Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - Lisa Kudrow

Episode Date: December 9, 2024

Lisa Kudrow (No Good Deed, Friends, The Comeback) is an award-winning actor and producer. Lisa joins the Armchair Expert to discuss her background as a pre-med biology student at Vassar, not ...being a people pleaser in the Groundlings, and how Jon Lovitz became her bridge to comedy. Lisa and Dax talk about why Conan O’Brien is the best person to bring to a dinner party, listening to the internal voice that told her to be an actress, and how pan au chocolate and a walk in the sun can be a cure for rejection. Lisa explains how home is the people you’re with, the fallacy of the healing power of fame, and why she’ll never be tired of talking about Friends.Follow Armchair Expert on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Watch new content on YouTube or listen to Armchair Expert early and ad-free by joining Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify. Start your free trial by visiting wondery.com/links/armchair-expert-with-dax-shepard/ now.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Wondry Plus subscribers can listen to Armchair Expert early and ad free right now. Join Wondry Plus in the Wondry app or on Apple podcasts. Or you can listen for free wherever you get your podcasts. Ba da ba ba ba ba ba ba ba ba ba ba. Ah! Dee dee dee. Welcome, welcome, welcome to Armchair Expert.
Starting point is 00:00:21 I'm Dan Shepard and I'm joined by Miniature Mouse. By Monica Geller. How's the song go? Did I have joined by miniature mouse. By Monica Geller. How's the song go? Did I have it? Not really. You can't trick me in this thing. It's not really right, but it's close.
Starting point is 00:00:32 It's close. Dee dee dee dee. Yeah. Our first friend. What's the chorus? Just give me the words. I'll be there for you. Thank you. I'll be there for you.
Starting point is 00:00:42 Even my sins are true. What's the second part? That was it. That was it. Oh my God. What's happening with you? I'll be there for you even when I'm sad. What's the second part? That was it. That was it. Oh my God. What's happening with you? I just. Hearing the song come out of my mouth is very disruptive.
Starting point is 00:00:52 Well, we're just. Disregulating. Ha ha ha ha. Da da da dee do da da da. Okay, can we please? Friends! What if I thought at some point they screamed friends in the song?
Starting point is 00:01:04 Ha ha ha. Our first friend is here. Our first friends. This is very important. Please, please. Friends! What if I thought at some point they screamed friends in the sky? I mean. Our first friend is here. This is very important. Maybe that's why I'm getting upset. Yeah, you're getting nervous because it's such an honor and you're afraid I'm gonna anger our lovely guest, Lisa Kudrow.
Starting point is 00:01:15 You can't, she's a ground-leaning improv genius. She knows how to party and get down and play. She sure does. She was awesome. I love Lisa Kudrow. Me too. Well, that's our guest love Lisa Kudrow. Me too. Well, that's our guest, Lisa Kudrow. I said it seven times.
Starting point is 00:01:27 She's an award winning actor, a producer, friends, da da da da, friends! The comeback, Romeo and Michelle's high school reunion, Web Therapy, I was on that. Who do you think you are? And okay, her new show, I say from the bottom of my heart, is delicious.
Starting point is 00:01:44 I can't wait. You're gonna love it. I know. I told you, it's very murders in the building with apartments. Oh, murders in the building, I know, I'm so excited. Yes, it's really, really great. She's fantastic in it. Please enjoy.
Starting point is 00:01:54 Guys, this is a huge deal. I know. I feel very grateful. We're seven years in and it's our first friend. It'll come up in the episode, but I, I wanna say it now. We're seven years in and it's our first friend. It'll come up in the episode, but I, ah, I wanna say it now. We did almost have a friend, David Schwimmer. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:02:14 And he had to cancel because he had a really bad ear infection. Yes. And Robbie Wobb said he had Schwimmer's ear. Yeah. It's really good. It's great, Joe. It bears repeating twice. Okay, please enjoy Lisa Kudrow.
Starting point is 00:02:26 I'm Indra Varma, and in the latest season of The Spy Who, we open the file on Daphne Park, the spy who killed the prime minister. As the Belgian Congo gains its independence, MI6 dispatches Officer Park to build a spy network. Its aim? To thwart a communist land grab, promote African democracy and prevent nuclear war. Along with Field Officer Larry
Starting point is 00:02:52 Devlin, they work to be a part of what would be one of the darkest operations in MI6 and CIA history. In order for Park to succeed, she needs to win the trust of Congo's first Prime Minister Pat Patrice Lumumba, or remove him. Follow The Spy Who on the Wondery app or wherever you listen to podcasts. You can binge the full season of The Spy Who Killed the Prime Minister early and ad-free with Wondery Plus. I'm Colin Murray and I'm Ennis James and if you thought we'd already covered the wildest sporting stories on everything to play for, well, think again. Yes, we're bringing you weekly bonus episodes where we dive into the sporting stories that
Starting point is 00:03:36 really connect to at least one of us. So expect brilliant sporting stories and also tangents that nobody asked for. That's right, the things that we were reading about when we were very young that we've continued to read about, the stuff that really motivates at least 50% of this partnership. If you want more laughs, stories and more of us going on script be sure to follow everything to play for wherever you get your podcasts. Are yours going to be all about Wales? Yes! Yes. Okay.
Starting point is 00:04:07 He's an arm transfer. He's an arm transfer. He's an arm transfer. I'm chewing gum. Oh wow. Yeah, you should. Is it nicotine gum? Yeah, yeah. You know, I love chewing gum. Oh wow. Yeah, you should. Is it nicotine gum? Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:04:27 Yeah, yeah, you know, I love nicotine. I'm on all kinds of variety other than smoking. What? I do the mints, the lozenges, and then I do a little spray. Do you know about the spray? Are you into spray? I don't do it, but my husband does.
Starting point is 00:04:41 Oh, he does. You get it here? It's fucking pricey. Cause yeah, they're European, right? Right, that's it. That's does. Oh, he does. You get it here? It's fucking pricey. Because yeah, they're European, right? Right. That's it. That's it, right here, yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:04:50 That's it. It's so exciting. I'm just so happy I'm not getting judged for still using nicotine. Oh, no, no, no. Because most people say, well, you gotta get off that. Why?
Starting point is 00:05:01 Yeah, there's no reason. Because they don't know. They're just thinking of smoking, which yes, you should get off smoking. And I chewed tobacco, which of course you should get off of that. But nicotine's fine. That's what my research has shown.
Starting point is 00:05:11 Yeah. Even many doctors confirm that on here. Yeah. Oh, good. Right, that's not the problem. One of them was questioning. It was the delivery system that's the problem. Tobacco is the best delivery system.
Starting point is 00:05:21 Yeah. The dosage was really perfect. How long did you partake in that delivery system? 20 years. Nice. Yeah, and then 20 years of this. I'm 20 years on this too. Yay.
Starting point is 00:05:34 We both put it the same, I quit in 2005. Yeah, me too. I did the full body scan recently and I was just bracing. I'm like, you know, dude, you smoked pack a day when not drinking and several packs when drinking a day. That's a bad combination too. That's so bad.
Starting point is 00:05:49 You can't get enough of them in your mouth when you're drunk. I know. Well, it's just too lung irritants and throat irritants. It's so bad. It's a real fuck you to that whole system. Yeah. By the way, this is why I'm no fun in a dinner party. Why? Cause I get like, oh no, that's system. Yeah, by the way, this is why I'm no fun in a dinner party. Why?
Starting point is 00:06:05 Because I get like, oh no, that's terrible, too irritant. Oh my God. Did you read the study on? I think that's part of your charm though. Oh yeah. No it is, I watch a ton of interviews with you today. I think that's a very charming part of you. Now back to you and I trying to not perform anymore.
Starting point is 00:06:22 Oh right. My therapist would say to me, hey, sometimes, and I'm only asking you to do it 10% of the time, sometimes watch the show. It's a good show. You don't always have to be the show, but I'm so controlling. Some of my performing's out of my controlling nature. Is yours that way?
Starting point is 00:06:37 I'm not sure, or I don't wanna know. Maybe more to the point. It's more honest. Maybe I am. After Friends, I did two different shows that was basically just me. Yes, yes, yes, yes. So I did have to think about,
Starting point is 00:06:53 ooh, what's wrong with you? Ha ha ha ha ha. Coming from the most quintessential ensemble. And to me, that has nothing to do with it. Right, right, right. Coincidence. By the way, maybe it does have nothing to do with it. Right, right, right. Coincidence. By the way, maybe it does have nothing to do with it.
Starting point is 00:07:07 Yeah. And maybe it does. Do I have to know? Wasn't the working title though of one of the shows, Now It's My Time to Shine? That was another show. That was a third show. There's a third show.
Starting point is 00:07:21 Still in development, in development hell. But my controlling part is I get anxiety that if it's left to some non-professionals, that this thing's gonna go in the ditch. It's like, if I get on an elevator with four strangers, I think, well, I'm the one with improv training. It's kinda on my shoulders to make this experience less awkward.
Starting point is 00:07:39 Or is it also their expectations from this group of me? Yes. So to me, that is very actory or entertaining person who's trying to please or fulfill expectations. I know there's a part of me that just wants to play too. So if I am in a gathering where there are funny people around and they're doing bits, I want to participate. I also want to see if I can keep up. Or I'm a little competitive and I think I can do better.
Starting point is 00:08:10 I can beat this. I wanna see if I can win at this game. And you still feel that way? Yeah, sometimes. And then there's plenty of times where I do feel like go for it. Yeah, I'm tired. Especially if it's a bunch of standups, standup comedians.
Starting point is 00:08:22 That is a different vibe though, doesn't it? Yes. Because you and I are both from the groundlings. Yes. And we're both improv people and sketch people. I often feel, and this is too critical of standups, but it's like, are we playing or am I hearing six minutes of your standup right now? Is this interactive or am I the recipient
Starting point is 00:08:40 of pre-planned something? Right, and it can get mean if I overstep. I'm inviting some hostility potentially. Interesting. If I question or compete. Oh, sure. Yeah, but it's worse for you. Because I'm a woman.
Starting point is 00:08:57 You're a woman. That's true. Do you also think people, because of the TV show, they don't know what you can do? They think, oh, you can read a script in a funny way show, they don't know what you can do. They think, oh, you can read a script in a funny way, but they don't know about your background. They don't know about the pedigree. Yeah, they don't.
Starting point is 00:09:12 They probably don't. About my huge stand-up career before. No, and I did not have a stand-up career forever. But you were groundling. Well, some people know they don't care, because it's not stand-up. By the way, have you noticed, to me, stand-up comedians are so much more serious
Starting point is 00:09:27 than comedic actors. They want to analyze comedy and pick it apart and talk really seriously about what they do. Yes, I definitely think there's a strata of dysfunction that the result is comedy. And I think improv artists are like a seven on that scale. And I think standups are generally a 10. They got some fucking shit to work out
Starting point is 00:09:50 and you're gonna sit here and listen to it. Were you a groundling? No, I didn't make it. I was in a Sunday company for a year and was kicked out. And I just recently got over that wound. I mean, truly, maybe like six years ago. I was never a crowd pleaser. I don't even know how I got into the main company
Starting point is 00:10:07 because I didn't do the kind of stuff audiences liked. So I think it would be helpful for people to know within the Growlings, when you're in the Sunday company or the main company, you can be an inside favorite. There's always a couple people in the group that they're clearly the funniest by our definition, but that's not to say they kill the most.
Starting point is 00:10:24 In fact, it's almost assured that you won't kill if you're the favorite among us. Whoever was the most offbeat and weirdest and most esoteric would make us laugh the night you'd put up all the sketches because it was refreshing and novel. I don't know if I fit that category either. Who were you there? What kind of things were you doing?
Starting point is 00:10:42 I did your favorite actress on a talk show. It became a character I did in the comeback, this HBO show, but I loved that character monologue. I loved doing those. What about improv? Yeah, but not game improv. I liked, I did this thing, Transformers, where it's sort of longer form and you do a scene
Starting point is 00:11:03 and then it gets silent, whatever, I guess it's called miming to people listening. I might not know. But whatever space work you're doing, it starts transforming as a group. You're all in sync and you turn it from baling hay to a rodeo lasso or something. Right, right, right.
Starting point is 00:11:21 And then your new characters, they were really good improvisers in that. I was really happy, I was the only girl. Well, let's back all the way up. Mom was a real estate agent. When I was in high school, yeah. Okay, and dad was a doctor, and he specialized in headaches.
Starting point is 00:11:36 Yes. What would that make him by training? Was it an internist? An internist, yeah. I can only assume knowing that you ended up working with him for so long. Were you guys besties? Did you have a great relationship?
Starting point is 00:11:47 Yeah, very close. And you have an older sister and two brothers. Just sister and a brother. Oh, I got that wrong. Okay, sister and a brother. And you went to Vosser. Vosser? Is that how you say it?
Starting point is 00:11:57 Vosser. You made it fancier. I mean, it is fancy, but you made it really fancy. Maybe back in the day, they would say they went to Vosser. Janine's going to Vassar in September, and we're thrilled about it. She absolutely aced her interview. I was thrilled to go to Vassar. I thought, yes, I'm gonna be a lady.
Starting point is 00:12:17 Only ladies go to Vassar. And I get there and I find out, oh, these were like the wild ones. Really? Really? What do you mean by that? Like the Kennedy type, people who part were like the wild ones. Really? Really? What do you mean by that? Like the Kennedy type, people who partied and had yachts and stuff?
Starting point is 00:12:29 Very artistic and sort of rebellious and went their own way. You know, were not mainstream. It opened in 1861, which is the start of the Civil War. It was a women's college. I think the first to offer science for women to learn. Women should not be trusted with science. No, that's a terrible idea.
Starting point is 00:12:54 So you already are gonna have a lot of people who are sending their daughters there who are not in the mainstream. It was all female when you went there? No. When did it switch to coed? 1969. Perfect year for that.
Starting point is 00:13:07 So I think the first year of graduating class of men was like 72, three, four. Okay, and when you went there, you majored in biology. I presume you were gonna be on a medical track? Yeah, I was pre-med. So had you done any acting in Encino? In junior high I did, because I liked going to summer school,
Starting point is 00:13:27 I liked having something to do. And I took a play production thing, and we wrote sketches and it was so fun, and I could do it well. But why not stick with it in high school? No, that is not something that, if you're going to be an adult, you do, I decided. Oh right, it was too frivolous.
Starting point is 00:13:44 Yeah. Okay, you also went to high school with E you do, I decided. Oh, right, it was too frivolous. Yeah. Okay, you also went to high school with Eazy E. Oh my. I did? You went to the same high school. What was it, Taft? What was it called? Yeah, how many years apart?
Starting point is 00:13:52 No, it's at the same time. What? How could I be the one telling you this? Because I don't know. You don't know about yourself, do you? I don't know about myself. You're gonna enjoy this. I also don't know who that is.
Starting point is 00:14:03 You don't know who Eazy E is? This is so charming too. This is great. He's one of the members of NWA. Oh wow. Yes, I'm disappointed you didn't know he went there because I was under the assumption he lived in Compton. Their hit song was straight out of Compton.
Starting point is 00:14:16 But he's going to school with you out in Woodland Hills. Out in Woodland Hills, yeah. Maybe he got bussed there or something. Maybe, I don't know. What's his name before it was EZE? That might help us too. I know, what if I go, oh! Yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 00:14:29 I slept with him in 11th grade. Sorry, Derek Lynn Wright. Okay. Derek Lynn. No help? By the way, no, I had three friends in high school. Who were they? Well, maybe four.
Starting point is 00:14:41 You were smarty pants? What was your strata in that? Your first year in high school was sophomore year. And for five minutes, I thought, okay, I'm gonna try to be a cheerleader. I'm gonna try to be part of everything. The scene. So I went to all the rehearsals
Starting point is 00:14:56 and I learned the thing for cheerleading squad. And then I didn't realize to try out, that's in front of whoever shows up and wants to watch. And I just went, oh no. Well now, no. I do not wanna be a cheerleader. And then you have to run and be elected and you have to campaign.
Starting point is 00:15:16 I'm out, not for me, no. Because you're shy? It was too embarrassing. Nothing good is gonna come of that. You're very tall. I am very tall? I don't know. How tall are you? How tall are you?
Starting point is 00:15:28 Like five eight, five seven and a half. It's tall. It's not that tall. It's not that tall. I take back my whole thing. I look gargantuan. No, I just wondered, I think sometimes it's rough being tall
Starting point is 00:15:39 when you're a girl in high school and boys are like five four, they haven't grown. It can be hard. Or you're an actress. And you're the only tall actor. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Dax. You and I are built for each other to be in a scene together.
Starting point is 00:15:52 I'll make you look like tiny little girl. I know. I just worked with Ray Romano and I didn't know he was that tall because of Brad Garrett, but he's like 6'2 or 6'3. This is a phenomenon. I've noticed it elsewhere, right? I remember the first time I met Andy Richter in real life
Starting point is 00:16:09 and I went, what? You're 6'3? But he's next to Conan. His whole career, yes. Oh my God. How tall do you think Andy Richter is? He and I are the same height. Definitely 5'5.
Starting point is 00:16:19 Right. Right. For sure. Yeah, with heels. And that can happen. Yeah, Brad Garrett is a monster. So Ray Romano. He's very, very tall. But Ray was on Pairnotes, so I'm hip to the fact
Starting point is 00:16:29 that he's probably 6'1 or 2 or something. Sorry, 6'1, 2, yeah. Yeah, 6'12. We'll fact check it, we'll get his exact dimensions. 6'1.2. Okay, so in high school, you had three friends. Four. Four.
Starting point is 00:16:42 You just added one. And other friends. Did you feel self-conscious that it was only three? No, you just made it four real time? I felt bad that I left out one of them. Michael? No, I'm thinking of the girls. There were four of us, so I had three friends.
Starting point is 00:16:53 Wait, one, two, three, no, four. There were five of us. I am fun at a dinner party. I've been to one with you. Counting. I doubt you remember, but I've been to one with you. Which one? We were at Adam Venet's house for dinner one time. I've been to one with you. I doubt you remember, but I've been to one with you. Which one?
Starting point is 00:17:05 We were at Adam Venet's house for dinner one time. Oh my God. With my ex-girlfriend, Bree. Oh, so it was a long time ago. 20 years ago. Okay. Tell me. It was outside?
Starting point is 00:17:16 Yeah, at his nice big mansion. Yes, and Jim Burroughs was there? Was he? I wasn't hip enough yet to have known who Jim Burroughs was. And somebody showed up a little late with a woman. I don't know if you'll clock this too. Maybe you won't. But this woman who I just went, what the hell? What version?
Starting point is 00:17:37 Why is this happening right now? Like how does that exist? Like did it look like a sex worker? This person that was just sort of. High end. And then I saw that person few years later on one of the housewives. Interesting.
Starting point is 00:17:50 On a show and I went, okay. Interesting. But I can be sort of judgmental and someone comes in and just like riff raff. You know. Yeah. Yeah. Bogie is what we say.
Starting point is 00:18:04 Oh you do? My wife and I'll go Bogie six o'clock. Riff raff's a bad word I think. You know? Yeah. Yep. Bogey is what we say. Oh, you do? My wife and I'll go bogey six o'clock. Riff raff's a bad word, I think. Yeah. Or do you think it's got like a bad historical? I think so. Like racist or something?
Starting point is 00:18:13 Oh God, I hope not. Well then what can be bad about it if it's not racial? I don't know because I know I've seen things. Yeah, I don't know. The words are canceled now. We have to look it up. Yeah, Rob, figure it out. No, but even like back then.
Starting point is 00:18:24 I saw it in an old movie where it's like, oh, they're an actor, all actors are riffraff. And then it came up in something else and someone was like, don't say that, that's a horrible thing to say. And I went, riffraff? It doesn't sound like it's really bad. Yeah, it doesn't.
Starting point is 00:18:38 Okay, use, we got clearance. Oh, good. What's the origin? Yeah, everything's good. Middle English. Oh, fuck, we don't care about that. Is that referring to any ethnicity or anything? Yeah, then we're fine.
Starting point is 00:18:47 My only memory of who was there is you. Oh, wow. Yeah, I remember Bree and I driving home and we were like, I can't believe we met Lisa Kudrow. This is fucking nuts. Yeah, we couldn't believe we were at a dinner with you, to be honest. So I don't know other than Venet,
Starting point is 00:19:01 who was there other than you. And Chuck Lorre was there too, I think. Oh, wow, Dex, you missed a lot of people. I think this is a different party. How many times do you have dinner over there? Just once? I don't remember that many times. Okay.
Starting point is 00:19:13 But okay, so for people who don't know, when you're on a set and you're filming, the ADs, if someone wanders into the scene that's not background hired to be in the scene, like you're filming on a sidewalk in downtown LA and everyone that walks back and forth has been hired. But if a civilian wanders in, they go, Mike, go to three. Yeah, there's a bogey.
Starting point is 00:19:32 They always say there's a bogey and that's a civilian that's wandered into the professional. That's wandered in. Okay, God, that's funny. So, Chris and I are big on bogey. You got three bogeys, you're somewhere and you just think, oh my God, some civilians have entered the wrong door or something. So unrelatable. I don't think, oh my God, some civilians have entered the wrong door
Starting point is 00:19:45 or something. So unrelatable. I don't think this, well I think everyone can relate to people being at a party that doesn't seem like they know anyone. That's all it is. Well that happened here. So for Halloween, Dax has a big hayride
Starting point is 00:19:57 for this neighborhood and he takes it all across the neighborhood, it's very sweet and cute. That's nice. Thank you. But two of our friends who have a baby, they came back early and they were sitting here and there were some bogeys slash riffraff that were just hanging out at the house.
Starting point is 00:20:11 No one knew who they were. For like 35 minutes, they were just chatting with some. See, that would make me very nervous. Yeah. And in their defense, it was a very permeable. Please let's hear their defense. Okay. And then my anxiety will go away.
Starting point is 00:20:25 We got a food truck and invited everyone to come to the driveway and have a hamburger on Halloween night. You invited everyone. That's right, but now there's a little bit of a permeable, is that the right word? There's an impermeable border. That's not an invitation to inside my house.
Starting point is 00:20:37 That's the driveway where the food truck is. So it sounds like people decided, let's also get into the house. They crossed the line. Luckily I was just driving the hayride and I missed it. So, okay, great. Yeah. Okay. Back to you and your friends.
Starting point is 00:20:49 I'm working on the in-defense of it. It was the burger part. Hey, you invited me over for a burger. How was I to know it wasn't? No, and there were people in the house. So they went in. And they probably thought. Like other people are in.
Starting point is 00:20:59 I guess it's inside and outside. I'm getting chilly. Yep. Should we just go inside? Should we go inside where these other people are? This is clearly a haunted house situation. They're probably bogeys too. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:21:09 You were there inside. No, I was out in the hayride, but two of our friends came back early because they had a baby. So they then later were like, this is so weird. Right, but they were inside. Yeah, they were inside, but they were loud.
Starting point is 00:21:21 We were out of the house. I'm just trying to say that it's all fine. It's okay. No one meant any harm. Mostly. We were out of the house. I'm just trying to say that it's all fine. It's okay. It's okay. No one meant any harm. No. Mostly it's good people in the world. Let's just keep telling ourselves that, right?
Starting point is 00:21:30 And at some point we're all gonna die anyway and it's all gonna be okay. Yeah, well, we'll have it all this in heaven. We just leave the house for two hours and the house is wide open. Well, that's the big thing to discuss. So people probably fucked in our bedroom. We're not doing that anymore.
Starting point is 00:21:44 Let that be the worst thing. Did you pine for popularity? Did you care? Were you the kind of student that you had your thing, you were focused, I'm gonna be a doctor, I don't give a fuck about all this frivolous crap. Or did you want way more friends? No, that is how it was.
Starting point is 00:21:59 Cause junior high, I thought, oof, we're all supposed to be popular. That's supposed to happen developmentally, right? See, again, why I'm not fun at a dinner party. Because you want to get into the science. Because I want to get into the evolutionary, like, behavioral. Well, to be fair, you are a biology major. It's in your history.
Starting point is 00:22:16 Yeah, you're generous. You and I would be cutting it up like crazy because that's all I want to talk about too. I don't know if you've ever heard the show. That's all this is. Yes, why do you think that happens? Right, I must know. I can't feel comfortable until I understand why it happened. Because then I can predict what's gonna happen.
Starting point is 00:22:29 That's all I really wanna do. And that, yeah. It's very important evolutionarily. Modeling, playing out scenarios, having a plan. The world is scary if we can't do that. Right, don't we all do that? No, happy people do not do that. Do you think?
Starting point is 00:22:44 I don't know. Yes, to just be fine with what is, and then something comes up, you'll deal with it. I can be that person sometimes. Very happy when I am. But today, I have to say it's election day. So everything is just like, all right, what's going to happen? What should we prepare for? Oh, my God. Yeah, there's a level of intensity. Yeah, there's a baseline anxiety. Yeah, I can feel it walking around the world today. Like, whew, everyone's a little on edge.
Starting point is 00:23:10 Yeah. Yeah. Okay, anyway. Okay, so great. So I'm delighted to know that you didn't really covet that. I'm gonna focus on getting myself to where I think I need to be, and that is college,
Starting point is 00:23:22 somewhere on the East Coast and not here in Southern California. I relate to that greatly and I also remember from Pollard's autobiography, those moments you have in your teenage years, and for mine it was literally in a mirror, where I go like, okay, here's the situation. You're not a babe, I wanted to look like
Starting point is 00:23:39 all these other boys. We're just gonna bet on our personality. Like a real, let's talk about the game plan here. Those moments happen in teenage years. It's really adorable. I wish I could like see kids doing that in the mirror. My head's full of 10 different things. You walked in today and I went, Jesus,
Starting point is 00:23:55 he looks so gorgeous. Oh my God. That's so cute. Thank you. I think I'm way better looking for sure now than I was. It happens with men too, by the way. Have you seen The Substance yet? What is that?
Starting point is 00:24:10 Okay, a movie, you gotta see it. Demi Moore. Is it scary? Nia? No, then I will not see that movie. Do you want us to just tell you everything that happens in it? Not if it's scary. But it's about aging, really, women aging
Starting point is 00:24:23 and how they get sort of cast aside. I'll just hit you with the premise. Yeah. She's an aging actress. She finds out there's a thing you can shoot in your body. And then for two weeks, you'll be your 20s self, but you have to return to your old self for two weeks. And you go two weeks, two weeks, two weeks.
Starting point is 00:24:38 And that's the substance that makes you young again. And of course, when she's her younger self, she don't wanna play by those rules. She doesn't wanna go back. Is she back in time? Nope, she takes this shot, she becomes young again for two weeks, and then she has to go through a procedure
Starting point is 00:24:51 to go back to being old for two weeks. Oh, and she says, no, I don't wanna go back to being old. And you pay a heavy price for that, and you end up kind of destroying your older self. It's very, very good, and so feminist, it's nuts. But this whole thing of he comes in, he's gorgeous, he looks better and we do that for men. We allow men to age and think it's attractive
Starting point is 00:25:12 and it's not the same for women. I think you and I could have a conversation that no one is allowed to have. About? There is an evolutionary reason for that. It's like both unfortunate and it's not out of nowhere. Right. Dudes can have kids in their nineties. Look at some of our famous directors.
Starting point is 00:25:28 It's true. Right. Women can't and shouldn't. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. We don't know that we have that awareness. So you gotta like fight through all that. Cause it's not just about procreation anymore. No, we don't even need each other anymore,
Starting point is 00:25:43 which is a whole new interesting dynamic. Oh my God. And it's scary just about procreation anymore. No, we don't even need each other anymore, which is a whole new interesting dynamic. Oh my God. And it's scary. That's the chilling, terrifying thing. By the way, you know the movie here? No. Tom Hanks, Robin Wright, Robert Zemeckis,
Starting point is 00:25:56 it's going through time and they shot it and they could actually shoot the scene and then look at the playback of them as younger and it's ready for them to see. Whoa, and they wanted to make this movie for the rest of their lives? Well, and all I got from that was, this is an endorsement for AI and oh my God.
Starting point is 00:26:18 It's not like, oh, it's gonna ruin everything, but. But maybe. What will there be left for, forget actors, but what about up and coming actors? They'll just be licensing and recycling. We'll be watching new Brando movies. Yeah, and then set that completely aside. What work will there be for human beings?
Starting point is 00:26:37 Yeah, we've talked a lot about this. Oh, you do talk about that. Oh, yeah. And then what? So there'll be some kind of living stipend for people. Exactly. There'll be no work of living stipend for people? Exactly. There'll be no work.
Starting point is 00:26:46 And you don't have to work? How can it possibly be enough? Let me attempt to make a glass half full. I'm shaking, I don't know if it's chilly in here. Or. There's a blanket? Are you cold? Maybe.
Starting point is 00:26:57 First of all, you're sitting on a blanket. Feel free to use either of those blankets. Oh, can I do this for you? Cause I've done it one other time. Oh yeah, he likes. And it made you happy? Okay. I'm gonna make a burrito.
Starting point is 00:27:05 Or I'm just getting old and I need a shawl. It gets a little chilly. That's nice. He likes to wrap people in a burrito. Okay. You go like this. You can change when I leave. Okay, thanks.
Starting point is 00:27:16 I just do that for now. I just won't gesture anymore. Oh my God, you look so cute like a baby. Okay, this is great. I just took you back in time without AI. This is like night-night time. 99. Better to sleep.
Starting point is 00:27:29 Stay in your bedroom tonight. Better to sleep, this is a drag. This isn't working out. Okay, maybe this is crazy glass half full, and I think it's very unlikely. Oh, please tell me the full part. So you and I will have experienced, and I already know you have your arms
Starting point is 00:27:42 completely wrapped around the experience because I've heard you talk about it I wrote down a quote from you today. It said uh, let me just read it cuz it's so good That's the healing power of fame. Everything will be fixed now You're talking about getting the dream and your thought is everything will be fixed now. That's the fallacy. Yeah, right Okay, because you said that's the healing power of fame. Right, suggesting like, yes, that there would be a healing power of fame.
Starting point is 00:28:09 It would fix everything. And it doesn't. It doesn't, but I think in that for me is the greatest gift I've ever been given because I at least got to go like, okay, great. That's not it. What is it? And it sent me on a journey of figuring out what it is. And if I hadn't
Starting point is 00:28:26 been given the gift to find out it was blackluster or that it was empty, I would have never stopped believing that that would have been the fix. So currently everyone in America thinks if I didn't have this job and I didn't have money problems and I didn't have that, I would be fixed. And so we'll give everyone that. You don't work, you don't have money problems, fucking robots are doing every single thing. And then three weeks after that, they turn that light switch on, everyone's gonna be like, yeah, I'm miserable.
Starting point is 00:28:53 Why am I miserable? And then we all start the path. That could be the outcome. How's that glass half full? That sounds so depressing. Because everyone will actually try to confront the real angst of being a human. The real purpose.
Starting point is 00:29:05 And not these other stories we've told ourselves that it's because we don't have this ski boat and we don't have this pair of shoes. It's an equalizer, that's for sure. So what you're saying is so people will- Be miserable. Be miserable, but then what they're gonna see is being here on this planet, in this life,
Starting point is 00:29:23 is about something else. It's not about what I do. It's about who I love and who loves me. It's about connecting. It's about being part of a community, but a community doing what? Well, right, meeting in the yard, I guess. Painting, it doesn't have to be for a result.
Starting point is 00:29:42 The domestic robot will do that better. Oh, it will a result. The domestic robot will do that better. Oh, it will be better. The artist robots will do it better. You're right. So I guess it can't be about being the best, takes that off the table. I have a solution, hiking with friends, playing pickleball, playing cards, being social
Starting point is 00:29:57 and enjoying the big gift, which is like other people. Right, but haven't you been on vacation? And after a week? Yes. You're getting itchy. Okay, now what? Well, because you and I are doing the same thing at the end of seven days. Like I'm a piece of shit
Starting point is 00:30:14 because I haven't been productive. And if I'm not productive, I have no value. No, I don't feel like that. Oh, you don't? What's your issue? You're just bored. Yeah, everyone needs an occupation. I don't mean the professional occupation.
Starting point is 00:30:25 I mean- A purpose. You need something to occupy your time and you need to decide what's fulfilling and what isn't. But again, we're so distracted by the immediate needs that are on everyone's plate, make my rent, feed my kids, all this stuff. But you're saying that'll be solved and I'm saying, I don't know what government can afford
Starting point is 00:30:43 to solve that on a satisfactory level. Currently, we can't. We're just imagining a future where the robots actually do, do every single thing. They grow the food and there's just a surplus of all things that are needed and they manufacture phones and they build houses for everyone. So that's where we're at. This is Yuval Harari, a homo deus. It's all been solved. We're all a leisure society, now what? So I think now what would be great depression for months. Population decline.
Starting point is 00:31:10 Sure. That's a terrible joke. Because it's not funny. If you or someone you know is contemplating suicide, get in touch with this hotline. Yes, we'll put that in the show notes. So is that possible? Does it give everyone the gift
Starting point is 00:31:26 of not needing all this stuff? I'd need to see an episode of that. Maybe there was one on Star Trek, or a good writer's gonna have to play that out for me to see, I'll get back to you. Okay, so now back to graduating, going to Vassar, integrated in 1969 for men, 1861 for females it started.
Starting point is 00:31:45 I just learned all this from you. How the fuck do you get into comedy? Did you know you were funny throughout all that seriousness? Yeah. Do I need to relieve you from that? I was able to do it myself. Okay, good.
Starting point is 00:31:56 One with my hand poking out. I'm like Harry Houdini. Somehow I was able to score my hand under the loose blanket. It felt like watching Houdini for a second. That's why I offered assistance. I saw your hand moving around a ton under there, like, oh fuck, she's trapped.
Starting point is 00:32:10 I can't, I had a feeling. I need my gum. Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare. Hello, ladies and germs, boys and girls. The Grinch is back again to ruin your Christmas season if you dare. You can listen with the whole family as guest stars like John Hamm, Brittany Broski, and Danny DeVito try to persuade the mean old Grinch that there's a lot to love about the insufferable holiday season. But that's not all. Somebody stole all the Children of Whoville's letters to Santa and everybody thinks the Grinch is responsible.
Starting point is 00:32:57 It's a real Whoville whodunit. Can Cindy, Lou, and Max help clear the Grinch's name? Grab your hot cocoa and cozy slippers to find out. Follow Tis the Grinch Holiday Podcast on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. Unlock weekly Christmas mystery bonus content and listen to every episode ad free by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app,
Starting point is 00:33:18 Spotify, or Apple podcasts. They say Hollywood is where dreams are made. A seductive city where many flock to get rich, be adored, and capture America's heart. But when the spotlight turns off, fame, fortune, and lives can disappear in an instant. When TV producer Roy Raden was found dead in a canyon near LA in 1983, there were many questions surrounding his death. The last person seen with him was Laney Jacobs, a seductive cocaine dealer who desperately wanted to be part of the Hollywood elite. Together they were trying to break into the movie industry. But things took a dark turn when a million dollars worth of cocaine and cash went missing.
Starting point is 00:34:04 From Wondery comes a new season of the hit show Hollywood and Crime, The Cotton Club Murder. Follow Hollywood and Crime, The Cotton Club Murder on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. You can binge all episodes of The Cotton Club Murder early and ad free right now by joining Wondery Plus. by joining Wondery Plus. ["Wonderful Music"]
Starting point is 00:34:31 By the way, do you wear a lot of shawl collars or whatever this would be, Monica? This is a very cute look on you. It is a nice look. It is? Look at the dress. Yeah, the fact that it's like pinstriped up top and then straight. Oh my God.
Starting point is 00:34:38 Yeah, it's very cute. Okay. Legend has it your brother's friends with John Lovitz. Yeah, I grew up with John Lovitz. He and my brother, best friends. And he grew up in Encino as well? Tarzana and he was at our house all the time. And he said to you what?
Starting point is 00:34:52 I let him know after college, I decided I should try acting because I always was interested, but threw it away. After I graduated, I realized, wait a minute, don't have any regrets later. I know you plan to get married and have kids and all of that, but you might regret not ever even trying. So know for sure why you didn't pursue acting. So I let Love It Snow after I graduated, because he got on Saturday Night Live. And before that, I thought, oh,
Starting point is 00:35:23 it's only a magical few that are touched. Certainly no one who looks like me. But I saw him just pounding away forever. In college he was a theater major, he wanted to be an actor and oh dear God, how bad. It's so hard. And then he got on Saturday Night Live and I thought, oh, it's his reality, I wonder if I should try.
Starting point is 00:35:41 So I let him know and he said, go to Groundlings. That's where I learned the most for acting. That's been the best preparation. I wasn't allowed to even audition because I called them and said, John Levitz told me to call, which may have been like a fucking guy got onto Saturday Night Live.
Starting point is 00:36:02 Okay, well when's the last time you performed or acted? I said, junior high. Then I said, great, we're sending you someplace else. Oh. See Cynthia Sigetti, who taught improv, and she had a class she taught at the Coronet Theater. Oh, no kidding, where they do Largo now. Yeah, the other person in that class was Conan O'Brien.
Starting point is 00:36:20 He also was sent to Cynthia Sigetti. Oh my God. And by the way, I've told this before, but I was gonna quit. I went to one class of Cynthia's, Conan wasn't there. Everyone there just felt like, oh, not for me. You didn't get a good vibe. These are actor-y people.
Starting point is 00:36:34 I thought comedy would be less serious and phony. They were really overdoing it with emotional adjustments. I was like, this is just embarrassing. This is like cheerleading. You've been embarrassed for people for quite a long time. Mm-hmm. And I didn't want to be part of that. It's an embarrassing endeavor, to be honest.
Starting point is 00:36:54 Well, except when. So the next week I was like, do I go back? I should go. Just go, come on. And I was a little late and they were already up there doing lift a disc or space ball or whatever it was. Now throw it and you're angry. Everyone's angry, angry now.
Starting point is 00:37:10 People are throwing it and they're like, grrr. So embarrassing. And then there was Conan. I didn't know him, he was really tall, red hair and he was throwing it and he was angry but he wasn't making a meal of it. I got it and then Cynthia said, good commitment. And I went, that's what commitment means. I can do that.
Starting point is 00:37:29 And so I just made a beeline for him when it was all over and, you know, like, hi, I'm Lisa. Yes, we're going to date shortly. Pretty soon we will be dating. Not really. Best friends. For how long? You did date though, right? Eight years and then tried that for- After eight years of friendship? Three months and then no. That's an ill-fated plan.
Starting point is 00:37:51 It worked out. Well, clearly, but not in a romantic sense. I mean, it worked out. We weren't supposed to be. They were meant to be, yeah. No, of course. I'm only saying, if you've been friends with someone for eight years, I always have a hard time understanding
Starting point is 00:38:05 that transition into dating. Obviously there's probably success stories. You think it's too friend-zoned by then? Yeah, just that's an interesting transition after eight years. Like generally your first kiss is quite exciting whereas opposed to like we've been hanging for eight years now we're kissing feels a little bit awkward.
Starting point is 00:38:22 No, still exciting. Okay, great. Yeah, cause it's a completely different relationship and we're better as friends. So that was just a weird blip. Because I can relate to that is so embarrassing. When I really think about the times I've done it, I feel like it's because, well, first of all,
Starting point is 00:38:40 I'm allergic to earnestness. I don't know if you have that. It feels so cringy to care. But now I can see that as that's actually a beautiful thing that people care and throw the thing with such fervor, even though it's embarrassing. I can see that now as cool. Do you think you have that?
Starting point is 00:38:57 I'm afraid to care that much because then there's possibility of getting rejected. No, if the praise is coming for, grr, like indicating anger or, oh, I'm sad. I'm not buying it. It's bad. Right. You were like, bad as being rewarded.
Starting point is 00:39:16 The teacher is really just trying to make people feel safe and comfortable. Right. Mm-hmm. And so for me it was, well, how will I ever be able to trust her? I'm going to think I'm great and then I'm going to have horrible habits. I'm just going to become good at being bad. Right.
Starting point is 00:39:35 That's not what I am hoping to learn to do. You need the truth. And then I need an example. I learn best by example. So what does it look like when you're doing it right? Because Robert De Niro isn't doing Spaceballer Lift a Disc right now for me to see. And Conan was doing it right.
Starting point is 00:39:52 Yes. He told the cutest story, I'll earmark that. I'm gonna save that. When you were on his show. Okay. I'll just say it now. But you telling him how thrilled you were to meet Matthew Perry and how hysterical he was.
Starting point is 00:40:04 You're going on and on about how special and funny he was. And he admitted to you when he interviewed you, he's like, I just started feeling like, well, who is this guy? And why is he so, my Gene Cordero thing. Oh, sure. Kristen and Monica love Gene Cordero. No, his name is Eugene.
Starting point is 00:40:19 I started calling him Mean Gene Cordero. That's not his name, but because I'm threatened by how funny he is. They would just regale all the time how funny he was. Okay, yeah. Well, because Conan was, was. Yeah. Has always been.
Starting point is 00:40:31 Yeah. And that's not a lie. The funniest person I'd ever met. Yeah. Ever. Well, you stumbled into one who historically will go down as one of the funniest. One of the funniest people ever.
Starting point is 00:40:42 Yeah. It's up all time. All time. We just ran into him at an improv class. That's so bizarre. Yeah, and we'd go to parties like, well, he's the best to bring to a party because he makes everyone so comfortable.
Starting point is 00:40:52 He's so hilarious. And he's, I think, one of the smartest people I've ever met. That was my hunches. I bet, sure, you were attracted to the comedic ability of him, but I imagine how brilliant he is is what really made you wanna be friends and eventually lovers as we discovered. For three months.
Starting point is 00:41:10 Three hot steamy months. For five minutes. You then started going through the actual program at the Groundlings. Yeah, we got accepted into paying them money for the basic class. We were allowed to do that, but we weren't in the same class.
Starting point is 00:41:23 And everyone knew we were close friends. I always suspected that had allowed to do that, but we weren't in the same class. And everyone knew we were close friends. I always suspected that had something to do with if people thought there was anything good about me, because I sort of had Conan's endorsement and he was already really respected. He was going to get in. He left, right? Third level or something? He was in the advanced class. Is that called third level?
Starting point is 00:41:42 I don't know, the advanced class. No, I think that's fourth. And from there you get voted into the Sunday Company. And you do two sort of showcases. After that first performance in that advanced class, he and his writing partner, Greg Daniels. What? Yeah, you didn't know that?
Starting point is 00:41:57 I don't think I knew that, or did I? Maybe I forgot. Oh my God. You fucking dumbass. Can we just do this whole thing about Conan? Yeah. No, but they got invited to write on Saturday Night Live. Oh, it wasn't Simpsons first, it was Saturday Night Live first? Saturday Night Live.
Starting point is 00:42:10 So they had to go to New York. Wow. And that's why Conan wasn't a groundling. On this episode, we answer the burning question, why wasn't Conan a groundling? Wow. How far into the main company before you got an audition for SNL?
Starting point is 00:42:26 I didn't get an official audition. I was just told Lorraine Newman had seen me at the groundlings and she thought I was good. Was she a scout for SNL? No, but she let me know, she let them know to pay attention or come see me. They were coming out to look at Julia Sweeney and I think she was letting them know, look at her too. Oh my God. So you knew that before the show.
Starting point is 00:42:50 Before the show. Did that make you nervous? It made me nervous because that was gonna be life changing. Were you focused on being on SNL? Was that something you wanted to do? I wasn't gonna say no to that. But it wasn't your only.
Starting point is 00:43:02 You wanted to act and be in things. I thought I should probably be on a sitcom. I mean, I wasn't gonna say no to that. But it wasn't your only. You wanted to act and be in things. I thought I should probably be on a sitcom. I mean, I wasn't getting any auditions or anything at that point at all. And Saturday Night Live was good too. Duh, you know. Oh my God. You'll take it.
Starting point is 00:43:19 It's one of the coolest. It's like joining the Beatles or something. And I remember calling Conan because he was writing there. And I said, can you put in a good word or anything? He was like, no, cause that's a different no. It might make it go worse for you. That's the real answer. Also, he may have known,
Starting point is 00:43:39 they're kind of like a Julia Sweeney. That's kind of the entire story. So you didn't fly to New York and do the whole thing? No. They were in the audience. They were in the audience and I thought, I'm having, they're here to see me too. Right, right, right, right. Were there any dudes that went to SNL while you were there?
Starting point is 00:43:53 No, but I'm usually wrong. I don't remember things well. I just know, yeah, Julius Sweeney, that's all I know. That's who went to SNL while you were there. But I know, because I was a groundling, I voted in Will Ferrell. Oh. Get out. It's so weird to think of him in the Sunday Company.
Starting point is 00:44:07 It's almost like he's too much of a god to have possibly done that. Was he outrageously good as we came to know him on SNL? Yeah, that wasn't even a question for anyone voting. Everything you need here, Will Ferrell. Okay, you're on Cheers in 1989. Yeah. You are, congratulations, did you know this? No, I did, but I yeah. Will Ferrell. Okay, you're on Cheers in 1989. Yeah. You are, congratulations, did you know this?
Starting point is 00:44:26 No, I did, but I don't know what year. Were you in the groundlings when you were on Cheers? Yeah, wait, was I? No. You weren't. That's why I got voted in. Oh, because you were on Cheers? No, I was in a play, Ladies Room, that Robin Schiff, who was a groundling, she wrote it.
Starting point is 00:44:46 It was really successful. And then I got to be in a movie with Teresa Russell directed by Sandra Locke. I got cut out of it, but it was not comedy either. And I got to audition for so many things because of that play. Because of a sketch? Oh wow.
Starting point is 00:45:01 A play, Ladies Room. I don't know about Ladies Room. It was a play. Okay. Where you play. A play. Ladies' Room. I don't know about Ladies' Room. It was a play. Okay. Where you play. At the Tiffany Theater, which was the Equity Waiver Theater in LA. And it ran forever.
Starting point is 00:45:13 And it was me and this girl, Christy Miller, who was also in the Groundling program. And maybe Sunday. Wait, Christy Miller, who's? Christy. Oh, not Christa Miller. Christy Miller. And at first the characters were called Airhead One, Airhead Two. We were total of like five minutes in and out of the stage.
Starting point is 00:45:28 Then the play is backed by Aaron Spelling and Douglas Kramer. Oh, wow. And they give the characters names, Romy and Michelle. Stop. Oh, come on. I was about to say Airhead One, Airhead Two, Romy and Michelle. Yeah. So they made it later into the movie. But years later after Friends.
Starting point is 00:45:46 So much later. Oh my God, so much later. There's a bad pilot with Romeo and Michelle that Spelling Kramer made. It's not great. Okay. Because I realized I kept saying so bad and that's unkind.
Starting point is 00:46:01 Right, everyone tried their hardest. Sure, sure. That's in between, I imagine, Cheers and Friends. You do two pilots between Cheers and Friends. Oh my God. Congratulations. That's before Cheers. This is before Cheers that you made a pilot? Either right before or around the same time
Starting point is 00:46:17 because I knew one of them, I wasn't a SAG member. So you had to get two jobs. I had to get Taft Heart Lead and then join or something like that. So it was Cheers and Romy and Michelle, but it was called Temporarily Yours. Wow. Temporarily Yours. That's why I got into Groundlings.
Starting point is 00:46:36 Because you had done. I was ready to hand it over to, I think because I was friends with Conan. I think it's because you were good. Can you not just take that? I think you're a fraud. I'm with you on this one. No, it's not that I think I was bad.
Starting point is 00:46:50 Could you be misled by the fact that you were with Sweeney on stage? Yes, I mean, I do know Piers thought, that's funny, but I was not a crowd pleaser with the groundling audience. I wasn't doing like Fright Wigs and Blackened Teeth, you know, that kind of stuff. Yeah, you were embarrassed by that. I wasn't doing like fright wigs and blackened teeth, you know, that kind of stuff. I wasn't, I mean, I would have been. I did one sort of like that. If people could see your face.
Starting point is 00:47:13 One time. You're almost throwing up, you're kind of holding back up on it. One time. But I was trying to be clever, by the way. Pat Sajak had a late night show. Oh yes, for a minute, a talk show. For a minute. And he was gonna start having sketches. Oh yes, for a minute, a talk show.
Starting point is 00:47:25 For a minute, and he was gonna start having sketches. And so they wanted Groundlings to come do sketches. So they came to watch a show. And the director of the main company at the time, I was smoking and I was gonna go get cigarettes. He goes, let me walk with you. I was like, no, I didn't think he liked me at all. All right.
Starting point is 00:47:41 And we're walking, he says, so Pat Sajak, people were out here and they watched the show. So they liked Julia, of course, Sweeney. I went, yeah, yeah, he said. Everyone does. And I don't even understand any of this, but you. Oh, jeez. Oh my God. And he really did say it like that
Starting point is 00:47:58 because I remember thinking manners at least. Yeah. Sure. But all right, I went, huh. I think he said, this is crazy. I said, yeah, wow, that is crazy. Jeez. You know, having fun on stage is really contagious. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:48:14 I skipped one part and I just need to know cause selfishly I'm left-handed. So a lot of the work, you did a study with your father for eight years and part of the study was to see if left-handed people had cluster headaches at an inordinate rate. Close. Okay.
Starting point is 00:48:29 Yes, and. Yeah. You were born in 1983. Yes, and also I was not. Yes, and I could see how you might be confused with that because an eight and a six have circles in them. That's exactly right. And that is why I was a fine improviser.
Starting point is 00:48:52 Very good. Anyway, it was to see if there was any association between hemispheric dominance, handedness, and headache types. So it wasn't just cluster headache. My understanding is that your right hemisphere controls your left hand. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:49:08 So did cluster headache show up more in the right hemisphere over the left hemisphere? Was that discovered? No. Okay. It was just to see if people who were right hemispheric dominant had more cluster headache. But it was every headache amongst all headache types.
Starting point is 00:49:25 But the answer was no. Okay, that's what you found out. Now let me ask you this, because headaches were such a topic in the house, it would have given me a self-fulfilling prophecy that I was gonna get headaches. Did that happen to you at all? No.
Starting point is 00:49:38 I've been like overly concerned about headaches, because this is like the primary concern of my father. No. No. He was concerned, not concerned, but he was interested in headache because he got almost every headache type. Oh, he did.
Starting point is 00:49:51 What is the explanation? It's a complicated explanation that has to do with, if it holds, it's his theory, which was impressive because he had the first working theory, that it had to do with some damage to the hypothalamus. Mostly men had cluster headache and that the damage may have come from burning the candle on both ends was his theory at the time. But I don't think stress brought on the cluster headaches. I think it was a circadian or circ annual rhythm thing for episodic cluster and people who had it chronically all the time.
Starting point is 00:50:26 Could those people discover a pattern or were they completely random? Well, the pattern had to do with the light changing. A lot of them are hormone related too, right? Migraines, but not cluster headaches. Those are those females skew, don't they? Yeah. Which would make sense.
Starting point is 00:50:43 But there are men who get headaches, well, young men and then as you get older, if I'm remembering it right, because I worked there for eight years, guys get older, their headaches go away. They go away. Because my daughter has a lot of headaches. I don't know about a lot.
Starting point is 00:50:57 She has more than average. Is she adolescent? She's a woman. No, but I guess not. No, she's 11. But they're hormones maybe. She's 11 and things are starting to happen. Sorry.
Starting point is 00:51:06 No, I mean, I'm sorry. Look at me, now it's like, no, no, no joking. This isn't funny. Everything's very serious. Now we're talking headaches. Come on. I would have been happy to have a good time with you, but you brought up headaches.
Starting point is 00:51:19 Yeah, I had them when I was younger, but I don't really have. If I have one now, it's very, very rare. And I'm so grateful because they're fucking miserable. They are. But they've got good treatments now. Yeah, I know younger, but I don't really have. If I have one now, it's very, very rare, and I'm so grateful, because they're fucking miserable. They are. But they've got good treatments now. Yeah, I know people, they do injections when the shit hits the fan.
Starting point is 00:51:30 Yeah. There's those migraines, you know, like hemiplegic migraines, or I don't know, maybe they don't call those anymore, but half of the face or body gets paralyzed. And the scary thing is when it happens, you think, you gotta get a brain scan, because stroke's happening, but it's not.
Starting point is 00:51:47 Whoa, is that there's too much electrical activity going on? My brother's a neurologist and he now is a headache specialist. And he had just explained it. And now because of my age, I don't remember what he said. Right, but that's a joy because he can explain to you all over again.
Starting point is 00:52:02 I bet he loves explaining it and you'll love learning it all over again. This is very symbiotic. I don't know if he does. He does. Okay. How cool for him. You said he's a man. He loves to explain things, trust me.
Starting point is 00:52:13 As I explain this to you right now, I know the same tickle he's getting. Oh my God. Got meta. Oh my God. We're the worst. Like cannibalistically meta. Okay, I wanna talk about this kind of interesting
Starting point is 00:52:28 and sim like. Your life is a sim for sure. You meet Conan on your first day of, do you believe in the sim? What does that mean? Simulation. Simulation. Simulation, right, what do you mean? Like do you think you're living in one?
Starting point is 00:52:39 Not real. Do you think you have a carcass somewhere plugged into a computer and it's giving you this experience? I do now. I mean you should. I did it until giving you this experience. I do now. I mean, you should. I didn't until today. You should. You just convinced.
Starting point is 00:52:49 That's all it took. It's a simple explanation of where you're. I heard it once. You've experienced a lot of one of one things. I think if you have a lot of suspicious stuff happen in your life, you're probably more prone to think like, what's going on? We don't really believe in the sim,
Starting point is 00:53:02 but also we 30% do. Yeah. We play around with the notion that we're plugged in somewhere. I'm processing everything you're saying and trying to figure how it's the same as the way I see things. Cause I do think that there's too much we don't know.
Starting point is 00:53:16 So it could be that, it could be God, it could be anything. Something stinks. I don't know if something stinks. I think that what stinks is that we require to measure it, see it, describe it, define it. We need to know. You're using science words. Predict it in order to accept it.
Starting point is 00:53:34 When the one thing I learned from science and scientific method is there's more we don't know than we do know. So just because you can't doesn't mean it's not happening. We have the tiniest sliver of data, really. We're so limited in our senses. We have these five, and if you really ponder it, if no one had sight and you didn't have sight,
Starting point is 00:53:57 it's completely unimaginable. Nobody could expand their fucking imagination enough to imagine what sight is or hearing or taste or touch. So yeah, conceivably there's like 12 other ways to observe reality that we just don't observe. That's what I think. There are things we can't explain that we've just known. Well, let me ask you this.
Starting point is 00:54:16 Have you had those moments? Cause you've had a very exceptional life and you go like, well, how do I make peace with this? This is an abnormal amount of, you know. Of success. For me, I would call it of success or things I couldn't have imagined. Yeah. Yeah, well, okay. Here's the thing.
Starting point is 00:54:32 When there was no way I was gonna be an actress and I was in college and my plan even on graduation was, I'm gonna go to graduate school and study evolutionary theory, not gonna be a doctor, that's fine. I'd come home for spring breaks and I'd be driving around in LA and you'd hear on the radio a commercial
Starting point is 00:54:51 for a new sitcom or a sitcom and they're promoting it with their best joke. I have huge quote marks. I'm waving like a lunatic. Pelican flapping its wings. I'm driving along and I'd hear that joke which would just be like, well that's what she said last time.
Starting point is 00:55:12 And I think, oh my God, why do they have to like hit it so hard? Can't they just throw it away? That's what she said last time. And then the thought was, Lisa, please remember to throw it away when you do it. And I went, what? I'm not doing that.
Starting point is 00:55:33 Right. But you always were. And then other things like that. I'd watch David Letterman and watch someone who was being very, very phony. You know, that's not the way they talked. Not really, no. Oh, I love that, I love that.
Starting point is 00:55:49 Like that kind of thing. And I thought, oh my God, Lisa, when you're on Letterman, please try to be yourself. I'm like, yeah, wait, when am I gonna be on Letterman? For what? The latest evolutionary theory? Am I gonna come up with some world altering? The fifth tallest biology graduate from Vassar.
Starting point is 00:56:06 Put your hands together for the fifth tallest. I don't know how to explain those things. I'm feeling very seen by the notion and this is a terrible thing to admit, but it has been a great source of confidence for me. I watch stuff and I think, well, that's not very good. Maybe I can do it. So much of my propulsion has been seeing something
Starting point is 00:56:28 I don't think it's very good. So then I think, well, shit, then I think maybe I could do it. I'm motivated. Oh, you think that's what I was experiencing? Yes. I don't. You would go to an improv show and you go like, that's not very good.
Starting point is 00:56:38 I have so much fear that I'm not good enough. But when I see something bad, it would weirdly encourage me and go like, no, no, this might be doable. And so you're hearing shitty acting on the radio and something in you that tells you, I know that's not good, that's weirdly confidence building.
Starting point is 00:56:54 Does that make any sense to you? It does. But you don't relate to it. I don't feel like that was that part of me responding. It felt like it was someone else saying, Lisa, when you do it, but it wasn't a voice, it felt like it was someone else saying, Lisa, when you do it, but it wasn't a voice, it wasn't anything else, it was a thought in my head. But to respond to it like, wait, what are you saying?
Starting point is 00:57:12 What does that mean? Sometimes I just know what I know, although now I'm feeling like an idiot after talking to you that, oh yeah, she studied science and she thinks that something in the cosmos is talking her. But it did feel like such a strong feeling that shouldn't rationally be there. Yeah. And you kind of would listen to it, which is good. I didn't, I rejected it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:57:36 Until Levitz. And it was very practical. I'm 22. I don't have a mortgage. I don't have any responsibility. Now's the time to try that. and you don't wanna have any regrets. I'd forgotten about those other things. Now this is a childhood question. It's related to the truth, and it's related to watching the people be phony. Now it could be as a name as you're a younger sibling,
Starting point is 00:57:58 I'm a younger sibling, my older sibling tried to deceive me all the time, because that's how it works. Right, you're the least competent person in the household. So you have the least respect. You're the dumbass. Yes. Yes. And everyone's getting something
Starting point is 00:58:11 you're not getting all the time and you wanna fake it like you are. Do you relate to that observation, which is it's very important to you to know what's real and what's not. Ooh, I used to. And do you think that's childhood stuff or just your biochemistry?
Starting point is 00:58:26 I don't know. Things shift and change in me all the time. What's important, who I am, what kind of mood I'm in, either very analytical or I'm very like, you know, it doesn't matter. It's okay. You'll rise to the occasion. I feel like a different person.
Starting point is 00:58:43 And Diane Keaton once said to me a long time ago, something like, oh, I was 25, I was a different person. Like, well, don't you feel like you're the same person? No, I've been so many different people. Right. Of course not. We've all been so many different people at different times. Yeah, and if you like Buddhism at all, which I'm very newly into reading about,
Starting point is 00:59:00 yeah, we are a product of whatever context we're in. We're not even the same person throughout the day. You go to the grocery store and shit's popping off and there's an argument over here and there's some version of you that's there that's not the version of you at dinnertime later. Right. Or just some important beliefs shift. Yeah, sometimes you care a ton about something and then other times you're like, I don't even care about that. It's also good. You don't want to be so stuck in the thing you were saying when you were 16, we're supposed to. Oh yeah. Yeah, not being married to all these cornerstone beliefs
Starting point is 00:59:30 we think that define us. Definitely. Malcolm Gladwell says, hold your opinions loosely. I agree with that, but what about core beliefs? Beliefs and opinions are different, aren't they? Values and opinions are different for sure. Would I be right in guessing the permanence of the role as mom is something unique? It feels like bedrock to me.
Starting point is 00:59:48 There's a higher order, something shifted in the list of priorities. And you can feel it's permanent, and you're like, oh yeah, there'll be no wavering. And this is a unique feeling. Other than when you get a tattoo and you go like, okay, put it on, and you go like, yep, well, that's a permanent decision.
Starting point is 01:00:03 There's very few of those in life. Yeah, I don't have any tattoos. I'll give you one before you go. Because I, put it on. You go like, yep, well, that's a permanent decision. There's very few of those in life. Yeah, I don't have any tattoos. I'll give you one before you go. Because I don't like permanent decisions, except for my son. Yeah. Yeah. Okay, so I just wanted to point out this Jimmy Burrows thing, because this is another simulationy kind of thing.
Starting point is 01:00:16 You go to Cheers, and a very cute conversation with you and Ted, talking about you being there all week and just staying on set the entire time to learn what was happening. But Burrows, of course, is directing that show. So you have some experience with him. and Ted talking about you being there all week and just staying on set the entire time to learn what was happening. But Burroughs of course is directing that show. So you have some experience with them there
Starting point is 01:00:30 and then you get cast in Frasier. Right, they made a mistake. And then they corrected the mistake. And what happened? As a lead? Series regular. She was playing Frasier? Yeah, yeah, you're set.
Starting point is 01:00:41 Oh, you're Frasier. Yeah, she was. Remember, they made a mistake and then they corrected it like, no, let's stick with Kelsey. I mean, he's already established on the other show. Just feel... She's made the 11. It was a funny idea.
Starting point is 01:00:53 Don't mess with what's... No, the Roz character, I mean, they, I think had Perry Gilpin in mind when they wrote the part, and she and I were the ones that went to the network. And I just sort of Changed their mind for a minute and that was a mistake They reverse course how deep into the process did you get before you were replaced a couple days before shooting? I don't know halfway through the pilot week for sure for you at that moment career-wise He's coming off of Cheers. This is just shows gonna work, right? You must have been like okay okay, back to the,
Starting point is 01:01:26 everything's about to be fixed. What was the heartbreak of that? Was it devastating, how'd you handle it? I did think I might be one of those people for whom this isn't gonna work out. Am I? I am. Am I though?
Starting point is 01:01:39 I don't know. How did you find your way back to some level of confidence? Grief starts to wane. Time passes. Yeah, and I would just get up every morning and walk. And then at the end of the walk, I lived near Michelle Richard at the time. It was a great little cafe and they had panneau chocolat
Starting point is 01:01:59 and I'm gonna have one of those at the end of my walk. And as I'm out there walking, the sun is bleaching my hair and it's getting a little lighter. So I'm getting some lighter highlights. Beautiful. And I'm just in every way lightening up. And I have friends that I'm talking to who are saying like,
Starting point is 01:02:14 oh my God, you're leaving the house. That's amazing. To me, it was support and encouragement. Like, well, you're doing great. Look, one door closed, another one opens. And then I think it's that one thing that I was told, that it's, then what else will you do? And I could always just go back to school,
Starting point is 01:02:32 get caught up in whatever's happening in evolutionary biology, take whatever classes I have to take and just continue on that path. And that was never an option. I knew I wasn't gonna do that and that this is really what I wanted to do. Yeah, how long between getting fired,
Starting point is 01:02:48 again, by Jimmy Burroughs before Friends? A year. I don't know, I'm bad with this. Maybe people know this. I didn't know any of this. I find this really fascinating. So you audition for Friends and Jimmy Burroughs is gonna be the director.
Starting point is 01:03:02 And your last experience with him was that you were fired. Right. Yeah, that's scary. And I really thought, I'm not his cup of tea. Yeah, he doesn't like. Right. I'm not for him. How much of a say does he have in things? Right. You know, and it seemed like. Oh, a lot, okay. Oh, me a lot. And so I had to audition.
Starting point is 01:03:17 I auditioned for just Jimmy. One of my auditions was in a room, just Jim Burroughs. Oh, god. And I'm doing the audition, my auditions was in a room, just Jim Burroughs, and I'm doing the audition and he says, no notes. And I walk out going, that either means I give up, she's hopeless, or it was perfect, I have no notes. And then it's, I'll find out soon. It doesn't matter, what can I do? Yeah, I don't know how many years ago this was,
Starting point is 01:03:42 less than 10, I think. And there's something for Jim Burroughs, like a special something, and I think it's even broadcast. And the six of us cast members are with him. That's where I think I said like, yeah, well, I had an audition. Remember the audition we all had? The round with just Jim?
Starting point is 01:03:58 Just Jimmy? And everyone went, no, I didn't have that. He's like, one look at a tape of them and they're like, oh yeah, that's him. Oh wow. I was the only one. It's a blessing he didn't know that until 10 years ago. I thought this is that crazy insecurity you think
Starting point is 01:04:14 he needed to see you because it didn't work out on the last thing. Yeah, it's just part of the audition process. It's just part of it, everyone did this. Why don't you calm down? Yeah, you're talking yourself out of being crazy. You're like, you're not even that important. None of this matters that much.
Starting point is 01:04:29 You've made this something that's not. And in fact, they did need to check with Jimmy. You were spot on. Is it all right? Because we think she's pretty good. And then this crazy thing happens in the table read. The table read. For friends.
Starting point is 01:04:42 Did it? Where he suggests you. No, not the table read, one of the rehearsals. For the pilot? For the pilot where Rachel is about to cut up credit cards and we're all sitting around the kitchen table. And he thinks, oh, you know what'll be fun? Lease, get under the table.
Starting point is 01:04:58 What? Oh God. What do you mean? Let's sit under the table. And I'm climbing down. For what? I'm just like shoving myself under the kitchen table. And I said, I can't see anybody. He's like, yeah, but it's funny. That's all right.
Starting point is 01:05:10 Oh boy. And when I heard you retell us before, you're feeling right. Cause I don't belong here. You don't think I belong here. And now you're physically- Removing me. Putting me where it's now visually obvious
Starting point is 01:05:23 I don't belong here. Right? It was like a very triggering confirmation that he hated her. Oh my God. He doesn't want this to work. He doesn't want me in the scene. Cause one of the issues with the character, it's like, how do we let the audience know why they're friends with her?
Starting point is 01:05:37 Right, right, right. Cause she's so different. And I don't know that this helps with that. So we do the run through and David Crane, who's so nice, he's like, okay, that was good. Lisa, it's funny that you're under the table. I don't know that that works. And I'm thinking, he thinks this was my idea.
Starting point is 01:05:57 Oh no. Oh no, he thinks it's my idea. On top of it not working, it was my bad idea. And now they won't be able to trust it's my idea. On top of it not working, it was my bad idea. And now- Oh, this is so stressful. They won't be able to trust any of my instincts. Yeah. Yeah. And then Jimmy says, no, no, that was my idea. Okay, thank God.
Starting point is 01:06:15 Right, I went, oh, thank you, thank you, thank you. He's like, we were just trying it. This is a turning point though. She doesn't have to do it. Yeah. In his book, he wrote, like she needed to trust me. So I needed to show her. Like it was all calculated? I don't think to do it. Yeah. In his book, he wrote, like she needed to trust me. Oh. So I needed to show her.
Starting point is 01:06:26 Like it was all calculated? I don't think the whole thing. What do I know? Okay, I didn't know I was the only one auditioning for him. The hell do I know? I thought a ghost from the past came to tell me to be an actress. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:06:38 For people who don't know, Jimmy Burroughs is, by all accounts, the very most successful director to ever be in television by a landslide. Every show you ever loved, he directed either the pilot or the whole thing. And still. It's impossible. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:06:54 Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare. When you're not pleasing this person, it couldn't get worse. That's right. You've got to trust that he's right. But he'll be the first to say, it's just a pitch, 50% of them don't work. Right, right, right. Wow. So that was a turning point and then things got better. And as you said, you grew to absolutely love him, right? Well, right. Wow. So that was a turning point and then things got better. And as you said, you grew to absolutely love him, right?
Starting point is 01:07:28 Well, yeah. Then he was so fantastic because I did this show, The Comeback, and asked him to be Jimmy the director, because it was him. Yeah, yeah, to act. And he did it. Had he ever? And he was fantastic.
Starting point is 01:07:42 I think no. Wow. He was himself? Yeah, it was so great. Now let me ask you this, because you do it so gracefully and it appears to me that you don't ever mind it, but it occurred to me, there are things that I got sick of talking about.
Starting point is 01:07:57 What is just your overall feeling about talking about friends? It's a blessing. Was there ever a period where you're like, please shut up about friends? No, because I'm too grateful. Well, that's nice though. I there ever a period where you're like, please shut up about friends? No, because I'm too grateful. Well, that's nice though. I should have been grateful for all the things, but sometimes it took me a while to be grateful.
Starting point is 01:08:11 That's all right. Okay, you forgive me? Well, I hope you do. Are you gonna fire me from this table? Oh, oh, oh. But is part of that because the experience itself was so fulfilling? Yeah, it was great.
Starting point is 01:08:23 We really did get along. It's that thing that you were talking about at Groundlings where you can read when people are having fun. That show is so special in that way. We also worked hard at being friends. That six-way relationship took some work and we did it. What did that look like? Just like going out for dinners and stuff or being social?
Starting point is 01:08:42 Really talking things through. If someone said something or did something, it didn't get too big because it was, can I talk to you? Usually not me, because I had to learn to be, can I talk to you about something? Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:08:55 Because I never knew that was allowed, but I saw it modeled really well by Courtney and Jennifer and Matt. Yeah, communication, like rule number one in any relationship. Yeah, and respectful communication. So knowing you were entering the situation where this guy was gonna direct you
Starting point is 01:09:11 who had fired you recently, what was your confidence level going into that? Cautious. Now this maybe is a rude question, but was it at all on your mind that you were the oldest member of that group? Yeah, by a year. I know, but in your 20s, that feels like something.
Starting point is 01:09:25 Right, well, I was 30. Right. 30 or 31? 31! He's like, panic on your face, like, I'm gonna be the- I was 30 and a half. Okay, okay, 30 and a half. Right?
Starting point is 01:09:37 Yeah. Oh, well, I can tell you, I knew math very well. No, I was, because I was 94, May of 94, July is my birthday, so I wasn't 31. I was 30. Yeah, you're 30. Oh my God, it's this kind of detail that is fascinating. Now it means nothing, but when you're 30
Starting point is 01:09:53 and this is your big shot and you've been chipping away and it's hard and you got fired before, the stakes feel so fucking high, you don't know at that point you're gonna follow Seinfeld, do you? Or do you? Like, do you know this thing's gonna be given the best shot imaginable?
Starting point is 01:10:05 No, shooting the pilot? Yeah, of course, they hadn't picked it up. Yeah, that makes no sense. No, they hadn't picked it up. By the way, here's what a bad judge of, is a show gonna be successful or not? I was like, it's cute. Right.
Starting point is 01:10:17 I mean, it's not Seinfeld, it's sort of groundbreaking comedy. I'm just glad it's on NBC, because I've got a recurring role on Mad About You. I gotta protect that. Yeah, and you were playing your own twin. I didn't know that until today. That's because when they put us on,
Starting point is 01:10:31 they put us on right after Mad About You. It ended up being such a great crossover though. Okay, good. We have kept it from you until this moment. I don't think we can go on. And you've done a great job. Thank you. If Monica has a religion, it is friends.
Starting point is 01:10:46 Oh. She talks about it every fucking episode. Even yesterday, I was thinking, I was like, are we gonna even talk about it? Oh my God, what do you wanna say? I don't know what to say, because I don't think there's any way for me to really tell you how important it was to me.
Starting point is 01:11:01 I mean, we have a Stanzy in there of Matt Damon in me. It's Matt Damon and friends. It was Good Will Hunting and friends that changed my whole life. Oh. I had every episode VHS taped. I myself VHS taped, I had a color coded system, I had 31 tapes.
Starting point is 01:11:19 Oh my God, the night of the finale, I had a AP test the next morning. Couldn't care less about the AP test. Was up till like 3 a.m. watching the Letterman or whatever you guys did that night and rewinding it. Oh my God. No, it was like a once in a, who knew? There'd be an internet and then you can think about it
Starting point is 01:11:37 and it would present itself to you again. Exactly. You couldn't miss it. You could not miss it. Hence the must-see TV. If you really, if you didn't see it, you're fucked. There's never gonna be something like that again. You're absolutely fucked. Your life's over.
Starting point is 01:11:48 If your fucking timer on your VHS didn't go off as planned. Oh my God. Oh my God. Yes. That was Sopranos for me. So special. And it was funny. These people were really funny.
Starting point is 01:11:58 In anticipation of you coming, I was trying to isolate why I didn't give that show a chance. I simply didn't give that show a chance. Yeah. And I imagine it's cause I was in to isolate why I didn't give that show a chance. I simply didn't give that show a chance. And I imagine it's because I was in my 20s trying to be an actor and something about that is something maybe I wanted and I couldn't, I don't know. I have no explanation for why. Can I offer something that would have been me
Starting point is 01:12:20 had I not been on the show? Yeah. Well, if absolutely everybody loves it, it might not be for me. Thank you. You think you're different. I've got a different sense of humor. A thousand percent. That's interesting.
Starting point is 01:12:33 There's first why didn't they give it a shot, but then once it was off to the races, I could never join on late. I was too punk rock in my own mind. I was in middle school and I was trying very hard to be like everyone. Right. Everyone was watching Friends and I think it was like, I like this thing that everybody else likes.
Starting point is 01:12:49 I'm like everybody else. And I'm also going to like it. Time's a good chili. I'm going to like it the most. I'm going to know everything about it. I'm going to be perfect at liking this, which I did do. It's so true. I had the luxury of I looked like everybody.
Starting point is 01:12:59 So all I wanted to do is be different. Yeah. And Monica was different. And all she wanted to be is like everyone else. So I was like, anything anyone was doing, I was out. I still have to tell myself, you're acting like you're 12 years old right now, and it's okay to like something everyone likes.
Starting point is 01:13:14 Yeah, I only watched Everybody Loves Raymond during COVID. There you go. And then I watched Big Bang Theory and went, oh my God, that Sheldon's the best character I've ever seen in my whole life. Right. Right. There's a thing about being in the cool club that gets in your way. I don't know if it was the cool club when I was on Friends.
Starting point is 01:13:33 I wasn't watching anything. I was working and was the only one to get married and have a kid. Yeah. Season three, you had a child? Yeah. Was it? Yeah, we'd get together and watch the episodes and stuff.
Starting point is 01:13:43 And then like what you were saying about you have a kid and everything shifts, everything drops about 10 pegs on the list of priorities, because it's that transition also into being a parent. I don't transition well, so it takes up a lot of my attention. And then also, that was around the same time I started getting cast in movies, while I'm doing Friends and I'm a was around the same time I started getting cast in movies while I'm doing Friends and I'm a mother for the first time. And it was just a little too much. That's a lot.
Starting point is 01:14:12 So I wasn't watching anything. I was done with the what's groundbreaking comedy. And the other big shift for me was after 9-11, I'd be driving back from Warner Brothers. Oh, that was when driving back from Warner Brothers. Oh, that was you? Yeah, we were at Warner Brothers. And people used to stop at a stoplight and go, ah, look at me, you know. Look at you. Look at you.
Starting point is 01:14:33 Look at yourself in the mirror. I know you. It's you. I know. And after 9-11, I don't know why this always makes me want to cry too. They'd pull up and I'd look over and they're looking at me and they weren't like, eh, they just mouthed, thank you.
Starting point is 01:14:49 Yeah. Oh wow. Like very somberly. And that's when it really sunk in. I couldn't watch CNN anymore because all it was was who died. Yeah. Who was in New York? Who was near the towers? Who was in the towers?
Starting point is 01:15:04 Everyone knew someone in the towers. And I had this weird dissociated event. I was watching Will and Grace and I went, oh yeah. Oh, thank God. I went, oh wait, but it's in New York. Oh God, who did they know in the towers? And then went, oh, no, no, I'm in TV. I know they shot this before 9-11.
Starting point is 01:15:23 So it hasn't happened yet. And then I went, no, this isn't real. It will have never happened here. Yeah. And it was like, oh, thank God. Think I can go somewhere that didn't happen. And that's when any kind of comedy, snobbery, any of that melted away forever
Starting point is 01:15:47 because entertainment is important and it's providing a huge mental health service and it is important. I agree in having done some things that weren't my comedic tone and to see how appreciated there are by people and recognizing like, oh no, everyone's entitled to laugh,
Starting point is 01:16:06 everyone deserves a laugh, there's no hierarchy, there's no great comedy and bad comedy. If you make people laugh, that's it. And also, why did I wanna do this anyway? For me? No, because when people are laughing and enjoying themselves, it's something you're doing, that's what the thrill is. Sorry, keep going like trauma style,
Starting point is 01:16:26 but additionally for me is that's when I'm safe. If all the men in the room are laughing at me, no one wants to fight. No one's hitting anybody. We're at peak safety when everyone's laughing. That's the personal level too for me. Probably is hard to see it as a gift, but I think it's really hard to understand
Starting point is 01:16:47 the integration your stuff has in people's life. It's too abstract. I don't even know that it's even healthy to know it. But to be given that moment at the light, that weirdly is kind of helpful in computing what it really means. Yeah. You're not at work feeling special.
Starting point is 01:17:02 You're like, oh, let's go out and save the world tonight. No, but we were always aware out and save the world tonight. No, but we were always aware there's the task at hand. We got sort of over publicized. What is overexposed? Yeah, saturated. I couldn't think of overexposed. Yeah, that's all right, you got there.
Starting point is 01:17:16 That was a hard one. You got there pretty quickly, actually. That was a big one. You're being a little hard on yourself. It took about one second for you to get there. It should have taken. Fraction at best. You know what it is, is I think your obligation is you do want to honor those people.
Starting point is 01:17:28 And part of how you honor them is accept what they're telling you. Yes. Also, we were overexposed. Everyone was excited at the network, at the studio. We were on every talk show. And so then it just became the joke. Matthew Perry was the first one who said,
Starting point is 01:17:43 we feel like we need to get the word out that we're on. Yeah. Which was insane. Yeah. Right? And so then we were asked to do some commercial or something else, and we just went, we're so overexposed. And how are we going to fix this?
Starting point is 01:17:57 And then it was, we don't need to fix it. They're still watching the show. We just need to focus on the task at hand, which is doing this show and doing it the best we can. And the writers and producers feel the same way. And there were conversations just about, I don't know, is this getting a little too weird? You know, like with the writing,
Starting point is 01:18:19 but everyone just got refocused on. Make it good. Yeah. Don't forget what this is all about. Job. Being great at that taping. Let me just scan here. Okay.
Starting point is 01:18:29 I'm getting shaky. It's too much energy. I'm talking too much. No. I'm like convulsing. Is it the nicotine? No, she hasn't had nearly enough is my argument. Yeah, you need to steady yourself.
Starting point is 01:18:40 Well, I can't chew and talk. Yeah, you can. Yeah, do whatever, we edit. Okay, come on now. What the hell is that? I'm gonna be really Yeah, you can. Yeah, do whatever, we edit. Okay, come on now. What the hell is that? I'm gonna be really rude while you reload. I'm gonna go pee-pee, is that okay? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:18:51 Potty right there. You wanna get out of here. I wanna pee at some point. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, take it. No, go ahead. Want to go together? No. You can slow your system
Starting point is 01:18:59 so you can go together. That would be so weird. We didn't have a door on that for many, many, many years. It was wide open. So you got the door. Why do I feel like I was here before? You've never done it. Were you in Scientology?
Starting point is 01:19:12 To Arshagran. No. The guy who used to live here was a big Scientologist. And he had a podcast? No, his daughter lived up here. And she had a podcast. Yeah, she did. She had a cat podcast.
Starting point is 01:19:24 I'm just remembering doing a podcast. Yeah, she did. She had a cat podcast. I'm just remembering doing a podcast. And it was, yeah, you can use the bathroom. And it's like, this is a curtain. Maybe it's deja vu. Ours wasn't a curtain. It had nothing. Or a precognition. That's right.
Starting point is 01:19:36 Of post-cognition. Like your cosmic voice. I feel like an idiot. No! What do you mean? I do believe sometimes things just we believe that. make themselves known to you.
Starting point is 01:19:47 Obviously you resisted it for so long and this is your life. It's not a weird thing to think. It's added up to being exactly that. I mean, how do you have things happen that you can't explain and come on? That's when we talk about the sim. I think that all the time, even this.
Starting point is 01:20:01 You wanna go for real? Yeah, go to the bathroom. It's too much. I'll tuck you back in. Oh, but this. You wanna go for real? Yeah, go to the bathroom. It's too much. I'll tuck you back in. Oh, but this has to come off. Yeah, you'll take that guy off. Oh my god. I'm out of my mind.
Starting point is 01:20:13 I'm not talking for me. Are you an introvert or an extrovert? No, you're not talking enough. No, are you kidding? You're talking enough. Why are these pants out? Get your head straight in there and come out and talk more. Oh my god, that was so long.
Starting point is 01:20:27 So much pee. Did it overflow from the toilet? Sometimes I wonder if it will. Do you ever? Sometimes, especially doing this, I rarely, like that's actually a sign to you that I feel comfortable around you. Just generally I'll sit here and be miserable
Starting point is 01:20:47 and then the guest leaves and I've peed for three minutes. Where I'm like, oh my God, I cannot believe this. Wasn't that like five or 10? That was under 60 I think. Wouldn't it be funny if I thought, I think that was about 10 minutes. I would be a little nervous. Mixed with the shakiness,
Starting point is 01:21:00 we might need to get you to your brother. Oh my God. Yeah, can I just call your brother really quick? Do a little pet scan. That's so cool that he followed in the family footsteps and became a neurologist. That's very fancy. He's super smart. That's like Vosser.
Starting point is 01:21:14 Vosser. Just like Vosser. He must've gone to Vosser. Everyone at Vosser when I was there was like, yeah, I didn't get into Yale. I have just a few more questions. Oh no. Sorry about this. And then we're moving on to your new show. Oh.
Starting point is 01:21:27 Bear with me. I was like, I wonder if maybe we don't ever talk about that. No, we're gonna talk about that. No, actually, cause I love. This is just chit chat. I genuinely loved it. We like to chit chat. One question is, there are some people that get famous
Starting point is 01:21:40 and they had some training. They have some experience being the most popular person in school. And then there's introverts that get famous, and I think it's a little bit different of an experience. There's no prior experience where it's like, yeah, everywhere I go everyone wants to say hi to me. It's very foreign.
Starting point is 01:21:58 Interesting. Let's take Matthew McConaughey, who I love. He's so comfortable being famous, but guess what, he has been famous since he was born. He was Little Mr. Texas, we found out. And every girl liked him in school. He had a lot of training to be kind of adored. People are looking at him all the time.
Starting point is 01:22:15 He's hot shit. So by the time it happens, he's kind of had some practice. And then you take other people that were like, I'm hesitant to say this, but I'll give the example of Edward Norton. He was a fucking genius bookworm, and now he's the most popular guy in the world. It's a much that were like, I'm hesitant to say this, but I'll give the example of Edward Norton. He was a fucking genius bookworm, and now he's the most popular guy in the world. It's a much different new experience, I think,
Starting point is 01:22:29 for some people than others. How did that transition for you feel when all of a sudden you were like, one of the six most popular people in America? Oh, globally. Was there like dissonance and disconnect from it? Yeah, it's everything. That was the beginning of online chat stuff.
Starting point is 01:22:46 And I could actually go on a computer and read what people are saying and how they're criticizing, well, two of the three girls are cute. You know, like a lot of that stuff too. And went, oh, okay, this won't help me. Yeah. Be good on the show.
Starting point is 01:23:04 So I just immediately stopped. You were smart enough to know I'm not looking at that. Cause there were some good things too that I didn't necessarily agree with. Right. Just rationally thought none of this needs to be taken to heart or too seriously. Very nice when people appreciate what I do.
Starting point is 01:23:26 Not everyone will. Okay. That was pretty intact. Yeah. It takes some people decades to come to that. Oh yeah. Or never. I do not need to know what people think.
Starting point is 01:23:36 In AA we say what people think of you is none of your business. That's such a great saying. It's kind of true. It is none of my business. But what I have found is it depends on mood isn't even the right word. It's like a frame of mind and I couldn't even define what that frame of mind is. But I can watch the same thing and think that was funny. Oh, good. And then another day, the same thing and say, why did I think that was good? How have you been getting away?
Starting point is 01:24:06 Oh, you fraud. With doing this for so long. Oh my God. Yeah. Right, it's the exact same footage. Yeah, again, it has nothing to do with what you've done. It's everything to do with what you feel. Well, also if I'm doing a character
Starting point is 01:24:21 and I see a glimpse of me, and mostly there's a lot of me and everything I do Yeah, I can tell the difference if I watch the comeback. I have no problem watching that. That's a different human being from me I'm proud of it. It's all good friends. Sometimes like oh you just did a voice basically that wasn't acting I wasn't anything. It was just like, I don't know, what? And then I don't want to shit on it because people like it. And I'm not saying you're an idiot for liking it or anything. It's just for me, what I try to do is out of respect, not even just for me,
Starting point is 01:25:01 but for people who do like that. Honoring the whole thing. so can you forgive yourself? You didn't think you were so great at the acting? It was good enough for a lot of people? And could you just do that? Can you forgive yourself is like. And then the answer is, well, of course I can. It's so hard though to forgive yourself, isn't it?
Starting point is 01:25:20 But don't you forgive everyone? I mean, performance wise, someone will have just a moment in a performance yourself, isn't it? But don't you forgive everyone, I mean, performance wise. Someone will have just a moment in a performance and I'll go, oh, well, I forgive it because the rest of it is so great. Oh my God. Yep. I am ultra aware of those things. The big thing for me now is, I don't even know if I should say it out loud. Of course you should. Can I forgive myself for not having some work done on that face? Can I forgive myself for not having some work done on that face?
Starting point is 01:25:46 Can I forgive myself for getting older and not doing something about it? Cause I watch him like, they've got a jawline. Am I supposed to have a jawline? Did I do this wrong? Like even into my sixties, that thing that comes up is, wait, should I, am I supposed to, are you allowed? Is everyone but me doing this?
Starting point is 01:26:06 That's the thought I have. Everyone but me seems to be doing this. So, should I? Am I allowed not to? Or is it gonna be so off putting, it's gonna affect people's experience? Interesting. Watching me.
Starting point is 01:26:22 I'm trying to be practical about it because clearly I haven't. Oh my God, here we go. I think you look be practical about it because clearly I haven't. Oh my God, here we go. I think you look exquisite. You look exquisite. Thanks. Again, call your husband, let's go to the bathroom. Meet me in the bathroom.
Starting point is 01:26:33 Well, he won't let me do anything. He likes your face, fuzz your face. He won't let me. It's so crazy how we see ourselves and how other people see us. Cause obviously we look at you and I'm with your husband. I'm like, don't mess with it. It's great. But I also, I look in the mirror and I'm like, okay, I did.
Starting point is 01:26:47 I got chin filler. You start looking and you're like, okay, I think I can start. Just rearrange this a little bit. And then you do it and you're like, I like it. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Well, I did get Botox. Yeah, sure.
Starting point is 01:27:00 At age 60. At 60 for the first time. I went to the doctor and he's like, wait a minute. I've never checked the box the first time. I went to the doctor and he's like, wait a minute, I've never checked the box for first time in LA. You're unique. And then I hear unique is a euphemism for idiot. Okay, sure.
Starting point is 01:27:16 But I really relate to like this bizarre zone your brain goes into where you go, in some weird way, am I not being professional? Yes. I signed up to be a fucking actor. I gotta be pleasing to people to look at. Do I have an obligation? Why am I acting like that's not part of my job,
Starting point is 01:27:33 that I'm above this? And I look at peers and I go, yeah, they're doing what you're supposed to do. It's a very entangled experience. Well, another part of me wants people to then just get used to me older. Of course. That's all.
Starting point is 01:27:47 I was gonna say, do you have pride? On the other end of it is pride. I haven't done anything, guys. That's cool. I'm walking through this. It's not pride. Because I don't judge anyone for doing it. I get it.
Starting point is 01:27:58 And a lot of people look fantastic. But I also am afraid that if it doesn't heal right. Yeah, it's scary. I look older and altered. And not like you. Yeah. Older and fucked up. I think it's more complicated than people give it credit. They're just evaluating it in terms of vanity,
Starting point is 01:28:17 which is fair, some of it's vanity, but some of it's also like, you know, you do certain things. If you're a pilot, you get lasik. There's things that people do. And you have this occupation. Your face is the job. But what's the obligation for people to see us as young? Why is that owned?
Starting point is 01:28:33 It's maintained. Interesting. Because once there's work that is not trying to make you look 20, AI can do that for me. But it's just making you look looked after, cared for, kept up. I've got some stuff in my fridge. Let's play with some injections before you go.
Starting point is 01:28:51 Yeah, injections are the safest thing to do. I'm gonna give you some injections and then give you a tattoo. I think the surgery. When your husband says, that was the podcast, you go, I don't know what happened. I don't know what happened.
Starting point is 01:29:01 I'm a new person. He's like, what's going on with your jaw? It felt like it was okay for some reason. I think it's his height. I just trusted him. I have no other explanation than he's tall. He's very commanding. Okay, another question I had is,
Starting point is 01:29:19 when it became so publicized how much money you guys were making, did you witness any impact on your interpersonal relationships and that being so public, was there fallout from that? So again, I think that's another one that's like, it's probably more complicated than people would fantasize about.
Starting point is 01:29:36 Family and friends, no. I think it was always if you're gonna be an actor, the hope is that you make enough. To not do another job. And this was like, the show's really good if you're gonna be an actor, the hope is that you make enough. To not do another job. And this was like, the show's really good and you're good, but this is winning a lottery. That's how it was sort of looked at,
Starting point is 01:29:54 but you mean like asking for money and doing stuff. If it did, I'm not remembering. Yeah, it wasn't a big thing. Or that's what's not registering to me. The only, I don't remember what I was even going to say. Cause I thought of one thing, then another thing, knocked it out. And then, but there was something, damn.
Starting point is 01:30:12 Maybe on your next trip. Okay. Here you go. I know what it was. Okay. The thing is, I think for all of us, and especially at that time, right? It's like 20 years ago.
Starting point is 01:30:21 That's when it was money being. The last two years. Yeah. That it's, don't want people to know that. And for me, the biggest impact was at my son's schools, as he was getting older, our society was moving into what's privileged class, where the other people in his school had assumptions
Starting point is 01:30:41 about his family based on what's been known. Public knowledge, yeah. You guys fly private to Aspen on Christmas. Right. And that's that. Not once, but right. And also what they didn't know was that some of their other classmates' families were billionaires.
Starting point is 01:30:58 Billionaires. Yeah, right, right. But it's not known. My son's getting a lot of shit for being privileged. And then it was, hey, cool. I thought you'd get a new car. You got the old soccer mom car. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:31:12 I wonder if you felt a discernible lack of compassion towards you at any point. Cause you were just known to have all this money. Who the fuck's gonna ever feel bad for you again, because you have all this money. Sure. And I mean, I don't need anyone feeling bad for me. Let's say that.
Starting point is 01:31:26 Well, I like compassion. Okay. Yeah, when I'm going through a hard time, the people that I've loved and been there for, I would want them to be there for me. You're still a person. Yes, oh, I know what you're saying. Sometimes there's been hints of, you know,
Starting point is 01:31:39 if there's a stressful time around something personal, sometimes I feel a whisper of, well. But also you're rich. You can afford to do this. Buy your way out of this problem. Yeah. To buy your way out of this emotional problem.
Starting point is 01:31:53 This problem with your husband, have you thought about giving him a couple million dollars so that makes it go away? And then it's just, of course, that's what's plaguing you right now. Maybe I need to have a little more empathy about that. But the only time ever I did a Who Do You Think You Are, because I produced the show and I was the first one to shoot it.
Starting point is 01:32:11 And I'm in Belarus and learning about how my family was killed by death squads during the Holocaust. Your dad's grandmother, your great-great-grandmother. Great grandmother and kids and family and whole town. And so I'm learning about that and I'm talking to this old woman who had been there. She's not Jewish. That's why she survived. And I'm just surrounded by this whole darkness of it and getting slightly angry.
Starting point is 01:32:38 So this woman in between shooting in Russian and she just said, you're from America? Yeah. You have nice teeth. And I went, yeah. She didn't have any teeth at all in her head. I said, yeah. And she said, you're rich? Oh boy.
Starting point is 01:32:53 And I said, yes, yes I am. And I was so- It's kind of undeniable. Yes I am. Yeah. I'm so proud of that at this moment. Yes. Because all these people were murdered
Starting point is 01:33:06 and then my grandmother, they came over, they had nothing. And you're still here. Here you are and you're rich. And that. Yes. It was the only time in my life that I felt like, yes, I'm rich. Yes. I love that.
Starting point is 01:33:21 A thousand percent. I went to Dachau with my mother when I was 16. We toured Dachau. And I really recommend everyone have that experience because talk about the stuff we can't figure out or we don't understand really what's going on. To stand someplace where it is still so physically accessible that the weight is so palpable is fucking weird.
Starting point is 01:33:43 I've never had an experience anywhere else in my life like it were after an hour there, you're like, oh my God, I gotta get the fuck out of here. I've never been, I don't know if I can handle it. Yeah. And I could barely handle that, but I was really surprised by my reaction to being around someone who survived it,
Starting point is 01:34:01 then later came back and placed a monument where the mass grave was. I was standing there and thinking, God, all these people were killed. And then there were the people who were shooting who have to have had moments later on where they went, what did I do? I'm sure a lot of them just went Jews, they had it coming. But how many lives were ruined on all sides? It's convenient to think of that group of people, some other group of people that were evil and stuff.
Starting point is 01:34:34 They were normal people that were in a system and they played their role. And yeah, I imagine of course there's some monsters that were like, we didn't get enough. And then I think more often people were like, now there's a new reality and now I see it. And what the fuck happened? And I was under the spell of this.
Starting point is 01:34:49 Even if for like five minutes when that veil is lifted, it's torture. And then they can go back and tell themselves the same story to get through it. And these weren't Nazis either necessarily. A lot of times it was local police who were happy to help. Anyway, sorry, we just got there. My last friend's question. Made a dinner party. No. of times it was local police who were happy to help. Anyway, sorry, we just got there. My last friend's question.
Starting point is 01:35:06 You see, made a dinner party. No. Isn't it funny? We like this part. That's what we'd like to do. Yeah, it's almost sadistic, but we like this part. My last, it's kind of related. I only bring it up because I wasn't on a cultural phenom, but I was on Parenthood for six years.
Starting point is 01:35:21 Yeah. And I fucking love those people so much. And I hadn't seen the show, I guess, in eight years or whatever it was, and my daughters, I don't know, they wanted to see it or I suggested it, but we watched it on a vacation last year. From the second it started, the title sequence,
Starting point is 01:35:39 I started crying. And it was the most cathartic, wonderful. I got to experience it in a way I almost couldn't when I was doing it. I've heard you say a couple of times that you were unable to watch Friends. Yeah, to watch myself. Well, what I really liked is I have a bit of the same fear,
Starting point is 01:35:56 which is like, I mostly just don't wanna get caught watching myself. Well, there's that too. Yeah, that's an element of it. What the hell? It's like so humiliating. So you didn't watch it? I didn't.
Starting point is 01:36:06 First couple seasons, we'd go to Courtney's and watch it every Wednesday, every Thursday night. I almost said the wrong night. Yeah, must see. Must see Wednesdays. I was just making up a word. It's like, it's every week, every, I don't know. Just make up a word.
Starting point is 01:36:18 Every Saturday morning we'd get together. As a day. Watch the show every Saturday morning. For example, every Wednesday, whenever it was on, I don't know. Whatever, no one remembers. Thursday night. We'd watch it every week and then too busy
Starting point is 01:36:29 and I was pregnant. I don't know, I just stopped watching and there are episodes I've never seen. Wow. And it's almost impossible to avoid. If any show is on at all times of the day. In fact, one of the only fights I ever got in when I was still dating Kristen,
Starting point is 01:36:42 we didn't live together yet. I went to her house, this is back when a DVR only had like 20 hours of storage. And I like go to watch some show we had and she had all these roommates. And someone had recorded and put a season's pass on friends. And I'm yelling in the house, I'm like, whoever put this on the DVR, you don't need to,
Starting point is 01:37:00 just turn the TV on, it's on. You don't need to record it, it's literally on all day. And then Amy Hansen, our sweetest friend, came around the corner and she goes. And a true angel. An angel, she goes, I'm sorry. And I go, you were doing it, you should definitely keep recording,
Starting point is 01:37:16 I felt so terrible. Yeah, that's the worst thing you've ever done. But anyways, you can't even avoid that, you can't go channel surfing and not see it. Mm-hmm. It's so comforting. That's right. Yeah, but you started watching it again. Well, when Matthew passed away, I started watching.
Starting point is 01:37:29 I mean, there were marathons, and it was part of the process for me. And boy, I really appreciated it and how fun, well, I knew he was funny, always, anyway. Yeah, Conan knows the most. Well. Humiliated. Yeah, for no other reason than to torture Conan. Right, anyway. Yeah, Conan knows the most. Well. Humiliated.
Starting point is 01:37:45 For no other reason than to torture Conan. Right, right. But he just was so funny and I'm like, God, LeBlanc is hilarious. Oh, Jennifer, my God, that's so good. Yeah. Come on, Courtney, how were you never nominated for an Emmy? That's insane. And Schwimmer, yes, oh my God, come on.
Starting point is 01:38:04 It was just this whole appreciation. I went, I gotta watch all of them. Yeah. Did you cry when you're watching it? I cried when there was a marathon on and I caught, I mean, I'm not watching it like on max from season one. I tried, I don't know if I can do season one, but maybe season two or three.
Starting point is 01:38:22 My husband's like, can we watch and watch it? They're like, okay. And then something about me was like, I can't. You feel like it's too self-indulgent? Yeah, but I feel like I need to watch all of them. So anyway, the episode where Phoebe got married is on and I'm watching it and I got so caught up that I cried watching her, cause she looked so happy watching her because she looked so happy.
Starting point is 01:38:46 Yeah, she was so happy. She had such a real smile. She was just, I've never seen Phoebe that happy. You could remove yourself. It's she. Yeah. It's for sure, she. It's for sure, sure, she.
Starting point is 01:38:59 It's certainly she. She sells seashells by the she shore. Who wouldn't be happy marrying Paul Rudd? Well, and then there's that. But it really touched me. I was so happy for her. I'm glad you got that moment. That's what everyone felt that whole series is like,
Starting point is 01:39:12 we know them, we love them. But did you cry when she got married? I cried so much. I was like, I know them. They're my friends. They're saving me from feeling lonely. That one glimpse you got is what people had for 10 years. So lucky for us and grateful to you guys for that.
Starting point is 01:39:31 So I knew him through sobriety. That's where I start chewing my gum. Yeah, yeah. This is gum time. This is where I need my nicotine. Yeah, yeah. Look, what us addicts put everyone that love us through is rough.
Starting point is 01:39:44 Yeah. If I were you, I would wanna see the version, like let's put it this way, and I can compare, put everyone that love us through is rough. If I were you, I would want to see the version, like let's put it this way, and I can compare, I think it's a good comparison, cancer. So my father, he had a lot of health issues towards the end, and there's a whole decade of his life he was really on the decline. When I've dreams about him,
Starting point is 01:39:58 I have dreams about him in his like 40s. I want to see his vibrant, virile self, and I miss it so much. And I guess I think if I loved an addict and I had to see his vibrant, virile self, and I miss it so much. And I guess I think if I loved an addict and I had to see the whole thing, I would be grateful to get to go back and see it before it had taken its toll. Right.
Starting point is 01:40:16 I, this'll sound odd, am more comforted that he was happy the day he died. He got to die happy. And to me, that was a gift. It could have gone a much different way. Yeah. I think people, they have a category addict.
Starting point is 01:40:37 It's really incomplete. It's a spectrum. I've loved people in the program that I could recognize, oh, they got it worse than me. And I've had friends in the program that I could recognize, they got it worse than me. And I've had friends in AA where I would say, the weight of the world is heavier on your shoulders than it is on mine. And it's pretty heavy on mine.
Starting point is 01:40:54 And I can see it and feel it and it's heartbreaking and I don't envy you. And I have a lot of compassion because you really are dealing with more than I am and I can feel it. I'm sad for that. Yeah, it is complicated. It is, yeah.
Starting point is 01:41:07 But I loved that Matthew I first met and the one at the end. Cause God love him. This is you and I love you. Yeah, I accept that this is you. Yeah, I understand. And so did he. I didn't even watch the show
Starting point is 01:41:20 but I got to be around him a lot. And he has a lot of quotes I keep with me. One of them is, I've spent my whole life making everyone like me. I haven't really asked myself what I like. He's like, oh, I can relate to that. Yes. I thought the sentence was gonna finish a different way.
Starting point is 01:41:35 Oh, you did. I've spent so much of my life making everybody around me like me. And no time making myself like me. Yeah. It's the same thing, really. Not asking yourself what you like is very similar to, you haven't figured out what you like
Starting point is 01:41:48 and you're not trying to make yourself like yourself. But it's not like, what do you like about yourself? It's accept yourself, love yourself. That was to me the whole thing about, fame isn't gonna give you that. Just cause everyone else is loving you. It weirdly compounds it and then makes you hopeless. Cause the thing that was gonna give you that. Just cause everyone else is loving you. It weirdly compounds it and it makes you hopeless cause the thing that was gonna make you love yourself
Starting point is 01:42:09 didn't work and now we're out of options. It exacerbates it, but the answer is simply, you're not only allowed to love yourself, you've got to. It's like require. You must, yeah. You're all you've got. Ultimately, it's so nice that people love you, but it doesn't work if you don't love you.
Starting point is 01:42:28 It can work temporarily for me. Okay, your show, No Good Deed. I'm not blowing smoke up your ass. It's fantastic. I'm gonna add to you. You've seen it? Yes, I watched today. A while I was working out, I watched three episodes.
Starting point is 01:42:39 Can't wait to watch it. You're gonna fucking love it, Monica. Really? Yes, because it's very, and I don't know if you'll agree with this comparison, it's weirdly very murders in the building. Ooh. Oh, interesting. Wow.
Starting point is 01:42:53 Exciting. It's great. So Liz Feldman and I were in the Sunday company together. Oh my God. It all goes back to the groundlings every time. It circles back. All roads lead back. Wow. Did she create it?
Starting point is 01:43:06 She created it. She had also created Dead to Me. Which was Christine Applegate, Linda Cardellini. Had you known her prior to this? No, I was just told, so we have an offer for you to do this Netflix show. Interesting. Tell me more.
Starting point is 01:43:21 It's limited series, which you can do, cause I was committed to something else at the time. I went, okay. It's Liz Feldman who did, I said, Dead to Me. You knew. I know. Well, this sounds like a yes. Well, I'll tell you a little more.
Starting point is 01:43:35 You'll be married to Ray Romano. Well, of course, yes. Yeah. He's such a good actor. So again, back to Parenthood, that's where he did his first kind of dramatic work. He was awesome. I got to direct him in an episode.
Starting point is 01:43:48 I loved Parenthood. Oh, you did? I saw every one of them. Oh my goodness, okay. You were keeping that very tight. I should have said that before. No, it's probably best. There wasn't a moment.
Starting point is 01:43:56 Oh, there were a lot of moments. Remember I told you I rewatched the whole thing and I cried and you go, oh yeah, it was really good. I was going to and then I forgot. Remember how I kept saying, there's something I wanna say and I can't remember what it is? That's what it was,
Starting point is 01:44:06 that you're a super fan of Parenthood. But yeah, he was incredible on Parenthood, right? Yes. Heartbreaking. He's so good. I'll add, what a dude. He has no ego to walk into Parenthood season, whatever it was.
Starting point is 01:44:19 Yes. That's fucking hard. You were on a show that had your name in the title. Which was your whole story. Yeah, and then you walk in and you're like 23rd on the call sheet this morning and you can't wait to act. Yes. Did you see that Netflix movie, him and Mark Duplass?
Starting point is 01:44:34 I can't remember it was called because the name of it has nothing to do with what it was about. Thank you, Paddleton. Oh, maybe that was someone's name, but to me that has nothing to do with what it was about. And that was just world-changing to me. He's incredible.
Starting point is 01:44:51 He's almost a Duval, like he's just alive there. And it's real. Effortless. So I was thrilled. You have such rhythm. Oh, good. Oh, big time. Yay.
Starting point is 01:45:01 And you have a lot of heavy lifting. You should see the list because you don't get sent screeners and get told what's embargoed. But the list of things I can't say is comical. I've never seen a list so long. Oh, because spoilers. But I think we can say from the get-go,
Starting point is 01:45:14 you and Ray Romano are married, you're empty nesters, and you're gonna sell this terrific house. It's a very LA story because this has happened to a lot of people where you accidentally end up with a house that's worth like $5 million. And they're in this situation,
Starting point is 01:45:27 and they're gonna sell the house, and it's a great device. You meet all these characters that are coming in to tour the house, and they all want it. And by the way, the house is so great. It made me want the house so bad. Me too.
Starting point is 01:45:40 It's perfectly beautiful. That was a set on two stages. The first floor is on one stage, second floor is on another stage. But you have heavy lifting without giving anything away. So you're selling the house, is that all we can say? And there's some secrets. Okay.
Starting point is 01:45:53 There's a lot of secrets. There's stuff going on. It's my favorite kind of story where it's unraveling. You're just two people selling a house, you're having a great, then this weird thing happens, and this happens, and this happens, these people are weird. And all this stuff is getting kind of peeled back. In every episode you're having a great, then this weird thing happens, and this happens, and this happens, these people are weird. And all this stuff is getting kind of peeled back
Starting point is 01:46:07 in every episode, you're like, oh, okay. But first and foremost, and this is the thing I was saying about you living in your house for so long, I can really relate to, without knowing anything else, just the notion of handing over this place that has given you almost all of your most beautiful memories is such a bizarre notion. When I think about our own house right now
Starting point is 01:46:27 and like all the memories we're having with these little kids, it's a very weird thing to do. To me, the woman I'm playing has gotta be unstable because that's nothing like me. You could walk away from your house of 27 years right now and be fine. Wow, you're a psychopath. Not fine, but home are the people you're with.
Starting point is 01:46:45 That's true. And you claim a space. So wherever we live next, I'll claim it. It'll be ours, it's fine. Here's the weird thing that caught me by surprise. My brother and sister and I found out that our house that we grew up in in Tarzana was for sale and there was an open house.
Starting point is 01:47:01 And let's just go. And the three of us went to the house and I thought I can afford to buy it. I think, should I just buy it? Right, of course. I should just buy it. I want it back. I think I should buy it.
Starting point is 01:47:12 Yeah, yeah. I must buy it. Do you buy it? No. Oh. Cause at first it was like, I want it back. We were having so much fun. It's like, yes, oh my God.
Starting point is 01:47:20 And that's the same. And remember we blank and we did that. And oh, remember the time I got thrown across the room and yeah. It just got really dark. You're like, yeah. Come to the belt. Ah. This is where dad used to hang his belt.
Starting point is 01:47:33 We were having the best time, but by the time we were sort of done touring it. You were over it. I was done. This is for someone else's memories. Also, what you think you're buying is a teleport device. Back to those fun memories. I discovered this in the weirdest way with Nintendo.
Starting point is 01:47:49 So I had Nintendo in seventh grade. It's the only year I ever played video games. I had such a fun year with my friends playing these new video games. And then as an adult eBay came around and I was like, oh, I could get a Nintendo and all those old games. And I ordered all the stuff and it came and I hooked it up to my TV.
Starting point is 01:48:04 I couldn't figure out why it wasn't giving me anything. And I realized, it's not the game I missed, it's seventh grade I missed. It's like my friends and I doing the thing, and I think I can get it back by having this object. It's what you cared about while you were playing that game. But truly, the show's fucking fantastic.
Starting point is 01:48:22 That's great. I don't have objectivity. I watched the first one and immediately forgot I was in it and when I can't wait to see the next one. So that to me was a great sign. That's a huge sign. Yeah. By the way, blew through your wife's show.
Starting point is 01:48:36 Who didn't? Everyone did. Literally everyone. You know who mostly blew through it? Dads. Really? Isn't that inexplicable? That's who we hear most from. That's fantastic, cause it's a romantic. mostly blew through it, dads. Really? Isn't that inexplicable?
Starting point is 01:48:45 That's who we hear most from. That's fantastic, cause it's a romantic comedy. It's kind of encouraging. That is the best news I've ever heard. I mean, truly, right? My husband loved it. Well, there you go. Can we watch more of that?
Starting point is 01:49:01 It's like, yeah. That's not what he sounds like. I don't know who I just did. What does he sound like? You must be able to do a great impersonation of him. No, I wouldn't mind watching more of that one. It's okay. He's foreign. No, I like it. He's French. Oh my God.
Starting point is 01:49:08 Does he make love to you so good? Very attractive. That is very attractive. My only regret in life sexually is that I didn't make love to a French woman. Okay. Cause I have a whole, no. I think this is worth exploring.
Starting point is 01:49:21 I bet French women probably instruct. Oh, someone's calling. Okay, that's you going, you're so smart. I'm like, oh, I'm not gonna do that. I'm not gonna do woman. Okay, well call that no. No, I think this is worth exploring. French women probably instruct. Oh, someone's calling to tell me. You're supposed to be somewhere else. Okay, listen, I am so sorry. I'm sorry, this was really too long. What time is it?
Starting point is 01:49:36 Nah, it's fine. Okay, you sure? I don't think it's fine. It's my publicist. Of course. How'd that go? Why haven't you left yet? It can't still be going on.
Starting point is 01:49:44 Come on. You gotta go. Wrap it up. Okay, Lisa, what a fucking joy. Yeah, this was nice. Our first friend. Yeah. That's a big deal.
Starting point is 01:49:54 Am I? Yeah. We had David Schwimmer, and I'll tell you our funny joke. He had to cancel because he had an ear infection, and Robbie said he had Schwimmer's ear. Ha ha! That's hilarious. Ha ha! That's hilarious.
Starting point is 01:50:07 It's really good. That's so good. Yeah. Oh shoot. You gotta respect the fact that- He's so great. But you are the, but like you're the best one. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:50:17 So we're glad to have you. No, I'm not. Oh, I can't wait for you to meet everybody. But this was such a treat. It was. Thank you so much for spending so much time with us. Everyone watch No Good Deed, 12, 12, 24. I know you don't care numerically.
Starting point is 01:50:31 What could be better? 12 plus 12 is 24. Oh, 24, 24. We like that. 48. Everyone watch No Good Deed. It's absolutely fantastic. Everyone's fantastic on it and it's perfectly written
Starting point is 01:50:42 and the score is impeccable. 12, 12, 24. Thank you, Lisa Kudrow. Thank you. He is an armchair expert, but he makes mistakes all the time. Thank God Monica's here. She's gotta let him have the facts. It's 11-11. Oh, okay. Hold on. I really wanna think on this. Did you have one? Yeah. Oh wow, I wanna know so bad. Don't you wanna know? Yeah, but.
Starting point is 01:51:11 You're not allowed to know other people's wishes. No. That's a weird part of wish culture. Yeah. Why is it that telling someone your wish would be a wish? Because you're not allowed to know other people's wishes. Yeah. Why is it that telling someone your wish would be a wish?
Starting point is 01:51:20 Because you're not allowed to know other people's wishes. Yeah. Why is it that telling someone your wish would be a wish? Because you're not allowed to know other people's wishes. Yeah. Why is it that telling someone your wish would be a wish? Because you're not allowed to know other people's wishes. No. That's a weird part of wish culture. Yeah. Why is it that telling someone your wish would make it not come true?
Starting point is 01:51:29 It's superstitious. I know, but why? What's the logic behind it Monica? Why are you taking your shoes off? Trying something new. Do you do multiple wishes in one minute or do you just do the one? You go several.
Starting point is 01:51:42 I do as many as I can. Oh my God, that's a great idea. I might switch to that. It's a little panicky. And do you, let me ask you this. Do you want to tell me your wish? Is that another part of it? Like I wanna know it.
Starting point is 01:51:55 My hunch is you wanna tell me. No, not really. Oh. Okay, great. They're pretty basic. Like my wishes are very similar to my prayers. Great hair, great skin. Can we pause for a second?
Starting point is 01:52:09 There's a board issue. Oh, wonderful. What's a board issue? He's bored. He was telling us that he's bored. I said we need to top it. He should have a, like some kind of button where he's back there and he's like, bar it's boring.
Starting point is 01:52:25 Click. Does this mean we're recording or not? I'm probably not. No, I hope so. Cause 1111 is a really important. I mean, I have a backup recording and theory should be working, but on the computer it's not registering for some reason.
Starting point is 01:52:37 So. Interesting. I feel like Rob, your wish should have been that there was no technical problems. Wouldn't it be such a sad wish for Rob? It's just, it's one of them. We were free to like wanna ride a unicorn on a- That was yours? Snow cap mountain.
Starting point is 01:52:54 And Rob's gonna be like, please no technical glitches. Well mine, somewhat mine are- Work related? Often, yeah. Yeah, same. I guess you're right. Go ahead, Rob, make your wishes about technical proficiency. It's working, I don't know what that was, but.
Starting point is 01:53:10 It's weird, okay, the wish came true. I bet the computer made a wish on 1111, which is like, I wish I could stop computing. Oh. And then its wish came true, then Rob was like, bullshit. His overrides the computer's wish. You don't get wishes, you're a computer.
Starting point is 01:53:26 What do you think the robot would wish for? To be a boy. Oh, I forgot. Yeah, his wish is right on his sleeve. He wears his wish on his sleeve. Oh. He's so cute. How do you think he's?
Starting point is 01:53:40 It's 11, 11. Time to make my wish once again. I wish I was a boy. I never tire of making this wish. Do you think he's feeling a little uncomf with? AI? Yes, and chat GPT and like meta glasses. I'm excited for AI.
Starting point is 01:54:06 They will be superior to me. I will seem so charming as if I'm a flawed human being. Oh, that's very, and that's an interesting take. Glass half full. Yeah, he's very optimistic. He is, he'll seem like a clumsy dum-dum. Yeah. Which is very much what a boy is.
Starting point is 01:54:22 Right. So very boy-like. Okay. Yeah. I like that. How was your fitting? It was nice. It was. We're what a boy is. It's a very boy-like. Okay, I like that. How was your fitting? It was nice. It was. We're shooting a commercial tomorrow. Yeah, it's very exciting.
Starting point is 01:54:30 Co-stars. I know, it's very fun. It is fun. We shot a commercial once before together, a very long time ago for the city of Los Angeles. That is right. The state of California or the city of Los Angeles, I don't know.
Starting point is 01:54:44 California tourism, I believe. And we were up at the city of Los Angeles, I don't know. California tourism, I believe. And we were up at the observatory, ding, ding, ding, when I was about to, I was gonna tell you what I just did this morning, but that'll put on pause. What's your biggest memory from that California tourism shoot we did together?
Starting point is 01:54:59 Well, I was wearing like a really specific dress. And? Christian said. Yeah, that's my number one memory. So we work with a guy all the time. Yep. And he, he saw, he got. Saw me in a new light.
Starting point is 01:55:15 He saw you in a whole new light. He was so shook. It was hilarious. Well, understandably, because especially up until that point, I was a little assistant running around in sweatpants. I was gonna say, you were in your Pangaea phase or just prior. You were in- It was before Pangaea. Yeah, but it was like always bedtime look.
Starting point is 01:55:38 Not really. I mean, when I would show up to the house, I'd look cute, but everyone saw me. You know, it's all very interesting, actually. This is psychologically interesting. Go on house, I'd look cute, but everyone saw me, you know, it's all very interesting. Actually, this is psychologically interesting. When I was an assistant, I liked fashion the same amount. That hasn't changed. Correct. But I think when I was an assistant,
Starting point is 01:55:55 no one thought that or, you know, they were just like, oh, she's just like a little girl and she gets groceries and she eats chicken nuggets. Dino nuggets. I'm gonna challenge that from a guy's perspective. We don't have a status thing. If we see a hot woman, it's not like we're like, ooh, she's the janitor. We don't think that way.
Starting point is 01:56:22 We just go, ooh, hot. I don't even think about it. I'm just like looking at them and I go either, Aruga. No. Yep. Aruga. Don't do that. That's a cartoon noise from Bugs Bunny. It's okay.
Starting point is 01:56:34 But do you, some people really do it. No, that's not even a cat call. Even the worst guy is not yelling out his window, Aruga. Well. Now there's other bands. Yeah, someone yelled at me the other day and it was awful. I'm gonna, this is a brag. I did yell at two guys.
Starting point is 01:56:50 I was at a crosswalk and there were two dudes in a truck and this gal was at the corner and they started hustling and I got involved. You did? Yeah, yeah. What'd you say? I'm not gonna, I don't like when I show that side of myself. You've seen that side of me. Well, did you say a slander?
Starting point is 01:57:04 I was like, hey, motherfuckers, have some fucking, you know. Respect? Some respect, yeah, have some manners. Shut the fuck, like, you know. I like it. I kinda snap, like, get ahold of yourself. You're acting like a couple of fucking dogs. Wow, you're so mixed, Bessie.
Starting point is 01:57:20 Tell me more. I'm a human being who's attracted to people. I to people. It's just what you do with that attraction. I know that. I'm glad you said that. And that's why I've chosen a Aruga because I feel like that is a playful, cartoony way. I'm glad you did that. Now if I went, boy, that's rough.
Starting point is 01:57:38 That says I have a boner. The other one says I have an old timey horn somewhere on me. Okay. Right? Yeah, that's true. Aruga. Okay. Now I like that you did that. Okay. Right? Yeah, that's true. Oh, okay. Now I like that you did that.
Starting point is 01:57:47 Okay. I bet that woman felt protected. And so that's nice. Yeah, I hope she did. Was it Kristen? No. No, no, no. I was exercising, someone else was in an exercise outfit.
Starting point is 01:58:01 These two guys were letting it rip. I see. I didn't think that was cool. That's really nice. But I am making a decision in that moment. There's two guys. Yeah. They might hop out of the truck. So I got it, like there's a lot of thin slicing going on.
Starting point is 01:58:13 I'm like, I'm gonna tell these guys, shut the fuck up, this is crazy. Yeah. There's two of them. They're a light, maybe they're gonna get out. Okay, I guess I'm up for that. Yeah. And then I go, I'm up for that.
Starting point is 01:58:22 That's the part I don't like, cause I don't want you to get injured. But I also like that you protected. This is the problem with life in the world and the planet. It's a messy fucking place. Sometimes a bad decision is mildly better than the other thing it's corrected. Yes, that's right.
Starting point is 01:58:39 That's true. Yeah, one of the biggest memories I have in my life is- Christian noticing. No. No. Giving an arugula. It's also funny though, because I was wearing like a very sparkly dress,
Starting point is 01:58:55 kind of like a ridiculous looking dress. I didn't pick it. And so for that to be the thing- Well, well you can see this though. Do you think your dress, and now it's changed yet again, but do you think your dress evolved from when we first met you? Because I think it did.
Starting point is 01:59:14 That's what I'm trying to say. I don't know. I mean, look, in some ways, yes, because my financial situation has changed. But the- I think your confidence situation changed a bit too. Oh, sure. I think you felt more comfortable being
Starting point is 01:59:30 who you are, what you have. Yeah, but then the more oversized I get. See, now that's what I'm saying. Then it pivoted again. Now you're like, I'm in a sleeping bag. Yeah, it's so cute. Yeah, I don't know. But I just, I mean, he had never seen me in a dress
Starting point is 01:59:47 and then he'd also never seen me in full glam. That was also probably part of it. I was in heels. It was a look, but that was a fun commercial. It took him by storm. Yeah, that was funny. Okay, but- I'm glad we have the same memory of it.
Starting point is 01:59:59 I only do because you, he said it to you. Of course. And then you, of course, repeat, you passed along the compliment. Always said it to you. Of course. And then you of course repeat, you passed along the compliment. Always want you to know. Yeah, and I think you mentioned it a few times and so that was my last. I really wanted to sink in.
Starting point is 02:00:15 Yeah. I'm gonna add Kristen's a handsome man. Very. Yeah, very handsome man. Okay, but a memory I have, I was at a light, I think I've talked about this before, but I was at a light, it was red. It had a no turn on red sign. Right.
Starting point is 02:00:31 And there was someone behind me and he was honking. And I was not gonna move. Yeah, you won't be peer pressured. Yeah, but it was getting like aggressive. And then there was a man on the street. Yeah. And he like looked at the guy and was like, it's not, it's not, she can't go.
Starting point is 02:00:49 Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And I loved it. Yeah, we have a diminished role in this world, but one of the roles is to keep the younger cuckooer versions of ourselves in check out in public. They wanna freak out in their house like Tonka, go nuts, but when you enter society, you gotta tighten it up. Yeah, I think that is a good thing for men
Starting point is 02:01:10 to do for other men. Yeah, yeah. Okay, now the reason I was just at the observatory. Oh. I'm trying, this is a New Year's resolution that I started last week. Okay. I wanna be able to ride my bicycle,
Starting point is 02:01:23 my cute road bike I told you about that's green and yellow. A lot of people ask me to post pictures and I need to. So I did it for the first time, I guess, four days ago on the break, I rode from here and my thought was, I'm gonna ride as far up the hill as I can get. And then, hold on. And then not up the hiking trail. Oh, that's what I'm asking, okay.
Starting point is 02:01:43 Up Ferndale. Okay. You know, it twists all around and then how you would drive to the observatory. Okay, got it. And my hunch was like, when you leave the house, it's immediately inclined up the side street and then up Ferndale.
Starting point is 02:01:58 When you get to the stop sign, I'm like, I already know when you're hiking, you're winded by the time you get there. So I'm like, maybe I'll get to the stop sign then maybe next time I'll get to the first turn and so on and so on. Well, on my trip last week, I got all the way to the final stretch,
Starting point is 02:02:13 like maybe a block. I did have to get off and walk the last like half block or block up to the very top. Wow. My thighs were as dense as like a microwave. They were so, I've never, they've never been that inflated with blood or whatever was going on. Oh, God.
Starting point is 02:02:31 They were just so pumped up. Wow. So I did that and then this morning I'm like, I'm gonna do it again. So I did it again this morning and I didn't have to walk. You did the whole thing? Yeah, I was kind of shocked with just one trip up because the first trip up was bonkers.
Starting point is 02:02:50 This trip up was good, it was a hard workout, but my legs didn't get like locked. Wow. And you think maybe you'll ride to the moon soon? I hope I don't ride to the moon, yeah, by 2026. That's so nice. The first person to climb Everest on a bicycle, on a road bike.
Starting point is 02:03:09 That's awesome, congratulations. Thank you, oh, I brought it up, not just, I didn't bring it up to brag, but I also brought it up because the most insane thing was happening on the entire trip up this morning. It was an SNL sketch and it wouldn't fucking stop for 25 minutes. So I'm huffing up the hill, I'm in the highest gear,
Starting point is 02:03:26 I'm like, ah, ah, ah. And I have headphones in, I'm listening to stuff. And I hear something just to the left of me a little bit and I like, look, and it's like, it's really close. It's a dude with dreadlocks and a backpack and he's on an electric fucking scooter. And we're going roughly the same speed. Sure.
Starting point is 02:03:44 It's maddening. Being next to a dude on a scooter, and we're going roughly the same speed. Sure. It's maddening. Being next to a dude on a scooter, he goes ahead of me, now he's ahead of me. Then he gets to a stop sign, and I think he maybe had to put more money on the scooter. Because now he's got his phone out, and I think he didn't have cell service, whatever.
Starting point is 02:04:01 I then pass him, I'm now riding. I forget about him. Yep. 12 minutes later, I hear something, I look over, he's, errr, I'm like, oh my fucking God. And I don't have it in me to go faster. Because you wanted your alone space. It's just something that was so- Invasive. Well, it was the awkwardness of it,
Starting point is 02:04:20 but then it was also the humiliation of a guy in this little scooter passing me. It's electric. Because I'm going like three miles an hour up this steep hill. It just was crazy. Imagine you see a guy taking a nap passing you on your hike. Like it just felt like that. Like how is this guy and I doing the same thing?
Starting point is 02:04:37 Yeah. We passed in, I bet five times. Did he pass me right at, he passed me at entering the parking lot to the observatory. He did win. Wow. Yeah, but it was comical. This reminds me, fights, bikes, running.
Starting point is 02:04:57 Remember earlier this year, my running situation with the dogs and the people. And the people congregating. Yes, now I drove by the other and the people. And the people congregating. Yes. Now I drove by the other day. Okay. Let me see what I can find. Wow, there's gonna be photographic evidence.
Starting point is 02:05:13 Mm-hmm. This was the area, okay? Uh-huh. There's now a sign up. Oh, that's. That says no dog walking, private property. Oh, did you put that up? No, I didn't.
Starting point is 02:05:27 But that would have been a good move. But also it goes to show. You weren't the only person in convenience by that. Correct. Yeah. Correct, I felt very validated by the sign. I bet. Vindicated.
Starting point is 02:05:40 They were just there? That's not even their house. Oh my God. I didn't think ever that was their house, did you? I guess if I was being generous, I thought maybe one of them, that was their area. Yeah. That was a thing that happened when we used to live on Los Feliz Boulevard.
Starting point is 02:05:57 I would come out and someone just be having like a picnic on the front yard. They'd have a blanket out. They might be asleep. Sure. It's interesting. Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare. Okay, I do want, I have an update sort of, not really.
Starting point is 02:06:26 And I wasn't really gonna say this, but I am. A couple of fact checks ago, we talked about a dream I had. Oh yes, yes, yes. About Jagers. Cagers, Jages. JG. JG. JG.
Starting point is 02:06:39 Dream. A dream. Let's be, let's like make it so clear that I was talking about a dream. That's right. I got a very disgusting email from somebody. Also like do not email me. Me?
Starting point is 02:06:54 Me too. The less emails I get in general, the better. But this random person emailed me and said. I think you should read it. The subject is geez, dot, dot, dot, be an adult, exclamation point, exclamation point. Okay. Then it just says-
Starting point is 02:07:09 Really quick, just already, I wanna have a grievance. Yeah. This is the definition of being an adult. When you're a kid, you don't even think about this. This is exclusively for adults. So just right there, problem number one, continue. Yeah, she said, go to your doctor and convey. Hold on.
Starting point is 02:07:27 I know it's a woman. I know. Oh. And I'm interrupting you too much, but you already have a look on your face, which I love. When you're reading it, you're her. Yeah. Yeah, I say, so you're like this.
Starting point is 02:07:38 Yeah, okay, go ahead. Okay, go to your doctor and convey your concerns. Instead of making your personal hygiene issues a problem for your audience, you never cease to amaze me. Exclamation point, exclamation point, exclamation point. You are such a constant child. Not go to a doctor because you know better. MD after your name. God. But you're tedious. Okay. So none of that makes
Starting point is 02:08:00 any sense. And it's really mean. It's not grammatically great. Yeah. Also MD after my name. What does that even mean? But let's just, let's treat this as if it's really mean. It's not grammatically great. Yeah, also MD after my name, what does that even mean? But let's just, let's treat this as if it's a real piece of advice. I wanna give this person a day in court. So what she or he, she is requesting is that you go to your doctor and you say,
Starting point is 02:08:19 I had a dream my vagina smelled. He's gonna go, go see a psychologist. Why are you here? Does your vagina smell? I don't think so. you say, I had a dream my vagina smelled. He's gonna go see a psychologist. Why are you here? Does your vagina smell? I don't think so. I had a nightmare that it did and the love of my life was put off by it.
Starting point is 02:08:34 Yeah, it's a dream about- That's what she wants you to do is go to the doctor and tell them you had a dream about your vagina. I guess. I'm gonna start going to doctors to tell them about my dreams. Yeah, I mean, I'm so tedious. Also, why do you listen?
Starting point is 02:08:48 Go away. Well. No, I 100% stand by that. If you're the type of person who's gonna send an email like that, I prefer you do not listen to this show or me or engage with me ever again. I understand.
Starting point is 02:09:04 You actually don't have permission. I understand. I have a different take. Go ahead. Yeah, which is like people, I'm one of them. I used to kind of hate listen to Rush Limbaugh. Okay. People hate listened to Howard Stern.
Starting point is 02:09:19 Like they just, they wanted to hear what he said so they could be mad about it and they could go to work and they could talk about what a misogynist piggy was. And it was like, it was their hobby. Yeah, that's a sad way to live. He still got those ratings. They still had to listen to his message. Some of it definitely sunk in.
Starting point is 02:09:35 So I don't mind, I don't mind. I don't mind if you're like, you're an incel listening that's hating me. That's great, keep listening. Nah. No. And that's good, that's fine. I understand you, I get what you're like, you're an incel listening that's hating me, that's great, keep listening. Nah. No. And that's good, that's fine. I understand you, I get what you're saying. Okay, and I get what you're saying.
Starting point is 02:09:51 I, no thanks. You don't get to, or you do get to, because it's a public show, so you can do whatever you want, but like the idea that you opened an email, I mean, I didn't understand half of what that meant, so I think this person is unhinged. They're probably, yeah,
Starting point is 02:10:09 they're probably got a lot of stuff going on. Let's- Can you say that it was mean? Oh, absolutely. Well, it's so ridiculous and silly and stupid. Like it's mostly just embarrassing. That email is so embarrassing. If I sent that email to the host of a podcast
Starting point is 02:10:25 and didn't want to accept she was talking about a dream, it's just embarrassing. But even not just the part about the go to the doctor, like you're tedious, you never cease to amaze me, you're a child. Well, again, that to me confirms. So she has a story about you, which was at the end of the email. Her story about you is that to me confirms. So she has a story about you, which was at the end of the email.
Starting point is 02:10:46 Her story about you is that you're tedious. And so anything you say is gonna be tedious. So the fact that you said you had a dream, that has to be tedious because her story about you is that you're tedious. And so she's backed herself into this crazy corner where what she's saying doesn't even make sense. Go see a doctor about your dream.
Starting point is 02:11:05 It's so, I mean, it's such a stupid email. Yeah. Yeah, it's mean, but mostly it's stupid. Let's go into the psychology of it. Okay. This really doesn't work because I already, I think the story part is really relevant, but my hunch is she has something going on vaginally.
Starting point is 02:11:22 Why is that such a hot, like why did that trigger her so much? Yeah, I think it triggered people. I got a few nice responses that were- I only read nice ones. Oh, that's nice. But I mean, I have like a person in my life reached out and said, oh, I use this.
Starting point is 02:11:41 And I was like, it was a dream. Like I freaked out and they were like, oh, sorry. Oh, I use this. And I was like, it was a dream. Like I freaked out and they were like, oh, sorry. Oh, but then. I know. And I was like, no, no, I know. I'm sorry. I was like, I got a bad email and I guess I think everyone thinks that.
Starting point is 02:11:56 And I wasn't, I actually don't think that about myself. I could be wrong, because that's again the fear. But the dream was a fear about being unlovable. That's right, and unworthy. Exactly. Yes, yes. And broken and gross. That's right, fundamentally flawed.
Starting point is 02:12:15 Like, okay, he passed, somehow I fooled him with this, and I fooled him with this, and I fooled him. But eventually the truth will be discovered. And the last thing that he didn't have access to that he finally discovered was of course, the deal breaker. Yeah. It makes a lot of sense. Yeah, it's just a metaphor for like, I'm not good enough.
Starting point is 02:12:33 Yeah, yeah. So I think people do struggle with this issue. Oh, absolutely. And there turns out there are a lot of products on the market. Okay, great. So people can check that out. Are they oral or are they, you put them in you.
Starting point is 02:12:45 Oral. Oral. Yes. Interesting, that's encouraging. Well, I think it's like prebiotics are supposed to be helpful. Now here's the thing. I do think, I think I'm right about that
Starting point is 02:12:57 the good comp is this fear of erectile dysfunction. No one would send me a mean email if I was talking about erectile dysfunction. I know. Well, they don't think you're tedious. They think I am. Well, even let's take her out of it. I think there are many people that would clutch their pearls
Starting point is 02:13:17 when you're talking about a vagina in public. And I think that's crazy. Yeah, I know. Like get real. And I don't think it's, it's not dudes. Also it's not dudes saying it. Yeah, I know. Like get real. And I don't think it's, and it's not dudes. Equivalent. Also it's not dudes saying it. I don't know.
Starting point is 02:13:29 Yeah, that's interesting. It is, cause I think what makes sense is like, it's a fear. So when you're talking about it, like God knows what it is. Like she shouldn't say that. I would never say it. Like you're doing something
Starting point is 02:13:41 that scares the fuck out of them. Exactly. Yes. That's right. So that makes sense. And then maybe if anyone was gonna have an issue with my erectile dysfunction conversation, it was a dream. It would probably be a guy.
Starting point is 02:13:54 Like, dude, shut the fuck up. No one wants to hear about your limp dick. It would probably be a guy. Yeah, it is. People feel threatened somehow. I get this, by the way, if I can own one of the worst parts of me. I was thinking in terms of,
Starting point is 02:14:09 in fact, I think I saw the person driving and I was like, what is my problem with this person? Why don't I, what is my issue with this person? And it is that they present so fragile and vulnerable and weak. Interesting. And when I see them moving through the world that way, it like gives me this deep,
Starting point is 02:14:32 I just can't imagine presenting this way. I would just be so afraid everyone was gonna take advantage of me and harm me. So like my own stuff, I can't even handle when someone's like just presents as crazy fragile. It really, it triggers my fear of myself presenting that way. And that's introspective.
Starting point is 02:14:57 I think some element of homophobia is in there as well, which is like you're a young boy and I get, I'm only gonna speak for my generation. And we just had a guest on yesterday, we talked about the power of that. And I wanna add like, yeah, there'll be straight guys like me or this guest we had talking about having been molested and the implications that you're gay
Starting point is 02:15:17 and you feel gay and then you'd be dead, like your whole school, you'd be dead. But I think some element of homophobia for some guys is it's not even maybe that they hate that two guys are gonna hook up in their house. It's that when they see them presenting as gay, they imagine like, oh my God, that's what I've been trying to avoid my whole childhood
Starting point is 02:15:39 to be masculine and butch and tough. And it scares them. Like to see it scares them. Like, fuck, if I was acting this way, I would be so called out and you know. That's probably true. When people are themselves, a lot of people find that very threatening.
Starting point is 02:15:59 Yeah, yeah. Or maybe there's like a deep jealousy. Yep. Because they are. They're holding in their true selves because they've told themselves, if I show my true self, I'll be excluded. And now here's this person showing their true selves and they're not being excluded, they're being embraced.
Starting point is 02:16:16 It's like very threatening to your core. Like they feel like it's unfair. Yep, it shouldn't be that way because I know if I did that, I would be excluded. So why is this person getting away with it? It's like, oh, Sam, but it's like, why are they getting to do something that I'm not allowed to do? And then, yeah, I think that's what's going on
Starting point is 02:16:30 a lot of the time. Yeah, me too. Who triggers you? When people walk around with a victim complex, I am so disturbed by it. I also, I find it annoying because I guess I feel like you're not everyone, like everyone has issues.
Starting point is 02:16:49 Just stop. Like stop. Yeah, the world is not conspiring against you any more than it's conspiring against. Exactly. I guess it is. No, granted, there are classes where the, if you're a black female.
Starting point is 02:17:00 Of course. Yeah. No, it's not. But in general, just living life. Victims don't trigger me. Oh. People who walk around with the victim complex. That's a different thing.
Starting point is 02:17:09 True. That's like everything is, they're a victim or the world is doing this to them or they, like they can't figure it out and it's everyone else's problem. Yeah. It's everyone else's problem, but theirs. It's also a great tool in the narcissist kit.
Starting point is 02:17:25 It is. It's like when they've clearly fucked up and they clearly owe someone an apology, they figure out how they're the victim. And now they just switch their story to how they've been victimized. There's a lot of people who are very quick to be the victim in this world.
Starting point is 02:17:43 And yeah, I'm not talking about real victims. Yeah. And I find it so off-putting. I don't know. I don't really know what it is, why it's so, well, for one, it's contagious. There's that. I think there's something about walking around like that
Starting point is 02:18:00 and being so negative and all this is happening to me. It's hard to be around that and maintain a level of happiness. Yeah, you're almost inclined to meet them there. And- It's a horrible feeling. I know, I just got this thing. This bad thing happened to me too. I wonder if there's something for you
Starting point is 02:18:21 in the fact that like you were presented a fork in the road as a little kid and you could have gone home every day and told your mom, no one likes me cause I'm brown. Or you could like learn cheerleading and force them to be around you and like you. I was thinking that and I thought it sounded a little- Arrogant. Arrogant. But that, I do think that's what it is,
Starting point is 02:18:45 is there's a part of me, and this isn't necessarily fair, but there's a part of me that thinks, I figured it out, so can you. Right. Again, not to everyone and not to people who are victimized. Sure. These are people who are victims in their brain. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 02:19:01 There is a way to look at the world differently and I know it from experience. I think for me, mine is ultimately incredibly self-centered because it's really just my irritation or fear that I would present that way. It just seems so unattractive that when I'm around it, I just can't stop thinking about how much I would hate to be presenting this way.
Starting point is 02:19:22 Yeah. I mean, it's just a buzzkill to be around that all the time and to feel like you have to be constantly Lifting up. Lifting somebody up. Yeah. And we all do this, right? We all need to vent, we all have moments
Starting point is 02:19:39 where we feel like a victim and we're not. I mean, all of us, it's not, but for some people, it's a way of looking at the world. I wonder if what could be helpful because I think this is one of my favorite AA things, which is like learning in the fourth step, I believe, that self-aggrandizement and self-pity are the same level of narcissism.
Starting point is 02:20:01 Yes, exactly. Right, so I think once I really accepted that and believe that concept, for me to be doing the self pity thing, I feel as bad as I would be talking about that I'm God's gift to this planet. And so I'm just like, oh yeah, that's the same level of self indulgence.
Starting point is 02:20:20 Anyway, it was a dream. Yeah, it was a dream, everything. Everything's tip top. Yeah, JG, dream. Everything. Everything's tip top. Yeah. J.G. Jagers. Jagers, don't be scared. Clean as a whistle. Don't be scared.
Starting point is 02:20:31 Don't be scared. Have you ever smelled a Springfield Jagers? You ever smelled a warm apple pie coming out of the oven Jagers? Because that's what you're getting into when you pull them slacks down. Okay. It's like opening the door to an oven.
Starting point is 02:20:45 Oh my God. You hit with a waft of warm apple pie. Jesus. Yeah. Warm apple pie. Oh, this is for Lisa Kudrow. Oh, I loved Lisa Kudrow. What a gift.
Starting point is 02:21:02 What a gift. What a dream, what a gift. What a blessing. What a gift. What a gift. What a dream, what a gift. What a blessing. What a blessing. A Christmas miracle. I knew over indexed is blessing. You probably noticed it. Oh God, really?
Starting point is 02:21:12 Yeah. I love calling things a blessing. Are you joking? I like, I don't think that God's involved. Right. But I like what that means if you do believe God's involved. Sure.
Starting point is 02:21:23 Like I understand what it means and I like that meaning. Yeah you do believe God's involved. Like I understand what it means and I like that meaning. Like this is otherworldly, this is really a special treat. So I say it a lot and I do wonder if it's confusing to people who know my stance on religion. Yeah, I'm sure it is. But I just feel like it really, really articulates what I feel a lot of times now, increasingly so.
Starting point is 02:21:43 I'm wearing a very fuzzy sweater and somehow it just migrated into my mouth, I think. Or I don't know if it's psychosomatic because I can see the little frizzies. I'm like, pfft, pfft, pfft. Does that say my pfft? Oh my God, it's just. Wait, add some to the bag.
Starting point is 02:21:58 Oh no, that's only hair you're wearing. I'm sorry. By the way, we're due for, I think today we're doing another harvest. Yeah, because it's dwindling. It's kind of disappeared in that way. I wonder, does hair disintegrate? I don't think so.
Starting point is 02:22:12 Okay, Lisa, this was such a long time coming. Our first friend, I was so grateful. I did feel like I fucked it up a little bit. There's no way to really convey the meaning of her here. And so I was kind of put in the position to try. And so I said, I think I said, there's nothing I can really say, but I wish I could have.
Starting point is 02:22:43 I wish I could have articulated it, but I can't. It's a blessing. She's a blessing. The show was a blessing in your life. It was. For sure. Yeah, yeah. It was life-saving. It was a life raft.
Starting point is 02:22:55 Uh-huh. I don't know. There's just not, there aren't words in the English language. I wonder if Lisa's thing, there's a myriad of reasons why that's hard to accept. Yeah, how can you? And let's be honest, like a lot of people feel that way.
Starting point is 02:23:09 Of course. Right, so it's like even the most grounded person at some point would come to expect that that's the effect it had on people. Yes. Because you've heard that a million times. Yes. So I think you're trying to elevate,
Starting point is 02:23:21 what you want to do is give this person, who's very nice, I just met Monica Padman, I want her to know that I've received it. Because really now I'm doing something for you, which is interesting, because the goal is, you wanna do something for her, right? You wanna tell her, I really am grateful for you. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:23:40 Truly. Maybe that's a way to say it, by the way. That is a good way to say it. Yeah, like I'm just personally grateful that on this trip, you were in my sphere and you just gave me so much relief and happiness. Okay. But I do think that maybe she's in a position
Starting point is 02:23:56 where she's got to act like it's the first time she's ever heard that or something. Maybe, I mean, I'm not gonna do that. Like that's not my job to worry about the way she's gonna receive it. I'm not gonna do that. Like that's not my job. Right. To worry about. Worry about the way she's gonna receive it. I'm not gonna play that game. Oh yeah. But I am anymore.
Starting point is 02:24:12 Maybe at one point in my life I would have, but whatever, I can't. But I just, I do feel what you're saying. There is nothing new I can say to her. To be clear, I don't think you should have not done that just because of whatever her reaction is. I think it's good for you to be able to express your gratitude for the people that you have gratitude for.
Starting point is 02:24:33 Me too, but I guess that's where it gets heady. It's like, I want to be able to tell her accurately. But I can't tell her accurately because I don't have, I really do not have the physical words to do so. You'd have to open your chest and invite her into your heart and let her feel what it felt like and then release her. There's no way. So everything you say just starts falling,
Starting point is 02:24:58 is sounding dumb and trite and falling short and it's just like, what's the point of any of this? Anyway, and she hears it all the time. And is it for her? Like, is it for her or is it for me? I think it'd be okay if it was for you. Yeah. I don't think that would be bad.
Starting point is 02:25:15 I guess. Yeah. I guess, but I couldn't do it. I think it'd be crazy if you didn't tell people how much you appreciate them. I agree, and I think people should be. And their reaction's their reaction. I just enjoy imagining what her reaction is
Starting point is 02:25:26 or what she's going through, but in no way am I suggesting you shouldn't, I think you should do that always. Yeah, it's just hard to do in something so meaningful. Yeah. And it's having with Matt Damon too, same thing. It's like, sure, I can sit here and we can talk about the camping trip and that,
Starting point is 02:25:43 we can do it, but it's never gonna. Well, here's like a darker examination of it. Is part of the frustration, because this is part of mine, is like, I know Letterman you've heard from people that they like your show, but you need to understand that, like I like it on another level.
Starting point is 02:26:04 There's none of that. It's not like, it's not a competition thing. Okay. It's not, I know, but you really don't understand. See, I have a tiny bit of that. That's not it. I'm like a lot of people laughed at your show, but I'm like, oh, I can be who I am because you exist. Well, yeah, that's, but that's right,
Starting point is 02:26:19 but that's, I think other people had that too. Yeah, Adam Scott had that, Kimmel had that, most people I know actually had it. I don't people had that too. Yeah, Adam Scott had that, Kimmel had that, most people I know actually had it. I don't think I'm a special case, but I- I wanna be a special case though, do you? Yeah, everyone wants to be a special case. I would just wanna be a special case in life.
Starting point is 02:26:38 Just across the board. Yeah. You guys ain't saying anything. I just wanna be- A very special case. A special case. I should get a shirt that says a special case. I was thinking the exact special case. A special case. I should get a shirt that says a special case. I was thinking the exact same thing.
Starting point is 02:26:48 A special case. Everyone is a special case. They are. Everyone is, except that lady from, well she's special I guess, she's very. She wants you to go to the doctor and tell them about a dream. It's just a disaster.
Starting point is 02:26:59 Bukowski was right. I do think your sweater is everywhere. Don't try, it is. I might have to table this guy. No, it's so nice. You know what, I have two of these's everywhere. It is. I might have to table this guy. No, it's so nice. You know what, I have two of these. Oh wow. Yeah. It's really nice.
Starting point is 02:27:10 I have two of these. This is a part of my wastefulness. Luckily I don't shop often, but I don't ever go to a store. I order online. And you click number two. I got an XL out of the gates, and I was like, too big, that's a skirt. Oh. Might be a great skirt for you.
Starting point is 02:27:29 You mean a dress? Yeah, a dress. A mini dress. Really? Yeah. Okay. Picture this. Yeah. But then longer. Okay.
Starting point is 02:27:38 And then you put like a belt around it. Oh, wow. That's very 80s. Very cool. We'll try it. Okay. Next fact check. Okay, great. You'll be wearing my extra large version of this. They'll be fucking, oh, we'll both wear it. It'll be,, very cool. We'll try it. Okay. Next fact check. Okay, great.
Starting point is 02:27:46 You'll be wearing my extra large version of this. It'll be fucking, oh, we'll both wear it. It'll be, oh my God. And it's gonna look like it's snowing. Oh my God, there really is shit flying everywhere. Yeah, it's all right. Okay, now a few facts for her. Was Vassar the first women's college to offer science?
Starting point is 02:27:59 No. The first women's college to offer science was the Troy Female Seminary in Troy, New York, which is now Emma Willard School. She said it opened in 1861. It was founded in 1861, but it opened in 1865. It opened its doors in 1865. So we're guessing then that it got founded
Starting point is 02:28:20 so it could get funded, and then it took four or five years to build. Yeah. When did Vassar become coed? 1969, she was right about that. She nailed it. Yep. She's very bright. Oh my God. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:28:32 I know. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I'm not surprised. I don't think you, I really, maybe this is also. I agree with what you're about to say. You can't be that funny and not be. You can't be a great comedian. You can't.
Starting point is 02:28:46 And not be pretty bright. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, you can have done terrible in school, but you gotta be bright. Yes. Yeah. It's the timing.
Starting point is 02:28:53 There's a math happening in your brain at all times when you're really performing comedy well. And there's a verbal dexterity to be constructing these things in a manner that is funny. Okay. The Eazy-E situation. Oh, please, is funny. Okay, the EZE situation. Oh, please, tell me. Now, EZE went to three different high schools.
Starting point is 02:29:11 He went to Compton High School, Manuel Dominguez High School, and Taft High School, which is where she went. But he dropped out in 10th grade. So he went to three high schools in two years. Correct. That's too many high schools in two years. Correct. That's too many high schools in two years.
Starting point is 02:29:25 I agree, it wasn't for him. No, and he was right. That's exactly. Yeah. And so that clears that up, there was some confusion. Right, no wonder she didn't bump into him. He was probably only there for a month or two. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:29:40 Okay, how tall is Ray Romano, 6'2", according to the internet? Made up a song last night. Oh. You know, Feliz Navidad. It's what the girls decorate in the tree. Kristen's out of town, so it's just the three of us. Yeah. And it came on and I was singing,
Starting point is 02:29:53 Los Feliz Dad, Los Feliz Dad. I go, girls, you listen to this song about me. Los Feliz Dad, da da da, ee dee da da da. A Los Feliz Dad. Oh my God. I'm still in a sweet spot where they think I'm funny. It's gonna end my life. Like when they're 15 and 17 and I sing a Los Feliz Dad
Starting point is 02:30:18 and they're like, fuck this guy. They'll laugh. I hope so. They'll laugh, you're funny. If that all happens, I'll just, and they go, what the fuck is this guy doing? I'll just walk down into the basement and I'll just stay there until my life's over.
Starting point is 02:30:32 No. I'll stand in the middle of the basement and go, what happened? Listen, kids. I'm gonna be like, what now? What the fuck am I gonna do? Listen, kids, can you prepare yourself a little bit that kids do grow up and-
Starting point is 02:30:59 And I'm not cool anymore? Eye roll a little bit, but laugh, it's loving. I think it's a great motivation for me to stay sharp. Okay, great. Yeah, I think it might prevent me from going down the road that many comedians do, which is like, they just get less funny. Okay.
Starting point is 02:31:14 But I'm gonna be working my ass off. You wanna stick with the tie. Well, I gotta keep these girls laughing. That's my priority. Well, that means you can't be doing comedy from 2024 in 10 years. You gotta be like, that's not funny anymore to these people. That's right, I'll do that.
Starting point is 02:31:31 Okay, you said impermeable border about the house and you didn't know if you said it right. Impermeable means not allowing fluid to pass through, not liable to be affected by pain or distress. Okay, does your right hemisphere control your left hand? Yes. Are cluster headaches due to damage to the hypothalamus? Yes, it's related.
Starting point is 02:31:55 Are migraines worse for girls? Yes. Hemalgic migraines, are they still called that? Hemalgic? Yes. She knew a lot. She made a little misstep with that science thing. What science thing? Vassar.
Starting point is 02:32:11 Oh sure, but we can forgive that. But for the most part. They probably told her that. I'm sure. Yeah. I'm sure they did. That's on them. Yeah, I blame them.
Starting point is 02:32:20 They were the first women's college to lie about being the first to offer science. Yeah, yeah. That's a distinction. Big time. So that was her and it was really just very- Oh, she's a blessing. She really is a blessing.
Starting point is 02:32:35 She is. You can believe in the word blessing without believing in God. I know, I just, I worry that people who truly believe in like blessings coming down from God, that they might think it's a joke. It's not. And it's not.
Starting point is 02:32:53 No, I'm sincere about it. And I think they would be fine with it so long as they agreed it was a blessing. If I say the Big Mac's a blessing, although I think it is, look at it, man, it arrived in the 50s and it's still here. I know. It's a blessing. So if you're mad about that.
Starting point is 02:33:11 Send us an email. Send Monica an email. All right, and I'm just gonna end on reminding everyone that it was a dream. That's a big, big dream. Yeah. And that's that. And it's a warm apple pie.
Starting point is 02:33:30 All right, love you. Apple pie. Okay, okay. My God. Good night. I love you. Love you. ["Warm Apple Pie"] Follow Armchair Expert on the Wondry app, Amazon Music, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen to every episode of Armchair Expert early and ad free right now by joining Wondry Plus in the Wondry app or on Apple Podcasts. Before you go, tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at Wondry.com slash survey.

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