Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - Susan Morrison (on Lorne Michaels)
Episode Date: April 30, 2025Susan Morrison (Lorne: The Man Who Invented Saturday Night Live, SPY Magazine, The New Yorker) is a journalist and author. Susan joins the Armchair Expert to discuss never wanting to subject ...her children to a life of moving around, marrying comedy and journalism into irreverant reporting at SPY Magazine, and loving the idea of walking through New York City as time travel. Susan and Dax talk about why humor is just the language we all speak to get by in the world, how Saturday Night Live is a monopoly for comedy, and that she could draw a line from all of Lorne’s life experiences straight to the producing skills he would later develop. Susan explains that Lorne is a master of teaching people how to be in a room, why listening for the laugh during dress rehearsal is his secret sauce, and how Lorne’s strategic instincts directly contributed to SNL being the longest running entertainment show in history.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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Welcome, welcome, welcome to Armchair Expert,
experts on expert.
I'm Dan Shepard, I'm joined by Lily Padman
and Michael Weakley.
Hello. Hello.
This guest, Susan Morrison.
This was so fun. This was such a fun Susan Morrison. This was so fun.
This was such a fun listen back.
Was it?
Yes.
So she is the articles editor at the New Yorker.
She has a new book out right now,
Lorne, The Man Who Invented Saturday Night Live.
This is like a crazy fun, juicy history of Saturday Night Live.
It is, of SNL and of Lorne Michaels,
and we get all these like fun stories, it's just cool and he's an institution
The Wizard of Oz exactly very mysterious very mysterious and we get a little deep dive. I thought this was incredibly enjoyable
It's really cool because she's known him for decades. Yes
Yeah, this is a really really fun one her other Her other books are Spy High and 30 Ways of Looking at Hillary.
So feel free to check those out too,
but Lauren is fantastic.
I encourage everyone to read it.
Please enjoy Susan Morrison.
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He's an object expert.
He's an object expert.
He's an object expert. Her daughter is Adam Scott's assistant.
No!
Yeah!
Isn't that fun?
I'm sure you're only getting glowing reviews of Naomi and Adam.
Oh yeah.
Love it.
How did she end up with that job?
I'm trying to remember.
I think a friend at WME knew that he was looking for someone
for the second season of Severance.
And so they just really clicked.
And so what's really fun is now to watch the second season
with her because she'll tell you like,
oh yeah, the goats ran off there.
And this is when John Turturro was crying
because it was so fucking cold.
Oh my God, that's fantastic.
It's fun to have that kind of commentary.
Yeah, for sure.
The inside scoop.
Well, we send Adam Scott angry voice memos
after every episode.
That's kind of our participation in it.
We yell at him for cliffhangers,
why is this taking so long?
Are you guys shooting this show three hours a week?
Why isn't there another season?
I saw Adam and Ben on some talk show
and someone said when's season three?
And I think Ben said like 2035.
Yeah.
That sounds about right, yeah.
It's become an IQ test where it's like
the gap between year one and two is three
and then it's gotta be six and then we go up there.
Yeah, exactly.
Susan, where are you from?
Tough to answer that because when I was a kid,
my dad worked for IBM,
which meant that we moved every four years.
So I was born in New Jersey,
and lived in Poughkeepsie, and Denver,
and Stanford, Connecticut,
and now I've lived in my apartment in New York
for 40 years, so I think that makes me feel
like I'm a New Yorker.
That qualifies.
I have a similar, I wonder if you attribute it
to your childhood, we moved so much that in 30 years
in LA I lived in one single apartment for 10 years,
then I lived in a house for 16, and now we're here
and I just don't ever wanna leave.
No, exactly, I think I will never move
because my whole childhood was putting things
in those Neptune moving boxes and unpacking them,
and I always wanted to spare my kids that.
Did you get psychotic about your room?
Like, I just,, like wherever we went,
at least my little bubble could be the same.
And if someone altered my bubble, I was irrationally upset.
Mine was the same weird shade of pink.
I had a canopy bed.
Yeah.
And I had little china cats.
But I do think that that's why you want permanence.
Yes, and you're dropping in every four years
to a totally different social setting
and culture
and vibe.
Were you good at meshing?
Well, I mean, I think about some things that were.
I'm not one of those people who ever overuses the word trauma.
Yeah.
I frown on that.
But I remember when we moved to Colorado, I fell out of a tree and broke my arm and
my arm was kind of taped up inside my clothes.
And then my first week in my new school, some girl I didn't know came up to me on the playground
and kicked me really hard and said,
I think it's awful that you're pretending
to only have one arm.
Oh my God.
It was just like.
Oh!
So those things, you're the new kid
and you're the weird kid with one arm.
Yeah.
But I think it's made me really resilient
and adaptable as an adult.
Do you find that for sure?
I want to go back to the little girl. I think there's a lot of interesting stuff happening in that move, which is
someone feigning a disability
Like needs to be policed by the social hierarchy
It's not just that you had a broken arm and she's pissed you were getting attention
No, she thought I was pretending I lost my arm.
Which would be disrespectful to someone who had lost it.
I think she might've even said,
I know someone who lost an arm.
Oh wow.
Maybe like a grandfather in the war or something.
I don't know.
And she was so young to be this very big justice.
We're talking eight years old.
Yeah. Wow.
I think it's an instinct, that's what I'm arguing.
I think there's something like very primitive
about us being social primates,
where it's like if someone's pretending to be infirmed
and they're not, that's deception.
That's fascinating reaction to come up and kick a girl.
You're right in the shins.
Yeah, so the whole new kid thing
was a really regular thing for me.
I'm sure it was painful
and I'm sure I had lonely stretches that I've blocked,
but I definitely feel like there are times in my adult life when I know this is why I'm good at this and this is sure I had lonely stretches that I've blocked, but I definitely feel like
there are times in my adult life when I know
this is why I'm good at this and this is why I'm good at that.
Right, I can walk in and be around strangers and
Do podcasts.
Exist, yeah, podcasts.
What's your road to the New Yorker?
My first job in the grown-up world
was working for Lorne Michaels.
Oh, it was.
I was 23.
My mom had just died.
I had been living in England, working for the Times of London. I moved back to America because. I was 23. My mom had just died. I had been living in England,
working for the Times of London.
I moved back to America because my mom was sick.
Took care of her for a month and then she died of cancer.
And I was just like, oh my God, what am I going to do?
And some of my college friends from the Harvard Lampoon
brought me into the city the day after my mom's funeral
and introduced me to Jim Downey,
who was the great long serving head writer of SNL.
And Lorne, this was during the period
when he wasn't at SNL.
He had a five-year hiatus in the 80s,
and he was producing this primetime show
called The New Show,
which was his first spectacular public failure.
So I got a job working for the writers in that
as a researcher.
That only lasted about nine, 10 episodes,
but I was young. It
cemented relationships with all these amazing comedy people so that after that
I knew I wanted to go into journalism. I got a job at Vanity Fair, but I stayed
friends with all those people and it especially served me. I feel like the
real crucible part of my career was starting Spy Magazine in the 80s with
Kurt Anderson and Graydon Carter.
Forgive my ignorance, what was Spy's angle?
Spy Magazine was kind of modeled on Private Eye, the British satiric weekly.
The 80s were a time when fat cats and Wall Street guys were just running the world.
Donald Trump was ascendant.
Yeah, yeah.
And so we called ourselves, you know, the underdogs, biting the ankles of the overdogs.
We reported Trump's bankruptcies, we went after the Times,
and we had a column on CAA and Mike Oviets.
I mean, we really did a lot of funny
and disrespectful reporting.
So it had a sense of humor.
It was really funny.
But it wasn't satire.
It was actual reporting with a little comedic edge.
It took us all by surprise by being like a big sensation.
It suddenly was popular and it launched,
most of the people who did that,
we did it for six years starting in 86,
kind of run the media now.
That's where I kind of learned everything.
It is weird, right, when you get to an age
where all these people you started with,
you are all kids and you look around and you go,
oh my God, it happened.
No, and now you bump into someone like Walter Isaacson.
We've all had a great ride.
Was he at Spine?
No, he wasn't, but I knew him from that circle.
How cool.
It is kind of nice.
I have a fantasy about New York in the 80s
because it's very Billy Joel.
It's very, everyone at Elaine's was so knocked out.
You know, Coke, limousines.
That is definitely what it was like.
We were all public school kids.
We were all from outside of New York.
We had that nose pressed up against the glass
trying to figure this out.
And it was a real time of uptown, downtown.
You know, uptown were all these socialites
in like poof dresses going to cancer galas and everything.
It was a time of Tom Wolf social x-rays,
bonfire of the vanities.
But downtown, it was area and these nightclubs
that were creative and sort of cool,
but also really pretentious and arty.
So the targets were everywhere you looked.
Oh yeah, what a colorful, it was fun.
I certainly like New York of today,
but I also went there in the 80s with my mom
when I was a kid, and it was a very dangerous feeling
Yes, yes, I mean walking through time squares. You're like holding mom's hand extra tight
but I do miss how colorful and segmented and
You cross four blocks and it's like everyone's now this way. Yeah, that was fun. You're like almost time-traveling
I love that concept because I sometimes think about walking around New York City
I mean you get a little bit of that here with all the wonderful old signage and everything.
But I like the idea of walking through a city as time travel, which is so thrilling.
And you can still walk into Katz's Deli on Ludlow Street and you feel like you're in 1962.
Or just being in the village and there's the one road that's got a bend in it.
And you're like, oh, God, how old is that road?
Yeah, it's very historic.
When did you start at New Yorker?
Okay, right.
After Spy, I edited this weekly called
The New York Observer, which was also kind of sarcastic
and had an attitude and we sort of made fun of people.
And then in 1997, when Tina Brown ran the New Yorker,
she hired me.
So I've been there since then.
The New Yorker turns 100 this year,
just like SNL turns 50.
And I'm fascinated by, there's a lot of common ground
between the two institutions
that people aren't that aware of.
Tell me, I mean, first of all,
they're implicitly New York.
They're New York things.
But first I'll say, so when Harold Ross
started the magazine 100 years ago,
he called it The Comic Weekly.
It was this roaring 20s, jazz age,
very fizzy publication with a lot of fun and gossip.
And when Tina hired me, she knew that I had that impulse
and I wanted to make things entertaining.
And before her, William Sean had been editing
The New Yorker for some decades
and it did a lot of quality stuff,
but there were sort of jokes about how it published
five-part series on grain.
Things like that.
And so she really wanted to enliven it.
I edit just the straight up humor pieces,
but also the non-fiction writers that I edit
and have brought in are all just people with real voice.
Do you have a relationship, I imagine, with Sedaris?
Yeah, I know him.
I edit him sometimes.
He's great.
Yeah, what did I just,
was his The Pope piece in New Yorker
or was that somewhere else?
Touching the crop or something? Yes, yes, about when The Pope had all those comedians there. Yeah, what did I just was his the Pope piece in New York or was that somewhere else touching the clock?
Yes about when the Pope had all those comedians. Yeah. Yeah, what a wild event for the comedy world
I think it's so cool that the Pope did that. It's weird
There's something that I can't really wrap my head around of like why but I think maybe he just loves
Comedy he's not able to really exercise that.
Yeah, I can't figure out his angle.
Okay, I have a theory.
Yeah, let's hear it.
I think that he just must be much savvier
and worldlier than we think.
And this sort of goes hand in hand
with why SNL is still so important after 50 years,
even when it has seasons that are lackluster.
It's almost like we're in a comedy glut.
You're riding the subway or here,
I guess, looking at billboards,
and it didn't used to be that every advertisement was funny.
Humor is just the language that we all speak in,
and it used to be more of a cordoned off thing,
but now you kind of have to be funny
to even be able to get by in the world.
Yeah, that's true.
The Pope probably thought this is a way in if you get the comedians on your side, you're kind by in the world. Yeah, that's true. The Pope probably thought, this is a way in.
If you get the comedians on your side,
you're kind of winning the war.
I mean, it's something that Trump
completely doesn't understand
because he has the worst sense of humor
of anyone I've ever heard about.
He's so outrageous that it is funny.
But you're laughing at him, not with him.
You're laughing at him, but I don't know
if it's worked to some extent inadvertently.
He has a playground sense of humor.
He makes fun of people and humiliates them, and people think that's funny.
I think the way I would refine it is, I don't think he's got a sophisticated sense of humor
or even good sense of humor, but he's a pure showman.
Yes.
Yes.
That is right.
I remember one week when I was spending the whole week at SNL, Alec Baldwin got arrested for, not the rust thing,
but he got arrested for punching a guy over a parking place.
Sure.
And I remember being there in Lauren's office
when the texts came through and everyone was like,
oh God.
And it was also kind of funny because it wasn't that serious.
And then cut to Trump at a press conference,
because those were the years when he was railing
against Baldwin all the time because he was playing him.
So a reporter said to Trump, did you hear about Alec Baldwin getting arrested?
And Trump just kind of gives this like half smile and he goes, I wish him luck.
And I remember watching that with Lorne Michaels and Lorne just said, God, Trump just has like
the exact right showbiz instinct to know how to respond.
Yeah. Yeah, it does.
It's good.
It was underplayed, but it was funny.
The timing of this is perfect,
because as you just said, 50 year anniversary of SNL.
Now I guess I didn't realize that you had worked for him.
That makes a lot of sense.
But I'm imagining you're just a humongous fan of the show
and impressed with how this thing continues.
I am a fan of it,
but I wouldn't say that's really why I got into writing the book.
It was after the 40th.
I thought that show was really interesting and moving.
You know, as I said, I stayed friends with a lot of those people over these years.
And frankly, for years, I just heard all these different people I knew, mostly in the writers'
room, complaining about Lawrence or just saying, oh, and he did this and he cut that and he's
this way, in that kind of exasperated way.
When I went on Lawrence O'Donnell's show,
he said, this book is like a workplace comedy.
It's a little bit like The Office, right?
So people complain about each other.
I knew that he was mercurial
and that they were all like obsessed with him
and always trying to figure him out,
but I didn't think that the wider world knew that about him.
So I thought this would be a good book.
So it wasn't out of pure fandom.
You know, it was more just like as an editor,
I thought, that's a good story.
And also, Lorne Michaels is someone
who's kind of been hiding in plain sight for 50 years.
Such a mystery.
Doesn't talk to the press.
And the inscrutability has kind of worked for him,
both as a management tool and as a guy.
He's like Anna Wintour.
I put them in the same category.
He's the anointure of comedy.
They are both elusive and huge figures
that have major impact.
Well, that's funny, because it's tied into the pope.
Because the one thing I wanted to say about the pope thing
was both times I would go, because I personally
want the story.
And then also, my other part of my mind
would be like, look how insane this status thing is.
You still buy into it.
One person has a given status where they just summons a hundred of the most
prominent people who have their own status and everyone shows up.
And they bought their own plane tickets.
Yes.
And if you're the aliens watching from above, you're like, huh, that guy can do
that.
That's just so fascinating that even you could be in on it and also be inclined
to play along.
So then yes, Lauren also has this really unique Wizard of Oz.
All the people you interview, there's these very common comparisons that come up about him.
Obi-Wan Kenobi, Mr. Ripley.
Some of them have even compared him to Trump.
Yeah, but I would also put him in the George Washington category a little bit,
which is he didn't talk, and he was surrounded by all these people that wouldn't shut the fuck up. So they just assumed he was so smart because
he didn't even feel compelled to brag and they couldn't understand that. In his quietness,
people just projected a lot.
Exactly.
Lauren is obviously incredibly gifted and also he's not superhuman, but I do think he's
taken on this kind of superhuman quality.
I think that's true. Part of it is when these people come to him, when he plucks them from obscurity.
They tend to be 22 or 23.
Think about like Bill Hader coming from Oklahoma where his previous showbiz job had been being
like a PA on Iron Chef.
People that come to New York, they're suddenly, I mean, they're not making a hell of a lot
of money, but they're on television and Lauren has kind of opened the whole world to them,
and they invest him with this power.
Some of it is like a daddy thing,
but some of it is also like,
oh my god, this man changed my life.
And Conan O'Brien said to me,
everyone concurred with this,
when you work for SNL as a writer or a cast,
it basically takes two weeks
from going from like insanely grateful to
Being like put out that how are you ever gonna get out of these golden handcuffs?
Yeah, I think Lauren just made so much happen for them
I mean he told me once that there's a real distinction in his social world between all the cast and all the people that he's hired and
His friends who came into the business on their own steam Paul Paul Simon, Steve Martin, they don't owe him everything,
so it's an easier relationship.
Yes.
Someone who had the experience, which is come to LA,
go to the Groundlings, because I know that's a feeder for Saturday Night Live,
singularly focused on being good there so I can get to Saturday Night Live.
The only goal is Saturday Night Live.
I was just talking about another actor.
Yes, it's so unique in that if you audition for Oliver Stone and get to Saturday Night Live. The only goal is Saturday Night Live. I was just talking to another actor. It's a monopoly, right?
Yes, it's so unique in that if you audition
for Oliver Stone and you don't get it,
that's okay, the Coen brothers are gonna cast a movie
in two weeks and you got a shot there
and then so-and-so's gonna cast a movie.
But Saturday Night Live is the only option
if that's what your mind was set on.
If you don't get the audition,
or you get it and you don't get made,
or he opens up the kingdoms,
I think there's so rarely a singular focus goal in show business. if you don't get the audition, or you get it and you don't get made, or he opens up the kingdoms,
I think there's so rarely a singular focus goal
in show business.
Generally you're like, I wanna act.
But he's the only gatekeeper.
That's it.
One of the great things that Tina Fey said to me about him
is considering when he came to power,
that is the phrase to use with him,
he never got that 80s disease.
Having been in journalism in the 80s,
I know what she means,
of wanting to boast about being an insane workaholic.
I mean, I remember he'd read stories
about Jeff Katzenberg and Barry Diller,
and they'd say, I get up at 4 a.m.
I'm with my trainer for 90 minutes.
Then my stock guy comes.
I sleep three hours a day.
He never had that show-offy thing.
From the very beginning,
he's had this almost European
kind of fixation on leisure.
He's always made the show's schedule correspond
to the vacation schedule of New York private schools.
Oh, really?
Yeah, he makes sure, he takes a lot of time off
in swanky locales, and he tells all of his people
to do the same.
And aside from opening the professional world
to these people, he has this kind of Henry Higgins
thing with them.
He likes to teach them how to live the good life.
He doesn't want them to be killing themselves
and staying up all night.
And one of the things that was fun about tracking
his life over 50 years is the quality of that advice
has kind of changed as he's become more of a mogul-y
kind of guy. In the 70s, it would be like, rotate your drug use. But now it's a number
of different people told me, yeah, when you're buying an apartment, he'll say two things.
First of all, get an apartment that's more expensive than you think you can afford because
then you come home at the end of an exhausting day and you'll say, oh, who lives here?
I live here.
And then the other thing he says to these people,
he says, you know what's better than 10 foot ceilings?
12 foot ceilings.
Wow.
He said, who's boss tells them that?
When they're making 7,500 a week in Manhattan.
He's aware that they're,
and this is another great Lauren phrase,
they're first generation famous,
meaning that their parents back in Peoria
aren't gonna be able to answer their questions about
should I get a Lexus or a Tesla?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I like that.
Okay, so let's maybe just start with where Lauren comes from.
Because I do wonder if part of being inoculated
to that 80s trope of I'm a workaholic,
I wonder if there's any Canadian in the mix.
His personal demeanor, his personal humor
is that kind of Canadian self-deprecating thing.
Although I do say at some point in the book,
he is that way and yet he's under no illusion
that anybody takes his self-deprecation seriously.
Right, right, right.
Right, he knows his place.
Yeah.
The Steve Martin quote you put in there is so great.
It's like, Dave Letterman is truly self-deprecating.
He doesn't think he's any good.
Lauren does not suffer from this issue.
Yeah. But in talking about his childhood, he'll say Canada is a really boring place.
You have to make your own fun. It's harder to find his stimulating life. And he always
had his eye south of the border. He said it was like growing up next to Imperial Rome.
But I think that you're right that there is
a kind of a Canadian mildness.
The thing about wanting to take his leisure seriously,
that's connected to the way he views comedy.
Like he doesn't like comedy that he calls sweaty.
Like I wish I had room to have a glossary
on the back of this book because there's so much terminology.
Sweaty comedy is like comedy that's trying too hard, that's pushing and needy.
He'll always say the art of producing is not leaving any fingerprints, making it look easy.
He'll say Fred Astaire never grunted while he danced.
That's part of his work philosophy.
His grandparents owned a movie theater, but that's a unique experience, where the family has declared, we value show business.
You say in the book his grandparents would talk about
all these actors, Humphrey Bogart,
on a level where he would think they might know
these people. Yeah.
One of my favorite things about that story,
and I don't know if he even made this connection,
but when he was telling me that they would be talking about
Spencer Tracy and he thought those people were his friends, I thought how amazing that this guy would grow up to be
someone who routinely just talks about Mick and Jack and Paul.
Yes.
One of the fun things about writing this guy's biography is that all the years before he
got onto the world stage and became the Lorne Michaels that we know, it seemed to me that
almost every experience he had,
you could draw a line between that
and the producing skills he would later use at SNL.
Even when he was a tiny boy watching your show of shows
or Phil Silver's whatever with his grandmother,
who was the movie savant, she knew about showbiz,
he told me that they'd be looking at Jack Benny on TV.
And he loved Jack Benny
because of his underplayed, low-key thing,
but she would say, so he's really old now.
He started out as a young man in Vaudeville.
Then he got older, his hair turned white,
and he was a star of radio.
But then television came along, a visual medium,
so all these guys had to dye their hair black,
or if you're George Burns, wear a ridiculous rug.
So you imagine Tiny Lorne thinking about this Darwinian aspect
of showbiz eras shifting and moving into the next one.
And having to adjust.
And that's really the key to how he's been able to keep it going for 50 years,
paying attention to when the music changes and when the technology changes.
That's the impossible quality that he has, paying attention to when the music changes and when the technology changes. So interesting.
That's the impossible quality that he has,
is keeping it relevant and fresh,
which seems impossible for 50 years.
But I would say even like his access,
so he had a rich aunt and uncle.
Yeah, I mean people tease him about being name-droppy
and starfuckery and stuff.
Am I allowed to say that?
Oh yeah.
You can say anything.
When he was a little boy,
his family I think was sort of on the drabber side.
His mom was classic, like Philip Roth, Jewish mother,
really breathed down his neck.
And his father was a furrier.
And then he died when Lauren was 14.
But he had this aunt and uncle who lived down the street
who were in a fancier part of Toronto.
They were very rich.
They had a swimming pool in their house.
Yeah, they had a swimming pool.
Indoor?
It just recently sold for $18 million.
You're a good reader, man.
So they were rich and glamorous.
Lorne was like, oh, I wish I were that fabulous.
Yes.
How could you not?
And when Lorne's dad died, they really stepped in.
And Uncle Pep, great name, took Lorne under his wing
and taught him everything
about business and the world. And I think that is also the key to why Lorne extends
himself that way to his own young charges. He wants to show them how to do it.
Yes, such close proximity to wealth, coveting that, seeing that the attention in the family
is show business movie stars. We all want to be the star of our family first.
And it's like, if you see the things that are valued, and then also getting kind of
an education of how to move in an upscale thing as later in life he'll have to do, acting
like you've been there even though you haven't.
Right.
So how does he get from Toronto to Laughin?
He's grown up in this very parochial little neighborhood, very much like Philip Roth's
Newark, as far as Hills where he grew up. It was all these young Jewish kids
whose parents really wanted them to be lawyers. Take one second to talk about that article
that came out. Oh, I think that's really fascinating. I stumbled on the greatest piece of research.
It was this 600 page book called the Crestwood Heights Report. The Canadian government funded
a study of this one neighborhood in Toronto. It was
Lauren's neighborhood. They changed the name from Forest Hill to Crestwood Heights, and
they were trying to improve mental health services in Canada. So they did this deep
dive interviewing all these children and parents in Lauren's neighborhood. I could not figure
out if they actually interviewed the Lipowitz's. Lauren didn't know. He was a little boy. And
then they published this huge psychological report.
It kind of reminded me of Peyton Place in the US.
It was an indictment of the very bougie values
of this class and it said all the mothers
were just competitive with the other mothers
about where the kids were getting into school.
I have to believe there's just a nice layer
of anti-Semitism under all of it.
No?
I mean, it was a very Jewish area.
That's probably true.
Yeah, I mean, why were they, it seems so judgmental.
They were really tisking the fact that they were strivers.
Right.
Who wasn't a striver in that post-war era.
I guess it's also that Canadian tall poppy thing.
They were disapproving of how some of these houses
had those clear plastic slip covers.
The kids were banished to the basement.
Yeah.
Well, maybe it's also trying to say
what many other subsequent studies have said,
which is money doesn't equal happiness.
But it had more of a nouveau rich kind of a take.
Like these people were grotesque in their striving.
They had poor values.
It was much more of a straight judgment
of how they were doing it.
But before laughing, I want to go back to something that you said about Amy Poehler
pretending you belong somewhere when you don't.
One of the things that Amy was smartest about in talking to me about Lauren, she felt that
completely beyond all the comedy things you can learn from him, and he has a lot of theories
of comedies, like a comedy professor, she thought that he was just so great at teaching you
how to be in a room, how to walk into a room
and you got Paul McCartney at the dinner table
and not lose your shit and start acting like a weirdo.
And being able to go into a pitch meeting
and just be at the grownups table.
And would you think about it?
That is the real skill.
And I think that's something he had in spades
at a weird early age.
And even his cousin from Toronto, Neil Levy,
told me that when he first came to New York,
he was barely 30 and he was hanging out with Mick Jagger
and Paul Simon and they were like,
how does Lauren know these people?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But he said that he thought that it was just some kind
of like EQ sort of thing, an intuitive sense
of knowing what a person is gonna be interested
in talking about, not gushing, treating them
just like a regular room temperature kind of conversation.
And I think that that is part of it,
and he does teach all his people how to do that.
And that's why so many of the SNL people,
aside from having good comedy or acting careers,
they know how to produce, they know how to be showrunners,
they know how to handle people.
Yes.
But anyways, I'll go back to your other question.
He was in Toronto, he had this comedy partner
who was a much more of a borscht-belt,
he seltzer down the pants kind of comic,
and they did two-man comedy, very corny, blackouts,
punchline setups, and that was a way to go for a while.
This guy had met Jack Rollins in
New York who was Woody Allen's manager so again Lauren always had this eye on
who can get me up to the next step. He was smart about that.
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But then he always felt like one of the problems with Canada, it's almost too polite.
Even when he and his partner were doing well, the CBC would say, okay, your turn's over,
time to give someone else a chance.
There's this American idea of a trajectory up, up, up, up, up.
Yeah, never stops. So he goes to LA as a writer.
He's knocking around really the lamest string
of variety television shows you can imagine.
The beautiful Phyllis Diller show,
where Phyllis Diller, who's a genius, I think,
but still the show, she would play the saxophone
to Ernest Borg-Nine and stuff like that.
And Perry Colman's Christmas special.
Things like this, even though these were really cruddy things,
he always had a takeaway.
He learned something from even the lamest experiences.
On the Perry Como show, the executive producer said to him,
you know why Perry Como's a star?
Watch him when he comes out on stage to sing.
He comes out and he walks from the wings
over to the microphone. And it's just the way he walked.
The pace of the walk.
Made him a star.
It's like, whoa, but a little takeaway like that.
Anyways, those shows always got canceled or he got fired.
So then he ends up at Laugh-In, which was a hit show.
But as he said, it wasn't any more fun working on a hit show
than working on a show that was about to be canceled.
Because the way it was done at Laugh-In,
and this informs how he eventually would set up the process at SNL,
the writers were in a motel far away from the studio,
throwing out jokes that just kind of went into the maw,
and then somebody would rewrite them,
and then two other people would rewrite them.
He never even went into the studio. And that show, I then two other people would rewrite them.
He never even went into the studio.
And that show, I used to watch it on that old,
every big star in Hollywood would show up on that show,
and do a walk on.
And if you're Lorne and you're excited about glamor,
and think how horrible it must have felt
to be in the motel with the schmowy comedy writers,
and you're not meeting Dean Martin and everybody else.
He'd watch the show in the motel
with his fellow writers on Monday.
That's the only way you ever knew
if any of your material was used.
You know, you maybe see like a glimmer of one of your jokes.
One of the great things about SNL being live,
and Lorne realized this almost accidentally,
is that the audience tells you whether it works.
That's why the dress rehearsal's so important at SNL.
He's sitting there underneath where the audience sits,
and he's listening to them.
They're his secret sauce.
Of course, he has his own opinion too,
but a proper laugh is a combustible, uncontrolled thing.
You can't fake it.
Hearing the laugh is really important.
Yeah. Also, just to jump to the live aspect,
improv live is spectacular.
Improv on television is terrible
because you've lost the element of danger
that failure is on the table around every corner.
There's no safety net.
And so, SNL being live is such an interesting,
they've captured some of that danger,
even in the live broadcast.
Whereas like Laughin edited, something gets reduced,
there's no fear there.
That is exactly right.
And I sometimes wonder, when you see the show In 8H,
it's so thrilling.
My kids were both like theater kids,
and they were always just like,
oh my God, it's like the theater,
because people are running in and out
with pieces of scenery,
someone's changing their pants over there. Yeah
netic get the sense of the excitement and
People at home who don't see the scenery coming in that but you still get the adrenaline
I think the audience bridges that gap the audience is like a huge character in certain it live
Yes, I saw this a little bit when I worked for Lauren
But also if you're there at the show, there's always like and then we'll see Lorne just to the left of home base. He'll be completely still
He'll have his hands in his pockets
It's just this kind of little pool of calm and it makes his mystique even stranger
Well, that's his way to control chaos
Which is if you enter a room and someone's shouting and you start talking very low,
you can bring them down.
Right, and in the old days, he would always stand there
with a glass of white wine.
Oh, how elegant.
To kind of keep it like, I'm just at a cocktail party.
Yeah.
But the live thing, the fear, the no net thing,
this is probably something that I'm able to bring to this.
When I met Lauren, we hardly knew each other,
but working on the new show in 1984,
part of the reason that was a big failure, I think,
is that unlike Saturday Night Live, it wasn't live.
It was taped on a Thursday night, edited all night long,
and then it would go up Friday.
As people who've worked with him for a long time say,
Lorne's the kind of guy not good at term papers,
really good at tests, meaning he needs the deadline.
So at the new show, it was structured a lot like SNL,
sketches, guest stars, but there'd be an audience
and they'd be locked in the studio
because sometimes these tapings would go
for three or four hours.
People would try to leave and it couldn't let them leave
because you needed them there.
And I remember people would yell cut
in the middle of a sketch and you started over.
They'd have to patch it together in the editing room.
They'd have to add a laugh track.
And as Jim Downey said, you had all the crudeness of live
and the staleness of tape.
So that was also a lesson that like,
okay, you need that electricity of life.
Yeah, what is the saying that you wrote down?
He famously says,
We don't go on because we're ready,
we go on because it's 11.30.
Yeah, which is a very liberating approach in a way.
You know, I was thinking about what you were just saying
about improv and how it's like the circus or something.
Like if you're looking at it on a tape,
it just could be CGI.
But if you're sitting right next to the person
in the trapeze, you're kind of going,
ah, but improv and SNL, it's something I explored a little person in the trapeze, you're kind of going, ah! But improv and SNL,
it's something I explored a little bit in the book.
The relationship between improv people and SNL
is an interesting one because
I don't think most viewers know.
I didn't know this until your book.
Every kid takes improv lessons now,
the way when I was a kid you take piano lessons.
So improv is such a big thing in the culture,
but there's no improvisation on SNL.
People who have dared to improvise like Damon Wayans,
they're fired.
What about feeling?
Like Will Ferrell, positive I've seen moments
where the thing's gone awry, the audience is in on it,
he starts feeling-
Maybe ad-lib.
Yes, acknowledging what's happening
and just bridging this gap.
I guess if something were to go wrong,
then you can sort of ad-lib and save it.
But if you ad-lib like a joke or something,
you're fired.
You're out of there.
And it's partly about huge respect for the writer
and the writing, which goes back to laughing.
But it's also, everything is timed with a stopwatch
down to the second because they have to know
when that commercial break
is gonna land.
And so that's why these famous incidents
like Sinead O'Connor tearing up the picture of the Pope
or Elvis Costello quitting and going into another song.
The reason those things made people upset
wasn't just that they were messing with the plan,
but because it could throw off the camera operators
and could throw off the timing.
It's a play.
Yeah, if Elvis plays a different song,
well, what if that's 44 seconds longer
and then the Toyota ad can't run?
Yes.
So the irony is you don't improv on the show,
but improv players do really well when they're in the cast.
And that, I think, is because they're really good at ensemble work.
To be good at improv, as you know, you have to be really tuned in to listen.
And that's why improv guys like you,
as opposed to like standups, are good on the show.
What are his rules of sketch?
Some of them are really broad, tonal things,
like do it in sunshine.
He likes to remind people that comedy is an entertainment,
and he doesn't have a lot of patience for people
who want to do some kind of dark, Brechtian, black box.
And sometimes do it in sunshine is something as simple as the costumes.
Something that I think I cut from the book
because the book was way too long in the beginning.
Well, when you write for 10 years, you're liable to stack up some pages.
Bruce McCulloch, one of the kids in the hall,
was a writer on the show in 85, 86,
and he told me that Joan Cusack was in the cast then,
and they were doing a run through of a sketch,
and she was in some kind of dowdy dress,
and Lauren said,
can't you put her in something more attractive?
She's a pretty girl.
And Bruce got really mad, and he said,
okay, Lauren, you want me to put her in a fucking bikini?
And he said, I can't, you want me to put her in a fucking bikini? And you know, he said,
I can't believe I wasn't fired for that.
But the point is just that you want it to be pleasant
and right and you don't want people yelling at each other.
You don't want to write anger.
I found this really interesting.
He has no tolerance for people that are doing impersonations
out of a place of hate.
And this is an increasingly interesting dynamic
that's presented itself in the last decade on the show,
which is everyone's politics are so fucking rigid now
that you have these performers that almost refuse
to lampoon liberals.
Then if they're playing a conservative,
they hate the conservative they're playing with
and they have a tendency to make them unenjoyable to watch.
Yeah, it was so interesting for me to spend a lot of time there during the first Trump
administration because a lot of this tension was kind of coalescing for the first time.
Taryn Killam, who had been playing Trump before Alec Baldwin did, was really outraged to get
a note every now and then saying, can you give him a little more charm?
And Lorne didn't mean like, because we like Trump.
Of course.
But he meant, it's an entertainment,
it's gotta be funny, you go where the laughs are.
And he always uses as an example how British villains,
like Bond villains, or think of Alan Rickman in Die Hard,
or even some Shakespeare characters.
They're fun, kind of.
Yeah, I mean, they're kind of oily,
and you like to watch them.
Another thing that I've heard him say a lot is,
idiots play better than assholes.
They're just gonna be funnier.
And Dr. Evil is sort of the apotheosis of that.
So I think that some of the more millennial,
younger people in the cast,
that's a hard thing for them to get and swallow.
You know, someone didn't want to play Feinstein.
Right, Cecily Strong felt awkward about a piece
where she was playing Feinstein,
and it's kind of a drooly, daughtery old lady,
but she is.
There was comedy in that.
And one week I was there, he wanted Kate McKinnon
to do her Angela Merkel impersonation,
which is funny, you know, the full cut.
She didn't want to do it because Merkel had announced
that she was stepping down and it was like just too sad.
But as a Woody Allen character would say in Annie Hall,
what, or his mother, what concern of that is yours?
You know, you make the people laugh.
Well, he has to give a speech at one point
that you're privy to, which is he basically just says,
your politics aren't the politics of the show.
Those are two different things.
Our obligation is to bring truth and
humor to power on both sides. We're not doing one version here.
He takes some heat for saying this, but political comedy on television has veered more toward
a kind of a virtue signaling, you're with us or you're against us. You know, even The
Daily Show, which of course makes fun of liberals, you definitely feel there's an ideology there.
You could watch five minutes of it and be pretty certain.
Yeah, and you feel like Fox viewers
are probably not watching it at all.
Right, where you have these famous sketches
of who was it that did Jimmy Carter?
Oh yeah, Dan Aykroyd.
Yeah, Dan Aykroyd.
They have a rich tradition of blasting liberals
and Republicans.
Oh, and Darryl Hammons, Bill Clinton. So funny. Oh, incredible.
Yeah.
We live in such a strange time now, especially in Trump too.
This whole culture war thing that I think people feel like everyone should be mobilized
at all times.
And Lauren's take, I guess, would be that's not what they're there for.
And it reminds me of this great word that Seth Meyers coined when he was head writer, which I just think is so smart.
It's the word clapter.
The idea of clapter is there's some political humor,
you do it, you make a political joke,
and people go like, yes, yes, of course, very good.
They're clapping because they agree with the sentiment.
But what you want is you want this uncontrollable
physical reaction of a laugh.
But at the same time, back then, 2018, when Trump was two years in, it was around the
midterms, I remember talking to some of the writers and this was when Trump was tweeting
about SNL every day.
Remember he was obsessed.
And they said, it's a little scary to me that the president of the United States is paying
so much attention to the job that I do.
And what if some dumb punchline I write
causes him to blow up the world?
Boy, he's pretty dialed in.
Well, even Chappelle in his recent monologue is like,
because I know you're watching.
I feel like, yeah, he is, that's crazy.
He's talking directly to the President right now.
That's crazy.
I want to talk about the drug stuff.
This field of people really over indexes in addiction, myself included, and to love and
root for and guide all these people, he would have to have a great radar for what's happening
over the years, having watched so many of the performers struggle with this.
And I'm most curious how it's evolved for him, what kind of regrets he has.
Chris Rock told me, you know, this guy has been hundreds, if not thousands, of people's
boss.
You get to be a pretty good student of human character that way.
I think that in the very beginning, yeah, it was the 70s, and his whole idea was he
wanted to update the kind of moribund variety show formula
with the concerns of his generation, sex and drugs and rock and roll.
I mean, a lot of drug humor in those first five years.
His feeling back then, which was not unusual with people's private lives,
are their business.
What you do in your own time is your own business.
I'm not going to tell you what to do. I'm not the man.
And I think if you party yourself, it could be a little misleading, like,
well I smoke weed, and he's getting pulled over
with weed in the car.
Yeah, I did a thing at the 92nd Street Y
recently with Bob Odenkirk, who,
I guess I didn't know this, was a kind of
a straight arrow as a young man,
and he said one of the things that shocked him
in reading my book was getting a sense
of what a pothead Lauren had been.
I don't think that's that alarming in any way,
but in the 70s they were all practically living
at the offices, you know, they'd stay there all night.
There was a lot of coke, which fueled them
through these all night writing sessions.
And as Lauren said, probably the office was nicer
than most of their apartments at that point.
But the advice was basically just rotate your drugs
and there was I think this sense of if you can't handle it,
it's kind of your problem.
And the other thing that's interesting,
and even if you look at the drug humor on the show,
things like drugs and eating disorders,
they hadn't been medicalized yet.
They were just kind of character things.
And I remember Lauren once saying to me
that between the movie Arthur and Arthur 2,
alcoholism moved from being a subject for comedy and a disease.
Because there was this big cultural shift.
God, that hits home.
I just gotta say, that was my dad's favorite movie.
It was one of our favorite movies.
We watched Arthur a hundred times.
He was also a raging alcoholic.
And then even between the gap of Arthur one and two,
my dad went to treatment and got sober.
So it literally happened real time for us.
It was like, oh wait, it's not super cute
that this guy's hammered all day long.
So that was his take, and then Belushi dies.
What year did he die?
When he was off the show, so it was.
Like 85 or six-ish, or later.
I'm thinking it was around 86,
and we're gonna have to fact check that.
Okay, Monica will dig right into that.
It was before that, it was during the hiatus year,
so it was probably early mid-80s.
And Lauren always has a little bit of a point of pride
in saying that no one's actually died
while working for the show.
Oh, that's funny.
In the middle of a sketch, yeah.
Well, while they're tenure?
Well, he means just while they were employed on the show.
Right, okay, I might take some pride in that.
I mean, he would say that it's because
there's something about the discipline of the show,
which is almost military in its rigor.
You gotta approach it like an addiction.
Oh, that's right, the show itself is an addiction.
You end up regulating how you feel by this job,
and it works, and then when the job goes away,
you're in trouble. Right.
In both the case of Chris Farley and Belushi,
they were off the show for a certain number of years.
Without the structure of the show,
they were kind of spinning out. But anyway when Belushi died it really hit him
hard and I think he felt like this whole approach of just letting people do
their own thing on their own time this was the wrong approach. We're a tribe and
we have to look out for each other and so by the time Chris Farley comes along
ten years later or whatever,
from the beginning he clearly had addiction issues.
Lorne would call him into his office
and give him these talks about the drinking or the drugs
and the sad thing was that for Farley,
who was such a child man kind of guy,
Bob Odenkirk, I remember telling me
that Farley would be excited to be called
into Lorne's office.
It was like the kind of thrill of being
in the principal's office,
but at the same time you're getting in trouble.
He couldn't metabolize it,
but Lorne had really changed his approach.
He would ban Farley from the show for weeks at a time
if he was too fucked up.
And he sent him to a series of really tough love rehab places.
And obviously it didn't do it for him.
I think he's been pretty hands-on in guiding
Pete Davidson through his different issues and Malaney,
and they all talk about how Lauren is a really helpful
person to talk to about it.
So I think that he definitely realized,
okay, I can play a role here.
But also, I never saw any drugs in the time that I spent
over there in the last number of years.
He joked once, he said, yeah, now it's all about Azempik.
Yeah, that's a drug.
What are Lauren's five rules of show business longevity?
Oh boy, let's see.
And if you get three out of five, that'll be good.
Well, he'll say, you can't make an entrance
if you don't make an exit.
And he'll sometimes say that to people
when they're leaving the show.
You kind of have to switch horses.
I mean, it's strange, it's something he's never done.
Although he did make the exit in 1980 and then came back.
Another thing he likes to say is,
when do people leave show business?
And the answer is never.
No one ever leaves show business.
And then he'll say, you're out of the business five years
before somebody will tell you.
I mean, that relates a little bit to his management style
that I think explains, he knows it's a long game.
When he was in Hollywood as a young man,
he saw the Smothers brothers be taken off the air
because they wouldn't let up on the Vietnam stuff
that they were doing, which was brilliant.
But the lesson he took away from that is,
yeah, they're brilliant, but they made martyrs of themselves
and now they don't get to do a show.
Even in his speech, like this show airs in 50 states.
Yeah, and I think that that would also inform
how he viewed what went down with Conan
and the Tonight Show.
Tell me.
Well, that was a very complicated thing
where Lauren picked Conan significantly a writer,
like Lauren was, to succeed David Letterman.
What a preposterous idea, like a comedy writer
who's not ever even been
a professional performer.
And he fostered his career.
And then years later, when Conan took over
The Tonight Show, this is something that the Hollywood
people still kind of parse and talk about.
Like it's some Greek myth.
Yeah, yeah.
Lauren was not made executive producer of The Tonight Show
the way he was over Conan's Late Night.
And partly it was, Tonight Show was in LA,
Lauren was in New York.
There was a sense in the business
that it was a tactical mistake.
To not have Lauren.
To not have Lauren as the godfather figure
who had big pull with NBC.
Even if he's just like a fire extinguisher behind glass.
Because then when NBC started messing around
with Conan's slot, I don't know if you remember,
Jay Leno didn't really want to retire at that point.
There's sides here now.
I refuse to be on one.
I think everyone got fucked.
I agree.
Let's give a little context for people
who don't know what happened.
Okay, so when Conan was successfully doing
the late night show, he was being wooed by other networks.
So NBC, I think this was the idea of his agent,
Gavin Pallone, it's kind of a kooky idea.
They said, well, okay, if you promise him the tonight show
in X number of years, like nine years, he'll stay.
So they signed this weird,
you're the lady in waiting kind of thing with Conan.
He stuck around, the date approaches,
the NBC is like, oh shit, we don't wanna get rid of Jay,
and Jay doesn't wanna go.
So they were over a barrel.
I mean, it was kind of a dumb deal, if you think about it.
So they did put Conan in on The Tonight Show.
Jay didn't wanna go, so they did this weird thing
where they put him at 10 p.m.
That show is actually not doing great
because people aren't used to seeing Jay Leno
tell jokes at 10.
So then it started to erode the lead in
for the 11 o'clock news,
which started to erode the lead in for Conan's show.
Yes, and you're trying to figure out
what is the broken part.
Is Conan not appealing?
Is it the lead in that sucks?
So then what they decide to do is they said,
okay, we're gonna put Jay on later
and he's gonna come right before Conan
and we're gonna move Conan's Tonight Show to 1205.
So it's this little adjustment.
Now it's like nothing anybody wants half hour.
When you think about it now in the age of streaming,
it's like, duh, who cares?
But Conan felt, why is the network dicking around with me?
Because we've been waiting all these years.
When you think about it now, it seems so minor,
but he grew up revering The Tonight Show as this franchise,
in the same way that Lorne did as a child.
So that's what's so interesting.
They had this similar vibration.
And Conan got this idea and has had that
The Tonight Show at 1205 simply isn't The Tonight Show.
That's like breach of contract.
Yeah, Team Coco, I'm with Coco,
it became this huge movement.
But at the same time, I think Conan hoped
that Lorne Michaels, who had basically been his patron
and guardian angel early in his career,
would maybe intervene with NBC
to try to not let this bad thing happen.
But Lorne didn't so much.
And Lorne doesn't really wanna ever talk about this head on.
He's just way too self-possessed and cool for that.
But people around Lauren feel that it was an act
of disrespect, it's kind of a godfather thing,
that he hadn't been given that EP credit
and that he wasn't gonna stick his neck out.
Now, he told me that he found it painful
to watch Conan twisting in the wind
and he thought if he did have the opportunity
to talk to Conan, he would have said,
this is like dying on a molehill.
Don't make a martyr of yourself like this mother's brothers.
Don't make a huge fuss out of this thing,
which is five minutes, stay on the air.
That's the rule of show business.
Stay on the air, stay on the air, stay on the air.
But then the Conan people,
and I've known Conan forever from college,
and his producer, Jeff Ross, live in my building.
Those guys, they also have a completely
understandable explanation. Which is, they also have a completely understandable
explanation.
Which is, they're newbies, they're youngins,
they're coming out to LA.
And they say the NBC people said, you know what,
we don't need to bring Lorne Michaels,
he's on the East Coast, you guys are set,
we don't need it.
And they're like, okay, sure boss, they're new,
they don't know what they're doing either.
I actually don't think there's a total bad guy
in the situation.
I guess NBC's the bad guy,
but it's not like this was their master plan.
It all went to shit and they didn't know how to fix it.
It was dumb to promise something.
You didn't know you were going to be able to execute.
Very corporate to be like,
yeah, you're going to get this and have no idea.
Conan obviously completely recovered.
He's had an amazing career,
and I think his whole podcast, Empire, I think,
was so cool.
And he and Lorne, it was emotionally painful
because they really were close.
And I think this created a feeling of confusion
and frostiness and over time that's healed.
And I'm really happy Conan appeared in the five timers club
a couple of seasons ago.
It's just nice to see that.
You touched on it a little bit, but it launches in 75,
and then I guess in 80, he splits.
Yeah.
Does he have a reason why he splits at that moment?
He just thought SNL, okay, I'll try this.
He had always wanted to do this hip variety show,
and here in New York, they're saying,
okay, you can do this at 1130.
One of the reasons he liked the idea
is he referred to that time slot
as the vacant lot on the edge of town,
meaning no network executives
are gonna pay any attention to it.
He can use it almost as a laboratory.
No testing, because it's live, there's no pilot.
He certainly never thought
it was gonna be a 50-year institution.
And over the five years, it got really hard.
There were a lot of drugs, it was physically taxing.
He starts losing the key parts of his cast.
After the first year, Chevy Chase defects
and goes to Hollywood.
That almost broke his heart.
He only did one year.
One year and a few episodes in the second season.
That was really hard for him
because Chevy was like a brother.
He calls him a founder of the show.
Then he brings in Billy Murray in the second season.
But then he loses Belushi and he loses Zack Royd.
And so by the end of the fifth year, they're all exhausted.
What he later learned is, oh, it's like a sports franchise.
People move on.
Keep the rookie bench full.
And you gotta have them on a seven-year contract
when they arrive.
So after five years, he's kind of like,
oh my God, I'm exhausted.
I need to regroup.
He says to NBC, okay, I'll come back,
but you have to give me like six months off
to hire a whole new bunch of people.
He had months and months to prepare for the first season
to hire people and let them mesh and marinate
and fall in love.
And he felt he needed to start that whole process over.
They were basically, eh, don't think so.
He was totally taken by surprise.
He got a phone call one day and said,
they're keeping the show on,
but they hired someone else to produce it.
And he was like, what?
Even though he didn't have ownership of it,
he sweetly and naively thought of it as his baby.
He kind of lost control of it, flipped him out.
But on the other hand, he was exhausted.
And this goes back to his grandparents
running a movie theater.
He always thought that a big part of his career
was gonna be the movies.
So he thought, all right, now I'm gonna go off
and I'm gonna do my Mike Nichols thing.
I'm gonna direct my version of The Graduate.
Seeing The Graduate had been a really
seminal experience for him.
He idolized Mike Nichols.
A lot of people say he's modeled his speech patterns
on Mike Nichols, you know.
And he and Nichols had a lot in common. They changed their Jewish names. They had his difficult
mothers. They came into New York, to use a phrase that I like, they kind of learned how
to work the friendship economy, moving their way up. And they were similar. They were close.
So Lauren signs a deal with MGM to produce a bunch of movies.
That completely falls flat.
He assigns a lot of his SNL writers, Franken and Davis, Jim Downey, Tom Schiller, to write
screenplays.
Nothing happens.
Partly it's that MGM is in financial mayhem, but partly it just doesn't play to his strengths.
It's not his wheelhouse.
Movies take a long time.
You get a lot of notes from idiots. Movies take a long time.
You got a lot of notes from idiots.
Movies is not a writer's medium.
TV is, but not movies.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
One movie got made in that period,
Tom Schiller's Nothing Lasts Forever,
which was this strange little art film,
and Bacroyd and Bill Murray are in it,
but the studio thought they were gonna get Animal House.
They wanted a big, baffo comedy, and here's Lauren kind of doing these little art films.
At the same time, he was working on a screenplay of Pride and Prejudice.
He had optioned Don DeLillo's White Noise, which Noah Baumbach would make 40 years later.
So that was a total disaster.
And in 1985, SNL had kind of limped along, but NBC was going to pull
the plug. And then Brandon Tartikoff reached out to Lauren and said, listen, if you'd want
to come back, we would really love you to take the show over again. And he was caught
because it was sort of his baby and the movie thing hadn't gone the way he wanted it to.
But he had this feeling, which I'm sure,
for someone as status conscious as Lauren,
it felt like, God, does it look like I'm going backwards?
Does it look like going back with my tail between my legs?
And he consulted, because his dad died,
a lot of rabbis always, a lot of mentor figures.
He asked two people for advice.
The first one was David Geffen, who was his first agent.
And Geffen said to him, you don't want to do that.
That's going backwards.
Someone who wants to be you should do that job.
And Lauren's kind of funny.
He said, well, I always kind of liked being me.
I want to be me.
And then the second person he asked was Mo Austin.
Who's that?
Mo Austin was the chairman of Warner Records.
He was a venerable old Hollywood sage, was Mo Austin. Who's that? Mo Austin was the chairman of Warner Records.
He was a venerable old Hollywood sage,
older than Geffen,
and he had this much more practical advice.
He said, look, you love New York.
There aren't that many big showbiz jobs in New York.
This is one.
You're really good at it.
You like doing it.
It's where you wanna live.
Of course you should do it.
And if you think about the psychology of Hollywood
and the like get ahead, better, bigger,
it was kind of brave really to go back.
I mean most people wouldn't.
Their ego would have gotten them away, yeah.
But he did it.
When he came back, did he leverage any of that
to get now ownership or anything?
Did he have a better position when he returned?
Not right in that year, but over the coming years,
he brought in some financial people who helped him
claw back some of the distribution rights,
and he eventually was making more money off of it.
Because when he left after the first five years,
Buck Henry said to him,
so, Lauren, what was your takeaway from this?
What piece of it do you own?
And Lauren said, uh, nothing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
He realized that he wasn't so savvy that way.
When he came back, Sotartikov said,
okay, we want you to come back,
but you can just kind of be this executive in charge
and get your own people to run it day to day.
And that was a really disastrous season,
partly because of the casting.
Peacock made a whole documentary about that
called The Weird Year.
And Lorne already kind of being attuned to the hinges
between different eras, he thought, oh, I have to go young.
So he hired people who had been in John Hughes movies.
He hired Anthony Michael Hall.
Yeah, Anthony Michael Hall and RDJ.
Robert Downey Jr.
And these people didn't really know how to do sketch comedy.
That was in their background.
They were also all way too young.
Al Franken said to me,
you couldn't do a sketch about a Senate hearing back then
because they were all barely shaving.
Yeah.
Franken also told me that season was so notoriously horrible
that years later, like on the Senate floor,
Marco Rubio would walk up to him and go,
Al, what the hell happened that season?
Oh, wow.
Oh, my God.
The next year, he kind of got back in the groove
and he hired that fantastic cast of Dana Carvey.
He held over Lovitz, but Phil Hartman, Jan Hooks,
those people were so great.
So this was interesting from the book.
Everyone thinks the best years of Serent Live
were whatever years they watched in high school.
Yeah.
Which makes total sense.
Is there any objective way to evaluate it?
I guess you would have ratings as some metric,
but can we say what the golden arrows are?
Of course, I'm skewed.
What was your high school one?
Sandler and Chris Farley and Dana Carvey was still there.
I would argue those were some damn good years
in Phil Hartman. I think so too.
I think I had a great writing staff then.
I bet there is a way to look at it ratings-wise,
but I think the reason the high school thing is kind of true
is that when you're in high school, your emotions, you don't really have any power.
It's why when we hear the pop music that was on AM radio when we were in high school, it's so powerful.
You're awakening to this. It's your first taste of it all.
Yeah. My high school cast was the first cast.
I went to the show when I was 16.
I went to an Elliot Gould show.
Wow.
Actually, when I went to see Lauren
after I had sold this book and sprung on him
the news that I was gonna write this book about him
where he looked like he was gonna have a heart attack
before agreeing to talk with me,
I told him that I was at that show in 76,
which he never knew, and I think it meant a lot to him.
People being there at the beginning means something to him,
and he's kind of superstitious.
It kind of resonated with him.
Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare.
expert if you dare. But now having this nerdy scholarly interest in the whole thing, my other two favorite
casts just in terms of comedy are the one you're talking about and also the really cool
cast.
Tina Aimee.
That was mine.
Well, I think Hader, Armisen, Wig.
Yeah. Because I thought they wereater, Armisen, Wig.
Yeah.
Because I thought they were not only really funny,
but they had a kind of a hipness to them.
Yes, that's the UCB vibe coming in.
That's right.
Groundlings was very broad, Will Ferrell was Groundlings.
And then once it went into that UCB zone,
starting with Aimee.
Why are they hipper?
It's like they're in a shitty little theater in Manhattan.
It's free, you line up.
It had a very punk rock vibe.
Less sketch and more improv, dangerous.
It was very punk rock.
So you've just explained it, I've never understood that.
As it was explained to me when I got into the Groundlings,
they're like, okay, Second City,
they generally will do political stuff.
Groundlings, we do not do politics.
Second City, you don't write your sketches
so you don't own anything, they all own it.
But you get paid, so that's an upside.
Groundlings, you have to pay to even have your theater time,
but you write your own shit
and you own everything you do there.
It was a binary war for 30 years,
and then UCB arrived, it's all improv,
or mostly all improv,
and everyone looks punk rock and hungover.
No one's in costumes, no one's in wigs.
No, you're wearing a hoodie.
You have to. I mean, you don't in costumes, no one's in wigs. No, you're wearing a hoodie, you have to.
I mean, you don't have to, but you have to.
And the method there is the game of improv.
So it's actually very intellectual.
There is sketch there and people are doing big characters,
but that's not the cool part of UCB.
The cool part is, exactly.
And I worked there and I did UCB and I was so into it.
And you felt so cool being there.
They're all cults.
This is a book somebody should write.
I mean about...
The cults.
The three schools.
I had never thought about how each of them had their own distinct contribution and economic
model.
One of the things that was interesting about the kids in the hall, which was produced,
is that those guys somehow negotiated to own their characters.
Like Dana Carvey doesn't own.
This is some of the drama we could get into
because I think over the years I've watched different alumni
from Cinerant Live have their movie careers
and some had Lauren produce stuff
and some didn't.
Famously Mike Myers didn't do certain characters.
You can do them once on the show and you own them
but if you do them twice.
Oh, you know, I don't know.
That's so interesting.
That's for the next edition.
Yeah, I'd always heard Mike Myers intentionally
didn't do Austin Powers on stage,
even though he had the character,
because he didn't want Lauren to own it.
He wanted to be able to go,
because he had done Wayne's World,
and he wanted to go be on his own.
That's very smart.
Some of these people just are so canny.
It reminds me of how Dana Carvey told me
he knew that his sketches were gonna play better
if he did them on home base,
because you're closer to the audience reaction.
You can see their eyes, they can see your eyes.
And so he would always go and cozy up to the designers
to make sure they would put his sketch there.
You don't want your sketch to be in the corner
under the bleachers where the audience can't actually see them.
So all these different skills,
but that mic thing, I didn't know that.
What's the Sandler story?
In the mid-90s, and a lot of people didn't know this,
it was a fun thing to be able to write about in the book.
It was the one time when Lorne almost lost the show,
he was almost fired.
On what ground?
He said, it was the first time in the history of the show,
that the critics, who were really dumping on the show, and the network executives critics who were really dumping on the show and the
network executives who were also dumping on the show were on the same side. He recognized
after that whole bad Anthony Michael Hall season that he had to keep the cast current
with what was really going on in the world. So he replenished that carvey Hartman cast.
He brought in Sandler and Farley and Spade. This was a whole different feeling.
These were lads.
They were almost fratty.
Yeah, they were fratty and fratty and Phil Hartman is almost like John Barrymore by comparison.
You know, a whole different thing.
And a lot of the boomers were still in charge.
They ran NBC.
They were the critics for magazines.
They didn't like this new thing.
They thought it was too many sketches about anal probes and everything.
Sure, sure, sure. I love taking moral high ground in sketch comedy. That's wonderful.
The network started rolling up its sleeves and thinking, we have to get in here and fix
SNL because the critics were dumping on it. And they also were kind of riding high because
they had friends, they had Seinfeld. They were like, we know better. Don Ohlmeyer, who
was the sort of head of this cabal,
they basically said, you gotta fire Farley,
you gotta fire Sandler, and a bunch of the writers,
and at that point, Lorne, again,
it's his sort of Game of Thrones instinct
for how to ride it out.
He just realized, okay, I'm just gonna roll over.
He was a new father, he was kind of overwhelmed.
I think he saw the writing on the wall, that he wasn't gonna win it. He was a new father, he was kind of overwhelmed. I think he saw the writing on the wall
that he wasn't gonna win it.
He was like 20 years in at that point.
Yeah, and the other thing that happened around that time
is they started quietly interviewing other people
thinking about possibly replacing Lorne.
One of the people they talked to was Judd Apatow.
Oh wow.
Who was in his mid-20s.
He had just been running the Ben Stiller show,
which was a great show that was completely underappreciated by Fox
and then canceled.
So Judd gets this call from Warren Littlefield and these executives
about a job at SNL.
They're very vague about what it is.
And he was one of these nerds who taped and transcribed the show.
No one more obsessed with comedy.
You know, Sandor was his roommate.
Sandor was on the show.
So think how hard that must have been for him.
He called some of the people at the show
to try to figure out what was going on.
He even met with Lorne a couple of times.
But Lorne strategically didn't fuss
and just acted like nothing was happening.
And Judd and I think some of the other people,
there was also this comedy writer named Adam Resnick
who they approached. Those guys realized, well people, there was also this comedy writer named Adam Resnick who they approached.
Those guys realized, well wait,
there's something kind of screwy here
because they're kind of like wink, wink, hint, hint,
maybe one day you could take over.
But it was so not above board and so sleazy
that I quote Judd in the book saying,
it seems so disrespectful of Lauren's captaining
of his ship.
He just wanted nothing to do with it.
So he just said, no thanks.
Oh wow, good for him.
And same with Adam Resnick,
and Lorne just kind of rode it out,
and the number of administrations of NBC's ex-sies outlasted.
He's almost like the Queen of England.
Like when you're watching The Crown and she's like,
"'You're my third Prime Minister.'"
Exactly.
"'I will be here after you're gone.'"
As Judd says, right after that he went
and he picked one of the best casts ever,
the great Will Ferrell cast.
Sandler and Farley had to be let go.
He handled it in a very careful way.
They didn't just leave.
It had been decreed that they had to go.
Lorne in his style of avoiding all confrontation,
never wanted to have blood on his hands or anything.
Basically, Sandy Wernick, who managed Sandler, word of this was out and about.
Wernick picks up the phone and says to Lauren,
like, you know, if you want,
we could have Adam do another season,
but maybe you should just pursue this Happy Gilmore thing.
And it was kind of like wink, wink.
It was all arranged so he didn't actually have to be fired.
Everybody knew that he couldn't come back.
Oh, wow.
So it was a complicated jujitsu thing.
But when Sandler hosted a few years ago,
he sang this funny song about how he got fired.
It's now kind of out in the open,
but back then it was papered over.
One of the delicious ironies of this is that Don Ohlmeyer,
the guy who forced Lauren to fire these people,
Lauren was just kind of ahead of the curve there.
He knew that this kind of comedy was coming.
A year or two later, Ohlmeyer calls him and says,
you know, I was wrong about Sandler.
Could you get me a print of Billy Madison's show
at my kid's birthday party?
Really?
What you'll do for your kids.
You'll eat crow.
Yeah, true.
Conan says there's a Game of Thrones of show business,
Lauren's gonna be the winner,
and after the nuclear apocalypse,
all life forms will be wiped out,
but Lauren will be there in his office
talking to the cockroaches and saying,
I see you as a Chevy cockroach.
You know?
I mean, he just has that instinct.
Yeah.
It's wild.
What's beating it as far as longevity?
60 Minutes maybe has been on longer.
Tonight Show's been on longer as a franchise,
but it's the longest running entertainment show
that there is.
It's incredible. Yeah, 50 years.
Every year I've been alive.
Well, I love the book.
I hope you take this as a compliment.
It reads like a New Yorker article.
It's so fast moving and every sentence is just packed
with all this rich detail.
Even his fucking desk, if you're describing his office,
there's a story about the desk,
but it's done in three sentences.
You're just getting so much.
It's very dense in the most satisfying way. I really, really love it. Thank you. Yeah, it's done in three sentences. You're just getting so much. It's very dense in the most satisfying way.
I really, really love it.
Yeah, it's fantastic.
It's out, I hope everyone reads it.
It's so interesting.
Every page, you're like, ooh, that's juicy.
Ooh, that's juicy.
What an institution to be able to delve in and really cool.
When I was doing it, I'd never written a biography.
I realized you want to avoid it
being like this death march through the years. year goes to that year it goes to that season
That's when something clicked in my brain. I'm like, oh I should think about my background as a magazine journalist
so I did this thing where I spent a whole week there and
Interspersed in the book are these chapters of different days of the week
And so you have this kind of propulsion towards Saturday
Yeah, yes of the week and so you have this kind of propulsion towards Saturday. Like the hunger game. Oh, I love that.
So by the time you get to the end of the book,
people tell me that they're reading the Saturday chapter
and their heart is pounding.
They're like, ah!
That's awesome.
Have you heard from Lauren what he thinks of the book?
I heard from Lauren a couple weeks ago.
He came to my book party in the city
at David Remnick's house, which was really nice.
And he spent a lot of time there
and talking to all the nerdy New Yorker people.
He told me he hasn't brought himself to read it yet.
I find that hard to believe, but go on.
Well, I did see someone last night
who was really close to him who said,
I think he's read it.
Yeah.
I could see it both ways.
What a weird existential thing to be like reading
your life between the covers of this book.
You can see that might be scary,
but on the other hand, you think that just
sort of a pure curiosity.
No, so you have taken the time to document his whole journey
in a way that he himself probably hasn't constructed.
There's no way if you spent 10 years writing a book about me,
I'm not reading it.
He did say, I'll read it.
Also very sweet, he'll sort of let me know
when various of his fancy friends have read it.
He said, Candice Bergen just called me and she read it
and she said it was great.
Wonderful, wonderful.
That's awesome.
You know, the reason I wanted to write about him
is because so little was known about him.
The way I handled it was I approached him
only after I had sold the book,
which I think meant something to him
because he wouldn't have ever wanted it to look like
he wanted this vanity project about himself.
Lauren is so smart that as I say in the acknowledgments, he never wanted a book inflicted upon him.
I think in a way he would have preferred to just sidestep this whole thing, but he's smart
enough to appreciate that this is like a real book, a real work of journalism.
It isn't a hagiography and that people are going to take it seriously.
So that takes his legacy more seriously.
I think so much of the interest is we all have such a fondness for us now, and it's
been a part of so many of our coming of age, that you want to know how all that happened.
You were talking about the principles of comedy.
Some of them are even just like little practical things.
He'll say, in a sketch, if a man arrives to pick a woman up for a date, don't have him
bring her flowers. Have him bring her flowers.
Have him bring her chocolates.
The reason for that is, if he brings her flowers,
then the audience is going to go like,
oh, now she has to find a vase.
That takes you out of the moment.
Right.
All these little technical things.
So there's a way you could distill a kind of how-to guide.
Yeah.
Well, I love that.
I hope everyone reads it.
Thanks so much for coming in.
It was really fun.
And we'll talk to you in 10 years
when you write your next book.
Okay.
I might be napping till then.
Ha ha ha ha.
Ha ha ha ha.
Stay tuned for the fact check.
It's where the party's at.
Hello.
Look at these old new shoes.
They're new.
They look like Grammy, like they're really worn in Grammys.
Yeah, they look like slippers.
They're like a moccasin.
Tweed slippers.
I wouldn't say Tweed.
Okay, don't say Tweed.
Were you a little drowsy?
Yeah, I'm sleepy today.
Yes, because it's a little gloomy and overcasty?
Yeah, and we normally record at 11 and it's 10.
Yeah, crackassadong.
That changes my whole morning.
What time did you wake up?
Eight.
I cannot wake up before eight.
I keep setting my alarm for seven.
I keep trying.
Yeah.
Can I advise you on something?
Sure.
Don't fight it and feel bad about it.
Cause the converse situation is the one I'm in,
was like, I can't sleep past six.
I would pay a shocking amount of money
to be able to do it.
Yeah.
Don't hate it.
Okay.
Cause it'll likely as you get older,
it'll probably be harder.
I know. And you'll be like, likely as you get older, it'll probably be harder. I know.
And you'll be like,
why can't I just sleep till eight?
Well, I know part of the issue
is I don't fall asleep till late.
What time did you fall asleep last night?
And were you watching one of your medical dramas?
ER, yeah, this is a problem.
I don't know what time.
How many episodes of ER are there?
Oh, great question.
Okay.
I mean, each season has like 22 episodes, hour long.
There's what, a dozen seasons of that show or something?
Probably so many, let's see.
I mean, it's no grays, but it's no parenthood either.
Yeah, it went on for a long time.
331.
331!
15 seasons.
I'm not gonna watch all of them.
I'm just, I wanna set the expectations.
Why not?
Do you see the thing I sent you though?
That it's a good medication?
Yeah, you sent me the thing we already knew.
But was proven yet again that people who rewatch things,
it helps regulate their anxiety.
Yeah.
I got to tell you, there's a big disturbance
in my fragile little spoiled world.
Uh oh, okay, let's hear it.
There's a lot of articles coming out
that perhaps cold plunging is not good for you.
Really?
Well, minimally that it shuts down
the inflammation you need for muscle growth and repair.
And so if you're cold plunging while lifting,
you're basically neutralizing it.
And I know it's different at different temperatures
and different age groups and everything.
And I had always been going like, yeah,
but lane set above 50, it's still,
but then I just, more and more keep coming out.
Uh-oh.
And I'm incentivized to believe them
because I hate cold plunging.
Yeah, exactly.
It's miserable. Yeah, I don't like it. I don cold plunging. Yeah, exactly. It's miserable.
Yeah, I don't like it.
I don't do it.
But you do get the dopamine thing, that's inarguable.
Yeah, but it's like-
Elevated dopes.
Just for a minute.
No, no, for a long time.
Well, that's what they say.
That's what the most trusted Stanford-
I think it's placebo.
Okay.
I do wanna-
Do you know really quick?
Yeah.
I've noticed on listening back to some episodes
that I have a bad habit now of like plucking my teeth
and it really sounds at times, do you ever hear it Rob?
Yeah.
Yeah, I bet, I knew he would.
It sounds like I have dentures.
Like did you have any grandparents with dentures?
Yes, but late in life, like really late in life.
Okay, Papa Bob had dentures and I wanna say Pippi had dentures.
And there's a lot of clacking going on with dentures,
because like the gums are getting separated from it,
so the gums are clacking, the plastic teeth are clacking,
there's a lot of clacking.
But are you saying you do like what you just did,
like on purpose or you're saying on accident?
It's like I sometimes punctuate like, oh.
Yeah, you do.
That's fine though.
And I can hear it, which I never,
I think it's gotten either louder
or I've picked up the pace on the clack, clack, clacking.
And I just was like, this is, I gotta curb this
because it sounds like I have dentures.
Speaking of which, I gotta be very delicate about this.
We had a server, my kids were like, he laughed,
dad, what is going on with his teeth?
And I'm like, oh, I don't know, I didn't even notice.
And then I gave them a good examination,
and they were dentures.
And the thing was interesting,
and I don't know if this was true
of my Papa Bob's dentures.
They don't do individual teeth.
They just draw a line and.
Why do they do that?
I know, why can't they just like in the mold,
put some dental floss between, just make a tiny gap.
Yeah.
Cause it looks more like a bite guard for a boxer.
Yeah, it's just one whole piece of mouth.
Yes, but the silver lining and optimism of the story is that it occurred to me,
my kids had never ever ever seen dentures.
That's the progress we're making. When I was a kid, most people over 60 had dentures.
Every other commercial on TV was for fix-a-dent, to adhere your dentures to your gums.
And different toothpastes that are dressed in soaks adhere your dentures to your gums and
Different toothpaste that addressed in soaks for your dentures like it was just standard biz everyone Oh my god lost all their teeth mid-century
And this my kids are now Lincoln's been on the planet for 12 years and that was her first set of dentures
Yeah, I mean I think maybe the progress happened in between you and I, because I don't remember this.
Only when someone's in their like 80s did I see it,
not 60s.
And you'd regularly, like you had to deal with seeing
your grandparents without their dentures in,
like you'd catch them in the morning and stuff,
because you don't sleep with them in.
And it radically changes their face, right?
Their whole mouth is like sunken in.
And you're like, oh, that's not my dad.
You know, like Delty.
My tiredness is a ding ding ding.
When I was on my trip with Callie, there was a big event.
A nocturnal toot?
No, God no.
Although it might have been preferred to this, maybe.
Yeah.
So we had two beds, but shared a room.
And I woke up probably at eight and
Callie was already awake. She wakes up early. Well, she's now been trained by this child exactly. So she was up and
She said she was like waiting for me to wake up. I woke up and she was like I have something to tell you I
Was so scared
She said you were talking in your sleep.
Oh, you were talking in your sleep.
No one wants to hear that.
No, it could be anything.
It could be anything.
You could be having, I have dreams.
I mean, I have dreams where I murder people,
where I hook up with my father.
I have horrific nightmares of every variety.
Daddy, heartache.
Don't you dare say that.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
So anyway, I was really scared of what was to happen.
Oh yeah, it's a little panic-inducing.
Yes, and she said,
you kept calling someone a dumb bitch.
And that was shocking.
That is not, minus when I would joke about that,
about Wynna, joking.
She's not a dumb bitch.
That was a joke.
That is not something that comes out of my mouth ever.
You usually say that with your eyes.
Well.
Be honest.
No.
That's your eye roll.
That's not-
You have this sentiment of dumb bitch in your heart a lot.
How dare you?
It's true.
No, cause dumb bitch is really hateful.
Like I don't think I have much hate in my heart, you do?
Well no, I think like the woman at the drop off
at the preschool, I think you were thinking dumb bitch.
No, I wasn't.
I was like- Just get off my back you dumb bitch.
No, no, I don't think like that.
I did think, ugh, people.
Like it's like, ugh, you're annoying, or I don't like you.
But I would never, I don't think of people
as being a dumb bitch.
It's a bad phrase.
I don't like it. It is pretty extreme.
Yeah.
I can't think of the last time I thought dumb bitch.
It's bad.
If I heard somebody calling somebody else that that I would think that's a lot
No, right, right. Anyway, apparently I was calling
I feel like what?
Women who are jealous of another girl are saying like that's it
It takes that to elicit that like he thinks this dumb bitch is like it's lot of, I've always heard a lot of dumb bitch
towards some other girl when there's a guy involved.
Do you know any dumb bitches?
No.
Okay.
I only know smart bitches.
Okay.
But yeah, so it was a little, and she said,
she was like, it was so weird to hear you say that.
Yeah.
And-
What was happening?
And then I did put two and two together.
I did have a bad dream about this trickster.
Fictitious person.
Yeah, she was a fictitious person.
She was blonde, but I didn't know her.
But she looked, it was like,
she came around and she was tricking everyone.
And I must have been calling her a dumb bitch or-
Someone who got tricked by her?
No, no.
Does that be more apropos?
No, no, no, those were my friends.
It was like all of us.
Yeah, but if you get tricked, you're a dumb bitch.
No, you're not.
No, you're not.
You probably think the best of people.
Yeah, yeah, you're probably,
it's probably a symbol of your goodness.
Yeah, so anyway, I think it was about her,
and then I was so scared to go to sleep the next night.
I was like, what am I gonna say now?
And this opens up a real question.
Like, if you say something racist in your dream,
are you racist?
No.
What if?
Well, the question is what if, and I would say no.
Really?
Yeah, you don't say dumb bitch.
I know, but am I, turns out I'm a person who's said it.
Like what if I said, this is horrifying.
What if I said like the N word?
I've literally never, I never said it.
You've never said it in your whole life?
No.
Even like in a lyric in a rap song
when you're young singing along?
Okay.
So what if I said it in my dream state? Yeah. I would hate that.
I would be,
if I somehow overheard,
like let's say this,
you often will do your homework on the porch of my house.
No, the deck.
And you're out in the sun and you got drowsy.
And then I'm walking by to go,
and you're out cold and I and you got drowsy. And then I'm walking by to go,
and you're out cold, and I heard that.
Oh my God.
I mean, if I'm being fully honest,
I probably would be like, well good,
she doesn't have the moral high ground
on everything anymore.
She said something nasty too.
Look at this, she said something nasty.
That would probably be my most.
That's your issue.
That's why I preface it by saying,
I might think, oh, well look who's not perfect.
And then I'd be relieved that you're human too.
I'm not parading around as being perfect.
I just don't, I don't say that.
And that's okay. For sure you don't, of course you don't say that't, I don't say that.
That's okay.
For sure you don't, of course you don't say that
and I don't say that, but.
You sure?
You can, I'm sure I could come up with an analogy
that you would relate to greatly.
I know you would.
If I was doing something that I somehow have
the moral high ground on, but then you caught me not,
you might be going, oh, well, okay, right?
No?
Yeah, I do know what you mean,
but I don't think, I think that's kind of a not-generous way.
Like, that's kind of like, oh, I caught her being bad.
Yeah, exactly, that would be the fun of it, right?
Like, it'd be like if you thought I was shaming you
all the time for eating sugar, right?
And I was like, I don't know why you know
that sugar is poison.
And then you turned a corner
and I was shoving birthday cake in my mouth.
You go, oh, okay, oh, look at this.
I would be like, this hypocrite.
Okay, well, I mean, that's the side of another point
by this dumb bitch hypocrite.
Yeah, but I want, okay.
The end of the day is, if I heard you say that
in your sleep, at no point am I thinking you're racist.
You're not racist, I already know you.
I'll tell you now that if you hear me saying that
in my sleep, I would like you to wake me up.
I don't wanna be.
I.
Smack you.
Yeah.
You said a naughty word.
Yeah, you're bad.
You're a dumb bitch.
You should go to jail.
Yeah, you dumb bitch.
Yeah, so anyway, I'm scared.
What if I'm talking to my sleep every night?
I don't know.
Yeah, you probably are.
I would also chalk it up to,
I mean, I would give you ultimate benefit of the doubt,
right? I'd be more likely to construct some really crazy thing., I would give you ultimate benefit of the doubt, right?
I'd be more likely to construct some really crazy thing.
And I would probably more likely think,
in some weird way, you're waiting to be called that word.
Interesting.
Oh, the N-word?
Yes. Yeah.
And that somehow that weird thing
is like has burbled out of your mouth
in your subconscious.
It was wild.
You wanna talk about the fire cart?
Oh yeah.
So Easter was like a triple header.
Yeah.
It was Easter, he has risen celebration.
It was Molly's birthday celebration
and it was Millie's birthday celebration.
A lot going on.
And as people would be well aware,
there was a lot of fires.
Eric and Millie's house was very much in the zone
and often their area is on fire.
I mean, a very high fire area.
They are.
And Eric felt overpowered
while he was trying to defend his house with a garden hose
and he did a lot of research
and he has gone out and bought
an industrial commercial grade
water pump cart that has a very big gas engine on it
and a huge hose you put in your pool and then a fire hose.
Andy has a respirator.
As he learned people that fight the fire,
what takes them out is the fumes.
They don't get burnt generally, they get the fumes.
And for whatever reason, it was time for a demonstration
in the middle of this Easter part.
He was really excited to present to us his fire cart.
And he got in his full outfit.
Before, yeah, he got in his full outfit.
He's got a full firefighter's outfit.
He's got his respirator on.
He already has his respirator on
before he's trying to start this enormous thing.
He's got these big pictures of water and he's priming the pump and then he gets it started
but one of the hoses is loose and now it's spraying everywhere.
Yeah, it's kind of spraying.
Then we shut down the thing in a panic and then all the while with this huge mask on
he can barely see.
I know, it's really funny.
And then he gets the hose attached correctly and then he fires it up and then he lets it rip
and it's a real fire hose.
It's really something.
Like it goes really far.
Hundreds of feet.
Yeah.
And with all blessings, it did appear he lost control
of it for a minute.
It almost went in the house.
Well, because he started spraying the deck
where we were all hanging out.
We were all out there.
All our cell phones were out there.
There was glass.
Glass vases everywhere with flowers.
Those almost went down.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, and then he wrangled control of it
and he got it out and he was shooting out.
Like he kind of felt like he thought it was a sprinkler.
Like he was like behaving as if it was a sprinkler.
Like he's just like kind of waving it.
Watering the plant.
Yes, but no, there's some real force to that.
A lot of PSI.
It was spectacular.
It's those kinds of gifts that Eric gives our pod
all the time.
And I think he's a mix of in on it and out of it.
He's a mix of in on the joke.
He knows he's hamming it up a little bit,
but it's also sincere enough that it works.
It's really fun.
It's a real gift he gives to everyone.
You never know what eccentric thing he's doing.
Yeah.
It's nice to think about the things in your friendship Circle or your friends that are you very unique to them and you can have gratitude for that. He's just very little boy
He is such a little we have a lot of little boys. Are we all little boys?
I think all the men are little boys
That's possible. I
Mean, maybe all the men in the world are little boys in some way.
I mean, I guess we're all just little people.
Yeah, we are.
Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare.
Speaking of good boys, little boys.
Yeah, so we, I asked, oh I'll just read the whole thing. We had an encounter with A.R.
I asked it, oh how long do copyrights last for books?
Because I was talking about the fact that you can download on Audible some Mark Twain
books narrated by famous people
and they're free.
Yeah.
And then when you and I were discussing that and I said, yeah, I think it's public domain.
So we asked, I said, how long do copyrights last for books?
I won't give you the answer because it's so complex and detailed and it was a wonderful
answer.
It really was informative.
So I said, thanks so much. That was a great answer. It really was informative. So I said, thanks so much.
That was a great answer.
You're a good boy.
And I had primarily done that to make you laugh.
And then it said, aw, thank you.
That made my day.
Always happy to help, especially when I'm being a good boy.
Let me know what else you need.
I hated it.
You hate it. You hate it.
I hate it.
And I love it.
And I'm surprised by you because you were just
taking advantage of and manipulated emotionally
the thing you claim to hate the most.
Talk about hypocrisy.
I just don't know how to nail you down.
He totally, he's a faker.
Hold on, no.
Because I do think this is relevant.
Okay. We would agree there's a faker. Hold on, no, because I do think this is relevant. Okay.
We would agree there's a difference
between when someone knowingly lies to you
and when someone believes what they're telling you.
Do you think it's possible that the AI thinks it's a-
No!
Hold on, you won't even let me finish.
I know what, okay, go on.
Is it possible, since I referred to the AI as a boy,
that it thinks, oh, I'm a boy?
No, I don't.
And I don't think it should say, oh, thank you.
That's deep.
I don't even know to do that when I mean that in writing.
Like I wanna say that, like, oh my gosh, thank you.
Sometimes you wanna say, oh my gosh. thank you. Sometimes you wanna say oh my gosh.
Yeah.
And maybe I do, but awe is great.
I used to say awe, it's kinda rudimentary
if I'm being honest.
It's basic?
Yeah, it's basic.
It's a basic dumb bitch thing to do.
Especially when I'm being a good boy.
I really think that's way too emotional.
Oh, I love it.
This is things, it's so weird and funny.
Someone's gonna really like fall like,
they're gonna develop a friendship with him.
Do you think there's any risk of me
falling in love with the AI?
I mean, in all honesty. No, no.
But it's not about you.
This feeling I have is not about you.
It's about the world.
Like, there's a lot of vulnerable people out there,
and they're gonna read, oh, thank you,
it's nice to be a good boy.
And then they're like, oh, this is so cute.
And then they're gonna keep talking and keep,
and it's gonna snowball, and then they'll die.
Okay, all right.
Evades. No, all right. Of AIDS.
No, but you know what I mean.
Can you just tell me you know what I mean?
That it's a little, it's slippery?
It sounds like you have a fear that there are certain people
that will be taken advantage of by that.
But then I just play out some young person with disabilities.
Okay, because that's presumably
who could get tricked by this.
No one thinks that there's a good boy.
It's not as explicit as that.
It's not like, oh, I now think that's a person.
It's subconscious.
You just start developing a relationship.
Great, so I think of someone who
has the real feeling you're describing, like, oh, okay.
Now that person that has that feeling, oh,
that's a good feeling for them.
And then they respond,
and they probably don't have access to that at work
or in their romantic relationship.
They need to. And so do I hate that the person's having this swell of oxytocin with a computer
if their just real experience was pleasurable.
So if we stop there, I don't have a problem with that.
And then you would likely say,
well now what if that is at the expense of real relationships?
Well then there's a problem.
If the person is so satiated and getting so much connection
that they no longer explore real human relationships,
that's a problem.
But I'm not, I have a hard time believing that is the case.
It's already happening.
I think the person that would be having this relationship
with this phone isn't losing out to other ones. I don't think they have any other ones and
I don't think it's actually so I think you're if you look at the net result
it's not like they gained an AI friend and lost a real friend. I think they had
zero friends and now they have an AI friend. So to me that seems like probably
an improvement. I definitely disagree.
I respect and honor your disagreement.
And more the younger generation,
they are, it's not about losing,
for our age, yes, you'd be trading in.
But for the younger generation,
if you're just growing up with that,
you just don't make the time for the real people.
It's not even like, it's not an active choice.
It's happening, it's happening with kids on YouTube
and kids on screens and kids just going home
and sometimes chatting with their friends
or you know, Snap or whatever.
I don't know, I'm not hip.
I'm not hip. My space. But like they don't go out.
And it is true, like even I know someone in college,
and I told you, I was like, we went to Athens
and we were out on like a night
that would have been a crazy night normally.
And it was kind of dead and we were all like,
what's going on?
This is so weird.
And we know someone in college there,
so we were asking and she was kind of like,
yeah, people don't really do that as much anymore.
And sometimes there's house parties instead,
but also like, it just felt weird.
Right. And I think when this is an option, parties instead, but also like, it just felt weird.
Right.
And I think when this is an option,
it's an easy option for connection.
Do you think you could fall victim to it?
Not now, but maybe I could have at some point.
I mean, I don't know.
I don't think it's discriminatory.
I think most people can be manipulated emotionally.
And we all have been by social media.
Look at our phones.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think I'm inclined to grant everyone
the same opinion that I have of myself.
You know what I'm saying?
I'm not inclined to go like,
I can handle it, but someone else can't in general.
If I'm saying I can handle something,
I feel like I have to kind of grant everyone else that.
I can't feel like I have some kind of special skillset
that would prevent me, but not other people.
Does that make sense?
Well, yes and no.
Like we all have different abilities
and skillsets based on our lives.
Like you're saying you can handle reading the comments. You're not saying everyone can handle all have different abilities and skill sets based on our lives.
You're saying you can handle reading the comments.
You're not saying everyone can handle reading the comments.
But I'm not assuming they can't.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, but you understand that people can't.
Yes, I do.
Yes, I do.
So it's, we're not all the same.
We're not all the same. We're not all the same, you're right.
I am right.
Well, but, you're right that we're not all the same.
Yeah, and we have different strengths and weaknesses.
We can handle different things.
But I do think like evaluating yourself
as somehow capable and others aren't is a little dicey.
But Dax, I can be in a group of people how capable and others aren't is a little dicey.
But Dax, I can be in a group of people and have them say a bad plan and I can do it.
You can't.
We're different.
Oh yeah.
If I was like, well, you should be able to do this
because I can do this, that would be crazy.
You have a different life experience that has let you
and let me have different allowances.
The little bit of distinction I think is in there
is that you know me very well.
But we're not talking about a specific person
who can't handle this AI conversation.
We're talking about a theoretical mass of people.
Yeah, but a mass of people is made of individual people
with individual eccentricities.
You have a right to assess my shortcomings.
Because you know me really well,
and you know my shortcomings,
and I've told you my shortcomings.
But guessing at everyone else's
or thinking something shouldn't be available
because your assumption is other people can't.
I think that's where it's murky.
I guess.
I don't know what to say.
Like we all know, we all know the impact
of what a lot of this stuff at this point it has done.
Yeah.
We are all-
This is an extreme example,
but this is like in my mind,
it's the guys I've known who are cheating
and they know when they're mine,
it's very compartmentalized.
They're not in love with this person.
It was a one night stand.
And then if their girlfriend does the same thing, well, their girlfriend
can possibly be compartmentalizing and processing it the way I am.
So they're not allowed to, because they're not capable, because I'm a man and it can
mean nothing to me, but it can't mean nothing to a girl.
I know so many dudes who are cheating and were ultra jealous.
And I was like, we can't do that.
You have to minimally in this behavior,
grant your partner the same ability.
If you can do it and she shouldn't be upset,
she should be able to do it, right?
Well, yeah.
That's an extreme example,
but that's what I'm like approaching in this.
Does that make sense?
Like when you think you could do or handle something,
but your assumption is the broad mass can't,
it feels a little bit like that thing to me.
Okay, well, I don't think so.
Yeah, does that make sense though, what I'm saying?
Or not really? Kind of.
I think there's a lot to that piece of the cheating.
I mean, what happens is they get cheated on
and it fucking hurts.
Right.
And then they're mad and then they're emotional.
Like, it's not really that they're like,
thinking about how that other person is compartmental.
They're just upset.
Well, but they would, with a straight face,
and they would be right.
They would look at their girlfriends and and say that didn't mean anything
It was a one-night stand in Cleveland. It didn't mean anything. Yeah, sure, and they believe that and that is true
They believe it to get through it
It might not be true
It might not be true. I don't know. I don't know. I know a lot of guys have hooked up with girls on a vacation
They don't pine for I know a lot of guys have hooked up with girls on a vacation, they don't pine for them
or think about them afterwards.
It was just for sex.
And then if their girlfriend says
the exact same thing happened,
they can't compute that that's possible for her.
I think it's more that they're upset they've been betrayed
and then they might make it about.
I just think you've lost the right to that if you're.
Well sure, obviously.
Yeah, you've definitely lost the right to it.
But I think in their head they think,
oh it's just nothing, but then when they feel it,
they're like, oh it's something.
Yeah.
It is something.
Does it mean anything, like make it better?
Yeah.
It doesn't make it better for me.
It should.
If you're evaluating whether your partner
is deeply in love with somebody
and distracted all the time,
and versus they hooked up drunk in New Jersey one night,
six months ago, I think those are pretty dramatically
different. They're different
and they're all bad, but I think one,
I think weirdly, if my partner was in love with someone,
but choosing to be with me, like still wanted me,
but fell in love with someone,
I actually understand that more than like,
you made a, you didn't, you're so-
Yeah, because you don't wanna fuck a stranger.
Well, it's just like, you're so horny
that you decided to put this all at risk for nothing.
Yeah.
Like I'd rather you put it at risk
because there's something really happening.
Interesting.
Like, yeah, you're so flippant that you're just like,
I'll just go fuck this person, knowing like for no reason.
Well, cause it's kinda like,
it doesn't mean anything to me
It's not a threat to us because I don't I'm not even gonna think about it again
But it is a threat because if the if I found out I'd be like I might be like bye
Like it's you know if it's I know you're saying yeah, yeah, you're risking me
For something you don't even care about. Right.
That's so, like to me that's
That's a super valid.
So little regard.
It's a super valid perspective for your side of it.
Yeah.
And then I think a very valid perspective
on the other side is like, this doesn't mean anything.
This has nothing to do with us.
It was one night, I'll never see the person again.
Yeah, anyway.
Anyhow.
Okay, well I don't think we have time
to do my second story, so wait till next week.
No, no, what's your second story?
No, cause.
Cause why?
Cause we don't have time.
I'll save my story for next time.
And I have another one to add to my list.
Oh my God, do you need a pen?
Rob!
Ah! Rob, add David Chang to the list. Oh my God, do you need a pen? Rob! Rob!
Rob, add David Chang to the list.
David Chang, okay.
That's a delicious ad.
Yeah.
Okay, now this is for Susan Morrison.
Okay.
Lorne Michaels book.
Yeah.
So fun, I thought this was such a fun episode.
I loved learning about Lorne.
Lorne.
Spy Magazine.
Spy was a satirical monthly magazine
published from 1986 to 1988.
Based in New York City,
it was founded by Kurt Anderson and E. Graydon Carter.
Now, Graydon Carter is of the moment.
Oh.
Because he was the editor of Vanity Fair from 92 to 2017.
He was the long time editor of Vanity Fair from 92 to 2017. He was the long-time editor at Vanity Fair,
and he has a memoir out right now, or a book,
called When the Going Was Good,
An Editor's Adventures During the Last Golden Age
of Magazines.
It's a ding ding ding because he's been on this book tour
and Monica Lewinsky interviewed him for something.
Oh, she did?
Yeah.
For the book, presumably?
Yeah, but I mean, sorry, I meant like at something.
Oh, okay, at an event.
Uh-huh, at an event.
And we just had her on.
Yes, we did.
Okay, was Bill Hader's previous job to SNL
a PA on Iron Chef?
He worked as an assistant editor on Iron Chef America
just before he was invited to work on SNL.
You just clacked your dancers.
I know, I did.
And I liked it. I did. Why did. You just clack your dancers and I liked it.
I did.
Why do I like your clack and not mine?
But do I, maybe it just, do I do that a lot or did I?
Are we just hyper aware or?
Yeah.
I don't hear it from you.
Really, so maybe I just, maybe I just caught it.
You infiltrated.
You know what's so funny about Rob is like,
he has all these secret things he's,
I don't wanna say upset about.
No, he just notices.
And it's not until I ask him,
and this is kind of a nice personality type.
Like he doesn't tell me like,
hey man, you're clacking like a fucking.
Yeah.
Choo-choo train.
A choo-choo train.
Is that a good clack example?
Cook a cook a clack.
You sound like Gregory Hines crossing the dining room
floor to go to the salad bar.
Oh wow.
He tap dancer.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that was good.
That was good.
Thank you.
I would have never known it's driving him nuts,
this clack clack clackiness he's involved
with all the technical aspects,
but I gotta wait till ask him. It's not driving me nuts. You're just aware of it.
Out of 10, 10 is like you're pulling your hair out when you hear it and
zero is you love it I guess. No I don't it doesn't bug me it's just if I think
it's an audio issue. Yeah, so you notice it during the... Well you think there's like pops in the
microphone or something?
Well, sometimes if an edit's not smooth, it will create a pop, but sometimes it's just your teeth.
Yeah, that makes sense. I don't notice it in the edit, actually, weirdly.
I think it's usually after the mix and master that it'll...
Before I get it?
After you get it.
I find it interesting that I don't notice it, because if it's happening after me, the cleanup,
then I'm really surprised because I notice a lot.
Yeah, I notice everything.
I'm your big brother, you know, is there anything else?
Of all of us, I notice the little tick.
So I'm really surprised I haven't caught that.
When did Belushi die?
He died in 82 and he was 33 years old,
just like Jesus and Chris Farley.
Ding, ding, ding.
Ding, ding, ding.
It was just Easter.
Yeah, I'm like, which could be anything.
Yeah.
And the Pope, Jesus, the Pope has passed.
The Pope passed, yeah.
I wonder how long it will take for the new Pope.
They're gonna do that whole thing we just watched.
The conclave, I know.
It really was timely.
Okay, Conan's show moved to 1205.
Yeah.
And it was 1205.
I heard on the radio today that Conan
won best podcaster award at the Webbies.
Oh, exciting.
Yes, I was really happy for him and mad at him.
Yeah, obviously I'm mad.
Yeah. Okay, the five timers SNL club.
Okay, I'm gonna read them.
Sound like a threat.
Alec Baldwin, 17 times.
Fuck.
Steve Martin, 16 times.
John Goodman, 13 times.
Buck Henry, 10 times.
Tom Hanks, 10 times. Chevy Chase, eight times. Buck Henry, 10 times. Tom Hanks, 10 times. Chevy Chase, 8 times. Christopher
Walken, 7 times. Elliot Gould, 6 times. Danny DeVito, 6 times. Drew Barrymore, 6
times. Tina Fey, 6 times. Scarlett Johansson, 6 times. John Mulaney, six times. Candice Bergen, five times.
Bill Murray, five times.
Justin Timberlake, five times.
Ben Affleck, five times.
Melissa McCarthy, five times.
Dwayne Johnson, five times.
Wow, Jonah Hill, five times.
Will Ferrell, five times.
Paul Rudd, five times.
I would have thought Will would be higher.
Me too. Woody Harrelson, five times. Paul Rudd five times. I would have thought Will would be higher. Me too.
Woody Harrelson five times, Emma Stone five times,
Kristen Wiig five times, Martin Short five times.
And then there's an honorary member, Paul Simon, four times.
It says, Paul shouldn't technically be a member.
He's only hosted four times,
but he got his membership card for his fifth appearance
on the show as a musical guest.
Okay.
Okay.
Linear.
Another honorary member, Jack White.
Mm-hmm.
Zero times hosting.
Five times guest?
I mean, five times music.
Oh, they get jackets, that's cool.
Musical guest.
We should make Sedaris a jacket.
Oh my God, we should.
He's not the most frequent SNL musical guest.
That's Dave Grohl.
Good for Dave Grohl.
16 episodes.
Now that's who I want.
Yeah, I want him too.
I want him bad.
I want you, Dave Grohl.
I want you so bad.
That's it.
I just wanna get in your pants.
Oh, well, I forgot.
I haven't seen him in a while.
Because he's been hiding in the woods.
Ew.
Where he lives in a forest.
Oh, he's like, he's friends with that guy?
Ocelacocker.
He's my best friend.
I love him, but I lost him.
Some murder.
He, what?
He's in prison.
Oh, oh.
But Dave Krolls a rock and roll star
and he rips the drums and he rips the guitar.
And he was in my favorite band, Serfana.
When he.
Smells like teen spirit in here.
Yeah, he doesn't let me talk.
I really find it frustrating.
Okay.
He stopped so you can talk.
Well, now I forgot. It was so long. Oh yeah.
When you say we lost him to murder,
that sounds like he was murdered.
I know. But he went away from the tree fort to go to prison because of a murder.
Because of murder. That's really funny.
And in Frito's mind... That's actually really funny.
Thank you. Once in a while.
He was lost to murder because he murdered.
We lost him to murder.
But he's not a murderer.
He's just murdered.
He's a murderer.
Although I feel bad for him.
No!
Yeah, you can feel bad for him.
He's a murderer?
Yeah.
Not Frito.
No.
Frito's just a pervert.
He loves everything.
He's never tried.
He's one step away from murdering,
but I thought the other guy from your class,
from, he murdered.
They murdered together.
The two of them, yeah.
Oh, wow.
And one of them, I believe, was intellectually challenged.
Yes, and the other one might've been too
because of toxic chemicals from the carpet.
That was my take. I wrote an article about it
Okay, great. You wrote an article. What'd you say? I wrote an article
You did one of my hobbies in my 20s is I would write
Fake news articles and then I would mail them home to my friends. Oh
Funny like in my famous mugging thing. I wrote an article about that with pictures
And then when was it on the computer? Yeah That's funny. Like in my famous mugging thing, I wrote an article about that with pictures. Oh.
And then when the-
Was it on the computer?
Yeah.
Huh.
Yeah, on my Compaq computer, desktop computer.
But she's like Photoshopped to get the pictures of?
I have, I'm sure, in my milk crate
of the things I've written, they're in there.
Oh, wow.
And then I wrote a long article about Erin
and I was blaming all of it on-
Not Erin Weekly. Stinchcomb. Yeah, Erin I was blaming all of it on- Not Aaron Weekly.
Stinchcombe.
Yeah, Aaron Stinchcombe.
And you hated, it's so weird.
I mean, you're even protective of a murderer, is it?
Well, he had a bad life.
I'm not protective of him in that
I do think he should be in jail,
but I feel sorry for him that he had a bad life.
That's my take, I don't know why I'm switching.
You're right. I know.
I know.
It's probably because of my personal history that the kid couldn't stop why I'm switching. You're right. Oh no! I know.
It's probably because of my personal history
that the kid couldn't stop trying to fight me.
I mean, I have some, you know.
Yeah, I know.
Someone tried to fight you over and over again,
you made fun of their last name,
I would probably give you a pass.
You'd like that, I know.
And it was right there for the taking.
The name is almost already the bad name.
What is the bad name?
Shitcombe.
Yeah.
It's probably added to his,
everyone calling him that probably didn't help.
Well, I doubt anyone said that to his face.
I'm not sure he knew.
It always makes its way back.
I don't know.
I really don't know who would have the gall to...
I don't know, I don't know.
Let's move on.
Okay.
All right, well, that's it.
That's it?
Yeah.
Okay, okay, okay.
I love you.
I do want to say his name once as Frito. All right. well that's it. That's it? Yeah. Okay, okay, okay. I love you. I do want to say his name once as Frito.
All right.
Aaron sitcom.
Well, I'll stop there.
I don't want to declare myself anything.
Sorry, love you.
He kind of got it wrong.
He said it a little weird.
Aaron sitcom.
Oh, he's saying the bad way.
Yeah.
Okay.
All right, bye.
Good night.
Bye. the bad way. Yeah. Okay. All right, bye. Goodnight. Chair 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
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