Conan O’Brien Needs A Friend - Jon Stewart
Episode Date: September 30, 2024Comedian and television host Jon Stewart feels honored. Honored! To be Conan O’Brien’s friend. Jon sits down with Conan to discuss the life cycle of a talk show host, risky bits that never saw th...e light of day, the ethos of legacy entertainment, and the importance of trusting your discomfort. For Conan videos, tour dates and more visit TeamCoco.com.Got a question for Conan? Call our voicemail: (669) 587-2847. Get access to all the podcasts you love, music channels and radio shows with the SiriusXM App! Get 3 months free using this show link: https://siriusxm.com/conan.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
My name is John Stewart and I feel
Honored honored to be Conan O'Brien's friend. You weren't sure about the name
It was my verb subject agreement is Hello, it's Conan O'Brien.
We're here with Conan O'Brien Needs a Friend. It's a juggernaut. The podcast. Yeah, it's Conan O'Brien. We are here with Conan O'Brien needs a friend.
It's a juggernaut.
The podcast.
Yeah, it's a juggernaut.
Do you know what a juggernaut is?
Yes, I know what a juggernaut is.
Unstoppable.
Yeah, but yeah.
Unstoppable.
Is it big?
I don't know.
We talking to microphones?
I don't know who's listening.
It's massive.
I got stopped at the library the other day.
And the girls-
Wait a minute, you were in a library?
Okay. And were you looking Wait a minute, you were in a library? Okay.
And were you looking for directions?
Where's the dispensary?
Hello?
I'm looking for the dispensary.
I'm sorry, I shouldn't pretend that you don't read.
You read a lot, don't you?
Shut up.
No, you do, right?
I'm Matt Gourley, by the way.
You fooled everyone.
I know, but I shouldn't act like you're someone
that doesn't care about books.
Because so many people know about our lives.
They saw my kids, they were like,
oh, it's Mikey and Charlie.
And then at one point they're like,
I can't believe I'm talking to you.
And I'm like, I didn't know that like people,
I know people listen.
It's just, we're in a room with like five, not five,
how many of us are six people?
I don't know who's listening.
Yeah, it was good that you corrected from five to six.
That was important.
No, I'm constantly running into people, as I've said,
that are listening to the podcast as they encounter me.
It's a juggernaut.
Yeah.
Just this morning on the way into work,
I was waiting at the light and a guy was like,
oh, hey, I'm listening to the podcast right now.
And kind of pointed at his phone and I was like,
oh, cool, man, how's it going?
And he literally just turned and then walked away
and then just stood at the, faced away from me
and stood waiting to cross the street.
Oh, you wanted to talk to him more?
Like I was like, oh, hey, that's good.
And he was like, and literally walked away from me
and looked at the other one.
He wanted to, yeah, he didn't wanna talk to you.
He just wanted to go and listen to the podcast.
Yeah, he would rather listen to you guys on a phone
than talk to me in person.
Okay, this reminds me of something that happened to me
years and years ago.
I got on a flight and it was some flight,
I don't know which airline it was,
but one of those airlines that was showing-
That's important to know.
The late night show.
Sorry, you got on my case about five to six.
Please figure out which airplane you were on.
Okay, I guess I deserve, you know what?
I deserve that.
I deserve that, okay?
I deserve that.
And I won't retaliate, you know?
I won't go after anything about you.
And I apologize.
You're looking at my denim jacket.
I know. It's horrible. It's cordu apologize. I'm looking at my denim jacket. I know.
It's corduroy.
It's corduroy.
No, no, it's awful.
Anyway, you could fix that refrigerator for me
when you get a chance.
I mean, just dress up a little bit for work.
Oh, come on.
But anyway, I got on a plane.
We started flying. What was the airline?
Spirit Airlines, I believe.
No, and the know, the little monitors
where people are watching television
and the person who was sitting across the aisle
and ahead of me had their monitor on
and the plane takes off and they get service
and they start watching my late night show.
And of course it's silent because they have headphones on
and I can see it through my mannerisms that I'm coming out,
I'm greeting the crowd, and then I can see through
my mannerisms that I'm doing the setup to the first joke.
And then I do the first joke,
and the guy laughs and he turns to me and he gives me a thumbs up.
Oh!
And I'm like, oh, this is cool.
That's amazing.
And then I start to think,
I just taped this, like,
I just taped this a couple of hours ago.
What's the second joke?
You know, I can try to think.
I know the first one was good.
I can't remember what the second joke was.
And I see myself gesturing, and then I deliver it.
And the guy doesn't laugh and turns to me and does the end.
Oh!
And just as he did it, I remembered,
oh, right, the one about the pineapple.
Oh yeah, that wasn't good.
And I'm like, shit, am I gonna be getting
a blow by blow critique of the show
as I watch myself in silence
to this guy who's wearing his headset?
It was hilarious.
Oh my God.
Never forgot that.
Second joke.
And I was like, ah!
Right, the pineapple joke.
Ah.
I don't remember what the joke was.
But anyway, these things happen.
It's very strange.
But yes, Sona, you encountered some people in a library.
Were you taking the kids there?
Yeah.
Okay, so did you get a book while you were there?
I sometimes read.
Okay.
I'm not an avid reader.
You used to make fun of me for reading all the time.
The books you read are enormous.
And they're so like, how many books about Lyndon Johnson
do you have to read?
You have to read all the ones by Caro.
And then there are other books by Lyndon Johnson,
but you know it's not just Lyndon Johnson,
it's American history.
I know.
But then of course you gotta know your French history.
You've gotta know about World War I and World War II,
then you gotta learn more about World War I and World War II, and then you gotta learn more about World War I and World War II, then you've got to learn more about World War I and World War II,
and then you've got to learn more about World War II
and World War I.
It doesn't stop.
And Stalin's always up to no good,
so you've got to read about him.
What's gonna happen this week?
Yeah.
There's just so many.
I mean, I read some books, but you just constantly read.
Like, just give it a rest.
Yeah, give reading a rest.
You know how to read. We get it.
You know what would be great if you did a PSA?
Hey! Hey, kids, give reading a rest.
And then Sona says, give reading a rest.
Turn on the TV.
The more you know.
Yeah, exactly.
All right, my guest today is an up-and-comer.
He's getting there.
He's an Emmy Award-winning writer and comedian
who hosts and executive produces The Daily show on Comedy Central, Thrill'd.
He is here today.
Jon Stewart, welcome.
There's so much I wanna talk to you about.
And I, you.
And I, you.
Sir.
It's just turning to a Senate subcommittee here. Well, the mics are right. First of all, I will congratulate you. And I you. Sir. It's just turning to a Senate subcommittee here.
Well, the mics are right.
First of all, I will congratulate you.
You're rarely out here in LA.
No, almost never, almost never.
Although sometimes you're here and you know,
do you reach out?
No, you don't.
If I knew how.
There were Stuart sightings.
It'll be like across the street and I'll be like, John.
And then he just steps back into an alley.
Right.
And I hear later from his people, he's not in LA. When I see him, I just fade into the street and I'll be like, John. And then he just steps back into an alley. Right, well here's what I do. And I hear from his people, he's not in LA.
When I see him, I just fade into the work and go,
I'm excited about being your friend in the future.
In the future.
And then I go into the hedges.
He's like the way a vampire rolls backwards.
That's right, that's right.
That's John going back into the shadows.
That's right.
I wanna start off by congratulating you.
I don't know when this airs, but I will say you just won an Emmy the other night.
This may not air for seven years.
When I do something with John,
I like to hold onto it for seven years,
because then it really-
It has to age.
It has to age, like a fine wine.
But I congratulate you.
Thank you.
I accept it.
I don't, there was some question
of whether or not I would accept it.
Ladies and gentlemen, I am here to say.
You accept my congratulations.
I accept it and we can move on from that.
I wanted to talk to you because there are many things
to talk about, but one thing is I feel like we have
this kinship both coming up at around the same time
in very different ways.
Very much so.
But early 90s and it's so hilarious to me now
that at the time that was very much, it was the present,
it was the early 90s.
Now, Sona, to you, it probably sounds ancient.
90s.
The 90s.
Oh, they had TV back then?
Sona, you don't-
They had just developed a television.
Oh, wow.
You don't have to say it like that. That actually hurt my feelings.
The 90s?
That was like one of those where she's like,
tuberculosis, dear God,
pleurisy, I didn't know that.
Is that still a disease?
Now clear something up for me.
Were you on a test show of mine or not?
I was not.
You were not on a test show
because the test shows were as dysfunctional and insane
as the early shows that were on air were.
I can't remember who was on the test shows
and who were not on the test shows.
I remember Mickey Rooney being on a test show.
Oh dear God.
Did he know it was a test show or did he think?
I remembered him.
I have a very clear memory of talking to Mickey Rooney outside that 30 Rock hallway.
And I'm nobody and he is hanging from a garment rack.
His feet dangling, he's hanging on a garment rack
like a chimpanzee and he's in his white t-shirt
and he said, Conan, I used to have a full head of hair,
but Harry Warner made me use this shampoo
and I lost it all.
And I thought, this is an amazing job I have.
This is an incredible job.
He blamed his hair loss on Harry Warner in 1941,
making him use a kind of shampoo.
More impressive is a 90 year old man with that agility
to be hanging off of a-
He was flipping around.
That's incredible.
Doing full 360s.
For consistency sake, we should have Sona go,
Mickey Rooney.
Mickey Rooney?
What?
When we get to a name you know,
just say bingo.
But until then, just deal with this.
As we walk through our careers,
it's gonna be, you're gonna see,
there's gonna come a moment where you're like,
I remember that show. But it's gonna be a you're gonna see there's gonna come a moment where you're like, I remember that show.
But it's gonna be a while.
Okay, all right, I'll wait.
I just wanna know if you have the same feeling
that I have about this, which is that
in, there was this period of time where,
and this might just be me, but I felt
like a lobster without its shell,
so young, so like,
Jesus Christ, this is, you know, 1993 doing this show,
so raw.
It felt like it took forever to get to the point
where people said, yes, now you've arrived.
That felt to me like it took a thousand years.
To you.
To me, but hold on, but John, let me tell you something.
Let me finish this.
So then there's this period where finally it felt like
it gelled, so it's a thousand years of feeling like I've gotta get there, I've gotta you something, let me finish this. So then there's this period where finally it felt like it gelled, so it's a thousand years of feeling like
I've gotta get there, I've gotta get there,
I've gotta get there, I've gotta get to the point
where I'm accepted.
Then it starts to gel and then before I know it,
it's you're the old guy.
And no, no, not in a bad way, it's nice.
Like you're the elder statesman.
The time moved in a manner that was shockingly,
you know Conan, it was only yesterday.
You're that, I realize you're the narrator from-
Once the fungus on the nail on your big toe
begins to creep.
But you, do you know what I'm talking about, which is-
It's so interesting to me that you thought that
because you were, and this is not a exercise in smoke,
but you were kind of legend to us already at that time
because of Lampoon, because of SNL, the Simpsons,
like you were already in our eyes a made man.
So it's so interesting to me that you would feel.
But nobody feels that.
Or I don't know, I think there are people that think,
I've always heard that Eddie Murphy,
when he was doing standup and was like 17.
But that's Mozart.
Yeah, no, I know, I know.
That's a prodigy.
Well, I don't know.
Please, I didn't even see. Really?
I didn't even see, no, no, he's,
he might be the most talented human being
that's ever wandered onto the planet.
It's different.
So, but what I'm saying is, I know a guy,
a comedian named Ron Richards that I worked with
in another lifetime in like 1985 told me
that he did stand up and he did stand up
when Eddie Murphy was just starting
and Eddie Murphy was like, I don't know, 16,
years old or something, 17.
And that there'd be nobody, there were nights
where there was nobody in the club
or maybe one person.
So a lot of people wouldn't even bother going on
or they'd go out and just sort of phone it in.
He said Eddie would go out and do,
to one person would do it as if the whole room was packed.
This is when no one knew him, this is pre-SNL.
He would do it, the whole thing,
and then he'd walk off stage and he'd tell people,
I'm gonna be one of the biggest stars in the world.
Wow.
And-
He just knew.
He just knew because, and that makes sense.
Then I'm contrasting that with my own experience of-
How much of that is internal though,
because as an outside observer, right?
And I've heard you speak about this
and sort of this idea of you felt a little bit
like not the cool kid or not the dirt,
but for those of us who are sort of not in that stream,
like Harvard Lampoon or SNL or Simpsons.
Well, Harvard Lampoon does not see,
this is the other thing.
I don't think that confers coolness.
That was the one thing I wish.
Oh, at that time?
No, no, no, no. That was the one thing I wish. Oh, at that time? No, no, no, no.
That was the one thing I wished I could have changed
about my bio.
Really?
Is that what's so cool that Dave,
he comes out of the midst, he's from Ball State,
that's just much better.
I remember before I even went on the air,
people were like, Harvard, oh, so some intellectual
is going to take over for David Lett?
And I thought, well, no, I'm actually quite silly and-
I'm gonna make Dick Cavett look like he has no humor.
Exactly.
Ladies and gentlemen,
welcome to Masterpiece Theater tonight, Peter Ustinov.
I can tell you, we had a guy that did our warmup
before we knew we needed to get someone to do our warmup.
And he was the announcer on the show,
Joel Goddard, lovely man, but we just said, we don't know who does the announcing.
Who does it like on the tonight show?
And they said, the announcer always does it.
Ed McMahon always did it for Johnny.
Okay, so he asked Joel Goddard to do it.
And I would go out and I could always tell the audience was like,
I don't know about this guy.
And I would think, well, that's all on me.
And one night, a couple of weeks into the show, late night, 93,
I'm like putting on my tie and I wander out
and I hear Joel talking to the crowd and he went,
and of course he went to Harvard
where he wrote a thesis,
literary progeria on the works of Flannery O'Connor
and William Faulkner.
This man was born with a silver spoon in his ass
and you're going to laugh and I thought, what the fuck?
Why?
Can I tell you?
Yeah.
The angry announcer character, maybe.
That is an archetype.
Yeah.
I would hope that Johnny Gilbert does that on Jeopardy.
This motherfucker.
This motherfucker.
Don't think that he doesn't know the questions, he does.
They're on a paper, he'll act like it's coming to him,
but it's not.
It's all written out.
But this is, you're talking about the broader world.
Like in our, so for comics, right?
And you probably, same as me, came of age
in sort of the 70s, late 70s, early 80s.
National Lampoon was it.
And those guys came out of-
Doug Kenny, Henry Beard.
Right.
And they were legends in comedy,
and you knew that they had created
a kind of new anarchy and a new form.
And they were so idolized,
and knowing that you would come out of that same stream, you know, that, so where the larger world might look at it
and say like, oh, it's Harvard,
it's gonna be academically removed or intellectualized.
He's gonna be giving lectures.
Right.
You won't do a pratfall, you'll just go,
and I waited three seconds
and then allowed gravity to do its thing.
Like the way, so coming out of that
Yeah.
was like legend.
Well, here's the thing.
I guess the larger point I'm trying to-
I need a Sona.
Yeah, you do.
You need a Sona.
You can have- That's what I need.
Guess what? No.
I gift you. No.
There's nothing politically- Malia.
Hey, there's nothing politically incorrect
about saying I gift you this woman.
I think I'm on pretty solid ground.
No question.
Sona, I gift you.
The fuck?
I know, this is so fucked up.
Well, don't worry, this will never air.
The, I guess what I was-
Colin, I want you to know that if there's anything
that you say on this podcast that you don't feel good about.
That it'll come out?
You can. You know what's interesting? I will about. That it'll come out? You can.
You know what's interesting?
I will allow.
That is my rule for my guests,
but Gorley, if I fuck up, leaves it in intentionally.
Yeah, he does.
He leaves in all of the, so I don't get that courtesy,
but I guess what I'm trying to say is that we,
finding ourselves coming,
I think we came up at the same time,
we're the same age, We've had these wonderful experiences,
but what I'm noticing just in general,
and I'm wondering if it feels the same way to you
is that there was this period of adrenaline.
I often feel like when you watch The Bear,
that's what it felt like to me
to put a late night show together early on.
It felt like you have to live there.
You're constantly living on the edge. You feel like you have to live there. You're constantly living on the edge.
You feel like you have to reinvent the menu every night.
And then there's this brief, the period of,
oh my God, people come to the restaurant,
we got our stars, everything's good.
That felt, even though I,
it doesn't feel this way to other people,
that felt quick.
And then, ah, the eldest dates.
Right.
You better take a nap.
That felt like that part lasts a lot longer.
Yeah.
And the new guys and the new gals come up real fast.
And I don't know, that's how it just felt to me.
And I'm not complaining, I just find it
like a trick in time.
Well, there's definitely, I feel that time jump related more towards, I think, the physical
manifestation of erosion that I see in the morning.
Like, it's not, I don't feel that way about necessarily the career.
But I also think we followed a slightly different path in that as a standup, like I did face a tremendous amount
of I guess what my agent called failure.
Yeah.
And lack of success.
I'm unfamiliar with this word, unfamiliar.
But having been canceled or having been, you know,
done all those different things.
So I think I had a different expectation
of what making it was.
And I think ultimately,
and I'm sure it was a rationalization
or some kind of mechanism,
that the success for me coming from where I came from
was impulsively moving to New York with no money or prospects or anybody in my
life mentioning that I might have ability and having a six week sublet and saying, fuck
it.
Trenton, New Jersey ain't it.
And I'm not working at the bottom half and for the rest of my life, I'm getting that, you know.
I'm putting Springsteen in there and going,
it is a death trap.
It is a suicide rap.
And you gotta get out while you're not young,
but, you know, 24, 25.
I don't remember those lyrics at all.
But it's-
Do you know who Bruce Springsteen is?
Bingo!
Good!
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, no, no, not Rick Springfield.
Oh.
Similar.
Fuck.
Okay.
Yeah.
Not Harry Styles.
Different, no.
Then nevermind, no idea.
Imagine Harry Styles with a bandana.
Well, different bandana placement.
Harry Styles would wear it like a gondolier.
Yeah.
Harry Styles would have it on here.
Oh solo mio.
Taking you.
That's right.
Springsteen back pocket to wipe the working man's sweat
off the working man brow.
Whereas Harry Styles would wear it as like,
where it's covering my pearls.
I don't know what's happening.
That's all it is.
You have to cover the pearls.
But it's the same idea. That's right. Harry Styles and Bruce Springsteen it's basically the same thing. The same. That's all it is. That was the difference. You have to cover the pearls. You have to cover the pearls. But it's the same idea. That's right.
Harry Styles and Bruce Springsteen,
it's basically the same thing.
The same, okay.
That's right, that's right.
If you know one, you know the other.
Exactly.
When I saw, I went to see Harry Styles,
I was, took my daughter to, it wasn't Outside Lands,
Coachella? It was Coachella.
And Harry Styles performed, and I saw him,
and at one point he turned around
and he had an H on one ass pocket and an S on the other
and I thought, why didn't I think that?
Can I tell you something?
Yeah.
I saw that and the whole time I was thinking,
who's SH?
I was reading it in Hebrew.
That's the problem.
And so I got, and I said, Sally Hemmings?
What are we looking at here?
You know what the problem is?
Why is he doing that?
And also you had your touristic out.
What is the name for that goddamn stick?
I think touristic.
Touristic.
Goddamn touristic.
Goddamn touristic probably has a sound.
Where's my goddamn touristic?
Whenever I've gone to concerts with John,
whenever there's any kind of reading,
if they put up anything on, he always takes out his-
Where's my goddamn tour?
He takes his touristic out and he goes,
he goes right to left.
Doesn't make any sense.
These aren't even words.
Why would he start?
Why would he start with Born to Run?
No, no, no, no, John, that's the last song. All true, all true.
I don't know about you, again, I'm just trying to,
I don't often get an opportunity to talk to people who've-
We did the same job.
My vintage, but I guess the other thing
that kind of fascinates me is,
and again, I can't, I just want to compare notes.
I found the early years, I'm very happy,
I'm thrilled with everything,
but I found 90s and 2000s to be a time
of constantly worrying,
constantly fretting, constantly.
And-
Even after the early, like it took you a while
to get that flow.
It took forever, but I guess I'm saying internally,
I really like this period.
Do you know what I mean?
And in terms of just how I feel, I feel like-
A security. Well, maybe it terms of just how I feel, I feel like- A security.
Well, maybe it's, and sometimes I think,
you know, I say to my wife,
I think I've acquired some kind of inner wisdom
because I'm much more at peace and she says,
she says, no, no, actually testosterone levels fall.
Oh.
And what you're feeling is a loss of testosterone,
which by the way is quite apparent
in other areas of our life.
It's an evolutionary trick
To get you to stop striving. Yeah
But what they do is?
Genetically they remove your ability. You're a neutered cat. Yeah young man. Yeah
That's what I am licking where your balls used to be
You're done
where your balls used to be. You're done.
Give it up.
You're done.
No, there's something there.
There's a scar.
There's two little scars where they used to be.
And if I rub them, I get some satisfaction.
It's fascinating to me because, again,
like my observation of your track is so different
than how you experienced it.
Well, everyone feels things.
I remember watching your show, like the first week,
I was like, oh, these dudes, they know what,
not only do they know what they're doing,
but they're like, I remember the clutch cargo shit
and like the absurdist comedy.
And the guy was like, oh, they've done like,
by God, they've done it.
Like I knew that there would be, you know,
as you get used to productions
and you're gonna be sanding,
people don't realize that productions are functions
of management prowess,
that there's a sort of active management
that you have to post-mortem.
Like you're a comedy show with a masturbating bear.
Like the bear masturbates and then afterwards you're like,
so what did you guys think?
Like there's that part at the end.
Like how did he feel? Tell me that, when he was batting at his diaper,
you got, no, you don't, it's gotta be in a two shot.
That's right, that's right.
Because you need to see.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
You know what's so funny is my favorite part
of when you're doing it for a while
and then is yes, there are the years
where you're taking it so seriously
and everything is life.
And it really does feel like the bear.
It's one of the reasons, like I watched the bear,
great comedy, but when I watched the bear and I'm just-
Fantastic.
I watch it and I, sometimes I think this is too much tension
and I've experienced a lot of that in my life.
And I just want to watch Selling the OC,
something that doesn't have that.
Well, you're watching, you know,
I imagine what you liken to is a creative pursuit
where there is a certain maniacal desire
for brilliance or excellence
or whatever the comedic equivalent of a Michelin star is
that you hold yourself to that standard.
And ultimately you end up in a freezer
telling your beloved, you're gonna die alone
and get the fuck out.
Like that's, you know, and that's a painful thing to watch
because it is analogous to that pursuit.
I can remember, you know, I did a show
that was more of a talk show on MTV
and then we went to Paramount
and we knew probably a month in,
I was supposed to be the Arsenio replacement.
And you can imagine people at home-
I've always thought of you as Arsenio.
Exactly.
So you can imagine that people who had been,
you know, sort of trained on that audience,
I would pop up and they'd go,
mm, no.
Right.
We're gonna say no.
So we knew, I knew like a month into it,
this is fucking, we're gonna go down.
When it happens, I don't know.
And I had that same, the bare mentality of,
but I'm doing a silly show.
So there was one night and booking was really hard
because it was syndication.
So we'd appear at 3 a.m. in Atlanta,
but 7 p.m. in Phoenix.
Like it was just all over the place.
And we would be there to one o'clock
in the morning every night trying to squeeze
every last bit of the Willy Wonka parody that we thought we were going to do, but can we
really even afford the hat?
If he doesn't have the hat, is he really Willy Wonka?
Like, that kind of shit.
And in our exhaustion and in our frenetic energy and in our desire to save it and be
great one day, we were all in my office,
Stevie Higgins was in there,
he was the head writer.
The door opens and it's the booker.
He looks in with a look on his face of that look that
maybe doctors had two weeks into the pandemic.
Right.
He goes, Hal Linden said no.
We all went, what?
Barney Miller's not gonna do the show?
And it was then that I realized like,
oh, I think I'm going to jump off a building
because my emotional wellbeing is now wrapped up
into whether an actor that nobody had seen probably in,
like it was like Herschel Bernardi.
He had done Circus of the Stars.
He was the headmaster on Circus of the Stars in 1980.
So he was still quite relevant.
He was still quite relevant, but it was 13 years later.
13 years later.
Herschel Bernardi wants to see a script
and he wants to approve it and you're like,
Gah!
But it was the, your whole wellbeing was tied up
in these unbelievably trivial moments
that didn't matter even five feet outside of that door.
The other thing too is it was your case
and was my case too where I used to live and die
by what our rating was.
It would come out on a Thursday.
And I would all day Wednesday, the tension would be rising.
And then I would go home, not sleep Wednesday night.
And I would come in Thursday and take the elevator up.
And this is back when I was on three month contracts
and they're sinking.
We've got a replacement ready for Conan.
We just, he isn't quite ready yet,
but we'll get rid of him soon. And I take the elevator up and I would come in
and I would walk to my producer's office,
like I was going to the gas chamber.
Yeah, yeah.
You get these crazy, like I'm telling you.
And what I remember is if the number was a two or above,
two point, a 2.0, it was great.
If it was a one nine, it was great. If it was a 1.9, it was bad.
And what I didn't realize-
By the way, a 2.0 now is like a hit sitcom
on a network at eight o'clock.
This was at 12.35 at night.
Right, an amazing number.
But you know what I found out?
You know what I found out was that was the demo.
But what I remembered was the demo,
if it was a 2.0, it was like,
hallelujah, we made it at 1.9.
And then I found out much later on that the sample size,
because it's a Nielsen rating for that,
is literally like there's six people.
If one of them has a head cold and turns in,
takes some Nyquil and turns in early,
you disappointed America that week.
And if one person didn so crazy, yeah, yeah.
And if one person didn't have a head cold
and watched it, and all six people watched it,
you were a hero.
And I always instinctively knew that I'm living and dying
by this infinitesimal shit.
That's called, I think, being young.
You're just, you know, you're in your late 20s, 30s,
you know, and then into the 40s and then just...
I can tell you, I remember the moment that that changed for me.
And it was-
Was it getting this podcast, this booking?
It was coming in here,
and reading this,
and realizing that you don't consider us friends yet.
No, we aren't.
That this is a future desire.
We'll see, John, I'll let you know.
I was about to read this in the past, you bastard.
I was, we knew this fucking thing was dead.
Like you could just see it and you could tell two weeks into it.
This is the John Stewart show?
Yes, it was on MTV.
They loved it because it was Beavis and Butthead.
It was written for seven-year-olds.
So, you know, it was a huge success.
By eight-year-olds for seven-year-olds.
Right.
We go to Paramount and people were like,
I have no idea what the fuck this is.
Like two weeks into it, we do a bit,
I thought it would be funny if we have David Tell,
one of our writers at the time,
dress up as Hitler and come out
like he's a guest on the show.
Like, hey, you know, everybody wonder what happened to Hitler.
Oh, I think you brought a clip. and it's him at Nuremberg
going, I sense flies and gubs.
So I don't think anything of it.
But I think, oh, and we're laughing our balls off
because every idea you come up with
is two o'clock in the morning.
And you think it's hilarious because you're sleep-divine
in the way that Stalin would torture people
like it's two in the morning.
And so they're like, what if, what if,
tell it was Hitler?
And I'm like, love it.
Let's have him come out holding a bagel with a schmear going,
I don't know what I was so afraid of.
These are delicious.
Boom, I'm gonna kill.
He comes out, ladies and gentlemen, our next guest,
it's not on the docket.
It's not like you have it like, you know,
we had somebody from Beverly Hills, 90210, not the lead,
but like somebody who was just sitting at the Peach Pit.
Like not even, you know, we couldn't get guests.
We sucked.
Wait, so not Joe E. Tata?
Whatever it is.
Sorry, come on.
How did you remember that name?
And you know what?
Is that really a person?
Joey Tata was the actor who ran the,
he's the guy that ran the Peach Pit.
I even know that.
Can I say something?
I can't think of my son's name right now,
but I know Joe E. Tata think of my son's name right now,
but I know Joe E. Tada.
Joe E. Tada, we love you, man.
If he's still alive, I'll eat my head.
I know that one.
That is amazing.
So we don't like, it's, you know, we've got nothing.
This isn't planned.
So first guest of the night, we do the monologue,
do the whole thing.
And at that time it's all OJ, you know, it's all,
you know, okay. Ladies and gentlemen, first guest, veryJ. You know, it's all, you know, ah, it's, okay.
Ladies and gentlemen, first guest, very surprising.
Nobody's heard from him for many, many years.
We are just so honored that he chose to do this show first.
Ladies and gentlemen, Adolf Hitler.
Attell walks out in full Nazi regalia
and he's doing this and he's got the mustache
and he's holding a bagel.
And what I didn't realize is the crowd would rightfully
boo the shit out of him.
It's Hitler.
The whole thing devolves.
I see in the control room, there's an immediate break.
The stage manager comes out and goes,
they need to see you in the control room.
I go to the control room.
We're filming on 26th Street in New York.
Paramount, our syndicator,
they're watching from a lot in Los Angeles.
Sure.
The phone rings.
It's just one guy.
And he goes,
that will never see the light of day.
That will never air.
You will never do that again. I actually turned it into an
episode when I was writing for Sanders. We turned it into an episode, Adolf Hankler,
where I had on the Wu-Tang Clan and Adolf Hankler and Rip Torn had to come in and go,
that no, we're not doing it. They called me immediately. I was two weeks into a show
and we're already putting reruns on.
So we knew this thing's going down.
But I had your experience of like, this is my shot.
Like this is it, my name is on this.
This is a manifestation of who I am as an artist,
as a person.
If it gets rejected, I am rejected.
I wasn't sleeping, I was really miserable,
I was drinking like a motherfucker,
like all those different things.
And one night in my insomnia,
three o'clock in the morning, four o'clock in the morning,
I just remember thinking,
you're gonna have had your own talk show
with your name on it,
where you could do whatever you wanted
other than dress up David, tell us Hitler.
And people are gonna say, did you enjoy it?
And I would have to say, I hated it.
And I think it nearly destroyed me.
And what a dumb fucking response.
And that morning I got up and was like, I'm gonna enjoy the shit out of this.
And I don't care anymore.
And it was revelatory.
And it was such a...
I felt it physically, like that relief.
Now, the blow of the story is,
they canceled it pretty soon thereafter.
I had the revelation, and the story should have been like,
and I learned to enjoy it and the show soared
And the ratings Conan Oh the ratings you wouldn't believe I was literally shitting money
It was amazing like your scrooge. Yes, and you woke up boy. What day is it?
You're shouting out the window people like fuck you
We were the cranky old man? We liked him. What?
Boy, what day is it?
It's your eviction day.
You're leaving.
Get out.
So, yeah.
But it was the lesson of my career.
And it tied into the sort of flip side of that
was when I got Letterman a couple of years prior,
which had been my sole goal for five or six years
of working in the clubs.
And I remember going back to my apartment
and there was still like a hole in the floor
and it was still one room and I wasn't any taller.
And so that, you know, that sort of, that summit,
that Everest that had occurred by going on Letterman,
I was still the same dude.
And when I got canceled, I remember thinking,
but I'm not any shorter.
And I don't live in a smaller,
and I still have the one thing that they can't take away,
which is a desire to write jokes.
And that's how I think I was able to,
when the Daily Show came, work hard,
but not make myself insane.
Yeah, I think the saving grace for me was always,
I was very nervous, self-loathing, you know.
That's so crazy.
All the bullshit.
Like, I view you so differently, that's so crazy.
All the bullshit, but when we were doing the show
and Max Weinberg and the Max Weinberg Seven are playing and we're doing this comedy that I loved
and working with Smigel and working
with all these great people.
I loved that part.
I always loved that part.
I loved an audience.
I loved, and I remembered thinking,
if this only lasts six weeks, I got to do it for six weeks.
So I remember that it was the show.
It was the doing of the show that saved me
because the doing of it brought me joy.
And also you can't do these shows
unless you're in the moment present
and taking it beat to beat.
If you're doing comedy on stage.
It got you out of your head.
It got me out of my head
because now it's just time to go.
It was all the rest of it that I found to be agonizing.
But-
Could anyone help you through that?
I imagine somebody like Lorne, who really has been through that experience of show business
and ups and downs and had a longevity in that, is that something you were able to share with
him in any way or was that-
Oh, he knew.
I think the thing about Lorne and, you know, Lorne,
no one would know me if it weren't for,
I think I would have made a name as a-
You had already made a name.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
But I think if Lorne hadn't chosen me, you know,
for that job, I think I would have probably,
through various crimes, have made a name for myself.
Oh, yeah.
Pacific Northwest, roaming and then eventually-
Is that Conan O'Brien fighting in the Ukraine?
What is he doing?
Is he on the front lines in Kharkiv?
Look at that hair.
But I think-
So tall, what a target.
They can't seem to hit him.
The Wendy, a nine foot Wendy's girl is in Kharkiv
and no one seems to hit him.
Amazing.
You know, Lauren has an interesting thing,
which is he totally put me on the map
and I owe my career to him and I love him to death,
but he is not, and he would probably admit this too,
he's a throw you in the deep end
and watch you figure it out kind of guy.
And in a way I respect it because it works,
but he's not a hand holder.
He's not someone who's going to,
I know they tore you up.
The critics go down.
I know that you were destroyed.
I know that article came out.
I mean, he used to sometimes tell me about articles
that I couldn't possibly have read.
Oh. He'd say like, I mean, he used to sometimes tell me about articles that I couldn't possibly have read. Oh.
He'd say like, you know,
I think what the Cincinnati Post-Dispatch Register said
in their supermarket handout was unfair.
I think someone will eventually want to mate with you.
I mean, he would say, you know,
and I'd be like, what?
I didn't know about, oh, no, no, no.
But then he'd do that, but then he'd say, but know, and I'd be like, what? I didn't know about, oh, no, no, no. But then he'd do that, but then he'd say,
but listen, he did have an institutional knowledge
and he said, you're likable
and you've got a good quality, a vulnerable quality
and it'll, all I wanted to hear is
your weird comedy is so cool.
That's not what Lauren was saying.
I think he even he early on found it off
putting in fucking crazy.
But he did say like, you're polite, you're polite I think he even he early on found it off putting in fucking crazy. That's so wild.
But he did say like, you're polite.
You're polite and your goodness comes through
and that will see you through.
And I'd be like, what?
You're a well-mannered boy.
Yeah, no, but I mean, seriously, I think-
Have you thought about wearing culottes
and playing into the well-mannered boy archetype?
He did tell me a couple of,
I think he did an interview a couple of years
into the late night show and it's going really well.
And he said, I thought like, well, we're,
we're doing such cutting edge comedy.
I bet that's why Lauren, you know,
and he said, no, no, no, no, I chose Conan because,
you know, he has good manners.
And I thought, fuck.
But I could, later on, I could see one of the points
or not, it's not a point, but a mission that I had on this podcast that it was not something I set out to do
But the more and more I talked to people like yourself, and I'm lucky enough to get to share these experiences
I like to just be honest with people about how things feel sure and
I do think envy such a big part of our culture
And we are two of the luckiest people
on the face of the planet.
I feel that every day and I know I wake up every day
and go, I've just had an absurd amount of luck
and I give it up to luck and I know that I've worked hard
and have some ability, but I luck is,
I give it up in 90% luck, but I also want people
who are listening, especially young people,
to know that often-
Be polite.
Be polite, yeah.
It's the only way to get a talk show.
Yeah, you can be so fucking unfunny
and have such an off-putting quaff on your head.
But no, I do try to remind people
that you can be doing worthwhile work
even when you feel terrible and that everybody, I mean, we've subsequently been able
to meet everybody we wanted to meet who influenced us
and talk to them and talk to them at length.
And all of them have the same story.
I think Eric Idle was here like yesterday or two days ago.
And I've talked to him.
Yeah, the seat is still very British.
Yeah.
I can feel it.
I feel a certain
floated pastiness as I sit here.
Is it imperial?
Is it?
It feels that way.
Has there been a twit sitting in my chair?
Has there been a colonizing twit in his chair?
So, no, but he, name anyone who you idolize,
President and company excluded,
they will take you through a tale of darkness,
woe and insecurity, and I just like to tell people,
yeah, that's what it is, I'm sorry.
If you're in comedy, you're always, I think,
potentially 20 minutes away from bombing.
It's just the way it is.
And I always think about this in, when someone says,
I'm doing a benefit, you can come out.
And I always think, well, okay,
but I gotta really think about it.
And they're like, no, you don't, it's a benefit.
People have already paid the money
and they just wanna know the name
and that you're gonna be there.
And I think, no, no, no, it has to be good
because when it doesn't I don't care
If when I'm 90 if you go out there and it doesn't feel right and it doesn't go well, it feels worse
Where you feel like you've gone out there and they're there to cure like we're here to prevent cancer and you're eating it and like
They're just like, you know,
it wasn't bad enough that cancer is ravaging our community.
But now, but now your set is quite frankly, trite.
And giving us cancer.
We're finding what you're doing, trite.
Like bombing at a benefit.
Like there's almost an instinct at the end of it
was like, folks, I don't have to be here, you know?
Yeah.
I'm trying to raise some money here.
You can be a little less judgmental.
I'm not bringing out my best stuff.
Hey, you don't want a children's hospital?
You don't have to have a children's hospital.
It is what it is.
That grind on it is a newer phenomenon that I think- What's that say to that part again?
The idea of grinding on it,
that sense of striving and neuroses,
I think it was a strange new manifestation in show business.
Johnny was the guy who used to do these and he'd be like,
I show up at 4.30 for rehearsal and at 4.45,
I'm scheduled for my first blow job.
I go back, I have my first blow job.
Yeah.
Then I play cards with Ed, we have a couple of drinks,
we tape at six and then I go home
to the blow job factory that I live in.
Like there was no, until Dave came along.
A blowjob factory.
Do they manufacture people there that give blowjobs?
That's a great question.
Or do you get the blowjobs at the blowjob factory?
Conan, it's the most common question that I get
about the blowjob factory.
Now, first of all, I will say this.
Do I go there to obtain someone who will give the blowjobs
or get the blowjob on an assembly line?
I don't disagree that it's somewhat confusing.
I will also say this.
Globalization devastated our blowjob factories.
You know what?
Devastated them.
And now it's all outsourced.
All outsourced.
They're killing us.
In China, they're eating our lunch.
They're eating our blowjob lunch.
And eating something else.
Sona, you gonna be okay?
Sona, you and I have discussed at length
how this country is bleeding blowjob factories.
You know, when-
And you are suddenly shocked?
When Biden said blowjob back better,
I said the alliteration still works.
You said this man needs to step out of the race.
Or he could have said build back blowjob.
Either way, it works.
Any word can be replaced by blowjob.
Build blowjob better.
I don't know.
Whatever it is, it is.
There's a sticker being made right now.
I hope so.
A bumper sticker.
It better be.
It probably already exists.
But he really, Dave changed the nature
of almost the personalities of the people
that took those jobs because he worked.
It's interesting, because Johnny Carson,
we only knew him.
He goes on the air around the time we're born.
And then I don't come into consciousness,
full consciousness, until my 30s.
Right. But I come into, when I'm seeing Johnny,
he's literally, and watching my dad laugh at Johnny,
it's the earliest, Johnny's at that point,
11, 12, 13 years in, and it's set.
So he may have had that period in the early 60s.
You know what I mean?
He may have had his period of, we just didn't see it.
He was so established.
He was the only game in town.
But the pace was so different.
If you watch those shows,
what we had to try and do every night is put on a circus.
Like it was, you like this entertainment?
How about this entertainment?
How about I'll do this?
His was an hour and a half told a few lovely jokes.
It was the very idea that these celebrities
that you had never experienced
in a kind of less formal setting.
Richard Burton sitting there talking.
Telling a story and it's charming in and of its own right.
And by the time we got along, there's 10 of them
and everybody's gotta turn that like,
oh, you want to hear the record at 33?
How about at 78?
And everybody's running as fast as they fucking can.
I've been talking about this for a while,
which is comedy and entertainment in general
keeps getting more and more and more and more compressed
to the point where things get faster and faster and faster.
So you can watch, just bear with me here,
but you start with like Steve Aung in the 50s,
and then you get to Jack Parr,
and then you get to Johnny Carson.
What you're seeing is things are speeding up,
going faster and faster and faster.
Then you get to Dave, and that's feeling fast,
but we look at those now.
You look at a David Letterman from 1983,
and sometimes, you know, it was at the time,
as we were seeing it, revelatory and spectacular,
and it still is, but now it looks, huh, this is really going kind of slowly.
Then the pace picks up some more, then more,
then more, then more, and to the point where I think it's,
I notice that every time I watch something on HBO
or Netflix or anything, they never tell a story in a line.
The story starts with the murder,
then cuts back to the beginning of the story
when they're showing up, but then cuts back
to the police showing up because they don't trust you
to sit still.
And they shouldn't.
No, no, no, and they, and trust me,
they know what they're doing.
And it all started with pulp fiction.
I remember when you watched pulp fiction,
you were like, this is, but the storytelling
is not even linear.
I don't know what's happening here.
This isn't fair.
Right, and now you can't watch like a cartoon linear. I don't know what's happening here. This isn't fair.
Right, and now you can't watch like a cartoon
on Nickelodeon that isn't like flashback.
Yeah, yeah.
No, no, we did, I have, I'm shocked.
When I watch most anything,
and I say it's gone beyond comedy,
but of course it's in comedy everywhere,
is it's just, you know.
It's all in that molecular level.
It's ADD, yeah.
Think about on the internet, you know, you had,
and this was years ago, and it's not around now,
but it's sort of informed some of it, which was Vine.
And Vine was basically six seconds.
Give me your best six seconds.
And it trained people in sort of that, the atomic nature. It's like the ma- you're seeing the matrix of entertainment
or comedy where it, it's at its most fundamental building block.
And then there were people and you watch it and I'm always amazed now,
like you'll go on an app of TikTok or Instagram.
The level of creativity within a compressed timeframe or of, you know,
an event that occurs.
And then the next two hours are this explosion
of neural energy and content creation that takes that.
My favorite recent one was Donald Trump at the debate,
they're eating dogs, they're eating people's pets.
Five minutes after that, I'm on the thing. And it's that audio with, I suppose,
with pets looking scared.
Yeah.
Like, the gr- the gr-
And I was just like, this is the greatest.
Yeah.
It's now at a molecular level.
It's functioning in, in quantum comedy world.
It's also one of the things, you know,
the internet giveth and taketh away.
Well, that's for sure.
There's the, there's the pluses, there's the minuses. But one of the things, you know, the internet giveth and taketh away. There's the pluses,
there's the minuses. But one of the things I think has been great is it's been, it's the
democratization of comedy in a way because you, me, you know, Colbert, John Oliver, get everybody
together and they're all thinking of the best idea they can possibly think of
with their big teams.
But the funniest person, the one who comes up
with the best thing is probably in a basement in Iowa
and they shoot the thing.
And it's already out there.
And by the way, it's out there seven seconds
after the event happened.
We are the insurance companies of comedy now.
We are the guys in leisure suits who are like,
we're in some ways the infrastructure of show business.
Like there is no more wasteful business than show.
I mean, I think we can all agree with that,
which is why I think we need to save the planet.
And I vow that my carbon.
I would say the blow job factory
is you could argue is the most wasteful business of all.
Cause what is, we don't even know what it does.
Wait, you don't know what it does?
We don't know.
You've gotta wait till the end.
Yeah, what got outsourced?
You've been leaving too quickly.
That's the problem.
No, you gotta stay with it.
Oh, I always leave very quickly.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Oh, no, no, no, no, no, I always.
It takes minutes for it. What? It takes minutes. No, no, no, no, no, no, no. Oh, no, no, no, no, no. I always. It takes minutes, boy.
What?
Minutes.
Well, not for me.
I'm efficient.
I have a ruthless efficiency when I orgasm.
Oh, come on.
I'm in and I'm out.
Come on, man.
What do you mean, come on, man?
I don't know.
You've heard the stories.
You've been around.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know. I don't know. I don't know. You know, that infrastructure and all those things,
and what they're showing is it's the difference
between sort of entertainment is there was this legacy
business and you're seeing it change now
as Silicon Valley comes in.
The ethos of legacy entertainment is we've created
this incredibly eccentric business where like,
you know, we're like,
we're like, we're like, we're like, we're like, we're like, we comes in. The ethos of legacy entertainment is,
we've created this incredibly eccentric business,
where like, and you need an agent and a manager and a lawyer,
and they're gonna take about 60% of what you make,
but without them, there's nothing you can do.
And you join the studio, and the studio will give you a deal,
and you'll sit in your room.
It's the most inefficient way.
Silicon Valley walked in like in the way that Elon Musk
walked into Twitter and went like,
how many people work here?
10,000, make it two.
That's, so now that Apple and Amazon,
they go in and they go, writer's room.
Wait, you've got 14 writers and they're with you
from start to finish on the production.
Well, it's important for the writers to be invested. And then also we're showing them how they're on the page because it's different
about the page to the screen. They've got to understand how that works and understand
how we interact with the props and they're like, they can have three weeks and it's got
to be on zoom and you can have four of them. Right. They're changing us from an analog
business to a digital business. And I think that's the schism,
the earthquake that's been going through it.
I can't function like that.
Like my writers, like what?
You know, they're like-
Well, also it's not, it's across the business.
Many comedy writers, my vintage or younger,
have trouble getting work now.
Right.
These companies don't believe-
It's changing radically.
It's changing- They don't believe in institutional knowledge
that allows people to grow and get better and create more.
What they believe now is the autour system,
which has always sort of existed within film and TV.
And then this idea of ruthlessly efficient content factories
where what matters is the real estate and then this idea of ruthlessly efficient content factories
where what matters is the real estate and not the individual creative.
I think the problem, if I had to guess,
would be that you can't explain
what happens in a writer's room
to anybody who hasn't been in one.
Imagine a coffee clock with a lot of Holocaust jokes.
Yeah, but you know, I remember-
That's a writer's room.
I remember on, when I was on The Simpsons,
and it was, you know, fairly early days on The Simpsons,
there was a lot of excitement
and a German film company came,
this documentary film crew came from Germany
and the director wanted to, he wanted to capture the Simpsons
writing room in action.
So I'm sitting there with Swartz Welder and Jeff
Martin, Myers and the stuff.
The legends.
All these amazing people.
I'm sitting in this room, and they set up these
cameras, and the guy was there, and he had the
lens around his neck, and he's watching us.
And what he saw was a bunch of guys saying,
all right, well, we need him into the scene.
And it should be, and then it would be, you know,
Al Jean would be like, we really need,
it should probably be Marge that takes us out.
And be like, okay.
And then there'd be this, and John VD would go...
Hmm, what if?
No.
And long silences, and you could hear the equipment.
And then at one point the guy just went,
can something happen?
And I'm like, this is writing.
And there's a famous story of, I think it's Harry Warner
or something walked past the writers,
the area and the lot,
and he didn't hear typewriters going.
And he was like, I better hear typewriters because those guys are getting paid
well a lot of writing is sitting and thinking and agonizing and eating a donut and then
There's this process. People don't realize too that the idea like you're diagramming stories like in some ways
It looks like a math problem like you're
creating these kinds of tranches of A B B, and C storylines and drawing lines and creating arcs.
And it really is a little bit of like
a beautiful mind craziness.
Like you look at it and go, none of this seems to,
but everybody's, you're putting the Jenga pieces together.
And then in the edit later, the mistakes that you made
with your original instinct can get corrected or shaved off.
You know what was the biggest change for me
in content creation was the invention of the Avid.
When we stopped editing in the online rooms
where like if you fucked up,
you had to go back to the beginning
and you could start to manipulate things digitally in space,
it was revelatory.
Right.
Because it was how more your mind works.
The technology of it had not caught up with the way
that you spatially kind of see structure or plot
or character or those things.
When you had a tool that would allow you to work more
in sync with how you think.
Right.
That was because in the early days at MTV,
I can remember we would do these bits, you know,
these parodies and like get the little razor
and cut the thing and put it through
and tape it up and run it through again.
Like it was.
You feel like Charlie Chaplin on the set of the Gold Rush.
Right.
Yeah, it was.
And we saw that transition.
I've always liked working with young people, eh?
Cause I'm a creep.
Right. You don't have to pay eh, because I'm a creep. Right.
You don't have to pay them, they're still in school.
They'll work for credit.
Oh, this will help me.
But no, there's like, I'm very delighted
by when I see young comedic talent
that really makes me laugh.
I feel better.
There's this, I guess there's this cliche that people in our stage
are supposed to be looking at young comedies
and going, I don't think that's funny.
Why, in my day, and I've never felt that way.
Mostly I feel like, shit.
Like the other night at the, you know,
Emmy's, one of the Emmy's parties,
I ran into the writers that do hacks.
And I just stopped and said,
you're doing such superb work
and you started out with a great show
and then the other seasons are,
each one's better than the previous one.
I don't know how you're doing it,
but I left feeling energized and better about things
because I'm always happy when young people are killing it
because I think, oh, civilization is gonna be okay.
And I'm putting that all on the writers at Hatch.
It reminds me of sort of the way that they look at athletics.
Like when people go, you can't compare the football players
of today to the legends.
And you're like, right, the football players of today,
like mediocre ones would blow their fucking doors off.
Yeah.
Yeah, Dick Bukus was great.
These guys are running a three, two, 40.
Like he wouldn't have a, he wouldn't even know that they had gone past him. Yeah, Dick Budkiss was great. These guys are running a 3-2-40.
He wouldn't even know that they had gone past him.
And I look at that sometimes with the content now
that's being created by those young comics and all that.
And I'm just like, they've leveled us up.
Like they really have, people like to talk about,
oh, back in the old days, that comedy was great.
And you're like, well, it was kind of flat-footed and racist.
But other than that, you're right.
Right, right.
No, I'm always impressed by,
and especially like in the standup world,
like the level that young comics come into it.
Like it's one of those things like I see
as my kids went through the college process,
I was like, oh, I wouldn't be able to get into college today.
Oh, I totally feel the same way.
It makes me feel that way about the comedy clubs.
Like, oh, I would have to end up really being a bouncer.
I am, yeah.
Oh, you'd be a great bouncer.
You better leave.
What are you gonna do about it?
Nobody expects for you to hit them low.
Nobody expects that.
You go right at the knee.
I think, you know what?
I would love a comedy club where you and I are the bouncers.
They're different sizes and both equally ineffectual.
I'll hit you high and you won't feel it.
And I'll hit you low and you won't feel it.
Who are the bouncers?
It's Ren and Stimpy.
They'll take care of it.
No problem.
But you know, it's funny, I've had this experience now
where, as I said, this all started out with me talking
about those early years where I often think,
I honestly don't know why I did any of the things I did.
I think it was all compulsion.
Like I don't come from a world.
Right.
I came, my parents had nothing to do with show business,
I don't come from a show business world.
I went into an environment that was supposed
to be the opposite of all that.
And I, like a salmon swimming upstream,
I don't understand why I did,
made most of the decisions I made.
There was some sort of compulsive thing
that was pushing me into, I think there's
this thing I'm supposed to do and I got to get there.
I've got to get there.
Right.
And so you go through that period and then you get, here we are all these years
later and my overwhelming feeling, and I know gratitude is a word that's thrown
around a lot and it's become cliched.
I'm incredibly grateful.
But the other feeling I have is,
I'm, and I've had this feeling too, occasionally,
you must have this, where I'll run into someone
that graduated from college the same year I did,
and I didn't know them, but they'll say,
oh, Conan, I graduated in 85,
and I'm filled with this one thought, which is,
hey, we're alive.
I mean, that's my overwhelming feeling is,
I'm sorry I didn't get to know you on campus.
I can't believe we both went for four years
and didn't know each other, but that happens all the time
at these schools.
But the other one is just like, we're still here.
There's a lot of people who aren't,
and I'm just happy about that.
And I contrast that guy who I am now with the guy in 1993
who feels like someone's got a gun in his
mouth.
You know what I mean?
But the weird thing is it may be just as you said, which is if you hadn't had felt that
way, you wouldn't have pushed yourself to get to that other side of gratitude that it
wouldn't have been.
Yeah.
And I think compulsion is a really apt description of I think for me, I don't know if it was compulsion
as much as there was a little bit of like Richard Dreyfuss
building the potato tower.
No, exactly.
That's what I'm talking about.
And you're not sure.
In ET, yeah.
Right, it wasn't ET, it was-
Oh, I'm sorry, Close Encounters.
Close Encounters.
Yeah, yeah.
He also does it in ET and-
Oh, he does it everywhere, every movie.
In Jaws. Six cities! If in E.T. and- Oh, he does it everywhere. Every movie. In Jaws.
Fix it!
If you don't remember in Jaws,
he builds the tower of mashed potatoes.
Also, Mary Poppins.
We're gonna need a bigger plate.
That's what they say.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
It happens in a lot of movies, but anyways.
Always Dreyfus, always potatoes, always Devil's Tower.
Constantly covering for my blunders.
No one knows why.
But I remember-
I know exactly what you're talking about.
Go ahead, go ahead.
This idea that I was vibrating on a frequency
that didn't match my life.
It didn't match.
And the first place that it began to match it
is I worked at this punk club in Trenton called City Gardens.
And it's sort of this legendary punk club.
It's a great movie written about it called Riot on the Dance Floor.
It's about the, there was a little guy who was a postmaster during the day named Randy
Now who booked all these bands like Bad Brains and Black Flag and all these tremendous bands.
And I was out of college, I didn't know what the fuck to do with myself.
And I found this punk club with all the music that I loved and all these incredible artists
that would never come to Trenton, New Jersey.
They'd go to Philly, they'd go to New York, and on their way they would end up in this
shit hole neighborhood in Trenton.
And working there and feeling that creative energy, I was like, these people are vibrating
on that frequency.
I can't follow that road because I don't feel that,
but I'm gonna find it.
Yeah, your version of it.
My version of it.
Yeah, yeah.
And that was moving to New York.
So working at City Gardens is what propelled me
to just sell my shit and move to New York
in pursuit of, I didn't even really know what,
but it felt like it had to be something creative
and collaborative and something.
It's so funny that it's a great analogy
to the making the mashed potato mountain
because in ET, but also...
But also in...
Mr. Hollens-Opess, Mr. Hollens-Opess.
Thank you, Mr. Hollens-Opess.
And also in Dead Poets Society.
But anyway.
When each of his students came in
and tasted the mountain, each one,
oh, Mr. Hollens, how I'll miss your potatoes.
But if I look at me and again,
this is some sort of
garbled, I know I have some wisdom to pass on,
I just don't know that I have the eloquence to pass it on,
but I didn't know and you didn't know,
we didn't know exactly what it is we were supposed to be
doing, but there was something that was making,
pushing us in these different directions.
And I knew when I was around that energy,
for the first time in college in the Lampoon,
like, what is this?
I don't know what this is, but...
And I thought maybe it's second,
I gotta go to Second City, but I wrote them a letter.
And they wrote me back.
Dearest improvisational actors.
Dearest, I've got an emotion for you.
It's called wanderlust. Yeah. yes, I've got an emotion for you.
It's called wanderlust.
Yeah, seriously, I wrote them a letter
because I thought I was writing to a bank.
I think I told that to Tina Fey
and they just laugh at me like,
no, no, no, you go to Second City and you,
and oh, I wrote them a letter.
Didn't seem to work out.
Would you have any interest in a young Irish boy?
Oh, you'll see, there's big things coming from me.
But so much of what I did,
I didn't understand at the time,
but I knew I had to do it.
And that's where I'm in doing improv
and meeting all these people who are 10 years away
from being super famous,
and we're just putting money in a jar.
And I don't know why I'm doing this.
And I can't explain it to anybody,
but it feels, it's like a fever.
It's just a fever that you have.
Yes.
And then later on you're doing your thing and-
And you can't force it.
And not everybody does feel that in different ways.
It was very clear that, you know,
my friends had gone a very different route.
And in some ways I felt like,
especially in the early years,
they were all like somewhat disappointed in me
in that I couldn't get my shit together.
I definitely drank too much, did too many,
because I was just lost.
I just didn't know what to do.
And also, living that lifestyle at punk clubs,
it's not like Stivs, Baters, and the Lords of the
New Church roll through and you're like,
have you tried this new green juice?
It's phenomenal.
How's your cholesterol? Those guys are vomiting on stage.
Like, it just wasn't the healthy lifestyle.
But the way I've tried to articulate,
I think that feeling, and maybe you tell me
if you think this is sort of apropos,
but is that idea to trust your discomfort.
To trust your discomfort that I'm in this situation
right now and I am uncomfortable
and I've just got to find a way to articulate for myself
why it's making me uncomfortable and why I need to make a change.
And hopefully the act of making change, right,
is the antidote to that discomfort and anxiety.
Now, do you know that that change will be successful?
You have no fucking idea.
But the act of doing it teaches you, in some respect,
that you are not a prisoner of your circumstance, mind,
situation, any of those things,
or your fate has not been written, boy.
Well, I would say if, in some alternate universe,
the Jon Stewart show that you started on MTV
that went to Paramount and it gets canceled,
if that had turned out to be the end,
and whatever you were doing now,
you would not regret a second of it.
That's why it takes me back sort of
to earlier in the conversation when you said,
what was that moment for you?
And it really was the pivot point,
the cleaving of the life that I was going to lead
to the life that I ultimately was lucky enough to lead
was one night and I worked,
so I worked at this place called City Gardens
and I worked at this other bar called The Bottom Half.
It was underneath the liquor store on Route 1.
And I remember saying to them, you know what?
Fuck this place, fuck this life.
I'm moving to New York.
And they were like, have fun at the gay pride parade.
You know, like it's like that was the kind of bar
that it was.
And that moment to me was the moment.
Like when they say, you know, what's the best, you know,
when did you know you did made it?
And I was like, I knew I'd made it when I hooked that U-Haul
up to the rental truck and just drove
and just went up to the city.
And that was it.
I always, I do always try to tell younger people,
you have less to lose than you think.
No question.
You know, just, if you think it, try it, just try it.
And you don't know, but you'll learn something from it.
And I do end with,
cause I've kept you longer than most guests,
just cause I know you're parking a one.
I have another guest coming.
It's, I'm using this room.
Oh, go ahead, go ahead.
By the way, thank God it's in this building.
When we first drove up here,
I thought we were taping out of the back of the medical spa.
No, no, no.
So I almost pulled into that parking lot
and was like, wow.
We're gonna get out of the way.
We're gonna get out of the way
so you can talk to Hal Linden.
Who's here?
What?
Yes, he's here. Looks like we made it.
He's here.
Hey kids, look up Hal Linden, you'll enjoy it.
But I'm glad you're alive.
Thank you.
And I'm glad I'm alive.
Yes.
And congrats again on all your success
and thanks for doing this.
This was really fun.
My pleasure, I'd wanted to do it for a while.
I'm a huge fan of it.
I love listening. You know, there's very little now and thanks for doing this. This was really fun. And you know what? My pleasure. I've wanted to do it for a while. I'm a huge fan of it.
I love listening.
You know, there's very little now
that you can listen to that elevates your endorphins
and your dopamine levels in a way that this,
that your podcast does with all the different guests
and so much out there that's toxic to the system.
And so this is a really nice SAV for all of that.
So it's great. I've often thought of myself as a SAV or a balm, which is actually the word.
Always a balm, always a SAV.
A balm.
Yes.
John, go with God.
What?
Whatever God you want.
I didn't have any of them.
What now?
I don't know what to do.
I'm lost.
I'm talking about Jesus Christ of Nazareth.
The carpenter?
Yes.
Oh, no.
Seated at the right hand of the Father, Jesus Christ of Nazareth. The carpenter? Yes! Oh no!
Seated at the right hand of the Father,
he will come again in glory to God,
to living and to dead,
and his kingdom will have no end.
Who's at the last?
Is it Rickles?
Who is it?
It's Rickles.
It's Rickles and then Jesus.
All right.
Done.
All right.
Conan O'Brien needs a friend.
With Conan O'Brien, Sonam of Sessian, and Matt Gourley.
Produced by me, Matt Gourley.
Executive produced by Adam Sachs, Jeff Ross, and Nick Leow.
Theme song by The White Stripes.
Incidental music by Jimmy Vivino.
Take it away, Jimmy.
Our supervising producer is Aaron Blair, and our associate talent producer is Jennifer
Samples.
Engineering and Mixing by Eduardo Perez and Brendan Burns.
Additional production support by Mars Melnik.
Talent Booking by Paula Davis, Gina Battista, and Brit Kahn.
You can rate and review this show on Apple Podcasts, and you might find your review read
on a future episode.
Got a question for Conan?
Call the Team Coco hotline at 669-587-2847
and leave a message.
It too could be featured on a future episode.
You can also get three free months of SiriusXM
when you sign up at siriusxm.com slash Conan.
And if you haven't already,
please subscribe to Conan O'Brien Needs a Friend
wherever fine podcasts are downloaded.