Conan O’Brien Needs A Friend - Martin Short Live From SiriusXM NY
Episode Date: June 30, 2025Martin Short feels duped about being Conan O'Brien's friend. Martin Short joins Conan live from SiriusXM NY to discuss perfecting the eight minutes of dinner conversation needed for a late night spot..., wrapping the fifth season of Only Murders In The Building, and the inexorable influence of Don Knotts. Plus, Conan takes audience questions about baby names, staying confident in one’s work, and more. 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.
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This episode of Conan O'Brien Needs a Friend is sponsored by Macy's.
Let's introduce the man of the hour, Mr. Conan O'Brien!
["Born to Scream"]
["Born to Scream"]
Hey, how are ya?
Hi, how are ya? Wow.
Uh, well, that was sad.
Um, no, no, that was too much.
You gotta try and get it a little bit in the middle.
Not there.
Let's stop with the woos.
This is the smallest crowd I've ever played.
But I know there are people, oh there you are, good, hi.
Hi, nice to see you, you're behind glass.
This is like they're testing a product
and these are people watching.
I was, Blay, you introduced me,
I didn't know I was being introduced.
I was as far away from you.
There's a hallway outside here at SXM that goes,
it's like 150 yards and I was way down there
talking to our guest when I heard,
got on a burn!
So I ran like a madman to get here
and that's why I've had a heart attack.
Now listen, we're gonna have a wonderful, wonderful show.
Thank you for being here.
How did you all get here, by the way?
Love the shirt.
Don't wear it in the rain.
How did you all get here?
Did you apply?
What happened?
Are you contest losers?
What happened?
Yes?
Team Coco winner from Instagram.
Hey, nice, all right.
And I know we hit a ticket somewhere,
I don't know where that...
These people.
What happened?
So tell me how you found that ticket.
I did a thing where I said we were gonna hide this ticket
outside Macy's, were you watching?
Yeah, I saw it about 20 minutes later
and I knew exactly where it was
because I worked a couple of blocks away.
And so this is the biggest moment of your life.
Oh yes.
There will never be anything, you'll have children,
you'll probably become president,
but this is the biggest moment of your life.
Yeah, it's all downhill from here.
Yeah, yeah.
Starting right now, you're gonna hate the interview.
You're gonna loathe it.
I can't talk to these people
because they're in the witness protection program
behind glass and I think there are people listening elsewhere
but it's really wonderful to be here.
I call it Sirius XM, that's my little nickname for it.
I love coming to New York,
I've been having a wonderful time
and I wanna bring out a good friend of mine.
He grew up in a corn field in southern Illinois
and this is his first time in the big city
and I'm not kidding, he got scared
when we got into an elevator yesterday.
I told him, relax, it's a magic room.
Let's bring him out here, David Hopping, David!
Woo!
Woo!
A magic room!
David, you are from, tell us where you're from.
I'm from Carlinville, Illinois, it's near Springfield.
Okay, and it's a town of like 11 people.
Like 5,000.
About 11.
6,000, yeah.
What's that?
You guys can sit in the chairs.
Why would we sit?
Well, I'm just saying, it's the intro segment
for the podcast.
Who are you?
I'm just, I'm saying you could stand also,
but you could, there's some nice comfy chairs there.
Why don't you sit down?
Okay, you're right, there's some comfortable chairs here.
Why wouldn't we sit?
There's a good sitting energy.
Why don't you sit?
Yeah, there's mics there, yeah.
Okay, these mics work.
Okay, it's nice of you to come.
David, you've seen, we've been here about three days
and you've seen 15 Broadway shows.
Yes, I've seen three so far
and then I'm seeing one on Saturday.
Yes, yeah.
And it's great.
I mean, when you were growing up in this tiny, tiny town
where there's just corn, I mean, corn is every-
There is a lot of corn.
Yeah, there's a lot of corn
and you didn't have a television,
there was no heat, or, and you grew up,
you know, I think you were a scarecrow for a while.
I'm curious, and then you come to this city
with Conan O'Brien.
The only time I've ever been to this city is with you.
And you walk around with me.
I do.
And your job is to tell people,
hey, look, it's Conan O'Brien.
He's brilliant, he's so needy.
They don't seem to recognize me.
You're very good at that.
Thank you.
Yeah, and you hand out.
Someone has to do it.
Yeah, you hand out, he hands out my bio explaining it.
Yeah, scan this QR code.
Yeah, well I hope you're having a good time.
I am.
Because that's really your job, is to have a good time.
The last time we were here, we spent Valentine's Day.
I sent my wife a picture, because we were here for work,
and I sent my wife a picture of David and I
at a romantic restaurant.
And I said, no, don't be sad.
It was a lovely evening.
I got you a rose, remember that?
You were maybe gonna have a friend visit,
so we had like a third place set up,
and then finally the waiter just came
and slowly just took it away.
It was tragically sad, but I had a good time.
You're a good friend.
Thank you.
You're my paid friend, you're an assistant.
Yes.
And this is fun, it's really fun to be here.
There's an energy in New York.
Yeah.
It's, well, it's terrible.
I think it makes us better versions of ourselves.
We are better, yeah, we were nice.
I've been to a couple of Broadway shows already.
You have.
It's been wonderful.
Your wife's been to a lot too.
Anything to get away from me.
She goes without me.
She brings a handsome guy with her.
Well, I think we should probably, what should we do?
Should we bring out our guests now?
Blay, you're in charge of this.
You're the boss.
If you want to bring out the guests, we got a great guest.
You're holding the mic kind of close to your mouth
in a weird way.
I don't really know how these work.
I've only seen kind of American Idol.
Everyone I'm talking to so far is not a professional.
You came to KonaCo to install air conditioners.
That's right, yes.
And then we just gave you a mic and we let you go.
And you, I don't even remember how we found you.
I just walked in one day.
We have no security at Team Coco.
I think he's our security, David's our security.
Yeah, I'm really threatening everybody.
Very intimidating.
Yeah, exactly.
Did you tell people, leave Conan alone
or I'll take you to the Broadway show Smash?
Yeah, I went to see Smash.
I had a great time.
Wait, didn't you see two shows last night?
I did a double feature last night.
I saw Oh Mary and Sunset Boulevard.
Oh, a gasp.
Oh Mary's fantastic. It's like hilarious, a guest. Oh, Mary's fantastic.
It's like hilarious.
Yeah, perfect.
I loved every second.
Perfection, well, not every second.
There's one second I don't like.
No, I loved every one.
We are blessed.
I mean, this is a, I'm gonna introduce our guest,
who's a mystery.
Your legs, there's a woman right here
whose legs are going like chat cameras.
She's excited.
She's happy to be here. Are you going like, chat cameras. She's excited.
She's happy to be here. Are you about to pounce?
What are you gonna do?
You're gonna charge?
Anytime.
Anytime.
Our security is right here.
Yeah, no, no, yeah, that's my security.
Yeah, come on up.
And if you're free on Valentine's Day,
let me know.
What an interesting thing to say.
I have this, I introduce guests and sometimes I say,
oh, I really love this person and I really don't.
But this person is one of my favorite people of all time,
has been since I was a young man, he's much older than me.
And this card says, my good friend, he is a good friend,
and a hilarious comedian and I think,
no, that doesn't do it.
He's, I believe, the funniest person I've ever met.
And I've met everybody.
And he's also one of the loveliest people I've ever met.
And I am crazily thrilled that he's here with us.
My guest today is all those things,
and he stars on the hit Hulu series,
Only Murders in the Building.
I'm excited he's here.
Marty Short!
Yeah!
Yeah!
Right?
No, you're not Jay Leno here.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
Oh my God.
Sorry to disappoint.
Yeah.
Hi, I'm Martin Short.
And I feel duped.
Oh my God.
Oh my God.
Oh my God.
Oh my God.
Oh my God.
Oh my God.
Oh my God. Oh my God. Oh my God. Oh my God. Oh my God. Oh my God. Sorry to disappoint.
Hi, I'm Martin Short and I feel duped
being Conan O'Brien's friend.
Marty, I have to tell you, this woman right here,
she did this, I'm gonna recreate what she just did.
She went, oh my God!
She's losing it right now.
Shake it a little.
Yeah.
Oh no, it's just me.
Hi everyone.
Yeah, these are microphones Marty.
They go a little closer.
Oh yeah.
Yeah, that's okay.
Well Conan Diddy, Jeffrey Epstein O'Brien,
it is a thrill to see you.
Yes, lovely to.
I can't believe you,
because I would assume you'd be hopping a flight
to Washington for the big parade.
I'm a big fan, you know.
I know you are.
I'd be there to support.
It must have been so weird for you,
that whole Elon Trump fight.
It's like kind of your Sophie's choice.
Who do you pick?
I love them both.
They're so good.
They're wonderful.
They're so wise.
I meant everything I said in my interview,
in my pre-inter I said in my interview,
in my pre-interview, in my intro, if you will.
You tell me if you'd had a stroke.
I just had one right there, massive stroke.
Cerebral event, I like to call it.
This gentleman, I first started watching him on SCTV
when I was, I wanna say 14 years old, 15 years old,
you and your cohorts, and I thought,
oh, I didn't think anything could be this funny.
I thought funny was, and I had been watching SNL
for a couple years when SCTV,
when I saw that for the first time,
and I thought, oh, this is an Oppenheimer moment for me.
Like, this is a new level of funny,
and I still feel that way.
And you have said that SCTV, you think,
is maybe, despite all of your crazy success,
might be the purest reflection of your craft.
You think that's it?
I think it was true, because it was so ideally done.
You know, you would write for six weeks
with people that you had known and worked with
for 10 and 12 and 15 years
at that point. Yeah. You guys all knew each other. I went to university with
Eugene Levy and Dave Thomas. Right. You know, Andrea Martin is my sister-in-law.
Yeah. You know, there was a lot. I knew Katharine Harrison. She was 18 when I first
met her. And so we all loved each other. You would write for six weeks. You would shoot with no audience
so that no one was telling you by,
oh, I know you thought that was funny,
but we're saying it's not funny.
We just went with our instinct of what was funny.
And because we were on so late
and we were never that big a hit,
NBC really didn't care about us.
So we were on it. So we didn't have any...
Been there, done that. Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But no, I know the feeling.
Well, I know that-
I set you up for that.
I know the feeling, yeah.
Oh, and that was all you, okay.
Look at how he did, he took credit, but beautiful.
I know what you're talking about when,
the essence to me of the best comedy
is when you're making yourself and your friends happy
and then other people pick up on that
and your attitude is, look, this is what we're giving you.
This is what we believe in.
And then my brothers and I are watching
in Miss Quamacut, Rhode Island at our grandfather's house
on a TV that's picking up a weird station in Buffalo,
off Buffalo and we're getting it in Rhode Island
and we're religious converts to what you guys are doing
because just so many fantastic characters
and then jokes that were there
for people that were paying attention.
And I think now it was like comedy for the internet
years and years before the internet
because you're putting a little Easter egg in there and you guys are saying
Hey, if you get this fantastic if you don't you don't oh and also there were I mean
And I can speak objectively about sctb because I joined it late
So I mean they had already won Emmys by the time I joined so when I'd see Rick Moranis
do a VJ when no such thing existed,
or comment that Michael McDonald seemed to be
on every album, so you see him running from studio
to studio doing,
Minimum, minimum, and running out of his,
I think this is the level, who makes these observations
that I might have thought about
in the best moments of my day, you know.
So listen, it was just an honor and thrill, but it was, I remember one point I was doing a piece
called the Nutty Lab Assistant, and the premise was that Ed Grimley took a potion and became John
Cougar Melancham. That was, but anyway, so now- That old bit.
That old bit. So now we're on stage and I I'm Grimley and John Cougar then.
He didn't have a melancholy.
Was getting ready to replace me as I transitioned.
And I saw Andrea and John Candy and Catherine,
who were playing just people in the audience,
laughing and laughing, and I thought,
look at these people. They love each other.
They've been friends. They've done Second City Stage.
They know each other so well, and look where we are,
and that was 1982, you know?
Yeah.
And it continues.
I was such a fan that when I was in college,
I invited John Candy, it was just after,
not long after Splash, to come visit The Lampoon,
which is where I really got my start,
come see and meet everybody and go to a dinner
and we did an event that he would be the guest at
and I spent a day with him,
which was a wonderful time in my life.
And then, yeah.
That was his real life.
Yeah, yeah, and then years later, I bump into a woman,
she said, I'm John Candy's daughter,
and I said, oh hi, and she said,
I have a picture you might want,
and she had a picture that John took of me.
I'm the sweetest little girl you ever saw.
I put on a special jacket
because I'm going to meet John Candy at the airport.
And you had the Buster Brown haircut back then.
I'm dressed as a Catholic school girl,
and he took a picture of me, and I thought,
I don't know, it's so funny
that I don't have a picture with John.
I have a picture he took of me,
but he was everything I wanted him to be.
And that's something-
Yeah, that was his genius,
that he was everything you wanted him to be.
And that's why when you see,
especially planes, trains, and automobiles,
he just breaks your heart,
because he was such a brilliant actor.
But he was so funny and so sweet.
I will also credit, I'll say this about Mr. Martin Short,
that when I'm, so I grew up idolizing this guy.
And then I have noticed that over the years,
we've become friends,
which has been just one of the greatest gifts of my life.
He's Marty Short, 24 seven.
And it's awful.
Gee, that sounds kind of desperate actually
when you put it that way.
It's terrible.
He's doing Grimley and I'm like sit down.
We're at a funeral.
I was just about to say this is my dad's funeral.
But no, you came in and you're just,
and always, you're one of my,
I'm gonna say maybe my favorite insult comic.
Your insults are so.
Oh no, it's done with love.
Oh, it really isn't.
No, no, no, no, no, no.
I mean, look, when I say you look like
a six foot five inch creamsicle, I mean that.
Because you're pale.
Let's face it.
I mean, if you had a pimple right in the middle of your forehead, you'd look like the Japanese flag.
You're like if Iceland had a face.
Okay, enough.
Are we good now?
Yeah, we're done.
Are these written on your... I had to get out of. I had that you know, I didn't run this morning
So the biggest mistake I've made in my career was on oh, I can think some okay
Let's take it easy there down down
Was one of my eyes
final late night shows and we doing at a theater in Los Angeles a couple of years ago,
I think three years ago, and I'm coming to rehearsal,
it's a brutally hot day, and so I never wear shorts,
but I thought, oh, I'll just wear shorts at rehearsal.
What does it matter?
So I'm wearing shorts.
What does it matter?
It doesn't matter, I'm just there with whoever's the guest
and we'll just be at rehearsal and whatever we're gonna do,
and I'm driving in and my mind starts to go, who is the guest and what, and we'll just be at rehearsal and whatever we're gonna do. And I'm driving in and my mind starts to go,
who is the guest today?
And then I realize it's Martin Short and I,
oh fuck.
And I put my-
Well, I mean, you walked in, it was like,
first I thought I was looking at two rolls of paper towels.
They were your legs.
Well, this is what I go, no, no.
And I'm thinking, should I try and stop in bi pants?
It's too late, I get there.
Marty comes in and like a laser beam.
The first thing he does is he does maybe 10 minutes
that's devastatingly hilarious
about my legs. I didn't know beef jerky came as spam.
You know?
I just made that one up.
But anyway, just bang, bang, bang, bang, bang.
And my writers were crying because they love it.
They never get to see anyone really,
and Martin Short comes in and it was the best treat.
Well that is the joy when the boss is ripped to shreds.
Yes.
And when the boss has hideous legs.
No, those were not, they weren't Betty Grable gams,
as we used to say in the 40s.
You know a reference the kids will love.
Thank you.
Thank you so much.
This is being filmed in black and white. You had a great honor, which is you were inducted
not long ago into the Five Timers Club
at Saturday Night Live.
Great honor.
And I've done one Saturday Night Live
and then Lauren said, okay, we saw how that goes.
But that is a, I was in the first Five Timers Club,
I was the guy who opened the door.
I'm one of the first lines on the first Five Timers Club
where they induct Tom Hanks.
And I remembered all I had to do was say,
hello, Mr. Hanks, and I think he says, hello, Sean.
And then, and I'm wearing a blue blazer,
and all I have to do is take a smoking jacket
off of a hook, help him off with his jacket
and put the smoking jacket on, that's all I have to do.
I'm very young, it's Saturday night live.
Oh, you're not on TV yet?
No, no. No.
I'm a writer on SNL, and Jim Downey said,
have Conan do that, because he thought I was a funny lad,
and I'm there, audience, live television,
and knock, knock, knock, I open the door,
and I go, hello, Mr. Hanks,
because I'm in my head saying, hello, Mr. Hanks,
hello, Mr. Hanks, hello, Mr. Hanks.
He comes in and he goes, hello, Sean,
and I help him off with his jacket,
and then I go to get the robe,
and I'm putting the sleeve on wrong.
And I've looked at it subsequently, and it's a second.
It was 30 minutes to me.
I couldn't get his arm through, and it was horrifying.
And it was my...
Well, you know, the same thing happened
when Jimmy Fallon was trying to put the coat on me,
and he couldn't get it.
They finally just draped it.
Yeah, but he really fucked that up.
Just inept. What are you gonna do? I know. It's true. But he's on NBC. Yes he is.
Yeah. His show lasted. They kept him. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
So like they were like this guy is good. Yeah. Anyway.
Let's not dwell on that.
No, no, no.
That's how long time would go.
Or dwell on it a little more.
Well, as I said, just in the dressing room,
at least you hold no bitterness toward it.
So that's what I mean.
I really don't, actually.
Yeah, no, no, you let everything go.
Yeah, that's one thing about you.
You let the feets go.
Go ahead.
No, no, no, in my own way it was a wonderful thing.
Uh, we're gonna edit that out.
No one snorts at me on my show.
We have to talk about Only Maroon's in the Building
because it is a phenomenon and one of the things
that's been lovely to see is, first of all, massive hit,
and second, it's so nice that it's come
so late in your life.
Um, you've got, well, you've got like a year or two tops.
Yeah, yeah.
Uh, I've talked to your doctor, and, um,
but no, it is such a phenomenon, and-
Now what if I, just in my sleep tonight, pass away?
What do you do with it? Do you leave, do you joke to away? What do you do with it?
Do you leave jokes in?
What do you do?
Conan can predict the future.
That is a huge win for me.
I guess that's true.
You've gotta check out Conan,
Marty's last interview where Conan predicts.
Yeah.
It's fantastic.
Yeah, you're like the new Nostradamus.
Yeah, or Moo.
Nostradamus.
Yeah.
We can edit that.
Not gonna keep that in.
All my laughs will stay in. Yours will go.
I do the edits myself.
We're gonna put-
And hopefully you do the sweetening,
because I've heard your laughs.
We put crickets in on you, and huge laughs
from the 1950s on me.
No, no, no, before I came out, I said to your producer,
I thought they had an audience, but,
because I was hearing nothing.
I, no, it's a fantastic show.
You get to work with your partner, Steve Martin.
You guys are so fantastic together.
Oh, thank you.
The idea.
I love Steve.
The other, well, you say that now.
At dinner tonight, it'll be a different story
after a few drinks, but.
You really boss me about him.
Is it about him all the time?
Selena Gomez of course, just fantastic.
Mr. Short we closed a long time ago.
They, they're literally putting your chair
on top of the table.
They're literally putting your chair on top of the table.
But there's this old, it used to be a classic form
in television was the double act, the two-hander. And then I think it kind of went away
and you guys brought it back.
And to watch you two as funny as you are separately,
to watch you two work together and switch off.
When you guys hosted SNL together,
I contacted you right afterwards and I said,
that is the best SNL monologue I think I've ever seen.
Thank you, very good.
It was absolute comedy, masterclass.
I think you two were reading,
you have an amazing bit where you say, you know.
We do each other's eulogies.
We do each other's eulogies, and I think,
is it your line or Steve's, which is wow,
I thought there'd be more people here.
That was Steve's.
That was Steve's. That's Steve's to you.
And it is, first of all.
Mine is, there's so many wonderful things I could say
about Steve Martin, but this hardly seems the time
nor the place.
But watching you guys and you were,
one of the big thrills of my life was you once asked me
to do a guest hosting thing, a live show.
And I'm calling my brothers saying,
I'm going to Las Vegas to be on stage at Caesar's Palace with Steve Martin and.
Martin. Yeah, thank you.
And they, I mean, that's what it means to me.
And, but I got to sit in at rehearsal
and watch you two work together.
And that was like, everyone should see that
because I don't know anyone who,
the two people who prepare more than anybody
in the business are Steve Martin and Marty Short.
Over the years you did my show, I think 25 times,
23 are okay.
And then there's two that were really fun, really good.
But no, you were on 25 times and every time he did it,
you would keep calling back, second producer,
okay, send me the latest draft, working, working, working.
And then you would come out and it's a Swiss watch
and a lot of young people ask me,
you know, how can I avoid what you did?
But no, a lot of young people ask me,
what do I do when I say if you work hard
and you really prepare, I mean, that's part of it.
Clearly you're crazy, crazy off the charts talented,
but preparation.
Well, I think the whole approach that I've always done
in every element of show business is prepare so much
that no matter what happens, you can go home that night
and toast yourself with a glass of champagne,
say I did everything I could.
I can't help it if Conan's a stiff but even even when you're so what I do is I over
prepare and then I go out kind of gunning for bear knowing you know I've
done everything I can do truthfully the host might be off you might pick up the
audience might be but there's nothing more you could have
done.
And I even do that in movies.
Sometimes you're doing a movie and you realize the director is not that great.
And so what I do is I make the crew and the cast love me so that everyone loves me and
then I can go up to the director and say, oh, can I have a freedom take and I have one
more take and should we give Marty a freedom take?
And they all love Marty, so yes.
And then I can do it faster and slower and improvise.
And then I can go home and say,
that moron will pick the wrong take.
But I did everything I can.
This toasting yourself at night with alcohol is sad.
Yeah.
Well, I don't think the first couple are sad.
I think when it gets into,
uh, spillage here, you know, and no one's there.
You know.
You've always left nothing to chance.
And you're thinking about it, you know, your early Letterman appearances, your Carson appearances.
I remember just how funny you were.
And people who don't know think, well, it's Martin Short, so that's what happens.
No, I mean, it's important that people know there's a whole architecture and a lot of work
that goes into it beforehand.
Well, it is a weird thing.
I remember the first time I did an important American talk
show was Dave Letterman in 82.
And I remember thinking, OK, how do I do?
What do I do here?
And I thought, oh, I know what it is.
You have to be on.
You have to be like a charming person at a dinner party.
But it's got to be eight minutes charming person at a dinner party, but it's gotta be eight minutes
of your best dinner party moment,
but you don't have the hour and a half
to ramp up to that eight minutes.
So you have to figure out
what those eight minutes would be.
Dave was always funny because sometimes,
like one time I went on and he said,
tell the Tony Randall story.
And I said, Dave, I was on seven weeks ago and I told the Tony Randall story. And I said, Dave, I was on seven weeks ago
and I told the Tony Randall story.
No one cares, no one's watching, he said.
So sometimes you would find you would hit some of them,
but at least you went out knowing,
okay, I can relax because I'm prepared.
Also, when you prepare like that,
you're available to play in the moment.
If something. Absolutely.
You're confident.
I always think if I wanna prepare, prepare, prepare,
and then get out there, and if I've thrown it all away
because I get out there and something happens
that I wasn't expecting, that's even better.
Absolutely.
If you haven't used that stuff.
Absolutely.
I mean, with certain hosts, with you,
I had to prepare every second
because I knew I wasn't gonna get much but
No, we would we we had great times you and I there's a there's a best of me and Conan
I think on the internet that is just fantastic
there is a mashup some fan did a mashup of all of Marty's appearances and
You want to see a master at work.
This, and it's just, it's mostly insulting me,
and it's one of my favorite things in the world.
And then you told me once that you were on the internet,
and one of the comments was,
does Marty realize, does Marty Short realize
that Conan's six-four and can kick the shit out of him?
That's right, yeah.
Well, what happens when you do talk shows,
and then, you know, I'm not on social media,
but I will go to YouTube to find,
look at the last appearance just to see,
oh, oh they didn't use that joke,
oh god, they didn't use that joke.
And, but you're seduced by the comments.
And there's always, you know, that thing of,
oh, he's fun, oh, I like him.
I have been bored by that guy from day one.
And then one of them was, Conan, he attacks Conan.
If Conan wanted to, he could take him apart.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like, I'm Matt, you know, as if you say these insults
to me in efforts, I'm like,
I've got to get my sword.
He'll pay.
He'll pay.
One of the things that's so fun about Only Mercies
in the Building is you don't need them
because you've got this amazing nuclear core
of you, Steve, and Selena, and it's just wonderful.
But then you have guest stars.
And you can have whoever you want.
And you're getting the cream of the crop.
At one point I looked over, we were shooting something,
and there were chairs, we were in a holding area,
and I looked in, there was Meryl Streep,
and there was Chris Hoff-Waltz,
and there was Renee Zellweger,
and there was Diane Wiest,
and I was starting to count the Oscars.
And it was two, four, six was starting to count the Oscars and it was two four six eight nine
You know this insane. Yeah, I have a
Right, but you have an ace. I have an a cable ace award. Yeah
Writers Guild nomination. Yeah. Yeah, but
Do you have I mean you've had everyone on who's on the wish list for because you just?
Wrapped I, season five.
Yeah, that's correct.
Two days ago.
Two days ago.
And do you have a wish list for who would come up next?
I think, you know, he's from Chicago.
I think Pope Leo would be the kind of guy.
He did a lot of improv at Second City.
He did a lot of improv at Second City.
He was in the touring company with Bonnie Hunt
for a couple of years.
No, no, no, no, listen, he's, I think it's,
I think it's gonna be a different era.
Yeah. Yeah.
Anyway, no, I don't, listen, there's so many,
I know so many great actors that I would love to work with,
but I don't know, wouldn't Ryan Reynolds be great?
Wouldn't, you know? Yeah.
I'd love Pino.
No, she's gone.
But you know what I mean?
Betty Grable.
Betty Grable.
The reference to her number.
Yeah.
She's got gams forever.
Yeah.
Yeah.
How about those gams?
No, I don't know.
There's there's I'm always amazed.
Here's what I the proudest of.
I am of Only Murders.
It has a reputation of being the happiest, loosest, most fun set to be on. And a
lot of these great legendary names that we have attracted have heard that, and that's one of the
reasons they're doing it. And I think that's because Steve and Celine and I all share a
similarity that we like to work in happy joyness, because that's your audience and that's your going to work.
You know, the big mistake people make sometimes
in show business is, you know, I've heard actors say,
well, I try to create World War III on the set
and out of the ashes come my performance.
And what's insane about that is that's assuming
that this film or TV show is gonna work.
The only thing that you can have and keep to yourself
is the experience of doing it. And that's gotta be the great fun hang to go to work. The only thing that you can have and keep to yourself
is the experience of doing it.
And that's gotta be the great fun hang to go to work.
And if not, then quit.
I think the other thing that might, I would assume,
you've had this incredible career before
Only Mirrors in the Building,
but when a hit of this size comes,
and you've already experienced success,
but it's coming at this stage,
it's coming at a time when you have a perspective
on these hits like this don't come along all the time.
No, no, they're miracles, they're total miracles.
But I must admit, it sounds, and I really mean this,
that I've done so many things that I've just loved doing and
some of them didn't become popular and some did kind of and some did and I
have great love for all those experiences you know some of the things
that I mean I made this film Clifford oh my god everyone oh my god you know when
it came out Roger Ebert you know attacked it on a level that he never attacked anything
Right, right and but I loved it
So yeah, and I think the only time when a critic gets you the worst part is when you know
It's not good and they've caught ya. Yeah, you know, that's bad. But when you love something
You're that experience. It doesn't matter that the film didn't open
That weekend once you just live with it and love it
the same way you like, only murders and murders.
Also, that endures.
I mean, that's the nice thing now is I think,
I have a saying and I've said this to a lot of people,
good work is never wasted.
And it's one of my religious tenets is that
if you do something that you love,
that you think has real value,
it will, over time, it will withstand everything.
Cream rises to the top.
Cream rises to the top,
which is actually chemically not true.
But.
Sinks like a stone.
No, if you leave it out a few days, it will.
I forgot that part.
But I think that's, I mean, that's when I think about you,
it is, I mean, I was talking to you,
I've done this before, but you came in
and I was bothering you about your character
on Arrested Development who is thrown by a strong.
Uncle Jack.
Yeah, who's thrown by a strong man to attack people.
And that's one of my favorite,
you're one of those people where I will,
I could sit back and think about you.
And I go like, well, you know,
nothing's better than Clifford.
Wait, Arrest Development, wait.
That season on SNL, wait, there's this, there's that.
And there's just this constellation of incredible work
that's all very distinct and different.
And that is a gift to everybody.
I mean, everybody in comedy, just any, fans, everybody.
I think, but you could say the same thing about Kristen Wiig,
about Catherine O'Hara, Andrea Martin.
You know, so many people I've worked with,
Christopher Guest, Billy Crystal,
I've worked with the greatest people imaginable imaginable. And so when you work with people
on that level, it's a tennis game. You've got to, oh, okay. I remember the first day
working with Meryl and driving to the studio and thinking, hmm, I'm nervous today. I haven't been kind of nervous going to the set for a long time. I oh, yes
Street, yeah, I think I forget who it was if it was you or maybe it was Tom Hanks told me that they were shooting a scene
with Meryl Streep and
They were in a movie with Meryl Streep and at one point they wandered over the set and she was sitting on the couch
and she said can you run lines with me?
And I think it was Tom Hanks said,
Meryl Streep has to like go over the lines.
He just thought that she was so amazing.
This oracle, he was, and he said he was relieved
to know that she had to, she was nervous.
She was looking.
Absolutely, so the first scene we shot
in Only Murders was a scene where we're at the
piano and we're kind of flirting a little bit and the cameras, the first shot set up
is over her to me, so it's pressures on me. And then we break down so that they can reverse
the cameras and do her side. And we go into holding air and she just says, okay, nerves to half.
And I go, wait a second, I was nervous.
You can't be nervous.
Okay, this is this fallacy that,
you were terrified backstage before we did this.
Terrified. I know.
Well, I mean, first of all, and I know,
God, I hate people who criticize other people.
But your breath was not pristine.
My breath was not pristine.
It was like the breath of a cougar.
Really?
No, no, so I was, no, see I do relax completely with you.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And.
I shouldn't, but I do.
You shouldn't, but there is a,
this is different, mistakesaks, you know.
I remember the first time we had a dinner
with you and Liza.
Minnelli.
Minnelli.
His wife Liza, and she just had a baby.
Might have been Nev.
It was my daughter Nev, yeah.
And it was 2006, I know dates like Rain Man, 2006.
October, October.
And it was Paul Schaeffer, my wife Nancy, me, and you,
and I'd done your show and that was planned.
First time we had dinner, and Liza wasn't gonna come
because she'd just had the baby.
But she decided to come. An hour before.
She decided to come, and then at one point she said,
I don't know if I'm hallucinating this table
or if it exists.
Yeah, yeah, she was, and I think she was wearing
one of one kind of shoe and another of another kind of shoe.
And that was 2006.
I was on Broadway doing a show.
Yes, yeah.
You were doing Gypsy, I believe.
Yes, I was doing.
You were Gypsy Roots.
Why did they do it? I had. Yes. You were gypsy-roofs. Why did they do it?
I had a dream.
Uh, no, I mean, I have that feeling still.
It's a wonderful thing not to be jaded.
And I have that still.
If I have it today, when I'm getting lots of makeup on
to cover my eye vein.
He had so much makeup, and it's frustrating for her and getting lots of makeup on to cover my eye vein.
He had so much makeup, and it's frustrating for her because he smiled, a hunk fell off,
and they had to get spackle in.
But I'm, and then you walk in and I go,
it's Marty, and I'm, but seriously, after all this time.
No you don't.
No, I am very in touch with the Conan
who was famous
and meant something to you, whether it's sports
or entertainment, when you were 12 and 13.
Yes.
Those are, I remember, you know,
after I now was on Saturday Night Live
and I was early in the movies,
and Chris Gueston, I was in the movie,
and I was in the movie, and I was in the movie,
and I was in the movie, and I was in the movie,
and I was in the movie, and I was in the movie, and I was in. Those are, I remember after I was on Saturday Night Live,
and I was early in the movies,
and Chris Guest and Jamie Curtis are friends of mine,
and she was having a birthday for her three-year-old daughter.
So this is like, I don't know, 89 or something.
And out of the kitchen comes Tony Curtis,
and he looks like Tony Curtis.
Yeah. And my favorite film was some like it hot.
And it's Tony, and I, it didn't matter.
Tom Cruise, it wouldn't have mattered.
But who I was, no I like Tom Cruise.
I'm just saying that.
No, no, it's a different thing.
It is, it's when I was 12 and 13, Tony Curtis.
You know?
I used to have that about, we would get A-list movie stars It's when I was 12 and 13, Tony Curtis. Yeah. You know?
I used to have that about, we would get A-list movie stars
on the show and then occasionally we'd get someone
like Don Knotts.
Now I grew up watching Don Knotts.
I remembered, one of my earliest memories is my mom
would turn on the TV and leave for a couple of weeks
and I would watch the Andy Griffith show.
Yeah. And Don Knotts is brilliant,
and then The Incredible Mr. Limpit,
and all those movies in the 60s,
and he came on the show,
and that meant the world to me.
And it didn't mean-
Totally agree.
So that was because I connected to him
through the TV screen,
and that's my situation with you.
Don Knotts was probably one of the biggest influences
of my life because I again loved Andy of Mayberry
when I was a kid.
Little Ronnie Howard was on it.
But what I loved about Don Knotts was the complete
commitment to doing a character.
And the one thing that I think is the secret to doing
any character, whether you're even in a sketch
or a movie like Father the Bride or something,
if it looks like you're trying to be funny,
it won't be funny.
But if you make the audience believe
that this person truly exists
with all his foibles and insecurities,
because this is what life is, you go to the cleaners,
I couldn't get the tail, Mr. George.
That guy exists, he's not trying to be a character.
Right, right.
He's a real person.
I was at the, sitting in the audience on the SNL 50th,
you were brilliant, Steve was brilliant,
I thought it was a wonderful show, I loved it.
The thing that fascinated me the most
was watching Eddie Murphy, because I don't,
I've met Eddie a couple times, I don't know him well,
but I've always, he's so supremely talented and watching
him, uh, he did this scared straight sketch and watching him come out and he's just,
he's not in character.
He's not in character.
He's not in character.
He's not in character.
And then they go three, two, and I saw him become completely his character.
And then he did the same thing on the game show sketch
where he becomes Tracy Morgan.
And then three, two, and I saw him at one
physically become Tracy Morgan with his body.
And I thought this is extraordinary, the commitment.
And all my favorite.
Well, there is a reason he's Eddie Murphy. this is extraordinary, the commitment and all my favorite.
There is a reason he's Eddie Murphy.
Yes, but you know, one time when I got to go backstage
and say hi to Bruce Springsteen,
because my drummer, Max Weinberg,
is also in the East Street Band,
he said, come back and see Bruce,
and I went back to see Bruce Springsteen,
and I said, that was just insane, that was incredible,
and he went, yeah, you know, I'm still trying,
if I can get that minute,
that part where we do that one song, it isn't quite so.
If I can just... And I thought, what is he talking about?
You know, first, get that mouth fixed.
Um...
You got to push the jaw back.
And I keep writing him, and he won't write back.
No. But there's...
Well, it's a night guard he just won't wear.
That's all. No, no, it's amazing. guard he just won't wear. That's all.
No, no, it's amazing. Bill Hayter told me the story that we were all at,
it's 2012, and it was maybe the greatest stage thing
I'd ever seen in my life.
It was Philip Seymour Hoffman and Andrew Garfield
in Death of a Salesman, directed by Mike Nichols.
It was 2012, and it was the opening night.
You couldn't comprehend, there
was so much emotion on that stage, you said, well, they can't do it again. So Bill, I was,
had escorted Bernadette Peters that night. And Bernadette's sitting beside me. And Bill
Hayter leans forward to say something to me and turns and hears Bernadette say, how can
they do it eight shows a week? How is it possible?
And Bill said, I'm sorry, I don't mean to ease it up.
I just heard Bernadette Peters question, how do they do it eight shows a week?
I'm just leaned back and ignore it because she'd only done 35 Broadway shows at that
point.
But it is incredible when you see great artists and they're still probably Phil Hoppin or Andrew Garford were thinking,
oh, I didn't do that moment right.
And you're seeing something you think is historic.
What you said about commitment,
you have to be 1,000% committed to the character.
And I really feel that if you had kind of done,
you know, people think, well, okay, that applies to
if you're playing a fellow, if
you're playing in Shakespeare. Yes, I understand. I'd say, no, no, no, it's what makes Ed Grimley
funny. It's what I'm serious is that you are that person. You'll you become that person.
And it is deadly serious to you, even if you've got the crazy hair and you're it's it's
But it yeah, because there's another it's like I look at Jiminy Glick and if I had to
sum him up I would say a moron with power yeah because there is an assistant
when I order tuna I do not expect it to not have Dijon mustard that's a sin you
know and she's quivering and she screwed up the order. I love that idea.
And Ed Grimley-
The idea that someone gave you a show,
you know what I mean?
Someone said he gets a show.
He gets to interview people.
He became powerful, you know?
And, but Ed Grimley, I remember my sister-in-law
was coming to California, this was 1979.
I was doing a TV series and they were flying down
and she hadn't flown that much.
So it was still exciting for her and she said, oh my God, I changed outfits three times trying
to figure out what I would wear on the plane.
And I'd already become jaded enough that I thought, how adorable to be 28 and still that
excited by life.
And that became an inspiration to Ed Grimley because so that Ed in his Ed sketch would be the phone would be ringing
He'd say oh the phone is ringing. Yeah, I love the phone. There's always such a sense of mystery, you know
And
So, you know, yeah Glick Glick's thing was he'd reprimand people and I've had it with you and you think
Oh this guy that's why if I ever did something with Ed
I mean with that Jiminy Glick, I would like to do,
Mr. Glick goes to Washington.
The idea that Glick becomes a congressman
for Louisiana and he's now in and he's working on defense.
I don't know what it means,
but I'm going to read books tonight.
In the current environment,
Unless Lucy's on.
In the current environment, it's not that far-fetched.
No, no it isn't.
Cabinet position.
That's you can't believe how broad it's gone.
It's broader than any sketch, any character
that you could comprehend.
Right, because the essence of comedy and political comedy
is to take something that seems a little off
and then skew it and bend it this way, but you can't do that now
because you opened the New York Times
and it's Jiminy Glick has been named
Secretary of the Interior.
And you'd say sure.
And then your job as a comedian is to say,
Jiminy Glick, well that's a, Jesus Christ.
I don't know what to do with that.
Absolutely.
I don't know what to do with it.
Absolutely, there's nothing you can do about it.
I'm going to let you go into the wild.
You're a man who's much in demand.
I won't let you go until I tell you
that if my career ends today,
I will look at a camera that's not there
and say, I don't care.
I know Martin Short.
I love you to death.
You're the funniest person I know.
And I'm just delighted for you.
Really, seriously.
Well, that is right back at ya.
And we're gonna have dinner tonight.
No, I don't think so.
Yeah.
And I think, given the fact that I,
as you people like to say, schlepped here,
all the way here,
I think you have to pay for dinner
just to see what it's like.
You know, Conan, Conan, no, Conan is notorious
for never picking up a check.
In fact, people think he has an impediment in his reach.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Good to try the beef.
I don't have a wallet.
Okay, seasons one through four of only murders
in the building are available to stream on Hulu
with season five coming soon.
Marty Short, go with God, go with peace.
God love you.
Conan, thank you so much.
Martin Short!
Fourth of July coming up, you got plans?
I am going to see Kelly Clarkson in Vegas.
Oh, you love your Kelly Clarkson.
I sure do. It's her opening night.
Can't wait. And then I want to see the concert and then figure out like a fireworks situation.
You know what? Fourth of July for me, it's about fireworks.
You know, a lot of people think it's about the traditional Fourth of July hot soup.
Oh.
But I say it's about the fireworks.
And for me, the best fireworks, Macy's Fourth of July hot soup. Oh. But I say it's about the fireworks. And for me, the best fireworks,
Macy's Fourth of July fireworks memories.
I mean, come on, I'm saying it.
As a kid, I used to say to my mother on the Fourth of July,
can we watch the Macy's Fourth of July fireworks tonight?
And she'd say, why do you talk that way?
You're 39.
And I would say, I want to, I want to, I want to.
But it's such a memory of mine.
Next year is going to be the 50th anniversary
of the Macy's Fourth of July Fireworks Show.
And you probably already knew that.
We all knew last year was 49th.
And we were like, just wanna live to be fifth.
I gotta make it to the 50th and then I can die.
Macy's Fireworks Display has been going since,
say it with me, 1976.
For me, the best performances are the ones
on the Macy's Fireworks Show Yeah, it's a great lineup.
Yeah, I mean, you got your Jonas Brothers, Eric Church, Lenny Kravitz, Ava Max.
I mean, I'm just going by memory.
Kiki Palmer, I think Trish Yearwood, Betty Grable did a great job.
Yeah.
Ahem.
Tune into Summer's Ultimate Watch Party, that's what I call it.
Macy's 49th annual Fourth of July Fireworks show,
live from the Brooklyn Bridge on Friday, July 4th
at 8 p.m. Eastern time on NBC.
Gotta love NBC and celebrate at home all summer,
along with essential finds from Macy's.
Now I'm just gonna think about what I've gotten
at Macy's lately that I just love.
Oh man, Ninja, it's a creamy ice cream maker.
You know what?
A lot of people think, when they think of Uggs,
they think, oh, really comfortable shoes.
The shoe, yeah.
Yeah, not me.
Oh.
I love the shoe, but I think of the Sage plush throw.
You do always say that.
And then you got that black series
laid up beanbag toss set, and I, god,
I don't know what that is.
I've just, I'm sorry.
I have to admit, I don't know what that is. It've just, I'm sorry. I have to admit, I don't know what that is.
It's like, you know, where you toss the bean bag in it,
you know.
It's radioactive and it lights up?
Yeah, well.
Sounds dangerous.
Anyway, head to Macy's.com or shop in stores today.
["The Sound of a Belly"]
What happens now? Ready for the next thing? Now. We are going to take some questions from you,
the crowd. Who's ready for some questions? And Conan, you could sit, you could stand
if you want and be alone. I was standing and you told me to sit. I'm sitting and tell me
to stand. I'll sit right here. It's very comfortable. We're all just pals hanging out. Fantastic.
So whoever has a question, raise your hand and hopping will come,
come get you and ask you. Oh, my goodness.
Hey, my name is Allie. I am from Long Island. I'm great. Nice to see you today.
Nice to see you too. So I actually went through Team Coco on IG. That is why I'm here. So thank
you. I just wanted to let you know that for my 17th birthday in 2003, you hosted my birthday party.
What?
I know, because me and this beautiful angel.
Where did you get $500,000?
Well that, we'll talk about that later.
I can help you with that.
No, I'm really curious.
What happened?
So, my best friend, this is my best friend Jasmine and I,
I got on a train from Long Island and went to a taping
of The Late Night for my 17th birthday.
Oh wow.
Yeah, it was March 2003.
It was Colin Quinn, the Donnas, and Adrian Brody.
So we, there were-
Was he still, he was starting his Oscar speech then?
Yes, he was starting.
He was, he was brewing it.
And then we saw him finish it.
Yes.
20 years later, yeah.
Because it was actually funny when you were talking about
people when you were a teenager who just sit with you
and stay with you and you are one of those for me.
Oh, that's nice. So thank you.
Thank you.
But I just wanted to let you know that, you know,
we were teenagers, we were little scallywags
and we might've brought some alcohol
and marijuana into your studio.
I remember that was a very good crowd.
We were, so I just-
Andro Brody was getting laughs that he's never gotten since.
That was us. That was a bunch of-
So wait, how did you sneak it in to NBC?
We put it in our backpacks and we-
Wow, really good security.
Amazing.
What's in your backpack? Don't mind, okay.
It was like, we had like 40s of old English.
And no page said anything?
I'm sorry, go ahead.
I had a backpack with only a bottle of vodka in it.
Wait a minute, you weren't just taking,
you didn't just, you took like a full functioning bar
with you.
Yeah, pretty much.
We came out from, we're from Eastern Long Island.
That doesn't explain everything.
But we had an hour and a half on the Long Island.
You murdered, I'm from Long Island.
I'm from Long Island.
But I just really wanted to let you know,
and then we also had like an ounce of weed with us.
We had a lot.
So you were smoking?
We were, no, no, no.
We smoked a blunt outside of Rockefeller Center
in the middle of Rockefeller Center.
So you don't remember, I don't even think
you went to my show.
We did, we did because you ran past me
and your hair was just blowing in the wind.
There's no wind inside?
Well, you made it.
It was, there were fans.
You were nowhere near my show.
I was.
So I just wanted to say-
You were watching live with Regis.
So I wanted to let you know,
thank you for a very wonderful 17th birthday party.
Well, I'll tell you this.
Your first name again is?
Ali.
Ali, it does have a lot of meaning to me.
I bump into people on the street and they'll tell me,
I was here when you did this or that.
I really do feel like I'm seeing an old friend.
So thank you.
And there were years early in my career,
there's a lot of people who get very negative about aging
and we have such a youth-centered culture,
and it's worldwide, but I've enjoyed getting older
because I'm very happy about my life,
and I'm very in touch with, as I was talking to Marty,
I'm very in touch with when I was younger
and so worried about is the show gonna make it,
am I gonna make it, What's gonna happen to me?
Is this gonna be okay?
Or is anyone watching this?
So when I'm bumping to people
who are watching way back when,
it's really meaningful to me.
So thank you.
You have been such a part of,
and I'm gonna speak for her,
you've been a part of our lives for 25 years.
I'm, you know, so thank you.
I was on for 33, so.
Oh.
I can always find the negative.
I can find the negative.
Always.
So fast, yeah, I am the absolute worst.
You know, yeah.
All right, we're gonna do one more in here,
then we're going out.
Oh wait, you, you, she's gotta get one too.
Two more in here.
What is, what, all of a sudden, we don't have time?
This is my favorite part.
Hi. I don't like Marty, go ahead.
My name is Maya, and I actually watched
the very first episode in 93 that came out.
I used to cut school as well from Brooklyn,
and me and my friends used to come in and watch.
It was always Bob Costas for some reason.
Those were the episodes.
93 is all Bob Costas and Al Roker,
and it was like Bob Costas Monday,
Al Roker Tuesday, Bob Costas Wednesday, yeah.
There was like a Fred Savage in there somewhere,
just like the A-listers, but you,
and actually I've waited almost 18 years to say this,
my daughter is named Nev because of the episode,
when you came back and you had your daughter Nev,
and they, I think Andy at the time was like,
oh, what did you name your daughter?
And you said Nev, and I remember watching I'll go what a gorgeous name and my daughter is
2007 and her name is Neve and
Every time yeah, and so you've I'm shaking right now because you have been
my my
Comedy like legend and I've waited
32 years to meet you, so thank you.
Well, I am, listen, I'm getting a hug before I go.
I know HR will intervene, but I will tell you
that it's so funny because when I named my daughter,
when Liza and I came up with the name Nev,
we were thinking of names, and we came up with the name Nev,
we were really thinking of the Irish name Neve,
and the only problem is that Neve,
the Irish spell it because they love to do this.
The Irish are such ornery bastards.
They love, they'll be like, it's Neve, how's it spelled?
N-I-A-M-F-K.
Like, they'll just throw stuff in
and there's this theory that they were doing it
just to fuck with the British, you know?
Like, those bastards will throw consonants and vowels
in there they've never heard of.
And so we just thought, no, Neve,
and so N-E-V-E is so clean.
And then so many people were like, oh, after Neve Campbell.
And I'm like, no, but I love Neve Campbell, she's great.
But we were trying to do that Neve thing,
but we wanted it to be Neve.
And yeah, we were, my wife and I are here in New York
to do, she's got things to do
and I'm doing some stuff for SiriusXM.
And we've been waiting
because my daughter finished her junior year of college
and she's been abroad studying since then.
And so I haven't seen her in a long time.
And she came to New York last night
and I went down and waited on the't seen her in a long time, and she came to New York last night,
and I went down and waited on the street
for her car to pull up, and she came out,
and I just, my wife and I were,
we've got our nephew back, and that's how it is.
It's no different than when I first met her,
when she was born, way back when,
and I'm sure it's the same with you.
When they're under your roof, you're so happy.
And the only thing better is money and real estate.
And cocaine.
That's a lovely story.
Thanks for saying that.
One more, let's do one more.
And stop shutting down the love, Blay.
What an asshole.
Hello.
Hello, so my name is Billy and I used to work at NBC
and I was there when you first got your late night show
and it was 1993 and they had a cocktail party on the top floor of 30 Rock and you walked out
and I was in sales, I was like, you know what I'm saying?
And I met you and everyone in the room, because you were a writer before that, so everyone
in the room goes, he is the next big thing.
And we were all like, and you were just so gracious to everyone and everyone loved you. And I have a question, so I actually have a question.
My question is, you started your career as a writer
and you were on The Simpsons and SNL.
And did you ever, when you first were starting,
think of yourself to be in front of the camera
or has it just happened?
I did, I did think about it,
but I knew it had to be the right way.
I knew what I wasn't, I knew I was not a standup.
I knew that I had something to offer, but I didn't know where it to be the right way. I knew what I wasn't. I knew I was not a standup.
I knew that I had something to offer,
but I didn't know where it fit into the firmament.
And I really didn't, I worked at SNL,
and I never once looked at any of those cast members
and thought, Dana Kirby, I could do that.
And then insane events took place
that could not have been thought of,
where suddenly there's this seismic shift in late night.
And this is, nowadays, they'd never have picked me, ever.
Ever.
They would have said, okay, you know,
the world is filled with hilarious people
who've been making things on YouTube for years.
And there's so many possibilities.
Back then it was, oh no, who will host the show
if Dave's not hosting it?
We need to turn to an expert and they turned to
Lorne Michaels and then the whole thing started
and Lorne looked around but he kept, you know,
and then lo and behold, I get a chance,
which I was not ready for, but my lesson to everybody
is when your moment comes, you may not be ready, but you have to take it
and then figure it out on the way.
And my analogy is a boat, a steel boat is leaving the port
and it's leaving, leaving, leaving,
and you know you have to be on that boat.
Leap, now there's a good chance when I landed on that boat,
I hit my chest against the edge of the boat,
hit my jaw, fell in
the water, almost drowned, grabbed a rope, got dragged along, looked like an idiot, pulled
myself up, bleeding, blah, blah, blah. But I got on the boat. And it wasn't pretty,
and I wasn't ready, and I did think seriously back then about, well, maybe I should wait
till the next late night slot opens up for a complete unknown
and something in my head said, you're an idiot.
Well, we're glad you took that leap.
Well, I'm delighted I took that leap.
And I say often, I still can't believe, honestly,
I was talking to Marty about being cynical,
I cannot believe that that happened.
I still wake up some mornings and go,
wait a minute, what?
I'm at the Simpsons?
I'm a writer in a dark room and then that happened?
And it worked?
Not right away, but it worked?
That's crazy.
It is crazy.
So you never know when your thing is gonna come along.
It won't come when you want it.
It won't look the way you thought it was going to look.
But I think that's true for all of us in different ways.
So, I'm crazily lucky to be here
and crazily lucky to have all of you
caring at all about what I do.
So thank you for being a part of this.
You, I want you to relax.
What's your name?
Rachel, how you doing? Oh, you're awesome. That's another
hug I if if you know, listen, I need to sign forms first before I hug anybody. But I you
I'm so lucky to have you in my life too. All right, you get that? You get it? All right.
We have hopping outside the fishbowl. Do you want to take a question from out here?
I love that I told David your you're banned from the studio,
and he chooses that.
Yes, let's get someone from outside the fishbowl.
David, do something.
Yes.
Hello.
My name is AJ.
I'm from the Lower East Side.
So OK, how are you doing, AJ?
Pretty good, pretty good.
Having a good time.
Wow, you seem thrilled.
Extremely.
You know what?
The fishbowl blocks out 80% of the enthusiasm. Yeah, I promise.
I just didn't have a long night last night.
But we're here.
Well, now I want to know about this long night.
Oh, it was we could talk about it later. Don't worry.
I don't need a hug.
Hanging out with these ladies.
Could have been we could have been in the same spot.
You know. Yeah.
But so my question, it kind of builds off what you were just talking about
a bit where I'm around the age where you would have got your first late night show.
Yep. And I work in music. I don't make music. I do like social media work and like event curation and stuff like that.
And I've got to have like good notes of success. Like I've got to make money and I haven't had to, like, work for people I don't want to. I've been able to do things on my own. But you start getting
to the point where it feels like a lot of the other people that started in this kind
of like field with me that are in my age range, whether a little above or below, they're starting
to like give up or do something else or they think it's never going to materialize for
them. And I think the things that I do like objectively are really quality and I really
care about them and stuff like that. But it's easy to kind of look around and start being
like, well, maybe they have the right idea. And maybe it is kind of time to like, are
you enjoying it? I love it every day Oh, I love it. Every single day. So why don't you stop?
Because sometimes it's not the feasible option or it's not the... You went to school for
something.
Maybe you should figure out something to do with that.
I think that everyone has to figure it out for themselves.
It would be very Pat of me to say, don't give up on your dreams.
But everyone intuitively knows what the right thing to
do is. They do. There's like a little person inside you that knows. And there are people
who say, I'm going to stop doing this. This isn't right for me. I think I should pursue
this other thing. And I don't, I think it's wrong to say they gave up because something
in them spoke to them and said, be like if I had said,
I wanna make my living playing,
I love playing guitar and singing rockabilly music
and it's like a hobby of mine.
But if I quit comedy and was doing that
and didn't have any reserves of money or anything,
I would probably at some point go,
yeah, this is a fun hobby,
but this is not what you should be doing.
But that's something you know.
That's something that you will figure out.
And I think if you love it and you're able to put a roof over your head and you can buy
a sandwich, then you keep doing it if you love it.
Because yes, if you've got a family to support and you're making no money on it and your kids don't
have medical coverage, it's not giving up to say, okay, this is not feasible.
But if that's not the case and this speaks to you and it's your passion, I say that you
keep going because you don't know where it's going to lead. But I think there is a Pat philosophy which is pursue your dreams and you too can be Taylor
Swift and I think, well no, a lot of people can't be Taylor Swift.
In fact, it's been proven that only Taylor Swift can be Taylor Swift and she gets to
record each song nine times and you'll buy all of them.
So apparently even she can't be Taylor Swift.
But in the pursuit of that, you will make other decisions
along the way.
So I don't like the pat answer, you've
got to stick with your dreams, man.
Because first of all, that's an annoying voice.
And second of all, I think that it's very personal.
It's the most personal thing in the world,
what you decide to keep doing.
And if you're willing to do the thing you love
and be humble about it and realize that,
no, I don't need to fly in a private jet.
I don't need a Bugatti.
I don't need fancy, huge this or huge that.
I have all those things 10 times over.
I drive 10 Bugattis at the same time.
I've glued one to the other.
So if you see me in 10 Bugattis driving,
wasting fossil fuels, that's just because I can have it.
But that was not the goal.
The goal was I love this, and if I just get to meet Martin
Short, I'm good, and pay my rent.
So my first apartment was a $380 a month apartment
in Los Angeles, and I drove really awful used cars
that I bought at the airport.
But I was happy.
I mean, in many ways, it's not like I was miserable.
I was happy, because I was earning my,
I was working with funny people and writing comedy and paying my rent so it doesn't get better than that
It really doesn't I mean you add little things along the way
But the the way that my life has substantially improved is my wife and my kids, but the other stuff
Isn't doesn't make me markedly happier than when I had a $380 a month apartment.
I was happy then and I'm happy now.
So that is a fallacy that it's all about money.
Still, I'm glad that I've done so well financially.
I think we have time for one more question.
Out there, outside, there goes hopping.
I like that you narrate the
audio medium
uh... hi my name is uh... cooper i'm from long island new york i
haven't seen yet except today
uh... my question is you don't know who i am here
no clue
my question is uh... when you're on simpsons and as now what was your
reaction when you wrote something
and an actor just completely
changed it?
That's interesting.
I think Simpsons was very locked down, so that wouldn't happen.
And if someone did change something, it was for the better.
So if you're working with a Hank Azaria or a Dan Caslonetta, I mean, they would riff
sometimes.
And what they would riff and come up with was just better.
And I always like any system where the best thing wins.
So if I'm working on it, if it was my script
and someone improvised something
and it got into the show, good chance,
it was better than what I had come up with.
So I had no sense of how dare you,
Dan Caslenetta, who are you to improvise my words?
I'm 24 and my skin is clearing up.
And I felt the same way at SNL,
it was very disciplined.
The Lorne always, Lorne empowered writers.
And so it wasn't the old studio system
that you,
the thing in the 50s where writers are just these guys
that, you know, banging away on typewriters
and they never get close to the stars
and their people, you know, abuse them.
I've always been in a system where writers were empowered.
So it didn't really happen to me that often.
Wasn't really a thing.
And like I say, if someone did change something,
it's because, you know, Phil Hartman or Dana Carvey
changed something.
I wasn't backstage saying, that idiot.
It was like, wow, yeah, I wrote that.
I just take credit for it.
So that was my feeling.
Awesome.
OK, I think we're done.
That's it.
We did the thing.
Hey, we did the thing.
Thank you all for being here.
Hug, hug, also I want someone to look through their bag.
Conan O'Brien needs a friend.
With Conan O'Brien, Sonam Avsesian and Matt Gourley.
Produced by me, Matt Gourley.
Executive produced by Adam Sacks, Jeff Ross,
and Nick Leal.
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.
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