Conan O’Brien Needs A Friend - Questions 3
Episode Date: February 29, 2024Conan chats with Liz from Providence, RI about working as a children’s librarian and what role Conan would fill in a fairy tale world. Wanna get a chance to talk to Conan? Submit here: TeamCoco.co...m/CallConan
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Okay, let's get started.
All right.
You brought a poop.
Here comes Liz.
You were the poop guy.
Here comes Liz.
Oh, you were, what happened the last night?
Oh, you don't like this?
You don't like me talking?
Does this bother you?
It's a welch.
Nope.
You do the more you do that, the more I talk.
Don't worry.
Hi, Liz.
We're just working through some things here.
Welcome to Conan O'Brien.
He's a fan.
Hi, Liz.
How are you?
Hi.
I'm great.
How are you doing?
I'm doing great.
It's so nice to meet you.
Where are you calling us from?
Providence, Rhode Island.
Oh, Providence.
I know Providence.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Well, I grew up in Boston, Massachusetts.
And then when I was a kid,
we would spend the summers staying at my grandfather's house.
He was a retired policeman from Worcester, Mass.
And so he had a place in Miss Quamicut, Rhode Island,
down by the state beach.
Oh, what way?
And so we would every year pack up our clunky station wagon
with six kids, parakeets,
two dogs, a cat, my grandma, like everybody,
we would just all cram into this thing
with everything we would need for three weeks.
And it was this mecca we would drive down
through Providence and usually stop off there
and get a bite to eat and then go all the rest of the way
to Miss Kwama Cut.
So a lot of fond memories of Providence.
I'm so glad.
Yeah, I think it's great here.
It's really nice.
It's a great place.
And what do you do?
I'm a children's librarian.
Oh, you are.
Good for you.
That's great.
I love that.
And tell us a little bit about, I mean,
God, it's been so long.
I used to love going to the library when I was a kid.
Big shock. I wasn't a jock, but I to love going to the library when I was a kid. Big shock, wasn't a joke, but I did love going
and hanging out in the library.
And in fact, there was a really good library
in Westerly, Rhode Island that I used to go to.
Oh, that's a beautiful library.
It's gorgeous.
It looks like a castle.
Yeah, it looks like a castle and I would go in there
and other kids would be playing at the beach
But because there's something called the Sun
It's in the sky I would say please mother
Take me to the library
learn I shall
I should have gotten a really big book and take that to the beach
I would used to do that. I used to always say yeah, I do was to check out the
Check out like some some giant almanac. Then get hide underneath it at the beach.
It's a huge atlas.
Yeah, but I loved it there.
And I remember there was always a contest every summer.
They had this giant 3D map with mountains and everything
and a river.
And everyone, you signed up and you got a little canoe
The little person in it and each time you read a book you advanced along the river
And that's the whole idea was by the end of the summer who would be in the lead and you could see other canoes
Were in the lead and you'd want to read more books try and get ahead of them
And then I eventually gave up and just moved my canoe over the mountain. I portaged and
Yeah, yeah, how do they know if you read the books, could you cheat?
They didn't, and you could cheat.
Oh no, it's all honor system in the public library.
I know, when I hear honor system, I say, see ya suckers.
This canoe's going over the mountain.
But it's the library.
It's usually pretty obvious when that's happening.
But yeah, we don't worry about it. If one kid hops his canoe over the mountain, you don't worry but yeah, we don't worry about it.
If one kid hops his canoe over the mountain,
you don't worry about it.
You don't get 20 more who are speeding along.
Yeah, I was actually, I was arrested, so.
Oh no.
Yeah, yeah, I did six months in juvie.
Gosh, the library was the origin of your delinquency.
It really was, it's where it all started.
And when I would tell the other kids in juvie
what I was there for, that didn't go over well.
Yeah, I moved my canoe and get him.
So I was, it's why you're so tough.
Yeah, yeah.
I went overland with my canoe.
I told them, I read Copernicus, but I hadn't.
The beating that ensued lasted six weeks.
So, okay, so, so Liz so Liz, you work at a library,
a children's library in Providence.
What's a children's library like these days?
Are kids still reading?
I hope they are.
I hope they're not on their phones and their machines.
Yeah, I usually say that kids are probably reading
more than most adults, frankly.
We're too busy to read.
Yeah.
And so I do, I see a lot of kids excited
about the books about libraries.
And the children's library,
I think is like a wonderful community resource now,
you know, gone are the days
where you had to shush your mouth and read in silence.
It's playtime and getting excited about books.
Wait a minute, children's libraries are loud now?
They are loud, my friends.
Like C-Soul Clubs, like thumping house music? Do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do We never heard it before. It's very loud. It's very loud. So I hope you're taking your kids to libraries.
We do, we take them a lot.
And we actually went to a different library once
and they're two and a half and they came in yelling
and I was so, I was sweating.
I was so nervous, but no one told them to be quiet.
And then we looked over and there's toys
and there's a whole play area in this one library.
And I was like, maybe this is okay,
but I personally couldn't handle it.
So we went to our normal regular library.
We knew it could be loud.
Let me ask you something, Liz.
No one goes, shh, there's not a mean old woman
named Mrs. Crumbbottom who goes, shh.
I have a patron named Mrs. Crumbbottom who shushes me.
Oh good.
I would never shush anyone as a librarian.
Wow.
So no, especially for kids because like play is so important and that's why we let
toddlers toddle around while we're reading aloud. They're still getting stuff,
but they need to engage in that way. That's incredible. Yeah. I love that. Yeah. I
love that. What are the popular books right now? Obviously Harry Potter was a
big thing. I still pretty big, honestly. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I hope so, those are good books, you know.
Any Tom Clancy for the kids?
Oh, Matt, Tom Clancy.
Well, we do have Tom Clancy,
but if they're reading it, it's in another room, not mine.
Actually, there's a book called Dog Man
that is never on my shelf, it's so popular.
It's a graphic novel series about a policeman
who has the head of a dog and the body of a man.
Wait, how did that happen?
It happened. It's a little dark. It starts out a little dark.
He was in a terrible accident. It was a car accident.
And the dog's body died, but his head was in good shape.
The policeman's head expired, and his body, though, still pretty good good shape so oh yeah bodies do fine without the head
Most bodies live on for a long time after the brain is gone so wait a minute so that's a very dark
Opening terrible accident. It's all laughs
Okay, so and do kids get upset by that dark opening?
No, not at all.
One of the clever devices of the book
is it's actually a comic within a comic.
When you open it, you meet these two kids
who are writing the dogman comic.
So, you know, it's all fiction.
You don't have to worry about it.
And then it's just all,
oh, it's fiction.
Pony's dog shenanigans.
It is fiction.
It is fiction.
Sorry, I should have specified that.
Okay, good, okay, thank you for clearing that up. Yeah, Sonia's wondering why she dog shenanigans. It is fiction. It is fiction. Sorry, I should have specified that. Okay, good.
Okay, thank you for clearing that up.
Yeah, Sonia's wondering why she hadn't read about this
in the paper.
I mean, this is pretty incredible.
This should have been front page news.
So Dog Man's the big thing, huh?
One of the things that would be,
it'd be funny if Dog Man was like real,
because it sounds like it's funny and kids like it,
it's got a good sense of humor,
but it'd be great, I think, if they just had the through line
was that dog man's in constant pain.
Oh, sure.
Oh, sure.
I'd love to see like a gritty, film noir dog man series.
He's just taking a lot of morphine and opium
to get through, because it hurts when you have your body,
when you have a dog's head attached to your body.
Yeah, I think there's two different instincts happening. The instincts of a dog, when you have a dog's head attached to your body. And he's just, and so. I also felt like two different instincts happening.
The instincts of a dog, the instincts of a man,
can they be one?
Does he lift his leg when he pees?
I mean, what is, what happens?
Who's, who's the dominant?
Oh yeah, there's a lot of dog behavior.
Really?
I would say the.
Does he sniff butts?
Yeah, he's probably.
That's why he goes to close.
He has the ability to solve mysteries,
but he's still a dog.
He likes dog bones.
He gets excited. He doesn't have a tail to wag, but I think if he did, he would. He likes dog bones. He gets excited.
He doesn't have a tail to wag,
but I think if he did, he would.
We all have a tail to wag when you think about it.
Does he poop in a toilet?
Wait, okay, so let's get, let's elevate this.
Cause it's the body.
It's a human body, but he's eating dog food.
So how is the body digesting the dog food?
That you do with your head,
but everything human related you do with your head, but everything human related.
I'm sure that Dave feels he has that
and all the people here.
You know what's interesting, Liz?
We're gonna digest dog food?
Can we eat dog stuff?
You know what's interesting?
Does he do it doggy style?
You know what's interesting, Liz,
is that Son is asking all the questions
a five year old would ask.
I really do feel like you're back at your library.
But I don't understand.
Does he poop?
Where does he poop? If he does it doggy style, I've never gotten that question from the five year old. They don't understand. Does he poop? Where does he poop?
Does it doggy style?
I've never gotten that question
from the five year old.
They don't mention that in the book?
They will, wait till they turn eight.
How does he do it?
Yeah.
Then they'll come back and follow up.
Follow up question.
Does he shower?
Okay, so I'm gonna just chill.
I'm sorry.
But just chill.
Liz.
You have to read it, you're in the library.
I really do, I feel like I should. You'll like it, it's pictures mostly. So. Liz. You have to read it, you're in the library. I really do, I feel like I should.
You'll like it, it's pictures mostly, so.
Liz.
You made a joke, but that's true.
No, it is true.
Yeah, I know.
I don't see you often, oh, I better go get my book.
Ha ha ha ha ha ha.
She had me a graphic novel.
Oh man, I laughed way too hard.
Anyway, Liz, I think it's wonderful.
And what do you do when a kid gets on a hand?
Does that ever happen or the kid's pretty well behaved?
Oh, you know, we have meltdowns of course in the library,
but luckily the kids can't be there on their own
for the most part, so we let the parents deal with it,
which is nice.
I have a question to ask you,
and you know, we don't really get political on this show,
but it is this thing that you hear about all the time
that's happening in libraries where parents come marching in
and they think that something's a little woke in a book.
You know, they think that maybe a dog man
likes Bernie Sanders in one panel and they're upset
and they want the book banned from the library.
Have you had to encounter any of that?
Oh, absolutely.
I have an annual pride display I put up,
and there are always complaints about that,
which is very funny to me because our pride collection
is probably about 100 books out of 30,000 books
I have in the children's room.
But just that little batch seems to upset some people.
And I think folks forget that if they don't like those books,
they don't have to read them. They don't have to check them out. But there's definitely other
people in the community that those books are for. So yeah, I've dealt with that a little bit. Luckily,
our community is very supportive of the library, so it's never gotten further than complaints.
But I do know other places that's just not the case. And I just feel so sorry for these library
workers. Oh yeah. There's sometimes, I mean mean I think it's such a noble profession. I think teaching is
such a noble profession. I think librarians, people that choose to try and
expand at Child's Horizons for a for a as a lifetimes occupation are really
doing magical work and then I when they you know, I always feel badly when suddenly they're caught up
in some crazy conspiracy theory
that these books are trying to, you know,
destroy minds or something,
or they have a political agenda,
and I think it can go way too far.
I agree, and I'm thrilled to hear
that you've got our backs, Conan.
Oh, I don't.
No, no, no, no.
Oh, it is old.
No, no, I mean mean the minute there's any trouble
I'll completely retreat.
You know.
All right.
I thought that juvie had toughened you up a little bit.
No, no, no.
No, no, those scars healed a long time ago.
No, I do like to think I have your backs, I really do.
I think books are not the enemy and we've got bigger problems. That's what I think.
Yeah, I agree. And that's why we're here as librarians actually. You know, if your family,
if you're like, I'm not ready for these books, that's fine. I'm not going to try to convince you
otherwise. We'll help you find what you need and then we keep other stuff on the shelf to help other
people find what they need. I have such happy memories of the little tiny library.
I went to a K through 3 school in Brookline Mass called the Baldwin School, and it had
this tiny library and I would go in there and I can remember to this day some of the books
I read in there and some of them were kind of dark
and a little spooky, but that made them so great.
Yeah, there was one about three sort of highwaymen robbers
that would rob in coaches and it was so beautifully
illustrated and they had little blunderbuss muskets
and then at one point they find a baby and raise it
and I don't know, I just remember thinking
this is such a weird dark story, but I love it.
And I-
Oh no, I totally get it.
And kids can handle it.
Like they, you know,
they can handle the darker fairy tales.
Yeah, absolutely.
I think, you know, it's within the boundaries of a book.
And so it's a way to sort of test the waters
with darker material.
Kids love that stuff. And I think, and they'll continue to love it of a book and so it's a way to sort of test the waters with darker material.
Kids love that stuff and I think,
and they'll continue to love it into adulthood.
I know I do.
Like the original Brothers Grimm stuff is very dark.
Yeah.
You know, there's people being fattened up to be eaten.
You know.
Yup.
You know.
There's mothers feeding fathers their own children.
That happens in the Brothers Gr grim in the juniper tree.
Oh yeah.
I don't know that one.
That's cannibalism in there.
Cannibalism?
Oh, that's an amazing fairy tale.
Yeah, and the juniper tree.
Oh, you know, evil stepmother hates the little boy
she's raising.
She tricks her daughter into thinking she killed the boy,
but the stepmother did it.
She feeds the kid to dad.
But then there's a whole redemptive cycle
where the kid turns into a bird
and sings about his murder
and he ends up dropping a millstone
on the stepmother like you do.
You know what it is?
It's an allegory for DNA evidence.
Beyond the grave,
the child screamed his innocence
and the father paid the price for the mother.
Okay.
That's what the brothers Grimm had in mind, do you think?
Yes, I think they foresaw that DNA evidence,
even after the death, will incriminate the murderer.
Yes, yes, that's about DNA.
My mind is shut to any other interpretation.
How did she feed him?
Wow, and do you read these books as well?
Are there modern fairy tales that you're into?
Are there modern interpretations of fairy tales that you like?
Oh, yeah, I am fairy tales are probably my favorite genre.
So I love it all.
Although I tend to read the old stuff because I too.
I just really love those dark fairy tales.
I like a fairy tale that's a little fucked up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All the books behind you seem to have tales in the title.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
Oh, yeah.
I've got all of the greats up there. Plus tales in the title. Yeah. Absolutely.
Oh yeah, I've got all of the greats up there,
plus some more obscure stuff.
So you like a fucked up fairy tale?
I love a good fucked up fairy tale Conan.
And there are so many.
Did you characters in fucked up fairy tales
ever just say to themselves, whoa, this is fucked up?
You know, they don't, and I think maybe if they did,
they'd end up in much better situations.
You know, you're not gonna get to get out of better situations. Yeah, I'm gonna get out of those situations
No, I mean that's there's fucked up versions of like some of our most popular like give me an example
I want to hear these cuz I might read them. Yeah, okay, so of course everyone knows Cinderella one of the most
Beloved fairy tales of all time. Um, well, there are some versions in East Asia where there's a whole second half of the Cinderella story
You know, she has her magical help of friends. She meets her Prince There are some versions in East Asia where there's a whole second half of the Cinderella story.
She has her magical helper friend.
She meets her prince.
But then the step family wants revenge.
So the step mother murders Cinderella.
Cinderella is murdered in her own story.
Cinderella now starts to haunt the step family
from beyond the grave relentlessly.
I know what you did last summer
it's all bad for them. Eventually she's resurrected usually with like a magical item of some kind
and then she has her true revenge uh where she boils her stepsister alive and feeds that to her
stepmother who dies from the shock. I see these things again and again and again cannibalism
See these things again and again and again. Cannibalism and redemption and also this is the format
for like John Wick, it's just this happens
but then oh you think it's over, it's not over.
Shit just got real.
I mean this is what happens with the empire strikes back.
I'm trying to get girly into the conversation.
I'm in now.
But you know, oh you think this is over?
No, the empire strikes back.
But then, you know, it's so, yes we see.
I land Imperial Walkers on Hoth.
I know he just said the title of the movie
with more conviction as if he was like getting more into it,
but it didn't seem like you were elaborating at all.
It's a follow sale.
You were just like, just like the empire strikes back,
where the empire strikes back. Yeah were just like, just like the Empire Strikes Back where the Empire Strikes Back.
Yeah, I was, that's my interpretation
after a lot of thought about the Empire Strikes Back
and having watched it many times,
that's my interpretation of what happens
and what it's really all about,
which is the Empire Strikes Back.
When people tell you who they are, believe them.
Yeah, exactly.
I took a test once and they said,
what happens in the Empire Strikes Back?
And I said, the empire strikes back.
What happens at return of the Jedi?
You're not wrong.
The Jedi return.
Oh, and a new hope?
Oh yeah, there really is a new hope.
And I took that test and I aced it.
And I was accepted to Williams College.
What happens in the Phantom Menace?
Oh man, that menace is phantom-ing.
And he's a real phantom of a menace.
Anyway, my point is, any story where someone boils someone
else and makes someone eat that person, that's a good story.
Yeah, it's a good story.
It's ageless.
It's a good way to dispose of the body.
Oh, incredible way to dispose of the body.
No one ever thinks of that.
They're like, what do I do with this body?
I don't know.
Looks to me to be 140 pounds of protein.
Yum, yum, yum, yum, yum, yum, yum, yum, yum, yum, yum.
You got a piece.
You know what I mean?
What do I do with all this protein in my bathtub?
I don't know.
You got a big refrigerator?
I do.
What's your point?
You got a skillet?
I've got lots of skillets.
Later, this restaurant's amazing.
Oh no.
I'm a murderer and I'm on the Atkins diet.
Yeah, I do.
You look amazing, man.
You've lost so much weight,
but it looks like you're getting a lot of protein.
And I don't see you with your friends anymore.
But you seem to have all of their shoes.
Yeah, that's like a true crime element to fairy tales. All right, Liz, do you have a question for me because I think I've wasted your time
enough with my foolishness and I apologize.
I do have a question. Oh, so fairy tales are made up of like stock characters, right? Like
your princess, your wise old crone, your whatever. And I wondered if you landed in a fairy tale universe
What role do you think you would fulfill in that fairy tale? I'm such a
ogre
And my features really that distorted no, it's more about how you terrorize people. Oh, I do not terrorize
You're a lot large presence in you terrorize people
I've heard that you hang out at bridges
and bully goats all the time.
I live under a bridge, but just because
the savings are incredible.
And it's not technically against the lamp.
And then when people wanna cross the bridge,
I ask them questions three.
Which apparently, guess what? There's no, yeah, I'd be a mischievous troll.
I wanna be someone who's asking questions three
and has little, I'm an imp, I'm bothering.
Like a trickster.
A trickster, yes.
And then if they don't answer my questions,
they go flying off the bridge to their doom.
And I live in a little hut in the woods
and people are freaked out by me, but I'm kind of funny.
And I also have a profitable podcast.
Podcast, very profitable.
That makes a lot of sense.
Yeah, because we do ads.
And you see if you monetize the ads,
then that's where the profit is.
And of course, if you get enough other podcasts together,
you can have a podcast company.
Anyway, I'm getting off track a little bit.
Team Troll.
That would be the name of your podcast company.
Team Troll.
Yeah, it would be one of the best guys.
Answer me these questions three.
In the morning it walks with four legs.
In the evening it wears a German World War I helmet.
Who be?
Don't ask for the answer because I don't have it. Any evening it wears a German World War I helmet. Who be he? Who? Hmm.
Don't ask for the answer if you don't have it.
None of them have an answer.
He has the body of a worm.
With the face of Winston Churchill.
Nine eggs a day he eats.
Who be he?
These are really good.
I'm naturally really good at these.
Is the thing though that there is no answer
just so you can eat them?
No one gets off this fucking bridge.
No one gets over the bridge.
Yeah.
Right?
He's a walnut who knew Eleanor Roosevelt,
but never really met her.
Oh, that's frankly-
Who be he?
Damn it, you get to cross the bridge.
As long as no one calls him out, he can keep doing it.
Yeah.
Oh, I'm gonna start,
I'm gonna do that on the way home
when I get to the 405 Freeway.
I'm gonna get out of my car, stop all traffic,
and say, answer me these questions three.
What if you did though, on the news,
Conan O'Brien was seen.
Traffic packed up for 65 miles, no one can pass.
Police say they can't get close,
but Conan O'Brien is asking people questions three.
No one seems to be able to answer them
and he's beating them with sticks.
Oh my God.
Nope, he just got shot.
Yep, we just shot him from a helicopter.
I'm shouting up at the helicopter.
Answer me these questions three.
A worldly bird it be, but no wings do I see.
Blam.
Thunderbite was shot today.
And rightly so.
You were fairy-tale.
Liz, I think you got your answer.
And mischievous troll who's shot by the LAPD
from a helicopter on a 405 freeway.
And it was a dog man that shot him.
And dog man, yeah, dog man solved the,
yeah, it was dog man, the marksman.
Liz, you're very nice and I'm very impressed with what you're doing with your life.
I think that's very cool.
Thank you so much.
And it is a, just think about the generations of kids who are going to be influenced by you
and then all those years of them coming back as older people and saying thank you.
That's so cool.
I love that.
I hope so.
That's the aim. Yeah. unless they're ungrateful bastards.
You never know.
Sure.
Or if they skip their canoe ahead and end up in juvie.
We do what the best we can.
Do the best we can.
I had to win that race.
And I wasn't reading fast enough.
I couldn't finish, hey God, it's me, Margaret.
Such a good book.
If there is a book that'll stump you it's that one.
Oh the minute thing I saw where it was going I had to skip my canoe. Yeah.
All right so nice to talk to you Liz be well and I'll see you next time in Providence.
I'll buy you a Mike's Hard Lemonade how's that? Sounds fantastic. All right you take care.
Have a great one.
Sounds fantastic. All right, you take care.
Have a great one.
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