Conan O’Brien Needs A Friend - Will Arnett Returns
Episode Date: December 8, 2025Actor Will Arnett feels just fine about being Conan O’Brien’s friend. Will sits down with Conan once more to discuss the power of healing through comedic bits, developing a stand-up act for his n...ew film Is This Thing On?, reevaluating his own geographical placement, 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. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Hi, my name is Will Arnett.
And I feel just fine about being Conan O'Brien's friend.
Fall is here, hear the yell, back to school, ring the bell, brand new shoes, walking loose,
climb the fence, books and pens, I can tell that we are going to be friends.
I can tell
never we are going to be friends
Hey there and welcome to Conan O'Brien
Needs a friend
joined by Matt Goreley.
How are you, Matt?
Good, thanks.
And Sona Mofsessian and Sona.
Yeah.
Of course, famously, my assistant for many years.
Yeah.
And then things start to change a bit.
I had babies.
You had babies.
Yeah.
You stepped back from that role
and you've risen to great fame
on this podcast.
And in your own right, and you're an author now, a lecturer, you're a phenomenon.
I am a lecturer and an author.
Yeah, you're like Cher now, I think.
Oh, I wish.
Another Armenian star.
Yes.
So this is unusual because David Hopping, a young lad from Southern Illinois, rose up from the ranks.
You anointed him, and he's my day-to-day assistant.
Yeah.
He's gone right now.
he's gone to the Midwest for a wedding, I believe, and you step back into my role today as my assistant.
Yeah.
So you texted me this morning, you know, asking me, we need to do these things today.
Here's what's happening.
And I thought, Sona's back.
We're back in the New York groove.
You know what's funny?
We just had an interview and I had ordered you lunch before the interview.
And in my head, I was like, I hope Conan's lunch is here.
Is it here?
Should someone go and take it and, like, maybe put it in the fridge?
Like, I started to just go back into assistant mode.
Yes.
It's weird.
How easily does it come back?
Yeah.
Is it like riding a bike?
Yeah, it's really not hard.
Although today I had to get on my phone for something and I was driving.
So I had to, you know, I was really nervous about doing whatever I needed to do on time.
And I had to pull off the freeway and then park and, like, do whatever I needed to do.
And of course, I got nervous.
We immediately got into the thing where you're my assistant and you have.
to take care of things,
and I start riffing and being a fool.
So this morning,
you knew that I have this medical appointment later on,
just to go to an eye doctor,
get my eyes checked,
and because I'm just wondering,
do I need a new glasses prescription or whatever?
So I'm just going to go see this doctor.
He's going to give me those drops that dilate your eyes.
And I know that.
And so Sona this morning said,
you can't drive.
So I'll drive me the appointment.
And so she told me, don't take your car to work today because I'll be driving you.
And then you'll get it, whatever, you'll give me a lift home.
So all of that's going to happen.
So I need a way to get to work.
And Sona said, I'll call you an Uber.
Let me know.
And then I might even have it here.
It was intense.
This is what happens.
It was also I was like, I got to order him an Uber.
I got to do it quick.
I can't let him waiting forever.
So here we go.
She says, let me know when you're ready and I'll order an Uber for you.
And I was done with a meeting I had at the house.
And I said, okay, you can order it now.
And she says, okay, hold please.
And I immediately respond, hurry, exclamation point.
What's happening?
Exclamation, question mark.
Hello?
Question mark, question mark.
I'm scared.
Three exclamation points.
And Sonar, that's like immediately, immediately.
And she says, I'm doing it.
I have to connect my corporate.
card. Don't poop yourself. And then she writes back, two minutes, double exclamation point.
Let me know if you need more time and I'll tell the driver to wait. Your name is Sona because she's
ordering it for me. It's in her name. And I write all caps. That's too long to wait.
She writes back, you've changed. I write, ah! This is all happening instantly. She says,
actually, no, you haven't. And I said, I just died from waiting. I'm a ghost.
and then I sent an emoji of a ghost.
She writes,
who's going to interview Rachel Senate,
who's recording for today?
Who's going to record today's guest?
Not it, she says.
And then I write her,
hello, I am a policeman.
I just found this cell phone
next to a skeleton
of someone waiting for an Uber.
Sona immediately writes back,
does he have any cash on him,
police officer?
We can split it.
I write
deal she says thank you for your service
how are you even ordering an Uber
and texting all this at the same time like how are you even doing your job
your job is you just have to riff with Conan
it's riffing with Conan it's doing it and then riffing with him
that's what I remember the job is yeah and and Sona knows that
the riff is more important than the Uber showing
that's true so she's immediately all in on the riff
and then she immediately goes into oh hello officer
when I lay out that I'm a skeleton.
I prioritize.
It's prioritizing.
So the life takes priority over him coming to work.
And the best thing that would happen if there was a screw up, this is where it gets tricky.
If there was a screw up and the Uber didn't come, that's, I don't care if I'm late.
I don't care if there's, you know, major problems in our company because I'm late.
I'm more interested in, oh, my God, this is great.
The Uber didn't come.
Yeah.
Now I get to have that.
Yeah.
as, you know, as new improv fun.
Oh, yeah.
And then we can, I can make that work for two days.
There can be two days riffs of me wandering the streets of L.A.
Two years.
Okay.
You would end in two years.
You'd be like, hey, remember when you didn't get that Uber for me?
Yes.
Oh, my God.
You would say it.
Yum, yum, yum, yum.
And you know what?
When I have something like that on somebody, it's a tasty, oh, it's a sweet gummy tree.
It's an everlasting gobstower for you.
It's an everlasting Willy Wonka gobstopper.
it never stops giving.
Yeah.
Make a mistake around me, and I'm delighted.
Oh, he loves it.
He loves the mistakes more than you actually doing your job.
Of course.
He's hoping.
He's rooting, you're rooting against me.
I root against you.
Yeah.
Because it's the most delicious thing in the world.
Must be a fulfilling job to have.
It sure is, girls.
Well, welcome back.
Yeah, I'm happy to be back here.
All right.
Well, let's get into today's show.
And I root against this guest.
I want him to screw up.
I hope he doesn't show because I like the riff more than I like the
My guest today is a hilarious actor who starred in the Emmy Award-winning series Arrested
Development and co-hosts the SmartList podcast.
Now you can see him in the new movie Is This Thing On?
I'm thrilled he's here.
He's hilarious.
Will Arnett.
Welcome.
This is crazy.
You just opened a box.
This is like Pulp Fiction.
A light is coming out.
It's like his Tommy gun in the case.
Oh, this is just a U-87.
That's right.
I don't know.
It's only the Rolls-Royce.
Is that an Noirons?
Yeah.
It really is.
Do you want to touch my-N-A-N-A-N-A-Is?
What do you do?
You know, this is.
This is a reissue or this is an original?
No, this is a real.
That's a real.
Real deal.
This is like a Beatles mic.
I'm so excited right now.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
You don't, you wouldn't understand it because you don't have a vocal quality.
I mean, it's barely.
There is not a thing you can talk about in mics that I don't know.
It's, you know.
It's the dream right here.
This is, I mean, this is the U-87s.
I'm too scared to hold it.
I mean, God, damn, what do you think this is?
And it also modeled after me.
Yeah, it looks like you.
Yeah, they took a, it looks like you.
For me, they said, it's a special, you know, the Germans are.
I mean, first of all, you know, I don't want to blow smoke up your ass, but you are the master of.
It's by so many liquids.
You're the master.
You are the master of voiceover?
You really are.
Thank you.
And I hear your, I mean, I can't.
I try to flee your ads.
Reese's pieces.
Good luck.
That's a truck.
You once got all confused
because you shoot so much of this shit.
Yeah.
Do you remember the commercial you did?
You went, Reese's, it's a truck.
I do.
I do.
There's a low light.
Yeah, but thank you.
Of course I remember that.
Why did they even air it?
It was humiliating.
Why did they air it?
She humiliate me.
This is, I mean, I'm not going to lie.
This is a U-A-7.
Thanks for telling the truth on that.
This is a P-48.
These are gorgeous.
These are amazing.
It's funny, remember, Eduardo, when you were working out the mics, you asked me about what
Mike I wanted.
I said I want a Blauhauser, remember?
Blauhauser-57.
57-KK.
You can't get them.
You can't get a Blauhauser-57, and they're hard to get.
Can't get one new.
You know what I think about that?
the dark web?
I've heard of the dark web.
Where's this show broadcast, just for legal reasons?
Well, listen.
I didn't even plug it.
I just brought it into Flex.
Incredible to have.
I wanted you guys to know how I'm living.
No, no, there's nothing sad.
It's impressive.
There's nothing sad about carrying around a microphone in a box.
There's nothing at all sad about that.
By the way, imagine that I packed it up from my house.
I had it in the passenger seat in my car.
I drove across town.
You put a seatbelt over it.
Basically, because I thought it was cool.
It is cool.
Listen, you're on a real podcast now.
Yeah.
None of this.
Hey, me and two of my friends are not going to know anything about a guest.
You know, men jerk off.
Oh, God.
Fuck.
Yeah.
You guys are killing it.
Listen, let me just.
I mean, that all came from envy.
Because I remember when you guys, before you started, this guy called me before they started their podcast.
We were like, we were killing it.
I got a call from this guy.
He's like, we're trying to do a fraction of what you do.
And he was all scared.
He was all scared.
I was like, Will, what's wrong?
Just lower your voice to literally.
He's like, when I'm scared, it's a boy.
And I said, what is it?
And he said, you just don't know what to do.
And I said, calm down.
I said, just, you know, make sure that you get, what is it, a U-807?
He's like, I'm writing this down.
And then remember you said, what do we do?
And I said, these are your friends, just talk, just talk.
I could barely write.
If you remember, I said, because the tears of the paper was so wet.
Remember, I couldn't write anything down.
This is so accurate.
It was tears and urine.
It was peeing onto the paper.
Yeah.
But that was just for, that was just for gigs.
You know, I did this podcast back,
back at the old location.
Yeah.
And I'm short on time.
And, um, Sean.
Location.
Yeah.
So I'm over there.
And I, and I remember walking out.
I remember walking out to my car after doing it after absolutely destroying.
Yeah.
Right.
And I remember, I remember I was carried out by your staff on their shoulders.
True.
Right.
It was an unbelievable.
And I'm like, who the fuck?
Who the fuck stuffed confetti in the ceiling?
They knew.
They knew this was going to happen.
I whispered to him, take me.
And remember, I don't know if you remember this,
but I think one of the interns made a golden crown for you
and put it on your head, and it said best podcaster ever.
And they filled up, they had one of those huge tanks
who ran a lot of Warner Brothers, and they said,
could you walk across this?
One of your P.A.s with this look of amazement, right?
I remember that.
So I remember getting in my car, and I says to my driver,
I says, just drive. Just drive.
Just drive.
Just drive.
I remember thinking
if this
fucking guy
can do a podcast
if
if in this
fucking
are you meniscalco
are you Sebastian meniscalco
this fucking guy
this
fucking guy
I wish I wish it was
I wish I was selling on arenas
every night of the wind that would be great
I'm saying again
I'm saying this act
of jealousy. I wish I met
people routinely in my life
who so amazed me I could go, this
fucking guy!
Anyway, back to you. Anyway, I know I wasn't
doing it. Yeah, let's get back to me for a second.
And, you know, let me know if it's okay to interrupt
you. I'm only the guest.
And, and, and, and.
This is heaven. Incredible.
I'm definitely right now.
What's the expression I'm thinking of is just desserts.
Okay.
Okay.
Oh, yeah.
So, no, I did. It's true story.
I did the podcast with you guys, and it was so much fun,
and I thought it would be fun to do it with people that I like
and have fun with.
That's actually a true story.
Yeah.
And I did think, and I hate saying it,
you guys are very good at what you do.
And so I thought, if we do it,
everybody's doing a podcast or we're going to look like a bunch of ding-dongs.
Yeah.
So we, I went into it with even less of a format than you had,
if you can imagine.
If that's possible.
Yeah.
I don't, anything is we don't have a format.
No, you don't.
We have a title.
Right.
And we have that thing we do up front.
The concept is this, right?
Is this thing?
Who knows?
That fell away very quickly.
Now it's just...
Well, apparently he's being held on to pretty tightly.
Well, Adam Sacks, he is Rain Man when he doesn't get to watch Wapner.
If we don't do that right away, he flips.
That's our format.
That's all we've got.
It's our format.
It's our format.
I mean, listen, you might want to update the references.
What is happening?
Well, first of all,
That movie just came out, didn't it?
No.
Are you sure?
I think it's been 40 years, 35 years?
Oh, you know what?
I think it's funny.
It's time to go back in time.
Remember?
Oh, God.
No, that one's old, too.
That should be a new segment.
Didn't that come out?
Yeah, let's go back in time.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Hey, hey, hey.
And now we're here.
Now we're here.
You, you guys are killing it, obviously.
We're having fun.
We're having fun.
Okay, don't do that.
No, no, we're having a good time.
Well, I don't know what that's like.
But I want to say this, I, you know, I look at the, I look at you three.
I saw it.
Trust me, I saw the wink.
And I saw how hard it was you to do the wink.
I saw how palsied you are.
You can't do the wink.
Oh, way to go.
Just give them stuff to cut.
You know what's amazing?
I get Sean Hayes.
I get it.
You do.
I get the Sean Hayes.
And then when you said, and Bateman's going to be there too, I have to admit.
Yeah.
I thought, oh, this guy wants to fly.
Yeah.
And so in one arm, he's got this giant wing.
And then you're holding an anvil in the other hand.
I was shocked that you chose Bateman.
Have you had Bateman in here?
Well, he's, we did.
We did.
And you know what he did the whole time?
I think at one point, someone tried to get him and eat a Tick-Tac.
And he was like, I can't.
Oh.
You know what he did say at one point, I took a sip of a soda.
And he went, you don't like your body very much.
Because I think he wants to live.
I don't want to live as long as Bateman wants to.
He wants to live to be 190.
I've said this a couple of times, so forgive me.
But I said to him recently, I said, you know what's going to happen?
You're going to be on your deathbed for malnutrition.
And I'm going to be Gurney's side with a hot fudge Sunday with 30 years to go.
You're visiting him.
I'm visiting him.
Smoking and eating a hot fudge sundae.
Is there anything better than a hot fudge Sunday, by the way?
Oh, it's so good.
That's really good.
I love a hot fight Sunday.
Sorry.
Wow.
And so, are you getting better at podcasts?
No.
We're getting, I'm getting worse at it.
Have you ever read the comments on your own podcast?
You some to every, no, you don't.
They edit them heavily.
They only show.
I think they do.
You know, Adam takes, Adam,
Adam makes sure I don't see the ones that are like how, why, why is he allowed to have a podcast?
He takes all those ones out, and he shows me ones that goes, he says, we got three comments
from last week.
And I'll be like, well, here it says we got over 75,000 comments,
and like, nope, it was only three.
Yippie, Conan, you go, Conan.
They're all from...
Purefully curated.
You're the same idea.
Adam Sacks.net.
Conan is a host was one of the comments.
You chose to show me, which shows you...
Still this guy?
Tony kicks at the can.
So I used to look at the thing, and they'd be like,
these guys are terrible.
They interrupt people.
all the time. These guys are the worst. I hate this. And I keep going like, let me get, let me remember
it. It's free. They don't have to listen. What's the problem? It's not an assignment.
I read the greatest quote that we don't have to get into now, but I get about comments online.
It's quite long, so I'm not going to bore you, but it's so good. It's from this book written,
you know, Sally Rooney? Have you ever read? I've no Sally Rooney. You ever read InterMetso?
I didn't read that. I didn't read that. Really, really good. And she has this other one called
Beautiful World, Where Are You? It came out like three or four years ago. There's this quote at the end that,
is about.
Can I read it?
Yeah.
I mean, we can always kind of
because you just keep listing
things she's done
and I like to hit a quote.
She's great.
She's great.
Yeah, she went to Amherst.
Yeah, no, no.
She displaces about 65 liters of water
if you put her in a tank.
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, I got them, right?
Honestly, your references are all like
old and or about New England.
There's a whole fucking world out there.
I'm so, it's so boring.
Why don't you go choke on her
Red Sox back?
while you're at it.
This is what I'm talking about.
What are you, Mayor White
and it's 19705?
A curling Fiske over here.
Yeah.
Oh, Jesus Christ.
Hey, why don't you go fill in the back bay?
So there's more usable land, asshole.
Oh, my God.
I mean, you know.
Why?
The back bay.
I don't understand it.
Nobury Street.
He's getting into the whole.
Tell him to shoot the noob.
Shoot the noob.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, anyway, get back to, you were going to get to the quote at some point.
I'm on Star Road Drive.
and classic yeah we get off route nine so this woman writes this thing uh in this book they're writing
emails to each other this woman she's a she's a writer and she's writing a note to her friend
and she's just done an interview about her new book she says i don't know if you've been following any of
this but about a month ago i was doing an interview over email and a journalist asked me what my
partner thought of my books unthinkingly i wrote back that he'd never read them so of course
this became the headline of the interview alice kelleher my boyfriend has never read my books
And afterwards, Felix, her boyfriend, saw a popular tweet saying something like,
this is tragic, she deserves better.
He showed me the tweet on the screen of his phone one evening without saying anything.
When I asked what he thought about, he shrugged.
And at first I thought a perfect example of our shallow, self-congratulatory book culture
in which non-readers are shunned as morally inferior.
And the more books you read, the better you are than everyone else.
But then I thought, no.
What we really have here is an example of a presumably normal and sane person
whose thinking has been deranged by the concept of celebrity,
an example of someone who genuinely believes that because she has seen my photograph and read my novels,
she knows me personally and in fact knows better than I do what is best for my life. And it's normal.
It's normal for her not only to think of these bizarre thoughts privately, but to express them in public
and receive positive feedback and attention as a result. She has no idea that she is in this small,
limited respect, quite literally insane because everyone around her is also insane in exactly the same way.
They really cannot tell the difference between someone they have heard of and someone they
personally know. And they believe that the feelings they have about this person, they
imagine me to be. Intimacy, resentment, hatred, pity, or as real as the feelings they have about
their own friends. And it makes me wonder whether celebrity culture has sort of metastasized
to fill the emptiness left by religion, like a malignant growth where the sacred used to be.
Jesus Christ. How fucking good is that? Does that sum it up?
It is amazing. Guys, great show. Can I just say? You did it.
My only regret is that it wasn't longer.
Do you mind?
I just made me think of something.
Can I just, can I just, hey,
Hey, Will, I'm sorry.
That just made me think of something.
Is it okay?
There's this book called Moby Dick.
Oh, no.
By Melville.
Can I, is it okay if I just read the whole thing?
You know what?
Here we go.
Page one.
That was pretty great.
It was amazing.
It's great to speak to the adults.
Yeah, I enjoyed it.
Call me Ishmael.
Okay.
Don't lick your fingers that much.
Stop licking your foot.
You're a quarterback?
Yeah.
Also, his voice is cooler than yours, so it's easier to, like, listen to him.
I think my voice is pretty cool.
Oh, boy.
Oh, God.
I am so sorry. I think it's a mosquito.
Do you guys see it?
I saw it.
I'll fuck it up.
You know what?
You read it.
Reading that quote, now seems professional.
Because right after I gave you shit about being so long,
Sonas started trying to kill a bug.
I'm sorry.
Yeah, sorry I'm not doing like a stupid voice.
You know what I mean?
Doing some bit.
Sorry I'm not referencing Barry Levinson films from the 80s.
Remember in Diner?
Oh, my God.
This is my show now.
My worst nightmare came true.
You were so nice to me.
Did you get it? It's still flying around the room.
It is a fruit fly. You were so nice to me in the green room.
You're such a, you're such a Jekyll and Hyde.
You never know what you're going to get.
Jekyll or Hyde.
One of them's the good guy, one of those a bad guy.
Who knows which?
I don't know.
I'm busy reading your quotes.
Listen, I want to be.
Most people are on a walk.
They're on a thing.
They're exercising.
They're driving and they're listening to this quote.
And they're having a profound moment.
Yeah.
And you know what?
I did, I, I went after you, because it was very long.
It's not just a quote.
Sure.
That was several pages.
But I should have acknowledged what a profound quote it was.
And it was cool of you to think of it and read it, but I didn't.
I panicked.
I went for the gag, the quip, the joke, the jape, the gaff, the goof.
This is getting longer than the quote.
And I, I'm trying to make it last longer than the quote.
Okay.
And by going for the quick, you know, Lafaroo, as you, I think you called it Lafaroo when we worked together.
One time when I was in Australia, I did.
Because I love tossing an ooh on the end of things.
Yeah.
But it was profound.
And you've had to deal with that because of celebrity culture.
No.
Don't drag me into deep water.
Nice dry.
No, but it is a...
Well, you don't know what it's like.
I've been really fucking famous for like 30 years.
two years, and at the top of my game.
Only because you're tall and you stick out.
I don't think that's the only reason.
You're also loud.
And you're loud.
Yeah, tall and loud's the way to go.
Tall and loud.
Again, it's the only, it's the only reason.
When you look at what women are into, if you would go on these sites where women are like,
who's got Riz, they all say tall and loud, give me tall and loud, give me tall and loud.
What are the sites?
If you had been, if you had been, if you had been, if you had been fought in, I don't even know
what a site is.
If you had been born, if you were five, five, you would have been taken, you
you had been working tolls on the mass pike.
I really believe that
Your Sturbridge
Your Sturbridge
Right
Get off that
Right there where the tolls are
That's where Sturbridge village is
Okay
Hey you, you got a buckle on your hat
Listen
Let's be real
Enough for the insults
I love you
Wob
No
Couldn't do it
No you couldn't do it
No
Buh
Oh
What the fuck?
I'm half a war
I knew I could break you.
Here's what I did.
I'm going to tell you what I said in the green room.
I think you're a great guy.
I think you're really funny.
I think you're really talented.
You've been doing it at a high level for many years, and I respect you.
This ruins everything.
Wow.
What's changed the topic?
This guy, this guy, so much to talk about.
I love seeing you succeed.
I can't say that about you.
It kills me.
I know.
That smartless is a phenomenon.
It just kills me.
This is the best part.
And especially, I mean, again, I root.
It really rubbed as you.
I root for you and I root for Sean and then Bateman.
What is it about Bateman?
Oh, come on.
What is it about Bateman?
He just gets my goat.
He's so pleased with himself and he doesn't age.
And he has such self-control.
And he sits there and he's, he's, he, he, he fires off these little ice daggers.
Fuck him, right?
I mean, come on, right?
Am I, am I alone?
Does this sound like love?
Yeah, yeah.
I love him.
I know what I knew it.
I would do him.
Hang on, man.
What?
We just thought you like loved him, like a friend, but oh, you want to do him.
You want to do love?
No, no, that's cool.
That's fine.
You know, I don't know.
I can't speak to that.
He says he likes to.
tall and loud. I've seen his sights. What's been going on? What's been going on over here? Can I
tell you something about maybe? You want me to read you something else? This is shorter, but this is
you centric. Okay. Okay. Okay. Let's hear it. I got you. If it's you got me with you centric.
I know. And don't feel the need for it to be short. By the way, I've never used my notes app so
much as in this fucking podcast. You're on that thing all the time. I know. Let's see.
So this is, this is, this happened last year. This is a true story. So this has to do
with your Christmas party.
Years go by, Jason never gets invited
to Conan's Christmas party.
Did you guys know about this?
I didn't know.
And he's brought it up before, right?
Maybe when he came on the show, did he bring it up?
I think so.
I know you and Sean pretty well.
Yeah.
I don't know Jason as well.
So, but a couple times it's coincided
multiple times with another mutual friend
of ours Christmas party.
Yeah.
And so.
And let's be fair, she's a massive star.
She's a massive star.
She's a couple of clicks above me
and I give that up.
She should be.
Your party is very well attended.
It's a very ritsy affair.
Yeah.
A lot of glossy names.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So people often go either to Conan's first and then this person's or vice versa.
So people are coming and going from this other person.
So a bunch of times I've gone to Conan's and then I've gone over there and baby's like, did you guys just come from Conan's?
Like, yeah.
He's like, what the fuck?
And he's so mad that he hasn't been invited.
He makes a big deal about it.
And then when I heard that he was mad, I kind of didn't want to invite him to keep it going.
Even worse, we did their live smartless show in Boston.
Conan came out.
Jason gave you shit in front of a live audience that you didn't.
In my hometown.
In your hometown.
And you said for sure next year.
And then the next year you did not invite him.
It was epic.
And nobody was happier than me.
Yeah.
It was sweet.
To me, it was one of the best all-time bit.
I just, I love that he wasn't invited.
It was better that he wasn't invited.
Way better.
Okay.
So now he's really pissed.
Finally, last year, you invite him.
Yeah.
And he's all proud about it.
And he's like, well, you know, I got invited to the thing.
And then he's like, first of all, he was like, I'm not sure if I'm going to be able to make it.
Yeah.
Because I got another party.
Yeah.
At which point, I hear this, but I don't really say anything.
So I get Conan to come on our show.
Secretly.
Secretly.
And then get it.
And it was so easy to get me being talking about the Christmas party and about Conan.
He's like, I don't know if I'm going to be able to go.
And he's listening.
I'm listening in, it's on Zoom, but I'm listening.
You were here in this room.
And I'm listening.
And you guys say, so, hey, Jason, you think you're going to go to Conan?
He's like, I don't know.
And he's very casually.
And he's casual.
I don't know if I'm going to be able to.
I've actually got this other party, at which point Conan reveals him.
It's like, you, and he lays into Bateman.
I went after Bateman.
He lays into him.
Hilarious.
So we're dying.
So then, not long after that, if I may bring up a touchy, actual, this is real personal
subject for you.
It's okay.
I know what it is.
Death in the family.
Yep.
My parents pass.
So, well, first, let me just say the timeline, because I have it here.
I wrote it down last year because the timeline was so good.
Yeah.
So I hear that your dad passes away and I text to you that day or the next day, and I said, hey, listen, I'm sorry to hear about your dad's passing, sending love from our family to yours.
And you wrote, thank you, Will, to be honest, I blame Bateman.
For the death of my father.
The day after his father dies.
Yeah.
Right.
So I wrote, it's not a terrible theory.
and Conan texts me back
he killed my dad
oh my god
my dad can I say
in fairness my dad would have loved this
okay
so
so so
so then
Bateman
I tell Bateman this
we're dying we're doing a thing that day
so he the next day
Bateman texts you and he says
Arnette tells me you're on to me
yes and Conan
Conan text Bateman he says
Bateman, do yourself a favor, turn yourself in.
Yeah.
Two days after your dad passes, of course, your mom passed away.
Yeah, which I did not see coming.
Which is not see coming.
So I text you two days after.
I knew you were in boss.
I said, Bateman is asking for your sister street address.
Oh, okay to give.
Yeah.
And you were busy that weekend.
Like a day and a half later, you texted back.
Just seeing this now, fantastic.
625 Boylston Street, Department 12C.
Tell Bateman to make it look like a robbery.
Oh, my God.
You know what's weird?
I swear to God, this is how I grieve.
I know.
Everyone has their way.
And I forget who I was somebody at the time was like,
it might have been Sean or something.
And they were like, what do you think?
I'd go, this is what he wants.
Yeah.
This is what he wants right now.
He wants to laugh and do bits.
This is what he wants.
And I know the vibe.
And obviously, our heart was with you and we love you and all that stuff.
But I knew that that, that, and honestly, that was, tell him to make it look like a run.
You're so sick.
I know.
I'm a sick.
I'm a sick person.
But I do know my parents who I'm very sentimental about, but they, a big driving force in
my life was making them laugh.
Sure.
And I did used to think about, am I going to want to do comedy after my parents are gone?
Because that was the whole reason I did everything.
But I remembered very much wanting to, I don't know, connect.
It was so comforting to me to screw around with you guys at that moment.
It just was.
And so, so, if that makes me a madman, then so be it.
No, I get that, man.
It is that old my grandfather used to say, I mean, it's not that too profound, buddy.
He's like, you know, if you didn't laugh, you'd cry.
So, like, they're sort of in that same area,
and you're still emoting, you're still feeling,
and you're kind of doing it in a different way.
I totally get that.
There have been so many times,
people call it gallows humor or whatever it is.
But I get that.
And I can't wait until my parents die.
No, just because I've got so many bits ready to go.
You got so many bits.
Oh, my God.
I had, I just.
I know the feeling.
I had, I knew that I had the Bateman bit.
I've done everything.
And my dad was like, I feel great.
And I was like, I got this Bateman bit.
I, I, I try, I cut the brakes.
I mean, ghastly, I've done it all.
And this is like they look at it.
No, it's, uh, no one has said cut the brakes in like 50 years.
You can't make a car crash by cutting a wire anymore.
Don't worry, I took care of his Tesla.
What did you do?
I cut the brakes with this big scissors.
Like they did it.
in the 1920s.
I have to mention,
there's so much to talk about with you,
but I watched your movie last night
is this thing on,
and I was very pleased,
and I'm really,
I'm proud of you as a friend,
and I'm really happy for you
because you're really magnificent
in this film.
And Bradley Cooper,
who directs the movie,
he has a part in it,
and he's really funny
as like a schlub,
as a character actor.
And,
and a friend of yours.
And it was really fun to see that.
Laura Dern's great.
But I was looking at it and I was thinking,
I remember you once telling me
that your big fear in life
was being caught trying.
You said that to me once.
You said, I just don't want to get caught trying.
I know that feeling,
and it's why we gravitate towards comedy
because you can joke around.
If something doesn't quite work,
you can make that the bit.
You can just be a shapeshifter all the time and nothing sticks to you and you plant your feet in this project and you're another person and it's a dramatic role and I'm very proud of you for doing that.
Well, first of all, thank you.
Thanks a lot.
And yeah, there is, there's a lot of truth in that.
I think that, you know, along those lines, I spent a lot of time being very cynical about a lot of things.
And because it's easy, it's kind of, it is easy to hide behind it.
And I give people shit.
You know, we talk about it on our own podcast.
When we hear people use the term storyteller, we're like, oh, man.
Yeah, I know you mean.
I call 911 for an eye-rolling incident.
Like, you know what I mean?
Like, I'm going to die from rolling my eyes.
And then I get doing it.
No one's an actor anymore.
And I was like, well, I think of my, I love to tell stories.
It's like, it's acting.
Yeah, it's acting.
Shut up.
But I get now a little bit more.
And again, I don't see myself differently, differently in any way.
You have to do that thing where you have to kind of own it.
Yeah.
and be it and be and there is a vulnerability to it and I can't write it off as a bit and I can't
at the end pull my pants down and make a fart sound um you know so I it is in that way for me
it was uh it was scary and and truthfully uh um I feel very vulnerable even about people watching
when I knew that you were going to watch they said Bradley said that they sent it for you guys
for you to watch yeah even showing
Ron and Scotty here in it.
Yeah, yeah.
They just watched it
the full cut a couple days ago, the final.
And I remember just waiting for his reaction.
He's my friend, loves me.
You know, my partner, we work together,
do all this sort of stuff.
And I'm thinking like, oh, boy, what if they,
you know, what if they think I suck?
But here's the thing.
You initially were quite interested in drama.
That's what you wanted to do.
That was, and if we went back to you and your 20s,
this is what you were interested in.
This is why I moved to New York from Toronto, truthfully.
And I was joke, of course, again, it's a nice cover,
that I was young enough and dumb enough
to think that that was a pursuit that I wanted to do.
And I didn't know anything about comedy at all.
I had no, I didn't do sketch.
I was in a stand-up, all that stuff.
And so I kind of backed my way into it.
I really got into doing comedy stuff
from auditioning for sitcom pilots
because I need to pay the rent in the 90s.
Yeah.
Like the first couple of sitcom pilot auditions
from my agent, from the, I remember being like,
I'm not going to do a sitcom, like as if it was beneath,
I wasn't working.
I was making no money.
I lived in the worst apartment you could imagine.
And I'm thinking like, I'm not going to do a sitcom.
It's like, what a fucking idiot I am.
But I did, I went wanting to be a dramatic actor.
And the other joke I made,
what used to make forever again as a cover
was people thought my dramatic acting was funny.
Well, this is interesting because you're,
it's a dramatic role where you play someone who,
is going through a breakup.
You're married, you have kids,
the marriage is running out of gas,
you guys break up, separate,
you move to an apartment,
you're wandering past a bar.
Someone says you need to pay the cover charge to come in,
and it's a high cover charge,
and they're like, well, why?
And they're like, it's because it's a comedy club.
You said, well, I don't have that money.
And the guy said,
well, just write your name down.
This is a true story.
It's an actual true story.
It's inspired by this story
of this English comedian,
really funny guy, John Bishop,
who might happen to me,
not a bit on a barge on a barge on a barge in like a canal boat in Amsterdam at a lunch and I went
over there with a friend and it was a big a bunch of people going over there for this thing and I went
I sat next to him and he told me the story of how it became a stand-up and this story was he was
separated from his wife getting divorced and he goes to a pub and he doesn't want to pay the cover
and he puts his name down for open mic so he gets in for free thinking they're not going to call me
and they call him and he goes up and the first thing he says is I'm getting a divorce I think I'm getting a
Wars. He's no ambition to be a stand-up.
He knows nothing about stand-up. So that was the
impetus. But he has the catharsis. He keeps going back.
Yeah. Because it makes him feel good.
Yeah. He tried drinking. He tried all that stuff. But this
he actually, and this is a guy, you know, who would never, never been to therapy, never done
to that stuff. But going in front of a crowd of strangers and just kind of talking about his own
reality made him feel better. He got relief from it, which was, which I totally get.
Now, I'd never done stand-up before, and I can see how that works.
I was curious to prepare for this role, you did stand-up.
Yeah.
And you did a lot of stand-up.
Yeah.
And were you telling the crowds, this is for a movie role?
No.
Well, once.
I know that in that situation, I probably would have said,
this is for a project.
I would have wanted some kind of shield as opposed to.
That was the instinct.
Yeah.
And actually, the truth is, the first time I went to do stand-up,
Shane Gillis, who was really kind to us,
and invited us down to Austin and to go up at the mothership.
And he said, come down here and we'll give you some time.
So Bradley and I went down there.
This is right after New Year's last year when we were in pre-production.
And I hadn't done stand-up yet.
And we went down there and we had all this material that we had written for the various sets
that happened throughout the movie.
And the first time I went up there, they introduced me as Alex Novak,
in my character's name.
And so I go out. I'm nervous as hell. Again, you know, I've done lots of stuff before, but never done actual stand-up, even though I was being introduced out. So people are sort of, you can see some people and here, some people were confused. They're kind of laughing. And there were some people who were clearly fans and not everybody, but some people are like, oh, yeah, okay. And what's the name and what's going on? And I said, I said something like, yeah, I'm Alex. Bear with me. Hopefully in a year or so, this will make sense, is what I said.
Yeah.
And then I went on and I did this set, came out, came off.
And it went, it went okay.
It was like, I was, and I was about to go out again for the second time that night.
And Kirk Fox, this comedian, great dude, super funny dude, he was talking to me and he said,
hey, man, don't, I don't know why.
He just, he goes, you don't need to explain it.
Just go out and do it.
Just go do it.
And it was such a great, it was such a great piece of advice.
And I was like, yeah.
So I just went and I did it.
And I thought, you know what, these people are going to think I'm having a nervous breakdown.
That's okay.
it doesn't matter and that gave me license and then a couple days later we were the next day we flew
back to new york and for six weeks virtually every night i'd go we'd go to the cellar at night
and do three sets a night and then during the day we'd rework this stuff because we're trying
to track the my character's progression and the story and everything and i would go up and they'd
introduce me sometimes his second time up or his first time and i'd go up as Alex novac and people
laugh uh or have a reaction and it didn't matter and and bradley would say to me
almost every time you know the instinct is as you know you go up there you're a performer you're doing
this thing and then part of you's like well i just want to make him laugh anyway right i just want to get the
laugh because i'm there anyway might as well do something to get the laugh might as well lean on some of my
old bits my old standbys you know and bradley would stop me and he'd go we're doing something
different and i go right we're doing something god what a dick i know you can't throw your fastball
you know you're talking about bradley cooper or no
But you're talking about General Omar Bradley from World War II?
Yeah. Terrific General.
And this is a film directed by General Omar Bradley.
Yeah. And we shot it, we shot it in the early 50s, I guess.
Before he passes away.
Yeah, yeah, right before he passed away.
And we were in, we were at the French sector of Berlin.
Yes, yes.
Because the French were still controlling it.
The part of the end where your character defeats Hitler.
I didn't see that coming at all.
With comedy.
Yeah.
I killed up with comedy.
Well, I'll say one thing I got pulled in,
and I think one of the compliments I can pay you
is that I got pulled into the movie,
and then at one point you're having an argument
with your estranged wife, Laura Dern,
and I got mad at her.
Sure.
I got mad at the character.
Because you love me.
And I just, well, no, I did take your side.
You have a big argument with her.
things are going, you have a big argument with her, and I started to get agitated because I thought,
no, he's right. You're not, you, you've, he tried to do something nice. Why the, why can't you? And I,
I got worked up. I know the moment you're talking about. And it's funny, I've had a few people have,
have had reactions from other people that I know, other men. Yeah. And women who have very, you know.
So this morning, minor thing, because my wife and I watched the movie together, and then this
morning I'm doing something and she's like, did you lose those keys? And I went, I didn't lose
those keys. And she said, well, were you going to put them this time so you don't lose them?
And I said, I didn't lose them. I didn't even go looking for them. They're not lost. They were
here. And she went, well, you kind of did lose them. And I just said, don't Laura Dern me.
Wow. Because we had just watched the movie last night. I said, don't Laura Dern me. And she's like,
okay, if we're doing that, I'm out. Because she doesn't put out. God bless Liza, she does not put up
with my shit. She was like, if we're doing that game, I'm gone.
And she went about her business, and then we talked later and all was good.
Well, check your phone. Yeah. Oh, my God, the pool boy.
Why is Liza calling me? An old cliche. Yeah. Go through my assistant. Why is she directly
contact me? By the pool boy, the pool boy. Yeah. But that's what makes you feel worse. And he still
wants to be called the pool boy. That's what makes you feel worse. Yeah. He's 80. He has no
hips. They've been both been removed but not
replaced.
They carry him around in a wheelbarrow.
Take
um,
but,
but, uh, but, uh,
Daveman has to have his hips
removed for weight.
Yeah.
No, he's, he's, he's the only guy I know who has joints removed for,
for, for, to keep his weight down.
Yeah. It's unbelievable.
He had, yeah. Remember the time he had just a spoonful of creme brulee?
Yeah. And then he went on a shooting spree.
I love the man. I do love the man, and it's just jealousy.
Of course, it's just pure jealousy. He looks so good. He looks so good.
Anyway, let's not waste him. We're talking about that.
Not another second on him.
I got some years on you, but I am liking this part of life where you've done the other thing for a long time.
You got a lot of satisfaction out of it.
and now you're just trying stuff
and you're putting yourself out there
and it's very cool.
Thank you.
You know, it's not like, I'm not making a big statement
like, now I'm doing this at all.
But, but it-
You did ask me to call you actor.
Yeah.
Will Arnett.
Storyteller.
Storyteller.
Storyteller.
Storyweaver.
Dream weaver.
Yeah.
And I, but it is, it's been, it's been,
been really, again, been really satisfying doing this.
And also, I do feel like I'm at a stage of my life
where I'm just a much more sort of bound and determined
to do stuff that I want to do.
Yeah, yeah.
And so, again, I'm not like, you know,
now I'm doing this.
Now I am the story to at all, at all, at all, at all.
I mean, I'm still a fucking idiot, you know.
I'm glad you said it.
I'm not supposed to say it, but I'm glad you did.
But is that like a known?
Yeah, yeah.
Wait you for another?
No, it is, it's like, fucking wig you on your Wikipedia page.
It says, moron, Will Arnette.
But do they?
Born.
But do they?
These guys know.
We started it.
Yeah.
Oh, you started it.
Oh, so you sound like somebody was talking about me.
The title of your podcast is smartless.
You know?
What describes us best?
I, and I do, I, you know this about me.
me. I worship at the altar of arrested development. I think at its finest, it is maybe one of the
highest levels of comedy that's been achieved. Or if not the, it's in very rare company. And so it's just
a remarkable achievement. And so you're an indelible part of that thing. That's a real major way
that my son and I have bonded over the years, is different comedic things. And he and I, to this
day when we get together when he's back from school and he's glum or one of us is down we start
watching arrested elements and he's like a you know he's like a card dealer in Vegas he knows which
ones to give me and he knows exactly which ones to deal out like what mood what will turn it
around yeah he knows that anything with franklin in it will kill me oh my god Franklin the ventriloquist
puppet um the close-up shot of Franklin pushing in which i've
I've talked to you about a reaction shot of a puppet.
But there are so many things in that show
that give me such delight.
And I know that Mitch Hurwitz has been like a huge part of your life,
not just as the creator of a show that helped you get a toehold
and gave you a real push, but as a friend and a mentor
and a life guide.
Without question.
I don't know him well.
I've met him a bunch of times.
Which is funny because you guys live like 200 yards from each other.
I know.
True story.
And whenever he comes, I duck behind a hedge.
Yeah.
And you know what?
I am, I'm, I, you know, it's that stupid thing in L.A.
Where you don't walk down the street.
Nobody sees their neighbors.
No one sees their neighbors here, which is not how I grew up, but it's very strange.
Can I ask you just sort of sidebar?
I want to get into the Mitch thing because I, as you're right.
And I adore Mitch, and he's been incredibly impactful in my life, not just, not just as a sort of a comedic beacon and a guide and a mentor.
but also as a friend and as a person,
he's one of the all-time great guys.
Do you guys dream about moving back to New York a lot these days?
Well, it's funny you say that.
No.
No, I'm kidding.
No, it's funny you say it.
I'm kind of half moving back now,
and I'm like, I can't get out of here fast enough.
Oh, okay.
I still love Los Angeles,
but I really love a lot of things about Los Angeles,
and I'm happy to be here.
But it's funny you say that because I've been going back
more and more for work because, you know, Sirius XM, they have space there and also both my kids
are on the East Coast for school. So I'll go back east and I'll be in New York and I'm very happy
to be honest, I like both. Yeah. I like the contrast, but I like, I like spending now two weeks
in the, you know, going up to Boston, seeing my, you know, my family. Yeah. And, but hanging in New York is great.
It's been, it's been, and I know it's like, it's like the oldest thing, you know, New York for L.A., and I, for years, I got so sick of people going like, well, in New York you can walk around, but I'm like, I know. I did the same thing. I lived in New York for over 20 years. I get it. But I have lately, and I feel like I'm not alone. A lot of my friends and people you know are like, I'm ready to go back. Like I see my later stages of life being in New York. I'm just, L.A. has been, I don't know. Again, there are people like, good, get the fuck out.
You know, but I don't know what to tell you.
I just got so much, you know, many properties here in L.A.
Oh, God.
I mean, I own most of Catalina.
You know that about me, right?
I didn't know that.
Oh, I mean, what I did is I took money that I made here on the podcast,
and I have bought up most of the Valley, all of Catalina.
You saw what happened in Catalina today, right?
What happened?
Oh, my God.
You're, they designated, you're Gavin Newsome.
What?
It's a toxic.
It's worthless.
I built a massive chip.
It's all worthless.
I seriously own like 6,000 acres.
On the way here, Gavin Newsom said, it's toxic,
and they're just going to, they're going to raise it.
And no one will ever, it's uninhabital,
no one will ever be able to go there.
I built, do you, you know that giant geodesic dome that just went up?
That's my house.
You're destitute.
You're destitute now.
It's all gone.
You lost everything.
I told you not to put it all in Catalina.
And you said nothing
And you actually said to me
This place will never be toxic
Which is how could you have
I said my marriage may be toxic
And all my friendships
But this ground in Catalina never shall be
Remember? I said that to you?
Of course I remember
You shattered it from a mountain top
And I said I'm going to build a giant
Geodesic dome
And live there
And live there forever
I put everything into that
And you did say you were going to live forever
Also as part of it
I remember this
I know
I'll out live Bateman
You and I are going to outlive Bateman.
I go, man.
You know he's going to dance on my grave.
Of course he will.
That's not for six years.
Well, Mitch Horowitz, one of the all-time great guys.
I just want to say, he created a rest of element, as you know, as you pointed out.
I don't think I'm a, I mean, the wittiest, funniest, most naturally, just like such a gifted, gifted, gifted dude.
Yeah, just amazing guy.
He is, when I watch that show, I haven't actually.
rewatch in a while, but sometimes clips will come up and, and I'll just think, like, what a fucking
brilliant scene. Like, what a great, everything. Like, just go, what a great idea. To keep that many
balls in the air and have it all pay off. Dude. To have that cast, but to have that vision,
um, he was almost like a live act. We used to say it's emerging like on a live action
Simpson sometimes, like from back, especially from when, when you were there, like those days. And
and we mean, I meant that always is the highest compliment to him. No, cutaways.
It's things that you can do in animation
that you really can't achieve
when you're shooting on a set.
And you guys had that pace.
The whole thing is beautifully rendered
and man, is it hold up.
Yeah.
It's great.
And so I always,
it's been a lovely thing for me in my life
because I always go back to my favorite stuff
and that includes the rest of development.
And you are so funny in that show.
But it's great.
I mean, like I say, you have all these things in your back pocket.
And now you can go make a movie with Bradley Cooper.
And it's good.
It's really good.
Yeah, thanks.
I just outed him as Bradley Cooper.
Not.
I know a lot of people were like, you mean General Omar Bradley?
I know people were going there.
Why is your audience so obsessed with it?
You know what?
We know one thing.
When you leave the comments, they're always like more World War II generals.
Do they really?
Yeah.
That's bizarre, man.
No.
I'm not going to be honest.
I'd probably get that, too.
It's smartless.
Yeah, mine or more UK said like Montgomery,
they want more Montgomery mentions of Montgomery.
More Bernard Montgomery.
Will, I'm very happy for you.
You know, funny, Neville Chamberlain once said, oh, sorry, go ahead.
Will, you are a, you're a great friend,
and joking aside, it meant the world to me
that you were texting me during a dark time.
And riffing with you over text was a true bomb.
It really did.
It was a serum that helped me
and just delighted that you're in my life.
Say hi to the guys from me.
I will, I will.
But do it more, like, show more love to Sean from me.
And then let, you know what I mean,
you'll know how to play it.
Of course, I know what I play.
Let Bateman know, like, oh, he's really all over Sean.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'm going to just pour a lot of sugar on Sean.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And then be like, no, no, he knows you're on.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I definitely mentioned you.
I'm pretty sure, man.
All right.
I love him.
man. This is it. We don't have a way to end this, really. Is there no ending to it?
There really isn't an ending. It just, and this way, this, you know, we usually wait for it to
peter out, and this petered out a couple of times. Um, so there's a couple of endpoints we can use.
Okay. You know. Oh, oh, you're, okay, sorry. You're, you're not saying create an end point.
Uh, and that's the way we do it. And that's all we got.
What are you going to say?
What are you going to say?
Bap, bam, bam. There goes another one.
By the way
Yeah
There goes another one
Yeah
And I'll tell you something
That's what he said to her
Where are you looking
Oh there's a camera there
Right there
Nothing ruins an audio presentation
Like a guy playing the camera
Hey can I just say something
Yeah it's about time you spoke up
Hey do you have another quote
Oh I got something
Hey is it okay
I read this inspirational quote
It's a long sermon
by Euripides
Fucking man, that thing went on and on.
And it was great.
Oh, yeah, I get it.
Yeah.
But can't just say it in fewer words.
Did you have to read the whole thing?
This guy fucking kills me.
What's on your phone that's better than me?
Fuck.
I'm just giving you time.
You know?
I got people to talk to.
Oh, look.
I was just looking at it.
Just doing some texting.
Hey.
Oh, fucking cruel musicians are texting me.
Oh, what's this?
Eddie better to text you, too.
What?
Nothing.
What was the question I was going to ask you guys about, about, God, we'd just cut the pauses out, so I seem really snappy.
Yeah, yeah, we'll cut off.
Oh, here is.
Here it is.
When you don't have a fancy mic, you can have fun.
You guys are at serious as well.
Yeah, right?
Yeah.
I think about a collab.
Yes.
You know?
Should we do a collab?
But you know, let me tell you something.
We do in, we do like a, we come in here into the studio, me and Sean and baby, and come into the studio and we do, and we just do something, you know?
You know what, me tell something?
Yeah.
We got a huge thing going.
Just to give you a spark.
That's fair.
That's fair.
That's fair.
lately.
You're looking at a little lighter.
I love that that came on the heels of you going, you know, we got a good thing going.
You immediately changed her of a dragon ass lately.
Listen, Taysam.
Yeah.
You guys come in.
We join forces, you know.
We take the power of this show and then we add whatever you guys are doing.
And we have...
Whatever we're doing.
You're doing fine.
Didn't you have a documentary or something?
No.
I don't remember.
We did a documentary.
series.
Yeah, okay.
I don't know.
I remember.
I tried to get it.
And it said, there's been a little interest.
Do you mind if I just do this real quick?
Sorry, I don't want to interrupt.
Okay.
GMC continues its commitment to professional grade engineering in the GMC truck series.
Like offering the world's first available six-function multi-pro tailgate on Sierra.
I just got to get a little business done.
Is that okay?
You know, you get, you get a lot of that candy money from Reese's.
I know you do.
I hate to brag, but I got a candy bar, too.
Payday.
The payday came to me, and I'm due a payday bar now.
And they want, yeah.
No, Hershey's is your bar.
No.
God, you can't have fun.
Hershey's is your bar.
He can't have.
What's that?
It's not payday.
It's Hershey's.
God, he's, do you have a guy in the room with you who's like,
not monetizable?
There's no money here.
No, we don't have a cooler on set.
We bring to cool down the heat on the table.
Sorry I mentioned the arrival candy.
That won't you just have a taser and just shock me?
Oh, my God.
No, Hershey's.
You know, Hershey's came to me like, oh.
Hershey's peanut butter cups?
That's who Owens Reese's.
I'm sorry.
What?
That's who owns Reesisis, right?
Yeah, well, the big company that runs at all came to me.
So you have Reese's, and by the way, you don't even seem to like the candy when you talk about it.
But I, Hershey came to me.
Yeah.
And they were like, please, please, please.
And I said, all right, sure.
Oh, good.
Yeah.
So I did it.
So I did it.
They were so like, oh, my God.
We're hemorrhaging cash.
And so I was like, yeah, whatever.
Hey, Hershey's.
I like it.
But then they were like, you're selling articular.
I forget that.
I keep going.
I said, Hershey's good.
But anyway, and then they said Hershey's Candy Bar.
Through the roof.
Through the roof after I gave it my sign of approval.
Through the roof, through the fucking roof.
This is so easily verifiable.
Don't look it up.
Don't look it up.
That always is alarm bells when somebody says,
don't look it up immediately.
And you tried to grab my phone.
Yeah.
That's how worried you were.
Just don't look at it.
Okay.
What's the rest of your daylight, Conan?
Be honest.
Be really honest.
Facial.
Is that true?
Yeah, like one of those avocado scrubs
In the face and then the back
What time you start drinking like four?
3.30.
No.
3 o'clock.
Yeah.
2.30.
2.15.
And then you're going to watch the baseball?
You're going to watch some baseball?
I mean, I'm not going to say what they're going to watch the baseball.
You can't say which teams?
Oh, because this doesn't air until, you know what, this air is.
Hey, welcome to showbiz.
Hey, hey, Merry Christmas.
Fuck, dude.
Merry Christmas, man.
Merry Christmas.
God.
Merry Christmas.
You're still just a writer up on 17.
Is this need
A punch up?
Do you see?
Lauren liked it.
This is what happened
when you let the nerds in.
It did well at read-through.
This is what happened.
The nerds never got it.
You know what I mean?
It works on the page.
Yeah, we got it.
Don't worry.
You didn't say it the right way.
We're rolling.
Scram.
Say it this way.
Talent's here.
Cheese is coming out of my eyes.
Oh, my God.
We stopped the course.
nerds so long ago.
I know.
These mics blow, but you can lean against them.
You know, you can't do that with yours.
I can lean against mine.
Anyway, a time was had by all.
You know what?
And that's what they did.
Stop ruining it.
We had a great, I just tied it up.
It was perfect.
Oh, my God.
To be continued?
Fuck you.
Don't come back.
Don't come back.
He's the worst.
You're a terrible guy.
By the way, all jokes aside, and I know we're done, but let me just say this.
And I know you wanted to get in a voiceover and you said all the people came to you,
but I did think of a gig that you'd be really good for.
What's that?
Affleck.
Affleck.
Fucking perfect.
We got it.
They also, there's a helium balloon company that wants me.
Really?
William balloons.
Wait, voices can get higher?
Conan O'Brien needs a friend
with Conan O'Brien, Sonam of Sessian, and Matt Goorley.
Produced by me, Matt Goorley.
Executive produced by Adam Sacks, Jeff Ross, and Nick Leow.
Theme song by The White Stripes.
Incidental music by Jimmy Vivino.
Take it away, Jimmy.
Our supervising producer is Aaron Blair,
and our associate talent producer is Jennifer Samples.
Engineering and mixing by Eduardo Perez and Brendan Burren.
Additional production support by Mars Melnick.
Talent booking by Paula Davis, Gina Batista, and Brick Con.
You can rate and review this show on Apple Podcasts,
and you might find your review read on a future episode.
Got a question for Conan?
Call the Team Coco hotline at 669-587-2847 and leave a message.
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