Fresh Air - Best Of: 'Hysterical' Podcaster / 'Seinfeld' Writer
Episode Date: June 28, 2025What happens when a former federal government employee turns his lens on the psychology of panic? You get Hysterical, a podcast series from Dan Taberski. In it, Taberski investigates a mysterious illn...ess that swept through a group of high school students in upstate New York. He spoke with Tonya Mosley about his award-winning podcast.Book critic Maureen Corrigan recommends some mystery and suspense novels for your summer reading list. Also, we'll hear from Larry Charles who has been a writer, director and/or executive producer on a number of culturally impactful TV shows and films including Seinfeld, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Entourage, and Borat. He spoke with Terry Gross about his new memoir.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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From WHYYY in Philadelphia,
this is Fresh Air Weekend.
I'm Tanya Mosley.
Today, what happens when a former federal government
employee turns his lens on the psychology of panic?
You get Hysterical, a podcast series from Dan Tabersky,
winner of both the Apple and Ambi Award
for Podcast of the Year.
In Hysterical, Tabbersky investigates a mysterious illness that swept through a group of high school students in upstate New York.
It began with one girl who woke up from a nap and suddenly couldn't stop stuttering.
Also, we'll hear from Larry Charles, who has been a writer, director, and executive producer on a number of culturally impactful
TV shows and films like Seinfeld, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Entourage, and Borat.
And book critic Maureen Corrigan recommends some mystery and suspense novels for your
summer reading list.
That's coming up on Fresh Air Weekend.
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This is Fresh Air Weekend. I'm Tonya Mosley. My guest, Dan Tubersky, is the creator of
several award-winning audio documentaries, including Missing Richard Simmons, which explored
the sudden disappearance of the late fitness icon, and Missing Richard Simmons, which explored the
sudden disappearance of the late fitness icon, and Running from Cops, which was a look into
the long-running reality show and its impact on law enforcement and public perception.
Tabersky's latest project, Hysterical, was recently honored as Podcast of the Year at
the Ambys. It's a seven-part series that unpacks a strange and
fascinating medical mystery, a sudden outbreak in 2011 of tics and spasms among high school
girls in Leroy, New York.
In December of 2011, a young woman posted a video on YouTube.
Hi, everyone. My name's S*** and this is my first video.
She's got shiny red hair with side bangs and she's wearing a white graphic hoodie.
A poster for the metal band Avenged Sevenfold is tacked to her bedroom wall behind her.
So I'll start off by telling you a little bit about myself.
I'm 16. I'm in 11th grade, and I play softball, like all the time.
When she made this video, there was no TikTok, there was barely an Instagram.
She's not looking to monetize, not trying to influence.
What this 16-year-old is looking for is a little help.
She's been having strange symptoms that so far, no one can seem to explain.
Recently, last August, I had passed out at a concert.
I was headbanging.
And I thought, you know, I was just dehydrated and all that.
By now, you've noticed that her speech is a bit halting, and her nervous teenage energy
is more than just fidgeting.
And about a month after, I pass out again.
The homecoming dance, that's awesome, right?
Um...
Hh, hh, hh, hh, hh.
It has pattern and repetition.
Eyes twitching, hands in the air, fingers flying.
And a few days ago, my twitching has progressed into noises like through my nose or in my
throat. And it's something that won't go away.
The series draws a line from the cases in Leroy to historical episodes like the Salem
witch trials, when girls displaying odd speech and convulsive fits were accused of being
witches.
And contemporary phenomena like Havana syndrome, when overseas diplomats and CIA agents suffered
neurological symptoms that were suspected to be the result of foreign attacks.
These were all moments when real physical symptoms spread through communities with no
clear biological cause. Many of these are known as mass psychogenic illnesses.
Dan Tversky says he's drawn to puzzles that point to larger questions about who we are
and how we live. Before becoming a podcaster, he was a field
producer for The Daily Show with Jon Stewart from 1999 to 2006. And before that, he worked
on economic policy in the Clinton White House. Dan Tversky, welcome to Fresh Air.
Thanks for having me. Nice to be here.
You know, what a career you've carved out for yourself. I can't wait to get into that.
But first, let's talk a little bit about hysterical.
Can you describe what you saw in Leroy, how prevalent it was,
and what was going on at its height?
Yeah, I mean, it started with one girl who woke up from a nap
with a stutter.
And she couldn't speak.
She just couldn't get her words out,
which was not normal for her.
Those symptoms evolved into twitches and spasms and vocal outbursts.
A couple weeks later, a friend on the cheerleading squad came down with similar symptoms.
Ticks, verbal outbursts, spasms, like really scary looking things when you don't know what's causing it.
Two became three, three became five, and they were off to the races. Almost all of the cases were centered in Leroy Junior Senior High School in a town called
Leroy, New York.
Hosting.
Something that you delve into so well in this podcast is really our understanding of what
even a psychogenic illness or conversion disorder is.
Can you really break that down for us?
Yeah.
I mean, conversion disorder is basically psychological stress or trauma that exhibits
itself as physical symptoms. Sometimes it's very simple, like it could be like GI issues
or you're nauseous. Very often it's neurological and very often they can become bizarre and
they can become long lasting. They can be limps, tics, spasms, outbursts, symptoms very
similar to Tourette syndrome.
Syncope is one that happens a lot, which is passing out, or near-syncope, which is the
feeling of passing out.
Seizures.
So it can really run the gamut, but the only thing is that these symptoms don't seem to
have an organic cause.
So you might have a limp, but the X-rays are normal, or you're having seizures
three times a day, but your MRIs don't show anything.
You were initially drawn to this story, I read, of the students in Leroy after reading
reports about Havana syndrome, which is to remind people that mysterious illness that
affected diplomats and CIA officers really around the world, not just in Cuba, in 2016. And some of the experts
that you talked to made an argument that what was happening to these men possibly isn't
so different from what the girls were experiencing. So much, especially with the girls in Leroy,
is tied up in whether or not they're believed. They're told it's all in their heads, that
they're being dramatic or hysterical. But I'm curious, how does that equation shift
when the same unexplained symptoms or similar symptoms start happening to powerful men who
are valued for their toughness and their composure and their physicality and mental strength?
I mean, that was part of what was interesting about it in the first place was comparing
Havana syndrome to what was happening in Leroy and how people were reacting to what happens
when you're right, it's like CIA agents, it's like people who, you know, like they do secret
ops.
They, like I say in the podcast, they know how to neutralize things.
Like these are serious, potentially scary people who are trained to deal with the stress
of, if not combat, close to it.
And so many people weren't willing to countenance the possibility that mass psychogenic illness
could happen to people like that.
Or it could happen to men, period.
And to watch how quickly the conversation became about, quote unquote, it's all in your
head for the girls compared to the diplomats and the CIA agents, I just thought was really interesting and really telling about women
and girls and belief in terms of their medical conditions and their medical experiences.
Right or wrong?
And, you know, I'm not saying it wasn't, they both could be mass psychogenic illness.
They both might not be.
But it was just interesting how hesitant people were to question the men and how quick they were to write off the girls.
And Leroy, a lot of folks thought it might be environmental. What were some of the most
compelling arguments in favor of that theory? And really, what did you ultimately conclude?
Yeah. I mean, as this was sort of all unfolding and people were trying to figure out what
this was, somebody slipped an anonymous note in somebody's mailbox for the parents of one
of the victims who was suffering from this.
And it reminded them of something that had happened in 1973 that might have something
to do with what was going on now.
And in 1973, it turns out there was a train derailment about three miles away from the
school.
And during the derailment, the train unloaded approximately 35,000 gallons of trichloroethylene,
which is an industrial solvent.
It ended up in the ground, in the water table, and stayed there.
And many people believed that this could potentially explain why people were having these symptoms,
thinking that the plume that was underground had gone to the high school and was starting
to cause these symptoms.
And they investigated the area.
There were six fracking wells on the school property, which is just really shocking.
They were not able to show that it was causing the symptoms
that were happening.
But it does go to show that it really can be anything
at a time like this.
And that you can't just say, oh, it's
mass psychogenic illness.
It's all in your head and walk away.
Because there really are things, part of knowing that
it's mass psychogenic illness is really knowing as sure as
you can be that it's not something else,
which requires an investigation, which requires all that footwork.
And then after a few years, mysteriously, the symptoms for many of these girls went away.
I mean, basically for all of them.
Yeah, by the end of the school year, the symptoms were all but gone. Yeah.
Yeah. I mean, one of the other things that you delve into is just how much
stress the environment and also our interactions with each other kind of play a role in how
we react to the environment in each other. So in the case of the girls, it was an interesting
point that you talked about how the media might actually perpetuate or even worsen this
symptom. So how deeply influenced we are by each other because
the more the story was reported, the more cases seemed to emerge. So was it that
increasing media attention, simply shining a light on it, was already
happening or did the power of suggestion actually play a role? Well, it's hard to
know. Like you can't know for sure, right? You have to report on it. You have to
report on this thing. It's a medical mystery. You need to find out the answer.
But the thing about mass psychogenic illness, especially one that was breaking out in Leroy
where the symptoms were so bizarre, is that it's a line-of-sight illness. It's not passed
randomly. It's usually passed in social groups, like kids at a high school or like a nunnery
or workers on a factory floor, even people in a town.
But by putting the girls with the tics on the news, they were basically showing the
tics to everybody else in the town and then that would become a vector for spread.
That the constant looking at the symptoms and seeing them and talking about them actually
contributes to it continuing.
We're listening to my conversation with documentary podcaster Dan Tubersky.
His latest project, Hysterical, is about a mysterious illness that swept through an upstate New York high school,
and it was honored as podcast of the year at the Ambys. More of our conversation after a short break. This is Fresh Air Weekend.
Electric vehicles are supposed to be the future, fast, clean and everywhere.
But now even automakers are pulling back.
What happened?
The pace of electrification was not going to be as fast as everybody thought.
On the Sunday story from Up First, hear how shifting politics and changing demand are
slowing down the EV revolution.
Listen now to the Sunday story on the Up First podcast from NPR.
On NPR's Wild Card podcast,
Michelle Obama says she's reinventing herself.
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I think I'm now at a stage in my life
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I'm Rachel Martin.
Listen to Wild Card for a conversation about balancing family and
personal growth with Michelle Obama.
This is Fresh Air Weekend. I'm Tanya Mosley. Let's get back to my conversation with documentary
podcaster Dan Tversky. Dan, I want to talk with you about the podcast that came out of
yours in 2021 to mark the 20th anniversary of the terrorist
attacks on September 11th. It's a seven part series called 912. And you're not only telling
stories from people who are talking about where they were on 9 11, but you also really delve into
how it changed us. The clip I want to play is from the first episode where
you actually found people who were part of a reality show called The Ship, which was
a recreation of Explorer Captain Cook's 18th century voyage to Australia and New Zealand.
And on 9-11, the crew was trapped on a ship in the middle of the ocean without access
to TV or radio. And this clip begins with Alan Block, who was part of that voyage.
Let's listen.
Alan Block 9 or 10 o'clock is the morning change of watch.
And that's the one where the captain who was about five foot two with a tiny bald head
and this gigantic loud voice and usually the meeting is, thank you for gathering,
we've got some weather coming in today,
but likely continued good standing conditions
for lunch is salted beef,
for dinner is salted pork.
That was the morning meeting, no big deal, right?
Well, this day started differently.
We thought we were gonna,
we thought it was more of a public flogging.
Mario and a shipmate had broken a bunch of safety rules on camera the day before while trying to catch a 30 pound barracuda.
So when everyone was assembled on the quarter deck, Mario thought that the captain was about to chew them out.
And we were, you know, sort of our heads were right down waiting for the whip to come down on us in front of everybody.
And then he just,
then he just proceeded to tell us this strange story.
Sorry to wake you up so alarmingly.
What I'm gonna tell you now is gonna shock all of you.
This morning, American time, 8.30, the 737 was flown into one of the twin towers at the
World Trade Center in New York.
It was full of passengers.
It was hijacked.
20 minutes later, another airplane flew into the other twin tower.
That one was hijacked as well.
That was a clip from the 2021 podcast 912 produced and hosted by my guest today, Dan
Tubersky. Like anytime I hear anything like that, where it not just people telling their
stories about where they were in 9-11, but real sound, real video or audio of people
hearing it in real time, it just, like, stops me in my tracks.
It takes me right back there.
I'm sure it's the same for you.
Oh, yeah, it gives me chills.
I mean, 20 years after 9-11 is a long time.
And so we were just trying to figure out how we could bring people back
to that shock.
The shock has been gone for so long. And we were trying to figure out
how to get people back to that without just sort of like dousing them in audio from the
actual, you know, planes hitting buildings and people screaming and all that terrible
stuff, which is super exploitative. And it doesn't even do the trick anymore.
That's such a unique story and was able to really take us into it in the ways that you
just talked about.
But you also went to several other really interesting places, like the staff of the
publication of The Onion and lots of other places to find out where they were when they
heard it.
We wanted to be able to tell a story about how we digested it all.
And so going to those stories that
are sort of on the side of 9-11 or people who had weird reactions or like the onion
is a perfect example of people who had to tell jokes about 9-11 like three days afterwards.
And how do you deal with that and how humor ended up actually being this sort of incredible
bomb and we just wanted to do justice to what had happened to everybody afterwards.
And to be able to sort of mine all those stories and see how it changed us, which it so clearly did.
It just seemed like the thing that I really wanted to talk about it.
I mean, I was here in New York. I lost a very good friend.
And it was part of my life. And I still here in New York. I lost a very good friend and it was part of my life.
And I, you know, I still live in New York. And so it was something that I was wrestling with as well
about seeing 9-11 memorials and sort of rolling your eyes sometimes because you feel like they're sort of playing
on certain feelings that aren't really there anymore and they're just sort of doing it to make money or, you know,
just all these sorts of other icky side stories and other sort of weird
things that happen after something, the conspiracy theories and trying to tell movies about it
and address a play, Dossama bin Laden, how weird that is, like, it means so more than
just the day.
And podcasting is just a great place to fish around like that and take your time getting to a larger point as opposed to just
sort of starting, you know, with like the years would happen on that day and making
people only feel that visceral thing. There's so much more to do in conversation.
Did you get those answers that you were looking for by making this podcast? That like by hearing
other people's stories kind of making sense and moving forward.
I tend to not look for answers because I tend to not believe.
I think there's, you know what I mean?
What do you mean by not believe?
Well, not you believe it, but the answer is always more complicated.
Everybody wants an answer.
And if there were an answer, then the podcast will be one word and it would be the answer.
And then you'd be done.
But I think what it is and what podcasting is so good at is that because it's
conversation mixed in with essay, mixed in with sort of audio, natural audio, like
I'm not really looking for answers. I'm more looking for wisdom. I'm more looking
for people who are involved in it to help me put it somewhere in my head
where it makes sense.
Your career trajectory is pretty fascinating.
As I mentioned, you worked for the Clinton White House in economic policy right out of
college.
I'm just curious, your time in government at the White House, did it inform at all your
approach to storytelling?
Did you learn anything there? You learned what you didn't want to be and do, but...
Yeah. I learned what I didn't want to be and do. My lesson from the White House is that
the people there were sincere. Despite the politics of it, my boss used to say, like,
Dan, if you stay late tonight, like, you know, 22,000
more people in Ohio are going to get the earned income tax credit if we get this passed. And
this is how it's going to change their lives. And like, it was real. It wasn't political.
It wasn't, I'm going to do this so I can make money. It was a real passion for policy and understanding how it changes people's lives and doing sort of incremental work to move
the ball forward. And I was really inspired by that.
I mean, you transitioned into storytelling at a really interesting political time and
moment. I mean, you worked as a field producer then for The
Daily Show with Jon Stewart from 99 to 2006. And that's a really important window for the
life of that show in particular because I actually think that was one of the show's
most influential eras. It's like really when it was forming its identity.
I started when Jon Stewart started. And so I was definitely part of,
of as it evolved with him.
I mean, when I started,
the idea of doing this sort of journalism about politics,
that was also kind of a joke,
and involving actual politicians in that,
like, was, was pretty out there and it was really exciting.
At the very beginning, like, they didn't even have Comedy Central in Washington.
So you would call people up.
Yeah.
You would call people up and you'd be like, we're from The Daily Show, and they would
sort of think you were saying The Today Show.
Right.
Right.
Yeah.
And so you wouldn't disavuse them of it because it was sort of you were.
And so it was wild to do that sort of
reporting that on the one hand wasn't journalism, but on the other hand had more truth in it
than anything I'd ever done. Because the subject matter, like truth through irony or truth
through humor, it just opened up a whole other sort of world of how to sort of describe what
you're seeing around you. Okay, so an interesting detail about you is that you're a quilt maker and I am so fascinated by this because
I mean, quilt making is storytelling. There are personal histories interwoven into the fabric, the choices for the fabric, the colors, like all the things.
How did you get into it?
It feels a little omin nose, doesn't it?
It very, but also like very fascinating. I want to know more.
You know, I was always kind of interested in that. My mother used to do stuff like crochet and knit
and I was always, you know, I was a boy so I was a little shy about expressing too much interest,
but I've learned how to crochet and I kind of, you know, I used to sort of watch her doing those things. And then, but as an adult, I
took a quilting class about 10, 12 years ago with a bunch of ladies. I just kind of liked
the idea of the machine and connecting things and then just exploring it. And then I started,
rather than using store-bought fabric, I began going to Goodwill and buying clothes by the pound.
And I would cut, so now I cut up those clothes and I make quilts out of that.
But like very often I'll get like, you know, hospital scrubs are really great to make quilts
out of.
But they're often, yeah, because they're just like a nice, they come in, like there's
like a nice dusty rose color or like a nice, nice blues.
And they sew together really well because they're just thin. And so I get the sort of storytelling connection.
I don't know that I'm trying to tell a story when I'm making something,
but I definitely like being around it.
I like being around the sort of stuff that people have left behind.
How much time do you devote to it?
I have a whole studio.
You know, I go back and forth.
Very often it's something I'm doing, like when I'm in the middle of writing, I'll end
up doing a lot of quilting.
It's a very good creative activity to focus on when you can't focus on the other thing
you're doing anymore.
And very often the good ideas in writing come when you're only paying half attention, right?
When you're just sort of, when it's in the back and you're self-conscious and you're
just like watching a movie, and that's when you have all your
ideas. And so it's very good to take the pressure off the writing and then just go start to
stitch together a few pieces of fabric and then all of a sudden you have a good idea
for what you're writing and you go back to that.
So fascinating. Dan Tversky, thank you so much for this conversation and for your work.
Oh, thanks so much. I could not be more honored to be here.
Dan Tuberski is an award-winning writer, producer, and podcaster. This summer's poisonous mixed bouquet of mystery and suspense fiction contains stems
of the Gothic, the hard-boiled, and a sprig of the cozy in honor of Agatha Christie.
Our book critic Maureen Corrigan has a roundup.
The mystery and suspense novels coming out this month are some of the best
this crew of mostly well-established writers has written. So let's get to them. El Dorado Drive
is Megan Abbott's most doom-laden novel yet. It's set in the year 2008 in Detroit, which happens to
be Abbott's hometown. The three middle-aged bishop sisters,
our main characters here, can recall their father driving them around town in a sapphire
blue caddy when he was general counsel to GM. But those days are mere rusty memories.
The trio is beset by money troubles until middle sister Pam invites her sibs into an all-female
financial club she's joined called The Wheel. Here's a brief description of the club's McBeth-like
initiation rites. There was a ritual to it. The women forming a circle around the coffee table, faces shiny, fly
away hair and lipstick smudged, heels off, pedicured toes, dancing in the carpet
plush. A woman named Sue intoned the oath. We pledge to commit to the secrecy of
the wheel and trust in its promise, all together now.
Women trust, women give, women protect.
What these women think of as female empowerment, the feds might consider a Ponzi scheme.
The spell of this smart, socially-pointed suspense novel lingers long after the wheel's
stash of cash and one of its members are no more.
The presence of the uncanny is even more potent in Dwyer Murphy's new novel The House on Buzzard's Bay.
Gothic chill wafts like ocean mist throughout this tale of college friends reuniting at an old
house one of them has inherited. The house was built by a band of 19th
century spiritualists and as the vacation gets underway the friends are
plagued by an uneasy sense that those spiritualists may not have vacated the
premises. Dwyer's restrained style heightens the ominous atmosphere.
In this scene, a stranger, a woman named Camille,
has turned up at the house.
She says she was invited by one of the group
who since disappeared.
It's nighttime and the friends invite her to stay.
Here's how Jim, the man who's inherited the place,
describes Camille's reaction.
She said how kind we all were,
just as she'd known we would be.
She must have repeated that three or four times
so that it sounded almost like she was making a joke.
Restraint is not a hallmark of S.A. Cosby's crime
fiction. His writing is rough, raw, and violent. King of Ashes, Cosby's latest
novel, is set in the Virginia town of Jefferson Run, which like Abbott's Detroit
has seen better days. Once a manufacturing hub where mason jars were made, the town is now ruled
by a gang called the Black Baron Boys. Roman Carruthers, our anti-hero, left years ago for
college and then moved to Atlanta to pursue a big career in money management. Roman knows his rise is thanks in part to his father, known as the King of Ashes,
because his crematory made him one of the few prominent black businessmen in town. When the
novel opens, Roman is summoned back home by his sister with the news their father lies near death
after a suspicious hit and run.
Turns out that Roman's younger brother Dante has ripped off the Black Baron boys in a drug
deal and they don't believe in repayment on the installment plan.
Cosby invests the classic noir plot of the ordinary man pulled into a nightmare with
emotional depth. Roman
scrambles to save his family by using his financial know-how to make the gang
a fortune, all the while plotting their annihilation. I warn you, that crematory
gets put to use a lot, but King of Ashes is so ingenious, neither grit nor gore could make me stop reading
it.
Laura Lipman's latest novel resurrects a character from her beloved Baltimore-based
Tess Monahan series.
Murder Takes a Vacation stars Tess' former assistant Muriel Blossom.
The widowed Mrs. Blossom, as she's known,
has won the lottery and she's treating herself to a river cruise starting in
Paris. But when the handsome man who flirted with her on the plane is found
dead, Mrs. Blossom's vacation literally becomes a getaway as she tries to dodge both the police, who see her as a suspect, and the
evil doers. It would be easy to underestimate death takes a vacation to assume it's just a
Miss Marple type romp. That would be a mistake. Where Christie, through Marple, investigated the invisibility of older women, Lipman perceptively
explores how older women often collaborate in their own invisibility, muting their appearance
and their desires.
Whatever your desires for summer mystery reading, at least one of these novels should fulfill
them.
Maureen Corrigan is a professor of literature at Georgetown University. Coming up, Larry
Charles. He's been a writer, director, and executive producer on a number of shows, including
Seinfeld, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Mad About You, and Entourage. I'm Tonya Mosley, and
this is Fresh Air Weekend.
Pop Culture Happy Hour, NPR's easy breezy laid back pop culture podcast has brought
you the best in culture for the past 15 years.
That means we spent the last 15 years talking about what exactly?
Bad reality TV, actually good Marvel movies.
Actually awful Marvel movies.
Reboots, pop music, prestige dramas, Netflix slop.
That's 15 years of buzzy pop culture chit chat.
And here's to many more with you along for the ride.
Listen to Pop Culture Happy Hour on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts.
Tanya Mosely
This is Fresh Air Weekend. I'm Tanya Mosely.
Terry has our next interview. I'll let her introduce it.
Tanya Mosely
My guest, Larry Charles, has been an integral part of TV shows and films that both reflected and made an impact on American popular
culture. He was a writer on Seinfeld, showrunner on Mad About You, a writer and
executive producer on HBO's Entourage, and a director and executive producer on
Curb Your Enthusiasm. He directed Sacha Baron Cohen's films Borat and Bruno. He also
collaborated with Bob Dylan on the film Mast and Anonymous. Larry Charles has a
new memoir called Comedy Samurai, 40 years of blood, guts, and laughter. When he says
blood and guts he means it. He and Sacha Baron Cohen took enormous risks with
their films in which Baron Cohen took his characters Borat and Bruno into the
real world and shot scenes with people characters, Borat and Bruno, into the real world
and shot scenes with people who thought
Borat and Bruno were real people.
To expose anti-Semitism, racism, and homophobia,
Baron Cohn's fictional characters pushed his targets
to reveal their darker feelings and beliefs,
and it sometimes ended in near violence,
with Baron Cohn, Larry Charles, and the crew fleeing.
Larry Charles also did a documentary series
called Larry Charles's Dangerous World of Comedy
where he went to dangerous places
run by authoritarian rulers or were controlled by militias
to see what comedy was like there.
Larry Charles, welcome to Fresh Air.
Welcome back to Fresh Air.
Thank you.
It's great to be here again.
Thank you so much.
So the book starts with you having a heart attack
and thinking this might be the end.
Did facing the prospect of death make you rethink parts
of your life and lead you to think you rewrite
parts of the book?
Well, I think it gave me a little more
perspective on my own mortality.
I have been obsessed with death since I'm
a kid, but the reality of death and the obsession with death are two very different things.
And so I think I wanted to go back and be a little more honest and take a little bit
more responsibility for my behavior. And I did add that layer to the book after all this
happened.
Yeah, because as part of the book where you write,
you realized you were the agent of your own misfortune.
Very much so, yes.
And that happened after.
I had some bad agents, believe me,
but I was the agent of my misfortune.
So you realized this after the heart attack
or you already knew it?
Well, you know, I have been sort of contemplating
all those things. I've been through therapy.
I mean, I've done a lot of self-reflection.
When you're a writer and you're sitting alone in a room, you have a lot of time to think.
So I've thought about a lot of these things, but I don't think, I think that I've thought
about them, but I hadn't really incorporated them or absorbed them or believed them completely
until this event occurred. So you joined on the second season of Seinfeld and often shows have a so-called Bible that's
supposed to lay out the tone and sensibility of the show and the shape of the episodes.
What kind of prep were you given when you joined Seinfeld?
None.
I mean, the only thing I had was Larry had given me a couple of the scripts before the
show premiered. And so I got to read
The Chinese Restaurant and The Bus Boy and a couple of the other early episodes when the show was just
before the show actually even was produced. And that was it. I never had any other exposure to
the show until I went to work on it. And I don't think that Jerry and Larry were quite sure themselves what the show should be. There was no Seinfeld. It's like it's funny when we look at
it now in retrospect, we go, oh, well, yes, it has these elements to it. But none of those things
actually existed at one time and they had to be constructed from scratch. So one of your famous
episodes is the library where Jerry has a book that he took out of the library in high school and is accused of having never returned it, although he's
sure that he did.
And in the scene I want to play, the librarian investigations officer, in the tone of a hard-boiled
police detective, warns Jerry about the gravity of this violation and what the consequences
might be for the larger society.
And the librarian is played by the late and wonderful actor Philip Baker Hall.
You took this book out in 1971.
Yes, and I returned it in 1971.
Yeah, in 1971. That was my first year on the job.
Bad year for libraries.
Bad year for America.
Hippies burning library cards.
Abbey Huffman telling everybody to steal books.
I don't judge a man by the length of his hair
or the kind of music he listens to.
Rock was never my bag.
But you put on a pair of shoes
when you walk into the New York Public Library, fella.
Look, Mr. Bookman.
I...
I returned that book.
I remember it very specifically.
You're a comedian.
You make people laugh.
I try.
You think this is all a big joke, don't you?
No, I don't.
I saw you on TV once.
I remembered your name from my list.
I looked it up.
Sure enough, it checked out.
You think because you're a celebrity
that somehow the law doesn't apply to you,
that you're above the law?
Certainly not.
Well, let me tell you something funny, boy.
You know that little stamp,
the one that says New York Public Library?
Well, that may not mean anything to you,
but that means a lot to me.
One whole hell of a lot.
Sure, go ahead and laugh if you want to.
I've seen your type before.
Flashy, making the scene,
flaunting convention.
Yeah, I know what you're thinking.
This guy's making such a big stink
about old library books.
Let me give you a hint, Juneau.
Maybe we can live without libraries.
People like you and me, maybe.
Sure, we're too old to change the world.
What about that kid sitting down,
opening a book right now in a branch of the local library
and finding drawings of peepees and weewees
and the cat in the hat and the five Chinese brothers?
Doesn't he deserve better?
Look, if you think this is
about overdue fines and missing books, you better think again. This is about
that kid's right to read a book without getting his mind ward.
That is still so funny and seems so relevant. It holds up so well. What
afterlife has it had? Well, it's my favorite thing.
I mean, when I hear it, sitting here listening to it,
I had a big grin on my face.
It's like it's joyous in some weird way, you know?
And it also kind of illustrates why
Seinfeld was different than most other shows
because the influence of that particular scene
really comes from a non-comedic source, Dragonet. And I loved Dragonet and I loved how funny Dragonet
was because the rhythms they created were so unique and that's what I tried
to recreate in that scene. And of course Philip Baker Hall was so serious, he
played it so straight that it was hilarious. And I
could listen to that. I have to say I don't like to watch my own work or even
listen to my own work or be you know even think about my past work but that
particular scene really does bring me a lot of joy. So what was the genesis of
the idea of it being like all of this hard-boiled stuff was about a library book
Well, I mean again you were you know one thing about Seinfeld and and Larry went through this a lot as well
It's like the desperation for stories and we were always seeking some kind of premise
Some kind of funny conceit that you could build an episode around and I had read
kind of funny conceit that you could build an episode around. And I had read about somebody who had kept a book for 20 years or something and the library
didn't know what to do.
And I thought that was a funny idea.
And then I thought about this character who would be the library cop who would have to
go and sort of enforce the fine or the law.
And then that kind of like dovetailed with a Kramer
romantic thing with the librarian all those things sort of started to weave
together rather organically and an episode sort of emerged from it so it
was very lucky that those elements sort of came together.
You describe yourself as a punk from Brooklyn in what sense did you think of
yourself as a punk?
Well I mean there was a what sense did you think of yourself as a punk?
Well, I mean, there was a literal sense
and a kind of a sensibility sense.
Again, I was attracted to underground literature,
Jean Genet, Hubert Selby, Last Exit to Brooklyn,
Charles Bukowski.
I liked, again, outsider stuff attracted me.
Why?
I don't know, but that's what I sort of gravitated
towards. In movies, I was a gigantic fan of John Waters. I would go into the city at that
time and it was a fertile time in the city for that sort of stuff. And you could see
underground movies by Ken Jacobs or Jack Smith or all these interesting underground filmmakers.
And so there was this other thing going on.
There was this other art being made and music.
You could go to CBGB and for a couple of bucks you could see the talking heads and the Ramones
and blondie all on the same bill, you know.
And so for very little money you could be exposed to really interesting and edgy and
outsider culture. And I really gravitated to that. for very little money you could be exposed to really interesting and edgy and outsider
culture and I really gravitated to that.
What made you love comedy?
Well my father was a failed comedian.
He what?
Yeah, he came out of World War II and used the GI Bill to go to the American Academy
of Dramatic Arts and he tried stand-up comedy for quite a while.
His stage name was Psycho, the exotic neurotic.
And he would have material, like in a trunk, in his closet.
And I would go in there and read that material
on this onion skin paper, typed up.
And he was always on, my father was always on.
He was more concerned with me,
rather than learning math or science.
He wanted me to learn the dialogue from White Heat or he would be quoting Jerry Lewis, you
know?
And so I was just exposed to that.
And even though when he even when he dropped out of show business, he had a lot of friends
who stayed in it, not necessarily as actors or comedians, but they became like
lighting directors or the stage manager at the Ed Sullivan show, a guy named Tony Jordan.
And then he would take me, my dad would take me to the Ed Sullivan rehearsals and I would
see the rehearsals and I became fascinated.
He was very into the glitz and glam, but I became fascinated by the behind the scenes
stuff.
Like this is how you do a TV show. And I'd be really, really into that and questions about that. And that kind
of planted a bunch of seeds in my head as well.
Well, just the fact that you had some kind of connection to that world must have made
that world seem more reachable than it seems to most people.
It still was far away. I mean, we would going back to Brooklyn I mean I couldn't imagine how to break through it was really Woody Allen reading about Woody Allen at that time in the 60s
And how he sold jokes to comedians from being from that neighborhood and selling jokes to comedians
That seemed to be like something I might be able to do is that how you ended up selling jokes in front of the comedy
Store exactly. I thought that is my that that's my one in. I can sort of write
jokes. I could, and I didn't even have a typewriter. I mean they were handwritten
and I would stand in front of the Comedy Store like a drug dealer and like stop
comedians that I recognized and go you want to buy a joke. And comedians were
pretty cool and it was a golden age of comedy at the Comedy Store.
You had Richard Pryor trying out material.
Robin Williams was there every night.
And the two big comedians were David Letterman and Jay Leno,
ironically enough.
And Jay Leno was a guy that bought material.
And I stopped him, and he said, oh, yeah, this is a good joke.
I'll try it out on stage.
If it works, I'll give you 10 bucks.
And it worked and I got 10 bucks.
Do you remember the joke?
It had something to do with Delta airlines, the airline run by professionals.
What do they have on the other ones?
Amateurs?
You know, something like that.
So what would you do say like, Hey buddy, want a joke?
I mean, well, how come, how come they would take you seriously and not like
just push you away and keep walking?
I had paper. I had like legal pages with me, you know. I would literally shove it at them.
I was, you know, at that time things were much more open. You know, there wasn't like security issues or fear.
Everybody was hanging out. It was a very loose atmosphere and people needed material.
And here I was saying, I have it. I have material.
And so, you know, not everybody responded, but quite a few really cool guys did respond.
And I wound up being able to write for them.
I want to get back to your heart attack in March of 2024 and your close call with death. You're Jewish by birth and culture,
but you don't practice Judaism.
And I don't think you believe in God per se.
You directed Bill Maher's documentary, Religious,
and Maher really doesn't believe in God or religion
and kind of scoffs at people who do.
Some non-believers become believers and start praying just in
case there's a God when they think they might be facing death. What about you when you were
afraid that you were really facing death?
Pete Well, first of all, I can accept the idea that there may be some intelligence to
the universe. How that manifests itself, I think, is beyond our comprehension. I didn't turn to God.
That wasn't an option for me.
I just had come to that belief system, and it seemed too hypocritical for me to suddenly
leap on that bandwagon.
So that was not an option for me.
But I think it did expand my compassion. I think it did expand my understanding and my commitment to alleviating
suffering. These were things that were not a concern of mine for most of my life. And
so now that is something that infuses my daily life.
You write in your memoir that hugging and learning is anathema to comedy. And one of
the models that I don't know who came up with it about Seinfeld was no hugging
no learning and you go on to say coldness callousness uncaring
uncompassionate disdain skepticism scoffing at seriousness these are the
building blocks of comedy and there was no room for genuine emotion do you still
feel like those negative feelings are the drivers of
comedy and there's no room for genuine emotion? Yeah, I mean I think the only
genuine, the only genuine emotion that really seems to sort of fuel comedy is
anger. That is the emotion that I think does exist in comedy and I think a lot
of comedians are working
through that anger, whether it be Mel Brooks, one of the sweetest people in the world, or
you know, someone like Bill Burr or Louis C.K. or whoever it might be, you will feel
some sort of anger. They have aggression towards the world that they have been, towards the
hand they have been dealt. And, but yeah do I do still kind of believe that if it feels like if you are
crying or you're feeling love you're not laughing.
It's funny because Jerry Seinfeld is often offered as the person who doesn't
fit all of that like anger being the driving engine of his comedy.
Well, that's true, but I think there probably is more anger there than we see on the surface.
And something we brought out in the show was that Jerry has a very dark side and a very
cold side that he kind of has a sadistic glee about and is part of his comedy. And he just is able to project a kind of sweetness, which is also real.
But that sort of a dichotomy in him is part of the driving force of his comedy.
He could be very impatient.
You know, he could be very intolerant of other people's point of view.
That's a lot of where his comedy comes from.
He's making fun of what other people's point of view. That's a lot of where his comedy comes from. He's making fun of what other people believe.
And so there is there is a lot of aggression to that as well, even though he presents it in a very
palatable way, you know.
You write that now, you know, post heart attack you think about death and impermanence every day, in addition to
thinking more about trying to help people who are suffering and be more
generous. Where else has that led you, thinking about death and impermanence?
I think I've come to some sort of acceptance of the finite quality of this life. And that
was something that was hard for me to really accept. I really did not like the idea.
I still don't like the idea of all of this being over.
It seems ridiculous to me that you go through this whole thing and all these problems, you
cause pain, you receive pain, and then at the end you die.
You know, when I see people talking about legacies, I kind of laugh in a way because
it's all so temporary and it's all so short.
So I know I can't change that.
So I've tried to come to some level of acceptance about it.
Larry Charles, it's been a pleasure to talk with you.
Thank you so much for coming back to Fresh Air.
Great to talk to you again, Terry, anytime.
Larry Charles' new memoir is titled Comedy Samurai.
He spoke with Terry Gross.
Fresh Air Weekend was produced this week by Susan Yakundy.
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