Fresh Air - Best Of: Ramy Youssef / Danny McBride
Episode Date: May 17, 2025Ramy Youssef's new animated comedy series, #1 Happy Family USA, is about an Egyptian American Muslim family living in New Jersey, after 9/11, trying to blend in and doing everything they can to avoid ...being seen as a threat. Youssef spoke with Terry Gross about the series and his own experience during that time. Also, Danny McBride talks with Tonya Mosley about his HBO series The Righteous Gemstones, about a wildly dysfunctional family of televangelists fighting for power, influence, and their father's approval.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Politics is a lot these days. I'm Sarah McCammon, a co-host of the NPR Politics Podcast,
and I'll be the first to tell you what happens in Washington definitely demands some decoding.
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Join us as we make politics make sense on the NPR Politics Podcast, available wherever you get your podcasts. From W.H.Y.Y. in Philadelphia, this is Fresh Air Weekend.
I'm Tanya Mosley.
Today, Rami Youssef, his new animated comedy series,
Number One Happy Family USA, is about an Egyptian American
Muslim family living in New Jersey after 9-11, trying to blend in
and doing everything they can to avoid being
seen as a threat. At the heart of the story is a middle schooler dealing with a double dose of paranoia.
Is Courtney the popular girl talking about me behind my back and are the phones tapped?
And usually people just have to deal with the Courtney part.
people just have to deal with the Courtney part. Also, Danny McBride talks about his HBO series,
The Righteous Gemstones,
about a wildly dysfunctional family of televangelists
fighting for power, influence, and their father's approval.
We get into what keeps drawing him
to these hilariously flawed, emotionally stunted characters,
and he shares the surprising inspiration
behind the signature
swagger his characters always seem to carry.
George Jefferson, he honestly is like one of my favorite characters when I was a kid.
I just thought he was so funny and how mean he was and funny he was and that little bit
of a swagger he had.
That's coming up on Fresh Air Weekend.
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This is Fresh Air Weekend.
I'm Tanya Mosley.
Here's our first interview with Terry Gross.
My guest Rami Yousef started as a stand-up comic. Then he created and starred in the semi-autobiographical
comedy-drama series called Rami about a twenty-something Egyptian-American Muslim
trying to make sense of how his life, including his sex life, fit with his commitment to Islam.
The series won a Peabody Award,
and he won a Golden Globe for his performance.
Yousef co-created the comedy-drama series Mo,
starring his friend Mo Amr
as an undocumented Palestinian American.
Last year, Yousef hosted Saturday Night Live
and had an HBO comedy special called More Feelings.
His acting career is taking off.
He stars with Steve Carell and Jason Schwartzman
in the new HBO movie Mountainhead,
which debuts May 31st.
It was written and directed by Jesse Armstrong,
the creator of HBO's succession.
In 2023, Yusef co-starred in the film Poor Things,
which won a Golden Globe for best motion picture,
musical or Comedy,
and was nominated for an Oscar for Best Picture.
Rami Youssef has a new animated series set just before and after 9-11.
It's about an extended family of Egyptian Americans in New Jersey.
The parents and grandparents are immigrants.
The children were born in America.
Each of them is trying to figure out how to
respond to the Islamophobia that's resulted from the terrorist attack on 9-11. Rami Youssef
was 11 years old and in fifth grade on 9-11. That's about the same age as the boy in the
series. The series is called Number One Happy Family USA and that's streaming on Amazon
Prime. In the father's attempt to prevent
people from noticing they're an immigrant family and Muslim, he does his
best to blend in by doing his best to construct the image of a happy average
American family but because he doesn't quite understand American culture just
about everything he does to fit in is wrong which only makes him stand out even
more. The mother wants to stand up and defend Islam.
This is a scene from the first episode, which takes place on 9-11,
when the father and mother clash over how to respond.
Rami Youssef does the voices of the father and the son.
Salma Hindi voices the mother.
Busa Rumi, a lot happened today.
Many people got hurt. This is the worst thing I have ever seen.
Things are going to change for us. People are going to look at us differently just because of who we are.
And what we must do now more than ever is...
Find our face and be strong.
No! We must blend in and change our values as much as possible.
We will change everything about who we are to fit in.
We must always be cheerful. We will never stick out.
We, from today, have no culture.
When people see our family, they won't think Arab.
They will think they are happy. They are perfect.
We are number one happy family USA.
Remy Youssef, welcome to Fresh Air.
It's such a pleasure to have you back on the show.
That scene is so funny.
I love it when the father says from now on,
we have no culture.
It's really great to be back after many years.
I really appreciate it.
And yeah, it was this idea of
Really tapping into how you know, it's almost kind of it is really funny and it's it's so cool that it gets to be funny
But it's obviously there's the other part of it. That's really sad, which is hey
Maybe if I try to erase as much of myself
I'll be able to fit in and I think that's the idea that I'm obsessed with
You know, there's obviously all the conversations about overt racism, Islamophobia, all these things on
the outside. The parts that I always tend to hone in on is, well, what is the person
doing to themselves amidst all that pressure?
What were the discussions like in your family living in New Jersey after 9-11? Were there
conversations in your family about whether to stand up and
defend diversity and defend Islam or whether to just, like you said, erase part of themselves?
Yeah, I mean, I don't know that it was exactly hit the erase button, but it really was, okay,
you know, because it's such a sad, terrible thing, and we're just near,
you know, the site of death of so many people who, you know, innocent people. So there's that piece
where you're just as sad as everyone else, but then it turns towards you and who you are. And so
you kind of go, okay, we should be quiet or something. It's incredibly confusing. It's
incredibly disorienting. And I think within my family, we were always proud of who we were and
where we come from. And at the same time, you kind of don't want to rock the boat. And I think my
father was very pragmatic about it all. And I remember him kind of being like, you know,
my family is really well read. They really, you know, I grew up with books all over the house and my
dad was just like, yeah, Japanese people went through a lot after Pearl Harbor
happened. He was already kind of saying almost there was this feeling of this
might be our turn right now and, you know, that was at the time and then now
it's kind of like, so when does the turn end exactly?
What's going on?
Yeah.
Did you code switch a lot when you were 11, after 9-11?
The cartoon version of The Sun does.
Part of the code switching is not just the way he talks.
It's also what he wears to try to look like all American.
Yeah, I mean, I grew up in New Jersey and and it was there was this like
burgeoning emo rock scene and I was so jealous of my friends who had the straight hair and wore the tight pants and I had
This curly fro and I I tried to hide it with a hat
I was always wearing hats and you know even in my older age
It's like such a holdover from being a kid and trying to just stuff
it under a hat.
But the beauty of this series for me has been that I think everyone code switches.
And I think we leaned into this animated style where the family literally looks different
when they're inside the house and when they're outside the house.
And I think to an extent, everybody does that.
And what becomes the larger pressure cooker is that there is this performance that this
family is literally doing for the FBI agent who moves in across the street.
But at that core, underneath all of it, I think this is what everybody does.
And I think it's certainly what kids do.
And so in so many ways, it really feels like this quintessential just middle school experience but you add onto it the
creation of homeland security.
Right.
A good reason to be paranoid.
Like you have every reason to feel like you're sticking out, you're not fitting in and maybe
that means prison.
Yeah, it's very much, okay, is Courtney the popular girl talking about me behind my
back and are the phones tapped?
Yeah.
You know, and usually people just have to deal with the Courtney part and and and now
this kid has has both of them and and that's where the series lives. So there's briefly a grandfather in the series and
he is very sexist. Like he is the man and he has control, especially control over
his wife. He's grumpy, he orders people around and at one point he says, I
sacrificed everything for this family. Most men of my generation hit. And he's referring to hitting women.
And he says, I only yell.
I didn't even take a second wife.
So did you have a grandfather who was like that?
And if so, how did you deal with it?
Like, did you say anything?
My grandparents never lived with us.
I mean, this is trying to kind of create something
that's more emblematic of that generational thing than my actual grandfather, who was
quite different and was also, you know, my grandfather is really interesting because
he grew up in a village. He was one of two people who could read. And then he took that
and became one of the only ones there again who went to college and then actually
became an interpreter for the United Nations. He interpreted between Arabic and French and
English for over 20 years. So he's kind of this totally different mold, I think, of that,
Jen, because he was such a...
Can I just stop you for a second? That's amazing he was one of two people in his village who
could read and became a UN translator.
It is so much more impressive.
Sometimes people say to me, oh dude, you were just like a kid in New Jersey and now you
have this whole Hollywood thing.
And I go, man, in terms of arcs within my family, that's not really, it's like, yeah,
I should have.
Of course I have to look at what came before me.
I mean, he set the bar.
We're listening to Terry's interview with Rami Youssef.
His new series is called Number One Happy Family USA.
We'll hear more of their conversation after a break.
I'm Tonya Mosley, and this is Fresh Air Weekend.
So you write and sing songs for this series and I want to play one
that's I think you can describe it as the theme song and it ends the first
episode of number one Happy Family USA. So let's hear it and then we'll talk
about writing songs. So this is in the voice of the father. We will prove to you our love. We will be number one, number one family in USA.
Number one happy family USA.
He's not sure.
Takes a boy.
So what made you think you should turn part of this
into a musical?
So yeah, that song comes out of the earlier clip
that you played where he kind of proclaims
out of peak anxiety to his family
that they're gonna erase their identity
and then he bursts the door open and starts singing this proclamation to the neighborhood and forces his family
to come out and dance with him on the front lawn. And then the song, as you can kind of
hear there, ends with the police swarming the house, a helicopter, and then Hussein sacrificing his son to the
authorities, you know, hoping that that will appease them. And, you know, I felt this,
it's either gonna be we're making something depressing or something so insane that you
have to laugh at this depressing subtext. And so it had to be the latter. And that's where music just started
to feel like such a fun extension.
Have you ever been in a band?
In high school, I was in a band and played backup guitar, backup vocals, and always fiddled
around with guitars.
And then I kind of had put the music thing down
as I kind of went into comedy and performing and all of that.
And then we were doing these voices at a sound studio
that had all these instruments.
And I probably picked up the guitar for the first time
after many, many years and started singing these songs
as the dad and had so much fun
and then we ended up baking it into the show.
In your band, did you do covers or originals?
It was originals and if you go back and listen to the originals, you'd probably encourage
us to do covers.
Well, in addition to like the number one happy family song that we just heard, you write
some some dark songs and I want to play a dark song.
This is a father singing.
One of the lines he sings is sometimes the darkness comes for me.
This is his like deep internal feelings, not the facade he's trying to put on.
So let's hear that.
Do you want to say anything about it before we hear it?
This comes at the end of an episode where we've seen him probably be his most performative
and then he has this moment when everyone's asleep and he goes out into the driveway and
sits by his halal cart. He's a halal cart vendor in the city and it's always parked in the driveway
And I love that image because it sticks out in this suburb that they can barely afford and he sits at it
Starts playing guitar and at a certain point there's like a piano line in which he hits
the area of the cart where the sodas are stored and it opens up into a keyboard and
there's a piano that comes out of the
cart and so he's singing this thing that sounds sad but at the same time visually is I think
quite funny.
And it's the kind of thing you can only do in animation.
Yes.
Yeah.
Okay.
Let's hear it. Show them that I'm brave Sometimes I'm quiet
But I think it's just because I might scream
I've got to be Mr. Tough Guy
I'm the dad
But sometimes
Oh, oh the darkness
Comes for me And I don't know what to do
Yeah the darkness, oh it comes for you too
And what do you do?
I think I'm gonna fight for the light
Yeah
I think I'm gonna fight for the light
I think I'm gonna fight for the light
I think I'm gonna fight for the light. Baby, I'm fighting the fight.
Do I detect a very slight Lou Reed influence in that?
Somebody called it Kebab Dylan.
Somebody else was like, wait, dude, this is like war on drugs.
This is like some sort of Arab Jeff Buckley thing.
Yeah, it's totally this folk thing that is so fun to do as this character,
because it kind of sneaks up on you.
And again, he's so crazy the whole episode.
And then all of a sudden you go, oh my this guy's so tender and there's this tenderness in
him and that is the experience of so many of the men that I know where you go
oh man this dude is like kind of intense and then you get him alone and you go
wait is this the most emotional person on earth? Yeah okay and and I want to point out again that that
was my guest Rami Yousef singing on that song. Is that your guitar also? It is. Good
for you. And that was an excerpt from Rami Yousef's new animated series,
Number One Happy Family USA. You started out in college studying political science and I think economics
as well. I'm not sure where that came from considering where you've ended up,
but how did you go from that to comedy? I was very bad at school and so I ended
up, you know, I ended up leaving. I was always in high school, really middle school and high
school, I was fascinated with cameras and I was always making things. And then in the
back of my head, I said, this is what I love doing the most, but there's no way I'm going
to be able to actually live doing this. And I didn't see a path to it being a career because I
didn't know anyone who had ever done that so I just thought I had to go to
school and become a lawyer you know because that was kind of the only thing
I could imagine myself doing even if I had no real connection to like the law I
just said well I know how to talk and it seems like those guys talk and then
they're able to feed their families by talking. So that was kind of all I could see.
Nothing to it.
And then I was, you know, there's some books you got to read in the middle.
And then, and then there, this comedy thing comes up and you go, oh, well, you could talk here, too.
And this is way more in line with what I love about art and filmmaking.
And so, yeah, it just became inevitable at a certain point.
It seems to me that the stand-up comedy world
is so different than what the life of a faithful Muslim
would look like.
Because, you know, I don't know what circles you traveled in,
but you think of stand-up comics, first of all,
of, you know, just being on the road all the time,
and having really bad eating habits,
and drinking a lot.
So were there parts of your life,
especially early on when you had to,
you probably had less control of your life early on
when you started in standup.
Even things like, is it five times a day?
Yeah.
Yeah, praying five times a day,
like as a young comic on the road.
Yeah.
I'm sure there were some very inopportune times
that you wanted to pray and you were on like a bus
or a plane or doing a set.
Yeah. How do you manage that? Like, what,
do you have to make certain compromises?
Well, this is a great thing. There's so many great features that are built into it. You
just do travelers prayers where you can combine. I mean, it's amazing.
Oh, there's travelers prayers?
There's all these, oh yeah.
Are there special prayers? Oh.
You can combo. You can combo and shorten and, But I think the thing you're talking about though in terms of
fitting it in in certain places, this is where I actually think an artistic lifestyle is so interesting because... So my father worked managing hotels, always on his feet, always dealing with
people, hey, where do I pray? The broom closet, there's that, and it's just like, where is that
going to happen? And then when you're an artist, there's that. And it's just like, where's that gonna happen?
And then, you know, when you're an artist,
it's like everyone assumes you're gonna be 20 minutes late.
You know, there's this whole other, you know,
kind of way and I always think, you know,
I'm surrounded by spiritual people, you know,
whether they are, you know,
part of any sort of practicing thing or not.
Because Hollywood is basically,
hey, I have this 130-page thing,
and I know you don't see it yet, but I see it.
I believe in the unseen of these words on this page.
Come with me, and let's all believe in it together and make it, right?
It's such a spiritual place.
Everyone is tapping into, you know, the unseen. Do you have prayer breaks for everybody who wants it on your sets?
We do.
Yeah, it's on our call sheet.
Rami Youssef, it's really been such a pleasure to have you back on the show.
Thank you so much.
Oh, thank you for the, you know, just incredibly thoughtful questions.
It's always just so exciting.
So I thank you, Terry.
That was Terry Gross speaking with Rami Youssef. His new animated series is called
Number One Happy Family USA.
It's now streaming on Amazon Prime Video.
Well, up next is my conversation with Danny McBride.
His latest show, The Righteous Jim Stones,
just finished its fourth and final season.
It's a dark comedy about a rich southern family of televangelists who talk about salvation
on TV, but behind the scenes it's all dysfunction, greed, scandal, and sometimes even crime.
We watch throughout the show's run the most ridiculous antics, a mass baptism in a wave pool gone wrong, a full frontal parking lot fight scene,
and the gospel banger misbehavin'.
At the center of the Gemstone family is Eli Gemstone, played by John Goodman, and his
three deeply flawed adult children, who are constantly caught up in rivalries and schemes
to keep their religious empire intact. In this scene I'm about to play, the three siblings, played by McBride, Edie Patterson,
and Adam Devine, are trying to convince their dad Eli, who has retired as the head preacher,
to come back to the church for a fundraising event to honor their late mom.
Goodman's character Eli, who speaks first in this clip, has left town on a boat to escape
the church and the family.
What can I do for you kids?
Ain't nobody heard whether you were coming back for mama's birthday celebration telethon?
I'm just curious if maybe your RSVP is floating around some bottle out here.
Yeah, well, I'm not gonna make it.
What?
Why come?
It's for mama, daddy.
Yeah, that's your dead wife from every dude.
Of course. I just, I'm out here.
I'm trying to wrestle with things. I'm trying to figure out what I need.
This dude's down here wasting away in Margaritaville
thinking he's f***ing Robinson Caruso.
Like you f***ing Tom Hanks from that one motion picture.
Philadelphia.
No, not the AIDS one, the buy-his-self one.
No, the, uh, ah, dang, I the AIDS one, the by-his-self one. No, the, uh, dang, I just had it.
The by-his-self one.
What is the f***ing Tom Hanks by-his-self one?
Castaway.
Castaway.
Bingo.
That's what you're doing, Daddy.
You out here acting like you in that f***ing motion picture.
Danny McBride has built a career, really an empire, as a writer, actor, and producer,
with a sharp sense for the ridiculous side of
masculinity and ambition. He creates men who are loud, delusional, and hilarious in part because
they are totally unlikable. Think Kenny Powers, the trash-talking, washed-up baseball player in
Eastbound and Down, or Neil Gamby, the petty, power-hungry vice-principal in Vice Principals.
His films include This Is the End, T-hungry vice principal in Vice Principals. His films include This
Is the End, Tropic Thunder, and Pineapple Express. Most of The Righteous Gemstones was
filmed in and around Charleston, South Carolina, where McBride has carved out his own version
of Hollywood's South with his longtime collaborators David Gordon Green and Jodie Hill, running
their production company, Rough House Pictures.
And Danny McBride, welcome back to Fresh Air.
Thank you so much.
I appreciate being on here.
Remind us of how this idea kind of came about.
I read that you initially wanted to write something
about the Memphis mafia right around the time
that Elvis died.
I did.
I had an idea I was working on called The King is Dead
that was all about sort of that summer when Elvis died
and it was, you know, it was gonna be a crime story
about the Dixie Mafia and...
I don't know, I just, I was playing around with it,
but I never really found the right angle into it,
but there was a lot of details and things I liked about that world
and that, uh, I don't know, that attitude for characters.
And so I kind of had put a pin in that for a while.
I wasn't sure what to do with that story.
And after I moved to Charleston, South Carolina,
which was in 2017, I just, once I got here,
I moved from Los Angeles.
I just was seeing how many churches were around.
And it just got me kind of thinking about when I was a kid,
I used to go to church a lot.
I was raised in a pretty religious family. And it just kind of got kind of thinking about when I was a kid, I used to go to church a lot, I was raised in a pretty religious family,
and it just kind of got my brain thinking about
what church is like now,
and so I started doing some digging around
and kind of researching,
and that's when I kind of came around this idea
of these mega churches and kind of like noticing
how they were starting to inhabit
old box retail stores here in the South,
and they were just kind of popping up everywhere,
and the more I kind of dug around on it,
the more it kind of seemed like, well,
maybe that Dixie Mafia story could unfold
in a televangelist family.
Maybe we could mash those two things together.
You mentioned that your family was religious.
What did that look like?
You know, when I was a kid, we were Southern Baptists,
and both my parents were pretty heavily
involved in the church.
And we were one of those families where they were like every Sunday, we'd be there on
Wednesdays.
My mom, she did puppet ministry at the church.
So we would help her take these puppets to church early Sunday morning.
So we were pretty involved.
And then when I was in sixth grade,
my parents got divorced and yeah,
it was a really interesting thing
because we had kind of given this church
so much of our time and then kind of we were there
and it was like my mom just sort of raising me
and my sister.
And then suddenly like,
the church wasn't so much of a welcoming place.
There was a lot of judgmental eyes there
because my mom had gotten a
divorce. I remember it being a very eye-opening experience for me about some of the people that
went to that church and about that level of acceptance and kind of, I don't know, it might
have been honestly where the initial spark of just like, wow, everyone's here to learn about one
thing, but it's interesting how everyone here doesn't necessarily, you know, take that and behave that way.
When you were helping your mom with her puppet shows, were you working on
ideas too? I'm thinking about you as a young storyteller.
You know, I was just inspired by her.
I remember when she first started doing it, when she got like a typewriter.
And I remember like watching her write these sort of like two or three page,
you know, little plays that they would end up doing on Sunday and I never helped with them or wrote on them,
but I remember watching her do it and then I got to,
I would hear them and then I would see what was performed
and I just always kind of admired it.
I thought it was cool that she was doing that.
So I just think that from seeing my mom be a storyteller
at such a young age, I think it definitely kind of made an impact on me as far as like, you know, that that's something people can do,
that you can craft a story and use it to kind of connect with people.
You know, one of the things about the series I find remarkable is, like, it skews this
world of big time preachers and televangelists, but it never feels like it's mocking
the sincerity of their faith.
And I'm just wondering, how did you find the balance
like between, I guess I would say like satire and respect.
Like did you ever go too far in your writing
and then think, okay, I gotta pull this back a little bit.
We're always self-censoring, I guess.
We'll always do it first, and then we'll decide
as it goes on what's too far and what's not enough.
But it was interesting when I started this,
and I met with the other writers,
that was something as I was watching other comedies
that are set in the world of religion,
that was one thing I kind of noticed with all of them,
is that there was a level of disrespect there
towards just people believing in something. And I don't
know, I didn't, it did, that stuff didn't resonate for me. And I felt like I wasn't
in on the joke. The joke felt a little bit like, I don't know, biting pessimistic, you
know, it's, it's, it's easy for someone who doesn't believe in something to just be like,
haha, look at all these idiots. And that to me just didn't seem like what I wanted to
spend my time doing.
And so from the get-go, that was sort of what I told the writers. I'm like, listen, I don't
ever want any of the jokes to really be about like religion. I don't want them to be about
someone's faith. You know, like let's we're setting these characters in here who are hypocrites
and like let's make them the butt of the joke. And from that, we might be able to actually
explore something even greater and even open the door to more people coming into the show than maybe would normally.
Our guest is Danny McBride, creator and star of The Righteous Jim Stones.
We'll be right back after a short break.
I'm Tonya Mosley, and this is Fresh Air Weekend.
My guest today is Danny McBride, actor, writer, and the creative mind behind HBO's The Righteous
Gemstones.
He's also known for his breakout role as Kenny Powers in Eastbound and Down, and the
unhinged school administrator in Vice Principals.
The Righteous Gemstones, which just completed its fourth and final season, is a satirical
comedy about a dysfunctional
Southern televangelist family. I gotta play a clip to give people kind of a
grounding of this. The thing about the gemstone kids is that I don't think
anybody ever really talks the way they do and yet they kind of feel really
believable. So this clip I'm about to play is from season two and it's the
three siblings, you, your
sister played by Edie Patterson and your brother played by Adam Devine and you all are standing
by this statue of your late mother and you've got this announcement to make that soon you
will be the head of the church and of course the three of you start fighting. Your character
speaks first. Let's listen.
We set my dominance or don't, doesn't matter to me. The damn tides of time and the winds of dust are upon us.
My reign is nigh.
What the f*** did you even just say, man?
That made no sense to me, that sounded foreign.
That's not a phrase, dummy.
Oh, Mike.
You're just both a bunch of two-bit half-rate siblings.
Damn Frank Stallone and f***ing Stephen Baldwin over here.
I'm Stephen Baldwin?
Yes, you are. Oh.
No, you fucking did not.
I ain't got no time for this.
Bye Felicia.
Okay, no.
What did he just say?
No.
Did he just say bye Felicia to me?
Yeah, what does that mean?
Bye Felicia.
Jesse, you will never run this family.
So bye Felicia to you, Jesse.
Who's Felicia?
You are.
No, you're Felicia.
Let's just all act like adults.
You're Felicia. Yeah. We can act like adults if he's Felicia you are no you're Felicia. She's all act like adults you're Felicia yeah we can act like adults if he's Felicia because I'm not f***ing Felicia
That was the scene from season two of the Righteous Jim Stones and my guest today is creator and star of the show Danny McBride
Okay first off Danny take me inside your brain What do you know about Bye Felicia? Are you ready for this now?
Oh God.
I mean, you know, I have, like I said, I have young kids, they're constantly on YouTube.
They're constantly showing me just silly stuff.
And so all of it ends up just bleeding into my head somewhere or another.
And the Gemstone siblings are just like so stunted that, I don't know, it just seems like they just
communicate in broken English mixed in with tons of pop culture.
One of the through lines, in addition to like trying to inherit an empire, the thing that
you do in The Righteous Jim's Stones is all of the children absolutely adore and worship
the memory of their mama.
And that love feels so authentic.
The mother wound they obviously have by her loss,
it almost feels like it's what makes them good
and redeemable.
It feels like they also really do love the Lord,
despite the fact that they're obviously messed up.
Yeah, I mean, I think that with that,
I mean, as we started, you know, it's interesting,
like when I first started writing the show, the very first attempt I had on the pilot
was it was, I was a minister in Edie, actually, I had written her to be my wife and we were
in a small church and I was being blackmailed by a bigger church that wanted to move in
on us and it was kind of, it was going to kind of be about us going up against that bigger church.
And I just was real... I'm struggling. I wrote that script and there was something
about it. I'm like, it just doesn't... I don't know where this goes and I'm not
really identifying with who this minister is. And there just wasn't enough there for
me to kind of put my hooks into. And then as I started really looking at the story,
I was kind of like, you know who's interesting
are the people that would blackmail
a small time minister to take his church.
And so then it was sort of like a light went off
and it was like, that's who this is about, you know?
And you know, a lot of people don't have experience
with running a mega church or can identify with that.
So for me, it suddenly became like, it's about a family
and it's a family who's suffered loss because I think that's something that people can identify with that. So for me, it suddenly became like it's about a family and it's a family
who's suffered loss because I think that's something that people can identify with. And
I think when you find those things that are relatable, then if you can hit those things
earnestly, I think you can then put those characters in any world and people will take the ride.
Have any church families or people just in general reached out to you and said, this is us?
Nobody has been that specific, but I did talk to different pastors when I was doing the show,
where before I did the show, I don't know if they would have talked to me after I was doing this show,
but there were people who definitely opened their doors to me and let me just pick their brains and ask questions
about how a church is run and about the minutia of it.
And there was one minister that I talked to
and he was very open about just how it was run
and how things worked.
And I saw him actually just a few months ago out in town
and he kind of came up and then whispered into my ear.
He's like, nobody knows I've seen it, but you nailed it. That's what he said. And when I saw my heart drops,
I'm like, Oh God, what's he going to say? Right. You're trying to avoid him. What percentage
of the show is kind of ad-libbed? You know, out of all the shows we've done, we definitely
did a lot of improv at Eastbound and a lot in VPs.
This show actually has the least amount of improv we probably have done of all of our
shows just because there's so many spinning plates with all the different characters and
everything that we always kind of just end up being up against the clock to pull it all
off.
So most of it is probably scripted more than anything we've done before, but we kind of
also allow ourselves that if somebody has an idea on the day,
we're not precious about anything.
And so scenes like at church lunch,
when you have all those characters sitting around there,
we would rip on those days for sure.
Like everybody would just kind of riff.
And those are the scenes where you have
the entire cast there.
So it'd be kind of foolish to film
and not let someone say something if they want to.
Can you recall a scene?
Oh, let's see, the church lunches,
they happen a lot in a lot of the seasons,
and so the schedule on Jemstones is very aggressive.
You know, a lot of times we have like two and three
location moves during the course of the day,
but church lunch, because there's so many characters
and it's on a set, it's like those were the days
we had the most control, so you would usually have a full day to shoot those scenes.
That just allowed for everybody, I think, A, to kind of take a breath and just like,
hey, we're all here just to have fun and there's not some ticking clock to be worked against.
You would just go around the table and Edie throws in something and then on the next take
Adam throws in something and, you know,
it just turns into all this chaos.
I mean, I think in the second season, I think it's like in the first episode, maybe,
we're sitting around that church lunch and we're talking about how Judy and BJ got married at Disney World.
And then we start, like, railing on her her about like, were any of the legacy characters present?
And like all of that stuff was all just improv.
It just, it was so fun just to kind of sit there and, you know,
Edie's got to be, uh,
she's got to be disgusted by us and we're poking holes in her wedding.
And so everyone's just throwing in all of their Disney knowledge and acting like
their Disney pros. But that was just how every day with all those characters were.
We would just have fun and try to ultimately make each other laugh.
Let's listen to that scene, which was in the second season.
Disney World was a thing.
It was BJ's dream wedding destination.
So we did it Nike style, dog.
We just did it.
Okay?
That's how we were all.
We're seat of our pants.
We're fun kids. We're whim babies, so...
We meant no disrespect, Daddy.
Oh, Daddy.
I just want to know who officiated the wedding.
Was it Donald or was it Goofy?
Oh, slice! That was a good one.
It was Prince Eric for your information.
Thank you.
Prince Eric? Who the fuck is that?
The boyfriend of Little Mermaid.
The hottest guy in the entire Disney catalog?
It's Ariel's boyfriend, you fucking bitch. Oh, Lord. Y'all went down to Disney That was a scene from season 2 of The Righteous Jim Stones. And my guest today is creator
and star of the show, Danny McBride. Did you grow up with a lot of cursing around you?
You know, I didn't, but I was, I loved cursing. I mean, when I was a kid, it's like Two Live Crew and Eddie Murphy.
And like, I mean, I just had all this stuff.
I would record this stuff from friends on cassette tapes.
I remember like Eddie Murphy's Delirious.
I had like an audio tape of it that I had recorded off of like a friend's VHS or something.
And I would just put it in my Walkman and I can remember like driving to church with
my parents in the back seat and they're like, what are you listening to?
I'm like, nothing, nothing.
You know, I would just be like, just listening to Eddie Murphy or listening to live crew.
I mean, it just always tickled me.
I just always thought it was so funny.
Just someone speaking with such vulgar.
It just, I don't know, I think
it ruined me. It tainted me.
Well, it definitely is infused in your shows. How do you navigate the children on set and
stuff when there's all that cursing? Which I should say it's gratuitous, but it also
really works. I just always have to watch your shows when my kids are out of the room, you know?
Yes, I do, 100%.
Well, you know, what we try to do with it is that like,
even that language, part of it is like,
it's an extension of these,
of like the character development in a strange way.
It's like that sometimes that language is used
because they don't have the facilities
to sort of express what they want to say.
And so relying on just like some bombastic way of communicating ends up being,
you know, part of the fabric of who they are, you know,
that it kind of represents some sort of like stunted ability to communicate.
And so when we start looking at some of the cursing that way,
it, I don't know, it could be, then it becomes like a weird sort of game of character development where
it might on this surface just appear like they're dropping F bombs, but then there's
actually thought behind why they're dropping the F bomb there.
Okay, something I really wanted to know.
Your character, Jesse, and the gemstones, and if we go way back to Kenny and Eastbound
and down, they both have like swagger. You know, like the way
that you walk, you kind of have this like gangster lean. And since you, you like brought
up to live crew, I'm bringing this up. Is that how you move or is that part of the characters
you play?
I think it's a little bit part of the characters. I mean, I might have a little swagger in my
life. I won't totally diminish my swagger, but, you know, it's also just like, I, you know,
growing up, George Jefferson, he honestly is like one of my favorite characters when
I was a kid.
Like I just thought he was so funny and how mean he was and funny he was and that little
bit of a swagger he had that, I don't know, it's just always something that sort of tickled
me.
And so Jesse, I definitely infused that with like, Jesse, for whatever whatever reason it's always like standing like he's about to like bow up
and fight someone you know his fists are clenched and he's like squeezing his
cheeks together and just like you know walk walk it with the strut but that's how I
would just get into character that was it now that I'm thinking about it even
that clip I play where you're like bye bye Felicia, as you're walking away, that is the George Jefferson walk, 100%.
It totally is.
There's something in all of your characters, you know, you presented as a really nice guy,
but there's something in all of your characters, they're all kind of terrible.
And I'm just wondering what interests you about these types of people,
the Kinneys of the world,
the Jessies of the world, you know?
You know what I think it is?
I think it's trying to find the perfect clown
for some of this comedy.
I think if a character is too goofy,
I don't identify with them as much,
or that comedy doesn't speak to me as much.
And so then it's sort of like finding, how do you center a comedy around a clown but it's not
just pratfalls or just goofy behavior.
So to me, character deficiency starts to be what seems like something fun to play around
with.
These are such exaggerated, enlarged versions of people around us that I don't know, there's
something about it that it's like by making fun of somebody
who doesn't know how to express themselves
or just as wears their emotions on their sleeve
to such an obnoxious level,
there's something there that as you make fun of them,
you can also kind of like poke at the truths of that,
of like why somebody would behave that way
and what that ultimately probably means.
And so I don't think it's like trying to create a defense for jerks,
but it is just a way of, I guess,
exploring jerks in a way that is comical and maybe a little enlightening.
David Green and Jody Hill,
you guys have been long time partners for a really long time.
When did you guys know that you all had something special?
Oh, I can't, you know, I don't really know. I mean, it's like, you know, we all met at the North
Carolina School of the Arts and we're, it was in Winston-Salem. It's just this kind of tiny film
school at the time. And it was not in the cards for me to go somewhere like NYU or USC. And this
was like in 1995 is when I was a freshman at school there. And so I was really just trying to like
calling around, trying to find a film school that I could A, afford
and I could hopefully get into.
And film schools at that point-
Is that what you mean when you say
it was not in the cards for you?
Do you mean because of the cost or?
Yeah, there was just no way that, yeah.
There wasn't just so, there wasn't a world
where I would have been able to have afforded those loans
or been able to get them
out.
And I actually had a friend who had gone to NYU that lived in my neighborhood and he graduated
right as I was applying for schools.
And I remember that he had asked a lot of people for money and then he was disgruntled
when he graduated from school and now had a ton of debt and wasn't sure what he
was going to do next.
And so the whole thing seemed daunting and kind of scary to me.
So I needed to find something that I could afford.
And so School of the Arts was a state school in North Carolina and the film program was
brand new.
I think we were the third class that graduated from there.
And what I really liked about that school was that
when you made a movie there,
you weren't allowed to spend your own money.
You weren't allowed to go raise money
outside of what the budget was.
Like they gave you what the budget was
and that was part of the education,
was like how do you make it work with what you're given?
And I felt like what was nice about that
is it seemed like it put all the
filmmakers on the same playing field.
It wasn't like the rich kids were going to have the best movies.
Like everyone was, was given like a number and this is what everyone needed to
kind of like create their vision with.
And, um, it was awesome.
And I think to pull that off, you really had to rely on the other people that
were at school with you and your friends and your collaborators.
And I think that's what sort of started Jodie and David and John Caccieri and Jeff Bradley,
these other guys I work with that are still involved with the show.
I don't know.
It just made us always want to kind of rely on each other more than rely on the system. You know, I read that, is it true that Kanye West approached you and asked you to play
him in a biopic? He did. It took me a while to believe that that was Kanye West when he called
me. My phone rang and he said, this is Kanye West. It was just like, get out of town. No, it's not.
Who is this? Yeah, it was a few years ago.
He reached out and I guess he was a fan
of some of the work I had done
and said he wanted to come to meet me
in Charleston, South Carolina to talk about a project.
And he came down here and we hung out for this awesome day
and went out in a boat and talked about life.
And he was telling me he was interested
in doing a story about his life and wanted me to play him.
And it was just sort of like shocking and kind of like,
it's like, I'm flattered,
but I don't understand how it would 100% work,
but it's like, let's talk.
Did he talk about what he sees in the characters you play
and how you like really draw out these themes
that really spoke to him?
He just said that there was, I remember when we were on the phone call, he said there was
like a fearlessness to it all that like we were just kind of willing to kind of go there
with things and he felt like that's what would have been needed.
That had to be flattering though, even if it was kind of crazy, I guess.
It was very flattering and it was a very, like it was a day that I will definitely not
forget.
You know, we hung out and just talked about life and, you know,
out in the boat for a while.
Then we came back here and my son was pretty young at the time.
And he, we came into the house.
My son's like, do you think Kanye wants to watch me play Fortnite?
And I was like, I don't know, maybe ask him.
And so, and then it just like for 10 minutes, Kanye and I just stood
there watching my son play Fortnite.
That's love there, right? When the kids are like, watch me.
You know, that means that you're cool.
Well Danny McBride, I just want to thank you for all the joy that you brought me and so
many others with the Righteous Gemstones.
And thank you for this conversation.
I really appreciate it.
Thanks for taking the time. It means a lot.
Danny McBride is the creator and co-star
of The Righteous Jim Stones.
We're going to sing and we're going to dance.
Hallelujah!
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