Fresh Air - Will Arnett
Episode Date: December 23, 2025Arnett stars in Bradley Cooper’s new film, ‘Is This Thing On?’ as a man who turns to the New York comedy scene as he grapples with his divorce. The ‘SmartLess’ podcast co-host talked with Te...rry Gross about voicework, how ‘Arrested Development’ changed his life, and being a troublemaker in school. Also, critic David Bianculli shares his picks for best TV of 2025.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Hi, it's Terry Gross. Somehow, we're almost at the end of 2025. It's been a rough year for a lot of people
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npr.org. Thank you so much. This is fresh air. I'm Terry Gross. My guest is Will Arnett. He co-wrote and
stars in the new movie Is This Thing On. He was one of the stars of this series Arrested Development,
played the title role in the animated satirical series for adults, Bojack Horseman, and was Batman,
in the animated Lego Batman series.
He also co-hosts the podcast Smartless
with his longtime friends, Jason Bateman,
who also started an arrested development,
and Sean Hayes, who has a small part in Arnett's new film.
Another longtime friend of Arnett's, Bradley Cooper,
directed the new film and plays Arnett's self-absorbed best friend.
The story is adapted from the true story
of the British comic John Bishop.
The film's title, Is This Thing On, has a double meaning.
It's what a lot of people say when they first get to a microphone.
It also refers to whether Will Arnette's character's marriage is on or off.
The movie is a hybrid of comedy and drama,
focused on the anger and resentments that can undermine a marriage
and how your sense of identity can change
if you're lucky enough to discover work that is meaningful to you.
Arnette plays a middle-aged father of two,
whose marriage has fallen apart.
He and his wife, played by Laura Dern, are separated,
and he's feeling lonely and miserable.
One evening while aimlessly walking down a Manhattan street,
he sees a restaurant with a comedy club downstairs.
Admission requires a $15 cover charge.
But if you sign up to perform, the cover charge is waived.
So he signs up because he doesn't have the cash.
When his name is called and he gets on stage,
he has no clue what to do.
He freezes for a while and then starts talking about the current state of his life.
I think I'm getting a divorce.
What did me off was that I'm living in an apartment on my own.
Yeah.
And my wife and kids don't live there.
That was probably the biggest clue.
Will Arnett, welcome back to fresh air.
Thank you for coming today.
And that scene is so good.
It's so much fun to watch you.
you feel so uncomfortable.
And you're actually very funny,
even though you're totally insecure
and unprepared to be doing stand-up
at that point in your story.
So I know in preparation,
you went to Comedy Club, open-mic nights.
Did you stay in the audience or perform?
No, I performed.
I went to the comedy cellar
almost every night for about six weeks
and performed under the name of Alex Novak.
Kind of in an attempt to understand what it was like, A, to do stand up, because I'm not a stand-up, and I'd never done it before.
And B, to see what it was like to do it through the eyes of somebody who's never performed in any capacity, really.
So that was kind of, that was the assignment for me.
Why didn't people recognize you?
Well, I think some did, Terry.
some people recognized me and were confused as to what I was doing because I would
they'd introduce me as Alex Novak and I'd sort of reinforce that say hi I'm Alex Novak and
people would laugh nervously the people who did recognize me the people who didn't
recognize me I guess was just because they're not fans of my films or TV shows
certainly people were you know a lot of my set especially that first set that you
played in the clip where I'm talking about getting divorced
forest. I think it did confuse people and people would be Googling me in real time trying to
figure out what was going on, thinking like, oh, wait, I didn't know this guy got married again.
Right. Not again. Yeah. So did you try to be good or try to be stumbling? Well, I tried to be
sensitive to the material. So I was using sets that we had written for the film. So I go out and I'd do
the first set. And then during the day, I'd be at home a couple blocks away in New York,
rewriting the sets and trying to figure out
really trying to get it to a place
that worked for the context that we were looking for
which is this guy who's never done it before
so I'd go and I'd rework it and rework it
and then you know one night I might go out
and go around the corner to the underground
all part of the comedy seller
and do the third set
and then go around the corner downstairs
the underground and do the first set again
and just keep working on these various sets
but always trying to track, you know, his development as a stand-up and so that all of those pieces work.
And not just his development as a stand-up, because those sets are also affected by where Alex is in our story and where he is with his relationship, with his estranged wife and all these things.
and they'll affect how he performs and how he is on stage.
You know, the kind of story this is about two people who are dissatisfied with their lives at the moment
and are like looking for a new sense of identity, which they feel they're lacking.
Why did you want to, like, tell the story from a more middle-aged point of view?
And I know it's based on a real comic.
and, you know, a British comic who I think is well known in England, but not here, John Bishop is his name.
What appealed to you about the idea of a middle-aged couple looking to, like, find new identities and find some satisfaction in their work?
First of all, when I met John Bishop and he told me this story of how he became a stand-up, and, you know, he is a very successful stand-up in the UK.
He's a really funny guy. He's a really funny stand-up.
I was drawn less to the idea of him kind of becoming successful out of nowhere and more to the idea of he found a thing that allowed him to kind of reconnect to himself and his wife.
He had gotten so far down the road in his life and that he and his partner, his wife, Mel, he described that there was no big event, that there was nothing that they had just simply, you know,
you can say whatever you want grew apart or whatever but they weren't communicating and they were
frustrated in their lives and they were frustrated with their lot but they didn't have the language to
even talk to each other anymore and that was the thing that really got me so we ended up you know
we we focused less on in our story Alex does not become a famous stand-up um John told me
recently that for him you know that becoming a successful stand-up was really the icing on the
cake of which which was reconnecting with his wife with mill and so that that stuck with me
i don't think it's uncommon way i think it's a real reflection of what a lot of people who are
middle-aged i guess do go through and you get i think that sometimes you get resigned
to the idea that this is your lot
and this is what it's going to be
and sometimes it's really a matter
if you need to find the language
or to start to really connect
with who you are.
There's a scene
and I don't think I'm giving too much away here
when they're trying to stay together
or get back together
where your character
asks his wife
he said like
I know this about a couple's therapy
that like one of the standard questions
is tell me something
about myself that you hate about me.
And I think, like, that's the kind of thing that could really go bad.
I can imagine that becoming a real nightmare.
I can also see a bit of, like, self-reflection being the result of that and self-knowledge
that you weren't aware of before.
I'm wondering if you've ever tried that approach and how did it go?
I think that there is, from my own life,
at this stage I'm much more willing to be honest about where I am
and certainly Bradley and I is something that we talk about
which is it's really important something that maybe you sort of avoid
when you're younger I think and as you get older you just kind of
you get to the point where you're like you might as well just say
and be honest and you have to allow people to have their own reaction to what you say
And sometimes you, so to instigate that, you have to say like, all right, tell me, tell me the thing.
Like just what is the thing that I do that drives you crazy?
Just say it.
And I, at the risk of blowing it all apart, and I think that's really important.
I think I'm much more willing to get into the deep water now myself than I was when I was a younger man for sure.
I'd like to offer an example of that from having heard you talk about this on.
Smartless, your podcast with Sean Hayes and Jason Bateman. And Bradley Cooper was the guest on
this episode. And of course, Bradley Cooper directed your new film, is this thing on. So Bradley
Cooper had been talking about how he really admired how angry some of your jokes were, that
you would joke with people and say things that, you know, sounded angry in general or angry
at them, but you were so funny and you knew these people so well that it was just like great
fun. So he figured, okay, I'm going to fit in by doing something similar, except it didn't come
off that way. It just came off as like really rude. And so what I'd like to do is play a clip
from that episode of SmartList and hear what Bradley Cooper had to say. And then I want to ask you
your perspective on it. Okay?
okay okay here it is and he was like hey man do you remember we had dinner the other night
and he goes how did you think that went and i was like and i remember being at the dinner
thinking i was so funny and i thought these two guys who were my heroes were so thought that
i was so funny i don't know if you remember this well and you're like i was like oh i thought
it was great i thought i was killing he was hey man you were and will or annette telling he's
like you were a real oh man and i was like what he's like yeah and by the way have your dogs gone
out to the bathroom. I was like, what? What time is it? It's 4 o'clock. Oh, no. I think they have to go
the bathroom. They're literally standing by the door. And that was like the first time I ever realized
I had a problem with drugs and alcohol. And I'll just never forget it. I was like, oh, the guy
that I think is doing mean humor is telling me like truth about that. And it was like,
it changed my entire life. And that moment was when I stopped pursuing this sort of mean
humor thing. Wow. Yeah, I'll never, do you remember that, Will?
I do remember that, yeah.
Okay, so that was Bradley Cooper on the podcast SmartLess, which Will Arnette co-hosts with Sean Hayes and Jason Bateman.
Were you surprised he told that story?
And I really want to hear your perspective on it.
And I'm curious, like, what made you think that it would go okay and be helpful?
Because there's the flip side of that corn.
It could go really terribly.
And he could just be very resentful of you and angry at you and just kind of dig in deeper
in defiance.
Well, yeah.
I mean, it saved his life, but you don't know the outcome when you go into it.
Well, it's funny.
I mean, I don't know if it saved his life.
First of all, he did it all.
I didn't save his life.
I did not know he was going to bring it up, of course.
And I was surprised, but I'm also not surprised because Bradley is somebody who he does sort of, especially as we've gotten older,
He's one of those people who tries to be as open as he can about his experience and honest as he can about where he's at.
So having said that, I think that is an example of that day when I went into his place and we had that conversation.
I had to be willing to risk it all because I love him.
And, you know, I wanted him to be okay.
And I know what it takes that sometimes you have to, you know,
know, be brutally honest within reason. I don't want to hurt him. I don't want to, I'm not there
to judge him for what he's doing. I'm there to be as honest as I can because I want him to
figure out a way. And luckily for me, but also mostly for him, he was open enough to the
idea of this. And that's really a testament to him and his ability to recognize in that moment.
It's got nothing to do with me. I'm just a messenger and I'm just,
You know, the only reason I did that is because I've been a beneficiary of so many great people in my life
in incredible relationships that I have, especially with a lot of great men in my life who've been honest and loving to me.
Your voice, I don't think it's just me the way I hear it. Your voice has gotten deeper over the years. Am I right about that?
Yeah, probably. I think, has yours? Oh, my voice has completely changed. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I just have
I was like an octave higher, I think.
Really, you think it's gotten higher?
No, no.
In the past it was when I started.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Because I noticed it with Howard Stern, you know, who I've known for a long time,
and I listened to some old clips and, like, Howard's, yeah, I think that that's what happens.
But certainly, yeah, it has, I think it has gone deeper.
Were you a smoker?
Well, I mean, no comment.
Who do you work for, Terry?
The tobacco industry.
So is how you're cast differently with the lower voice?
Well, you know, when I was, I think I always had a kind of a gravelly or whatever you want to call it, sandpapery.
Some people might call it annoying voice out of military.
I would not.
There are people.
And so when I was younger, when I first moved to New York, I had.
I looked much younger than my age.
I had a sort of a baby face.
And weirdly enough, I knew back then that it was going to, that it didn't quite match.
And it was maybe going to affect getting roles.
At least that's what I would tell myself if I didn't get a role.
I was thinking because of my voice.
So it took a while to kind of grow, I think, grow into it a little bit.
I think your voice probably helped you get all the voiceover work that was basically the
the way you made a living for several years.
Yes.
Yeah, and so you were so funny with Conan O'Brien on his TBS show.
And, you know, you're both so funny.
So I want to play a clip from that show, and that goes back a few years to 2021.
And you were talking about your voiceover work, and then you demonstrated some of your voices.
So, okay, and we'll hear Andy Richter,
Conan's sidekick on that show,
say a few words during the clip.
So here's you and Conan Bryan in 2021.
You've got the best pipes in the business.
His voice is so incredible.
I try to get voiceover work, and I'm like,
buy this product.
That's the response I get.
Well, they also like the ads to be more specific.
Yeah, I know.
That's true.
That was a little vague.
But that's obviously for Granny Smith apples, right?
I didn't, yeah, Granny Smith apples are real good.
You know, it's, no, I do, voiceover is a great thing, and I do a lot, and, and I actually,
to be honest, coming here today, I'm kind of behind on a couple of jobs, and I just, you know,
would you mind while I'm here, because you guys are miced up and stuff, would you mind if I just did a couple?
You want to do some voiceover recordings now?
Don't worry about it.
Well, I don't think it's appropriate to actually.
You guys have lots of equipment here, and I brought my stuff.
My setup with me.
Okay, that's ridiculous.
I brought my setup.
I can't believe I didn't see that back.
I'm going to just a little.
So you're going to just do a voiceover or two.
I'm just going to do a couple things and just stay with it.
Three, two, one.
Innovative, creative, and tough as nails.
That's the American spirit.
And that's the all-new GMC Sierra 1500 pickup truck.
Yeah.
Okay.
We're just going to keep rolling here because we're rolling here.
We're rolling on.
Roll in.
We're rolling.
Hey girl, I love your smile.
Crest white strips.
Yeah.
That's good.
We're banging them out.
We're banging them out.
We're done.
Oh, we're not done here.
Hang on.
We're still rolling here.
Here we go.
Three, two, one.
Flemann's racist butter.
Spread it all around.
Wait a minute.
That couldn't be a product.
Yep.
Is that butter for racist people
or is the butter itself racist?
I don't know.
I do not know and I don't care as long as the check clears.
Okay, so let's do it.
That's so great.
And like the first one we heard was for GMC trucks.
And you've done a lot or you did a lot of voiceovers for them.
And, you know, it's done in the style of like a rugged man who likes driving over tough terrain
and wants a vehicle that can handle it.
So you have the voice for that, but do you ever feel like that kind of a man?
Great questions, Harry.
It's not necessarily how I see myself, but yeah, I still work with, I still do the, I'm the voice of GMC trucks, and it's something I'm really proud of.
It's been a long time.
I've been doing, I've been doing the ads for GMC since 1998.
That long?
Yeah, I've been the voice of GMC trucks since, since actually, this is the anniversary month, December of 19.
98 and I never realized that was you yeah yeah well because my voice changed um
changed from doing those commercials maybe but I do it is something that um yeah I love there's
something that I that I like first of all I love working with the brand and um they are great
trucks I mean look they're Terry they're professional grade they are professional grade yeah
does it hurt your throat to do that no
The only time that it really got strained was in that way where it didn't hurt,
but I had to kind of be careful was when I was doing the Lego animated films.
And we did two Lego films and a Lego Batman film, standalone film.
And doing the voice of Lego Batman for extended periods of time was stressful.
So I would book a, I'd do a session, and then I'd have to make sure that I had nothing
to do for the rest of the day and basically wouldn't talk because it was, you know,
it was hours in there going through the script and doing stuff and, um, as this, as Batman.
My guest is Will Arnett. He co-wrote and stars in the new film is This Thing On. We'll continue
the interview and our TV critic David Biancoly will look back on the year in TV after a short
break. I'm Terry Gross and this is fresh air.
This is fresh air. I'm Terry Gross.
Let's get back to my interview with Will Arnett.
He co-wrote and stars on The New Film, Is This Thing On?
Which was directed by his longtime friend, Bradley Cooper, who also co-stars in the film.
Arnette is best known for his starring roles in Arrested Development, BoJack Horseman, and the Lego Batman movie.
He also co-hosts the comedy podcast, Smartless, with his friends Jason Bateman, who also starred in Arrested Development, and Sean Hayes, who has a small part in Is This Thing On?
When we left off, we were talking about his voiceover work.
In addition to Bojack and Lego Batman, he's done the voices of characters in monsters versus aliens, as well as voiceovers for countless ads.
How about your voice on BoJack Horseman, where you play, this is a world of showbiz with animals and birds portraying the characters.
And you're a horse who, when the series starts, is like a washed up.
actor who was briefly famous for his role when it sounds like a pretty bad sitcom and he sits at
home in the first episode watching videos of his old show and he's he's bitter he drinks too much
and it's such a funny series like satirizing everybody in show business the agents the directors
the actors and all of their insecurities did you do something with your voice for that character
No. It's funny because that's one of those ones where I've had people say, wow, you really sound like BoJack. And I'm like, well, yeah, it's my voice.
And you wanted BoJack to sound more human, probably, too, because he's already not human, so you have to humanize him.
Yeah, that's exactly right. There's enough going on with the fact that he's a horse and that it's animated. So I think it was important to just try to, the way he spoke, to be much more naturalistic.
Did parts of BoJack's life remind you of your own when you were at a low point?
No, and it's funny, that's a question I get all the time.
There were times when people would, I remember, like, there's, like, photos of my house went online,
and people would say, like, it just looks, it looks like BoJack's house, and I just think that's so absurd.
There's a lot of, like, retrofitting from people going on about BoJack and trying to,
hang it on my life
and they're very very different
I love making that show
Raphael Bob Waxburg's an incredible writer
the guy who created it just an amazing guy
and wonderfully written
and I loved every moment of it
but it's had this like sort of strange
afterlife and I think a lot of that is due to the fact
that a lot of people responded to it which is amazing
but I also think there's this kind of rush to
people to try to connect dots that aren't there?
Sure.
We always do that when we project a character's life onto the actor who's portraying that.
And I do that maybe too much when I interview actors, you know, because I always want to kind
of connect the life and the work to see what created the sensibility that we love and the
performer.
And, you know, I think I probably hit a lot of wrong notes and trying to do that.
Well, no, it's not wrong.
I think that that's natural.
But, I mean, that's the work, right?
Like, that's the job, is to try to figure out.
Certainly for, as a performer, you are trying to find moments where you can connect with it.
But at the same time, the job is to try to figure out a way to find your way in to, you know, portray that character.
And it's funny, it's like I did a show, Rested Development for many years where I played a character who's completely untethered to reality.
I've heard of that show.
Sure.
And so I played a character called Job, Job Bluth, he's a failed delusionist, and he's very, again, like, as I said, untethered, and he doesn't know how to live in this world that we live in.
And it's funny that people go, oh, yeah, you know, there are parts of BoJack, I'm sure, is that you, is that you?
And I'm like, well, why don't they say that about Job?
Or a character I played on 30 Rock.
or in who knows why
Because it was more absurdist
It's more absurdist
I mean obviously it's about an actor too
And also also BoJack was an actor
Yeah exactly
So I do get that
But
You know apart from that
It's just no
The rest of development was like
Your big breakthrough
Right?
100%
100%
Yeah
How did it change your life?
How long is this program
I'm looking at the clock
in every way
every possible way yeah
I mean that was 2003
and I'd been living in New York
for about 13 years at that point
and leading up to a rest of the few years leading up
I'd had a I'd done a bunch of pilots
I'd had a series that it went on to air
and aired twice and that was canceled
and I'd had tons of frustrations
like a lot of other performance
my story's not that different just
you know it's stuff out there etc
and an arrested development came along and really changed my life.
So when you got the script, however much you got for Arrested Development before the edition,
did you have any sense of how to play the character?
It's such a quirky way that you play him.
And, you know, he's kind of like lost in his own world.
He uses his like little magic tricks in some totally inappropriate ways.
This is not the time for you to, like, barge in and do a trick.
And so, you know, your performance, the way, like, you shaped the words on the page and embodied it physically, just being given a script, it's probably hard to do that without all the other actors there and without really understanding how unusual a series it was and how off-kilter the comedy was.
Well, yeah, I'll take it a step further.
I didn't even have the benefit of reading the full script.
I was given a sort of a slight character breakdown, I suppose,
that didn't really say how he behaved.
It just kind of said who he was.
He was the eldest of four kids, of this family
that had fallen on hard times,
their father had lost all their money, et cetera.
And I was sent these sides.
So the thing that I grabbed onto,
and I was really lucky, you know,
every once in a while something comes along that you just there's something about it that
kind of grabs you and there's a line in it there's a scene where um my character job enters a scene
where uh the character of michael played by jason badman is talking to the captain of this ship
and michael says to job something to the effect of you know uh how are you job and on the page it's
written incredible um how
having an incredible year.
And it was so, I don't know why.
It was so funny to me.
I just kind of got it for whatever reason.
And I just remember, and I did it in the audition and subsequently in the pilot, I just
understood the bravado of that.
Who, who says that, right, about their, when they're asked, how are you?
And I just thought, what a kind of sociopathic blowhard.
goes incredible.
I'm having an incredible year, right?
It says so much.
It's clearly somebody who is, you know,
covering up for a lot of deep pain.
And I just got it.
And that was it.
It was that line that was my entry point
for the character of Job.
My guest is Will Arnett.
He stars on the new film,
Is This Thing On?
We'll be right back after a short break.
This is fresh air.
This is fresh air. Let's get back to my interview with Will Arnett. He co-wrote and stars on the new movie is this thing on.
Let's talk about your formative years. Your father, James Arnett or Jim Arnett, I don't know what you're. Yeah. Both.
Okay. So here's a graduate at Harvard and he was for a few years president and CEO of Moulson breweries.
So when you, I know a lot of people, they look at their parents' lives and they think, I want a different life.
and your life is very different
you're both very successful
but you went in an opposite direction
not corporate not law
and it's a more artistic world
did you feel like he led an interesting life
but you wanted a different life
or did you see his life as
it must be uncomfortable
to be asked this question when your father's alive
so I realize
I don't want you to
I don't want to ruin your life
relationship with your father. No, no. No, I'll do that. Yeah, you'll be, you'll ruin it yourself?
I'll run it yourself. I don't need any help. No. No, my dad, you know, I have a lot of respect for what my dad did. My dad came from,
both his parents were teachers. And his dad at one point was a, was a teacher in a one-room schoolhouse on, you know,
in Manitoba, not even in Winnipeg.
And my dad worked really hard, and he got everywhere on his own merits.
You know, he got into Harvard on his own.
He became a partner at this law from Stikeman Elliott in Toronto on his own as a kid from
Winnipeg.
And he didn't have a fancy background.
So I've always respected how much of a sort of a self-made guy he is.
And he's always, you know, my dad said to me once, I asked him once years ago,
he's, you know, he's long since retired, and I said to him, I said, why didn't you move to the states?
Because you could have made a lot more money in the corporate world.
You know, you see how CEOs are compensated in this country and how absurd it is.
And he said, because I have an obligation to give back to the system that allowed me to come up.
And that's the kind of guy he is.
You went to a prep boarding school and you were expelled for being a troublemaker.
What kind of trouble did you get into?
you.
A lot of it was, Terry, I
I'm loath to admit, a lot of it was
smoking related. What were you smoking?
Cigrats. Oh, okay.
Yeah, I was never like a real sort of weed guy.
It was smoking
kind of bad grades because I was
goofing off, defying curfews,
all stuff like that.
And there were a group
of us, and I think that they just, at a certain point, people say, oh, you were kicked out,
and I always maintained that I was asked not to return.
A great distinction.
There's a real distinction there, Terry.
But so, yeah, it never really, it's funny.
I went to boarding school when I was 12, and again, my dad, who came up through public
school system in Winnipeg, my dad was really,
he was a little reluctant to send me there because he thought it was a bunch of rich kids.
And he struggled with it, this idea, because he was bound and determined that even though he did well and he was successful, that his kids weren't going to be a bunch of spoiled brats.
And that was important to him.
And so when I left, he wasn't all that upset that I left, to be honest.
you were mostly known for comedic roles
and although in the new film is this thing on
you play somebody who is just getting started in comedy
there are funny moments in the movie
but it's also just a character study
about how people change and come together
and then maybe break apart and then come together or not
so you didn't intend to be
comedic actor, as far as I know, you wanted to be a dramatic actor. Did you have to learn things
like, you have great comic timing, and you're naturally funny, and I've heard you on Smartless,
you're really funny on that. Did being funny in real life, was that mostly like your training
to be funny in roles?
I didn't have any training
and there have been times
where I regretted that I wasn't like in a sketch group
or that I didn't do improv as part of an improv group
in some sort of more formal setting.
You know, a lot of my friends came up through Second City
and Improv Olympic in Chicago, et cetera.
Well, that includes Amy Poehler, who you were married to for 10 years.
That's right.
And she created Upright Citizens Brigade,
which has been an incredible training,
for plenty of really successful and funny people
who we all know.
So, you know, I do wish that I'd had that.
At the same time, I kind of fell backwards into comedy.
I wanted to be a serious actor.
I'd gone to Lee Strasbourg.
I was young and I thought that I wanted to do stuff
that would sort of be, I don't know, important
or dramatic or emotional, whatever that heck it was
at that age.
And then I started reading sitcom pilot,
because I needed to pay the rent.
And weirdly enough, I was, I was, when I started doing that kind of 24, 25, at the time, I thought,
oh, I'm not going to do a sitcom.
It's like beneath me because I knew nothing at that age, right?
I just, and so hilarious now to think back and how embarrassing that position is.
But anyway, and I started reading for sitcoms.
And that, doing that, I was.
I was like, oh, you know, okay.
And I could kind of understand the timing,
and there was something about it that I kind of got.
Can you look back to your first audition?
How nervous were you?
What was the part?
What was your confidence level?
How did you present yourself?
Even if it was a kind of front you were putting on,
did you present yourself as confident?
Did you dress for the role?
I can think back on it.
Did you sleep the night before?
Yeah.
I can think back on a lot of those early auditions,
like first sort of paying gigs for like a sitcom and being very nervous
and almost like out of body, like feeling not being present
and just because I was so nervous.
But I also think that like in the last year, you know,
doing this movie has reminded me a lot.
It brought me back to that place.
I feel much closer to that kid I was when I was 20 when I first moved.
to New York. And, you know, doing something like this were all the stand-up stuff aside,
which was its own kind of thing, but doing all these scenes that were really vulnerable and
revealing and felt very scary. And, you know, it's funny, nervous and excitement, those two
sense, they're really close to each other. And so I was, I was excited, but I was also didn't
know. And I've realized now as I'm older that I don't have all the answers and I'm not sure
if I knew how to do it and I was scared.
I was intimidated at 54 and I've been doing this a long time and I was, you know,
I was unsure if I could do it or if I could be available in that way, be vulnerable in that
way to, in these scenes.
I can remember being a younger man and being a younger actor and feeling nervous and I kind
of am back to that now, which is I think I've shed a lot of that stuff and hopefully a lot
of the ego stuff over the last year, especially doing this movie where I, I've, it's good
to feel nervous.
Will Arnett, it's been a pleasure
to talk with you. Thank you so much. Congratulations
on the new film.
Thank you so much, Terry. I really appreciate it.
Will Arnett co-wrote
and stars in the new film is This Thing On.
After we take a short break,
TV critic David B. and Cooley
will look back on the year in TV.
This is fresh air.
This is fresh air.
Our TV critic David B. and Cooley is taking a look back
at the year in television.
But he says he's not doing a top 10 list because there's been way too much good TV to limit to just 10 titles.
And he's not doing a best of the year list because he says it's impossible to have seen everything.
But he's seen a lot.
Of everything I saw on TV in 2025, the one show I thought was the very best and has haunted me ever since was the four-part Netflix drama adolescence.
It's the story of a young teen accused of murdering a classmate.
and it's told in such a way, emotionally and technically, that I can't and won't forget it.
It's the show I recommend most highly, but with a major caveat, it's grim, and it's almost unbearably intense.
Intensity, it turns out, is a common factor among many of my very favorite shows from this year.
HBO Max's The Pit was a medical show with an impressively credible tension factor.
So was Netflix's The Diplomat, with its unlawful.
unpredictable high-stakes plot twists. And so was FX's The Bear, even though it wasn't about
life or death, just appetizers and entrees. The Bear even calls itself a comedy, but it's not.
Much, much too dramatic for that. A couple of my other favorite TV dramas, almost equally
intense, featured rag-tag mismatched investigative teams thrown together to solve specific crimes.
One, HBO's task was headed by a brooding, intelligent guy with lots of emotional baggage, played by Mark Ruffalo.
Another, Netflix's Department Q was headed by a brooding, intelligent guy with even more emotional baggage, played by Matthew Good.
His character is returning to work after being shot and almost killed.
And at first, he's openly hostile to his police-appointed therapist, played by Kelly MacDonald, who's his sharp,
and brittle as he is.
Have you been feeling depressed, Carl?
No more than normal.
If I was shot in the face,
I might feel depressed.
I might feel angry.
Not me.
It's all good then.
From my hand, yeah.
So no need for me to ask about anxiety
or sleep problems
because, of course,
you've experienced none of that.
I don't sleep much anyway.
So then this is just a giant waste of our time.
Well, those are your words, not mine.
And maybe it's just me,
But this year, I definitely gravitated to dramatic shows that made me uneasy.
It was another great season for Netflix's Black Mirror,
and the end-of-year final episode of another dark Netflix fantasy series,
Stranger Things, is eagerly awaited by many.
Including me, because I've seen all the new episodes leading up to it,
but the finale is being kept under wraps.
That show's been around since 2016, almost a decade.
But other terrific genre shows were new takes on old ideas.
Guillermo del Toro's Frankenstein on Netflix was an excellent and very different adaptation.
And what Noah Hawley did by reinventing the Alien movie franchise for the FX TV series Alien Earth was thrilling and at times truly scary.
And still churning out weekly episodes, brilliant ones, is Pluribus, the new indescribably original
Apple TV sci-fi series from Vince Gilligan.
The comedies I like best this year,
some were set behind the scenes of showbiz,
like the new Apple TV series The Studio,
starring Seth Rogan as a bumbling but well-meaning studio head,
and the returning HBO Max series Hacks,
starring Gene Smart as a female comic landing a job as a TV talk show host.
The other comedies were lighthearted mysteries benefiting greatly
from their veteran cast members.
Hulu's only murders in the building, and Netflix as a man on the inside.
Both of those shows made me feel good, which is a lot to ask of any TV show these days.
Nonfiction TV also offered many excellent options this year.
Artistic profiles to seek out from 2025 include Apple TV's Mr. Scorsese about film director Martin Scorsese
and HBO's Pee Wee as himself about actor Paul Rubens.
Most recently, there's the short but powerful Netflix documentary All the Empty Rooms
about a TV feature reporter and photographer who visit the families of children killed during
school shootings to memorialize the children's empty but still intact bedrooms.
It's as tough to watch as adolescence, and oddly touches on a similar subject.
TV reporter Steve Hartman talks about the power of visiting these bedroom shrines,
trapped in time and saying so much with their silence.
The whole point of this is to not have to say much.
I just want people to see the pictures
and just let the pictures speak for themselves.
Other great documentaries this year included Sunday Best,
a new Netflix program about Ed Sullivan's contributions
to popularizing black entertainers.
PBS is the American Revolution, the latest and perhaps greatest epic history lesson from Ken Burns and company,
and the new installment of the Beatles anthology, presented by Disney Plus.
On talk shows, I loved the feisty, topical spirit invoked by Stephen Colbert, Jimmy Kimmel,
John Stewart, Seth Myers, and John Oliver,
and especially the well-aimed irreverance of the current season of Comedy Central South Park.
Wow.
Many of these shows were attacked or censored by their corporate owners in well-publicized clashes that exposed and fought against the interference.
The CBS Late Show franchise is being retired from the schedule, but most of the time this year, the comics and their programs persevered.
Finally, my favorite TV moment of 2025 came courtesy of CNN.
Not for a news bulletin, but for televising live from Broadway,
a production of Good Night and Good Luck,
starring George Clooney as veteran CBS newsman Edward R. Murrow.
At the end of the play, Clooney recites Murrow's actual speech
to news and TV executives from 1958,
urging them to use TV wisely.
These instruments can teach, they can illuminate,
they can even inspire
but they can do so only to the extent that humans are determined to use them to those ends
otherwise they're merely wires and lights in a box
in the year 2025 the best of television from the American Revolution to adolescence
is living up to Ed Murrow's inspirational ideals
we all just have to find the best that's out there then find the time
to watch it.
David Bioncouli is Fresh Airs TV critic.
Tomorrow, we kick off our end-of-the-year series
featuring a few of our favorite interviews of the year
with Mitch Album, whose book Tuesdays with Maury
became a best-selling memoir
and was adapted into an Emmy-winning film.
His latest novel, Twice, is about a man
who discovers he can relive any moment
but must accept the consequences of reliving it.
I hope you'll join us.
To keep up with what's on the show
and get highlights of our interviews, follow us on Instagram at NPR Fresh Air.
Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers, Roberta Shorok,
Anne-Baldonado, Lauren Crenzel, Teresa Madden, Monique Nazareth,
Thaya Chaliner, Anna Bauman, and Nico Gonzalez Whistler.
Our digital media producer is Molly C.V. Nestor.
Susan Yucundi directed today's show.
Our co-host is Tanya Mosley.
I'm Terry Gross.
