Inside Late Night with Mark Malkoff - Robert Smigel Returns Part 2
Episode Date: August 13, 2024Robert Smigel returns again to discuss a Chris Farley sketch that didn't make it on, getting hired at SNL, Monday host pitch meetings, & Lorne Michaels. Follow on X (Twitter): @TriumphICDHQ Subsc...ribe to: YouTube Channel Follow on TikTok: @triumphicdhq Follow on Instagram: @triumphicdhq
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Hi, I am Mark Malkoff and welcome to Inside Late Night presented by latenighter.com.
Robert Smigel returns to the show. He was gracious enough to talk to me again. Here is part two of that conversation.
That includes, among other things, Robert reading a Saturday Night Live Chris Barley sketch that did not make it on the show.
Now it's time to go inside late night.
You're sitting in your office, fall of 93, Conan launches, and like a month later, what is your reaction when you found out that Red Buttons, the comedian and the suey in the show?
Oh, that's hilarious.
That makes the New York Times. I don't think people probably remember it. It was a clutch cargo, right? Is that what he was responding to?
Yeah, it was a clutch cargo, and then we ended up, I believe. Yeah, I feel like it was so silly. Ted Danson.
this was like before there was real cancel culture.
It was much harder to get yourself canceled,
but Ted Danson managed to for a brief amount of time
because he performed, it was a friars roast of maybe it was of Whoopi Goldberg,
I'm assuming.
They were together when they did the routine.
They were dating at the time, and he came out in Blackface.
I'm sure he thought it was, you know, kind of appropriately
inappropriate for a fires club roast. But everybody felt it was very inappropriate. I don't think
whoopey did, but he got a lot of flack for it. And it was on the front page of the New York
Post. And there was a lot of outrage. And so we did a clutch cargo where I played Ted Danson.
And Ted Danson at one point was defending himself saying, and he was just naming. And the whole joke was
just as if this is any defense to name really old comedians who found it hilarious.
So I believe one of the lines was red buttons was pissing in his pants.
He thought it was so funny.
Come on.
It was that kind of thing.
And the whole joke was like,
you're not really making a very convincing defense by saying that a 70-year-old man,
white guy found it funny.
And that was all it was.
That was it. It was just one joke within the bit. And Red Buttons was so panicked about
anyone taking it seriously that he announced he was suing. And I guess he didn't mind
getting some publicity as well. And I'm positive that we just made a meal out of it and went
back on the air and did a Red Buttons clutch car game. Yeah, at the time, no one was really talking
about him. Yeah, I mean, he was this guy who was a big comedian in the late 50s and
maybe 60s, and then he had this bit on Johnny Carson
where he would name people and said,
never got to be in a so-and-so who once said,
blah, blah, blah, blah, joke, joke,
never got to be on the Carson show.
And he would just go on and on with different people.
And it was a great, very popular bit.
And I'm sure we parodied that.
But that was it.
That was it.
It was just an old comedian trying to make something out
of a really innocuous joke.
Yeah, I just thought
it would end up happening
just right in the infancy of Conan.
I just thought the time in...
We thought it was hilarious.
We weren't concerned about it.
October 25th, 97,
Chris Farley comes back to host the show.
And you wrote four sketches
that I know of,
which were...
And I wanted to ask if they got
all to read through,
which was a bear sketch
that didn't get in,
that I know of.
One was Minnesota Fats.
It was Farley playing Minnesota Fats.
another one with him playing Rosie O'Donnell, like a Rosie O'Donnell show, and then the last motivational speaker.
The motivational speaker did get on the show.
That was the one, but do you remember those three others?
No, I'll have to look them up.
I do remember the bear sketch did get on.
Oh, that did.
Okay, the Minnesota Fats with him playing the pool thing and Rosie didn't, I guess, get in.
I don't remember either of those sketches, but I will look them up.
You got to the table read, I believe, or at least you submitted them.
But, yeah, I was just wondering what, were you, then were you there on the floor for Farley when he hosted since you had stuff in?
I was.
And, you know, I talk about that.
That's in the Chris Farley book.
Yeah.
They're going to make that into the movie.
I mean, what I talked about is in the Chris Farley book.
Yeah, we don't have to talk about it.
I just missed that guy so much.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, that was, you know, I have nothing but bad feelings about that episode.
And, um, the only thing I understand is that if he was doing the show, he would be distracted and getting into maybe more trouble. I do get that part. Yeah, I mean, that was one justification that was bandied about. But it should have been canceled. I mean, the whole thing should have been canceled. I mean, well, I mean, that's in whatever I said in the book is. Yeah. No, no, no. I got that. I get that. It's in there. It's, you know, I thought it was an opportunity to.
to help him by taking him off the show publicly.
Yeah.
Did you ever on a rerun of Saturday Night Live
ask for one of your sketches to be replaced
with a dress rehearsal sketch
because it played better a dress?
Oh, that was not uncommon.
Oh, yeah, I did write a rosy sketch.
Oh, you did wrote the rosy sketch, okay.
I wrote a rosy sketch where he played Rosie O'Donnell.
It sounds like, oh, yeah, but then he breaks down
and I'm just reading it now.
Tell us about it.
I'm going to read it out loud to you.
And I'm going to rediscover it with you.
Open on crude replica of Rosie O'Donnell's show.
I may regret this.
So singers, so grab onto your chair because she's headed for there.
It's the Rosie O'Donnells show.
Live, Sherry, an audience as a spunky old lady on the front row.
Now here's Rosie, because she used to have people in her audience every night, every morning, introduce her.
Chris Farley bursts out as Rosie.
Audience goes wild.
Chris Farley yelling, no impression at all.
Yeah, woo.
Woo, I'm Rosie O'Donnell.
Yeah, baby.
Here I go, baby.
I'm Rosie O'Donnell.
Woo!
Hey, bandleader.
Will is the band leader trying to enjoy Chris.
I'm Rosie.
Does a cartwheel.
Look at me.
Rosie.
Woo!
Suddenly tears off his wig and disgust and yells.
Damn it.
I suck.
Can't do Rosie, Old Donald.
Sorry, I'm sorry.
Gee, Lauren enters.
What the hell's going on, Chris?
I'm sorry.
I have no idea how she sounds.
I can't.
Chris, we spent a fortune on this set and that costume
because you said you could do Rosie.
Now what are we going to do?
Oh, God, oh God.
Look, I'll do someone else.
Who's fat?
Oh, okay, okay.
Think, think.
Think.
I'm trying.
Then back to Farley, fat.
Fat.
And Lauren's like, as fat as you.
Man, the pressure.
I got it.
Brando.
Lauren, you can do him?
Yeah.
Okay, we'll make the changes.
Go, run, run, run.
Lauren, get the brewer guy.
Crude animation with Brando hurriedly
put in Rosie's voice.
So, grab onto your chair
because he was the godfond.
there. It's the Marlon Brando show.
Cut to Cherry and the audience
confused but game. And now
here's Marlin. Chris births out as Brando.
The wig is different. Most of the lipstick has been
removed, but the clothes are the same
as Rosie's. Audience go wild. Jim as
Pesci is the bandleader.
Hey, how you doing? I'm Brando.
Woo! I'm Brando. Hey,
I'll make you an offer. You shouldn't
refuse. I'm
Apocalypse
now.
The horror.
You talking to me? I'm Brando.
He does a cartwheel
returns to the Chris Farley
voice. Wee. Yeah, baby.
Throws off the way.
Damn it. Lorne runs
in. What happened?
I don't remember what Brando
says. Well, thanks to you,
we don't have time to write a sketch.
That takes 10 minutes.
I remember Chris Farley says,
well, now what, Lauren says?
I don't know, let's think of more fat people.
That's not my job, if Lauren says.
And Chris says, what is your job?
It's to not do that.
Who's not busy?
Brewer, get me the fat black guy.
Oh, Jesus.
Jim is offended now.
He says, Lauren.
Lauren rolls his eyes.
Sorry, the fat African-American.
guy. Tracy Morgan enters. Yes, sir. Yes, sir. Lauren, get me a list of fat celebrities. I mean
as fat as Chris, okay? Get me double jins, saggy breasts, pregnant women are okay. I need fat.
I mean ridiculously fat. Tighten on Chris Farley troubled as Lauren's line repeats. So now we're
tightening on Chris's face. Ridiculously fat. Ridiculously fat.
Whydened to reveal Lorne still next to Chris Farley, he has been saying this line over and over.
So he pretended it was a voiceover, but he's actually just saying it over.
Ridiculously fat, ridiculously fat, ridiculously fat, right, enough, Chris interrupts him.
We get it.
The set darkens, Chris is in a spotlight.
Chris sings, why must I always be the fat guy?
I'm making up a tune right now.
Why must I dance the fatty dance?
There's a whole world of thin people that I could play
if you'll only give me half a chance.
Over Chris Farley's shoulder,
a photo of Chris mocked up as Pee Wee Herman appears.
I can do a wicked pee-wee Herman.
Photo switches to Chris as Richard Gear.
I can play a delicious Richard Gear.
Switches to Chris with curly hair and isotoner gloves.
Ah, but no one will see my Dan Marino.
Just because my belly goes out to.
here. It rhymes with Richard
dear. As Chris continues
singing, Lauren and Tracy
off stage. Tracy reads from
Pad. How about Drew Carey?
Not fat enough. The guy
from blues traveler? Yon.
Fred Flintstone. Been done.
Hardy? Who's your
Laurel? Tracy shrugs.
Chris is still singing.
So here my
tender plea
oh won't you
let me be
and then a picture
of Chris as Jenny McCarthy appears
Jenny
McCarthy
for you
Chris warmly
acknowledges applause
Lauren runs up with Tracy
trailing
Chris you're a hit
what did you do
I was just myself
Lauren
you mean fat
Chris nods and they hug
Lauren turns to Tracy
You eat
Oh my God
He turns to Tracy and says
You eat some bonbons
Tracy nods and runs off as Chris hugs
Lauren again
Wow
That's the end of it
I want an entire podcast
With these things that you have written
That's amazing
I mean you didn't remember writing this
but just to hear that this could have gotten on.
You know what?
I remembered when I heard Lawrence say,
where's the fat black guy?
I remember being in read-through and feeling uncomfortable.
Even though I called, I had Chris call him out on being crude,
I felt uncomfortable even just making Lawrence say it and read-through.
But there it is.
It made me laugh at the time.
And it's making me laugh maybe not for the right reasons now.
It was a long time ago.
but just to hear these things that could have gotten on.
I'm sure the Minnesota Fats thing.
I mean, I was basically, obviously, what I was doing was making a comment on how Chris is being exploited for being fat.
And that, I mean, honestly, that's what I'm getting out of reading this is that it's mocking the show and the comedy world for just going to the fat guy well over and over and over.
and then creating just this absurd joke
that he can play Jennifer Aniston
or whoever, Richard Gere,
which he obviously couldn't,
but it was not, you know,
it could easily be misinterpreted as saying
all Chris can do is B-Fad guys,
but I don't think that was the point.
I wish it got to dress,
but you got the two sketches on.
Oh, my God, I used to write,
in my later years,
I would write these deconstructing sketches
with Lauren in the background way too frequently.
I can't believe I just read that for you.
Just to have the database to see all the other stuff that did not get on.
You were there with the Sharon Stone monologue, and this only aired in the East Coast.
I actually have a videotape of it, and I don't think it's ever been posted online.
But she gets heckled.
There's four people in the audience that are protesting for a gay rights organization.
You hear somebody yell security because they're going on for 10 seconds and it sounds like that's Lauren's voice.
Right. It was obviously switched for air. It was obviously switched for, not for air for the reruns. So no one's ever seen it again.
And the West Coast has changed as well, I believe. Probably. I wonder if I can find it on this database. It's not something I would play publicly though.
I think Lawrence's the one that yells security. It sounds like him and it's like 10 seconds of them heckling and nothing's being done about.
this. And why were they heckling her? I don't... I believe it was basic instinct and the portrayal of
a character, a gay portrayal. Ah, right. It was definitely the first time I ever saw anything like
that. And it really did throw off the rest of the show, the momentum and just the energy from the
audience. I thought that was somewhat noticeable. Yeah, it was weird because I remember...
You and Sandler wrote that sketch, right? About the bar. You guys at the, uh, it was like Farley and
Sandler? Yeah, that was my, I'm sure Adam helped me write it. But yes, that ended up being the first
sketch of the night. It was the last sketch of the dress rehearsal. And then it did really well
and was moved all the way up. And it did pretty well. I think it did pretty well on the real show.
For people that aren't me, can you have described that sketch? It was really funny. Sandler wasn't
getting on a lot. I mean, he was still early on. I'm pretty sure it was just guys talking about, they
see this attractive woman at a bar and, you know, one of them's nervous and the other one's
like, hey, man, it's all in the approach. And then, here, watch and learn kind of thing.
And then they just go up there and it was just different versions of ridiculous comedy
versions of a hamina, hamina, hamina. Yeah, they're stumbling around Farley and Sandler. And then
he says, Sandler's like, pencil? And he, oh, be.
you defer what you want to touch.
Ooh.
I'm looking at the database and I'm the only credited writer of that sketch,
but I'm pretty positive that somebody helped me with it.
I always thought it was you and Sandler.
Probably Sandler.
Yeah, I don't know.
That's an example of a sketch that when it re-ramed,
that you used the dress rehearsal version and not the live.
We did?
100%.
Okay.
When it re-aired.
I thought it both played well, but maybe, I don't know,
played maybe better at dress, but I could definitely tell that there was just very little things
here and there. But yeah, that was just something that I did notice.
Interesting. I don't remember that, but I could definitely see that. It definitely happened
where, you know, if something played hotter at a dress rehearsal, we would use the dress
audience. Norm MacDonald told me that the cast and writers were able to suggest hosts,
possible host to Lorne. Did you ever hitch a host and actually get a host on?
I don't remember ever doing that while I was at the show. I remember later. I definitely
remember asking, I would like Stephen Colbert to host the show. I don't know if he would
have said yes to it. At one point, I wrote to him a few years ago and he said, yeah, he's earned it.
It's time or whatever, but it never happened. That would have been amazing. People don't even know
other than Carvey, how good he is on impressions. I mean, he just doesn't, his range of that
character stuff. Yeah. Another person I, I mean, maybe it's too late, but I really wanted Serena
Williams to host. She would have been excellent, yeah. I thought she would have been a very
dynamic and somebody who's like a larger than live sports figure that everybody knows about.
And it seemed like, you know, she really earned the right to host Saturday Night Live. And I think
she would have been great. Controversal years ago, I wanted John McEnroe to host.
He's friends with Lauren. Yeah. He's been on the show a few times, but he never got to host. I wanted
him to host. He would have been really, really good. He was, yeah, took him Johnny Carson like 10 years to get
him to finally do the show, the Tonight Show. He wasn't really doing a lot of stuff. Oh, I remember
wanting Pee We to come back. Oh, that would have been no one when he did the thing and he was the
It was, well, not immediately after the thing, but when, like, a year later or something,
I felt like time had passed and he was starting to emerge.
Maybe it was after the, maybe it was when he came back and did like that very brief
appearance on the MTV Awards or something.
Oh, did you hear any good jokes lately and stuff?
That would have been.
Yeah, yeah.
The ratings, if that would have happened, if he would have come back.
And he's a ground lane.
I mean, he can do the character stuff.
Well, I mean, yeah, but he also, he hosted.
it as Pee-wee once before, and I guess maybe
Lauren just thought once was enough.
Yeah, he did it once.
I think it was like, was it 85 when you were
there, or was that 80? Yes, it was like my
third show. Would you ever do
fake pitches when the guest was there?
And if not, who were the funniest people
that did the fake pitches? I heard Neelan,
Kevin Nealon was very funny with fake
pitches. Was that a thing when you were there?
When I was at SNL,
for the majority of my
time there, Tom Davis was the funniest.
he would have the funniest one-sentence ideas.
And I don't know if he was doing it as fake pitches.
I feel like sometimes he would actually try and write stuff up
and sometimes it would work and sometimes it wouldn't.
Maybe he was doing stuff that was canon fodder at times.
But there was something about the combination of his ideas being really silly
and his kind of incredibly laid-back attitude as he was pitching them
with total confidence
that made them even funnier
because that was his persona
was kind of, you know, I used
him on Conan. Oh, yeah. He played
Dippy the Hippie, and
he was a great performer, and I loved
using him on the Conan show.
But he was like the J.B. smooth
of that era. Like, J.B.,
who didn't have nearly as long a
story career at S&L as Tom Davis,
but I always thought he was hilarious,
and I was completely befuddled
why he wasn't on the show.
I don't know.
He didn't get much on this show in terms of sketches either.
No, he didn't get much on it.
But he had crazy ideas, not unlike the ones he pitches to Larry on curb all the time.
Yeah, funny, funny, man.
Yeah, I wasn't around for those Monday meetings, but that's what I heard.
The J.B., everybody waited for J.B. to pitch his ideas.
Like, I wouldn't make stuff.
I would go half.
I would really, like, I would almost aggressively bomb.
at those meetings because I made up a term Monday's hero, Saturday's goat.
Back then, goat didn't mean greatest of all time.
The opposite meant the person who lost the game for the team.
But I always felt like if they knew my premise on Monday,
the level of expectation would be distorted on Wednesday when they heard it at the
tape reading.
I heard that that would sometimes with the last,
In your opinion at the read-through, did the funniest stuff always get picked?
The stuff that got the most left did it almost always get picked?
Or was that not the case sometimes?
Usually stuff that killed got picked, but sometimes there was just too much stuff.
And every now and then there'd be stuff that killed that didn't get picked.
And I would be frustrated or the writer who I ever wrote writer was involved would get frustrated.
You know, it's a very complicated.
It's not an easy situation to throw people into.
comedy is so subjective and then there'd be you're basically doing it for not just the writers and
the performers but also for the crew and you just never know what you know jack handy pieces
sometimes would bomb and i felt like sometimes it was because there was like a prejudice against
him from the crew and that's what led to me asking loren to take names off the lorne and downy i asked
them to take names off the scripts for read through.
I heard about that.
How long did that last?
Lasted like as long as I ended up writing for the show and then it was reinstated
maybe a year or two after.
Certainly by the time the new regime came in in 1995, it was restored and never changed back.
Those initials are so important now.
And when you left the show, if you had somebody the right person's initials on that
added and stuff. Things change. A few things we talked about the last time, and I just wanted to
give some context to the listeners. Inhibited Dance Party, which you wrote for Kelsey Grammar. Can you
just describe what that sketches? Because I kind of glossed over it. I barely remember it, but I believe
it was a dance party type show. There were a lot of those on television at the time that were kind of like
American Bandstand was the original, where, you know, it's like teenagers, young people dancing to
contemporary hits and in this case
it was all about people who
dance kind of the way I would which was
they're just you know self-consciously
they weren't really into it. Sandler hosted the fictional show
you and Michelle in the background. Yeah I'm sure we
were good at it. Yeah that was Kelsey Grammer
Dwight Yocum and then the pinky ring for Joe Pesci we mentioned
but we didn't describe it can you just describe it a little bit?
It was based on just this thing that
I think people do when they look at themselves in a mirror in a clothing store and they're trying
something on. And then they just start moving around. And it just extrapolated from that. Just
imagining yourself in different positions. And then I just extrapolated and just had Joe Pesci doing it.
I just thought it was hilarious, the idea of that all he's doing, all he's doing is with different
pinky rings. That was the first thing that made me laugh. But then the second thing,
was just doing that thing that you do when you're wearing clothes, looking at yourself in different
positions, and then kind of just imagining yourself at a party or whatever or at a social
situation and how you would be and just taking it way too far and having Pesci just starting,
you know, conversations and just silent.
Yeah, the conversations and him mouthing words you can't say on network television,
having it like he's arguing with somebody.
Yeah, and then he gets carried away because he's Joe Pesci.
and he gets into an angry argument with the laugh.
It's one of my favorites, and it's Jim,
I think it's Jim Downey's favorite of anything I've ever done for the show.
Oh, really? Peggy, Ray? It did really well.
Same episode, The Criminals watched the news.
I just want to give some context. This is a TV newscaster that says,
Daring daytime robbery at Midtown Bank,
this and other stories coming up next at Six.
And these are robbers. I know Sandler and Pesci and a bunch of people,
or the TV is on when
the home that they're robbing and they see that
so they're trying to wait for more information
and then this commercials
keeps coming on which is
I'm a hungry puppy dog
so maybe I just
described the whole thing. I'm pretty sure it was
the first time I ever did anything
remotely like a
doggy voice on television
you know it was without the Russian accent
but it had this quality
to it that triumphed a little bit
especially the original triumph.
If you watched the first time I ever did triumph,
he's a lot more slow and deliberate,
and his voice goes this much into the,
you know,
because I was still like doing that heavy doggy thing.
That was a funny sketch,
the happy puppy dog thing.
But yeah, it was,
I definitely had help on with that,
either Conan or Greg or Bob or all of them.
They were gone by then.
Okay, then it was, no, they weren't all gone.
Were they?
Yeah, maybe they were. Maybe it was Schneider. Maybe you're right. Maybe Rob Schneider helped me write it.
I want to mention real quick, give Rob credit. People do not know how good he was as a sketch writer. I know, you know, people, you know, think of him just maybe he does these movies and he hangs out with Sandler. Even the Harvard that Ivy League people were in awe of Schneider as a sketch writer. I mean, he did that. What was though an Ed Glosser, trivial psychic? I mean, his sketchability was I, correct?
Trivial psychic was hilarious.
A perfect Christopher Walken sketch.
Just a beautiful, he also wrote Tiny Elvis.
He came up with Massive Headwound Harry, the concept.
Massive Headwound Harry was his sketch.
Yeah.
It's his sketch.
The only thing...
I mean, Tom Davis did the dog.
The dog was a genius.
Maybe Tom Davis came up with the dog beat entirely.
Yeah, I think I said that in somewhere.
That was Tom Davis' contribution to the sketch.
dog. Okay, so I wrote that, I wrote it with Adam, the robber's sketch. Oh, no, that's
pinky ring. Wait, let me look at the robber's sketch. Oh, wow. Sandler contributed a
picky. He definitely, I mean, he definitely added some stuff. Oh, look at this. Robbers,
according to this, Jack Handy and Conan O'Brien. No, I, that is fascinating. I must have either
written it earlier or I just called Conan and does Conan have an additional sketch credit on
that show? Conan was not at the show at the time. No, I know. This is 1992. He's definitely gone
by then. That doesn't make any sense. But I'm just wondering if I had written this sketch in the
past with Jack and Conan or if. Yeah, you might have. Or if I don't remember. I don't remember.
writing it for anybody but peshy, but I might have. Yeah, that's interesting that Conan got. I know
whatever motivational speaker was on Odenkirk at the end, extra material Odenkirk. Yeah, yeah. I bet Conan came up with I'm a
hungry puppy dog. I bet he came up with that particular choice of commercial, because there were a bunch
of commercials, but that was the one that kept going over and over. The crooks were just the robbers
just were kept wanting to hear the news. And then it's like, I'm a happy puppy dog.
So funny with all of them
I cannot believe that all you can eat
Your sketch group from Chicago that got you hired
That there's stuff on YouTube that exists
I had no idea
I mean I had heard about the show
You get these rave reviews from the Chicago Tribune
And you're doing the show at 83, 84
All You Can Eat in the Temple of Doom
Several O's in Doom
So you do not get sued
And the Japanese couple with you and Jill Talley
Doing the Talking in Japanese
but only with brands of Japanese products.
And then the medical school interview with,
it was so funny, the medical school interview.
Did you use that in your SNL packet?
Yes.
You do Ed Sullivan.
They really like that sketch.
You do, can you just do the premise of the sketch?
I mean, this is real like you at one point.
Well, it was based on, based on just this shit that I would hear when I was a pre-dental student
that, oh, we like Renaissance men.
We don't want you to just take biology and, you know,
because even when I was going to defer my admission to NYU by a year,
they were like, no, it's good.
You'll learn, get out there in the world.
We want Renaissance men.
And that was it.
Just that little bit triggered the premise,
which was this interview with, you know, the dean of admissions for a medical school.
And he's asking the questions that are so absurdly unrelated to medicine and about
trivial stuff like, you know, doing Ed Sullivan or whatever, or just random questions about
the Tigris and Euphrates.
And you flip the question around and you just basically state what he said just as a statement.
it. Yeah, that was, that's, that happens at least once, yeah.
That's such a funny thing, but it's on YouTube. I think it's a good. The whole sketch is on YouTube.
Not the whole thing, but it's a compilation that they have of the show. Yeah, somewhere I have the
entirety of that show. And that's what really got you, right? Franken and Davis showed up,
right? Unannounced, they were shooting something in Chicago? No, well, my friend Dave Reynolds,
who ended up writing, co-writing, Finding Nemo. He was,
somebody who
was cast. He was in my comedy
group and he was cast by Franken and Davis
to be
in this
movie that they were shooting called
One More Saturday Night that took place
in Minnesota, I think it was
supposed to be, but it was shot in Chicago.
And Dave got to be friends with
Alan Tom and told him he was in a comedy group
and Alan Tom, yeah, yeah, let's come
on, let's go take words, check it out,
yeah. And so
they came one night, and
And they were incredibly complimentary and kind, and we all went out for beers after at a German bar and had a great time. And that was it. I was like, that's nice little validation. Al Franken and Tom Davis were comedy heroes of mine. I'd seen them perform. That summer, they also did a couple of nights at Zanies in Chicago, and I went and saw them, and they were brilliant. Deadpan, Bob and Ray era style comedy that I loved.
And then like two weeks or three weeks later, I'm reading TV Guide because that's the only thing you ever read back then for any kind of industry news.
And there's a little article that says, Lord Michaels is returning to Saturday Night Live and he's hired Al Franken and Tom Davis as his producers.
I was in disbelief and just literally, it was the closest I've ever felt to like hitting the ceiling.
Like whatever that expression means, that's how I felt like.
my spirit rise out of my body.
I could not believe that the show that I had obsessed on for 10 years
was now going to be run by people who had seen me and liked me.
Then we got to audition, three of us.
They contacted you?
Well, we all had the same agent, this woman Anne Gettys in Chicago.
So Hugh Callowley and Doug Dale, who ended up being the host of TV,
Fun House on Comedy Central and me all, we did this one bed where Clint Eastwood hosting a
variety show and he introduces Peeway Herman and Howie Mandel doing Who's on First, which was just
the absurdity of visual and prop comedians doing this incredibly detailed, you know, language bit.
And of course, Pee We and Howie tear it to shreds.
And I recently showed it to Howie Mandel because I did his podcast.
And I played Howie, of course, because I kind of looked like him.
And then Doug Dale ended up getting very close to being hired.
I think we talked about that.
We did.
It was him and Lovitz were neck and Nack and Lovitz got it.
Yep.
And Lovitz was great.
Then you did a packet, right, on top of that?
Yes.
Then I was asked to, so then Franken asked around other cast members,
and they attributed a lot of the writing to me,
even though it was a pretty collaborative show,
but I guess I was the,
if there had to be a primary writer of the show,
it was my stuff.
And so I put together a packet
combining some of the sketches
that I wrote primarily for that show
that were primarily mine
and then a couple of other things.
And that's where Jim Downey got to discover my stuff.
And he liked me enough.
And so I made it.
And I probably wouldn't have, but back then the Writers Guild,
there were a couple of things that were miraculously happening
that I don't think I would have ever gotten hired otherwise, had they not,
which was, first of all, the show had an entire staff turnover
because Lauren Michaels took over for Dick Eversaw.
With it, he wanted to start from scratch.
So entirely new cast.
and an entirely new writing staff.
So there were all these slots open,
and most of them obviously went to veterans
who Lauren had worked with, or Jim Downey,
or Al Franken and Tom Davis had worked with.
Lauren had done the new show,
which was a primetime sketch comedy show.
He had sort of dipped his toes back into the water in 1984.
That show wasn't a success.
It was highly conceptual comedy writing.
But many brilliant writers, George Meyer, Jack Handy, Jim Downey, Al Frank, and Tom Davis, all transferred over to S&L.
And there were just a few slots open, and John Swartz Welder got one, and Bruce McCullough, Mark McKinney, and me all got hired, but as apprentice writers, which wouldn't happen today.
The Writers Guild doesn't allow anybody to be paid less than scale.
But I thought, you know, I understand like, okay, maybe there's a limited amount of time where you're allowed to pay these guys less than scale.
That would be perfectly fair.
Like you don't want to take advantage of them.
But it allowed them within their budget to hire more people, give more people a champ.
And now the cast, the writers is like 24 people or something.
I could be off on that, the writers now.
But back then, you didn't.
have this many? I don't know. There's, I don't know how many writers there are. It was a much
smaller staff and a smaller budget. And Bruce, Mark and I all got like, you know, 60% of a writer's
salary. So if it hadn't happened, at least one of us wouldn't have been hired. It's amazing how
it worked. Jill Talley, when she was in the sketch group, you were all interviewed in the
tribune and she said that a bunch of you were in, I guess, background. It was in Mr.
T. special. Were you in that? Mr. T. did a shot a TV movie in Chicago. I don't remember what it
was called. I swear to God, I don't remember if I was in the background or not. I know some of these
guys were. I literally can't remember if I was one of them. I definitely was an extra in, we all were, in
Al Franken and Tom Davis's movie, one more Saturday night. And I found it recently. And it's a scene where
Michelle and I are dancing in the background.
You danced on camera before inhabited.
You know, I talked to somebody who worked on Staten Island, the Jet Appetal film, which I really enjoyed.
And the person that worked on the movie told me you came in with all these different ways to play your character.
And they were so impressed with your preparation.
I mean, normally maybe people come in with maybe one or two ways to play it.
But basically, they said every shot you would give them something else to play with.
First of all, I just thought you were great in that.
I mean, they gave you this dramatic part.
I'm guessing you didn't have to audition.
I didn't audition, but he did a table read of it with an audience, and I played like five different parts.
It was in New York, and I was there in Laura Benanti and Pete, obviously, and Bill Burr, obviously.
A few of us were, like, playing multiple roles.
I think this was one of them, the pharmacist, but I played, like, a restaurant,
I played the guy who gets shot at the end.
You know, I was doing different versions of New York accents for all of them,
because I assumed that's what they wanted.
I don't know if the person you're speaking about was talking about that,
or if they were talking about,
because I don't remember doing much,
I feel like once we were shooting,
I thought I was basically doing one thing,
but I don't remember maybe.
They were saying them when they,
it was the actual shooting. You were doing it. You're giving them different options and with
things and stuff. That's nice. In your opinion, in maybe just like, I don't know, a couple
sentences or more, who is Lauren Michaels and what did he mean to you? What does he mean to you?
Wow. He's very, uh, there's so many things I could say. I mean, you know, I, he was somebody that I
was iconic to me before I met him, produced the show that the reason I wanted to be a
performer. It's the reason I thought the show gave me so much joy when I was a kid that
I finally realized that acting and show business in general was a worthy profession
because of the, you know, the capacity to just make people happy.
And then when I met him, like at first, I was very intimidated by him and, you know, I impersonated him as a way of like, just like when I was a 10 year old kid, I would draw pictures of my teachers.
The fact that I could impersonate Lauren Well was a way of, it was cathartic, but it was also a way of making friends at the show.
Like, it's just a way of getting easy laughs.
You were the first one to do him, right?
You were the first one to do, Lauren?
I think Mark McKinney was the first one, and his was a dead on, accurate one.
I was the first one to start doing him in a cartoony way, but Carvey was kind of doing it at the same time.
And then I didn't realize it, and then I asked him, do you do, Lauren?
And then he just did a Lorne for me.
And just, hello, yes, what to what gone on the show?
He had this weird move, which Lauren didn't do, but it was a perfectly hilarious extrapolation.
You know, and I just made my Lauren cartoonier and cartoonier, and it was like a coping mechanism.
You know, it was just a way of dealing with the boss.
It was something that over the years, as I got more relaxed at the show, because I was the nerdiest nerd possible, which I think I explained to you, and I don't think Lauren was very impressed with my overall demeanor, just being kind of scared and needy all the time.
my own way. And then I think we had a complicated relationship as many people do with him when
I was younger because I got to be kind of bratty and opinionated because I just had no perspective
on life. Nothing bad had ever happened to me. And I just, so I think I just kind of didn't really
understand authority and respect it as much as I should have at the time. But then toward my last
few years of the show. At the time I had being in the room with him, as opposed to even though I
didn't like, even though I begged out of it because I didn't like the way people were being political
in there. But I got to see a side of him that I didn't really understand before that. I got to see
him struggle with the decisions, a more human side of him. And I think he just got to know me better
and we ended up getting along really well.
By the time I left, I felt very close to him in a lot of ways.
And like I said, when he offered me the producing gig meant a lot to me.
And when I wanted to write for the show to help it, it was because of him.
I wanted to help him because I felt like I owed everything to him in a lot of ways,
him and Jim Downey, basically.
and I loved the show
and I loved how much he loved the show
and I loved how much it meant to him
so it meant a lot to me in 1995
to write those two sketches
because the show was really on the ropes
and I really wanted to help get it off to a good start
and the fact that those sketches were successful
in a way those
those are two of the most meaningful things
I ever wrote for the show for that reason
You know, and then I got to go back as a cartoon writer.
And at that point, we had this relationship where everybody else was resentful.
Not everybody, but a lot of people were resentful of how close we seemed to be, or at least, you know, not, I was never close like, hey, Lauren, how you doing?
Let's go out.
You know, I never got over my shyness and, you know, my ultimate awe of being.
Saturday Night Live, but I did feel very comfortable with him professionally and somewhat
personally. And there were people at the show who were like, why does he have that? Why does he
get an instant spot on the show and you don't even know what he's writing? Which was really
the ultimate compliment for me. He would say to me on Saturdays, I just want to be surprised.
I don't even want to know what you're doing. You told people you earned it. He said,
earned this? Yes, he did say that. He told me at one point, he said people are upset. There are some
people who are upset. Like, why does Robert have this automatic spot on the show that eats up time
that could be going to other people? And he said, well, he's earned it, which I never really
wanted. I wanted each individual cartoon to earn the right on its own. And I think they did
for the most part. And once in a blue moon, one would get cut, which I hoped was the,
exception that proved the rule that the others were deserving. And I think I've told you that
like when I did the Dana Carvey show, that was another moment where I started to understand
Lorne even more because suddenly I was kind of the Lorne of that show. And there were people
who I had hired literally 10 weeks earlier who had, you know, their careers were fluctuating and
They really needed a job, and I wasn't doing it as a favor.
I was hiring them because I thought they were all brilliant, and they didn't want anybody
to feel like they owed me anything, but at the same time, I was a little bit, you know,
half amused and half distraught that people would get angry at me because I realized that
that's just the nature of putting on a sketch show, that every week you're going to
disappoint people. They're not in the show enough or such a sketch they wrote that they really
loved didn't get chosen. And the fact that you have to be the decision maker, a lot of stress
comes with that that I hadn't anticipated. I figured, man, if these people who were like out of work
10 weeks ago are giving me side eye at times, then that's what Lauren's been dealing with
all these years. So I literally called them up just to say, I'm sorry. I've never really
really understood what went with this job.
And I remember him laughing at the time.
I think he appreciated it,
but I think he was also amused that someone would...
It finally acknowledged it.
He would acknowledge it in that way of just saying,
I'm sorry, I never got it.
But that was the case.
So, yeah, I've always had since then this deep affection for Lauren,
even though I was still perfectly capable of making fun of the show and making fun of him
and some of my most vicious stuff, like that Chris Farley sketch that I read,
or the cartoons that I would do that sometimes would make fun of the show,
or the cartoons that I would do that would have Lorne in them,
the 25th anniversary show, for God's sakes, was all about Lorne,
and it was making fun of mostly the 15th,
anniversary show, which I thought had a little bit of, was a little bit too self-congratulatory
and formal, a lot of podium stuff. And I assumed the 25th was going to be similar. So I was
kind of making fun of that, you know, and the hierarchy of who sits where, and I wrote a whole song
about it. And it definitely made Lauren uncomfortable, which I felt bad about. And I remember
being in the audience, watching the show, and thinking, this is not at all like the 15th.
This is great. Bill Murray's starting the show, and he's doing Nick the lounge singer and Lorraine's
in the sketch and acroids in the sketch. And people are really going for it this time. This isn't
self-congratulatory. This is the opposite. And then they did these tributes to the people who had
passed away since they did one to Chris and they did one to Gilda and they did one to
Phil and that's the one that really got me because it was the remainder of the cast that I had
worked with and they're all like holding hands and I remember Jan and Lovitz who were the closest
to them just gripping each other so tight and it just felt like just felt like kids without their
dad because Phil really was like kind of the calming dad figure of that group. And I was so touched
that I left my seat at one point during a commercial break and went up to where the writers were
and said, I don't think we should run my cartoon. I was getting really emotional. He said,
I don't think it's appropriate. This show's great. This shows really great. It's like I don't want to
make fun of it and a couple of them said I don't worry about it your cartoon's not mean it's
playful and I was like okay it was like I you know because deep down I didn't want to I didn't
really really want this to happen but it played well people love that I mean and it's
a lot to Lauren that he left it in I don't know but I mean I felt I felt strong enough at the
moment that I was going to voice this. I was going to voice it. And if somebody said,
you know what, you're right, then I was going to go to Lauren. But they talked me out of it,
so I didn't go to Lauren. And Lauren had Alec Baldwin set it up. And like literally,
he had Alec Baldwin said, everybody makes fun of the boss. He tempered it. And then the cartoon
ran. And I actually didn't think it killed that hard. I think people were.
Maybe it was inside, but I mean, it still got loves. I think people were, no, I think it was, no,
Well, that was the audience to appreciate an inside joke.
But I think people were like a little bit afraid to laugh.
Really?
I think so.
I think like, you know.
He was in the audience, which never happens.
He was watching that from the audience for the first time ever.
So maybe that was part of it.
Yeah, he was very like he was much more.
He was in the cold open on the 15th.
Chevy, you got to fall again.
That was funny.
Whatever it was, Chevy wants to fall.
In this show, he was.
kept a really low profile. And this cartoon, I think maybe people thought, ooh, this is heavy,
making fun of Lauren on his own anniversary show. But, you know, that's, that was what I.
I thought I made Lauren look good, just though good sport. That's for me personally, it made him look.
Well, no, it did. I mean, but at the time, this was like my thing. Like, man, I, no, I'm not going to be
Reverend, man. That's not what the show's supposed to be, man. This is what the show's supposed to be.
So that's what I ran with.
And it wasn't like necessarily against Lorne.
It was just more just about puncturing the balloon of pretentiousness that, you know,
and like whatever.
I was, Lauren was hawking, S&L, you know, the talking Dennis Miller doll or whatever there was.
I mean, there was.
I did feel like the show was being pimped and merchandise too much.
Like I was a purist because I wanted the show to be like it was in the 70s.
And I was still holding on to that in 1999, and I felt like, oh, it's gone commercial.
And now they sell merchandise.
You know, I'm sure I still had some bitterness over Chris Farley and the way that went down.
And I didn't like that they wanted to do a Chris Farley best of right away.
I thought that was exploitive.
Tim Meadows did a good job in the cold, opening the special.
I can't even imagine.
I don't know.
I don't know. I had a whole thing where I wanted it to be, I wanted to address his addiction and I wanted to
address what could have been, more it could have been done. You thought it was too soon? Because it was,
it was almost like, yeah, they had it like the next week, I think, maybe or two. No, I know. Tim's thing was
more like, well, we want to remember the good parts or whatever it was. And I was like, in my head,
I was like, no, I don't want to remember. I want people to know why this happened. And that,
more could have been done to i cannot believe that his representation did not drop him that it to me is
like that would have been something that i feel like he would have he would have panicked well you know i mean
it's it's it's one of those things where you just feel like uh i mean in a loving way they that
would have been a loving thing for them to do in my opinion is just to show the seriousness well
that's why you know yeah perhaps i mean this is that was that was
the thinking I had when, as I
wrote in the book or said in the book,
that I wanted us to
fire him as
a public humiliation so
that he would have to
take this seriously because Lauren had
very successfully helped him
three years earlier or whatever.
Numerous times, Lauren helped him.
Well, certainly the time he
suspended him from the show.
It was only one show that he missed
which was Danny DeVito hosted
in January
of 90, I think it was 93, and it was, he came back the next week for Harvey Kytel and he had one
small part in the restroom sketch where. I thought he missed more than one show. I think he missed
like three or three or four shows. Did he, he did? Okay, he did. I think so. You're probably
right. I mean, you were there. I wasn't. Pretty sure it was in the 91, 92 season that that happened.
Then he was sober for like number of years, which is like unthinkable now, but it was, but he
was. And the fact that it worked was my impetus of like, well, okay, this is what he cares about
most, you know, and that's what you got to take it away from him. He doesn't love himself enough
or whatever it was. I don't want to psychoanalyze him, but that was the thing that I thought
was what we needed to do. And anyway, so whatever, I'm just, I'm just rambling because I,
Yes, some of my cartoons were informed by, you know, my own cynicism about different things, including Chris.
But at the time, ultimately, I didn't want it to hurt Lauren, and I didn't think it was.
I thought it would play affectionate at the end.
And at the end, he gets this big applause.
He's saying, it's my show.
And then the audience started applauding before the sketch was over.
And in my mind, and I told this to Lauren, you know, at the rap party afterward, I said,
they were applauding you.
They're not applauding the cartoon.
That was your curtain call because you hadn't appeared at the show.
Did he get that?
Did he understand that?
He kind of laughed.
I don't know if he agreed with me or not.
I don't know.
But that's how I felt to me.
And it made me very happy.
It made me feel like it was playing as affectionate and it was playing as.
but you know what I have a different perspective on Lauren than other people in the audience
I you know I knew them better than maybe half the people in the audience and then will not
as well as another as the other half of people in the audience I was somewhere in the middle
as Bob Odenkirk said you saved the show I mean you're writing saved the show I don't believe
I want 100% do believe the most commercial stuff that played big during that era was yours
In terms of people that are in comedy, they love Jack Handy's stuff.
But in terms of your stuff, they love it.
And it played more commercially than Jack Handy.
And a number of Ted Williams.
I get that.
And I know I was an important contributor.
I feel great about it.
But I feel like the show would have survived without me.
I feel like the cast saved the show.
I feel like Dana Carvey, Phil Hartman, and Jan Hooks saved the show.
Yeah.
I mean, the cast was amazing.
I do want to point out there were some weeks where you and Norm, your cartoon and Norm on Updipers, I knew consistently those were the two times I was going to laugh at me watching the show.
Well, because those were writer-oriented bits more than character-driven stuff.
And you're right, at that time, there was a lot of recurring character stuff, a lot of what Jim Downey would say was wacky person in a normal situation.
And that's not the kind of stuff that comedy writing fans necessarily gravitate to.
And that's what you are.
You're a comedy writing fan.
And so am I, for the most part.
But I had enough of the affection for performers that Lauren recognized.
And that's why I think he wanted me to produce that year, because he knew that I, you know, Robert loves performers.
And like I said, the last time, you know, he said you make performers look good,
and that's what's going to make the show look good and make you look good.
And the cast was amazing.
I do want to point out if you were there, I don't think as many groundling people would
have been hired in the one, the first, like, I think three or four years.
I mean, the number, because they didn't hire anybody since Julia Sweetney.
They had, Shaban Fallon was featured for a little bit.
According to Chris Cotent, he just said that SNL thought, you know, it was half,
over the groundlands. They really didn't go there much to draw people.
I think there was a perception within the writing side of the show that of the two
Second City versus the Groundlings that the Second City writing was more sophisticated.
But I didn't really know the Groundlings well enough to really have an informed opinion of that.
I mean, I was a Chicago guy.
I used to watch these guys, John Capellos, Rick Thomas, Lance Kinsey, Megan Faye,
They would do these improv sets at 11 o'clock for free.
You didn't have to go pay for the regular show.
Anybody could come and watch the improv set.
And it was a very beautiful improv community friendly aspect of the city of Chicago,
that the hottest show in the town would literally let students and comedy fans
watch them improvise for free every single night.
And I went many, many nights.
and was heavily inspired by those guys.
And that's what, you know,
because I didn't really love improv as a performance thing.
I didn't like games.
Like, we need a place, we need a this.
And, or, you know, there were a lot of games that were,
I want to do it in the style of who,
Henry David Thoreau, okay, and we need a location and an occupation.
These guys would improvise scenes.
They wouldn't really improvising them.
They were kind of, they had premises that they were working on,
and they would kind of take suggestions from the audience
and just shoehorn, based on your suggestion of a doctor,
we take you to, and then they would do a sketch
that had to do with a doctor that they'd been working on.
And they would improvise in front of the audience.
They would work, they were doing,
scene work live in front of the audience. And that, I thought, was really, really informative
and an interesting way to write a sketch, like, because you're finding layers that go beyond
the premise and depth and texture and jokes. That was, I've got nothing to do with Lauren at this
point. Oh, no, no, we switched a little bit, but I think you answered the question with Lord.
Yeah, okay. Let me say one.
more thing about Lorne.
So what Lorne did that, I remember
when Conan had to speak
at Lauren getting the Mark Twain Award,
he didn't really have a thing, and I gave him.
The thing that I've always felt
was
an enormous contribution.
As a comedy writer,
Lauren was really revolutionary
in that he allowed comedy
writers to be their own
bosses of the sketches that they wrote.
And that was absolutely
unheard of on television.
before Saturday Night Live.
If you were a sketchwriter on a variety show,
you're lucky if you're even in the studio
after you've written the sketch,
much less calling the shots,
telling the director or telling the set people
what you want the set to look like or wardrobe.
But Lauren had every writer who came up with their sketch
be the producer of that sketch.
Not only was it invaluable in teaching people
how to work in television,
but it was incredibly generous,
and it also, but what it also had the odd effect of doing was turning writers into,
Tina Fey uses the word monsters, that might be a little strong, but writers kind of very
quickly lose perspective as to like, no, no, you don't realize that writers don't normally get
to do this. You know, after the first few times they do it and they have success, they're like,
hey, you know, just like any creative person, they get a little bit of positive feedback and
and I get a lot of confidence with that tiny little bit of positive feedback.
A lot of creative people are like that.
They'll go from, I suck, I suck to, no, no, that was pretty good.
Yeah, you know, it really was.
Yeah, no, why the fuck wasn't it chosen?
And there was, so the more confidence writers had by getting sketches on and successfully producing them,
the more apt they were to have less respect for authority.
that was an odd kind of byproduct of the creative freedom
that weren't allowed for creative people.
It's really true.
I mean, it's that goes on today,
and it's a reason why I feel like sketches,
a sketcher's like Mad TV had problems
because the people,
writers over there had very little say.
And I talk to writers.
Sure, that's true.
No, it's a very smart strategy.
It should have been like that over there.
Someone is smart enough to come up.
with the idea and write the sketch, then that person's probably smart enough to have a good
sense of how they visualize the sketch, you know, and most writers can.
And he'll put on stuff that he does not personally like because it does well at the table
and I give him a lot of credits, certain stuff that he might consider hack.
He absolutely, I know, would put on for the audience would want it.
And I just think the fact that he would put stuff on that maybe wasn't his favorite stuff helped the show somewhat or, I don't know, it played to the audience.
I think so.
I mean, I think he appreciated good writing and dry humor as much as anybody, but he was, you know, wary of putting too much of that on because he felt like then the show would not have performance energy.
And he was right about that.
Yeah, it's amazing as longevity.
But if he offered, if you got offered the gig, you wouldn't take it, would you, to take over for him?
They'll never offer me the gig because I'm too old at this point.
I mean, that's the first reason.
First reason is I'm too old.
I'm in my 60s, and they should give it to somebody who's going to be in it for at least, you know, 10 years or so.
At least.
Although, I mean, I don't know how old Higgins is or Tina.
I mean, these guys are probably deep into their 50s by now.
but they're younger than me that's good enough and uh so no i know i know i wouldn't take it
because i've never wanted it never wanted to do it the show i i really feel like mikey day
and streeter their sketches are on a level of what you would you would be doing i mean i feel
like with the current show there i mean there's a lot of funny writers over there and stuff but in
terms of sketch writing when i see a sketch that i'm like oh my goodness it it seems to be a lot
at times them. But I'm glad it went more to a writing show. We talked about the Beavis
sketch, right? We talked about that. Yeah. Another great writer is, um, really funny writer is
Andrew Dismukes. He always makes me laugh. Yeah, he's done very well. He doesn't, he's not one of
these guys who like dazzles you with a lot of different voices and that kind of thing. But he's,
he's always funny. And I guess he's a lot of times he's written the things that he's in.
Him and then Dan Bula with Sarah Sherman.
I mean, really like some of his stuff, but they have some really good people.
He's very solid.
No, I'm sure they have a lot of good writers there.
They're always good.
Yeah, but I just like the fact, and this is just me, and I know I'm not the majority,
but they have the writers.
They're doing more concept, premise pieces and stuff.
The stuff that I like a little bit more, it's a good balance, I think, with you guys were doing.
Absolutely.
Yes, it's not.
I mean, if anything, you could criticize the show for not having enough recurring characters.
Oh, yeah, they took away the catchphrases and they took away yet recurring.
Yeah, it almost feels like these things have been dismissed as being hacky and to the point where they don't even want to do them anymore.
They do them on Weekend Update. Is this what we talked about last week?
No, I don't think so, but they do that on update.
It seems like that's where you see recurring characters only is on Weekend Update.
I never thought of that.
And it's because partly I think they feel less corny on Weekend Update because
Weekend Update has sort of settled into this kind of vaudeville construct where Colin or Michael just sets people up
and they get to just go for it with a straight man standing right next to them.
And it's an easily acceptable way to do character stuff.
There's a lot less struggle than having to set up an entire story.
scenario and create a wacky person who then everybody has to react to earnestly.
Everything's taken a little less seriously at the update desk.
They do a good job.
I think they're doing such a good job.
Herb Sergeant, when he was doing Kevin Neeland, Jim Downey said that Herb negatively affected
Neelan's update performance.
Do you agree with that?
Again, it's like that was it.
I guess I overlapped with Neelan my last year doing update,
but I was not really involved in update other than occasionally writing characters.
Once in a Blue Moon, I would write a joke for Kevin.
And you did some commentaries as the moron?
I did The Moron's Perspective thing a couple of times.
I wrote for, you know, Bennett Brower, I wrote that thing for Chris.
I was there the one where he flies.
I was at the live show when he tries to fly and get stuck in the cable.
Oh, that was funny.
Yeah.
I always wondered why you were there at the Helen Hunt episode and why I know Conan would be going every weekend at the show.
But I always wondered why you were there.
So you wrote that.
Was that the Flying Bennett-Brouwer episode?
Yeah, Ellen Hunt Snoop Dogg.
I was there.
I was like, and I saw you afterwards and I was like, what did Robert write out of this?
But that makes sense.
That's what I wrote, I guess.
But yeah, I don't really have an opinion on Herb. I mean, I wasn't privy to what, I know that Dennis and Herb had a very, you know, they had a very functional working relationship.
Dennis really drove the ship. And I guess Downey has suggested that once Dennis was out of the picture that Herb wanted to steer the ship, it may have had a negative influence on Kevin being.
you know, restricted in his comedy and his approach to weekend update.
But I, I, this is, I don't know.
And possibly let in other writers throw in jokes.
I mean, if you look at Norm McDonald's first five or six shows, Herb is still there.
And you can tell, it seems like a Herb Sergeant update.
And then he was let go.
And that's when Norm started to be Norm.
I just, I felt, um, okay.
Herb Sergeant had an amazing run there.
He absolutely did. And that was just Jim Downey mentioned in the one thing. I just wasn't sure. Yeah, you answered the question. I appreciate it. I mean, Herb wrote for, he wrote for Steve Allen. Oh, Johnny Carson's first head writer. Yeah, he was Johnny's first head writer in New York. I didn't know that. dated Lauren Bacall. I mean, he had an interest in life. Yeah. Oh, I know he was a playboy too. I know he was a playboy, which is, you know, we didn't understand it because, you know, by the time we met him, he was like 65. And so he's, he's,
hard to picture him that way. But, uh, but yes, I heard he was, uh, a ladies man. He was a lethario.
He was a, he was a lethario. Yeah, thank you just for doing this. And I've known you forever.
We met December of 93, so you can do the math. I can do the math. But, uh, well, 30 years and
counting. I can't believe that. But you were so kind to me the first time I met you. You gave me
your phone number at Conan, like, whenever you need anything. And, um, just such a kind,
kind man. I very much
appreciated your fanhood
and your input. Oh, I'm looking at
inhibited dance party and Michelle
and I cross right at the beginning. It's so
weird. Oh, there
we are dancing. Oh, my God. Yes,
you should show her. I will.
I'm going to show my kids. Oh, there we are.
Oh, that's so funny. I love
this. That was fun sketch, and that was
just fun to see you guys in the background. I know them.
I don't remember much about the sketch,
but I will watch it.
Melanie Hutzel does like this weird dance
She does and I remember that I remember Samler hosting
And yeah it was just fun to see the both of you in
Oh dance party USA that was the name of the
Popular show at the time dance party USA was on the USA network
I think oh is that what it was
So this was actually called Inhibited Dance Party USA
Yeah it was really really funny
Thank you for being a pal
I can't believe you gave me so much time and answered everything
I know. I lost track of this being a podcast.
We're just two guys talking.
I'm probably going to do it in two parts.
But just the Rosie O'Donnell read to me, I'm going to, like, I'm going to be pumped
now for like a week.
Like, I can't believe that I got a read like that.
That's such a, I mean, it was such a funny sketch.
And just to see you do everything on it.
That was weird to revisit.
I haven't done that since I got this, since I got this, whatever you call it, database.
I haven't, I haven't, like, looked from my old sketches, and I've forgotten, I guess I've forgotten a lot of them, too.
Thank you for everything. I can't express your kindness over the years and just that you did this with me and put up with all the technical.
No, no, it's great. You're incredibly knowledgeable, and I'm learning a lot, just talking to you about stuff. I forgot.
You're right about the Star Trek. I am that guy. Oh, man.
It's all right. And someone has to.
be him. No, and you always had
good comedy instincts too, so...
I really appreciate it. Take care of my
friend. Show your family, the dance
party, and... I will. Yeah, you're
a rockster. Thanks for being my friend, and I'll
touch you later. All the best, buddy. Be good. Take care.
Bye-bye.
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Have a wonderful week, and I'll see you next Tuesday.
Thank you.