Office Ladies - An Interview with Bryan Cranston

Episode Date: January 31, 2024

This week the ladies chat with Bryan Cranston! Bryan Cranston is well known for playing Walter White on “Breaking Bad”, Hal from “Malcolm in the Middle” and so many more incredible, award-winn...ing acting credits, but he also directed “Work Bus”! Bryan shares what it was like to be given this opportunity and how he thought he would get to direct in the well air-conditioned “Office” set but instead found himself working in the now legendary “Death Bus”. Jenna, Angela and Bryan also chat about sharing birthdays, traveling and even taking yourself out bowling. This is a wonderful episode, enjoy!  Check out Office Ladies Merch at Podswag: https://www.podswag.com/collections/office-ladiesOffice Ladies Website - Submit a fan question: https://officeladies.com/submitaquestionFollow Us on Instagram: OfficeLadiesPod

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 I'm Jenna Fisher. And I'm Angela Kinsey. We were on The Office together. And we're best friends. And now we're doing the Ultimate Office rewatch podcast just for you. Each week we will break down an episode of The Office and give exclusive behind the scenes stories that only two people who were there can tell you.
Starting point is 00:00:18 We're The Office, ladies. Good morning, lady. Oh, we have a really amazing guest on Office, ladies, today. We're the Office Ladies. Good morning, lady. Oh, we have a really amazing guest on Office Ladies today. We sure do. All of you that listened to the work bus last week know that today in the studio, we have Brian Cranston.
Starting point is 00:00:39 We cannot wait for you guys to hear this interview because, look, there are certain episodes of the office that are just real big episodes and they weren't extra time and work bus is definitely one of those. It's definitely one of those. Yeah and we shared all about our experience on that bus but we really felt like you needed to hear from the director as well so we reached out to Brian he was so kind and gracious he came into the studio and chatted all things work bus with us. And more. Now, I know a lot of people know Brian Cranston from his many acting roles.
Starting point is 00:01:13 He's been in film and television and he's been on Broadway. You know, there's Malcolm in the middle and Walter White on Breaking Bad. And he even won a Tony Award for the Broadway play all the way. He's amazing, but Brain is also a very accomplished director. He directed episodes of Malcolm in the middle of Breaking Bad, Modern Family, Sneaky Pete, and his new series Your Honor on Showtime, and of course, this very epic famous episode of The Office. this very epic famous episode of The Office. And he is just delightful.
Starting point is 00:01:46 He's so much fun to talk to. It was such a joy having him. And Jenna, you know what? I was thinking we didn't bring this up to him, but I want him to direct our road trip movie if we ever do it. Oh my gosh, yes! We've never even shared. Have we shared about the fact that me, you and Lee
Starting point is 00:02:05 have a road trip idea? We came up with an idea for a road trip movie. Lee wrote it. It's so funny. It's so funny. I know. Some of the hardest I have laughed in a long time was when the three of us were sitting at your dining table
Starting point is 00:02:20 and we were pitching jokes. Because listen, you guys, this is a road trip movie about two gals that are like in their 50s. But anyway, I mean, it has a mom detectives element to it, I have to say. It really does. Yeah. But would Brian Cranston ever direct anything
Starting point is 00:02:38 on the road again? That's the question. I think after you listen to this interview, you might find that he would be very hesitant to do so. Well, listen, the office might have ruined him forever in directing anything in a moving vehicle again, but let's let him tell you about it. We're going to take a break.
Starting point is 00:02:58 And when we come back, our interview with Brian Cranston about work bus, which is also known as death bus. We'll be right back. It's such a great interview. We'll be right back. Yeah. Yeah. Well, who wrote your opening theme song? Creep Breton. Creep Breton. Did he really? Yes.
Starting point is 00:03:28 You know, I just realized who Creep was. You just did. I just in the last few weeks. Grass roots, all of that. Yes, the grass roots. And I'm thinking, that can't be the same. It's the same guy. Yes.
Starting point is 00:03:43 Now, my question to you, my first question, thanks for coming on the show by the way, my first question to you would be, did the show ever do a backstage idea about what Creed's background was? Did someone ever go, that guy looks so familiar? And, you know, did you ever do anything like that? I don't remember.
Starting point is 00:04:04 There were so many pitches. There were so many people who wanted to do a whole episode just on Creed and his life and wanted him to be outed as Creed Bratton, Creed Bratton, because he's the only person on the show who has his full name as his character name. Like Angela is Angela on the show, but on the show her last name is Martin.
Starting point is 00:04:26 But Creed Bratton, the character is also Creed Bratton, the man, but I don't think it was ever revealed. I will say though, of all the characters, we have a show Bible, sorry. I have to, you guys, Brian, Brian, Brian, his microphone this morning, something's up with it, and there is a bar in front of his
Starting point is 00:04:45 face and so for me to talk to Brian he has to look around the bar. Angela, it's safer to have a bar in front of my face. It helps the restraining order issue that we have. There you go. That we have. Anyway, all the characters had a, we had a show Bible of all their back history and Creed's is the craziest. It's the most fun to read.
Starting point is 00:05:05 He has like a family in Canada. He lives under his desk half the time. He's, it's like all over the place. No way, why didn't I get a chance to read that? That would have been great. They didn't give you the show Bible? No, I didn't get it. No one said it was available.
Starting point is 00:05:20 Been given that. Absolutely should have been given that. Would have changed work bus. I'm gonna quit. Yeah. Ret given that. Absolutely should have been given that. Would have changed work bus. I'm going to quit. Retroactive. Well, we always like to ask people when they come on, first question, how did you end up working on the office?
Starting point is 00:05:35 Oh. How'd you get this job directing work bus? Tracy Katsky is a friend of mine and she was working as a consultant with David in the last year you guys were on the air. Okay. Right? And I had just finished my season with Breaking Bad and that was 2012. Yep. I think it was 2012. And Tracy calls and says, we're looking for directors for this new season.
Starting point is 00:06:05 Would you be interested in coming on board the office? And immediately the answer was gonna be, of course, no. But I love the show. It's such a legendary show that any chance to be a part of it in some small way. And she said, I know you've been directing Breaking Bads and you're out in the desert and it's hot and it's sticky. How would you like to come to,
Starting point is 00:06:34 was it Burbank, North Hollywood, wherever we were? And we work inside. Yeah, low-officerity, air-conditioned. It's a short day, air-conditioned, easy,, indoors five days, bang, bang, bang. Boom, boom, boom. And I said, oh, it sounds fantastic. Let's do it. And she said, well, we have such and such slot open.
Starting point is 00:06:55 And I looked at my calendar and I said, I'll take that slot. And I don't know, you probably described it on your show before, but the way it works in television for directors is by time. You have no idea when you sign onto a show what your episode is going to be by the time it gets to your time slot. So we had no idea and it just so happened that Work Bus came onto my lap. What did you think when you read this episode?
Starting point is 00:07:29 Yeah. Well, the first I was excited to read it, read it right away and work bus, oh, I don't know, oh, they exterminate, was it exterminating? No, we were exterminating, it was 11 years ago, I think. There was this electrical issue, magnet electromagnetic things in the walls. And White was going to have to open up all the walls and redo the electrical.
Starting point is 00:07:52 So the basic idea is that there could not be a work stoppage found to be the best method to continue working while this work on the actual location. The office was taking place. So everybody had to load onto the bus, desks were on there as we all know, and we had to just keep traveling. We're in the San Fernando Valley in August. It's so hot in August. It's so hot. I went to the call sheets. It was 100 degrees this week. It was like triple digits.
Starting point is 00:08:31 It was very hot. So the first thing I did was curse my friend Tracy Katz. She was like, damn you as if they knew, you know? But it was a challenge. I think we shot in on the set for a day and a half or something like that. I think that's short. And then the rest of the time we were on a bus.
Starting point is 00:08:52 On that bus or in the park. And then we were out of baseball field. I know we were. Yep, right. We had that fold open. Yeah. I enjoyed it for the most part, but there was a. There were some tough moments.
Starting point is 00:09:06 Well, I have to say, okay, you know that our cast has renamed this episode Death Bus. This has come to you, I know. And Jenna and I wrote a whole chapter in our book about it, The Office BFFs. We have a copy for you. We signed inside. It says, Brian, we owe you our lives. Thanks, Angela and Jenna. It is chapter 12 and dedicated a whole chapter to this episode. And we have fantastic photos of you, but we realized after our book came out, you were doing press.
Starting point is 00:09:42 We felt really bad because every single producer clearly wanted you to be asked about death bus. Jenna was like, oh no, Ange. We wrote about this and now everyone is asking him the same question on every talk show. Why did you try to kill the cast of the office? Why did I try to kill the cast? Was it a murder for hire?
Starting point is 00:10:04 No one's asked. It was a failed- I can't discuss all those details. There is a current investigation going on. On going, on going. And indictments will be handed down. I have every reason to believe you two are in the clear. I can't be positive on that. But I have every reason to believe you two are in the clear. I can't be positive on that.
Starting point is 00:10:25 But I have set of circumstances. It was hot and tight. You talk about the set being contained. Well, we're on a bus and we didn't have a lot of room. And if I recall, nothing was actually nailed down. Everything was kind of shifting around. Desks were actually shifting and moving. And I'm looking at this going,
Starting point is 00:10:54 oh my God, I think people didn't realize this bus is actually on the road, on an open street and moving. Well, at first there was comedy in that, right? Like at first we're traveling down the road and like our little coffee cup is moving across the desert. Are we? Are we? Are we?
Starting point is 00:11:13 Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we?
Starting point is 00:11:14 Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we?
Starting point is 00:11:16 Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we?
Starting point is 00:11:19 Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we?
Starting point is 00:11:23 Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? Are we? That's funny. It's funny. But then there was a part of the script where I guess Dwight swerves and we all kind of slide and we all are like, ah. Yeah, he's trying to get us to the pie. Yeah, get to the pie. And I guess the AD yelled to the cast, we weren't really swerving.
Starting point is 00:11:39 So lean right and we got to ah and no one bought it. It didn't look good. And so then. they unloaded rain. Rain left and a stunt driver got on the bus. They removed us from the tow rig and now we are truly just a bus traveling down the road and with a stunt driver. We listed what all was in the bus.
Starting point is 00:11:59 Like we went back and screen grabbed it. It was a full like Arrowhead water jug dispenser, a microwave, a coffee pot, lamps, rolling chairs, desk, computers, a printer. Was there a little mini Xerox machine? I bet there was. So it was a full office. And it all, when the stunt driver swerved right, it all, it all swerved. Everything moved. And all of a sudden that was not part of the production
Starting point is 00:12:30 discussion that we had, by the way. It was like, we're doing this, Rain's going to drive and we're going to do this. And it's all contained and we'll have the, the cast move back and forth. It didn't look good. Not everybody was in sync. And there was something funny about things happening at the same time and once and you can't duplicate that. You can't fake that. And so there was an idea and I don't believe it was my idea, but I'm not saying it's not
Starting point is 00:12:58 to actually heighten the movement of the thing with a professional stunt driver. Yes, it was a professional stunt driver. It wasn't Rainn Wilson. We, however, are not professional stunt people. This is true. And this is where the beginning of the indictments will start. Yes.
Starting point is 00:13:19 And that's that. And the reality of it in retrospect, you look back and you go, oh my God, what were we doing? Oh, and then- Oh, wait, wait, wait. We don't wanna get to that part yet. Wait, I have to ask, you're not on the bus with us at this point.
Starting point is 00:13:33 You're in like a follow van and you're watching this footage on a screen. What? Hang on, I was in the bus the entire time. Wait, you were in the bus? Yeah, yeah. For that moment? I was in the very back. And the way back on the back row. I was down on Yeah. For that moment? I was in the very back.
Starting point is 00:13:45 And the way back on the back row. I was down on the floor. I remember that. I was on the floor with a little viewfinder and watching the thing as I'm moving back and forth too. I remember that. I knew you were on the bus most of the time, but I thought there were a few shots where it was like we had to clear everybody.
Starting point is 00:14:04 We cleared boom. we had just camera. And I did not know that you still stayed on. I stayed on when it was, when there was room, when we were shooting, when I was able to hide in the back on the ground, when there was no room and shooting in one direction, I think I was off the bus. Because it was too dangerous and I said, I shouldn't be here.
Starting point is 00:14:24 I'm catch-up-ing. I shouldn't be here. We did skip over one. So Jen and I, we were like trying to remember everything about this episode and filming it. And we were like, wait, we all had to get off the bus three times. The first one was because we got so tickled in Ellie Peter pants.
Starting point is 00:14:40 Yep, remember? And we had to change her clothes. And she had it. And she had it. Oh, no, Ellie, don't worry. It's in the book. It's in the book. Ellie is such a good sport. Ellie was like, guys, and we had to change her clothes. And she had it. She had actually. Oh, no, Ellie, don't worry. It's in the book. It's in the book. Ellie is such a good sport.
Starting point is 00:14:48 Ellie was like, guys, I paid my skirt. And we all laughed. And it wasn't a huge pee. It was just a little. She actually did. Yeah. So, so then. Oh, whoops.
Starting point is 00:14:57 It wasn't just a saying. So we all pulled over. We hung out in the park. Ellie changed clothes. Then we all get back on the bus. And I remember Jenna, like us being like, this is crazy, what a crazy day. Thinking like, that's the craziest thing that'll happen.
Starting point is 00:15:14 Then the swerve and everything flew. I remember digging Creed out of a pile of things. Do you remember that Creed was totally covered? It was dangerous. I look back on it now and it was, I would like to think that that wouldn't happen today. It would all be zip-tied or... Yes, something. Here's the thing, our show did not travel well. We were very good at shooting inside of an office,
Starting point is 00:15:40 but pretty much any time we left to go on the road, even just metaphorically, something happened. Yeah, we lost half the cast at sea. Yeah, that episode when you're on the booze cruise. We, Phyllis, Brian, and Rain drifted out to sea for about 20 minutes. On a dinghy. That's like 4.30 in the morning. 4.30 in the morning. Yes, because we were shooting nights.
Starting point is 00:16:05 And you had the choice. You know, we were wrapped. They were doing the scene with Jim and Pam. They're like, do you want to stay on the boat till we wrap, or do you want to leave? And only this small group raised their hands, because we had to kind of climb down a ladder, hop on a dinghy.
Starting point is 00:16:22 To get back to shore. And then the engine broke down. And then the engine broke and they lost them. And we floated. For a while. Let's take a moment and think about them for just a second. They were such great cast members. And the famous thing is that everyone was like,
Starting point is 00:16:38 we lost Phyllis and me and Brian and Rain were like, Ann, Ann, Ann, hello. People only cared about Phyllis. I know, I know. Sweet Phyllis. Sweet Phyllis. Well, it's true that whenever we left set, things happened. So we're sorry.
Starting point is 00:16:53 It was hard. Well, okay, so there was a second thing that happened then. We, we un-piled ourselves. There was, then we, we were hot. And I remember being so excited after lunch. Didn't you guys have to turn the air off when we were filming? Cause it was loud.
Starting point is 00:17:11 The AC in the bus was loud. Yes. It was loud. So there was this announcement, guys, we have a great thing. We have a portable AC unit that we're gonna pull on a trailer behind the bus. And we have a hose that is gonna go up through
Starting point is 00:17:26 like this sunroof thing in the bus. And it'll be quiet. We can leave it on while we're filming. You guys aren't gonna be hot anymore. And we couldn't believe our look. We were so excited. This is fresh, wonderful, cool air. People were getting willty.
Starting point is 00:17:41 They were getting, so we were like in a hot tin can. It was really tough. And San Fernando Valley, like you said, it was 100 degrees. And then we made it worse by having the closed up windows and everything else to where the heat inside that bus. Oh God. I would think would be 110, 115. It was like a little sauna rolling down the road.
Starting point is 00:18:03 And we were trying in the morning every time we cut, they tried to pump the air, but then we'd have to turn it off and you'd only be able to work for about five, 10 minutes before it became unbearable. So we got the little rolly unit. A brilliant idea. So wonderful.
Starting point is 00:18:20 But then we started moving and my chair was right under the little sunroof. I was very excited. I was like, this is awesome. You're going to get all the air. Because I'm going to get the first amazing cool air. Yes. But I-
Starting point is 00:18:35 And you did. I sure did. And I was- That part is true. It was very cool. I was smelling the air as it was cooling me and I was like, it doesn't smell right. It smells gassy.
Starting point is 00:18:50 It smells not right. And so you started voicing that. Yeah. And I was more towards the front and I was like, I don't smell anything. I don't, I don't, and there was a little bit of like, Jenna, a little bit. I know to be fair, I was the person on the set who had all the allergies
Starting point is 00:19:07 and I was ruining takes from sneezing all the time. And I think people thought it was just Jenna's allergy nose, Jenna sensitive. And I was like, no, no, no, it's not that. It's like gas. And then Sarah, our camera operator who was standing back there by you, she was like, I like wasn't-
Starting point is 00:19:23 She got a little loosey. Yeah. And then Brian, I think you came up and you were like, let me see what you're talking about. What wait, I stood on a chair right where your desk was and I put my face right up to the register where the air was coming. And sure enough, carbon dioxide. cold. I remember you go, get off the bus. That's what I'm saying. We all exited the bus and that is when you can tell everyone what they discovered that happened. Well, it was a great, great idea, but the execution was not thoroughly thought through.
Starting point is 00:20:02 So what we came up with when we were realizing production meaning was that it's gonna be hot as hell on this bus, how are we gonna keep everybody from wilting? And I said, we can pull a portable air conditioning unit that is strong enough to pump fresh air into the bus. And my concern was I wanna be able to shoot toward the back so I can't see it. And we can make it low enough, small enough
Starting point is 00:20:30 to where it won't be seen throughout the windows. And we thought about we'd have to adjust the rear view mirrors just and what about the noise? And no, no, these new ones are, so we really thought about this. Okay, great, great, great. And we'll just tow it. We'll have a tow hitch on the bus.
Starting point is 00:20:48 We'll hook it up and we'll just tow this unit. It has its own generator. It's quiet and perfect solution. What could go wrong? Well, what went wrong was the intake for the air conditioning unit was positioned the way it's manufactured. And it's just so happens the way it was placed on this trailer was it was facing the back of the bus at about a foot and a half away from where this intake is is the exhaust pipe of the bus.
Starting point is 00:21:25 So the fumes and exhaust from the bus only had about a foot distance away from the intake from the air conditioning. Just getting sucked up going right into the bus. There was no possibility of avoiding this. And it was locked down, but we didn't realize that until we were actually underway. And the thing was fired up.
Starting point is 00:21:48 And actually, Jenna, you and your sensitive nose saved our lives. Finally, it did some good in my life. You saved our lives. At first, how can exhaust becoming inside? It just doesn't make any sense to me. And sure enough, when I said I went, oh my god, we have made a huge mistake and we nearly killed the entire cast of the office. Really incredible. But I would say had no one detected it, what a beautiful way to go. All together. Right, oh my god, all together. Rolling down the road. Kumbaya. Shibuya roll call.
Starting point is 00:22:25 The big roll call. That's it. Ugh. Well, Leslie, I remember looking at Leslie David Baker and his eyes were bloodshot and watering. And I kept thinking like maybe the vent is hitting him at an angle. You know how it dries out your eyes?
Starting point is 00:22:38 Like if a vent hits you, but no, it was just poison. Now was Leslie's desk close to yours? Yes. I'm trying to remember. But no, it was just poison. Now was Leslie's desk close to yours? Yes, when we had the, when we all went flying into one another, I believe I flew into Leslie. Did Leslie, when we got off, I remember he was like, I'm not getting back on. Leslie said I'm never getting back on the bus again. I'm done.
Starting point is 00:23:01 I'm done getting on the bus. I remember him walking to his car and driving away, but I think that might not be true. But for some reason, I remember Leslie was like, goodbye. I'm out. I'm out. Shoot around me. But also poor Leslie, whenever we went on locations, he got the worst of it. When we went to the beach, I got sand kicked in his eye and it scratched his cornea and he had to wear like a patch for a week. Yeah. Oh. So I think Leslie was like, I don't do scenes outside of the office. Yeah. Forget it.
Starting point is 00:23:29 Forget it. I don't go on location. Yeah, shit goes down. It almost sounds like his character. You just drill, I don't go outside. Yeah, exactly. Don't leave the office. Were there any moments that you haven't talked about about this episode? Because we know you've been hit up with those questions quite a bit.
Starting point is 00:23:48 But any behind the scenes memories that you have that you'd want to share? Yeah, those things are so on the frontal lobe that it's hard to remember. I just had a really good time other than worrying about that. I was really happy to be able to be on your set and see it and feel it. You guys, by the time I came along, it was the ninth season, so you were a well-oiled machine. The role of a guest director is not to come in and I wouldn't dare. Wouldn't dare say anything to an actor about their character. How wouldn't that be obnoxious?
Starting point is 00:24:34 Like season nine. I think you could make a different choice for white. I think let's make this, I think he's friendlier. Yeah. Why is he usually such a bitch? Yeah. What's with the cats? Let's do away with that.
Starting point is 00:24:48 Forget all that. No more cats. No more cats. Yeah. And then you two, you know, I'd say I'd pull you apart. Yeah. Start to think about something about Jim that you didn't like. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:59 Just throw a wrench into everything. He's like, I don't think this. So there's nothing. A director on episodic television just comes in and tries to, what my whole goal was, whenever I direct television, which is different from directing features because in features, you are trying and need to please yourself and make sure that you get
Starting point is 00:25:24 all those elements and moments that you've worked so hard in breaking down that script. In television, it's about staying true to these characters, putting them in positions where they can really be themselves, where they feel comfortable. It's delivering the meat and potatoes that every showrunner is going to expect from you. I always thought if I can deliver two or three things that the showrunner didn't see, that's golden. Just a couple little things. I think there's a few.
Starting point is 00:26:00 When I rewatched the episode, I completely forgot that Ed placed the banjo at the end. Oh yeah, yeah. I mean, and just rips it. It's just so great. And everyone is just like, oh, whatever. Well, no, and it's true. I taught him the banjo in two weeks. And he was able to pick it up and perform that.
Starting point is 00:26:20 That's amazing. I loved all the pie scenes too. I thought they were really sweet. Did you eat any pie? I had some pie. Do you remember your flavor of pie? That's probably hard to remember. I'm thinking gooseberry.
Starting point is 00:26:32 Yeah, yeah, that was, look how happy you were. Well, he remembered that. Wasn't that fun? Yeah. Because it's such a funny name, I like it. Yeah, there was like a, it was like a, I think it was gooseberry, because it wasn such a funny name. I like it. Yeah, there was like a, it was like a, I think it was gooseberry because it wasn't blackberry. No.
Starting point is 00:26:48 Yeah, but there was a special berry crumble pie. Pie. When I rewatched it, I just remember how happy we actually all were to sit outside and have pie. I had chocolate cream. It was delicious. Interesting choice on a very hot day.
Starting point is 00:27:03 What? Chocolate cream. What? Chocolate cream. What? Peel back the layers. Okay, I have got to do something. I have been going through the call sheets and on the back of the call sheet they do a thing called Get to Know your cast and crew. And they ask a few questions, but they're so interesting.
Starting point is 00:27:30 You mean on every one of your call sheets, it was get to know your cast and crew? Someone was featured on each call sheet. We had talked about, Jen and I wanted to start with each new guest, ask them a few of these questions. What was one of the first jobs you had in entertainment? One of the first jobs I had in entertainment, I think it was a soap opera.
Starting point is 00:27:53 I was, I did like a three day role on Days of Our Lives. I love Days of Our Lives. Back in 1981. What was your character? I was a cousin of the person. I will tell you this. Bill and Susan Seaforth, he and his wife, Susan and Bill, they were on Days of Our Lives for years.
Starting point is 00:28:17 I happened to oversleep that morning, the first day that I was to work. And I missed the rehearsal, missed the blocking, missed everything. I'm panicking, absolutely panicking. And I race to NBC where we're shooting it. And I'm panicking, I'm nervous. And all of a sudden, I hear knocking on my dressing room door, and it's Bill Hayes, the big star of the show.
Starting point is 00:28:43 And he says, I understand you had a problem this morning. We stood in for you and we blocked him. And he says, can I run down what we did? And do you need some help on the back story of the character? I was so appreciative. I was just a day player. And he put himself out there to say, look. That is so kind.
Starting point is 00:29:03 Yeah, he was a lovely, lovely guy. And he helped me get over the anxiety of being late and the responsibility of that. And I spent all the money that I made on that episode to buy flowers for the people that I knew stood up for me and Bill and the casting director. And it was like, I'm so sorry. But that was my first experience.
Starting point is 00:29:29 Okay, I love that. I love that story. I love the kindness you were shown. I didn't know where that was going when you said he knocked on the door. I was like, oh no. Yeah, no. In a good way.
Starting point is 00:29:38 In a good way. Okay, favorite place in the whole wide world that you've ever been to? I guess it would be Venice. I was there on my honeymoon almost 35 years ago. Very romantic and very unique. And we just had, there was one night when my wife and I were, there was a thunderous rainstorm. And we went to a Vivaldi concert in a church that had windows at the top of this sphere and this dome. It felt like God was adding the exclamation to it.
Starting point is 00:30:22 You know, oh my god, it was just so it was just so magical and romantic Unbelievable time. Wow. Have you been back since your honeymoon? Actually, no, it's been a long time We've been there twice and that was we haven't been back in 34 years. It's time to go back. I think it's time Yeah, I don't know. I I say don't mess with it time. I don't know. I say don't mess with it. What? I say leave it. Don't revisit? Never revisit a memory? Well, it's too good. It's too good. You know what I mean? If you go back and then you're gonna be like, oh my gosh, it smells and it's... What? I mean, no offense, Venice, but I hear that you're getting floods and maybe it's a little stinky now and it's a lot of tourists because the cruise ships and all the Venetians.
Starting point is 00:31:08 I've lost the whole amount of gondoliers that listen to the show. It's just incredible. We just lost a few. Well, I'm just saying, you know, a lot of time has passed and this is an amazing romantic memory. Maybe it should just stay there. I agree with you maybe in the church, in the concert, in the rain and all that. But I don't think you need to rule out all of Venice. I think there's maybe new places you could discover.
Starting point is 00:31:36 I think leave it. Okay, well, two very different takes on this memory. Okay, last question. They just asked three. Last question, do you speak any other languages other than English? We. We, whole whole.
Starting point is 00:31:53 I don't, actually. That was the extent of my French. No, I know a little bit of French and a little bit of Spanish, but that's one of the things I really, really do want to accomplish before I leave this earth, is to be able to expand my awareness and culture and not just be so American centric. You know, I want to step out of that.
Starting point is 00:32:22 I spoke recently about not retiring, but taking a break. For the last 25 years, I've been working really nonstop and it's been great. As we know, it's wonderful and you're supported and you're having fun and you're engaged and it's artistic and creative and all those wonderful things, but it's not real life experience. You're going from one bubble to another bubble to another bubble. And I'm getting to a point where I feel like I'm a little depleted. Like my ideas aren't as fresh. They're a little harder to come by. And ooh, am I being derivative of another character that I've done?
Starting point is 00:33:01 And can I break out of that? I needed more, I need more influences to come in so that it's more reciprocal. Right now there's been a lot of outflow for the last two decades and I think I need some real life experience to be able to say, oh I've never even thought of that before. I want to read that classic novel that I've always sworn I was of that before. I wanna read that classic novel that I've always sworn I was gonna read. I wanna learn how to cook.
Starting point is 00:33:29 I wanna learn a language. I want to be in another culture and I don't wanna talk about show business. Yeah, we had an amazing conversation with Zach Woods and we were talking about this exact thing where we were saying that as artists, you need a life to feed your art You can't stay in just an art-making bubble No, because it's through our observations of other people and things and it's through going to that
Starting point is 00:33:58 weird cousin's wedding That you get your ideas and your inspiration. And I would extend that even to, I remember Jerry Seinfeld doing an interview about this, talking about how much of his comedy comes from the frustrations and little annoyances in his life, standing in a line or someone, you know, budding in front of you as you've been waiting for a lot, you know,
Starting point is 00:34:25 all those little ways that you watch how different people handle these every day, very universal situations, they inform you. They inform your art. And you, like you said, when you go from set to set to set or bubble to bubble to bubble, you start losing all those. And those are the things that we use to make our characters.
Starting point is 00:34:48 I used to joke that I haven't changed. I've had great good fortune in this business, but I really haven't changed. My dresser still puts on my pants one leg at a time. Good. He really does. He does a good job. You're valid. You're valid. It's my valid. You're valid.
Starting point is 00:35:04 I traveled a lot growing up. My dad was a drilling engineer. I grew up in Jakarta and we moved around a lot. But recently I found an old travel journal that I kept as a young gal. And I read a little bit of it on the podcast. I was very snarky about a man who sat next to me who was taking a lot of notes about how to play poker on his napkin, but he would cover them so I couldn't see him. And I was like, what's up with this guy? And I had a whole journal of paper and I would have given him a piece of paper, but he kept hiding his notes. So I didn't. It was like this weird like retaliation I had with him. But the story has a point which is as I go back and look at that
Starting point is 00:35:46 journal of travel and seeing other things and experiencing other things, I just crave it. And like, I want to, I want to like sit next to the guy on the plane who is taking notes on his napkin. What's that about? Now, what's interesting though is that now you have to hope that you're not recognized in order to have a legitimate conversation. Otherwise, it's weighted and it's not the same thing. Celebrity is a strange thing as we know. It makes people nervous, anxious, giddy, excited. They can't stop. They can't believe it. I mean, how many people have said, I can't believe I'm meeting you? Blowing my mind. Well, that's not the way that person normally behaves. So there's no way that you're going to have a normal conversation with that person.
Starting point is 00:36:47 So I always used to look for old people. If I were in a, some people who didn't know, chances are it wouldn't know who I am. And that way, I knew I was getting an authentic conversation. Oh yeah. I mean, I do, I do. I do. One of my favorite cities is New York and one of my favorite things to do is just people watch. And so I love to go hide out in Central Park and just watch everything unfold in front of me.
Starting point is 00:37:14 And that's something I find, I can, you can still go unrecognized. And if you wear your hat, and you don't make a big fuss about yourself. And you're big red nose. Yes, that's right. And you're floppy shoes. big fuss about yourself. And you're being red nose. Yes, that's right. And you're floppy shoes.
Starting point is 00:37:27 And you're wig. And you're sign. That's right. And then I smoke. You know, we know I don't smoke in real life. Start making balloon animals. You know, they won't know who you are. I feel the same way when I go to, my family has a farm in Archer City, Texas, and there's
Starting point is 00:37:43 a little cafe, Mern's, because the woman who runs it is named Mern. And, you know, it's great. I go in there and it's just everyone that's been working cattle and they're all in there. And it's, I just love it. No one knows the show. Do they have your picture up on the wall?
Starting point is 00:38:00 No, heck no. No, they have like- Come on, Mern. They have the starting lineup of the football team and the cheerleaders and whoever is, you know, doing well at 4-H Club that year. It's... That's rather sweet. Yeah, it is.
Starting point is 00:38:16 It's great. I used to travel a lot by motorcycle. In the 70s, I traveled across the country. For two years, I was on a motorcycle. Wow. And I would get odd jobs here and there. In the 70s, you could do that. Ladies wouldn't know that.
Starting point is 00:38:29 Because you're way too young. And at one time, I took Route 66 from California, Santa Monica to Chicago. And on the way back, I took this Route 50, which is called the Loneliest Highway. You go through Nebraska, Kansas, the places that people, for the most part, they go, well, there's nothing really to see there, so I won't avoid it. I want to go there. We're going through Kansas in a little place called Peabody, Kansas. It's flat, it's small. There's a bank on the corner, there's a coffee shop, and
Starting point is 00:39:09 in the coffee shop they list everybody's birthday for that day. And I said, these are the people who work here? And I go, no, that's people in the entire town. We have such a small town that they list everyone's birthday on that particular day. It's really, and it's quaint and sweet. And by the way, speaking of birthdays, we share a birthday. You do, your birthday wedding is. We are, we interviewed Tim Meadows for the podcast
Starting point is 00:39:37 and we were all talking about our celebrity birthday partner. And I said you. Yes. I know, happy birthday, happy early birthday. March 7 said you. I know. Happy birthday. Well, not yet. Well, not yet. March 7th. March 7th.
Starting point is 00:39:50 Yeah. Same year? Yes, 74. Yeah, that's right. This is my big 50th birthday this year. Are you welcoming it? It's going to come whether you want to or not, but... I am welcoming it. You're saying bring it on world. Yeah, I'm saying bring it on.
Starting point is 00:40:08 I'm doing big party. I'm happy to celebrate my 50th. I'm excited about it. I find it very liberating. I think it's great. You look fantastic. You both look great. I am 52.
Starting point is 00:40:20 I will be 53. I love my 50s. I love it. I told Jenna it's the zero Fs. She's making it look a lot of fun. It's my zero F's chapter of my life. Super fun. I guess if it was truly my zero F's, I'd say zero f***, right?
Starting point is 00:40:34 We like to keep it clean on office. We keep it clean. We have a lot of young listeners. Yeah. I'll bet you do. We do. The age range is like really big. There's rumor that you probably already talked about.
Starting point is 00:40:46 There's rumor of doing a reboot. Yes, we hear Greg is working on something. Yeah, he's cooking something up. But it's not involving the same cast, we should say that. Yeah. But I would love to pop on as a guest. Ooh, me too. I'd love to be a guest on some sort of next gen. Yeah, or something like
Starting point is 00:41:07 that. That would be great. But I don't see bringing Pam back in a sort of permanent way and following her life again. At least it hasn't. But you know, Greg Daniels is a person who could think it up and pitch it to me and get me on board. So, but I can't think of it. Right. Yeah. You know, so if Dunder Mifflin still existed, there'd be other people working there. Maybe. We think Creed would still be there. Brian and Oscar and I, our little accounting clump, we used to have this pitch that we would be the spin-offs, but it would be on Telemundo and it'd be like, Los Acatadores, Oscar Enjala y Kevin.
Starting point is 00:41:46 And I would do that. I would do the Telemundo reboot of the accounts. Telemundo. Telemundo. Brian, what do you get approached about the most? Breaking Bad. Breaking Bad. Yeah. Yeah, still.
Starting point is 00:41:57 I guess the most fervent fan base. Do you get pictures of people on Halloween dressed as Walter White? All the time. Yeah, we get that too. It's a crazy thing. You get pictures of people on Halloween dressed as Walter White? All the time. All the time. Yeah, we get that too. Yeah. It's a crazy thing. You get pictures of Walter White for a movie?
Starting point is 00:42:09 I do. I do. Yeah. People want me to know. But she holds a cat. Yeah. My Walter White. That's a crazy thing to have been on a show that endures.
Starting point is 00:42:21 I just rewatched Breaking Bad. I got COVID and it was my COVID comfort show. Let's see where... I watched it during the pandemic. This was my rewatch because it is my opinion that Breaking Bad is the single greatest television pilot ever. I stand by that statement.
Starting point is 00:42:39 And I have loved rewatching it. And people still rewatch it, right. And people still rewatch it, right? And people still rewatch the office. And it's such a cool thing to be part of something that endures like that, I think. It's truly legendary shows. We're both all very fortunate to be chosen to be on such a thing.
Starting point is 00:43:03 And as people have always asked you, I'm sure that always asked me, did you know it was going to be a big hit? And you go, no, it was a job. I was happy to read this great script. You two were like, this sounds crazy. This sounds fun. I don't know exactly how it's going to work. And let me ask you this, on the first year of the office,
Starting point is 00:43:27 what were the ratings like? I mean, was it- A bismol. Our first season was six episodes. And we were going to get- Shit can't. For sure. We were gonna get canceled, but then that summer,
Starting point is 00:43:39 between season one and deciding if we would get picked up for season two, the 40-year-old virgin came out and Steve Carell became a massive box office comedy star. And I think NBC was like, I'm sorry, you don't cut loose. The number one comedy box office star. Yeah. Yeah. You pick up that show.
Starting point is 00:43:59 It was still only a little bit, not a full season for season two. Yeah. And Phyllis and I used to call the ratings hotline. We used to run on Tuesday. This is how old we are. Old Tech Alliance. Ratings hotline, may I help you? We would run on Tuesdays originally. Before we moved to Must See TV, we were on Tuesdays and every Wednesday morning we would get on set and Phyllis and I would listen to the recording
Starting point is 00:44:25 and we knew that as long as we had like a 2.4 or above, we still had jobs. And we would just hold our breath and wait for the recording to tell us what our ratings were. Yeah. And it was like that for into the second season. Every week I would send out a mass email. I was like, that first thing.
Starting point is 00:44:44 I was like, hey, you guys, can you guys please watch our show this week? It really means a lot. Thanks so much. Everyone I knew from all my improv days, all my theater days, everyone back home. And then finally it was around the first Christmas episode, Yankee Swap. One of my friends wrote back and said, I don't think you need to send these anymore. You're going to be okay. You're gonna be okay. You're being a little annoying. Yeah, I stopped sending these emails.
Starting point is 00:45:10 What about was Breaking Bad big in the ratings at first? No, not at all. No, we're on a cable channel, AMC. We weren't big hits at all. Although, like the critics really, really loved us. So we had that, but that doesn't equate to being commercially successful. What happened for us was a stroke of really good fortune and that was in 2009, Netflix switched from the red envelopes where they would send you the
Starting point is 00:45:49 movies at once. Remember the mail them to streaming to where you can push a button on a computer. It changed technology, it changed availability and Breaking Bad's second season. We had two seasons and we're like, I don't know if it's going to go a third. Well, maybe we'll let them go with that. And all of a sudden, everybody started to go, was able to go back and watch the first episode and then just start watching them all. And then that's what caught on. So really, it was Netflix that was the stroke of good luck for us.
Starting point is 00:46:26 For us too, kind of. It's why we've endured since the show went off the air. Let me ask you this because I seem to remember this and I'm not completely positive. But when Ricky Gervais' version of the original Office, his character was caustic and mean-spirited and rude and biting and all those things. And Steve's character, when it first started, had more of a flavor of an edge to him, didn't it? When I first started watching it, it was more of like, ooh, and I think at some point,
Starting point is 00:47:05 and I'm asking as a fan, at what point did they go, well, let's make a, let's turn the dial on this a little bit and give him more of that confident, indisul, kind of level and not mean-spirited. That happened in that transition from season one to season two. I think people saw this lovable quality to his character and 40-year-old virgin, and they also just started writing the show more to Steve and less to the template that Ricky had laid down
Starting point is 00:47:43 with his character of David Brent. And so there was a little bit of a retooling, but we also got some really good advice from Ricky Gervais who said, hey, you know, in America, you guys like to do hundreds of episodes of shows. And David Brent doesn't work for hundreds of episodes. Like you can't like have that character do this
Starting point is 00:48:04 for that long. So you're gonna need to find more layers to your lead character or he's gonna burn out. And also so true, so smart. The writer's room also did something that I thought really worked for American audiences is each episode has one redeeming moment. One moment where it's either Pam listening to Jim's messages as she drives home and there's a montage, or it's Dwight getting a pat on the shoulder from Michael, even though the whole day they were like fighting. There's one little moment,
Starting point is 00:48:41 and it doesn't have to be a huge one, but each episode has one. So you're saying that this was a concerted effort. This was a note that every episode we want to have at least one redeeming quality come out of it. Yeah, one moment. A moment of hope. A hopeful moment.
Starting point is 00:48:57 A hopeful moment within all of it. Moment of zen. Yes. Look at that. I didn't know that. Yeah. And if you, now if I go back and watch, I see it, I can find them.
Starting point is 00:49:07 I'm like, oh, well that kind of made me feel better about that, to that work bus day. We got to have pie. We got to sit outside. We got to have pie. Was that our moment? Yeah. We got pie at the end?
Starting point is 00:49:17 Yeah, the montage at the end of pie. Well, there's another moment in this episode that I actually love, which is Jim and Dwight up on the roof of the bus. Oh, yes. And I love any moment when, you know, that these rivals, these guys who are always, you know, Jim's always pranking Dwight and everything. But when there's this moment where Dwight gets vulnerable and Jim is there to catch him. And I love that. That was a really beautiful scene. That's true because that exposes the audience
Starting point is 00:49:50 to the true character of Jim. And that he's, when it's necessary, when someone expresses vulnerability like that, it's like he doesn't come in for the kill. Yeah. He backs off and actually lends support. Oh, see? It's very sweet.
Starting point is 00:50:10 I had a few moments like that. You know, we kind of, I mean, so let's say that there's not a reboot series, but what if there was like a movie? Like Downton Abbey, the movie? Yeah, something to where we can see where these people are, these people in the entire cast that we're curious about. We wondered at the end, where did they go?
Starting point is 00:50:31 What did become of them? I mean, I'd do it. I would do it. I would do it for my kids, because I think they would think that's fun. I mean, if Greg did it because I would trust it. Yes. You know, 100% for sure, because I would trust it. Yes, 100%. For sure. Greg is signed on in this hypothetical.
Starting point is 00:50:49 Okay, as long as Greg is writing it and he's in charge of it, then I say yes. Okay. Enough said. Brian Cranston. Let's get Greg on the phone. Bitch, he's our new agent. I just wanna be an extra in it.
Starting point is 00:51:04 I do. You have to be in it. I would be an extra in it. I do. You have to be in it. I would be an extra in it. I would be some guy. I'd be like a crossing guard or something like that. Maybe you're like one of Dwight's hired hands on troop farms. On his farm? Now, why would I be the hired hand and not the foreman?
Starting point is 00:51:21 Thank you. It's just how we see you. It's just like a tight- It's like, look at that old guy. He's just a higher man. Why is he having to bail hay? He's an old man and they're making him bail hay. Oh, that's right. That's not the moment of zen. That's not a nice moment at all.
Starting point is 00:51:42 Are there any projects you're working on right now that we can share with our listeners? We know you're working on the project of living life. The project of living life? That's a good way to put it. I really do need to do that. I'm very fortunate that I'm in a position where I'm getting a lot of offers, both for theater and films and television and things. And so I just have to pick and choose what is new to me and challenging. I don't want to do something that I've done before.
Starting point is 00:52:15 And the more I go without that real life experience, the harder that is to find because I haven't changed. It's like you were saying, like if a band just played the same music over and over and they never expanded, they never wrote beyond what they were. Like you look at the Beatles and they weren't together all that long, but they expanded and expressed themselves in so many different ways, whatever they were going through,
Starting point is 00:52:45 it was infused in their art. And I kind of want to do that. I want to get out of the bubble a little bit. So that's that. But before that may happen, there's responsibilities I have. I have a Mascall company with Aaron Paul, and Dos Ombras, which is...
Starting point is 00:53:03 Oh, wow! Yeah. And had I been a great guest, I would have brought you some. company with Aaron Paul and Dos Omres. I saw that. Dos Omres. Yeah. And had I been a great guest, I would have brought you some. Damn it. I forgot. But that's going well. It's this business I've never thought I'd be in.
Starting point is 00:53:16 We'll share about it in our Office Ladies Pods series. It's so good. It's so good. Did you get to go like do a tasting? Did you get to be part of the formula? Yeah. How does that work? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:53:30 Well, here's Aaron and I, three years after the end of Breaking Bad, we missed each other. And you know, it's like when you leave. We can relate. Holly, yeah. Yeah. You're together, you're together, you're together. It ends and life goes on and sends you in
Starting point is 00:53:46 different directions. And we happen to be in New York City at the same time and we have to have dinner. So we're having dinner and we expressed how much we missed each other. And he said, you know, what we ought to do is have a company. We ought to have a Mascall company together. What? That's what I said. I go, what do you, that's random.
Starting point is 00:54:10 What do you, that's terrible. That shitty spirit with a dead worm at the bottom. What are you talking about? And he goes, no, no, no, no. He took me to a Mascall bar in New York City. We sipped some of the greatest spirits that I've ever had. I don't think I've ever had mescal. Oh, so good.
Starting point is 00:54:27 It's the older brother of tequila. Okay. Tequila is a mescal. Okay. But mescal is not a tequila. A spirit like that, that's made from a agave plant is always a mescal. And the way they make tequila is to steam it and put it in a silo and it's more of a fast process.
Starting point is 00:54:48 Mezcal is smoked and so it's in an earthen pit for four days and then mashed. In fact, ours, we have, it says artisanal on the bottle and there's no modern technology used in the process of this or else we can't say that on the bottle. So it's the old-fashioned way. It goes from that to a rock pit where two donkeys pull this big rock wheel and mash this now smoked agave. Then it ferments in an oak barrel for 10 days,
Starting point is 00:55:20 and then it goes into a copper kettle for a distillation. And that's the purity of it. It's mountain spring water and smoked agave. That's all that's in it. And it's done, Dos Omres is now the fifth largest mescal in the world. Come on! That is so amazing.
Starting point is 00:55:38 We have to try it. We have to try it. We have to try it. We're going to go get some. I will bring it to you. Yay! I will bring it to you. Yay. I will bring it to you.
Starting point is 00:55:46 Even better. I love this. Yeah, that's really good. Also, just your description of it. Just, I don't know. I felt like I left my body for a minute. It felt like I went on a little vacation. I know.
Starting point is 00:55:56 A journey. And we did. We went down to Oaxaca. We found this spirit and brought it to the marketplace. In truth, the spirit found us because it's been around for hundreds of years and we were just there to receive it. This sounds like a pretty good start
Starting point is 00:56:13 on the project of living life. Yeah. It is, but like any other business, it takes a lot of effort, a lot of time and energy. Probably more than you expected when you started. And it's a lot of effort, a lot of time and energy. Probably more than you expected when you started. And it's a lot of work. And I find that the business end of it, the case cells and this, it's not as interesting to me as the process of making it and that nurturing sense.
Starting point is 00:56:42 Yeah, that and I have a production company and that's interesting too and it's good. But I'm now looking for ways to have more of that human real life experience. I have a crazy question for you. Oh. Did you ever in your young artist's life ever do that book, The Artist's Way? No.
Starting point is 00:57:07 Julia Cameron? No. Excellent. I highly recommend it. I highly recommend it. Jenna did it twice. I did a few pages of it. And how did the few pages go?
Starting point is 00:57:21 Fantastic. We're different persons. I did it twice because the first time I didn't finish and it bothered me so deeply because I realized that one of my challenges in my early artistic life was having tons of great ideas of which I finished none. And so I thought I need to get over this finishing things problem.
Starting point is 00:57:44 Why don't I start by finishing the artist's way? Right, and so I thought I need to get over this finishing things problem. Right. Why don't I start by finishing the artist's way? Yes, yes. And so I had done 10 of the 12 weeks and I went back and I started over again. I did all 12 weeks and there are still things from that book, even today as an artist, that I think of it.
Starting point is 00:58:00 You know, one of the things is once a week you have to go on an artist's date. Alone by yourself, just you, that could be going to a symphony. That could be sitting in a park and watching people. That could be- I love that. Taking yourself bowling alone. Like whatever your artist date is,
Starting point is 00:58:17 you have to do this once a week. But it's all creative, it's all artistic. And so sometimes when I'm like starting a new artistic journey or whatever, I'll refer back and I'll do an artist state and I'll try to kickstart something. It's that business of living life, right? That's fantastic.
Starting point is 00:58:35 It's really awesome. The bowling part through me. The bowling, that's an artist state if you want it to be. Really? Oh yeah, take yourself bowling. And to be fair, the week I got the bark. Go to an art museum. it was the week of my birthday when I got this book as a gift,
Starting point is 00:58:48 but I also got a pair of roller skates. And I was a child of the 70s and I love roller skating. And then I think I started it and then I was like, I'm gonna go roller skate. That could be an art estate. Well, it was an art estate that never stopped. It was an art estate that never, I still have the same pair of roller skates.
Starting point is 00:59:04 They're by my front door. I still roller skate. That's got to be something, Jenna. That's great. That came out of the artist's way for me. I recon... I think it came out of your birthday. My birthday buddy is Ricky Gervais. Oh, look at that.
Starting point is 00:59:16 A little tie-in. I once told him that. He was like, okay. We also have Rachel Weiss. Oh. Oh, did she share our birthday as well? Yes. Uh, Peter Sarsgard. Mmm.
Starting point is 00:59:31 This is exciting. I have busy Phillips. We should have a dinner. We should have a March 7th. Busy Phillips has my birthday. Busy Phillips, yeah. You, Busy Phillips, Rikita Reyes are going to have dinner. Oh my God, I would love that dinner.
Starting point is 00:59:41 And then we'll have dinner with Rachel. That's not a bad idea. Birthday dinner? For a show. Oh. You have a dinner with all the people who share the date and you find the similarities and the differences between them, but they all have the same birthday. Brian, you have a production company. I'm so sorry we're putting you to work again.
Starting point is 01:00:00 This has to stop. Rather than that, let me give it to you and I take 10%. There it is. That's it. And welcome to Hollywood. Thank you so much for coming in today. This was fun, thank you. This was, it was so good to see you again.
Starting point is 01:00:16 You too. You know, this episode, it was beautiful. It turned out great. I just rewatched it and it's so good. Even though we all almost died. It's a great episode and it's a classic and people love it. And they don't know. It is a classic and now when people see us fly across the bus,
Starting point is 01:00:31 I think we needed that moment. We did. I think we need it. It made the pie that much sweeter. We did use it. I know. It's the actual tape. It's in there.
Starting point is 01:00:38 Yeah. And now you can relive it in our book. Yes, thank you. Angela, that's so cool. Yeah. Oh, thank you very much. You're welcome buck. Thank you, Angela. That's so cool. Yeah. Oh, thank you very much. You're welcome.
Starting point is 01:00:48 We love you so much. I'm gonna bring you some dosenberries and we'll all sip some. Do you have it on ice? Do you have it that straight? Yes, I do. How do you have it? You know, any way you like it is the right way.
Starting point is 01:01:03 I like it just neat. Maybe. I like it, just neat. Maybe one big ice cube and just let it chill without diluting it and just sip it. It's so great just sipping it. Do you ever mix it? Oh yeah, all the time. It goes in a cocktail as well. So well, in a margarita, in a paloma,
Starting point is 01:01:22 in an old fashioned, in a groany. Oh, you like old fashioned, and a groany. Oh, you like old fashioned, a groany. Oh, yeah. Those are my faves. So good. Yeah. Try a mescal on a groany. Ooh, that sounds good.
Starting point is 01:01:32 You're going to love it. Well, there you have it, our interview with Brian Cranston. I could not have enjoyed that more, Angela. He's the best. The best. Yeah. Big thank you to Brian for joining us in the studio being so gracious with his time.
Starting point is 01:01:50 And thank you all for listening. We will be back on Monday with a special Monday motivation episode with Kendra Adachi, the lazy genius. We can't wait for you to hear it. And then on Wednesday, it's Here Comes Trouble. So two episodes next week. Two Office Ladies. Two Office Ladies.
Starting point is 01:02:09 See you then. See ya. Thank you for listening to Office Ladies. Office Ladies is produced by Earwolf, Jenna Fisher, and Angela Kinsey. Our senior producer is Cassie Jerkins. Our in-studio engineer is Sam Kiefer. Our editing and mixing engineer is Jordan Duffy. And our associate producer is Ainsley Bubbicoe. Our theme song is Rubber Tree by Creed Bratton. you

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.