Office Ladies - An Interview with Zach Woods

Episode Date: November 29, 2023

This week the ladies chat with Zach Woods! Zach played Gabe Lewis on “The Office” and he shares what it was like to join the cast in the middle of Season 6. He also talks about some of his favorit...e memories from making the show, they all laugh over their love of “close call” moments, and Zach asks the ladies some questions of his own like what would you tell your younger self on the show if you could go back in time. This is a fun, lighthearted episode where we get to spend some time with the hilarious actor/improviser behind Gabe Lewis. So shut up about the sun and enjoy this episode! Check out Office Ladies Merch at Podswag: https://www.podswag.com/collections/office-ladies Office Ladies Website - Submit a fan question: https://officeladies.com/submitaquestionFollow Us on Instagram: OfficeLadiesPod

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Starting point is 00:00:00 I'm Jennifer 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 scene stories that only two people who were there can tell you. We're the office ladies. Hello! Hey, welcome back! Welcome back from Thanksgiving. off-slates. Hello.
Starting point is 00:00:25 Hey, welcome back. Welcome back from Thanksgiving. We hope everybody had good meals and good times. Yes, with friends and family. Some people do friends giving. One of my favorite thanks-givings was a friends giving. It was my first year in Los Angeles. I couldn't afford to fly home to see family.
Starting point is 00:00:43 Yeah. So me and my other friends who were in LA, we got together and we had a Thanksgiving. My friend Luda, she's Russian, she brought this Russian vodka. We all got so hammered. That's a friend's giving. It was so fun. I actually just found a picture of us. Recently it came up in my memory. Really? Yeah. I love that. Yeah, we had traded it. You know, Josh, he bought me the most insane thing last year for Thanksgiving. And he was like, this is going to be a tradition now. You're going to have to wear it every Thanksgiving. I was like, babe, what is it? Okay, you know, I'm always cold. And I always want a cozy onesie.
Starting point is 00:01:22 I'm like, babe, get me a onesie, get me a cozy onesie. Okay. Lady, it's a turkey. A turkey onesie. And first of all, it's a one size fits all. So it's enormous. Do you eat in it? Is it weird all day? No, I can't, it's like wearing a giant blanket.
Starting point is 00:01:39 I can't eat in it, but I do put it on. Well, I've only done, this is my second year. Okay. I don't know what the tradition of this turkey onesie's gonna be, but I told him, here. Well, I've only done, this is my second year. I don't know. I don't know what the tradition of this turkey once he's going to be, but I told him, here's what I'll do, because he thinks it's so cute. I put it on and I watch the Macy's Day parade in my turkey once.
Starting point is 00:01:54 Okay. And then you know, we get the food prep going, but I don't wear it to the actual Thanksgiving dinner. What is it that Josh thinks this is so funny? I look like a tiny tiny turkey. Do you watch football? Yeah, football's always on. So when I got into football, I was dating a guy who was from Detroit and you know Detroit plays everything's giving. And the Cowboys. Yes, now I'm married to a Dallas man. Yeah. Now I'm a Cowboys fan.
Starting point is 00:02:25 Oh, yeah. Yeah. So Cowboys, everything's giving. You got to work the meal around it. Half of my family's from Texas, lady. Yeah. It's always cool. What am I saying?
Starting point is 00:02:35 I know. Of course. Well, listen, we have a really exciting show for you today. I don't even know what to say about it. It's maybe one of my favorite episodes we've ever done. Jenna and I are in love with this interview, you guys. I'm sorry, it's an interview, but it was so wonderful. Would Jenna you tell everyone?
Starting point is 00:02:53 Well, we got to sit down with Zach Woods. As you know, Zach played Gabe Lewis on 52 episodes of The Office. He was on from season six to season nine. We talk all about it. We talk about his entire time on the show. And other things. Here's the thing. He's just so interesting and he's so smart and funny.
Starting point is 00:03:13 And we would be talking about the show. And then he would throw you and I like a curve ball question. Like a deep like question about what it means to be just human and alive. Like, yes's so fun. Oh, I just can't wait for everyone to listen to this interview. I just love it. Well, you guys, Zach is currently working
Starting point is 00:03:33 on a new stop motion animation series called In the Know. He's the co-creator, the director, and star of the show. And Greg Daniels is one of the executive producers. So you know this is going to be good. The show premieres on peacacock in the New Year, so be on the lookout. Yeah, we'll share about it in stories, but you know what?
Starting point is 00:03:51 I think we take a quick break and get to this interview because it's so fantastic. You're gonna love it. And the second half, dare I say, is even better than the first. It keeps getting better and better. Here it is. Hello, Zach. Hello. Hello, Carol. Wonderful to see you.
Starting point is 00:04:17 How wonderful to see you and you. Should we tell people we've actually been chatting off mic for like 30 minutes? Oh, seriously, we've been talking for half an hour, but we decided we should probably get to the podcast. Yes. They literally said we're going to do a big fake hello, and then you immediately call it on yourselves. You're giving away our secret.
Starting point is 00:04:34 So, right. I'm going to do an office man, office ladies podcast, right? I tell the stories behind the office ladies podcast. Okay. I'll be like Russian dolls. Oh my gosh. So, you listen to office ladies, and you break down our podcasts. Right. And I'll have you guys on to talk about the podcast when you're talking about this. This might be a genius idea. Well, we're going to kick things off
Starting point is 00:04:55 with the question we ask all of our guests to start, which is how did you get your job on the office? So good question. Alison Jones, who you guys both know, was like a fairy godmother to me. Like she for people who I mean, I know you've talked about her on the show, but she was the casting director for the show and like basically American comedy for a decade and more, right? And she brought me in to her office, which was in Gower Studios, right? I guess they used to shoot. I love Lucy and stuff. Wow. Right, isn't that right? I think so, yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:26 It's like one of these old Hollywood things. It's got like plaques everywhere. Right. And like plaster and it just feels like, you know, whatever. You can like, it's like where you can imagine like Clark Gable's stumbling into there after he like killed someone with him and be like telling his publicist like,
Starting point is 00:05:42 bury it. But anyway, uh, yeah, for Clark Gable. Sorry, Barrier. But anyway, poor, yeah. Poor Clark game. Sorry, Clark Gable, you've probably never killed anyone. I'm sorry. I just feel like I,
Starting point is 00:05:51 you know, like old Hollywood stars were always killing people and telling their publicist to cover it. Barrier, get rid of it. Yeah. She was just some girl. No one's gonna know. Yeah, anyway, but got distracted. Alison Jones.
Starting point is 00:06:03 Alison Jones. So I remember meeting with her, and I'd done this movie called In the Loop, and she'd seen it, and she brought me in for a meeting, and I really hadn't done anything, except for this one little independent movie, and she talked to me for like an hour, and then at the end of it, she just went,
Starting point is 00:06:19 I'm gonna help you, which is such a wild thing for someone to say in Hollywood. And then even a wilder thing to mean and follow through on. And then she got me a meeting with Greg Daniels and Paul and they just gave me a part on the office, which is a show that I had been like obsessively watching. I felt like I won a contest. Like, you know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:06:41 Like you win a raffle and you can do like a walk on on like a TV show. Like I felt like it was so bizarre to me that she almost threw it like to a suspicious degree where it's like, who's gonna jump out and say, gotcha or. Right. Yeah. Or is she gonna like, am I gonna get a call in here or Allison Jones is like throwing a palm in one of my enemy's faces.
Starting point is 00:06:59 It's like time for payback. Yeah. You know exactly. Yeah. And then yeah. And then I just got this part. And then I moved into this house in Echo Park, where it was a basement, and I'm tall,
Starting point is 00:07:12 and there were these rafters. So I had to constantly duck. Like, I couldn't, it was the ceiling was too low, so I was constantly doing these, like, kind of body rolls around my living room. And I was, somehow she got wind of this, and she was like, oh, I have an empty condo in Beachwood Canyon, which I'll give to you for a song basically.
Starting point is 00:07:29 And then she gave me this beautiful condo to live in for like very low rent, where they used to house, it was like a dormitory for starlets back in the, it was like the MGM gals would be there. And in the basement there was a beauty salon where they had to go through the works before they could go out into the world because they didn't want anyone seeing like the MGM girls looking less than their best basically.
Starting point is 00:07:50 So I said effectively an MGM girl. Thanks to Alison Jones, but I'm being long-winded. I'm a little nervous because we're starting to be less long-winded, but I will just say Alison Jones, I will never be able to adequately express the difference that Alison Jones made in my life, professionally, residentially, personally, just like that woman just like tap me with her magic wand and gave me my life.
Starting point is 00:08:13 So, you know, in LA, basically. I mean, we feel the same way about Allison Jones. Yeah. I had a general meeting with her and she sort of did the same thing. It was like one hour meeting, hey, I like you. I think you're talented. I'm gonna help you out.
Starting point is 00:08:29 And then just called me in for years, for little bit parts, and then eventually, how lucky am I that the person who decided to help me was hired to cast the office? That was just my good luck. Yeah, you know, because then she was like, well, I'm gonna have you meet on this new show, The Office. So it was the same thing.
Starting point is 00:08:48 And I've heard people tell this story about Alice and Jones many, many times. It's crazy. And she has this kind of like flinty new Englander quality where if you try to tell this to her face, it's just like, it's like shining light on a vampire. I mean, she just, she refuses the accolades, right? That's right. Yeah. That's right.
Starting point is 00:09:10 She can't tolerate. It's just like, that's been my experience anyway. Where you try to like look her in the eyes and be like, thank you. Yeah. She's like, no. That was fine. You have homemade cookie I just made. She always says like delicious cookies.
Starting point is 00:09:21 Right. She just feels like that awesome warm ant that's gonna look out for you. It's true. Allison, we love you. I love you. And my eye, if you haven't gathered it. Besides in the loop, which I remember
Starting point is 00:09:33 in which everyone was talking about when you came to work with us, it's a great movie. Besides that, what was your background? Like, do you have an improv background? Yeah, I started doing improv at upright systems to begin in New York, and I mostly just thought I was gonna do that.
Starting point is 00:09:50 I remember talking to someone and being like, I just wanna get a temp job and do improv at night. That was eight years of my life. It's fun, right? Did you feel like when you were doing that, did it feel unsatisfying in some fundamental one? No, it was the most fun. It was the most fun. Right.
Starting point is 00:10:05 It was the most fun because the job I didn't really care about, I just needed to pay bills so I could go do improv. And then you're with like, you have a community. Yeah, and they all are like-minded. And we were so into it, we were probably really obnoxious. Why I used to teach too, when I was in New York to help, like, I like teaching and also help me survive. But I remember once being in a cab in New York
Starting point is 00:10:26 and going past an improv theater and seeing all these adults outside and they were like throwing like imaginary knives to each other or whatever they were doing. Some like warm up. Some improv game. It was so humiliating and so you could not look nerdyer and less cool and these people,
Starting point is 00:10:43 I just felt my heart swell in my chest. Like seeing these like grown adults, just like kind of, they look so happy. They were just like being so cringe, so happily, in public, in New York, on the street. I was just like, God bless you guys. Like it's so sweet. Like, I've found it so moving.
Starting point is 00:11:02 I feel like I want to end. I thought it was so perfect when they made the choice to have Michael Scott in an improv group. It's so funny, it's so perfect. It was so perfect. Like I took in rough classes with a Michael Scott. Oh my God, it's mostly Michael Scott. Yeah, oh my gosh.
Starting point is 00:11:17 How much were you told about the character Gabe? Did you know it was gonna be like a long arc? No, I didn't know much. I, it's a pretty foggy memory because I think because it felt like such a, I felt like such a raffle winner where it's like you can be on your favorite show. It created like such a rush of anxiety that like I've never experienced anything like before since like like to be like completely inexperienced as a TV actor and to be thrust into a show where you're like, you know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:11:50 It's just like it was really overwhelming. And I remember like, when I first moved out here right before I started filming, I remember there was like some moment. This is a really crazy, compromising moment. I was at Walmart, first of all, I didn't know how to drive because I've been living in New York. So I had to, like, as an adult man, go to Pennsylvania and have my father retie to me to drive
Starting point is 00:12:13 because I was like, I'm gonna be in L.A. You have to teach me to drive. Oh, my God. So my dad taught me to drive, like, some weird, like, little short film or something. And then I remember, when we started shooting, driving terrified me so much that I would show up on set, and my jaw would be so clenched
Starting point is 00:12:29 that I had a hard time saying words. So I would take CDs, Frank Sinatra CDs, and I would put them in the car and force myself to sing along with old blue eyes so that my jaw would stay open so that I wouldn't show up with like, like rigor mortis face. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:46 And then, I think before I'd even shot my first scene, being in a Walmart, buying like multiple humidifiers and lozenges and sh** because I was like, I'm gonna lose my voice and then I'm not gonna be able to do it and I'm gonna, I was so panicked and I was worried I was gonna forget my lines. So I was like muttering my lines in a Walmart. For some reason I didn't get a basket.
Starting point is 00:13:06 So I just had like, armfuls of like humidifiers and lozenges, just like muttering like my lines to myself, like a crazy person. So what I really remember from that time is just the white hot panic of like, oh, you know, like. Were you prone to losing your voice?
Starting point is 00:13:21 What was this anxiety about losing your voice? I was prone to losing my mind. I was like, I- You in the Walmart. I think it was just like anything. You know, you have like free range. So I'm just gonna feel like anxiety's just like a giant like military helicopter that needs some place to land.
Starting point is 00:13:35 Yeah. And it was like, Oh, today it'll be landing on the landing pad of like vocal anxiety. Tomorrow it'll be like, whatever that'll, you know, some weird hypothetical thing in a different direction. Yes, yes.
Starting point is 00:13:46 So I don't remember what they told me, but I didn't think I was, I thought it might just be a few episodes and then they gave me more and I was like, wow, that's great. Do you remember your first day on set? Yeah. What did you shoot your very first day? I think the first thing I shot was a, to camera, like one of the interviews.
Starting point is 00:14:03 A talking head. Talking head. Okay. Yeah. That's a good way to start actually because it's just you. No one is dependent on your line for timing. You're not driving a scene. Right.
Starting point is 00:14:14 So I think that's actually a really smart way to start. They might have done that on purpose too. What was your first impression coming on the set? Well, John Krasinski directed the episode that I was doing. And I remember something happened on set and it took longer than they were expecting. So I sort of in my trailer just churning. And then they called me to set. And I think John knew that I was kind of like pent up and terrified.
Starting point is 00:14:34 And so he just like even though I'm sure it had been a long day and there was a lot left to shoot, he like let me just improvise a lot in the talking head. I doubt they used any of it, but it just was like, it let me relax. And he was so kind about it. The big thing that I remember, and part of why I was like excited to do this is because I'm not good at staying in touch with people and stuff. But I feel, yeah, that I feel like is important to me to communicate to people who listen to this, which is the level of kindness and hospitality that was extended to me on that show was bizarre. Like, if you're in the late seasons of a TV show
Starting point is 00:15:14 that has such a deep bench of amazing characters, and some new person shows up who's gonna suck up even more oxygen, eat up more story time, you know what I mean? It would be very easy to understand if people were not all that receptive to that, especially if it's someone who's like a rookie who's still just like learning about like, okay, what's an eye line? How do I, like, what's a mark?
Starting point is 00:15:35 You know what I mean? Like stuff, like just very rookie stuff that I'm having to learn on the go. Like it would be totally reasonable if people had a kind of professional detachment from that person. But everyone was so ostentatiously kind to me. Ostentatious makes it sound bad. Just generous, kind. You guys were so lovely to me.
Starting point is 00:15:56 You guys were so sweet to me and inclusive. I remember, I would just sort of camp out at Phyllis and Leslie's desk and watch them like shop for, they were both decorating's desk and watch them like shop for, they were both like decorating their houses and they were like, yes, she was looking for a gate for like, I think two years, she wanted a new, maybe.
Starting point is 00:16:13 We looked at every gate possible. I just remember basically, yeah, like gate shopping with Leslie and Phyllis and like they would show me and they would be so nice and joke around with me. I remember Kate Flannery went really went out of her way, Oscar, and not just in a kind, again, not just in a perfunctory professional way,
Starting point is 00:16:29 they invite me to their houses. You guys would include me in social stuff. I just, it was so, it was like the photo negative of what happened to the character Gabe, right? Like, Gabe is like this unfortunate, creepy guy shows up and is immediately and utterly ostracized. It was like, yeah, it was the exact opposite
Starting point is 00:16:47 where it was like, oh my God, look at this. Like this group of people is just like so envelopingly sweet. So that was life changing because I was already so fragile and terrified because it was such a new experience. And I wanted so desperately to do a good job and to be met with that kind of generosity of spirit was I think formative for me. I mean, we loved the character Gabe.
Starting point is 00:17:11 I mean, in re-watching, like Gabe has made us laugh so hard, but one of the things we've been most excited about doing this podcast is being able to reconnect with these people that were such an amazing chapter of our life. And you're one of those people. We've talked about you so much. We're so happy you're here. I mean, we still talked about the gift you brought to my Yankee Swap Christmas party, which was a sarcophagus, like jewelry box. It was the gift that everyone wanted. I mean, legend gift. Thank you. I mean, that's like white elephant stuff is like a real source of anxiety, right?
Starting point is 00:17:51 Because it's like, it feels like a moral spiritual test. So I'm glad that I passed. You passed and I have the sarcophagus. Yes, it's mine. I went home with it. Yeah, I have it on my bookshelf. And it's not cursed or anything, right? Doesn't seem like it. Okay, cool.
Starting point is 00:18:08 Yeah, it seems like it did you. I hadn't actively pursued a curse, but if there's a small sarcophagus, the odds that it has some sort of curse feels pretty eye. It's been good so far. It's doing great for you. It is. It's a heated battle that you won.
Starting point is 00:18:22 I also off topic here, but in anticipation of talking to you today, I also off topic here, but in anticipation of talking to you today, I sort of went back through old emails and I have some great photos of you that I sent a long, long time ago to you to probably hold the email, but they're great. They're just of you hanging out on set. So I need to make sure you get those.
Starting point is 00:18:40 Oh, I would love that. I would love that. Yeah. Not that I was a creeper, taking pictures of you. We wereer taking pictures of you. There's not my camera in the men's room with like got a lot of candy snaps. No, but I did. I found a few when we were at Shroop farms. Oh, yeah. So I'm going to make sure you get those with grobin. Yes. That's really surreal. I'm going to farm with Josh Grobin and like all these people have been watching for years. It's just such a weird, it's like.
Starting point is 00:19:08 I'm like, yeah, did someone like dose me with acid and I'm like, just back in my, in my like basement apartment and hell's kitchen having like a weird fever dream? Yeah. So I watched like your first couple of episodes, which must have been so insane because you're talking about being new and everything.
Starting point is 00:19:25 Right. So, like, there's the scene where you enter Dunder Mithin for the first time and White is holding a giant tray of hot dogs. And then Aaron and Andy sing the sob race song. Yes. That is so crazy. And then the next episode, you're like wrestling some great Danes and you're talking to Kathy Bates. Kathy Bates. I know. That's crazy. And then the next episode, you're like wrestling some great dames and you're talking to Kathy Bates. Kathy Bates.
Starting point is 00:19:47 I know that's crazy. Why did they tell you that you would be working with Kathy Bates? You know, this is not a satisfying answer, but the truth is, again, it's just this is the sort of like pummeling. The things I do. I felt like I was like being beaten into a happy gang.
Starting point is 00:20:02 Or so, like it's just like, it's just like, I don't know, like Kathy B Bates, the office, like, you're in a little line of driving and you're gonna be, like, it just felt like this kind of like word jumble of like, I don't know. What's next? Yeah, I just felt like, like, I don't remember finding it out, like, it's like the fog of war.
Starting point is 00:20:20 I'm just like, I don't remember. Like, that's very funny. We were so nervous about Kathy Bates being on set. Really? Yeah. What were you nervous about just that she would tell me? Just anything, just like making eye contact. And she was such a presence.
Starting point is 00:20:35 And then she was so kind. I think it was just her stature and her body of work. And we had avoided for so long having like these big name actors on the show. And so this was kind of a turning point and it was very shocking. It felt like, you know? Yeah. So my hair colorist had once colored Cathy Bates hair.
Starting point is 00:20:59 This is just, and he told me this like years ago, you know, and just, you know, when hairdressers just tell you they're lower while they're doing your hair. And he's like, well, you know, I used to color Kathy Bates here. And oh, what a woman. And he just like so admired her and all this. He didn't gossip, but he just did name drop
Starting point is 00:21:17 that he had colored her hair. So when I knew she was coming on the show, I had to resist that urge, you know, when like the second I saw her, not to be like, we have the same hair colorist. Hi, I'm Jenna, our hair colorist. He colored your hair. What?
Starting point is 00:21:38 Welcome to the show. I'm so because that you suppressed that. I know that would come just tumbling out of my mouth. I held it. I can't remember for how long I think I made it several days. And then I did finally say, you know, Robert Hickland, Hair Colorist, I think we, I think he, and oh, yes, Bobby, yes, I know him, yes, wonderful guy.
Starting point is 00:22:01 We should be best friends now. Well, that was my next line. So we are clearly best friends then Yes, same hair colorist. Yeah, so much in common. We're on your emergency contact Yeah, exactly. Let me ask you like so because for many people you are that like in other words when people see you Right, it generates the same feelings in them that Kathy Bage generated in you So what is the version like when people come up to you guys and are like, actually, did you know that we shared a, you know, whatever, we stay in the same summer camp cabin
Starting point is 00:22:29 that it, that it, that it, like, does it feel alienating to you when people do that or does it feel nice or does it just depend on the person? Like, well, I guess what I'm asking is like, or maybe is it okay to ask you guys? Yeah, yes, please. What is the version of being approached in a situation like that? Where maybe it's not just like in the airport,
Starting point is 00:22:48 but it's like a situation that has some containment that feels good to you versus the one that feels like, like if you're Kathy Bates, how do you want someone to approach you? Well, I'll say that I just did the Mean Girls movie musical. I play the mom. that I just did the Mean Girls movie musical. I play the mom. Yay! And after I got on the set and I was working, I called Angela and I was like, Angela, we are now like the old lady, like the people, like these kids and the crew and stuff. They're treating me like the way we were around like Kathy Bates or around
Starting point is 00:23:27 some of these like people who had like the resumes and all that kind of stuff. I'm like it's so weird and it feels like it was so bizarre because I was like, oh, I'm like not at all worthy of your, what do you call it? Like they're giving giving me like, yes, like sort of like, we thank you so much for doing our film and the directors were just like, we can't believe we got you. And I'm like, you can't. I'm like, it's the Mean Girls movie musical. I feel like people are lining up to do this.
Starting point is 00:23:59 You're being so overly kind to me. But I do remember that. Like when we would be at an award show, like someone from a television show that we had watched, you get a chance to meet them or they give you an award or something. You're like, oh my God, I can't believe this person. I was like, we're the old timers now.
Starting point is 00:24:18 We're the old timers who have been in the biz for a while. And I actually thought it was really cool. I'm still very humbled by it all that, you know, that I got to stop tipping and got to, you know, take the skills I learned from my improv classes and get paid to do something I love. It's still very humbling to me that people watch the show, enjoy the show, wanna watch me be silly or whatever it is. I always feel like I won the lottery.
Starting point is 00:24:50 So I've still taken it back by it, like what you're saying. I don't think that'll ever go away. I still can't believe I got to do this. I wonder if Kathy Bidts had that feeling. Yeah, maybe I will tell you. Here's an example of when maybe it's not fun or appropriate. I towards the end of my pregnancy was having some pain and they said, okay, let's get you to the specialist for this special kind of sonogram where they can make sure everything's okay. I was having a lot of pain in my pelvis.
Starting point is 00:25:20 So I met with this person I've never met before and he's conducting the sonogram. You know, I'm just like laying there and he's like, so is Dwight gonna be stopping by? Oh boy. And I was like, you mean a fictional character? I'm in a television show with it is not the father of my baby? No. I'm coming to you because I have pain in my pelvis. Giving me a sonogram and I'm laying here,
Starting point is 00:25:47 feeling so exposed. And you asked me, I knew he was like, and he, it's been like 20 minutes. So he'd been holding onto that. And then he was just like, when is Dwight stopping by? So maybe, maybe here's a tip. Like if you're in that situation,
Starting point is 00:26:03 maybe go bring up the TV show. Medical professionals in particular If you're in that situation, maybe you don't believe in the TV show. Medical professionals in particular should never bring up your celebrity in an exam room. Well, I think that's fair. I think it's fair to do. That's just a good solid boundary. Yeah. You're probably there because you're worried about something.
Starting point is 00:26:21 Yes, that's right. That's right. You know what? Tell me in the lobby. Tell me in the lobby after work. You need that's right. And that's right. Yeah. You know what, tell me in the lobby. Tell me in the lobby after work. You need to be you. Yeah. Right.
Starting point is 00:26:29 You need to be who you are and know that that person sees you. Right. You know, I think an analogy that I think of all the time is like, I'm an adult person and I pay a mortgage and I'm raising two children and and all this stuff. And yet all the time I feel like a little bit of like, I can't believe that I am tasked with these adult responsibilities. Like I can't, like young people will look at me and I know that I look like an old person to them,
Starting point is 00:26:57 but like inside, I still kind of feel like a flailing 23 year old who doesn't know what they're doing. So I feel like that's part of it too. Like when people are approaching me and they're like, oh my God, I love your body of work and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. I still feel like the struggling actor who's trying to make it.
Starting point is 00:27:17 Like that's never left me. I will say like before I was on the show that blog post you wrote to actors. Yeah, I turned into a book later, yeah. But at that point, I think it was just a vlog post. It was just a blog post, yeah. Advice to actors. It was so, because I'd read that multiple times
Starting point is 00:27:36 before ever meeting you or being on the show. Oh my God, I didn't even know that, Zach. Yeah, it was so orienting. I think because a lot of times, I think when people can feel the distance between how they're perceived and how, and their interior sense of themselves, we're describing, I think sometimes people's response to that is to try to identify publicly only with the way they're perceived or something. But I remember for you at that time, to share the flailing, to share the kind of blemishy, angsty,
Starting point is 00:28:08 unsure kind of experience that you'd had was so helpful because it's so isolating to aspire to something. Well, I don't know if that's even true. It's scary to, what am I trying to say? There's a cherry, you know, cherry, John's the actor, actor, cherry, she has this quote that I love so much where she says, the theaters where we comfort each other with our shortcomings, whereas like, I'll show you mine and you'll see yours reflected and then we'll have a night of laughs and catharsis and whatever.
Starting point is 00:28:34 In a way, like when you wrote that thing, it's like, not that that shortcomings exactly, but I felt comforted by your vulnerability and by your ownership of that vulnerability because I felt so vulnerable. So seeing like, oh, wow, someone who I admire vulnerability and by your ownership of that vulnerability, because I felt so vulnerable. So seeing like, oh, wow, someone who I admire who has a exciting career and who is willing to be introspective and revealing in this way and expose the gap between public perception
Starting point is 00:28:58 and interior experience, that for me was really helpful. Sorry, that's such a long way to do that. I loved everywhere that. No, and I think it's your question too, which is like we were so in awe of Kathy Bates, but like maybe Kathy Bates just feels like the same tripping over her own feet actor that we all feel like when we first start a role
Starting point is 00:29:19 or first start a job or whatever, but we never asked because we just assumed she must be filled with all this confidence and all of this, all of it. But that also goes back to you, Zach. You talk about all this anxiety and you're holding these things in Walmart and you can't believe you're on the show. You were seamlessly a part of our show from the very beginning. Like it's kind of blowing my mind that you're telling me that you were anxious or that you even were in experience
Starting point is 00:29:47 because I knew you had done in the loop, but I assumed like there were all these other things too. I really had no idea that the office was your first television job. Like, and for how just amazing you were, right? So just amazing right out of the gate and such a smart improviser. I know I'm being improvneurred here, but I just love it when people are really smart and say really
Starting point is 00:30:10 what do you smart things and don't go for the obvious joke and don't go for too much and are understated and you're all of those things. And I have loved watching your scenes so much. And I love going to the script and reading the script and then watching your scenes. Cause you, I think maybe you and Steve improvise the most. Honestly, if you look at how many episodes you're in and improvise so well, you know? That's very sweet.
Starting point is 00:30:36 I mean, I, yeah, it's so nice. I start taking acting classes because I, I would hire in between, like, when we would be shooting, I would go back to New York and I had this acting coach named Anya Safer, who I would go shout out to Anya Safer. Because I'd never go into acting school or anything. So I would go through, like, scenes from Tennessee Williams plays and, like, take voice classes and do, like, Alexander technique and all this shit, because I was like, I just felt
Starting point is 00:31:03 I had such deep imposters in the drum because I hadn't done it before. So it's nice to hear that it wasn't flagrantly obvious. On set, that's good. This is a great segue for us to ask you if you had ever played Abe Lincoln other than on the office. I'd been sent an audition for Abe Lincoln Vampire Hunter where I had to learn the Gettysburg address
Starting point is 00:31:24 and I was not hired to be Abe Lincoln Vampire Hunter. But other than that, I'd never played Abelink in. Wait, so Abelink and recited the Gettysburg address while Gilly Abampires are being a vampire. I think he hunted the vampires. Oh, he hunted the vampires. But you know how it is of vampires. You start out hunting them and then you become one. Yeah. I think they just wanted to see people do the Getty's Brigadress to see if they were plausible as Lincoln and then they were going to like get to the vampire hunting in like a later stage of the casting process or something. So I did for a while know the Getty's Brigadress. Because you had done that prior to playing Abe Lincoln on the office.
Starting point is 00:32:01 Yeah, I think so. Yeah. See, wow. Yeah. So there was a small part of you that had played Abe Lincoln on the office. I think so. Wow. So there was a small part of you that had played Abe Lincoln. It's not for an audition. I mean, like, my body had played Abe Lincoln my entire life. I had the doctor, I remember Abe Lincoln had something called Marfan Syndrome, which is like this. I guess it's like a congenital heart defect or something. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:32:20 Basically, like the symptoms are, your wings span is greater than your height. Then you have something called a Pectis Excavada, I think, which I have. It's your wings span is greater than your height, then you have something called a Pectis Xcavada, I think, which I have. It's like this weird divot in your chest. I remember going to the doctor and him being like, oh, Abe Lincoln had Marfan syndrome. We're gonna screen you for it. And then being just shocked that I didn't have it
Starting point is 00:32:37 because I had like all the... All the other. Yeah, I had like all the symptoms of Abe Lincoln's disease, but not the actual diagnosis, not to brag, hold your applause. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, what are some of your favorite scenes
Starting point is 00:32:50 or moments from the show? It's funny, like, I remember hearing some interview with Mark Reiland, the actor where he said, like, when you die, probably like the thing that flashes before your eyes isn't the episodes of the shows, but the experience you had making them, like, and I think for me, when I think of the show, it's sort of a gauzy feeling of like,
Starting point is 00:33:10 I remember a lunch a lot. I remember like hanging out with people, like in between setups and stuff. In terms of scenes, I think it took me a while till after I was off the office when I started to be able to really enjoy scenes because I didn't feel like, oh god, what if I took this up, you know? Right, right. You could be an audience member and watch
Starting point is 00:33:30 it. Yeah. And I really liked stuff where I like getting into fights with Ed Helms. I thought that was fun. I was like messing Ed Helms. I looked online to see what are the fan favorite quotes of Gabe. Oh, really? Yeah. and I share one of them with the internet. So I love so much in search committee when you just start asking him questions about the sun. And then Andy knows all this information about the sun and you say, shut up about the sun, shut up about the sun. So that made it as one of best Gabe quotes.
Starting point is 00:34:04 It's also one of mine. Here's another one, walk away bitch. Oh, yeah, that was standy, right? Yeah, that's to and remember that. And then this is one I forgot. And I actually had to go and rewatch the episode. We haven't gotten to it yet, Jenna. It's from turf war. And Gabe says, sometimes I wonder if I have ovaries in my scrotum because I am great at girl talk.
Starting point is 00:34:26 That's the most upsetting, sorry America. That's the most upsetting phrase I've ever heard. Oh my gosh. And the other one was there are plenty of people who love touching me. Oh, I remember that scene. It's heartbreaking. It's when Kelly hugs Gabe. It's hard break game. It's when Kelly hugs Gabe. It's hard break game.
Starting point is 00:34:48 It's when Kelly hugs Gabe. It's hard break game. It's when Kelly hugs Gabe. It's when Kelly hugs Gabe. It's when Kelly hugs Gabe. It's when Kelly hugs Gabe. It's when Kelly hugs Gabe. It's when Kelly hugs Gabe.
Starting point is 00:34:56 It's when Kelly hugs Gabe. It's when Kelly hugs Gabe. It's when Kelly hugs Gabe. It's when Kelly hugs Gabe. It's when Kelly hugs Gabe. It's when Kelly hugs Gabe. It's when Kelly hugs Gabe. It's when Kelly hugs Gabe.
Starting point is 00:35:04 It's when Kelly hugs Gabe. It's when Kelly hugs Gabe. It's when Kelly hugs Gabe. It's when Kelly hugs Gabe. are the search committee and you got to interview all of those amazing like actors doing the cameos. Are there any of that stood out to you? I remember Will our net would do this thing where he would sort of start improvising. Like he'd be joking around in this way that was so unbelievably funny in between takes. And then when they would call action was sort of like just continue in a way. I'm being like, oh, wow, that's fascinating. Like he's kind of in a, it doesn't stop in between cut and action.
Starting point is 00:35:28 He's like kind of not in a tiring way. You know, there's people who are like on in a way that, it wasn't like that. It was just like, he was sort of in this, it was like he was keeping it like a simmering or something. I remember being fascinated by that. Yeah. And I remember feeling like immediately like Ray Romano,
Starting point is 00:35:43 I just went to like rest my head on his shoulder I think he's like so warm and And and I really loved him and Then I also like it was fun. I remember we like interview people from the office. Yeah, just fun to do like Your interview of Mindy as Kelly was really funny and I think it's in the bloopers because Gabe decides that oh, maybe I'm going to be the voice of reason here and he looks at Jim and Toby when Kelly walks in and goes, we don't really need to go through all this, do we? If we're not, we're not, this isn't like a serious interview,
Starting point is 00:36:15 right? And they both just throw you under the bus and Toby's like, no, I think we, it is serious. And then Gabe says to Kelly, what are your weaknesses? And Kelly goes, I don't have any ass. This is something like that. But you guys, you could tell that Mindy was like breaking, and just the whole scene is so funny. I imagine there's a lot of great bloopers from that day. Yeah, I mean, and by that point, I guess that was late enough in the shooting process
Starting point is 00:36:42 where I felt like my blood pressure had dropped incrementally a little bit and I was able to. It looked like you were having fun. I remember enjoying those scenes more where I was like, okay, I think after they brought me back for another season, I thought, well, if they were horrified, they wouldn't have done that. And that really put me at ease where I just thought, okay, well, if they've decided they want me here, then it's their funeral.
Starting point is 00:37:05 I can't, you know, I'll take it. The other thing when I looked up the character Gabe and I did like an image search, one of the first things that comes up is Gabe as Lady Gaga. Yeah. That costume was, oh my gosh, I just remember you were in here and make up for so long. Yeah. You had the eyelashes. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:37:25 Yeah. I never felt more like myself on set. I think, you know, I never walked in high heels before. I don't know where they found high heels my size, but it was- It was shoe size. 11 and a half, a modest 11 and a half. We're not, you know. But it was, I don't know if you guys know this.
Starting point is 00:37:42 Extremely hard to walk in. Yeah. We have an idea. Why? Yeah, yeah. I know. No man has ever told you this. It was so hard to move.
Starting point is 00:37:53 I couldn't believe it. I was like, wait, people do this for hours at a time? It's kind of insane. It's ridiculous when you think about it. It's like, I'm the design issue where you're up on your tippy toes. Now, go walk all day. Not just that.
Starting point is 00:38:04 So many high heels. They're made for a foot where you're up on your tippy toes. Now go walk all day. Not just that, so many high heels, they're made for a foot where you just have one long center toe. Yes, true. Not even the shape of your foot. Which is likely I do have that design. That is. I just have a long center toe. That was also an Abraham Lincoln.
Starting point is 00:38:17 Yes, that's one of the symptoms of my advanced syndrome. Just a single long toe. In terms of volume, it's the same volume as five toes, but just in one in the one toe. Yes, exactly. All right, we have one other question we've been curious about. Great.
Starting point is 00:38:33 The great Danes. You had to work a lot with these giant dogs. Was there anything like any memory from working with those dogs? Yeah, they were like frustratingly professional. Really? Yeah, I was like, you know, with your dog, you just want to like rub your face in there,
Starting point is 00:38:47 snout, you just want to be like, oh, I love you, you're beautiful, you're a miracle. And they were just like, we're working. They just were so focused, they had that like working dog thing where they were just like not screwing around. Yeah. No snuggles, no snuggles. I was like spoon me, great.
Starting point is 00:39:03 And they're like, no, thank you. No was like spoon me, great. And they're like, no thank you. No thank you, strange human. I'm working. Yeah, I was like, it truly was like, you ever meet like one of those former child stars who's been like working from the time they were three and they were like, where's my light? Okay, I just need a little bit of eyebrow pencil
Starting point is 00:39:19 and let's go. You know, those people who are just like, they were like that, but just the canine version. Yeah. Do you share Gabe's love of horror films? No. I mean, I like some horror movies, but not really. What I do love is I really like wake up pranks.
Starting point is 00:39:33 Do you guys know about wake up pranks? No. Do you wake up someone in a horrible manner? Yeah, it's like people waking up their friends in mean ways. Oh, no. And people get scared. And I think it's very funny and very mean. And there's one where they're like,
Starting point is 00:39:45 disguised asleep. I guess they got like fast food. They're in a van disguised asleep. He's got like a burger on his lap, but he fell asleep before he ate his burger. And I think there's like a truck with one of those, it's like one of those trucks that pulls cars behind it. So it looks like the car is facing.
Starting point is 00:40:02 Oh, yeah, like the vehicle. Uh-huh. You can mistake it as an oncoming vehicle. Right, right. So this guy's asleep. So everyone in the car decides to wake up, prank him. And what they do is they swerve and scream all at the same time, and he wakes up
Starting point is 00:40:15 and he sees this car in front of him. And he thinks, you know, this is it. And he screams and he just squeezes the hell out of his burger. He just squeezes this burger so hard. And then I show him slow mo of just like face contouring and I'm squeezing the burger. It's so fun.
Starting point is 00:40:32 It's very mean and I don't think it's right, but it is very funny. And then I also like close call videos where it's like, I can't stand like fail videos where people get hurt. I can't stand it. But close call videos. Oh, and someone almost falls? Yes. Yes. That I. It's the best.
Starting point is 00:40:47 It's the best. Like I haven't seen the videos, but I will tell you, I have a memory I will never forget. I was in the Dallas, Fort Worth airport. And there was this long corridor that we were all walking down, right? And there's a woman coming kind of swimming up stream against all of us. She's got no soul. She was clearly very late for her flight. Okay. And she is running. I'm talking a full sprint with like trying to juggle a carry on, but a full sprint.
Starting point is 00:41:18 And she's in wedge flip flops. And she is running. And we can see her from so far in this corridor and she's running and the front of her flip flop bends forward under her foot and then she lurches forward and then she tries to overcompensate and she lurches back and she did it for probably it felt like 10 minutes. It was like wait, wait, wait, wait, and we were all all so invested. It was like, I don't know, 80 strangers. And we're like, is she going down?
Starting point is 00:41:51 What do we do? And then she, right before she faced planted, she pulled herself up. Yeah. And we were all like, and then she ran past us. I'll never forget it. Oh my God.
Starting point is 00:42:05 I've seen videos, if you saw the videos of someone who's like slipping on ice, but for like a very long time. It's like that. It's like that. It's like that. It's like that. It's like that. It's like that.
Starting point is 00:42:18 It's like that. It's like that. It's like that. It's like that. It's like that. It's like that. It's like that. It's like that. It's like that. It's like that. It's like that. that seems to never stop. And when it turns out good, right? So relieved. And it put there's so many,
Starting point is 00:42:26 and you can watch them to compilation. It's like people like their kid almost, like is riding a bike and almost runs into something and they swoop in and grab them or it's like, it's just like humans evading disaster is like the best. Have you seen the videos of people who they're scaring someone? Yes. But they're doing it by pretending
Starting point is 00:42:46 that they're scared of something themselves. Yes, and then the other person runs away. Yes, they're moral again. So like there's like a woman and she's like taking out the trash with her husband and she opens up the trash cannon that she's like, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah He has to be like anything. And it's just like the firefly respond. But the psychology behind it, it's so interesting because it's like, I share fear with you. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:14 We share that. But the one person, it's just pretending. And that's the other person. I know it's really fascinating. I kind of want to try it out. You should try it. It's a cheap prank. You have to do is excite. There's one more I have to say because these are really fascinating. I kind of want to try it out. You should try it. It's a cheap prank. Y'all you have to do is excite. There's one more I have to say
Starting point is 00:43:27 because these are now fascinating. You might like it. So there's the other one where you're in a group, like your family, and you pick someone and you say, like I learned, we're gonna do a magic trick and make you visible. And you put a sheet over them
Starting point is 00:43:43 and then you say some magic words and then you pull the sheet off and everyone in the room has agreed to pretend that the person is invisible. Oh, that's amazing. It's always the mom. They always do it to the mom, right? And then so then they pull the sheet off
Starting point is 00:43:56 and then everyone's like, no way! Holy, oh my God. And then the person's like, what, oh my God, what, what, what, you can't, I don't get it. That's amazing. Also the fact that it's the mom, like,
Starting point is 00:44:08 like an invisible mom, I feel like so many moms in family dynamics are just the invisible caretaker. They're all ready. They're all ready. It's like that's like an invisible labor. That SNL sketch at Christmas, everyone's saying, I got a piano and the mom goes, and I got a robe. And that's all she got. And it's like over and over. But then I got a car. I got a piano and the mom goes, and I got a robe. And that's all she got.
Starting point is 00:44:25 And it's like over and over. But then I got a car. I got a robe. Also, at the end, they're like, wait a second. What's this secret pile of presents? And the mom's like, oh, and they're like, it's presents for the dog. And then the dog gets a robe as well.
Starting point is 00:44:42 I think I'm gonna watch the one of, particularly the one where they're scared. Where they act scared. Yes, it's very fun. It's, I cannot wait. It's so interesting. It's so interesting that people like share fear. It's fascinating.
Starting point is 00:44:56 I heard that, I don't even know if this is true. This could just be something like I am basically making up. But that like laughter, like the origins of laughter, is it was like a way that like monkeys could tell each other that a perceived danger was no longer a threat. Like so basically it's like, okay, we're a bunch of monkeys. Like we think we see a tiger, everyone gets tense. And then I realized it was not a tiger,
Starting point is 00:45:17 it's something that looked like a tiger, but it's an tiger. Then we all laugh and it's a way of quickly dispersing the information that like what seemed to be threatening is in fact not a threat. So it's like this rolling sound that like lets everyone know. It's like a fire-john reverse. It makes so much sense. Right. And then also it makes so much sense. Why comedy is something we're drawn to watch and that like su there's us. It's a real, you know. Oh, that's interesting. Yes. Yes, I mean, I remember when I injured my back, when I broke my back and I watched the Larry Sanders show.
Starting point is 00:45:49 Me and Creed and Jenna one night in her hotel room binged the Larry Sanders show. And that laughter, it brings you relief, right? And maybe it goes all the way back to that. Just bunch of monkeys. Releasing some porn, they're no tiger. Yeah. Yeah. That's our whole show is just, I'm very scared of what Michael Scott is going to say or do right now. Okay. All right. All right.
Starting point is 00:46:14 I think that's right. It's like tension, cringe, release. Yeah. You know, set up tension, punchline. Like, yeah, I don't know. Again, I could, that could be total malarkey, but I mean, it tracks, I've been really into, there's a show about animals on Netflix and we watch the one about dogs. It's so good. Yeah, and dogs do this little sniffy snorty thing when they're, you know, how they play fight
Starting point is 00:46:37 and it's to let the other dog know that I'm not serious. So if you hear your dog and now my little two to-wawa rescues when they play, I hear it, they go, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, sh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, shh, sh, sh, shh, sh, sh, sh, sh, sh, sh, sh, shh, sh, shh, shh, sh, sh, sh, sh, sh, sh, sh, sh, sh, sh, sh, sh, sh, sh, sh, sh, sh, sh, sh, sh, sh, seriously when you're trying to like, I mean it. I really mean it guys. Like now you don't. Now you know you're being silly. Do you get recognized as Gabe? Sometimes, yeah. And what is that like?
Starting point is 00:47:17 I had a really bad one recently, so I'm making the show now this like stop-motion show. And in it, there's a like a lactation station, you know, that they have the airport. And we were getting designs for them. And I was like, oh, I want something really simple. And I was in an airport. There was an empty lactation station.
Starting point is 00:47:36 And I wanted to send a picture to the production designer to be like, this is what we're going for. This is a perfect example, right? So I started to take a picture of the lactation station as someone came up to me and was like, hey man, you were Gabe on the office. There's not lost to me. The Gabe is a, in many ways, quite a creepy guy. Yeah. And so this guy just saw me by myself in an airport photographing a lactation station. Oh, no. Like a true predator from hell. I mean, like that's an insane thing to do, right? To take a picture. Like, he has no context.
Starting point is 00:48:06 And if I say, this is for a show, that sounds even worse. It's like, it's for a show, really, buddy. Like, and so it was, that was a truly mortifying where I'm like, I, he must think I'm like, the Gabe is like a tone down version of me, based on I'm based on that experience. But yeah, people, people sometimes will recognize me from the show.
Starting point is 00:48:27 So after the office, you did Silicon Valley, you've done all these other things. Do you still get approached more for being on the office or for other roles, or is it pretty 50-50? I'd say it's probably 50-50 with the office and then everything else I've ever done. So it's like the single thing, maybe more. Well, I don know. Look at belly. Yeah, it's probably around 50-50. It depends. It's like demographically specific. Yeah. You know. And it's interesting. If it's younger people,
Starting point is 00:48:54 it's probably the office. If it's really young people, I think it's so sweet to me that kids find it so comforting. It's a kind of emotional wall paper. People have watched it a million times, they'll turn it on as a way of feeling like they're kind of among their friends or in a kind of soothing, warm, silly environment. I think it's so sweet. And so it's nice when it's like some whatever 19-year-old who's immersed in the scrant and paper industry fictional world, I think that's so sweet. I like that. Have you rewatched the show?
Starting point is 00:49:28 Some of it. I hate watching anything I'm in, so not that stuff. But I'd already watched the show so much when I came out. I think I would rewatch the show a lot before I was on the show, but I haven't done the wall-to-wall rewatch. We hadn't either. This is the first time for us. I'd seen episodes here and there.
Starting point is 00:49:44 We've talked about that. This is really our first time to see some of these episodes in a long time since they aired. Does it feel like, does watching the show feel like you're looking at a photo album of your friends and your life in a way, or does it feel like you can suspend disbelief and get lost in the story of the show? Like, are you able to invest in the fictional reality
Starting point is 00:50:04 of the show when you're watching it? invest in the fictional reality of the show when you're watching it? I think so. Because of the passage of time, it's both things. I have a lot of nostalgic thoughts and feelings. I get really sentimental when I'm watching it. I remember parts of my life that were happening when we were making those episodes. I miss people when I watch it. But I can also when I watch it, what's weird is I have images of all the things you can't see in the episode. So like I can feel Brian Whittle holding his boom above my desk in a scene when I'm watching the rewatch.
Starting point is 00:50:40 You know, I can like feel where, oh, I thought video village was over in the conference room for this one and Kelly's shouting out some safety meeting. So it's like all of the behind the camera stuff pops into my head as well. But then at the same time, I have found myself getting invested in the characters. Like I personally feel that Aaron is not the one for Andy. And I am getting angry. It's being shoved down my throat.
Starting point is 00:51:06 That I'm being told that they're the perfect couple. When I actually feel like Andy is thriving with his current girlfriend, Jessica. Jessica. Yeah. It is great. I like Jessica. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:51:16 You know? So I don't know. So I do, I have like some fan reactions when I watch. That's interesting. Show as well. Yeah. What about you, Ange. Oh, I mean, I think you said that so well.
Starting point is 00:51:27 That's exactly how I feel. It's both for me. It's a photo album and I'm in the audience and I kind of switch back and forth. I have really strong memories of episodes, you know, when things were happening in my life. And I watch it with that layer. Wow. So it's not even just the environment of the set, but it's the environment of your life at that time.
Starting point is 00:51:50 Yeah. That's fascinating. It was what, nine years of our life, and, you know, babies were born and family members passed away. And it's a lot of life happens in nine years. And I just watched that play out through this other filter of being a character. It's kind of, it's really surreal. That's trippy. Yeah, a friend of mine said to me, I was like talking about some,
Starting point is 00:52:13 maybe New York or something, she goes, well, places aren't places as much as their times. Like when you think of a place often, you're thinking of a time. And so it's not necessarily the geography of the place, but it's the sort of psychic place you were in in your life, right? Like where what was happening or who you were at that time? It's so interesting that it's the show where you're being somebody different Like you're playing a different person, but also you were a different person in your life at that time, right?
Starting point is 00:52:39 Like the circumstances of your life were different your relationships were different everything was different Can I just like one work? I'm just curious. Yes, yes, yes. For you guys, if there's something like you guys could go back and tell yourselves, like in that hour town style, like what would you, like if you could go back to like season one and visit with you, like as your own like fairy godmother or ghost of Christmas future or whatever, like what would you say, or maybe that's too hard a question. Hmm. I would say I think there are a lot of ways that I know how to advocate for myself professionally
Starting point is 00:53:09 now that I had to really learn on the go. And I feel like in some cases, I even got some bad advice. There were ways where as you're kind of an up and coming actor and maybe you're suddenly on this hit show, there are a lot of people that have ideas for you professionally. And I was just happy being on the office. I didn't need an and. I didn't need to also have a product line or also be a movie star. And yet I felt the energy coming at me, telling me I needed
Starting point is 00:53:46 to do all this more. And I think in some ways, you know, I would do the TV show and then I would spend my hiatus doing all the more that everyone was telling me that I wanted and that I had to do and that this is what you do next. And the truth is, is I just wanted to spend my hiatus traveling and enjoying my life and being in love. And sometimes I look back on that time and I think,
Starting point is 00:54:14 wow, I was just too busy doing a bunch of things that I felt like were expected of me. But my truth was, I just want to be on this TV show. I love it. I'm happy. This is enough. And it took me a really long time to get to a place where I didn't let other people's idea of what my life should be.
Starting point is 00:54:34 Like I figured out what my ambition is in life, but I spent a lot of years. I don't know. I mean, I don't necessarily regret any of those movies or any of those experiences or any of those things, but I think it's a life lesson coming to a place where you're like, well, what's enough for me is okay. Yes, that's right. One or need things other people need. What I need is enough and that's okay. Yeah. And I think it's even still shocking to people need is enough and that's okay. Yeah. And I think it's even still shocking to people when I say, no, the podcast is enough. I enjoy this. I like concentrating on it.
Starting point is 00:55:12 I like this being my one thing. I think maybe that's me. Maybe I'm in like a monogamous worker like I have a job I like to do. And that's the job I like to do. And fully and I enjoy it. And then I like to put it away. Like, I don't need a lot of ants. I don't, so. That's a great. I wish I could have told myself to trust that more in me. It's so noisy, probably, when you write like,
Starting point is 00:55:36 and if all of a sudden you're on the show and it's a success, and it's the cacophony of that, and all of the projection that it cooks up and everything. I think that yeah. There's a lot of like fear based sort of communication in that too, which is like, well, listen, if you don't do this now, it's not going to be there later. No one's going to want you later if you don't do this now, or you won't work later if you're not working now or any of it, you know.
Starting point is 00:56:01 And so you're like, oh my god, yeah, oh yeah, I don't want this to go away. So it's very, it can be kind of confusing what to do with that. And then of course I had spent 10 years not working at all. So you're like, yeah, yeah, I don't want, I mean, I don't want to go back to that, I guess. So I don't know. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:56:21 I think for me, I would look back and just tell myself, I'm gonna be just fine. I think I was just worried that I wasn't going to be everything I was thought I should be and that I don't need to be anything other than just okay with myself. That's what I think. It's interesting how similar, sort of like success on somebody else's terms is not success and Success on your own terms doesn't have to look like Somebody else's or like the sort of consensus aspiration, right? It's like here and to be like I'm enough Basically, I'm enough who I am is enough what I want is enough
Starting point is 00:56:59 I think then that was something in that blog post that made an impression on me when I read it too Which is I think I don't remember the exact phrasing, it was basically like don't postpone joy, don't make a certain kind of professional success, a prerequisite for participating in your own life. That's my recollection. Yeah, well that was a thing when you're a struggling actor, especially you're like, well I can't go to my friends' wedding
Starting point is 00:57:19 because I might get a call back for a thing that I auditioned for, so I need to be here, or whatever it is. It's like, so I need to be here. Or whatever it is. It's like, well, I don't want to have a boyfriend because I don't want to be distracted. There's like all these limits and all these superstitions that you have as an artist because you are holding the art as the only thing, the only aspiration. And so what I found was, oh my gosh, the material and characters that I saw at that wedding
Starting point is 00:57:47 and the life experience I got from going to that thing is just going to feed my art. So it's like, you can't do art if you're just doing art. Right. I think you have to have a whole life in order to feed it. And an identity that's like weird, like self-esteem is a little bit more, like diversified. And others, if your whole worth originates from your ability to do this one thing And you're not doing that one thing and then you're kind of like Who are you?
Starting point is 00:58:13 Yeah, so like to have like if you're like, oh, yeah, I'm not just an actor. I'm someone's mom or I'm someone's right You know or I'm or not someone's I am a mom. I am a Bicycle enthusiast. I am a whatever, a volunteer. I, you know, then you, then it's not like, oh, when I'm auditioning for a part, I'm auditioning for myself worth. It's like, I'm just auditioning for the part. It's like, yeah, which is hard enough,
Starting point is 00:58:34 or daunting enough. That makes sense. That's beautiful. What about you, Zach? What would you go back and tell yourself? Get a basket at Walmart. If you're gonna be carrying that man, you can get a fires.
Starting point is 00:58:44 I was basically like a walking close call video. I think what I tell myself, it's something similar. It's like, it's an interesting, I don't know, let me think for a second. I think, I think I probably would try to tell myself, and I probably wouldn't be able to hear it, but like, you don't need so much fear to protect you. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:59:07 I think I used anxiety as a motivator and as a kind of protection where I sort of felt like, well, if I'm buying enough humidifiers and running my lines enough times and freaking out enough, then surely I'm doing everything in my power to do a good job. And if I don't do that, then I'm gonna be kind of culpable if it doesn't go well. I think if I could go back and say, like, when you're doing all
Starting point is 00:59:30 of that, it has more to do with like, it's more neurotic than artistic, you know what I mean? It's not that actually isn't serving. It's not really, hopefully it doesn't hurt the character or the work, but it's about something different. That's more about like your childhood than it is about the job you're doing job you're doing. And so I think if I could be like, don't mistake your neuroses for your artistic process. Like develop an artistic process independent of that as much as possible so that you're not just reenacting your own like, Cuckoo Bird's
Starting point is 01:00:02 story again and again at work. Like, tell a new story at work. Tell someone else's story at work. You know what I mean? I think you did hear it because I think just the fact that you recognize it that even though, I mean, I... Took a minute. Took a minute. Took a minute.
Starting point is 01:00:16 What was your second question? Oh, yes. Second question is like, did you have a moment where you felt that kind of like, because so often I think when you get the thing that you want, it doesn't feel the way you thought it'd feel, blah, blah, blah, blah, like the behind the music, kind of like, I think, was there a moment
Starting point is 01:00:32 where you had that kind of like shimmering magic feeling like where you're like looked around and you were like, ah, oh my God, like that moment where you're just like the sort of, the gift of it, where you felt like really holy present and able to just enjoy it. Like do you remember that either the first or the most intense version of that for you guys? The first one for me was when we were shooting the pilot on the first day and our director Ken Quapis said, I want to do 30 minutes of all of you all just working in this space.
Starting point is 01:01:08 Do your job and we're just going to come around and silently document you. Like a documentary, we're going to set the tone of this show. All right, go ahead. And I will never forget that 30 minutes of, first of all, there was silence because nobody really knew what to do. And then I feel like it was Phyllis picked up her phone and like hit some buttons and started
Starting point is 01:01:35 a fake phone call. And then I started to hear buttons over the partition and accounting. And then everybody just started being their character and pretending like we worked at a paper company like all together. And I was like, the theater nerd in me was delighted and I thought I'm a part of something very special and I don't know what's gonna happen from here
Starting point is 01:02:04 but this is pretty dang cool. Wow. The sound. It does something like an orchestra tuning out like before. Yes, yeah. That's right. We go over about to play. Wow, that's so exciting.
Starting point is 01:02:17 I really felt that. Yeah. I mean, yeah, I loved that so much. For me, there's so many moments that felt like that, and they were almost always in the conference room, because we were all in there together, and we were all, each other's background, we were all in the moment,
Starting point is 01:02:38 and so many times I would have a minute where I was in the scene, but then I would step out of my body and I would just watch these amazing actors just fire off all these lines and everyone had their own character backstory and I just would be there in awe being like, this is so cool, this is so cool and I get to do this.
Starting point is 01:02:59 And there were times my character didn't even have lines, but I just couldn't believe I was in the moment. There was a scene where Michael Scott is brainstorming animal hybrids and no one is saying anything. And Steve had his scripted lines, but then he started to just, they just let the camera roll and you just kept improvising animal hybrids. We all just had to sit there and look at him where he was like, head of an owl, body of a walrus, like whatever it was he was saying.
Starting point is 01:03:30 And we were just all patiently looking at him. And then one by one people started to file out, like they were over it. And I just remember being like, this is the coolest, like this is the coolest. And I can't believe I get to do it. It's so sweet that in both your cases, it's sort of like, it's not the kind of grand slam scene for your character. It's just the scene where you're able to kind of
Starting point is 01:03:50 like behold the the majesty of this. Yeah. Working situation, right? Where you're like, it's about watching it and participating, but not in a way that foregrounds you. It's just a, I think like being a small part of a big thing is like the best feeling ever, right? Like feeling like you're part of a squad that like is, like that's such an exciting. So it's interesting, both of you guys, it was kind of like that feeling of like,
Starting point is 01:04:13 oh, I'm part of this. When everyone starts improvising, the filing out and Michael's still doing his animals. Right. Or the everyone sort of slowly coming into the joining, yeah. Showing up for the first time in the fictional office in a way. It was such a smart thing that Ken did by doing that exercise with us because we didn't start with a scene.
Starting point is 01:04:33 Like we didn't start with, okay, Steve Carell, our lead character, Michael Scott is going to do a scene. He made every single one of us equally important in the very first thing we shot. Wow. You know, nobody had any lines, but everyone was in character, and you really felt how, okay, so whatever scene is going on,
Starting point is 01:04:55 this is also always going on. So now we're gonna do a scene, but don't forget, you all are still working in this office, and you always have to be. It was really genius. That's cool. I think I missed that.
Starting point is 01:05:08 It was literally the first thing you shot. The very first thing. That's really it. Ever. The first time the camera's rolled, right? Yeah. I know. Just giving everyone a chance to kind of sort of a John did
Starting point is 01:05:19 for me when I did that little talking. Head where it was like, okay, just like, I mean, that's different because I was like talking, but I just mean like giving a lot of space. And it was, even that's costly. You're making a pilot, like time is money, everything, right? But just to be like, we got time, we got space, just exist. And I also think because it was Ken,
Starting point is 01:05:38 the very first time we were all in a room and we were all gonna be these characters, no one yelled action. He just said, go ahead. Oh, that's nice. No one yelled action. He just said, go ahead. Oh, that's nice. Because that's Ken, right? So we just go ahead. So it was just like this very slow, comfortable, easing into this world. Did you ever see that John Cazal documentary? I know it was you, do you know John Cazal? Like I could play Fredo. He was like in five movies and they were all like
Starting point is 01:06:01 the, but he was like the deer hunter, Godfather wanted to the conversation. He died when he was a young man, but they made a documentary about him because he did these like incredible movies and that's it. He just did these and then theater and stuff. But Al Pacino, he used to talk day after noon, Al Pacino, until these stories where they be like shooting on film and they would start rolling and Al Pacino would be all kind of coiled up and do his line. And he said this guy, the junk saw,
Starting point is 01:06:27 just be like, what'd you do this weekend now? And he'd hear the film moving through the camera and he'd be like, I don't know, I like made dinner with my girlfriend on Saturday. Oh yeah, what'd you make? Oh, we made a rigatoni and, you know, oh yeah, what'd you do after that? And like just talk until like,
Starting point is 01:06:45 how much you know, settle down. And then he'd just say like the first line of the scene where it's like, he would just sort of get them in a place of like, we're just here, we're just here with each other and then slowly sort of introduce the dialogue which is like such a policy-crazy thing to do. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:07:00 I mean like 35 millimeter film is running through a camera, but I just was like, it sounds like in a version of that, right? Where it's like, go ahead. Yeah, go ahead. It's not ready, say, go. Get your adding machine a few times. Yeah, that's nice. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:07:13 I feel bad. I feel like I've now just standing or okay. I love this so much. It's just made my heart so happy. Me too. Yeah. And I really, yeah, I can't say it enough. Like, it's a real talent I don't have, which
Starting point is 01:07:27 is like to maintain. Do you ever see those Richard Link later, the before sunset, before sunrise? I love those movies. But that's sometimes what shooting feels like to me, where it's this very discreet, specific experience of like real big emotion, intimacy, connection. And then you're off to your lives and you don't, to me it often feels that way. It's like it's like this amazing one night stand or something except it happened to be a two year stand. But and so I feel like I've kind of lost touch
Starting point is 01:07:57 with you guys and this larger squad, but I can just never say enough how much it meant that everyone was so kind. I just, in a way that you guys did to gain nothing from that. I had nothing to offer you. And in a way, I could have been either in your, like, I could have been a problem in that it's like another mouth to feed on this big show, like, but that was not how I was receiving that really set the
Starting point is 01:08:25 tone for the rest of my working life out thus far. And so I just, yeah, I don't know. I just want it. I felt when you guys kindly invited me on, I was like, I want to say to people, I want people who like the show to know how kind the people who worked on the show were and are, you know. You know, I think we were happy. Exactly. We were a happy cast, we were a happy crew, and we just knew like there's enough to go around for everyone. There just is. There always is. In good comedy and good art, you do not need to be stingy.
Starting point is 01:09:03 You know. It's a collective. It is. And and it was an abundant universe and I think we all looked at it that way. We always felt like we won the lottery. We always talk about that and I think everyone felt that way. So why not share it? A lot of lottery winners hire like private security and like a bunch of doberman, some shit. You guys really, you know, you guys are like the good lottery winners. Yeah. Zach, thank you so much for coming on.
Starting point is 01:09:29 Thank you for having me. It was really fun. What are you doing now that we can tell people about? I'm making the stop motion show that actually Greg Daniels is, like, he's his company, but it is one of the producers on. It's a stop motion show about an NPR host. So I'm doing that right now and that'll come out. Are you the voice of the NPR host?
Starting point is 01:09:48 Yeah. Amazing. You'll have to let us know when it comes out and where people can find it and we're going to share it. Oh, that's so sweet. Yeah. But anyway, thanks for having me on this really a treat. It's so nice to reconnect with you guys. I love to see you. Love you, Zach. Yeah, you too. Thank you for listening to Office Ladies. Office Ladies is produced by Earwolf, Jennifer
Starting point is 01:10:11 Fisher, and Angela Kinsey. Our senior producer is Cassie Jerkins. Our in-studio engineer is Sam Keeper. Our editing and mixing engineer is Jordan Duffy, and our associate producer is Ainsley Bubbico. Our theme song is Rubber Tree by Creed Bratton. [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪

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