SmartLess - "Charlie Day"
Episode Date: February 28, 2022Wrap yourself in cashmere and come sit by the fire with Mr. Charlie Day, who joins us this week to give career advice and acting tips. Jason learns about ‘voluntary additional school,’ Se...an wails on the slide-whistle, and Will teases us with intimate details about his relationship with Forte. Welcome to SmartLess.Please support us by supporting our sponsors!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hi there, this is Will Arnett, host of the Will Arnett FunZone podcast.
Hang on, hang on.
Will.
This week, what?
We've talked about this, man.
We've been over this like so many times.
Okay.
But we are doing it though, right?
We are going to do that.
No, no, we're not.
This is SmartLess.
Okay.
FunZone.
I know.
Well, what are we doing today?
All we need is a super simple welcome to SmartLess.
Oh, right.
I'm going to dig deep for this.
Welcome to SmartLess.
SmartLess.
SmartLess.
SmartLess.
SmartLess.
SmartLess.
SmartLess.
SmartLess.
SmartLess.
Now, listen, Jason, before we get too deep into the show, we need to talk about the crew,
the crew collar, and now you've, tell us what, walk us through what happened this morning.
Well, I went ahead and I got showered and changed prior to our record for my golf engagement
following this record.
Oh, you go.
Yeah.
Not proud to say, but Chuckles over there does it too.
So yeah, so I put on my collared shirt as you're required to do, and then it's a little chilly
here in Los Angeles.
I put on a nice wrap over the top of it, a nice cashmere wrap, and the collar on that
crew neck was a little tight.
So it took the collar of my undershirt there and pushed it up, and then Will was hurting
me calling it a mock turtleneck.
So that sweater's gone.
I'm going to go to a V-neck.
And Will said we were talking about money for producing the podcast, and Will said, what's
the budget for a mock turtleneck for Jason for the coming out of the budget?
I've already matched it.
It's a fair question.
First of all, you're allowed to mock a mock turtleneck.
It's built into the name.
But by the way, you'll never see me in a mock turtleneck.
You'll never see me in a turtleneck for sure, because I've got probably, they ask you sometimes,
what's the one thing you change about your body?
It's probably my non-superhero jawline.
I've got sort of a diagonal from the end of my chin to my Adam's apple as opposed to
a 90 degree thing.
So if I wear a turtleneck, I then have the turkey goblet hangover over the edge, the
cascades, the skin, the cascades over the edge of the turtleneck.
I can't have it.
Yeah.
No, I get it.
I disagree.
You both have nice, nice silhouettes.
Go back to the thing though, about being cold.
It's cold in LA.
I came down the stairs today.
I'm not, not making this up.
I came downstairs and Scotty had the heat, heat on, on the first floor Los Angeles and
the heat.
And I was sweating by the time I got to the bottom of it.
You come down the stairs, your Hollywood house, every day like Gloria Swanson, right?
That's right.
And a flowing house coat.
Yeah.
I'm ready for my close-up.
It's so great to see you guys.
It's so great to see you guys too.
This is really exciting.
I'm excited for you guys to talk to our guest today.
Oh, I am excited to listen.
Because our guest is somebody, it's a, this is a mega talent.
This person is a person who's been doing it for a long time.
This person is not just an actor.
This person is a writer.
This person is a skilled musician who started playing violin at the age of three.
They can play the piano, accordion, trombone, guitar, harmonica, and has written and improvised
music a lot in a show that they've done now for many, many years.
This person received an honorary doctorate from performing arts from Merrimack College.
This person, you know, was active at Williamstown Theatre Festival back in the day.
This person has gone on to a huge career in television in, I guess, the longest running
TV comedy of all time.
This person has-
Well, it has to be slow down here.
I want to, I want to do some guesses here.
I know.
Well, this is, this is my guess and it makes sense because this is my friend and I'm so
happy to have my friend and I want you guys to start trying to guess.
This person has done lots of movies.
This person was in the Lego movie with me.
This is Charlie Day.
Longest running comedy movie.
The Lego movie, too.
Yeah.
Pacific Rim.
Longest running comedy.
Horrible Bosses and its sequel.
Well, it's got to be Chuck Day.
And Beth Noor Forest's show.
It's Charlie Day.
Oh, my God.
Oh, my God.
All right.
You're scraping the bottom of the barrel now, boys.
No, I was-
Time to wrap the show up.
So, Chuck, what about, this is, now, I think the reason you've taken so long to book,
on this, is your schedule, right?
It took a real long time for someone to ask me.
I think that's what it was.
I can't believe Rob McElhaney beat you onto this show.
Oh, that's nonsense.
What does that say about us?
Here's, here's my favorite part.
Is that Bateman and Chuck Day have been friends for many years.
They've done a few movies together and I was so happy to steal Charlie as my guest from
under Bateman, just, just to really put it-
I would have had him on, too.
I know.
I think maybe you did ask me.
Yeah, definitely.
And then you were saying, yeah, gosh, you know, I don't know.
We're starting a podcast and I, I think you gave me a little bit of a run around and I
don't, I don't like to pressure people.
I know you were looking to get paid quite a bit of money for today.
Yeah.
I was waiting for you guys to make money so I could start making money, which is cool
because Will cut me a great check for this.
I had to send him over cash, a guy with a rucksack full of cash.
Yeah.
And that's a pay cut for me, guys.
Because you're not doing that well, right?
You know, that show is not paying you.
I've made a lot of bad decisions though.
You know what I mean?
I've made a lot of sketchy calls.
Wait, we had, Charlie, we had Macklehanion and, and, and what, is it really the longest
running sitcom in history?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, years, if you don't count episodes, I think you, you did more episodes of Will
and Grace in like two seasons.
And they already did.
How many years is it now?
This is something we don't want to gloss over because this, this, this is, you should be,
and I'm sure you are so proud of how long this show has been on the air.
Yeah, it's so cool.
This doesn't just make yourself.
We're talking, of course, about all of a sudden.
I mean, it's 15 years.
We just, we just, 15 years.
And you're about to do another one or two?
I don't know, at least another one, and we'll see after that.
Look at the way he's positioning right there.
I know.
He knows Fox is listening.
Of course.
That Vex or whatever the hell it is.
Yeah.
And he's going to jam him again.
He's going to get up to 20.
You know what it is?
We've done a lot.
I don't know how long we can keep it.
Nothing adds more zeros than a foot out the door.
Right?
I mean, let's just sketch them.
That's true.
Yeah.
So Charlie, let's talk a little bit about, because we were talking about all of a sudden
in Philadelphia, which is a huge long running show, longest by years.
Could you have imagined, take us back to the day when you actually, when it actually became
a TV show, because we had Rob on here.
We talked about it.
You guys made some videos and stuff and you shot some stuff.
Is that, am I remembering that correctly?
And you took it to FX?
Yeah.
That's basically it.
I mean, we were shooting in my apartment, which was on the corner of Western and Franklin
there.
I lived, and I think I paid 600 bucks a month for rent.
You got Rob.
Quick aside.
Quick aside, Jason.
Last time you were east of Cuyenga.
Five, four, three, two, one.
Back in the drug days for sure.
Yeah.
I think I might have seen you scoring on the corner.
Yeah.
There was a pay phone I'd like to hang out at.
I had to run you down a dime bag or something.
I'm not sure what it was.
Oh my God.
So you're in your apartment.
Right.
And was there a phone call from the, from your agent or, or a manager or something that
said they bought it?
You know what it was?
So we had shot this thing and, and it was like pretty good, but we knew we'd sort of not
hit the nail on the head.
And we had nothing really going on.
So we redid the whole thing.
We were doing it so cheaply.
We were holding the cameras.
We had a little boom that was, it was real low rent.
And our second go around was pretty funny.
We thought, oh, there's something here.
And we were all at three arts management at the time.
So like Nick Frankel and Michael Rotenberg took it to WME and they, they kind of sat
on it for a while.
They're like, yeah, maybe we'll, we'll hook you up with a big producer.
And God, we waited forever for John Favreau to watch it.
And he just, I guess he never got around to it.
The one that got away.
I know.
Well, I mean, I'm so glad I'm not cutting half a check to John, you know, like, I mean,
I'm sure he would have helped a lot, but, you know, it's nice not to have to be paying
or anything.
But, uh, eventually we got kind of bored and we shot a third episode.
And literally you, you shot it because you were just in this waiting because the agencies
are, so you just, you guys are on their timetable.
Well, that, and the only thing to do on Western is either move the bag or shoot another episode.
It should be, it should be noted.
Can I just take this?
Am I right in saying this?
And you guys going to agree or disagree with me?
The, the, the agent thing in, in a show business is hilarious because like you can't get in
touch with your agent in the first thing in the morning because they're in a staff meeting.
Every agent takes lunch at one o'clock, no matter what.
So they're out of the office for two hours.
They need an hour or so.
They need an hour to get there.
So they leave at 12.
Sorry.
We lost him.
He's on his way to a lunch.
And then he's back at three.
Then they do the thing is like, well, he's not in the office.
Why not?
Well, because next week is Thanksgiving.
Yeah.
Next week is Thanksgiving.
Not this week.
The fuck are you doing?
And then, and then the month of December.
And then month of December.
Sorry.
It's the holidays.
Sure.
Got it.
And then they go, and then, you know, obviously Sundance is at the end of January.
So nobody's back till Feb one.
It's the most ridiculous racket of all time.
We were getting a lot of it.
Yeah.
The end of the day goes like this.
Well, the end of the day goes, sorry that we're closed.
He's going to start rolling calls.
And then they call knowing you're not going to pick up.
Yeah.
Or they call you at seven o'clock and you're having dinner with the kid.
And you're like, why are you calling me now?
Yeah.
Sorry.
Sorry, Charlie.
No, that's it though.
We lost sort of patience with that kind of thing.
And we said, we're going to leave you guys and we're going to go to a different agency
with this.
And that sort of prompted them setting a bunch of meetings and, and Rob went around because
we thought maybe it'd be too much to have all three of us in the meeting.
So Rob went and, and we had an offer from F.
X to shoot a, you know, a real pilot with a real budget.
Rob's the closer.
He's a closer.
He's better in the meeting.
He's a better salesman.
Now, how are you in meetings?
Cause I don't think I'm great in meetings.
I don't enjoy them.
I feel like I'm trapped in an office.
I feel like I'm 45 minutes from getting out of these walls.
So it better not go bad in the next minute or two because I'm stuck.
Like all those things I start to feel, I start to think about, and then it just,
the walls start getting closer and closer like Star Wars.
How are you?
Do you, do you look at it as like an arena?
Like I'm on stage or this is fun.
Like let's win.
Or are you looking to get out of there?
It's tough.
It's a tough part of this business.
You know, it depends.
They're all very different.
You go into a meeting and, and you just, sometimes you just get cold stairs.
Yeah.
I do have that vibe sometimes of like, well, here's the idea guys.
Do you want to buy it or not?
Okay.
Yeah.
What's the difference?
What's it called, Will?
It's called sexy.
Sexy.
Sexy difference.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Charlie, you know about his sexy indifference, right?
Yeah.
It's one of, it's one of the major terms.
Yeah.
But yeah, it's, you know, it's, it's, you're either selling or you're buying.
The buyers usually look at you with absolutely no expression because they can.
The sellers, us have to go in there like, you know, circus clowns because we're selling.
And that's really what we do in this business.
And in a good year, you're selling, you know, you're selling yourself six, seven, eight
times and, and winning.
Like in other words, you get fired, you know, half a dozen times and rehired half a dozen
times if you're killing it.
So, I mean, how many people in, in other industries have to sell themselves or get fired or rehired,
maybe three, four times over their whole life?
I mean, we got to do that all the time.
It's, it's tough.
It's, it was hard for me.
When you look at the flip of it, Charlie, so you guys, you guys go through this process,
you make this thing, you wait, you make this thing, you wait, you're waiting, you have
to threaten to leave the agency.
Finally, FX buys it.
You guys are kind of a little bit hat in hand.
And now all these years later, you're at the position.
We asked you, are you going to do more?
Maybe I'll do one more, whatever.
Like you have the, the tables have turned a little bit.
Yeah.
Not a little bit a lot.
Yeah.
I mean, I think the thing is though, when we were shooting that pilot, I was 27 years
old.
Right.
And I'm 46.
And so I feel like, you know, I put in my time with this one.
It's 23 though.
I know it's incredible.
Lost age since it started.
Yeah, it's incredible.
It must be a real stress-free set there.
But, but we all make, we all make stuff.
We all produce or write or direct or act, whatever.
And Charlie, kind of what Jason was talking about, is there a point where you, like, are
you getting to a point where it's bothersome that the grind is getting to you about getting
all these nodes?
Because it seems now to put together a package to sell something, you have to really stack
the deck high before anybody will even consider you hear about Meryl Streep getting passed
or on or whoever these big stars go out to pitch these shows and they get passed.
Well, if they get passed and I'm stacking these deck and we're getting nodes, what does
it take to keep a production company going?
I like to get everything done independently of, of a partner.
So, you know, like I'd rather, if I'm going to be pitching a movie, I'd rather have the
whole thing written and say, you know, and, and, and a director in place and an actor
in place and like, here's, we're going.
This is what it is.
So all they do is write the check.
Basically.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know, as it should be.
Yeah.
But then that means you got to do a bunch of work for free ahead of time, which is cool
if you've got the time and the, and the funds to bank on yourself and, and work for free
for a little while.
Yeah.
Look, at some point you're going to have to do that work anyway.
So I'm, I'm usually, it depends, right?
There's other things I'll pitch and I'll know, okay, I want to get a writer on this
and I want to get that person paid.
So I'll, but even then I'll work with that writer.
I'll develop a whole outline.
So that movie is basically ready to go and I'll attach a few people to the movie and
then I'll go in and be like, here it is.
This is what it is.
Here's who's acting in it.
Here's the director.
Now please pay this guy.
And you got to understand this guy is, he's so fast and he's so good.
He wrote horrible bosses too on a five hour plane ride from New York to Los Angeles.
I'm not exaggerating.
He did a complete rewrite, page one rewrite on it and we used most of it and, and, and
out of deference to our writers that, that wrote the draft before I'm exaggerating a
little bit and, uh, but Charlie does a great deal of credit for that.
Well, I appreciate it.
I don't want to take credit away from, from, uh, you know, um, the guys who wound up doing
it.
I mean, it's just, he's fast, but he is a fast writing.
I'm real slow with names.
And we will be right back.
And now back to the show.
Wait.
So speaking of names.
So you and obviously you have a long time relationship with Rob Mackley.
How did you guys first meet?
What was that?
I met Rob on a plane.
So we were both being flown out today.
We're both being flown out to test for, uh, a pilot for the same role.
And it was one of those things where, you know, you're in the airport and you're like,
Oh, this guy's got to be an actor.
You know, he's got that look.
And, uh, the show is called Mather House is about college kids or something like that.
And you know, uh, I think, I don't know when I said hello, but maybe after the plane landed
and where were you coming from, from New York, from New York?
Yeah.
We both lived in New York and we're flying out.
That, you know, they put you up on, uh, like at the Hilton or something right on, right
off the one on one there by universal.
Oh yeah.
Many times.
And then, and then used to find Jason on the side.
Yeah.
I used to remember pilot season ice to come out there and stay there or the Sheraton or
the intercontinental over by Fox, which is where Tony Hale and I stayed for the arrested
test.
Anyway, keep going.
It was my second time that happened.
It happened to me.
I tested for something called weird Henry and they liked me for weird Henry and they flew
me out and then they did one sort of, uh, you know, round of notes with the producers
and then the studio was like, this show is not going to work and they can the whole thing.
And then the same thing happened with Rob.
Rob and I both went and tested and I remember thinking like, ah, I got this guy is he doesn't
have the charisma.
I don't, I'm not worried about him.
Look at his stupid face.
Look at his dumb face.
Man.
This is, he's, he's never going to make it in show business.
He'll never own a football team with Ryan Reynolds.
Yeah.
Forget it.
He was too handsome.
I was like, he's too model-y.
You know, you need some, someone real.
Uh, and then the same thing happened.
They canned the whole show while we were out there and, um, we just kind of bonded and,
and stayed buddies and, you know, now I can't get rid of him.
You know, every year I'm like, well, maybe, maybe we've done it with the show.
He's like, come on, one more.
Let's, let's go.
And then, so not only can you not get rid of him always, but then you guys create mythic
quest with, uh, it wasn't just the two of you or somebody else too.
Yeah.
With Megan Gantz.
Megan Gantz.
Yes.
Of course.
Yeah.
I mean, I'm not even podcasting.
I'm just talking about him.
I'm like, wait.
I hear him.
He barely talks about me.
I'm talking about this guy constantly.
No, no.
He talks about you quite a bit.
We just can't repeat it.
Oh, okay.
And you guys started a podcast together too.
Now you've got this all with Sonny podcast.
And now we're talking about the show and people are listening and we're not here to plug
that.
We're not going to talk about that.
No.
Let's, let's plug all everything you got.
Okay.
I think what we should really, if we really want to get this cooking, we should just talk
about golf.
I mean, let's go.
Well, when we were doing horrible bosses and I'm a bit of a golf nut, I would, I would
say, oh, Jason, you know, I heard you used to golf and you said, yeah, I don't do it
anymore.
I was like, well, you should come out with me, you know, maybe sometime and just, you
know, dust off the old sticks and hit a few.
You are the most golfing man I know now.
It's incredible.
It's nonstop.
Back then, back then I was very disciplined.
I didn't want to dance with the dragon again.
You know, I've got addiction issues.
Yes.
Like no, no, no.
You are fully addicted to golf.
Dance with the dragon.
No, no, no, that's a saying.
And then during COVID, you know, Will just threw me a lifeline.
He said, listen, buddy, you got to step away from Rachel Maddow, take your PJs off and
let's get out there.
Do something socially distant.
Let's, let's play golf.
And two weeks later, we were in Pebble Beach.
Yeah.
No joke.
You put it right in my arm.
Yeah.
I love it.
Well, I love that you do it.
I hope you don't give it up.
No, no, I don't.
Look at me.
I'm dressed.
Look at my outfit for Christ's sake.
I'm a half hour from the tee.
Oh, keep it snappy because I know you got a tee today.
Yeah, let's go.
Charlie, I have a shot.
I know, I know your question is going to be, Hey, Charlie, how, how long and straight
are you off the tee?
Very.
He's very consistent off the tee.
It's unbelievable.
This guy's a single digit handicap listeners.
Anybody who's into golf, this guy, it, this guy doesn't shoot over 80.
Okay.
It's, he's a natural athlete.
He played a lot of baseball when he was coming up.
This is the most you know about me.
This is surprising.
Wait.
So, so Charlie, speaking of growing up, so, so I mentioned in the thing that you play
piano and you play all these instruments, what's up with that?
So, because I don't know where to look at Sean perked up.
Sean doesn't want to talk about a long off the tee, but oh, let's get that harmonica
in his mouth.
Let's do it.
Let's do it.
I probably have one lying around.
Uh, I don't know where the violin thing came like, I was, thank you God, but you
have that ready to go.
Yeah.
Anytime there's a bad joke.
Hey, where's that keyboard we're going to introduce this year, Sean?
Yeah.
We're going to, I know I'm too lazy to lift this up and go in there because I got to
hook it all up, but wait, Charlie, do you still play violin, do you still play these
instruments?
Do you do that?
No, I never play, I never played the violin.
That's one of those.
Oh, that was not true.
No, I think I played the violin from like three to three in one month, you know, where
my parents were like, well, this is too young.
The piano is very accurate.
Yeah.
Is there an instrument that you excel at or that you stick with?
Keep it clean.
I don't excel at any of them, but I, I, I can play a little piano and a little guitar
and that's, you know, I can, I can write like a goofy song that we put on sunny, but I'm
done.
Was that something that your parents like incurred?
Like, did you take piano lessons, guitar lessons, all that kind of thing?
Yes.
I took piano lessons maybe till I was 10 and then I switched to the trombone.
I used to have a little sweatshirt because I was in the school band that said Charlie
Trombone.
So that like became my nickname for too long.
You know the problem with the trombone is if you leave it in the rain, it gets rusty,
you know?
I will.
It's true.
It's true.
If you leave it in the rain, clean it up.
Clean it out.
Well, you keep it clean.
You get some kind of brass cleaner or something like that.
You keep it clean.
Charlie, when you, when you write and produce or direct or whatever you do, do you think
about music when you're doing it?
Or is it an afterthought?
Yeah.
It's a big part of how I write something.
I'll be just listening to, you know, a style of music and I'll have an idea.
The Peshmode.
Yeah.
I'll be listening to the Peshmode and I'll be thinking, I got to do a movie with Bateman
where he, you know, wears eye shadow and trench coats.
Yeah.
You should see me.
I got great goth skills.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I do love, I do love to Peshmode.
Wait, Charlie, I know so little about, so it says that you were born in, in New York,
in the city.
Yeah.
True story?
True story.
Cause my parents, my parents both met at Columbia, where they were both music, getting their
doctorates in musicology and then they were...
Wait a second.
Wait a second.
Pump the brass.
Wow.
So your parents, so you kind of blow, brush through the whole music thing and your own
involvement with me, your parents have degrees in music from Columbia?
Yeah.
Yeah.
My parents are very...
Smart.
Smart.
As is my sister.
She also has her PhD in musicology.
What?
And what happened here was that, you know, I'm an idiot and I was like, I got to get away
from this music thing.
So, you know, I'm taking trombone lessons and all my buddies are outside playing baseball
and I eventually, you know, walked away from it all and gave it up.
But then when I got to like, maybe a senior in high school or college, I picked up the
guitar and I was like, oh, this is maybe, could be cool or a way to meet a girl.
And then I got back into it.
But I didn't want to be, they had no money and I didn't want to, I didn't want to be
a music person.
So you became an actor.
So they're at Columbia.
They're both taking, they're both in programs, music programs at Columbia.
They meet, you're born in the city and then what happens?
How long did you live there?
How long?
And then my dad got a job at a college in Rhode Island and my mother's family was from
Rhode Island way back, way, way back and they went and never left.
They're still there.
And so you grew up in Rhode Island.
I grew up in Rhode Island.
Yeah.
Yeah.
How did the acting thing hit you?
Was it like a high school drama thing?
That's a good question.
I mean, I did plays like a, like in third and fourth grade and always enjoyed it.
And then I wanted to do the school plays in high school, but I was kind of too nervous
to join the group.
I thought, ah, I don't, I don't, I don't.
But with the musical background, wouldn't you think that you can combine the plays
and the music and do what, what we call that, the theater that's, but there's got, there's
a music based theater out there.
I'm not quite sure.
I don't think there's a term for it yet.
What would be an example of something that you might do on music?
Five, six, seven, eight.
Go.
Ba-da-da-da-da-da-da.
Ba-da-da-da-da.
You guys are going to have to take that slide with us a little way.
I mean, Charlie.
So then Charlie, so then you finish high school and you say, um, I'm going to go to New York
City and I'm going to try to become a professional guitar player or actor.
Yes.
I did have that thought.
I was like, well, do it.
Which one?
I didn't know.
I was like, maybe I want to write music or maybe I want to do, uh, acting.
But you knew your future wasn't in Rhode Island.
It was probably in Manhattan.
Yeah.
Well, first I went to college, Jason.
Where was that?
Wait, hang on.
What's college?
Yeah.
It's a school after the studio school.
Voluntary additional school?
I don't understand it.
Voluntary.
Yeah.
That's the part I couldn't compute when I was a kid.
What trailer was that in on the mortar lot?
Yeah.
One with a flat tire.
And here's what happened.
I went to the voluntary additional school and they had a theater program, but they also
had a baseball team and I didn't make baseball team and I thought, oh, well, I'll go join
the theater club.
And then I just got hooked.
I was like, I like doing the plays and it seems to-
Was this school in New York?
This school was in Northern Massachusetts called Merrimack College and you could get in if
you had a pulse and they let me in.
My favorite thing in the world is swapping horrible theater stories.
Did I tell you guys about the wheelchair story?
Yeah.
No, let's go.
Let's go.
Okay, so-
Let's just pull the interview over to the side.
Hang on.
No, really quick.
This is horror.
I was at sophomore in high school and I was in charge of changing the scenery, right?
The battens that would lift the scenery.
So in between, we had like, we were doing one act.
So in between each act, we had like, you know, 15, 30 seconds to change the big, huge scenery
and pull them up.
And I was in charge of all those hydraulics.
So the stage manager points at me, she's like, go, and I didn't realize there was a rope
hanging on the side that somehow hooked onto the wheelchair that the guy needed in the
next scene.
This isn't over from a cartoon I saw.
No, I swear to God, this happened.
And I raised it and the hook pulled the wheelchair up.
So the curtain goes up and the wheelchair is just swinging, hanging in midair.
Oh, shit.
And the guy's first line was, you know, sending like, I don't know if I'll ever walk again.
But he had to, it was, it was awful.
Oh, golly.
To smart list.
Hey, Charlie, so, so you up there, so you, you, you come down out of the junior college
and you come to, to, to New York city and you don't just knock on a door and say, I'm
here.
I'd like to be an actor.
What do you, do you look in the paper for auditions or an agent or what was your first
step?
Yeah.
I did all that crap.
You know, you get the village voice and you're looking through all those things.
I had a really lucky break when I was in college.
There was, there was a guy there named John Fussman and he was like one of those guys
who was like 35 and in college and just hanging out just outside the school grounds, basically
the fence.
Yeah.
And he had tipped me off to a place called the Williams town theater festival.
And I, I went there to sort of, you know, empty garbage cans and, and maybe say one line
in a play and just intern and they had like a program where you could audition and, and
be part of a non-equity group.
And after my first summer there, I was still in college.
The next year I auditioned and I got to be part of that group.
And a bunch of agents go up there.
You're right.
Yeah.
After my third year there, I got an agent, but Sean, did you ever do that?
I'd love to do Williamstown.
Did you ever do that?
I would love to know, but I would love to, but you know, Charlie was going to ask you
like there, there's, when, when we were all young, all four of us and other people like
us that are actors, there was a definite path to what you wanted, right?
You got your headshots and then you had your resume on the back and then you would submit
them to agents and then agents was, but now it seems so different.
Do you have friends like, does your sister have friends and be like, Hey, Charlie, can
you help my friend out?
They want to get into the biz and they need advice.
I mean, do you ever get people coming to you and what would that advice be now for kids
rather than when we were growing up?
Weirdly, I don't get too much of that.
I don't know if I don't give off a vibe of that.
I'll help her.
I'm not sure why, but do you feel, no, but let me rephrase that.
Do you feel shitty about yourself that nobody wants acting tips from you or career advice?
I had that.
Sean, you know, when I was a kid, this is true story, when I was living in New York and
I was at my, I didn't know anybody in New York and somehow my mom knew through so many
from like Winnipeg knew the actor Len Karyu, do you know that guy?
Sure.
Len Karyu.
And so somehow she's like, you should call and I was like, okay.
So I called him poor guy because now I sort of 30 years later, I get that flip, which is
like, he's like, Hey, what, what can I do for you?
I'm like, well, I'm just in New York and I'm going to theater school and like, okay.
I'm ready to be successful.
Yeah.
And like, I get now that position, I even felt it at the time where he's like, I don't
know what you want me to do for you, buddy, but you know, I've already, I'm worried about
my own day to day over here.
And so you do get those calls sometimes from friends of friends and they go, Hey, our kid
is 18 and he's moving to New York and can you call him and give him, give him some advice?
And there's really nothing you can say to anybody.
I actually like it.
I actually don't mind it.
Yeah.
It's all about timing, but yeah, I actually, actually, what do you tell people, you know,
because you're getting an agent, like you do have to get into kind of a showcase situation.
It's just really tough for everybody.
I think you have to create your own path, you know, gone are the days of relying and
waiting on phone calls and agents and all that to do it for you.
You have to pick up a camera.
You have to write the thing, direct the thing, act the thing, put it on YouTube, all that
kind of stuff and Instagram and so that's how, because every Instagram star wants to
be an actor and every actor wants to be like have the most followers.
You guys were kind of like the first people to really do that in a way that has been not
just successful, but also had longevity.
You guys created your own stuff.
That was not the norm before you guys did that.
No, that's true.
Yeah.
Although, you know, in some ways, doesn't everybody do that?
Like somebody, I guess the lonely Island guys did that too.
Yeah.
Like, well, but they were already part of an infrastructure there at Saturday Night Live.
No, no, no, no, before those guys made videos and stuff.
And they did.
Andy Samberg.
Andy and Akiva and Jorm did, yeah, they made some videos on Lonely Island and they made
a pilot called Awesome Town that Phil and Chris, Phil Lord and Chris Miller produced.
If you've ever seen that, it's really, it's really rad.
But they did the same thing, which was, but again, that was around the same time that
Sonny started.
It was back in that.
What was unique about what we did is we did it for television where, you know, like you,
there was a lot of that in independent film, if you're the Cohen brothers, you know, you
raise money, you do blood sample, and then you, you know, you go do Raising Arizona,
whatever it is.
And we, I guess we just took that model to television and we said, well, we'll, you know,
we'll do the first one real cheap and down dirty.
And then hopefully someone gives us money to do this more legitimately.
But going back to your question before, I often do promote Williamstown, which for me
was like a showcase situation.
Or if you're really serious about acting, go to grad school, which I'd wish I'd done.
But because that place was, was not only boot camp for acting, it was boot camp for you
better show up and shine.
Because in that group, in that non-equity group, it was myself and Catherine Hahn and
Sterling Brown.
Wow.
And I mean, the competition was so fierce and, and Jimmy Simpson and these people were
going to outshine you and not, they weren't trying to outshine you, but they were going
to do their work and they were going to be, you know, they were going to come to rehearsal
and not set and just blow it out of the water.
So you had to learn how to, I feel like my first summer there, I did well in some plays
and I thought the next year I thought everyone would be like, well, he's the man.
Let's give him everything.
And it wasn't that way.
You know, it was a rude awakening of like, well, you did that.
What are you going to do now?
So that was such a good boot camp in terms of like, do your work, work hard, make sure
you make sure you're not wasting anybody's time.
It's funny you say that I remember having one of my acting teachers years ago, he was
saying like, look, all the process you do, all the work you do, whatever, when you show
up on set, no, they don't give a shit.
You got to deliver in the moment and that's it.
And that was the only sort of piece of advice that I've ever given young people, which is
just like, you got to, you got to be on top of your shit.
You got to know your shit.
Like you said, you got to be ready to deliver in the moment because that's what matters.
Yeah.
It's a bit exhausting, right?
You do.
Sure.
You just work into this.
Years go by, you develop whatever fame, success, and you kind of think, okay, well now I can
coast, but you know, the phone doesn't really ring.
Maybe it does for DiCaprio, but for nobody else, like you have to like, you got to put
something together and you have to, and then when you, when you are in it, you can't stink,
right?
You got to, you got to shine.
Your son, is he too young to know that he wants to do what dad does or?
Yeah, where mom does too.
Both of you guys are actors.
Yeah.
He has a great part in Paul Thomas Anderson's film right now.
Oh, she's great at it.
That movie is amazing.
Yeah, it is.
That guy.
Paul Thomas Anderson?
Yeah.
Talk about a guy.
I think things are going to work out for him, I think.
He's going to make it.
He is going to make it.
Paul Thomas Anderson is the greatest director of all time and go, and ignite, and ignite.
Right.
How about he's my favorite for sure.
I know, me too.
He's the greatest.
I got to go see a screening of that movie at his house, which, you know, he has these,
maybe he doesn't want me to tell, but he has like these film projectors.
He's got like this barn that he's converted into like a screening room.
And for Tracy, the name of the movie is?
Licorice Pizza.
Licorice Pizza.
Yeah.
Licorice Pizza, which is a name of a record store that was all over the valley when I was
growing up.
Right.
Anyway, so he's got this cool.
That's why you're crying, and your wife, Amy, Mary Elizabeth Ellis, whom I know, she and
I did a pilot together years ago, as you know, and she's a tremendously talented actor,
and she's in Paul Thomas Anderson's movie, Licorice Pizza.
So you went to a screening at his house.
Screening burn.
Yeah, just to kind of, and then to get to hang out with Maya Rudolph.
So that was a, I just didn't want to blow it for my wife.
I'm like, just keep cool, man, and don't, don't, don't get drunk and don't act dumb.
Did you stand up with a bunch of notes at the end of it?
I had a couple of notes, but he wasn't listening, you know?
That's the problem with these artists.
Yeah, we were, we were locked.
Pop Charlie Day is for a couple scenes.
That's really going to make this movie pop.
We'll be right back.
All right.
Back to the show.
Now listen, Charlie, for your new podcast, which is, I think it's becoming really popular,
isn't it?
Yes, it is.
Do you guys have, have guests on or is it just you three chatting?
Right now it's just us chatting.
I mean, that kind of caught us off guard, you know?
This was my gripe with Macklehenny.
About two years ago, I was like, we should do a sunny podcast.
We should just talk about the show.
The fans probably want to hear that.
And he's like, oh, everybody's doing podcasts, you know, like, you know, we're too late.
Then this year he shows up, he goes, you know what we should do?
A sunny podcast.
Oh boy.
I'm like this motherfucker.
I'm like.
Yeah, I know this guy.
But here's the difference.
And here's why I've benefited so greatly from a partnership with Rob.
When I said it, it was just gobbledygook talk.
And when he said it, he already had the mics and the producer lined up and ready to go.
He's an action.
He's an action.
He's an action guy.
So it's been good for me to unite with an action guy.
Being on that side of it, do you, and we all know this as actors promoting and, and, and
marketing and all that stuff, having to do talk shows and whatever podcasts or whatever
the thing is, do you have a preference of being a guest or a host?
Well, I guess we're not really hosting anyone.
So I don't know.
I don't know.
Yeah.
I mean, you're kind of hosting a podcast, but yeah, we're really just kind of shooting
a shit.
Okay.
People seem to want to listen to it.
But you're, I think that one of the things that we're all talking about the same thing
we obviously have, there are a lot of similarities, which is you talk about, we create our own
weather, we do our own thing and we do a lot of different things.
You've got to, you're doing a podcast, you do your show, you've got this new movie on
Amazon, which was, that was a sexy segue.
That was a good segue.
Yeah.
I did a romcom finally.
So you did a romcom.
Yeah.
Saw me as rom.
So, so talk a little bit about, cause I want to get into, you do, do a lot of different
stuff and you've got a lot of different gears, which is commendable and you're obviously,
you know, you're a talented guy.
So you go and you do a romcom.
What was the, were you just like, yeah, fucking, I could do a romcom.
I was always dying to do a romcom cause I actually really enjoy them.
And I sort of wanted to have my, you know, Tom Hanks moment or Billy Crystal or whatever.
And was there a sex scene?
No, there's, there's, you know, is there a kiss?
Hey, cool.
Hey, take it easy, man.
What are you imagining?
Jason, what are you imagining?
Talk to what you're imagining.
Well, because some people can go their whole careers or a large portion of it without
ever doing a sex scene.
And then all of a sudden the day shows up and it's like, oh my God, I've been in this
business 30 years and I've never had to like fake love-making.
Did you have to do that?
No, that's a good question.
No, I have.
Have you ever had to do that?
Yeah.
I have a, I have a very graphic one on It's Always Sunny where we did a ski episode and
we were making sort of fun of like 80s ski movies and over the top sex scenes.
So, you know, I was like, it was fine, you know, like, you don't have to ask him in
a whisper wheel.
I was just saying walk us through it.
I mean, you know, it's always the case with me with sex scenes.
I'm always, I always feel bad for the other person, you know, where I'm like, hey, look,
I'm sorry.
It's just me and this, you know, I'm pasty and-
Sean, you had to do one?
Yeah.
There was this cult show, which is fantastic called Campus Ladies with Carrie Aisley and
Kristen Sussin and Will Forte was on it and a bunch of funny people were on it.
And Jonah Hill.
That was Jonah Hill's first show.
And I played somebody who wasn't the brightest, who always wore a backpack.
How'd you get into that character?
Wow.
Well, so I just put a backpack on and then I had to wear no clothes, accept the backpack
and have sex with and literally have intercourse with Kristen Sussin.
Oh.
Oh, okay.
How did that go?
Jason?
Fine.
Oh, sorry.
Go ahead.
Sean, finish on.
That was it.
That was it.
And Jason, what about your sex stuff?
I've got a loose connection.
Can you guys hear me okay?
Yeah.
I'm not fine.
The wire keeps coming out.
And can you hear me?
Yeah.
And is it in?
I guess that's the big.
Hey, Charlie.
You didn't answer, Jason, if you've done a sex scene.
I have and I don't like them and it's just, you know, all the cliches are true.
You have a, there's a very difficult line one has to ride, which is, you know, if you're
into it and you're being passionate convincingly, things start to move, guys.
And if they don't move, there's that classic saying that one of the actors said, I apologize
if I get aroused and I apologize if I don't get aroused or something like that.
It's like, it's a concern.
It's a concern.
Well, Bateman, we did this movie called Horrible Bosses, it was a massive global hit will.
And you had a little sex scene with Aniston, right?
That was the first thing.
She like mounted you.
Yeah.
That was the first thing we shot.
Oh, wow.
Wow.
And that was basically my second time meeting her.
I met her at the, at the read through it was like, okay, well, now take all your clothes
off and we'll take these provocative photos.
But I only found it humiliating, you know, because I was like, ah, man, I should like
go to the gym or like, I was like, I'm so sorry, I'm really pasty and doughy over here.
And, you know, you're probably not used to an image like this in your sexual scenarios.
I had to do a scene in Brother Solomon with Forte where he comes to where we make up at
the end of the movie and I'm in the shower and I come out.
So I've just got the little sock on and then nothing else.
And then I got to turn in.
He and I have to hug while I'm basically, no, let's, for Tracy, let's explain what the
sock is.
Go ahead.
Well, it's, it's basically that, like it's a sock that you put over, it's a thing you
put over your junk.
All your meats and cheeses get covered.
Yeah.
It's like, it's a little coin purse that's got a couple of pieces of fishing wire on
both sides that go around you as a thong.
Yeah.
Okay.
But it's a new, it's a nude colored and it's made out of like pantyhose and, and with fishing
string on it.
So you can imagine it's just, it's not, it's not comfortable.
It's not a good looking thing.
And it's, it's difficult at times to fill out.
Will.
So, well, that was not an issue.
It was more of an issue that like it was kind of the, like you said, like, I'm, I'm sorry
if I get it aroused and I'm sorry if I don't.
And I just thought, boy, this could go either way with Forte.
I have no idea.
Which way did it go?
I don't want to, I don't want to say it, but I just, I will have to watch a movie.
Let me just say this.
I love the guy and you can tell what you've said plenty.
Well, you put that to the beat.
So Charlie, so talk, so you're doing this romance and comedy.
You decide you want to do it.
What is the movie?
Well, the movie's called, I Want You Back and it's with Jenny Slate and myself.
Oh, Mega Talent.
She's a talent.
Mega Talent.
She's pretty good.
She's pretty good.
Our, our producing buddy, John Ricard produced this movie.
Another Mega Talent.
Yeah.
And we've worked together on Horrible Bosses and Fist Fight.
And I was talking to John and I was saying, you know, we should find something to do.
And he says, he said, I got these two scripts and you should look at them.
And he said, but one's a romcom.
So you probably don't want to do that.
I said, why would I not want to do that?
What a nasty, nasty thing to say.
Nasty thing to say.
And I loved it.
We put it together.
It's, it's a really sweet and funny movie.
By the way, I didn't have to take my shirt off in it.
And I had this sort of conundrum where the character doesn't work out and then he starts
working out in the story.
And I thought, well, which body do I go with?
Do I go with the guy who looks like he's not been working out or the guy that looks
like he has been working out?
And I went with the guy who has not been working out.
Yeah.
So did you look at the shooting schedule to sort of plan out what kind of shape you'd
be in?
Cause I do that.
I mean, for Tracy, these, these, these projects, they take at least six weeks to shoot sometimes
12 or more.
And if you know, you got a topless scene on as Will likes to call it, you know, you want
to make sure that you're not having a whole lot of soy sauce a few days out, you know?
No, I let that go.
I, I was like, no, that's not, that's not what the audience wants from me.
They don't, they don't want me to pop that shirt off and have rippling abs.
They don't want it.
They'll be disturbed if they see it.
There's nothing funny about a six pack.
There's nothing funny about it.
And this is a comedy.
So Charlie, any, any recent vacays, as we call it in the biz, any, any vacays with
the fam?
I went to Hawaii.
Okay.
I knew that.
I knew that.
Oh yeah.
You sent us a shot of that beautiful.
You sent that pic in our little chain.
Oh yeah.
I did.
I did.
That's right.
So you went to Hawaii.
Did you go by yourself or did you bring your wife and child?
And, and I played a bunch of golf and we hung out and relaxed and went to the beach and,
and I reset.
It was good.
I was coming right off a bunch of things and it was nice to take a break.
Charlie 2022.
What are you most excited about?
Oh man.
I don't know.
I'm, I'm always pretty just excited to be doing this.
I mean, I don't know.
I'm still grateful.
More of the same.
Yeah.
And polishing up a movie for a good four years that I directed that Bateman was kind enough
to be in.
Yeah.
When do we get to see that Charlie?
Any minute.
I'm right around the corner, but I was going to sell it.
I was in the process of selling it to a studio and I was having some conversations with a
very talented man, Mr. Guillermo del Toro.
And I had to change a heart and I took the movie and I reshot about 20% of it.
Am I still in it?
You're still in it.
I'm going to cut.
That's been a maddening long experience, but I'm really happy with the movie.
So hopefully I'll get it out to the world this year.
I'm excited about that.
I'm excited about this rom-com.
I'm excited about maybe getting some golf in with the boys here.
Yeah.
That's good.
And Horrible Buses 3, I think we can announce.
Well, now why didn't we do it?
You know?
Well, because, you know, yeah, because Horrible Buses 2 just basically, you know, cratered.
Did it?
Did it shoot the bed?
No, it didn't shoot the bed.
It's a huge hit.
Oh, that's true.
Yeah.
It didn't do as well as the first.
Oh, you mean by pandemic standards?
Yeah, that's right.
But the standards of everybody staying home and not going into theaters are different.
Well, I would like the third one because I really, really like to collect those sets.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Things do happen in three.
Maybe we just make it for a price, you know, but it did turn out people just didn't give
shit about a second one.
So they're really not going to want a third.
It's not really a story that needed a second one.
Hear me out.
I mean, Horrible Buses 3, but there are two new, Sean, right?
Two new guys who look, they're kind of, they just go, ah, my boss is terrible.
Hey, my boss is bad too.
Are you a boss or you're an employee?
Exactly.
But the catch phrase is my boss is bad three.
Yeah.
Same here.
I get it, Sean.
I get it.
So Charlie, listen, you're just, you're such a talent.
You're divine.
You're a good guy.
You're a theater.
You're a theater major.
You're a musician.
You're a musician.
You're a musician.
You're a great marriage.
Great marriage.
Charming little kid.
Your new movie, I Want You Back.
Your romcom is out.
I can't wait to see it.
And it's on Amazon now.
It's really good.
I actually love this movie a lot.
Charlie.
Charlie, I love you.
Charlie, thank you for being here.
We see you on the golf course probably in the next few days.
Well, you're teeing off in about what, 10 minutes?
Yeah, this is already six minutes into my heart out.
Yeah.
Okay.
He's kind of heart out.
He loves you.
He never does this if he's got a heart out for golf as you know.
I appreciate the six minutes over.
That's good.
Can you know how persnickety Jason is about everything?
My range time.
I need my range time.
Yeah.
Well, we can come back.
I can come back.
We'll finish this off.
Next time you're on the podcast, we'll talk about the time when we were coming down 18
and the guy had charged Jason's Tesla.
Who?
We'll save that.
I had a two hour drive ahead of me.
Yeah.
It didn't do well.
You made him give him his...
My 20 back.
20 back.
Yeah.
And then we never...
I gave him 20 just because I felt bad.
He got yelled at so much.
Jason, you don't know this, but Charlie and I both tipped the guy after you took the tip.
Are you kidding me?
No.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, we felt bad.
Well, we don't want to write a story like fucking Jason.
I mean, you were his hero.
You were his hero.
He fucking good.
At least $20.
I should have taken more out of his pocket, son of a bitch.
I will say to your credit, you did preemptively tip the guy and say, hey, do you mind taking
care of this? He said, great, and then he didn't do it.
Right.
So it's like, well, I'm going to pay you for the valet parking, but the extra juice for
doing me a solid, which you didn't do, that then means that you no longer need the money
for that.
Yeah.
Let me ask you this.
If you had shot like even par that day, like your best round ever, do you think you would
have cared?
Do you think you would have been?
I would have given him a ride wherever he wanted to go and all the money in my pocket.
And that is Jason Bateman.
Guys, we'll be right back with a new episode of smartlets.
He loves his golf.
He loves his golf.
Charlie.
Thank you.
Enjoy the rest of your day.
Great.
See your faces, fellas.
Sean, let's hang out sometime.
I don't know.
I'm right here just for you.
Not worth it, Charlie.
No.
No.
It's got to be better.
Bring the slide whistle.
Next two weeks, Texas.
Let's get out.
Okay.
I'm busy, but you know, we'll see.
Yeah.
All right.
All right.
All right.
He's about to slam the wrap top.
He's going to do the good out.
Why?
Because I'll tell you why I wasn't going to do it.
Because Sean Penn did it.
And then I remember I was listening to that.
I was like, wow, Sean Penn did it.
That's how I'm doing.
I think I've done it ever since then.
I was like, well, Sean Penn just slams it down.
Just slam it down.
That's how you do it.
So I'm going to slam it down.
Bye.
Bye.
Oh, look, he really did it.
That Charlie day is, he's always a breath of fresh air.
Every time you see him, you feel better.
He's like, we could change his middle name to sunny, right?
So just Charlie sunny day.
Yeah.
Always a sunny day.
Yeah.
And Charlie.
So Sean, you don't know Charlie.
You've never met him personally.
I never met him.
I did that one voiceover of Monster's University with him.
But of course, you know, as you know, when you do animated films,
you don't really see the other actor because you're doing it a lot.
What?
Yeah.
So I never really met him before.
Right.
But I'm a huge fan.
And I don't know if you've seen Monster's University,
but he steals the movie.
He's hilarious.
Yeah, of course.
First of all, if you've got, if you're a fan of comedy
or a fan of animation or you've got kids,
you've seen Monster's University.
It's a great movie and he is great in it.
And you are, but he is, but no, it's a great movie.
And he is such a, I met him the first time was through his wife,
through me, Mary Elizabeth Ellis, who's such a talent and so cool.
And he's a super nice guy, super real.
And he joked about being down to earth.
He legitimately is.
And then he's going and then he's incredibly talented.
Yeah, I love him.
And prolific writer in just everything.
And he's so funny.
He's so naturally funny.
You guys got that.
You guys both have very unique voices.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He's got a very unique voice.
I don't know if I would consider myself to, but he, he does.
Wait.
Nobody ever bites, nobody ever bites my, for my theater stories.
Cause I,
Huh.
Number one.
So when we save it for a podcast,
no one wants to listen to.
Okay.
What's funny is that you don't take from that.
Like maybe I should stop asking.
I'm telling you.
Your takeaway is nobody bites.
No, I'm telling you.
Somebody's going to come with a really funny theater story.
I think they're always so funny.
I like that.
Usually your question about funny theater stories ends up with you telling a funny theater story.
I know.
It's just, it's a self set up.
Jason, you missed John the other day.
Robert and I kept pimping him out to tell funny stories for everybody at dinner.
Funny theater stories.
He kept, so he finding theater stories and he kept getting up and telling these hilarious.
They were legitimately hilarious.
And he got so worked up.
He had to go to the hospital.
I did.
That's a true story.
It's a true story.
So all of a sudden,
So all of a sudden Jen comes and she goes,
Sean just went to the hospital.
I'm like, what?
You know, next time I bring up a theater story,
maybe someone will bite, bite.
Bite.
Bite.
Oh bite.
Yes.
Got it.
Not that works.
That qualifies.
Love you guys.
Bye.
Bye.
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