SmartLess - “Will Ferrell”
Episode Date: August 24, 2020The posse gets a wonderful surprise from comedy royalty Will Ferrell (Old School, Step Brothers, Talladega Nights) popping-through for some fresh kombucha. The foursome discuss formidable his...tory with the Columbia House records club, throwing their sons’ cellphones out of moving vehicles, and other things like their careers, etc. “Keep your landlines, folks.” See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
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Hey there, Will Arnett here. Welcome to Smart List, our podcast where Jason Bateman, Sean
Hayes, and I each week, one of us brings a guest that the other two don't know about.
And this week is no exception. We get real into it. Most of the time we just mess around
with each other and then the guest has to be embarrassed. So let's get right to the
podcast.
Hi. Hi, how are you? Good, good. Should we go around the room and just say our names
and our roles? Introduce yourself? Yeah, I'm Sean Hayes. People have been listening to
the podcast for a minute now. Sorry, so we just skip that. Same three idiots. Okay. In
the role of Sean Hayes is Sean Hayes. Should we switch parts today? Oh, we could switch
parts. Oh, yeah. I'll play Will. I'll play Will. What about that? You guys are assholes.
Fuck. Oh, God. Okay. I'm going to be Jason. It's hard for me though. So when I look back
and I think about all the things that you've done, let's start at the beginning. Okay,
so America was founded in 1492. But what if I want to really be understood? No one understands
me in my house. You know, I've got a wife and two girls that just, I start talking,
they glaze over. So I really have to fight for attention. I get on this thing. I feel
like I've got to stop describing my question, right? We've spoken about this before and
I just need to ask the question. And then Sean, and then Sean's like a golden, Sean
comes on and he's like, do you like whipped cream? What's your favorite color? If Will
was a dog, what kind of dog would Will be on this podcast? Oh God, that's a good question.
Will's probably like an untrained German shepherd. But messy, matted. Yeah, just drool coming
out on the side. Bad hips like the German shepherds get. Yeah, dysplasia. Yeah. Jesus,
they would be like a full size standard, but shaved poodle. So cold yet fancy. And very
proud walks. Very proud. Anyway, let's get to our guests, please. Yeah, let's do it.
And I'm going to tell you, you guys actually know this person, but we're going to find
out stuff that we don't know about this person. If it's my mom, I'm in trouble because I haven't
called her for a while. Can I just say, if it's your mom, what? Careful. This would
be such a... Careful. No, I'm just going to say it would be such a mitzvah. If it was
your mom, because we could really get into... There's so much stuff about you and we've
known each other a long time that I want to know. You know whose mom is not going to come
on mine because she's dead. So that's our first commercial break. We're going to go to a
florist commercial break right now. Sean, by the way, I will say your mom is dead, but
imagine if my surprise guest was your mom. That would really... That would be more surprising
than me being pale. Pailer than me, my God. Guys, our guest today is from Irvine, California.
His mom was a teacher and his father played sax and keyboard for the righteous brothers.
Do we get a chance to guess at any point? No. Oh, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. No,
don't guess because he studied sports journalism at USC, but ultimately went on to join the
Groundlings and the rest is history. He's got like a million movies under his belt and
I'm sure that's not the only thing. Ladies and gentlemen, William Ferrell. Oh my God.
Jason. There's his head shot. Jason. Hi, Jason. Jason, answer the belly. Jason, it's
your mother. First of all, she's British, Will. Oh, okay. Sorry. But let me guess, let
me guess and let me guess and that. Oh, what a great booking, Sean. Congratulations. Guys,
can I just, can I start by saying I'm so excited to be on the gong show podcast, all
things you want to know about the new gong show. And it is just, I mean, it's sweeping
that country, both countries, Canada and US. Aren't that taking fire? It's unbelievable.
Are you just drinking, is that just medicine out of the bottle? That's what it looks like.
It's a kombucha. I know that because my wife drinks those. But it does look like a tonic
from the old time tonic. Yeah. And I just, I drink it as a prophylactic. Sure. Yeah.
Well Ferrell, thank you so much for coming on our little show. My pleasure. And we're
all obviously such gigantic fans of yours. And one question, you know, you know, you're
one of the rare people in this business and I think I can speak on behalf of everybody
that, you know, it's really hard to find people like you. Hold on one second. Will Ferrell's
got a phone call. Yes. Tight five everybody. Okay, that's a large pepperoni, right? Oh,
do you want chicken fingers with that? I thought he was ordering. He's taking orders. Can I
get the, oh, all right. Okay. All right, Todd, we'll be there in 35 minutes. He asked for
the address and then he knew the guy. So we didn't need the address. Hey, hey, keep your
landlines, folks. Keep your landlines. It is pretty strong. That looks almost like your
banking system collapse. You're going to want to have a landline. What I was going to say,
William, was Ferrell was, I always wanted to know what is that one thing or that one
event or that one person that made you want to get in the business and pursue comedy?
What was that? Barack Obama. Correct. What? Before that, before that. Great answer. Just
like a week before that. The one thing, the one person? Yeah, was there like a show or
a person or an event or something in your family or? Oh, Jesus. This is supposed to be things
you don't know. You're coming waterworks. Yeah. And we are losing light. We're losing
light. I said I wouldn't cry. You said you wouldn't try to get me to cry, Sean, but
right out of the gate. Here's the real answer to your question. Yeah. I enjoyed being funny
as a child, but I was actually diametrically opposed to going into entertainment because
I watched my father, the musician, go from job to job and be fired at the drop of a hat
and I thought, who would want to do that? I'm going to have a job where I carry a briefcase
to work. I can relate to that. I had some of the same fears myself, yet I still went
into this non-meritocracy and fickle sort of industry. You were early. You were early
child. Right, but you were young as well, but I mean not a child, but you had an opportunity
to take a different path, yet you didn't. You couldn't resist the allure of the pancake
makeup. Yeah, so what about that though? The floor lights. After seeing your dad. Are
there still floor lights? Yeah, they're scoop lights. Scoop lights. Yeah, yeah, scoop. Yeah,
scoop. No, okay. Listen, Will, but seeing your dad do that over and over again and not
like, you know, travel and not hold down, you know, secure kind of job. So what, if that
discouraged you, what encouraged you? I just kind of slowly started incorporating the messing
around with my friends, which I'm sure we all did. Keep it clean. Okay, yep. Yeah, okay,
you're right. Entertainment of my, ooh, that sounds weird. Yeah. The massage, no. No. Tickle
giggle. Tickle giggle. You know, we'd love to have a good gang tickle giggle. That's it.
We got it. We're back on. No, I just had, high school was kind of the moment, even though
I wasn't like a theater kid or anything, and I found myself writing what were essentially
skits. But was there like a comedy person that you were like, God, I wish I could do what
that guy does or. Who did you think was funny when you were a teenager? I kind of the typical.
Interesting that Will Arnett asks at once and gets a response. The pipes. Yeah, it's
the pipes. Exactly. I just got down to it. I didn't dress it up with a bunch of BS haze.
I was a member of the Columbia house record and tape club and one of one of the items.
Oh, you're being serious. I'm being serious for $1 plus postage and handling, which really
comes out to about a buck 89. That's where they get you. Yeah. I got to choose 13 still
seething. It was supposed to be for a penny. You got 13 albums and it's not a penny. It's
about 89. Okay. It's the handling that's expensive. We don't work there. It's the postage and
the shipping and handling. Yeah. Not to mention, if you get one record a month, if you don't
send it back within 14 days, you're charged for it. Yeah. Is that how you still use Netflix?
I'm doing it the original way. Yeah, I never, I still get the discs. I'm not streaming.
Don't blame you. Will drives by Ted Serrano's house and throws discs at his front door.
Here's your fucking movies. I'm done with these. One of my, one of my, it was the cast
album of Saturday Night Live. Okay, great. So you always aspired to be on the show that
you were on. I guess quietly. Yes. Quietly. I did. But that's, so Will, so you wanted
that and, and hold on. I'm not done. Yeah. I know. Fuck. Will, can I talk to you privately
real quick? Yeah. Yeah. No, no, Arnett. Sorry. Listen. Yeah. Listen, Arnett, when the guest
is responding to a question, especially one that you cut him off for Christ's sake. No,
no, wait until the silence, silence follows a completion of the fucking answer. Here we
go. Okay. Steve Martin, Steve Martin. Yep. And then I was also a tonight show weirdo.
I'd stay up and wait to see who the comedian was. If there was a comedian on that night,
I'd watch. If there wasn't, I'd turn it off. Wow. So I was kind of, that's how I, so those
are the guys, Steve Martin, also an idol of mine too is comedy wise. I just thought, right.
So, so dry and brilliant. But what was that moment? So you, you grew up in Orange County,
you go to USC and then you go to groundlings. What is that gap between when you, I never
knew this, like from when you finished USC to groundlings. What was that gap? Like how
did you, so I graduate USC with a degree in sports journalism. So in my mind's eye,
I'm going to go work on a ESPN, you know, I'm going to be a, a sports caster and
Oh, that would have been great. I know. I blew it. And missed it. In fact, Craig Kilburn
brings that up to me every day. Do you remember Craig Kilburn?
Sure do. Do you have a, do you have an ongoing friendship with Craig Kilburn? I haven't seen
him in probably 15 years. No. Well, he's on next. Come on out, Craig. You'll see him
in the green room on your way out. If you were quarantining with Craig Kilburn, that
would be it for me. That would be the greatest. So, so you finish. So yeah. So I have this,
I finish and then I start doing my, I mean, there wasn't really a job placement program
coming out of college. And so you kind of have to figure out a way. I found like a local
Orange County cable access news station that I started working at and I was trying to put
together a tape, which I wish we could cut to that now, that in which, yeah, I did, you
know, sort of do some field reporting and you would, you would anchor the news. You'd
also work the camera. You would do everything. And there was a light bulb moment in that,
even though it was this small rinky dink local cable access, they had legitimate press credentials
to all the major sports teams in LA. And at that time, the Rams, the LA Rams football
team were playing down at Anaheim Stadium. And the editor, you know, of the show, which
was actually a teacher of the class, it was actually run out of a junior college. He said,
hey, we need someone to go interview John Robinson, the head coach of the Rams at the
stadium after this weekend's game. And 40 hands shot up, except for mine.
But you knew him from SC, yeah? No, no, no, I'd never met him. But, but, uh, the point
was here we're, I'm surrounded by these hungry people who were like, I need that interview
on my reel. And my first thought was like, I'm going to have to check out a camera.
I got to ask someone, yeah, parking, I got to pay for it. I got to ask one of my classmates
that they'll run sound for me. Yeah, and you don't have a lot of money from, you don't
have a lot of money left over from that subscription to all those from Columbia. Yeah, no, I'm in
debt from Columbia house, representing. He's in the middle of a major lawsuit against
Columbia. We are, we are on the five yard line, guys. And if please have me on next,
when we finally come to terms, but I'm giving all the money to charity, but God, we're going
to hammer them. But I had no, I had no, I said, this is not a good sign. I should be
leaping out of my chair to go and actually get a legit interview with a head football
coach from the NFL on my reel so that I can get hired at a, you know, station in Yuma,
Arizona. And I said, if I don't, I don't really have that drive, then this other thing that's
kind of still gnawing away at me is I should really be looking into this comedy thing.
So I, that's when I signed up for my first class at the groundlings.
Really? Yeah. I'm not trying to prod you into doing it. How soon after that did you kind
of braid the two things by working on your Harry carry? Oh, that was, yeah, that was
kind of midway. That was a couple of years later during the baseball strike and just
kills me. Oh, that was a character you did at groundlings. Yeah. Yeah. There was, it
was the baseball strike and I used to, I had, I had a job, the art auction house that my
then friend now wife Vivica used to work at. I was the appraisal coordinator at the auction
house, which was basically, I answered the phones and coordinated appraisals and typed
up appraisals. Wow. And was, was threatened to be fired on several occasions. But I would,
I lived close enough home to drive home for lunch and I would turn the Cubs games on during
the day. And I had never heard of Harry carry. And I was like, who is this? Who is this guy?
Yeah, I grew up in Chicago. So he was a part of our lives. A fixture. Right. And so I'm
just, I would be listening. And the thing that struck me was listening to a game and
listening to this announcer say on syndicated national television. If that ball's a strike,
I'm a Chinaman. And I, I, I literally did like a spit take and was like, did he just
say Chinaman? Wait, wait, wait, wait, this is like a guy who's paid to do this. He's
like, and so I not, not, I just thought, no, this is, this has got to be a sketch somehow.
And they, they, so I somehow, even though it was a Southern California audience, I wrote
a sketch where it was during the baseball strike. So Harry carry didn't have games to
announce and he would, he had somehow gotten involved in a play reading in a local theater.
And it was this, this melodramatic play. And they were just sitting around, you know, let's
take it from Act One. And it was, you know, Perry had lines like, God damn it, Carol. Why
don't you ever look at me when we make love? And I, I, and by the end, by the end of the
sketch, the audience was like doubling over and laughter, even though they, they had no
idea that Harry carry was a real person. This is something that's transcending, you
know,
Yeah.
By the way, by the way, never knowing that, of course, you do the Harry carry characters
so many times, but the idea of him doing something, it was always in the baseball context, but
seeing him doing something that's completely out of.
Oh yeah. And, and we had all these other actors in our, we had a really good troupe and everyone
was just playing it perfectly straight. And like this one actress, Maggie Baird was literally
getting herself to cry while she read it. And, and, and it was just like, your tears
mean nothing to me. This marriage has been broken since the day we crossed the altar.
You know,
Always kind of drunk, right?
Yeah. Yeah. Just, and then,
And quaking a little
And then my friend Roy was the director like, okay, let's stop there. Harry, I don't know
if I'm feeling, you know, just giving the acting notes and like, Harry, I really want
to feel it from you this time. And you're speaking to no one but Carol right now in
the scene. Okay, let's take it again. And, and just the starting and stopping of that.
And
Did you do Harry when you did your SNL audition?
I did, which was, in fact, I tried to do an augmented version of that. And it was so
surreal because, you know, you're just in a, you're just in a void. You're on, you're
in 8-H in the studio there.
God, you must have been so nervous. I would have been just a mess.
I just remember listening, waiting in the way, so you guys all know that setup there,
waiting by the page desk outside the doors of the studio and hearing the person ahead
of you go through their audition while you're on deck and just looking at all the famous
pictures of everyone who had just hosted.
And being in the spot, in the place that you dreamed of being and now you're there.
Getting out to a studio that's pitch black, except for a spotlight and a camera and a
boom operator and Lauren sitting in the shadows. And then you just have to do comedy or standing
in a void, possibly. So yeah, that was very surreal. I tried doing it. I don't know.
Will Ferrell, I also want to know, like, have you ever desired to do anything? I know you
wanted to be a sports announcer, right? A sportscaster, but as if you, if you weren't
doing the thing that you're doing, not quarantining, but in entertainment business, what would
you be doing? If you had to pick a blue collar job, you had to pick, what would it be?
Oh, blue collar. I was, because I was going to say, I've always wanted to do finance.
It seems so interesting to you. I love finance. I love figuring out like a second more, you
know, I can't even do the bit because I don't even know the terms, but right, refi, low
will comes alive. When you mentioned private equity, it's like, who said, are you subprime?
Is that still a thing? I actually could be a, I could actually be a post person to be
quite honest to deliver the mail because I like, like the idea of a route and you get
to, you know, have some contact with people and the idea of finishing a task every day.
Would you be on foot armed with the, with the dog spray? Or would you be in the buggy?
I would go, I would go foot with the trolley. I'd push the trolley.
Nice. Yeah. Nice. Those are, those are sneaky tricky. Those three wheels thing, they will
go over on you. I'm sure they, yeah. In a high wind or yeah.
Or if, or if you don't take the letters out, you don't go in a clockwise or counterclockwise
rotation. If you take too many out of the left side, it's going to tip over on the right
and vice versa. Did you used to do it? Hey, how often did you look out the window masturbating
at the postman a lot or a little? Only in the summer months when they wear the
shorts. Look at that cart.
There's David. There's David. David, our postman's here.
Yeah. David is going to topple. David, it's going to topple.
I'll get the mail. Hey guys, David's here. Yes or what?
Wait. Cut to the reverses. Nobody's there.
Nobody's there. He's alone. Hey Bateman, quick question.
Cause you did, we mentioned before you grew up in showbiz, we all know that we've seen
the great things and people who are listening can, can right now Google up like little house
in the prairie and see cute little Jason Bateman.
Yeah. Did you ever have a real, did you ever have
like an outside show business job? Have you ever had like a?
I didn't and I genuinely hate that. I'd love to have had a paper route similar to Dave's
route with his three wheeler. But you were working all the time as a kid.
I started at 10. Yeah. So there was no chance to, but I've always legitimately fantasized
about waiting tables or bartending. There's something about working for a tip, which is
sort of like the same thing as I want them to like me. I want this table, might need
something different than that table to just sort of like being able to morph into whatever
they need me to be.
I have, I do, I will say this, all my quote unquote civilian jobs I've been pretty terrible
at. So.
Because you didn't like authority or you were just disinterested.
You know, like slow. Yeah. Just like slow on the uptake. I had a lot of patient managers
and supervisors who.
Did you have a lot of jobs? Like, do you have weird jobs in high school that you did?
I never, I was doing sports all the time. So I, but I had, you know, I had like the,
I worked as a bank teller. I was a valet Parker of cars. And how are you taking direction?
Well, you know, bank teller, you know, there's certain protocols and procedures you have
to follow on this and that. And it just took me a while. I mean, the fact that I was handling
numbers and money is, it just, I was like.
It was euphoric because of the, the, the finance.
I mean, that's, that led to my love finance, but I, I, I once had a, a regular customer
stop me in the middle of a transaction and say, can you call your manager over? And
I said, sure. And I brought her over and he's, and in front of me, he said, this guy is your
worst teller. Okay. And I just want you to know this. And he did in a very calm way.
And he was like, look, look at him right now. He's sweating. And I literally was sweating
and he's like, he's terrible. He takes forever. He, and, and the manager to her defense was
like, please, that's, that's not true. And I was like, no, he's kind of right. And I
just want you to know, like, I hate when I have to go to his window. And then he just
walked away. And she was like, I'm sorry about that. I was like, I, you know what, I can't
really argue with him. There's a, I'm not that great a teller.
This was counting bills, counting out cash or, you know, everything, cashing a cheque
chat. Yeah, do it all. So that guy did you a favor in the long run, right? In a lot of
ways. Sounds like you need to pen someone a letter.
Well, every time I go, every time I put the pancake makeup on, and I picture that guy,
and I say, who's laughing now?
So you still do all your own makeup.
I insist on it. It's crazy.
Well, there's allergies, especially in the, you know, post COVID-19 world we're all about
to step into. I will definitely be doing all my own makeup.
So Will Ferrell, you are one of the funniest people on the planet, if not the funniest
person on the planet. And everybody kind of, do you get sick of like, because now you're
a parent and you have to show up to like school things and parent things for your kids. Do
people expect that from you all the time? And what is your reaction?
There is a certain level of underwhelment. Is that a word?
Yes.
Yeah.
It is now.
I can tell, I can tell there are a lot of let down people continually.
But Will, I will say this, you know, Will, I don't even remember this a couple of years
ago, maybe last year we were having dinner.
Yeah.
We were having dinner with with Richter and Pete Giles and you and Viv came in from a
school event.
Yeah.
And with a couple other parents. And Will was wearing his name tag, they're all wearing
name tags and will say, hello, my name is Will on the thing, which is, which is great.
And that's such a testament to what a great guy you are. And it's like, yeah, man, I'm
not here. I'm just here because my kids are at school here and I'm interested in my kids
and their lives and their school.
But I'm sure you guys face the same thing. I find more that there are some parents who
literally won't say hi because they go so far the other way.
Yeah.
I don't, I don't want to bother them. So then you're like, hey, how you doing? And then
they walk right by and like, gosh, what, what did I say something wrong? Yeah.
Yeah.
And then do you feel on the, on the opposite of that, do you feel that you have to sometimes
lead with sort of a vibe that is less than sort of friendly or less than sort of solicitous
of conversation? Because you're afraid that if you seem too friendly, they're really going
to lean in. And like, how do you kind of
I would say, no, I would say that I would say at least in the school setting, most everyone
is, is, is relatively normal. I would say that posture, that's my game face for when
I'm on a commercial flight.
Right.
Just, just sour. Don't come near me. I will rip your head off.
I will not hear, not here for fun and games.
Let's get to flying.
Eye mask and headphones.
Well, is there anything that you haven't done that you want to do? Either a role that you
want to play or?
Nope.
Talk to you later.
Totally satisfied.
How do I, how do I turn this camera off? How do I get out of here?
No, there isn't because everybody thinks you can do anything.
I don't know. But how do you, how do you, you can't give that answer without saying
like a jackass.
Right. Well, yeah, what would you, what would you do if like, let's say, let's say Ridley
Scott came to you and he wanted to do a King Lear and he just thought he sees something
in you that would just be like an incredibly, it's off brand and studios excited and all
of those terms and all of that stuff and the money's just like, no, like you've never,
et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. Does your douche meter go off and say, even though you
could do it, do you feel like the audience will never accept it?
Yeah. I think that would be a, that would be a tough one to try to convince yourself
that you could pull that one off.
Having said that, you have, you have King Lear, are you about to, Jason, are you direct?
Are you doing it?
No, but you have, but what about in all sincerity? I think you've taken what you do and you've
pushed it into so many realistic, dramatic, melancholy things that truly nobody else could
do just like no one else could do what you do in comedy. I really think it's admirable
how you are so aware of how you come across, what sort of your goal posts are and what you're,
well, you're asking the audience to accept you as I think is, that's a lot of discipline.
I appreciate that. But yeah, I mean, it's, it's fun to do that other stuff, but there
are times where I'm, I am always on those sets of more serious things going, this is,
this is very hard. And this is hard to not look like you're trying to be the actor who
everyone needs to take serious. So it's a, it's a drama face. Yeah, it's so, it's so
tough, which is so funny because doing, doing what you do, specifically what you do will
is so, is so hard. And when I say not many people, like nobody could do it. And it's
so working out, you mean? Yeah, just work out. Well, just lots of the way you do arms
and legs. Yeah. Nobody does legs like you. And you've always said that. And no, but the
posts, you always post them too. Not a lot of people know that we'll train Reggie Bush
when I came through as C. I'm a fairly modest person. I think you guys, I think that comes
across here, but I will not hold back. No one does legs the way I do. I mean, leg days
is a holiday in the Farrell household. Leg day is, yeah, it's just, now here's the other
thing, Will Farrell, you know, you're also known not only as the funniest person in
the world, but one of the kindest people and everybody in this business always just raves
about what a great human being you are. And that's the hard part. I can't attest to that
because that's what they pay you for. Yeah, that's the part they pay you for very, very
sweet. And, but so that said, I think the thing I always wanted to know what really
pisses you off. Yeah, here we go. This is where we start the interview. He's all come
butchered up. Now do you mean, oh, I'm full of love. We just want names. We just want
names. Yeah. When's the last time you just screamed your head off and let somebody had
it? Yeah, because I can't picture you angry. No, I don't, I don't get, I'm trying to think
of the laugh. I mean, I have screamed before. I have screamed in a professional manner.
Or like in life or like at home or like with in people and human beings, what pisses you
off? I mean, yeah, home, it's, you know, the typical frustrations you have with your
children. And for some reason, I'm always checking myself because I'm holding them
to some standard that I don't think I was held to. Like I was, I was, I mean, I did well
in school, but I still had, you know, my room was a mess and I've never emptied the dishwasher.
And but for some reason, I'm just like, you guys, you, it's not that hard. We're asking
you to empty the trash. See, if I was your child, I would laugh at that and put the liner
back in. Put the liner back. Rewind the trash can. You're not done. It's a two step process.
But that, for some reason that I get crazy. And then I'm like, who is this person? Yeah.
But I was going to say about holding them to that standard. I, you know, during these
weird times we had the other day Archie or 11 year old was on his zoom class. And it
turned out he was, he had his camera off and on the side, he was on his iPad playing a
video game. So I said to Amy, I said to my ex, I was like, I was like, what are we, he's
on the thing and blah, blah, blah. And as I was saying to her, like he's on the, he's
on the zoom class, but he's on pause and he's playing a video game beat, beat, beat. I was
looking at her and I go, which I probably would have done if given the chance and you
probably would have too. And she's like, yeah, I totally know. Yeah, exactly. It was crazy.
I don't, I don't know why. Yeah. I don't know why I go there. But can I have one other thing?
I don't on in a work experience kind of bugaboo. Yeah. I don't love the unit publicist experience
on a set. Right. And for those listeners who were wondering, there's a lot of times on
a production, there's a publicist assigned from the studio and this and that. And they're
always playing the game of like so and so is willing to do it if you are and then right
guilting you. Yeah. Yeah. And they do, they do these wide circles, right? They just do
little drive-bys every once in a while to gauge whether you're in a good mood or a bad
mood to just want to kind of run something by you. And, and I'm always, I'm always amazed
that we want to have 20 journalists visit the set and do a three hour interview while
you guys are filming. And I'm always like, but wait, isn't the movie the first priority?
And I'm always, I'm always like, absolutely. If we have time. Right. Okay. But when do
you think it'll be a good time? You'll have to check with the first AD. Okay. But is there
a window? I have no idea. So you're up for it? Yes. If we have time. Okay. Great. So
you've signed off. If we have time. Right. And then I love those days when there's no
time and you just walk by and you go, I'm sorry, there was no time. Will, what was the
thing I remember you were telling me once about kind of felt like the same thing. Somebody
said to you, Hey, we're going to do a golf tournament. Tiger Woods is going to come if
you're in and like you felt like some of them. Somebody had told Tiger that you were going
to play. And it was like, yes, yes. Somehow my dad, my dad became your dad. My dad somehow
became a middle man. He was asking me, he had some friend of his down in Newport Beach
who came to listen to him play music was like, Hey, so he's talked to Tiger Woods and Tiger
Woods is in for it. If you and Tiger Woods play golf together, and they'll raise a bunch
of money for charity for another twosome. So you're a foursome together in these two
whoever, you know, it goes to the highest bidder to play golf with Will Ferrell and
Tiger Woods and that he's already reached out to Tiger and it's good to go. And I was
like, well, dad, who is this friend? And how well do you know him? And he seems like a
good guy. And, and, and I go, well, you know, a lot of times they'll ask one party before
they ask the other. And so maybe I'll check, let me do some research. And for some reason,
some way I had some way to check to see if the Tiger camp had ever heard of this special
charity golf. Dr. Miller got involved.
Exactly. And it turns out, of course, Tiger, I said, dad, guess what, your buddy, Tiger
Woods, apparently his team has never heard anything of this. And your friends lying
to you. And he was like, how, how could that be? And I said, I know, that's the way the
world sometimes works.
What kind of music, what kind of music does he play?
He's, he's like a old time rock and roll.
Really?
Yeah.
Guitarist?
No, he's piano, sax, Hammond B3 organ.
Wow.
Wow.
Yeah.
Let's hear it for the Hammond B3.
That's amazing.
But yeah, that was my Tiger Woods story.
I just, I always loved that idea, though. I've thought about that so many times, the idea
of like, so many, when they go like, Hey, we want you to do this thing and so and so
and so and so we're doing it. And I always think back to that story of like, and I'll
go, well, why don't you make sure that so and so, and so it's, that's how I found myself
on an island with Marie Osmond and Kurt Cameron, you know?
Oh boy.
I got asked to play in another charity golf tournament by a friend, assuming that I was
going to play with the person I know, right, only to show up and be placed with four strangers.
And these guys were like in it to win it. And they're like, Hey, hope you're pretty
good.
Did you end up playing?
Yeah, I had to play this entire 18 holes with these four guys.
And they wanted to show you how good they were, right?
A hundred percent.
They're like, we hope you're good because we win this thing every year.
And you better be funny.
And you're, well, and I was, it was early SNL days. So they kind of had heard of me,
maybe not. And they're like, is that show still on the air? I didn't know people watched
it.
Yeah, it's sweet. He sounds sweet.
And then I literally, we, we were supposed to be a banquet afterwards. And I said, guys,
I'm going to go put my clubs in my car and I'll meet you back inside. Just move home.
And did we win? Yes, we won even despite you really, you didn't stick around for the trophy.
I didn't stick around.
That's strong.
Yeah.
So as we say goodbye to you and this, and this pandemic day, what, what, what do you
do the rest of the day?
Well, let's see. It's three in the afternoon. I'm going to go, I might go, I might go walk
our dogs, peanut and Cosmo, right?
So that's with a mask.
They'll be with a mask. I'm going to do a sweep through the house to find where all
the devices have been hidden because these kids are liars and thieves. And so I'll do
a sweep and, and then we'll start talking about, we, we start talking about what we're
making for dinner at around noon every day. So we'll have to start.
You got to build a day around that. And then it's sleep by eight.
Yeah.
Jason, have you done, or will, or Sean, well, not to your kids, but maybe to Scotty, have
you ever done a thing where you go, you're so had it with the devices? I've threatened
during this pandemic, a minimum of a hundred times to throw the devices in the pool.
Yes.
I said, this iPad is going in the bottom of the pool. If I see it on one more time.
Yeah.
Yeah. But then you quickly realize all that means is more work for you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
True. I did throw my, my 13 year old Matias' phone out the window.
You did.
Drive all of us driving. But it was a real slow crawl. And I, I picked a target area
where I knew we could find it later. And I just chucked it out the window and hit this
bush. And he literally was like, what is wrong with you? And he was so shocked that I actually
did it. And typical true to form we pulled over. He's like, I can't believe it. Burst
into tears, went back to, to look for the phone. He's like, I can't find it. I can't
find it. I walked right up to the bush. I'm like, here it is. It's right here. And so
that was a great little shot across the bow.
What you're capable of, right? Don't mess.
What I'm capable of, but it hasn't been much of a deterrent.
Yeah.
So.
Well, Will Ferrell, thank you for being here with us. We love you. You're our comedy
hero.
Thanks, you guys. So much fun.
Can't thank you enough. Very, very nice of you.
Oh, Willie.
Bye, guys.
Love you, buddy.
Bye, Will. Thank you.
Guys, that was so fun. How awesome is he?
He literally is one of my favorite people in the whole world. And I was a little starstruck
there for the first few minutes, but God, he puts you at ease. Doesn't he? What a nice
guy.
You were starstruck when I came on? Or when he was on?
Oh, sorry. Arnett.
Oh.
Oh, sorry.
When Arnett was, yeah.
Sure.
Good for you, dude. Good for you. Dude, I'm just like, I'm a regular guy. I'm very approachable.
Ferrell is the best, isn't he? I had the honor and pleasure and good fortune to, to work
on a couple of things with him. And they were some of my fondest memories because most of
the time we just screwed around.
And it's one of those guys who you go, oh, no wonder you're a superstar because everybody
wants to work with you because you're one of the nicest people in the business and incredibly
talented, right?
Yeah. He's got, he's got that, as you know, you guys know, he's got that sort of that
natural timing that you cannot learn. You just have it or you don't. And he has got
it in spades in ways that are, he's got that thing that makes him, he's so surprising too.
Yeah, always.
He just surprises you with stuff. It's just awesome.
Is there anything you guys learned about him that you didn't know?
Certainly about his dad.
Yeah. Isn't that interesting?
And all the sports journalism stuff that he was excited about early on, right?
It's crazy. I've met his dad a few times and I guess I didn't really realize his dad was
a musician. I don't know how.
For the righteous brothers. I mean, that's crazy.
Yeah.
I did not know he was on Saturday Night Live.
Oh, yeah.
You didn't know that.
Wow. Mind blown.
Yeah. No, you got to go back and look at some of those.
You hosted a couple of times while he was on the show, Sean.
I don't look behind me. I don't look behind me. I just look forward.
Oh, okay.
I don't know how that's applicable in this case.
Sean, I'm very proud of you that you got, you got Will Ferrell to say, yes, do you have
any sort of incriminating photos or does he owe you money or how did you do that?
I have a couple. No, I don't have anything. I can't think of anything.
Okay.
All right, guys.
Love you guys.
I love you.
Hey, guys, I just want to say, bang.
Smart.
What?
Smart.
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