StarTalk Radio - A Conversation With Seth Meyers
Episode Date: August 23, 2014Seth Meyers is hosting the Emmy® Awards Monday night, but you can listen to Neil deGrasse Tyson’s interview with the host of “Late Night” this Sunday.Read more and listen to the entire episode:... http://www.startalkradio.net/shows/a-conversation-with-seth-meyers Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to new episodes ad-free and a whole week early.
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Welcome to StarTalk, your place in the universe where science and pop culture collide.
StarTalk begins right now.
Welcome to StarTalk Radio. I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson, your host.
I'm an astrophysicist and director of New York City's Hayden Planetarium at the American Museum of Natural History.
Today, we'll be listening to my interview with Seth Meyers, former Weekend Update anchor for Saturday Night Live,
and host of NBC's Late Night with Seth Meyers.
He's also hosting this year's Emmy Awards ceremony.
In this first interview clip, we start with the basics, where he grew up, his experience in school,
and whether he has any interest in science. I was an inside child. I don't know what that means.
I didn't like going outside as much, so I liked doing things that were inside. I was a reader.
I liked reading a lot. That's like people have an inside voice and yes you were an inside child where'd you grow up I
grew up in southern New Hampshire yeah live free or die LFOD as we say yeah okay for me it's like
sitting in an air-conditioned room reading in the summer seems to be like you're beating the system
like it's not hot or sticky it's just very comfortable so yeah you know i was a big comic book fan i loved okay so that's the start of some geek
credential you might absolutely yes very much so just got back from comic-con actually which was
a delight did you have the rare childhood where you go off to college and your parents did not
throw away your comics they kept them they kept them yeah my parents are just very loving parents
or your house was big enough it It was big enough, yeah.
When you live in New Hampshire, you can have the space.
But I also think they want the house to be a museum of their children.
Rather than quickly putting the jacuzzi in your bedroom.
They had a great moment.
This is years ago now.
I guess it would be 1998 during the Maguire-Sosa home run chase.
My parents had this moment of thinking,
wait, Seth has all these baseball cards.
So they went through my baseball card collection,
and they found all these Maguire. And know, the idea had always been like, these
will pay for. And then realizing that, you know, everything was worth a dollar, a dollar twenty
five. And at that point they asked if they could throw away my baseball cards because they knew
they were worthless. But at least comic books still have stories. You can't throw them.
Right. So at the time, did you want to be the heroes or do you want to write them?
I wanted to be a cartoonist. That was one of the first things I wanted to be.
Early? Pre-college?
Pre-college, yeah.
So you have art you can draw?
A little bit. I feel like I'm very good at knowing when my skill level has peaked and when other people have started passing me by.
I was a very good artist.
Not many people are aware of this.
No, self-awareness is the greatest gift.
Oh my gosh, that's everything.
It is the greatest gift. Oh my gosh, that's everything. It is the greatest gift. You know, I eventually later in life had it on SNL when I realized I'm not as good of an actor as the other people I'm surrounded by.
I need to find a job where I just get to say, hi, I'm Seth Meyers, as opposed to, hello, I'm this character.
So that explains it.
That explains it.
You know, I gotta wait till Weekend Update to see Seth Meyers.
There are certain people when they put on wigs, it's transformative.
Fred Armisen is a perfect example.
Fred can pay hundreds of different kinds of people.
I put on a wig, I look like a guy in a wig.
I look like a guy who walked into a cheap wig store and put on a wig.
No one loses their awareness.
Yes, exactly.
I had a cartoonist teacher once a week after school.
My mom would drive me to this guy who was a professional artist.
Loving parents once again.
Loving parents once again.
Most kids are dragged to piano lessons and you get a cartoonist teacher.
I got a cartoonist teacher, and we would go and draw, and it was really fun, and I liked it a great deal.
But then I just eventually realized, oh, I'm not that good at it.
But that was a thing I wanted to do at a really young age.
Well, that's the great filtering that should go on in everyone's life.
Yes.
Right.
You do it, and I like it still, but I'm not good at it.
Let me still keep finding other things.
Yeah.
But don't tell me you didn't want to be one of the superheroes.
Oh, I did.
That's a guy thing, right?
I did.
I don't have a tattoo, but had I gotten one,
I thought about this a lot when I was in high school,
I would have gotten the Flash logo.
The Flash.
Really?
The lightning bolt.
That was the one I always wanted.
Okay.
Did you know that Flash has atmospheric separators in front of him
so that he doesn't burn up going through the atmosphere?
That's great.
I will say I love the Flash so much because I remember at a very young age,
my dad told me the thing about how he keeps his costume in his ring,
which I just thought was the greatest thing, that you could pop out.
That I didn't know.
Yeah, so he pops it out there and just gets into it really fast.
That's because he carries it with him.
Yes, so he's got sort of a...
And that was another thing I wanted when I was younger, a Flash ring.
Okay.
But the problem with Flash comics is he constantly, more than any other hero,
has to be having thought bubbles explaining what he's doing
because he's moving so fast he can never be in conversation.
With anybody.
Right.
You know, there's a new Flash show, I think on CW, coming out this year.
And it looks good.
I saw the trailer, but that is the problem they have to figure out.
There's never any banter
with the Flash.
Maybe they don't know that yet.
It's like when they did
Border World.
Yeah.
Do you realize you're on
the border the whole movie?
Right.
Do people really think
this through?
Yeah.
Okay, so you did comics
and the birth of
Geek Credentials.
Yeah.
Were there any teachers
that had singular influence on you?
The teachers that influenced me the most were always sort of English teachers.
I had a lot of great teachers who embraced the idea of reading,
and reading books that weren't the assigned books,
but just the idea of how important that was.
You have awesome sentence composition, I want to add to this.
That's great.
I think that I've learned just from having a talk show.
You really have to learn sentence composition.
No, just sentences that can be interestingly embedded in themselves
with humor and insight and entertainment value.
The biggest problem I had in high school was I always tested really well,
but I wasn't a great student.
And science was something where I was very frustrated by it at a very young age to the
point where you didn't like it as a field or you just said no i'm just not good at it in school
well i like do people have that experience and then they hate science the whole rest of their
life i still really love math because math was i felt like i could hear the clicking of right
answers where in science i always felt like it was a puzzle I couldn't quite finish.
Oh, very insightful.
Yeah.
You know why in science, on the frontier, you don't know where you're walking, what you might
step in. You have no idea. And so you're just groping in the dark until maybe there's a light
that appears. Whereas math, you're right, you can still grope in the dark on the frontier of math,
but math as an enterprise, yeah, they're clicking gears there. Oh, for sure.
And I like answers. I want answers. If I'm going to do homework, I want answers.
You want answers? I want the truth. So you went to Northwestern?
I did.
Very cool. But there's no comedy major there, right?
No, I had a radio TV film major. I worked in a video store in high school. That was all my sort tv film major i worked in a video store in high
school that was all my sort of film education store um yeah that's the thing back in the day
you used to take your wagon there and then if you got past the indians you'd rent if something was
out it's so amazing back in the day well i remember just new releases at the video store
they just you would go for weeks and it would just be out. The movie you want to be, you'd have to drive to a video store.
It'd be out and then you'd just drive home without a movie. But I went to film school and the thing
that pushed me away from the production side of film is just how scientific filmmaking is. You
know, writing, you can sort of always do it your own pace. You can always do in your own space.
There's sort of no rules when you're writing. I mean, ultimately, as you get
more professional, you find rules
and whatnot. Plus, all the parts are in front of you.
There's a dictionary, there's your mind, there's the
paper. There's a blank page.
Whereas lighting is lighting.
You can't decide, oh, I'll light it later.
You have to light it now.
And light it in a particular way. And so I just
discovered how
much patience and knowledge you needed to be
a filmmaker. Whereas I sort of thought, oh, maybe I'll try to focus on writing more and then let
smarter people than myself. So that was allowed in that major. Yeah. Yeah. There was a sort of
sub-major for writing and I found my way to that. Welcome back to StarTalk Radio.
I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson.
In this show, we're featuring my interview with Seth Meyers.
In this next clip, Seth and I talk about what first brought him to comedy
and how that led to his 12-year run on Saturday Night Live.
We actually had superlatives in our high school yearbook.
There was a class clown.
There was another one called best sense of humor.
I got best sense of humor.
Someone else got class clown.
And I realized the difference is the class clown would stand up in the front of the class and just clown
around for everyone to laugh at.
And disrupt everything.
The best sense of humor sits in the back of the class and sort of says something snidely
about the class clown.
So they split the category.
They split it up, yeah.
It's like splitting best director, best picture.
Exactly. It was a very progressive high school to think that we needed to reward the two different kinds of humor. And then my freshman year at Northwestern, I saw
the improv troupe performed at New Student Week. The improv troupe at Northwestern is called Meow.
It's very famous. And I instantly knew that's what I want to do more than everything. But I auditioned
for it three times without getting in. You need that story. Otherwise, you have people who said
you're not going to make it. Absolutely. The Jordan. You need the Michael Jordan. You need that story, otherwise. Yes. You have people who said, you're not going to make it.
Absolutely.
The Jordan.
You need the Michael Jordan.
You didn't make the high school basketball team.
Right, right.
But I got in my senior year,
and I started going up to Chicago
to study improv, like take classes.
Yeah, okay.
And so I embraced that my senior year.
Quite the legacy of the city.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Absolutely.
I was lucky that my mother was a theater major.
My father was an engineering major at Northwestern.
They both went to Northwestern.
You were academic Brad.
Pretty much.
You had free tuition.
No, I definitely did not have free tuition, as I was often reminded by my father.
But I mean, I had free enough and then my parents paid for it.
So SNL, I read, holy cow, you debuted the first live show after September 11th.
Yeah, it was crazy.
If I remember, that was opened by Giuliani?
Giuliani and Paul Simon.
Oh, and that was important.
You know, you need the genetic right to the city and to the show.
Of the many things that Lorne is great at.
Lorne Michaels.
Lorne Michaels.
One of the things he's best at is whenever the show has to be important, which Lorne is loathe for the show to be important.
He always wants to remind you we're an entertainment show. Our job is to make people laugh. When people
try to get too self-important in their writing, he always tells you to back off. But he does know
there are moments where the show has to play this role of importance. By the way, I moved to New York
August 20th. It's crazy enough that I'm moving here just to be on SNL and living my dream.
9-11 happens. We don't even know if we're going to do the show there's all this talk about it and your first time you're on SNL it's crazy enough just if it's your first time with all this
other stuff on top of it um I will say no one remembers it as my first show that's no the
history you know what I remember that night that kid kid was one line. But yeah, Giuliani was on stage with Lorne.
They threw to Paul Simon, he played the boxer.
And then they came back and it was filled with first responders on stage.
Yeah, the firemen and everything, yeah.
And this seems, if it was in a movie, you would think it was a little too on the nose.
But I was getting ready for my last SNL.
I went 12 and a half years on the show, which is a very long time. And it was this Saturday morning but i was getting ready for my last snl 12 and a half years
on the show which is a very long time and it was this saturday morning and i was getting ready to
leave my apartment and my wife had the radio on and paul simons the boxer played and uh i like
started shaking i was like i can't believe this is a perfect bookend off my run there also a title
yes exactly yeah i got the paul simon thing thank you i'm glad you got it yeah title of their albums. Yes, exactly. I'm tying it together.
I got the Paul Simon thing.
Thank you.
I'm glad you got it.
I have a bit of trivia for them, for you.
Okay.
Okay?
Yeah.
There is a lyric in one of their songs,
April She Will.
Okay.
Okay?
You might not remember the song.
If you heard it, you'll get it. But starting with April,
he analogizes the name of the month of each month
with his sequence of girlfriends oh wow okay april she will she you start out happy but then makes
you sad when it rains or something all right and may she'll okay april may june let's go through
there is a lyric in that song that is a pre-global warming lyric. Really? Yes. You ready? Yeah. Okay.
The autumn winds blow chilly and cold.
September, I'll remember.
Wow.
It's like, no.
No one is thinking September is autumn winds blowing chilly and cold.
Yeah.
That is a long gone concept.
And that lyric could not have been written today.
Yeah.
That's just a little bit of pre-Global Warming.
You know, that's really one of the worst things about Global Warming is how it's dating songs.
I think people are really upset.
So, not to get sentimental, but were you sad to leave SNL to get your next job?
I was really sad.
And that was one of the reasons why I came back and did the first half of this last season was I wasn't emotionally ready to leave.
With that said, couldn't have had a better situation moving all of, you know, nine floors as far as offices go and working on the same floor.
Oh, right.
Yeah, yeah.
It's just 30 Rock.
Yeah, I'm still at 30 Rock.
Yeah, yeah.
And the great thing was the part of SNL that I was so worried I was going to miss.
You can say it.
You didn't have to move to L.A.
Say it.
Oh, I did not have to move to L.A.
That was a real prerequisite of this job.
I did not.
I can't.
You know, my brother loves L.A. so much.
My wife loves L.A.
And it's just not for me.
I'm convinced that there'd be no such thing as stand-up comics if there were an L.A. and New York to compare with one another.
Absolutely.
It's like the starter kit.
Airplanes and two cities on the coast.
If you can't get past that.
Airports.
Yeah, security at airports.
Yeah, that's the starter kit.
That's the starter kit.
If you can't make somebody laugh talking about the differences
between L.A. and New York, get out of the business.
Get out.
But, yeah, so it's been great, but it's nice.
You know, the thing I was worried about missing was working with the writing staff.
And, of course, the upside of my new show is I have a writing staff there.
And so you just find a new family.
So you became head writer at SNL.
How much of a show does a head writer write?
Some weeks you write a lot of it just because you have a hot week.
But you're just competing with all the other writers.
Where the head writer job sort of starts.
Competing in a happy way.
You just want the best stuff to come out.
You're writing.
And, you know,
some weeks you'll write two or three things
and if you have a hot week,
maybe all of them go to dress rehearsal.
But head writer definitely does not mean best writer.
Head writer sort of means on Wednesday
after you read everything that everybody's written,
there's sort of holes in the show.
Oftentimes the hole will be a monologue
or the hole will be we don't have anything political
to open the show.
And the job as head writer is to facilitate and to just make sure those things get done.
And the other thing is after we do that.
So it's a leadership role.
It's just a leadership role.
Yeah, you're bridging the gap between Lorne Michaels and the writing staff.
And is it true you wrote most of the Sarah Palin bits?
I did.
That is hilarious.
I did. I was really lucky. I mean,
when you write anything for someone like Tina Fey, the amount she adds to it, like on the floor,
she comes up with better jokes than the ones you have. The 2008 elections was such an exciting time
to work on the show. The entire writing staff was chipping in, but those were fun to write.
So we heard rumored that the Sarah Palin bits were just pulled out a whole cloth that you can actually go
to speeches and and comments she's made is that pure comedy unto itself well there were I think
we did six sketches with her and the second one was right after she did that famous Katie Couric
interview and we had sort of written a script with jokes and whatnot. And I remember
Tina on that week, that one specifically said, I think we should just transcribe it and just do it
exactly what she said. So there was a huge chunk of that sketch that was just transcription. And I
think in the best way of when you're sort of writing any sort of political writing, and I
feel like this is something that Colbert and The Daily Show
and John Oliver now do really well,
is they sort of use the subject's momentum against them.
It's like judo as opposed to karate.
And I think when you do that, it seems very fair,
and I think it makes the point better than when you do something
that could be perceived as sort of an ad hominem attack on someone.
I'd never thought about it, but that's exactly what's going on there.
And like you said, especially the Daily Show will get clips
and you'll play the clip.
Yeah.
And there it is.
And then you think the clip is out of context
and then they play more of that same clip.
Right.
No, you had it right what that meaning was.
You know, if you go back 10, 15 years,
you are watching someone say like,
this person's an idiot.
And without sort of that proof,
I think people then think it's just the political position
of the person who's saying that.
So Sarah Palin was really fun.
Although it went the other way as well, because I remember one of the things we wrote and one of the last ones was her turning to another camera and saying, I'm going rogue.
And then that was the title of her book.
So we borrowed from each other.
So do you have a moral, cultural responsibility?
so do you have a moral cultural responsibility i really think your first responsibility when you're doing this is remembering that you're entertainers on saturday we're talking about
you know 11 30 at night even more now when you're doing weeknight shows at 12 30 you have to
remember like what are people tuning in for what is your responsibility and we want to have a show
that's both smart and silly and but number one i want to laugh i guess yeah i want to have a show that's both smart and silly. But number one, I want to laugh, I guess. Yeah, I want to make people laugh.
Like, that's what I'm there for.
But as far as any time I feel like you can call out people in power,
those elected officials who have this responsibility to us,
any time you can sort of call them out for not fulfilling that responsibility,
that's a fun thing to do.
It's fun and good and could have a purpose.
Yes.
Achieve a goal.
Yes.
But in a really good way, Lorne
Michaels constantly reminds us, you know,
this is you, we're entertainers. Achieve
your goals in your own time.
Don't let it get too much to your head.
Otherwise you'll take yourself to it. Absolutely.
You can't do comedy. You'll overrate your own power. Yes.
You absolutely will overrate it.
Because I do feel like sometimes
the chemistry of when you're influencing people
and when by trying to influence them you you're pushing them the other way.
Like that, we'll never really know.
Welcome back to StarTalk Radio.
I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson.
We've been featuring my interview with Seth Meyers.
And in this next clip, we talk about his new job, hosting Late Night with Seth Meyers on NBC.
So I've been a guest on your show. You've been a guest.
You were great.
You played along.
You talked to Pluto.
I talked to you. You brought Pluto in. Oh, a guest. You were great. You played along. You talked to Pluto. I talked to...
You brought Pluto in.
Oh, my gosh.
It was great.
That was a great bit.
And I got to tell you my three favorite, your Venn diagrams.
Thank you.
Oh, my gosh.
And every time I see a Venn diagram of any kind, I say, that is so brilliant and so simple.
Yes.
Yet somebody had to invent it.
Some dude named Venn, you know?
I mean, just...
Right. I want, in my life, to invent it. Some dude named Ven, you know? I mean, just... Right.
I want, in my life, to invent something that simple.
Yeah.
And I don't know what that takes.
That is the definition, we were talking about math earlier, of the sound of a click.
Also, I've always found, and I don't know if you've found this as well,
but a lot of my best ideas happen immediately.
This is the way I've always felt about sketch
writing yeah a thing i've always said to writers too is good comedy ideas should write easy they
should write downhill whereas if you have an idea and you've been working on it for eight ten hours
it might not be a good idea because there's something about comedy that if the audience
can tell if it's tortured writing if if it's over-constructed.
That's the word, over-constructed.
Yes.
Over-built.
And Venn diagrams is a perfect example of it. I bet one day he thought of it so fast.
And any scientist as a math person, you have the weekend numbers.
Yes.
Is that going strong?
That's going strong, too.
Still in the rotation.
In the rotation.
It hasn't been subbed out.
No.
Well, you have to generate
so many of these desk pieces
the top ten list on David Letterman
is the Venn diagrams of late night
desk pieces the fact that they've
been doing it every night
for all these years and the people who tune in just
for that just for that so you try
to come up with something that eventually
we want to say and now it's time for Venn
diagrams and have everybody applaud with excitement knowing, oh, I like Venn diagrams.
Right, right.
And I'd say like the weekend numbers, I don't think there's enough quantization of life.
We shouldn't have too much of it, but we need more than what we do have.
People think that life is just something that, oh, that feels good or it's this or it's that,
but you can measure that.
You can count that.
You can know how big that is well i am a sports fan and i think one of the things i liked most about
sports even as a kid is all the statistics of sports and now there's been this explosion in
recent years of even deeper statistics specifically in baseball because baseball you have the time to
talk about it between exactly so much. You have so much time.
The reality is I watch less baseball than I read about it later.
And I agree.
I think there's something very nice and very comforting about being able to quantify things. I have a whole category of sports tweets that I put out.
And some of them are baseball.
So here's one.
Let me show you.
I think if you get hit by a pitch on ball four, you should go to second base.
That's great.
How's that?
Absolutely, because there has to be a punishment.
Yeah, you hit by pitch, you get first base.
Ball four, you get first base.
You get hit by a pitch on ball four, you go to second base.
Great, I sign off.
Okay, now in basketball.
Yes.
If you have a three-point line, because you're rewarded for being far away,
I think a slam dunk should be one point.
Okay, I'd like that too, but I'm not going to sign off on it.
Okay. Because we have to remember Okay. I like that, too. But I'm not going to sign off on it. Okay.
Because we have to remember this is entertainment.
Yes, okay.
So you don't want to do anything that makes less dunks.
You don't want to make dunks less rewarding.
Less rewarding or have fewer of them.
Yes, exactly.
Okay, all right.
We'll give you that.
But I'm fully on the ball for it, then.
And I'm a big fan of Back in My Day.
I think about that all the time.
Yes.
When I give talks, I try to fold in something that pokes fun at
recent past. Yeah. And I have kids. Do you have kids? No, just married. Yeah. Okay.
Kids know just my wife. I don't know what that means. Is that a joke or is it a... I'm just
saying that she wants them so much that it's only because we're just married that I don't have them
yet. Oh, gotcha. So the kids, you get to be in the mind of someone who takes everything for granted that you saw discovered.
Yes.
Right.
There's a whole other realm of material waiting for you to tap.
Yeah.
And that happens, I just want to tell you.
So can you imagine anything such as a science of comedy or mathematics of comedy?
Is there?
Yeah, I think.
Could it be so formulaic that it's no longer funny?
Well, there's this really
good book called i want to say i'm dying up here and it was about the comedy store in la
and the it's a great title yes and it's a sort of i want to say the late 70s but it's leno and
letterman and one of the comedians in the books he believed he'd figured out the science of comedy
and of course he had like anyone who thinks they've gotten it down to ones and zeros has lost what makes comedy great. With that said,
the other head writer job is, you know, when you rewrite sketches, just by trial and error,
you can sort of say, hey, as somebody who's seen 500 sketches, I will just tell you that they will.
So you're invoking a life experience force rather than a mathematical force.
Yes, but I do think there's a little bit of, you know, as with experimentation and finding results
and sort of tracking them, you know, but they're not absolute rules. So your life experience gives
you insight as to whether somebody's idea, somebody's skit, somebody's joke might fail.
And let's assume you're right most of the time. Is there anything that's fixable about it? Or you
just pour it out and start a new glass? No, fix it you know an example of something i've sort of
learned at snl which i think is different because this can work in other comedy shows and and people
pull it off with great aplomb but at snl i always found like when people are playing characters if
the character knows they're a loser it's's less fun. Whereas if the character is just loving their life.
A good example for me is Kristen Wiig's Target Lady.
Had no idea she was a weirdo.
She was so happy with who she was.
The audience knew she was a weirdo.
Whereas I think if you have the character be sad about who they are,
the audience will also feel sad.
Okay.
Especially with live television and that live studio audience.
The audience has empathy for the characters, so you try very hard to make
sure that they are sort of upbeat.
Welcome back to StarTalk Radio.
I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson.
Seth Meyers was the keynote speaker at the always entertaining
White House Correspondents Association dinner in 2011.
Let's hear what he had to say about that experience.
When I stood at the podium, you realize that the podium is sized for the president.
And the president is taller than I am.
And I felt like a little kid.
And there's a thing you can pull out, like sort of a three-inch step.
So if you watch it, I actually look a little taller than the president.
Because he spoke, and then he came, and somebody pulled my thing out, and I stood.
So this is the speaker's version of a phone book absolutely yes at least i didn't have
to walk up with a phone book and then everybody saw me for younger listeners a phone book is how
you used to get back in the day back in the day back in the day and let me say it used to be
the president went second at the white house correspondence dinner obama flipped it so obama gets to open he's the president of the united states he murders he murders because he's the
president and you have to follow the president he had great timing in there he has a stand-up
timing yeah a stand-up style yeah making matters worse he doesn't end with a joke he ends with a
spare thought for the troops like he brings the room
all the way down, he ices the room
and then you ladies and gentlemen
Seth Meyers
he's a killer
but he's great
was it your year when he said
there's all this talk about my birth certificate
but we did some research
and we produced something better than that
we have my birth video.
The Lion King.
The Lion King.
It was great.
And again, I'm sitting there thinking, why do I have to follow?
Because again, he's also the president.
If you're good and he's good, the tiebreaker is who's the president.
And the crazy thing about the year I did it was the next day he announced Steel Team 6 had killed Bin Laden.
I spent three weeks leading up to that.
All I did was think about that performance.
I really used 100% of my brain.
I went full Lucy.
Full Lucy.
I used all 100%.
And I couldn't make dinner plans.
And here he is, outstanding, working on the Bin Laden thing.
Yeah, and perfect timing.
So, some comedy is just fun and entertaining but other comedy is politically barbed sure right you've led that parade here
oh yeah I don't know if I've led it but I think it's been a good era of people who've been doing
it does it influence politics or does it reflect it and is it just the scenery along the way to
where it's going inevitably?
Well, I think to some degree.
You know, everyone sort of said after the 2008 election that a lot of the comedy shows had a big influence on it.
That was claimed, huh?
That was claimed.
But then, of course, in 2004,
I think those comedy shows were sort of making the same points
and didn't have the same influence.
So, you know, we'll see as time goes forward.
I think to some degree when you look at 2008,
I think a lot of comedians, Asadel included,
were pointing out the shortcomings of a candidate like Sarah Palin.
But the reality is, I do think most Americans
would have come to that conclusion on their own time.
Or it would not have mattered to them and they'd still vote for her.
Right. I mean, that's, yeah, I don't know who the fence people were
that in the end were thanks.
Why are there more liberal comedians than conservative comedians? Is that just an illusion that I have? I think it's real. No, I think you're right. I think the best comedy
comes from going after the favorite as opposed to going after the underdog. I feel like a lot of
conservative politics, they seem to be piling on the underdog. I don't know, it's less fun for me
for people that aren't going after sort of the head of the dragon. I got you. And I can take a
lot of conservatives right now would say that the comedians don't go after Obama enough. But I think
there is a lot of examples of that of comedians who do. But also, you know, liberal comedians
aren't going to go after Obama for not being conservative enough, they're going to go after
him for not being liberal enough. You know, my disappointmentians aren't going to go after Obama for not being conservative enough. They're going to go after him for not being liberal enough.
You know, my disappointment with President Obama has been that he's more conservative than I thought he would be.
Not because he wears high-waisted jeans.
Look, that's great.
When he does something like that, when he gives us a little nibble, a little something we can make a joke about.
So, you're doing the Emmys this year.
Yes.
I'm not going to see you this year.
No, you're not going?
No, because cosmos yes was
nominated for 12 12 are they all it's in the documentary category gotcha and you're night
you don't announce the documentary writers at snl i've heard referred to the creative arts
emmys as the ponytail enemies because there are so many sound engineers and like there's a lot
of guys with ponytails at the creative arts the creative arts emmys though i have a very special
place in my heart because the only time i won an Emmy was for writing song lyrics.
And that was at the Creative Arts Emmys.
Okay.
It feels a little bit less than the Emmys, I'm not gonna lie.
Than the regular Emmys.
Than the regular Emmys.
Unless you win.
Because the Emmy's the same.
And when you're holding that Emmy, you don't care which Emmy's it is.
If you're holding an Emmy, everything is outstanding.
Boarding an airplane with an Emmy,
everybody's really excited to see it.
If you've been waiting your whole life to see a TSA
person smile, win an Emmy.
Take it in an airplane. Okay, my one encounter with a
TSA person with a completely odd thing,
I brought a meteorite, a very
heavy, dense meteorite, through
security. And this is an opaque
object in the x-ray. Right.
And they say, what is in there?
And I kept thinking, how am I going to play this?
Oh, it's just a meteorite.
I just had to be really just cool, you know, don't you get these all the time?
And so I showed it to them and they all gathered around and touched it and so it was good. We're back on StarTalk Radio.
I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson.
In this final part of my interview with Seth Meyers,
we talk about his animated series, The Awesomes,
which is streamed on Hulu.
My producer at Late Night,
Mike Shoemaker and I, who used to be a producer
at SNL, we had this idea for a superhero
show back in 2006,
and it kicked around forever.
It was in development at
SyFy, MTV,
wrong guy. That's a quantifiable.
Wrong guy to use it hyperbole with.
Yeah, forever.
I got forever.
But Hulu's been a great place for it.
And the animation world is such a different world
because you do have to sort of lock your idea in
months before you see the finished product.
Whereas everything else I've ever done...
You could change it an hour earlier.
Absolutely.
You can change it on the fly.
And we work with a great...
Bento Box is this great animation company, and they're very patient with us, but every
now and then somebody has to call us and say, this cannot happen.
Bento Box.
I guess they're in Japan.
They're not, actually.
They're in L.A.
Faux Japan.
Absolutely.
So you have a superpower.
Yeah.
You can stop time.
Yes.
For 10 seconds.
Yes. But it kills me slowly it
kills me so they i have to be very limited kills you so stopping the time puts so much pressure on
my brain the power how much does it kill you uh it starts to have nosebleeds and i've been told
by my doctor on the show to be very careful about using it because they don't quite know they haven't
been able to scientifically test it it's too much stress on you too much stress wow and using the stopping time on the show which is based on
me personally i'm an overthinker so i need to live in a world where i can't procrastinate which i
live in now with late night which i lived in with snl if given extra time i just spin out and
overthink so every time this character proc stops time that you think this is that you're yes that's the
character on the doctor is a shortening of professor doctor so you feel free to use that
okay yeah oh well no i don't know not into titles gotcha if title implies that you should believe
me because of my title rather than for how good of an argument i offered you oh it's very good
yeah i mean i don't really use the title too one of my favorite things is when i meet somebody
every now and then they ask if I have a business card.
It's like, I'm a late night.
Why would I have a business card?
So it hasn't, what's the first? Season one was last year.
I missed it.
I'm sorry.
No worries.
No worries.
And then August 4th was the premiere of season two.
Okay.
Well, it's right there.
Yes, it's right in Hulu, and hopefully we're hoping people go back and watch.
It's also, you know, because we came from comic books,
we tried to do an animated show where it does tell one story.
And you do have to watch the previous episode to be able to follow the plot.
So this is your excuse for showing up at Comic-Con.
Yes, that was why I went.
They've been cutting down on the rules.
There have been some shows.
Oh, my God.
And so, look, there's a great audience.
Let's just go.
They know you don't have any comics and you don't have any soup or anything.
No.
So you don't belong.
There's so many shows that don't belong at Comic-Con.
Yes, completely.
Oh, my gosh.
I mean, the good news is it doesn't seem like the populace is that upset about it.
But when you have a real show that should be in Comic-Con, you do get a little upset.
With your hall placement.
Yeah, Cosmos was featured at Comic-Con because we had animations within each episode.
Cosmos fits into Comic-Con.
Whether you had animation or not, that fits.
Well, they have my peeps. I mean, the whole Geekosphere
is...
And you were in a couple of movies.
No, just I think literally a couple.
A couple. Two movies.
A couple equals two.
Forgive me, I've seen these movies you were in,
but I don't remember you.
Is that a good thing or a bad thing?
Did you blend in?
Were you such a good actor? No. I think I have't remember you. Okay, great. Is that a good thing or a bad thing? I think it's a good thing. Did you blend in? It's a good thing.
Were you such a good actor?
No.
I think I have a few lines.
It's a very good thing that I have my own talk show
and don't have to be in movies anymore.
My most science-y movie,
Journey to the Center of the Earth.
The Jules Verne story.
Yes.
Journey to the Center of the Earth.
And I had two scenes.
I was a scientist.
You were a scientist.
I was Dean Alan Kitsons was my name
and I have a trading card, which is hilarious because they did 3D trading cards.
But I'm in no action scenes.
So my trading card is just a headshot.
So wait a minute.
So in your animated life, you were a professor.
Yes.
And in Journey to the Center of the Earth, you were an academic professor.
There is something there.
There is something there.
Yeah.
But I had two scenes.
The first scene was right in the beginning of the movie.
And I basically said to, I'm paraphrasing here,
but I said to Brendan Fraser,
you can't go to the center of the earth.
And then I had a scene at the end of the movie
where I basically said, what, huh?
So those were my two scenes.
Wait, do that again.
Let me hear that again.
What, huh?
You were where?
Fully in the center?
No, actually, I'm disappointed that that's the best they scripted for you
in response to someone going to the center.
I know, I know.
Just a guttural utterance.
Yeah, that was about it.
But I will say it was 3D, and it was using a new 3D technology at the time.
And the first scene, the director said,
if there's anything you can think
of to do you know just because it's 3d and so the first thing i did because basically i was
measuring brendan frazier's office because he was about to lose his job in the end he didn't because
of the center of the earth okay okay but the first thing give you tenure yeah the first 3d moment in
the film is me turning the tape measure to camera and then snapping it back.
Okay, all right.
There's got to be something.
Yeah, something that people don't do in real life.
And then we read up on this that in Korea, the movie was in 4D.
Was it really?
Yes.
Oh, my goodness.
Yes, so they put in other effects.
Wow.
Sound, smells, water spray.
And so your other senses are now, we're engaging it.
So they, just so you know.
They did a sequel a few, like five years later with The Rock.
You mean Dwayne Johnson?
Dwayne, Dwayne The Rock Johnson.
And I instantly texted the director,
who I hadn't spoken to for five years,
and I just wrote, I am so excited we're doing another one.
This is so great.
I can't wait to see you
they did not pick up my sarcasm because
he takes it back oh I don't know if your
character is gonna be back in the second
one you've been listening to StarTalk
radio we're brought to you in part by a
grant from the Sloan Foundation.
I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson, as always, compelling you to keep looking up.