That Was Us - Isaac Aptaker & Elizabeth Berger and Us | Showrunners of This Is Us

Episode Date: February 18, 2025

Get excited because This is Us Co-Showrunners Isaac Aptaker and Elizabeth Berger join us to share their experience leading the beloved series for all six seasons. They take us behind the scenes of the...ir creative process, from how episodes were assigned to writers to their synergy with creator Dan Fogelman. We also dive into the art of bringing humanity to every episode, the challenge of handling actor improvisations, and the debate over incorporating COVID into the show. Plus, they reveal which storyline was the toughest to write and why small, deeply personal stories can impact audiences the most. That Was Us is produced by Rabbit Grin Productions. Music by Taylor Goldsmith and Griffin Goldsmith. Follow That Was Us on YouTube, Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, Threads, and X! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Wendy's most important deal of the day has a fresh lineup. Pick any two breakfast items for $4. New four-piece French toast sticks, bacon or sausage wrap, biscuit or English muffin sandwiches, small hot coffee, and more. Limited time only at participating Wendy's Taxes Extra. Welcome back to the That Was Us podcast. You, you, you. It's a very exciting day. A very special episode.
Starting point is 00:00:32 We have our, our shepherds. Yeah. Our guides. The creators of our world. Yeah. The showrunners of our show. Yes. Elizabeth Berger and Isaac Apptaker with us tonight.
Starting point is 00:00:45 I and E! in the house! Hi, guys! What up, gang? How are you? We're great. We're happy to be here. We're very happy to be here. It just feels so cozy.
Starting point is 00:00:54 It feels so nice. We're so happy to have you. I just found out. As we were finishing the show in 2022, were you pregnant in 2022? Were you just had the baby in 2021? I had my son halfway through season three. Through season three? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:01:10 Okay. So he's how old he? Now he's five. He's five. And then you just, you have a one year old. And a three-year-old in the middle. That's the one I'm talking about. The three-year-old is the one that you're at the end of the shoot.
Starting point is 00:01:21 Everybody's having babies. I'm getting lapped. I know. I was like the only person that had babies. It was me and Justin. because he had his older daughter or whatnot. Now, this is a question I have for both of you right now. Sure.
Starting point is 00:01:32 Because you both have three, just like Rebecca on the show. Is it an incremental step up from two, or is it an exponential step up from two? You have more experience. I'm going to... Nothing was harder than one to two. One to two was the biggest one. It was also, it was like my son was 21 months old. We had been living through a pandemic.
Starting point is 00:01:56 Yeah. We were very isolated. By the time she was born, my daughter, we were running on empty, I would say. My son was welcomed into a much more, my third child. Second son. Second son. It's very confusing. He was welcomed into a much more normal world where we had community and friends.
Starting point is 00:02:13 And I think that made the biggest difference. But I'm curious what you. Yeah. I mean, I'm still like in the beginning phase with just an eight week old. But it does, you're right. It's my oldest was born during the pandemic. and Ozzy was born like at the end of our show or I guess like the end of that year
Starting point is 00:02:31 that the show ended and he was born into a slightly more normal world and now she is just like... Yeah, it's like you're right the community, the like the camaraderie that you have with like your friends and I feel like my friends are all having their second kids now
Starting point is 00:02:48 so it's nice to at least like be able to go through that with people. It's huge you're like oh this is what it's supposed to be like you have a baby, people come visit, you go places, you sit in the park with your friends. Like, yeah, we don't have that for a very long time. Yeah. So I think, yeah, that's hugely different. And was all of this life change where you kept injecting so many children into this TV show?
Starting point is 00:03:13 And every turn, there's a new baby in this. What's weird, though, like when we started the show, like none of us, like, including Dan, had kids. So we were like the three of us were kind of like doing this thing. Like a lot of the writers did, and that was great. But we would be like kind of guessing. at what it was like and now you watch the show and now like I have a 10-month-old
Starting point is 00:03:29 at home I'm like oh like that's what I was writing about we did pretty good job and we were guessing what it was like to be parents totally totally I think we did okay guys
Starting point is 00:03:40 we did pretty well I was thinking and rewatching the show recently I was like wow this is very interesting we all we acted this we wrote this without really doing it
Starting point is 00:03:49 and I think we did pretty good I was like this is what it feels like it's a good show For everybody who loves This Is Us, you've already met Dan Fogelman on our podcast, but Isaac and Elizabeth are really highly, highly responsible for why you love this show. Yeah, the world that was created. The world that was created. And they were our showrunners.
Starting point is 00:04:16 And I can describe it, but I bet you could describe it better for anyone listening who maybe doesn't understand maybe what a showrunner is, including myself. What's a showrunner? What does a showrunner do and could I do it? Sure, I mean, if you think of like a TV show as a small company with probably 200 people on This Is Us, showrunner's kind of responsible for kind of running the thing and keeping it all moving. And so it's like you're running the writer's room. You're keeping the scripts on track and the stories on track. You're casting.
Starting point is 00:04:42 You're overseeing edits. You're hiring people. You're sort of just keeping everything going, answering to the studio and network every day. Yeah. Yeah, just kind of keeping the machine afloat. How big was the staff for This Is Us, the writers? It was a pretty healthy staff over, like, 15. By the end, it was, yeah.
Starting point is 00:04:59 It was big. Yeah, maybe it would vary, but I think we were always at least 12, I would say. And so the overarching, arching story of the show gets broken as a group, discussed as a group. And then. You mean like each season? Yeah. That's right. Each season.
Starting point is 00:05:16 Yes. And then individual episodes get assigned to individual writers or teams of writers. That is totally accurate. I mean, what was amazing about what Dan did is Dan, we had our pilot. Dan came in and he had pretty much had the idea for episodes two and three, I would say, in his head, which was incredible. But then what we all did very early on those first weeks is we sort of mapped out big picture, the giant moves of the series. I mean, we started with season one, and then we were all so lucky, as you guys know, we got our pickup pretty early for the next two seasons. And then we were doing so well that we were.
Starting point is 00:05:53 We kind of knew sort of big picture what the whole series looked like and how long it was going to be. So those big moves of like, you know, when do you find out how Jack died? When do you find out this? You know, we worked all of that out pretty early. Yeah, you guys would come in the room and see, like, there were just index cards everywhere. It was like very beautiful mind, just like every surface covered in writing. And as the show got more complicated, our coordinators had to keep track of like, wait, we said, okay, we said Randall's birthday was here and he was at that. He had a party there, so we have to honor that.
Starting point is 00:06:24 Sure. It got so... If I can evoke an image, the way in the 80s and 90s, you might have walked into a child's bedroom and there was wallpaper on the walls. And remember how wallpaper used to have borders at the top? Yeah. And there would be like dancing bears all the way around the top of the child's room or something. You walk into the writer's room, and around the top of the room,
Starting point is 00:06:42 it looked like they were chasing a murder suspect. Yep. It was the timeline. The timeline of the show. There was yarn and arrows and post of notes. I don't know if you guys know the story. So obviously the first season and a half, we're trying to keep a secret of Jack's death and how he died. And so we had all over the walls the whole plan that detailed the whole thing.
Starting point is 00:07:00 And we found out that on the weekends, the Paramount Studio Tour, they would bring tourists in. And they would be like, and this is us, writers' room. You can peek in the blinds. And who knows how many people every weekend. But we had been so proud of ourselves. We had no idea that this was happening. And someone told us. So then we came up with the code names for everything.
Starting point is 00:07:17 And we called Jack's Death Lemonade. And it was like this whole thing of like protecting from the tourists. Because people would like take a picture. They would just peer into our offices and the whole thing was just written out in bold dry erase marker. I can't. But we still did pretty well.
Starting point is 00:07:30 No one did it. We never had never had secrets leaked. I remember at one Paley Fest, somebody was asking like what they thought, how he expired. And people were pitching out all kinds of random theories and things that some were kind of crazy.
Starting point is 00:07:46 And then if somebody said like house fire, like, oh, that's a good one. You know what I'm saying? Yeah, yeah. He couldn't, like, betray anything, yeah. Next question. So, okay, in terms of running it and the process with this show as opposed to other ones, because you guys have run a few other things as well,
Starting point is 00:08:05 what's the synchronicity of how do you work with Dan as opposed to other shows that you run? Interesting. Well, Dan's the most closely we've ever worked with a third. And I think it was... With a third. He's a third. We were so lucky. I mean, I think it can be a hard relationship, the sort of creator and then showrunners who work alongside that person relationship.
Starting point is 00:08:34 We just, we get along so well. And we already knew each other by the time we took the job, how many years? Yeah, we had already worked together on multiple shows and for, like, we met Dan right when we moved to L.A. and started writing. Yeah, can you tell us a little bit of, like, how did you meet, Dan? And how did you guys get started? How did you become a team, too? Origin stories. You can say how we became. Sure, I can.
Starting point is 00:08:57 We met in college. It was a long time. We met at NYU. We went to Tish together, and we were dramatic writing majors, and we met there, and we became friends there. And then we moved to L.A. at the same time, sort of with the intention of becoming writing partners professionally. We got signed, and we shared a manager.
Starting point is 00:09:16 with this Dan Fogelman character. Oh, interesting. And we wrote a screenplay. And while Dan was shooting Crazy Stupid Love, which he had written. With John and Glenn, who did This Is Us. With John and Glenn, who did This Is Us, our manager slipped him the script
Starting point is 00:09:32 that we had written. And Dan was, so the story goes, just sort of on set of Crazy Stupid Love, sort of giggling at our script being like, who are these young Whippersnappers? I'd like to meet them one day. And then he came back, when he came back to L.A. Well, we were supposed to go to set.
Starting point is 00:09:45 but it turned out it was the night that Gosling was doing all his like shirtless stuff and sex stuff with Emma Stone and they were like maybe this isn't the best time to bring too young writers to work yeah so then we met Dan and yeah we met Dan we worked with him on a sitcom he did called The Neighbors we did another show with him called Grandfather the Stamos show and that was what we were working on when he was shooting the pilot with you guys so we weren't at all involved officially in the pilot but I remember as he does he would like call us into his office and be like hey guys like watch this tape like I found this guy he's mostly been on daytime soaps, but I think he's like an Emmy caliber actor.
Starting point is 00:10:19 And, like, that was heartily like, and, uh, yeah, we would, so we sort of saw this thing come together. Um, and then once the show got greenlit, we were under an overall at 20th who, who was our studio. And Dan called us and said, I have two shows. If you want to go on either one, it's this or pitch, uh, the baseball show. And we are not sports people, although you do like baseball. But I should not run it.
Starting point is 00:10:40 It was not, it was not a hard decision. No, it wasn't. And I do. I printed it for him. Well, Kevin. was doing pitch, wasn't it? Yes. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:48 And then he came around. Yeah. But I did, I printed it out eventually for Dan, but he wrote us an email that was like, I think I have a role for you guys on this. This is us one. But like, you have to like promise me that you're going to take it seriously. I mean, what? I know.
Starting point is 00:11:01 It's very Dan. But I wrote back to him and I was, at the time, I was very earnest. And I was just like, I promise you, we're going to take this so seriously. I was so nervous. And then we started doing that. But yes, to your question, like, we worked so closely with Dan. And every day was sort of whether, it was always dividing and conquering, but our favorite place, I think, to be was in the writer's room with him just slowly hashing things out. But it was just nonstop, the three of us huddled and figuring it out.
Starting point is 00:11:29 I'm curious, too, when you're talking about breaking story and then giving specific writers or writing teams like particular episodes, how is that decided upon? Oh, that's good. Very good question. Yeah, it depends. I mean, sometimes someone will have a real connection to the theme of a story. have come from their life or they really, really, like, feel like they have a handle on it, and that's always great. Sometimes it's just kind of, you're going down, like, early in the season, you're often just going down the list and sort of going from usually in order of seniority.
Starting point is 00:11:56 You're running, yeah. I mean, Dan was really smart. Some writer's rooms are very, like, it's all about the hierarchy and who has the most experience. I think what Dan did so well was that he recognized that you could be the youngest, newest writer in a room, but you could also be really brilliant and have a take on something. And he was not the type to just be like, well, this is the co-executive producer and they're going to go. He really tried to match writers with what felt, you know, right for them. And that I think you can kind of feel in the writing of the show that someone who is connecting really authentically is in charge of writing that episode. Did you guys ever, like, did anyone have to like fight it out for like specific things?
Starting point is 00:12:35 Like, no, I really want to write the car episode. And I really want to. Yes. Yes. Yes. Definitely. Definitely. Because there are ideas like the car or like certain things or people.
Starting point is 00:12:44 People were like, oh, man, that would be a really special one. But we also, like, the bar was very high for every episode. So everything kind of had that special. Yeah, I'll notice that. Yeah. By name, who was the most violent? Just kidding. I do have a question about being co-showrunners.
Starting point is 00:13:04 This is not typical, right? Usually a show is run by one person. It depends. I think three is not that. Although we've done it. We had a third guy and another. show. We like a thruffle. Yeah, I mean, it's such, on a network show when you're doing 18 and trying to maintain the quality that we were and the ambition we were, it's really like
Starting point is 00:13:24 you need as many people as can share the responsibility if they all get along and see the same thing in their heads. And writing teams. I know we had we had a couple of writing. David and Casey on the on the show. But again, another kind of more of an aberration than the norm in our industry. How do you guys, how do you make that marriage work? Like, it seems such a specific dynamic. Or maybe you don't. You can tell us all about it. No, I mean, it's, yeah, we just, it's, we've, it's been so easy.
Starting point is 00:13:59 Like, we've been so lucky. We, again, it's like the same thing as us and Dan. We just have a real shared sensibility. We find the same thing's funny. We find, we have the sort of same, like, invisible line for when things go from too sentimental to, like, to, you know, trickly to all that. From Jump Street, like from college? Yeah. Yeah, I mean, I think you have to be very lucky.
Starting point is 00:14:19 It's not, I mean, it's a relationship that I would say, I mean, we say all the time, we spend probably more time together than we do with our families, our spouses, our children. We're striving for more balance, but it's still the case. I mean, you have to really like being around each other and you have to really respect each other. And then I think you also have to grow together. I mean, we're very different. And we met when we were 20 and 18. I'm not going to tell you who's older.
Starting point is 00:14:48 But if you're watching on YouTube, you just saw the gesture. Don't forget to like and subscribe. For the listeners, it's hard. But yeah, you have to adjust. Like, you have to realize that your schedules aren't going to be the same as when you were 25 years old and you could work and pull all-nighters. You have to adjust for children and relationships. And we've been really lucky that we've been able to, you know, to do that together. I mean, your lives must be intertwined.
Starting point is 00:15:12 Are your partners also friends? I mean, like... Yeah, I mean, it's like, we do... You know what I mean? But, like, considering the amount of time. Yes, they are. I mean, it's like, it's the kind of thing where Isaac and I, like, we see each other all the time. Like, if we see each other on the weekend, we enjoy it, and it happens.
Starting point is 00:15:29 But it's not like we're just every weekend, we're like, hey, what are you doing this weekend? Yeah, yeah, yeah. I miss you. Yeah. But it's like, but yes, all of those, they are our littlest, our sons, our babies play together almost every day. Gosh, I love that. We're not there, but it's... We're working.
Starting point is 00:15:46 But they send this video. Yeah, we see they're very good. It looks beautiful. It all seems like they are doing well. Not to jump too far ahead, but like, what is a big takeaway from the show? Like, what surprised you that you guys came away with learning? Because I imagine, like, for all of us, this was, like, quite a ride. Yes.
Starting point is 00:16:07 And, like, it's hard to sort of imagine, like, what a journey this was going to be. be and like you guys always had to be 20 steps ahead of all of us especially like as performers like what did you take away or like what are you patting yourselves on the back now like two years removed like wow we really we accomplished that we did that and I'm going to take that with me to the next job I mean I wonder if it's similar for you guys but I think the level to which it resonated and how much it meant to people like no we couldn't prepare for that like that was so shocking I mean I say this to Isaac, but when people that don't know me, meet me and say, what do you do? Like, I still want to tell them that I ran this as us, even though time has passed because
Starting point is 00:16:50 I know what it meant to people and what it meant to me to be part of something that meant so much to people. Like, it's the, it remains the seminal, at least professional experience of my life thus far, and it's going to be hard to match. Really ruined everything. Forget it. Forget it. We're done.
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Starting point is 00:17:38 Learn more at SLOR.com. And ask your family eye care professional for Esselor Stellis Lenses at your child's next visit. Life can pull us in so many directions, kind of like our characters on This Is Us. And when things get hectic, finding time for yourself isn't always easy. That's why we love Peloton. Peloton has the convenient and varied instruction we all need to stay on track. You can find whatever you're looking for. If I want to focus on upper body, there's upper body workouts, there's glutes and legs workouts, there's core workouts, right?
Starting point is 00:18:11 got boot camps, you have runs, you have hikes, biking. Whatever it is, is there. Whether you're into Pilates, boxing, marathon, prep, or just need a good stretch or meditation sesh, Peloton has a class for you. They've got something for every vibe, every goal, and all three of us look for different things in a workout, but we can always find it on Peloton. Some days, I want to challenge myself with a tough boot camp. Other days, I just need a 10-minute walk or a calming meditation. A lot of time gives you the ability to choose what you need, whether you're pushing yourself or taking it easy. And let's not forget the instructors.
Starting point is 00:18:48 They are the best motivators out there. It's fun to imagine which instructors our characters would connect with. Like Randall, who's always pushing himself, would probably love someone like Robin Arson, while Rebecca might go for a more soulful yoga session with Aditi Shah. Allow me to give a special shout out to my girl Jess Sims for the dope. SimS60 that she always brings the pen. on Adrian Williams with the Thunder 45. I love you guys. And the class lengths are perfect. Whether you've got 20 minutes between meetings or just enough time to sneak in a quick workout while
Starting point is 00:19:23 the kids are napping, Peloton fits right into your day. It's all about finding your push and your power, no matter what season of your life you're in. And with Peloton, you've got the variety and motivation to do it all. Find your push, find your power with Peloton at one peloton.com. I think that seeing the power of the of the specific, the like little human memories that someone would share in the writer's room and how that would connect with so many people and how if you put these stories that might seem too small for TV out there, you get people seeing themselves in it.
Starting point is 00:20:05 And reflecting people's lives back at them, I think is so much of what TV is designed for. if movies are supposed to be grand and world building. Like, seeing little moments of humanity where you recognize yourself and characters is what TV does best. And if you can do that on a really high level, like, it just, it means something to an audience.
Starting point is 00:20:21 To that point, we've talked to our audience about why we think people related to the show. And the show is so specific, and it is so wide reaching, and there are a thousand ways into it. And part of our, you know, part of the theory is that, like, this was not just people making itself storylines, this was a room of writers bringing their lives and combining them into all of these stories.
Starting point is 00:20:47 Is there, if you're willing to break the anonymity, is there a certain storyline or a certain character or a certain This Is Us event that was your maybe personal contribution that you were happy to see brought to life? If you're willing to break writer's room, anonymity. Yeah, sure. I mean, just personally, I mean, anxiety is something that I've dealt with that I've seen other people very close to me deal with. And it's something that I talked about, you know, freely in those beginning weeks of the show and something that sort of went into Randall's character in a huge way. And I think that I think is also what's so powerful is it that then I got to see it reflected in this man, which feels so different than me.
Starting point is 00:21:35 So you got to see the way very different people. experienced things, but also people were experiencing things that also felt universal. I think that was, that was what I also take away is that if you can find something that is both very specific to one man, but also universal to so many people, that combination, I think, was just kind of magic. Have such an impact. Yeah. How about you? Yeah, I say for me, it's more like the little details and sort of the random moments of the fabric of my childhood. Like, we like would listen to Grace Land was the only tape in my dad's car. So we would listen to that for Thanksgiving. Every year on the drive down to...
Starting point is 00:22:09 It was the only tape in my mom's car. No, it's a great album. But after a certain point, you're like, we got it. We got to mix it out. You got to mix it out. So, like, getting to, like, reach out to Paul Simon's people and, like, get that and put that in the show. Or, like, we did an episode.
Starting point is 00:22:21 I think it was... Rebecca was in the hospital and Jack had the kids, and he made them corn sandwiches, like canned corn sandwiches, which was a thing that my dad would do whenever my mom wasn't there. Like, I remember in the production meeting, everyone was just looking at me, like, I'm sorry, what is this?
Starting point is 00:22:35 Like, Andy Props was like, I don't know how to make that. And then like, and then there was a spot. The Today show did a thing the next day. That's how big the show is. They were like, can corn sandwiches? Like, what is this? And I was like, dad, I told you it's not a thing.
Starting point is 00:22:46 What a dad thing. What a dad thing. Such a dad thing, right? It's just like sugar on carbs on carbs. Like, nothing. Not even cream. Not even cream. Just the niblet.
Starting point is 00:22:57 I can maybe, I can, I can, I can one up this one a little bit. Boy Scouts, camping trip. Yeah. One dad made us tang sandwiches. What is that? With the powder? With the powder? Would he add a little water to like...
Starting point is 00:23:12 No, he sprinkled the powdered tang on white bread, folded it up like a taco, and ended it out. Wow. I can't. That sounds really bad. That would be worse than three sandwiches. Throw some corn on there and there's a well-balanced meal for you. Oh, tang corn.
Starting point is 00:23:30 Tang sandwiches. That's brutal. That's such a dude. That's such a dude. That's such a dude move. No. No, no woman is ever doing that. So anxiety and corn sandwiches.
Starting point is 00:23:40 Yeah, there you have it. That's why we work. One thing that I noticed from coming into the writer's room is that I feel like they had a very strong sense of not only the characters, but they had a very strong sense of who we were as people. Because as you're watching the show, like, you're watching the dailies, you see us in character and you see us sort of out of character as well and whatnot. So I'm curious, like, what are the things that you saw in us that you're like, you know what we should write towards? because so-and-so already is sort of living in this place already that might help to sort of evolve the character even further. Oh, that's interesting.
Starting point is 00:24:13 That's a hard question. I'm trying to think about that. I mean, you guys were so good. I think what we just started realizing was the range of everyone. Was that everyone could be super funny, but then could go to these very quiet places. Everyone could do everything,
Starting point is 00:24:32 and I think that was so exciting to realize. I mean, I remember when we were just sort of like, is this going to work? Mandy's going to wear old age makeup? How is this going to go? That was such a day. It was such a mystery. And then we were like, oh, she's not a good idea.
Starting point is 00:24:46 Brilliant at this. Like, and then that opens up an entire world. And then, like, yes, with you guys to see that you could carry these comedy scenes, but also be brilliant, traumatic actors. I mean, you just, and then the voices were so specific. So you started to just, we could just hear you guys so. clearly because it was so specific. And that made it all very easy.
Starting point is 00:25:09 I kind of remember that shift when the two merged, where I was like, where I got like a scene. I was like, oh, this sounds just like me. Like I can't remember that like maybe like three quarters of the way through season one. Yeah. Where it was like, oh, that's nice. Yeah. That's in the groove.
Starting point is 00:25:31 It became real easy to memorize. What is it like for you? you all in terms of writing scripts and I know they'll go through the script and they'll go line by line or scene by scene and everybody will give notes on what they think should change and what plays, what doesn't. So it's very sort of scrutinized sort of thing. I'm interested in your take on actors who don't say the fucking words. Do you like that?
Starting point is 00:25:55 Do you not like that? I am sitting right here. Yeah, I was like, ooh. No, no, but I'm saying like, is it a strong, because I'm sure it also varies from set to set. And I want to say this, like, if you're on a Sorkin set, you're going to say the line. Yeah. Like, there's no... I mean, scripty will be on you.
Starting point is 00:26:12 To the comma. A very young, like, very, like, sort of skittish, 25-year-old girl will come up to him and say, hi, sorry, but you said this and you were supposed to say that. If you were on Amy Sherman Palladino, you're going to say what's there. So I'm curious for you guys with Dan or whatnot, like what kind of rules that you guys have for yourselves in terms of latitude versus not latitude. We were not a word perfect show at all. But you guys were also so respectful.
Starting point is 00:26:40 It wasn't like we had to worry about it. In particular, Milo, I remember, would like, he'd call the office and be like, hey, hey, can I come by? Like, we got to talk about this script. And he'd be like, oh, man, is he like, does he want to throw out a story? Like, we're really behind. I hope like, and then he would come and he'd be like, is it okay if I say, Beck, we got to get to the party instead of Beck, we should go to the party? And I was like, Milo, of course, man. Like, buddy, you don't even have to, like.
Starting point is 00:26:59 Get out. Get out. and right to write, paper's flying. Exactly, exactly. I can remember only, I can remember one time where we had like a little bit, there was this tension. It was season three.
Starting point is 00:27:13 There wasn't huge tension. It was the argument between, it was an argument between Beth and Randall. And there was a joke at the end of it that sort of undercut everything to try to diffuse the tension. And I remember it was one of you two guys, I don't think I should diffuse the tension.
Starting point is 00:27:28 And they're like, well, you try this joke. And I was like, I don't want to do a joke. I feel like Randall is known. as being the person who sort of like brings things back in that sort of way because he's uncomfortable with it. I think I want to live in this discomfort of that. And you guys are like, okay, you know what I'm saying? But that was like the one time that we had that conversation.
Starting point is 00:27:46 But I think it's like if it's working and like you have good writers and smart actors and everyone is trying to make the same show, which we very much were. Like that's the best part of the process is having those conversations and like, yeah, I think you're right. We shouldn't do that. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And that's very much what this always was. It was one of my favorite places to be. And I was saying this on a previous episode of the show.
Starting point is 00:28:06 Like, every pitch begins like, okay, the bad pitch is this. Because nobody wants to own it. Like, I spent so much time thinking about it. Okay, bad pitch. Yeah. It's an easy way to hide. And so I'm curious for you guys. I mean, you're running the show, but you've obviously, you've staffed and everything else.
Starting point is 00:28:22 Talk to me about just, like, putting yourself out there and having the thickness of skin to be like, all right, didn't get that one. Like, what is that? like for you guys. Yeah, no. It's not great when you don't get it. I mean, I remember the first couple weeks of this is us, I just thought everyone was so smart. Like, I was so intimidated by the writing staff because every time anyone opened their
Starting point is 00:28:45 mouth, it just seemed so impressive to me. K.J. Steinberg, one of our writers, came in with just like a pre-planned monologue that was so beautiful about like a pitch. And I remember just being like, holy shit, this is scary. Really? It was also the first few weeks were so intense Because we were yeah like Elizabeth said getting into these characters
Starting point is 00:29:05 Talking big picture And then we had all these guest speakers coming in To talk about sort of some of the issues The show was gonna take on Like a camp right? Like a boot camp of like Before we started Like adoption and eating disorders
Starting point is 00:29:17 And all kinds of and like I think the first or second day We had a woman come in who And speak to like struggling with eating disorder Her whole life and having to be hospitalized For almost rupturing her stomach And we were all crying listening to this And then the baseball show next door, Pitch, we saw their guest speaker were like three cheerleaders from, and we're like, wow.
Starting point is 00:29:34 These are very different rooms that are happening right now. Dan, Dan Mandate? Or did it, him and Jess coming up with it together? It was like, Dan, Dan from his office. I need guest speakers. Just booked a lot. He did a lot. I mean, we really wanted it to be authentic and we wanted to get things right.
Starting point is 00:29:50 So it was a lot of that. But yeah, it's nerve-wracking. I mean, I will tell you, too, in terms of nerve-wracking. Isaac and I became co-showrunners with Dan halfway through season one. I remember, yeah. We left the writer's room one day not showrunners and then had to return to it as showrunners. Oh, so the higher shift. Dynamic shift.
Starting point is 00:30:11 Yes. And also like that sort of mental gymnastics for myself of like, okay, now I'm going to sit back down at the table. And I need to like sort of project that I know how to do this is like the biggest. Listen there. No, listen up. The most imposter syndrome, if. if I'm using that correctly, that I've ever had. And the writers make fun of me
Starting point is 00:30:30 because they said that I sat down and that, like, I'm purely from nerves, like my voice literally dropped like an octave and I was just like, hello. Because I was terrified. I am your new boss. But you kind of, and I'm sure you guys have your version of this of just sort of just faking
Starting point is 00:30:47 that you believe you can do something. Every time. Every day. They're going to find me out somewhere later. Yeah, exactly. We're doing it right now. Yeah. I would come in there a lot.
Starting point is 00:31:00 Sterling was a fixture. You guys would all come in, but he was a fixture. He was an honorary writer. I came in a lot. Well, two reasons for it. And you guys can reflect this back to me. Because it was my second long-term show. I did six years on a show called Army Wives.
Starting point is 00:31:14 And one of the things that the showrunner would always tell me is like, dude, the better I know you, the easier it is for me to write for you. So this idea that you can't come in and talk is sort of anathema. just come in and say hi. Like, you don't have to be a big deal. You can just, you know, do that. And I was like, okay, the open door policy was there. I was like, I'll just come in and say hi.
Starting point is 00:31:34 But it's also because all the storylines are so individuated. And everybody who watches the show thinks we're all around each other all the time. But, you know, you go on the Cotobi track. You're on the Rebecca track and so I loved seeing what everybody else was doing and what the trajectories for all the other characters were. Like, I was as invested in that as I was. maybe even more so, to a certain extent. I was like, okay, Randall's cool, but like, what's going on with Jake?
Starting point is 00:32:00 This is this Vietnam? Oh, yeah. I think my favorite part, like, each season was, like, sitting down with you guys at the beginning of the season and you walked us through, like, yeah. Those were fun days, yeah. Yeah, and you were always like, do you want to hear what's happening with Kate? I'm like, please. It's like we all were so invested in everybody else's story.
Starting point is 00:32:19 And to a certain extent, like, it all factors into the work that we're doing anyway. It's like you have to know kind of. the big picture. You do. I mean, that's the thing. They would ask us all the time, like, do you guys know when Jack dies and whatnot? I'm like, yes, to your credit, you guys laid out this beautiful tapestry and map that we in the present were always operating with this knowledge of like, this happened in our past. Right? Because I don't know how, some people say in certain TV shows, they're like, no, I just like to take it one at a time or what have you. And I feel like, if you're doing a play or film, you have the beginning, middle, and end. And so we can also
Starting point is 00:32:55 of together help sort of track, chart the trajectory. And then I feel like sometimes, and I feel like there's a level of respect in this writer's room for actors that doesn't know. Sometimes you feel, and you can feel it when you're being played like a pawn. Just do, pawn goes here, you do that, and then don't worry about the thing that happens next.
Starting point is 00:33:15 We'll let you know when that next thing happens. And you're like, all right. But because there was some sort of like shared, collective experience or whatnot, like there was buy-in. And there was a mutual respect that was like, oh, no, we're all kind of doing this thing together. Like, they're on the words, but I have thoughts and feelings and ideas, et cetera, and all of it felt respected all the time.
Starting point is 00:33:36 And I feel like that's not the, it's not that way on every show. No. It's not. You just asked them about this, and I want to try to present a follow-up. The idea of walking away from these projects that you spend so much energy on. In our show, there must have been things,
Starting point is 00:33:54 that you felt very passionate about or very invested in that hit roadblocks, and we're just like, yeah, we're not going down that street. Yeah. What were those? Come with, Chris. Come with it. What were those? Because I know that in my mind,
Starting point is 00:34:11 there's these parallel universes of what could have been. Yeah. And you can kind of see glimpses down these roads for these stories, and it's like, oh, no, they're not going there. They're going down over here. Sure.
Starting point is 00:34:21 But I'm wondering if there was anything... That you guys, like, yeah, maybe didn't get to explore that you had mapped out, but like there wasn't time or... Even just what happened in season five with regards to the world, did that like completely shift? Oh, yeah. Tell us that because people are very interested in this.
Starting point is 00:34:37 How did COVID and... Yeah, there was big, I mean, that was a huge conversation I've had to tackle COVID on the show. And we had already shot and aired that story, that flash forward story where you realize Rebecca, in a state of Alzheimer's, has wandered into a Chinese restaurant. And like we were, and that would have been in the, thick of COVID. And of course, when we made that, we didn't know COVID was a thing. And so there was
Starting point is 00:34:58 talk of, did we show, like, would it be irresponsible to have that? And people weren't wearing masks because this was, when that was a big point of contention. There was so much, like, the show had so many eyeballs on it. And there was such pressure at that time to, like, represent COVID appropriately and safely. And that that was just, it felt like there was a, just such a weight on, like, on just doing right by the world and the time we were in. And then much less delivering on all the narratives we had already crafted that didn't have COVID in that mean so that was that was a big rearrange that was a big rearrange and then I mean I don't remember too many like paths not taken that I've been bummed about I mean we really did do most of the stuff we planned but we did what I remember
Starting point is 00:35:38 are just sort of the passionate debate days I mean we got in I remember going at it with Dan because he had this notion of Randall and Beth having another child and and Beth getting accidentally pregnant, and I was infuriated. I think it was because I was pregnant at the time, expecting my second, and the idea of like, like, you can't do this to me, Dan. I mean, Beth. Something about it where I was like, that's not what Beth wants. And he was, like, really trying to, and it was one of those days where we just went back and forth. That was more than a day. That was maybe the closest something came to happening that was not. And then we were, Dan and I were, of Who is texting offlining about, like, that we respect each other's opinions.
Starting point is 00:36:22 I mean, it didn't happen much. But it got heated. It got heated. And then that was one that, you know, didn't end up happening. And then one where Dan was right was that I was heated about was, like, not being sure if we should do our Alzheimer's storyline. And, like, just being like, and that was another one that the writers, like, we discussed endlessly.
Starting point is 00:36:44 And I was like, it's too sad. And our audience has been. been through enough and I don't know I think that it might be too much and he was right you know he said it's going to connect with so many people we're going to handle it beautifully Mandy's going to be extraordinary and it's going to be so meaningful you were right too it was so sad so sad so life though it just seems it seems to be so hard and it can't get any sadder and if it gets any sadder I'm not going to be able to take it and then it gets a little sadder you're right yeah it turns out you can yep and you can and you and you and you and
Starting point is 00:37:18 Yeah, that's such an interesting argument to have had. We were doing a live chat on a YouTube for the episode where Chrissy came on, and a lot of people in the comments were talking about the divorce storyline. Was that something you guys knew about early? Yeah. Yeah, that was one. And again, some of these you know about early, but you're still, as you approach it, you're like, are we really going to go this way?
Starting point is 00:37:38 That's when I came into the writer's room. Listen, we got to end this. I got an idea for a storyline. How about zip it. I'm out of here. Here. More that was us after these words from our sponsors. Get to Toronto's main venues like Budweiser Stage and the new Roger Stadium with Go Transit.
Starting point is 00:38:04 Thanks to Go Transit's special online e-ticket fairs, a $10 one-day weekend pass offers unlimited travel on any weekend day or holiday anywhere along the Go network. And the weekday group passes offer the same weekday travel flexibility. across the network, starting at $30 for two people, and up to $60 for a group of five. Buy your online go pass ahead of the show at go-transit.com slash tickets. You know, Sterling, bath time at my house used to feel like trying to get a cat into the water. I'd be out here making deals, bribing, you know, with more bedtime stories. You're negotiating like I was closing some kind of million-dollar deal just to get the kids into the tub. I feel you, bro.
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Starting point is 00:39:23 They've even earned the good housekeeping seal of approval. Yeah, right now, Bear really loves the melon and the lemon, and IFA goes like straight strawberry, like hard strawberry. Oh, and big news, Dabble and Dallop is now at Target. That's right. You can grab their bath bomb variety packs and six of their bubble bathsense nationwide in Target stores and on target.com. There's something about seeing it on the shelf, grabbing a bottle and tossing it in your cart next to the stuff you didn't even mean to buy. Bro, you go in for one thing you walk out with a full cart. But this time, at least you're leaving with something that makes bath time easier. So next time you're at Target, swing by the bath aisle and grab a bottle.
Starting point is 00:40:04 Or if you're more of an online shopper, head to Target.com. And if you want an extra deal, visit dabblingdollop.com and use the code, that was us 15, for 15% off your first purchase. What Chris is saying, it's like you can, you, we wanted to show that it can get really sad and unexpected and it can still be okay. And that is such a reality for so many people that you fall in love and you get married and you think it's going to work and you can't imagine it's not going to work and it doesn't work. And it's devastating and then life goes on. But yeah, that was one that was sort of part of the fact. fabric pretty early. Okay.
Starting point is 00:40:48 Did you guys always know how Jack passed away? Was that something that, like, Dan came to the table with? Is this something you guys decided in the room together? The fire and the smoke inhalation was Dan came in with that. And then the details of all of that, we cracked together. The slow cooker was a later, a later entry. Yeah. He knew.
Starting point is 00:41:05 He knew. No, no, no. We got media trained on that. Yes, we did. There were a few snafews. I believe Ellen DeGeneres was involved in one. We got scolded. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:41:16 We learned. There was a stock plummet. There was. Let's talk talking about it. We all signed a thing. We can't talk about it. Yeah, yeah, yeah. That was us podcast.
Starting point is 00:41:28 Suddenly canceled. I'm roughly taken off there. Well, let me ask you guys this, because Dan always knew he had six seasons, right? And he never really wavered on that. Like, do you feel like he wavered on that ever? No. No, because NBC was, like, they gave us that.
Starting point is 00:41:46 Like, we really could. crap this thing like a novel or a movie because like he might waver on it now is there any chance that maybe he might waver on it we're gonna do this is us babies it's gonna be animated so you guys all i'll do it i'll do it i'll do it i like that okay it wasn't easy i mean we definitely like everyone loved the show but we also just kept coming back to uh but it feels right and it really feels like we told the story now so completely and the aging kids it made it so like you can only tell those flashbacks before there was a finite quality like that's That's why we had to shoot stuff early.
Starting point is 00:42:18 It was, like, fleeting, you got to grab it. I guess my question is now, because the landscape of media is ever evolving and ever-changing. A show like ours on network television, and I mean this in the most, do you feel like it will happen again? Or do you feel like everything has moved to streamers or what have you? Or like, is there space for a serialized drama that's not a procedural to succeed right now, given just the strike that's just transpired and just like, how, look, our show is what it is, but it's not like, well, I won't say that.
Starting point is 00:42:55 People do re-watch it on Netflix and stuff. I can feel you hoping as you're asking the question. But mostly the things that do successful are the ones that, like, you can jump in and jump out. Yeah. You can't jump in and jump out of this is us. You're kind of confused about it. So I'm curious from you guys who are creating actively,
Starting point is 00:43:12 like, is there even like a push or pull from the, to get another one of these? Or is it like, no, we're doing different stuff? Oh, yeah, 100%. I think it's just the trick of This Is Us is that it took, again, these very relatable human moments and sort of presented them almost in the framework of like a thriller or a lost type show
Starting point is 00:43:30 where there was something so propulsive and there's mystery and you're like, I have to know, I have to fill in the blanks as I watch. And I think that you need that level of noisy in order for it to cut through because there's just so much out there. I don't think the quiet version of the family drama, right?
Starting point is 00:43:46 now could necessarily find this audience. So it's about like whoever can crack the kind of the next version that doesn't feel derivative, but that has some type of engine like that. To that end, so the propulsion part, which we were talking about this before, like, everybody's sort of like, what happened to Jack? How to happen? And we're like, like, guys, there's all this kind of story going on. They're like, yeah, but what happened to Jack?
Starting point is 00:44:06 Then we solve that. Then we introduce Mickey. I kind of feel like that's the sort of next thing. You got a brother? Who's this brother? Where has he been? How did it do we have that for the last two seasons? Or not like once Nikki is introduced?
Starting point is 00:44:22 Like what would you say was that sort of propulsive part that was the above the just drama of the family? I think it became those flash forwards, that future house and like older, who's with who then? How does everyone wind up in the ways? Yeah, yeah. So it kind of flipped from the propulsion was in the past and filling in those blanks and then it became the future.
Starting point is 00:44:42 It's very lost. Yeah, very lost. It's very lost. I was very glad that you had Toby arrive early. Yeah, everyone's like, where am I? Where are I? Oh, that's true. Because people would be showing up to the house.
Starting point is 00:44:52 And they're like, where's Kate? Why is Kate? They were wondering if Beth and Randall were together? Yeah, everything. Right? Then you were there without Kate. And they would pick it apart. They'd be like, Sterling's hand was behind his back.
Starting point is 00:45:03 He was not wearing the ring. Did he lose his hand in an accident? Like, what? Did he lose his hand in an accident? Yep. Working on that building? The introduction. The introduction.
Starting point is 00:45:14 of older Randall, my wife would destroy me. Over and she's like, did you just let it all go, bro? Like, do you remember, we had to take it down? We slowly had to, yeah. I remember the first time of it, old Randall was like, I'm like, this, and he had a whole thing. And John and Glenn did 214 and I'm like, look, we just need to make sure that he doesn't look
Starting point is 00:45:37 like he does in the present. We have to make it as big of a thing as possible so when people see it, they know that like it's a different time period, right? And I was like, yeah, but Randall's the dude that talks about running marathons and all this stuff. So it was a process. It was a whole face prosthetic.
Starting point is 00:45:52 Yeah. That became like pieces. Yeah. Like small pieces. Wait, can we also talk about how much Justin hated it? Oh, heeded it. Everyone is cool about it. And Justin's like, I don't want to look like that.
Starting point is 00:46:02 I don't know. I would never look like that. I kind of felt similar to you, Justin. I kind of believe that you both of you were different. We barely did any. A few gray hair. Yeah. He was like, what is this?
Starting point is 00:46:13 You're like, head to tone and stretch and stipple or whatever the glue was gone. And he has like a little spray on Greg. And the goatee. He's like, nope, hate it. Hate it. Anytime just that he wore a goate in the past once
Starting point is 00:46:26 for Chrissy's wedding, for a Kate's wedding or Randolph's wedding. He had a goatee. And any time he put on the goatee, this was like the whole time he just being like, touching his face and just felt. Yeah. Miserable.
Starting point is 00:46:39 And it was really the anger that aged him. Probably. We take that part for. for granted in terms of like, we're just trying to deal with, like, the relationships that are happening in front of us or whatnot. Sure. Sure. But that anticipation that the audience also had for, like, what, because you give them such huge twists from the jump. The fact that we're all living at two different timelines from the pilot, the fact that Jack, after 102, was like, who's this Miguel, and he married to who?
Starting point is 00:47:05 Yeah. Like, that was like, roo- so, like, you've already sort of, like, stoked this anticipation. What are they going to do next? And you guys kept, that must have been the hardest part. What's the hardest part? Did you feel that responsibility of like, oh, gosh, we've got to keep that propulsive energy going? Yeah, I think Sterling, you nailed it, which was Nikki and that relationship and Vietnam as an engine for season three. We were like, that was huge for us.
Starting point is 00:47:32 We were like, wow, we have now another season of the show that is going to feel completely different and it's going to sort of fuel the entire season. And then it did get harder because we had those flash forwards, but it was. was a little smaller after that. It was a little bit more intimate in terms of most of the week-to-week stories and they became a little bit more grounded without that element to it. And that was challenging. So I think then it was sort of about, okay, like, we don't have that kind of big thing sort of fueling these last couple seasons.
Starting point is 00:48:02 So how do we just tell really great human stories with still those little... And I think like the audience was along for the ride and they really... We talk about this all the time, like they very much trusted us and trust us and trust you guys, like, we're going to take care of you. We're going to, like, we're going to land the plane. Don't worry. Like, just stick it out with us. And they did.
Starting point is 00:48:21 And I think that allowed for some of those, like, smaller storylines because people were so invested in these characters already. You guys would do things. And they're usually probably what, I guess, you guys, I heard this term, Dan dates, like a mandate from Dan. Where he would come up with stuff with characters not involved. Like, the, I'm thinking of the FaceTime. Oh, the video chat guy, yeah.
Starting point is 00:48:42 Yeah. And I was like, damn, is this going to work? Like, every once in a while I ask, like, is this going to play? And then I was like, I watch it. I'm like, you, mother. It just gut you. He had the whole one with like the immaculate reception. Do you guys know Franco Harris?
Starting point is 00:48:57 He played for Pittsburgh Steelers, and we follow him at the beginning of the episode or whatnot. And I was like, why are we showing Franco? And then it comes at the game. I was like, how do you do that? Yeah. My hair looks terrible. Put this back on right in. Did you guys ever.
Starting point is 00:49:12 question when he would come up with those things that were sort of hung around characters outside of the Pearson's. Did you question or you're like, no, he's going to do it? Like, I'm curious from your perspective. I think what's the one we opened, season four? With where we meet Cassidy? Where we sort of follow a whole episode where the entire audience is like, who is this? That was a lot of conversation. That was one where we were all just, and even Dan, like, we would just be like, I don't know, like, let's see what happened. I mean, that episode has none of us in it, right? And People have been waiting. This is like broadcast TV, so now you binge it.
Starting point is 00:49:44 But people were waiting from like May to September to like see their favorite Pearson's again. You're settling in with the family on Tuesday night. It's like, huh? I think, I think, we're in a war zone. Is that one of the episodes that we watched at Dan's house? Yes. We all got together at Dance House.
Starting point is 00:49:58 We're all in that room watching. And I know Dan was sitting like near me on Twitter. Like, and people know what show this is. Yeah. People were just like, what is this? Yeah. Who is this? Where's Toby?
Starting point is 00:50:11 What is happening? I think that was real. Yes, a lot of conversation. But Mandy, I think to your point, like, people trusted us by then. And we had earned so much goodwill, I think, and trust that they were able to go for the ride. Like, we might have gotten a few angry tweets of where are the people that I love and that I tuned in to see. But overall, like, people went with it. And what also was so cool was how they learned the language of our show and the timelines.
Starting point is 00:50:37 Like, at first it was like, will it be confusing to be in two different timelines? And then it was like, we can do eight timelines. Like, we can, and people, like, really went with it. And they somehow, like, sort of expanded sort of their minds in terms of what they could follow in terms of all these different ways that we would jump around. And we would do those three, those trilogies of three episodes that would take place over the same day from different perspectives. I mean, that people could follow those across three weeks.
Starting point is 00:51:02 Like, that is ambitious and demanding of an audience. But I think, like, we trusted that they could and people loved it. Yeah. Is there anything that you guys remember particularly in terms of, of how we played with structure that particularly excited you. I mean, I guess, you know, instead of just following the traditional storylines
Starting point is 00:51:18 and, like, what episodes pop out to you writing-wise that were, like, very exciting to play with? The Kate and Toby divorce episode, which is fully backwards, was very, very tricky. And just, like, an intense episode to begin with because of the themes and the scenes, but then also to figure out how to hold the audience's hand enough. But there were two stories that crossed in the middle.
Starting point is 00:51:42 That was the hardest thing we've ever done. With her. Okay. Yeah, with her and her new. Yeah, sorry. Fully backwards and also. But in terms of a Dan date that I just learned this term, like, where he was like, and then they're going to meet in the middle.
Starting point is 00:51:53 And we were like, don't know what that means. But we're going to go writing. Okay. Sounds great, boss. Yeah. And then I remember we like, we like showed him the first cut. And he was like, guys, this is kind of confusing. And we were like, yeah, we know.
Starting point is 00:52:05 Dan, everyone says, God, Dan, good, good. The door closes. You're looking to. We're going to get it there. What is the middle? What is the middle? Yeah, that was wild. And then those trilogies were just like on production for you guys, everybody, just so ambitious
Starting point is 00:52:19 because we'd have three directors doing an episode and you would cross through one room and then someone else would be there and we'd follow them. Except Ken did the first batch. He did. And he almost died. Which is why we couldn't do it again. Yeah, correct. I just remember like viscerally him on set just like this.
Starting point is 00:52:37 I mean, that was him all the time anyway. Rocking. Roxie would be rubbing his back and he's just going to rock. We were just watching those right now. Just finishing, yeah. Finishing. I'm just going to just shout out real quick. Like, frigging Justin Harley's the dog.
Starting point is 00:52:53 I know. We talk about number one is like top three episodes of the whole series. Okay, that's it. That whole trilogy, I think, is pretty unbelievable. It is. Have you a business tracker. We just want to give you a little bit of, maybe a little bit of, for joining us today. Will you come back and talk to us about 2.15 just for a quick second?
Starting point is 00:53:13 We'd love to. But maybe right now you could tell folks what you're up to. If there's anything we should look out for. We're going, departing soon, to go make an original musical comedy movie starring our favorite brotherly rock band, the Jonas Brothers. That's kind of like their version of a hard day's night. We've always wanted to write a musical. Is that what you thought?
Starting point is 00:53:32 That's amazing. We're in the Try New Things phase of our career. We always want to do a musical. No, it's really fun. we're working with Justin Tranter, who's an unbelievable pop songwriter, and he's amazing. We're working with director, Jessica Yu is directing it. He did a bunch of This Is Uses for us and Quiz Lady. So it's a lot of really talented people, and it is something completely different for us.
Starting point is 00:53:54 Yeah, we're off to Europe and Canada soon. It's them getting home to their families for Christmas from London, and they go to Amsterdam, Germany, like all these places. Amazing. Sing a lot of songs. So cool. It's fantastic. It's very fun. This is a movie.
Starting point is 00:54:07 This is a movie. So like for next holiday season, sort of? Yeah, it's the 20th, 20th anniversary of them is a band. It'll be next Christmas 25. Wow. Yeah. Where can we find it? Disney Plus.
Starting point is 00:54:18 Maybe Hulu? Definitely Disney Plus. Yeah. I guess Hulu's on Disney Plus. That's right. It's all. It's all one family. You do have to cancel one and then bundle.
Starting point is 00:54:26 You have to buy the bundle. Correct. How I met father. Two. Two of those. Yeah, two of those. And love. Three seasons of love Victor.
Starting point is 00:54:36 Three seasons of Victor. Killing the game. And you also did the movie. You did Simon as well. We did love Simon. We did, I want you back. But yeah, we have fun stuff cooking. We got a project with Mandy
Starting point is 00:54:46 down coming up. Hopefully. That's why she got all dressed up. Hold the phone. Carry the lead. If the two of you would just confer and just decide who wants to look in the camera and say that was us. That was us.
Starting point is 00:55:03 Hey, everybody. Welcome back to another installation of the retrial. segment. The retread is brought to you by Peloton. Find your push. Find your power with Peloton. In this episode, we talked to Isaac Apptaker and Elizabeth Berger, which ironically enough, I was just in Toronto working, sitting at a booth with Michael Angerano, another this is us castmate, and these two walked into the same diner that we were eating in. Nuts. On this retread, we talk about the importance of mutual respect when it comes to working in a creative partnership. We talk about creative synergy when working with the creator of the show Dan Fogelman.
Starting point is 00:55:40 We talk about how they felt when actors deviated from the script, which I can be guilty of sometimes. But it was an all-around incredible conversation. We can't wait to have them back and talk to them again. And that is the end of our retread. All right, we'll see you next week with another episode of That Was Us. Bye-bye, everybody. That Was Us is filmed at Rue.
Starting point is 00:56:06 Rabbit Grin Studios and produced by Rabbit Grin Productions. Music by Taylor Goldsmith and Griffin Goldsmith. That was us.

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