The Big Picture - 4/20 Special: Jay Chandrasekhar’s ‘Super Troopers’ Return | The Big Picture (Ep. 60)
Episode Date: April 20, 2018Ringer editor-in-chief Sean Fennessey chats with comedic actor, director, and writer Jay Chandrasekhar about returning to make a ‘Super Troopers’ sequel 17 years after the original. Chandrasekhar ...also discusses what it’s like being an Indian American in Hollywood, returning to his roots, and bridging the divided audiences in comedy.More from Sean Fennessey on Movies Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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But that's one of the things about show business, right?
When I walk around, everybody who interacts with me says, hey, when's the next Super Troopers coming out?
So in my mind, there's a huge audience.
But the reality is they just happen to run into the Super Troopers guy.
So they said the one thing to him that you would say. I'm Sean Fennessy, editor-in-chief of The Ringer, and this is The Big Picture,
a conversation show with the most interesting filmmakers in the world.
It's 420, and I'm not above a little 420 content. Neither is today's guest, Jay Chandra Sekhar. Jay
is a member of the Broken Lizard Comedy Troupe, a quintet of friends who met at Colgate University
nearly 30 years ago. The world was exposed to Broken Lizard with Super Troopers, their raunchy stone comedy about a group
of goofball highway patrolmen in Vermont. That movie became a dorm room classic, playing on a
loop on DVD players across the country. Chandra Sekhar and the crew have made movies like Beer
Fest and Club Dread in the interim, but this weekend, they're back in uniform for Super
Troopers 2, more than 17 years after the original. Chandra Sekhar has led a fascinating career as a director, taking for higher gigs like
the Dukes of Hazzard movie, the Broken Lizard films, and dozens of episodes of TV, including
memorable runs on Arrested Development and Community.
He's made himself into a Hollywood lifer without abandoning what got him there in the
first place.
I talked to Jay about being an Indian American in Hollywood, returning to his roots, and
bridging the divided audiences in comedy.
Here's Jay Chrasekhar. Jay, thank you so much for coming in today. Thanks for having me. Jay,
Super Troopers 2, it's here. I feel like I've been hearing about it for 10, 12, 14 years. Why
now? I mean,
the joke is that we were
trying to wait until
420 landed on a Friday.
Nailed it. That only happens
every 20 years.
The reality,
why now? Yeah, why now?
We didn't want to be, look, we made
Super Troopers.
It had a good little run in theater and then had a bit of a monstrous run on DVD.
And so naturally, Fox was like, why don't you make another one?
And we said, well, we could see the future if you just looked at what the Police Academy guys did.
And now granted, I think
they made nine films, right?
So, you can't argue
with that success rate, but
they are
decidedly known for those films
only, and we had
dreams of a more
Python-esque path,
which is different movies, you know? So,
we wanted to make, we made a horror movie, Club Dread.
We wanted to make Beer Fest.
We made a waiter movie, Slammin' Salmon.
But eventually we always knew we would always, we would come back and make another Super
Troopers because it was fun.
And because it's really fun to have a crew cut and a mustache and a cop belt and those
sunglasses and act you know,
act like Clint Eastwood.
It's fun.
And, you know, so that's the creative reason about why now.
There was also like a financial reason as to why now, because the first one surprisingly
made so much money that there naturally was an argument about how much, and that was in
the court system for a little how much and that was in in the court system
for a little while and that was resolved and part of the resolution was you can make another one
the other third issue is that the studio business has become one that is completely devoted to
spending their money on capes and tights i wanted to ask you about this you know like that's really
what they want to spend it on.
And the reason is because,
you know, major corporations bought all the studios
because they thought they'd have a fun media piece.
But reality is once they saw what Iron Man did,
they said, oh, we can actually make profit here too.
We could only just have to use it
to pump our other products.
And so then they said the directive became
make movies that can make $250 to $400 million a pop.
Now, some of them are not going to make that, but some of them do.
And they want to make movies that move the stock price.
So when they look at our little movie, they're like, it's not going to make that much money.
And so they basically said to us, look, we know your movie is going to make a profit.
We just don't think it'll make enough of a profit, right?
And so basically they said, why don't you guys raise the money and we'll release it,
which is, I appreciate them releasing it big time.
And now they've put, now that they've seen the movie,
they put a whole bunch of money of theirs into it as well.
So we're truly partners.
But I mean, you know, we had to raise $13.5 million.
And I'm sure you're going to ask
me, but the first part of that was a 4.6 from a crowdfunding campaign. And then the rest we raised
on our own. When did that officially start? Because I feel like I was hearing stories about
drafts and when you guys were writing it literally 10 years ago. So when were you like, it's official,
we're all going to get together and this is going to be our project for the next X number of years? We started writing it about three years ago.
Okay. And we did the crowdfunding campaign around then too. And we probably had about
10 drafts by the time the crowdfunding campaign started. And then, you know,
the draft we shot was 37, you know, so. Wow. We tend to write a lot of drafts because our budgets tend
to be a little smaller and we want to just show up and say, this joke has been worked through the
ringer and we know it's good. And if the worst thing that happens is we shoot this joke, then
we're going to be happy with it. Now, we also improvise some in place of this joke. You could do
these three or four. We'll try, try you know we'll shoot those two but you
know we're a tight unit because we have to be you know the the budgets are fairly like the first one
we shot in 28 days the second one we shot in 28 days you know it's like wow it's such synchronicity
yeah i mean it's a it's a movie that's 10 times more complex but i also know how to make movies
now so instead of wasting all this time shooting shots I'm never going to use,
this movie I'm like, we need 14 seconds of this shot,
and we need 45 seconds of this shot,
then we need three minutes of this shot,
so we'll spend all the time on the three-minute shot.
You know, it's like you've got to – filmmaking is just a big puzzle.
You're just putting together these pieces to tell the story,
and then in between you're cracking these jokes.
But they have to be sort of, the angles have to be right,
and the timing has to be right, and the coloring and the lighting has to be right
in order for it to sort of, the audience to fully disappear into it.
I was going to ask you if all the TV directing that you've done
gave you that kind of militaristic approach to things
where you know that you've got X number of seconds to accomplish something,
but it seems like you were on that way before.
No, no, that's 100% true.
I mean, I've directed now, like, I think 110 episodes of television.
Incredible.
The thing about TV is the whole game is organized around a five-day,
at least in the half-hour, comedy is organized around a five-day schedule.
If I can finish my episode in five days,
then the next director can come the next week and shoot theirs in five days and then so on.
If I need a sixth day, then the next director now has four days and then now they're shooting their fifth day on Monday, which compounds the problem for the next director.
And then if they take six days, suddenly they're starting the episode on Tuesday.
Like it's a big, big machine that requires getting it done in five days. Suddenly they're starting the episode on Tuesday. Like it's a big, big machine that
requires getting it done in five days. So sometimes the producer will come down and say,
you're running out of time. You've got this scene to shoot and you have basically 90 minutes,
right? It's two and a half pages long. What are you going to do? And I say, well, what I need to
shoot this scene is these exact six shots, and then it can be TV quality ready. So this is what I'm going to do.
I'm not going to give you all these different choices. We're shooting six shots. We'll be done
in 90 minutes. And that's what TV allows you to do. You're like, okay. And sometimes when I'm on
a movie now, I'm like, I'm really out of time. And I could try to bump the budget up by going
over and adding a day.
Or I can shoot these six shots in 90 minutes and it's going to be good.
So let's go back to the crowdfunding thing because I find that interesting.
You guys set out to raise a certain number of money.
Was it to show Fox that there was enough interest in the film?
How does that work?
It was sort of a high-risk endeavor because Fox said, go raise the money on your own. And, you know,
Veronica Mars had raised, I think, 5.8 million for their film. And we thought, wow, is that,
I mean, that's, that was a very popular TV show. We were a very popular movie. What if
we could do that? You know, we could have probably gone to investors and raised a certain amount of money.
I don't know how much, but the thing was the sequel was coming at an unorthodox time compared
to the first one. You know, most sequels don't take that much time to get there. So the investors
were like, is there still an audience? Fox was to
some degree that too. They're like, we believe there's an audience. However, show it to us by
raising the money. See if the investor group class out there wants to put the money in. We said,
we will show you that there's an audience by crowdfunding it. But that's one of the things
about show business, right?
When I walk around, everybody who interacts with me says, hey, when's the next Super Troopers coming out? So in my mind, there's a huge audience. But the reality is they just happen
to run into the Super Troopers guy. So they said the one thing to him that you would say.
So true.
It's like when I run into, you know, if I run into George Clooney, I'm like,
when's the next Ocean's Eleven?
He's thinking everybody wants to see Ocean's Eleven.
Yeah.
Right?
I mean, it has no real bearing.
No one's asking about Michael Clayton, too, though.
Maybe not.
Maybe not.
Who knows?
I am, but.
But that's the point.
It's like my sample is just me.
Right?
It's just that's what people would say to me.
When's PodFest coming out?
Right?
Oh, do they want to make another PodFest? So I think ultimately it was a risk because you don't, you know, these crowdfunding things can
turn on you. They can turn on you. I mean, Zach Braff's campaign, I didn't study it, right? I
just know that he was unhappy with the partial reaction of his crowdfunding. Right. The crowd, you know, granted, he got some money and he made the film,
but some of the crowd did go after him.
He was sort of hurt by it and he kind of was defensive about it.
And I get it.
I like Zach.
I'm friends with him.
Did you have any trepidation then that you'd be like,
ah, you know, Jay has been making movies and directing television
for 15 years, 20 years in the business.
Why do they need this?
Because I feel like people
don't quite understand the mechanics of how you raise and then spend money in Hollywood.
The thing about our campaign was it was the beginning of the campaign was actually the
beginning of the advertising campaign for the movie, right? So we needed to make every piece
of art fit the tone of the first film.
So we needed to like get in shape,
grow mustaches, get crew cuts,
then write A-level jokes
that you could have put into the first film,
but they were organized around the campaign
to raise money for the second film.
The reality was this.
The studio said,
we'll release the film if you bring the money. Okay. So they gave us a
gift of a hook for the campaign. Like I don't have 13 and a half million dollars in the bank. I know
everybody thinks, you know, Hollywood people are rolling in it. That's all part of the showbiz too.
Like part of the show, I always say this about show business, everything in show business is
show business, right?
Part of the dream of Hollywood is that I'm living on a cliff and I've got millions and millions in the bank.
The reality is I'm living in a nice house and I don't have millions in the bank.
Right. I want to perpetuate the idea in show business that we're like, we're loaded and we're driving Lamborghinis and we're having sex with all the women.
Like that's part of the fun.
Yep.
Right?
We don't want to pretend like that's not true.
It's not true, but we don't want to tell everybody that, right?
But it dovetails with what you're talking about, right? Because you have to create a marketing campaign.
So you're the filmmaker, you're one of the writers, the creator of this brand, for lack of a better phrase. But then in an effort to raise money,
you also have to start writing around the thing you're going to be making. Is that right?
Yeah. I mean, let me be really clear. Like we went to investors and said,
we need to raise the money for Super Troopers 2. And a lot of them were like hemming and hawing and maybe and, you know,
like it wasn't like they were rolling out the dough,
and it was purely a function of how much time it had been.
So the crowdfunding campaign was literally a dream for us
because it was a mechanism to say 54,000 people put up their money for this, you know?
$4.7 million was put up for this or for six or whatever it was.
And then the investors were like, okay, sold.
And the studio was like, got it.
You're right.
Got it.
Did it embolden you to make the movie even more then?
Were you like, we're going to make it twice as good as we were going to make it because we know that there's a ravenous group of people that would literally just give us money to do it?
No. I mean, how much money we raise has no bearing on how good we're or how
hard we're trying. Like you try hard out of pride and out of a fear of later insult. You know,
like we were, we made a film with our friends and it was you know it turned out
to sort of
strike a nerve
with a certain crowd
in the country
and
then
because of the DVD
market the way it was
they watched that movie
over and over and over
and I think
had it been
a streaming time
they probably wouldn't have
watched it 20 times
or 10 times
whatever they watched it
I mean maybe
we'll see
I don't know
I would argue actually it was the perfect kind of movie I mean, maybe. We'll see. I don't know. I don't know. I would argue, actually, it was the
perfect kind of movie. I mean, I was a
kid in college when Super Troopers came out, and I had
that DVD, and it was on in the dorm room
all the time. But you had the actual DVD,
and that's part of the reason it was playing.
You know, if some other DVD was there,
that might have been playing
too. Now you have so
many options that you're like,
should we watch Super Troopers again again or should we watch The Crown?
We haven't seen The Crown yet.
We can do both.
No, I know.
I just mean the amount of times that it was watched.
You're right.
It became a—
You think they're watching The Crown in dorm rooms?
I don't know.
I don't know about that.
I'm watching The Crown. around. But I mean, I think that the, you know, that people ended up forming an emotional
attachment to that first film so that when the second film came up, if we messed it up,
we were really going to mess up two films. We were going to make people unhappy that we made a sequel
and unhappy that we ruined the first one because there's this other one out there where all the same
characters and it sucks like that that's the that's why you work hard out of out of uh out of
sort of respect to the emotional tie they had to the first one was it fun to actually start doing
it again to start growing the mustache to do the writing to get back into the characters it was
great i mean it was great to do i, we felt we had a great script.
We felt we, you know, knew the tone,
knew why the first one worked,
the timing, you know, was...
I knew what the timing was of that film
and could basically give a version of that same timing
that is modernized a little bit now.
Yeah, I mean, we were kind of excited and ready to go.
Was it going to work?
Who the hell knows, right?
I mean, you can't guarantee a film is going to work just because you know all those things, right?
I'm a way better filmmaker now, but does that mean it'll be a better film?
You can't guarantee that at all.
The film, we've now shown the sequel, and the audiences are reacting very, very positively.
Now, that doesn't even mean that it's going to land with everybody.
You don't know, right?
We'll know after probably April 23rd what the first whiff of opinion will be.
What's the Broken Lizard chemistry like now?
You guys are in your 40s.
You've made a lot of stuff together, but I're not, I assume you're not seeing each other and
talking every day, right? It must be, you must have families and lives and you have other projects.
Well, I mean, we have a lot of other projects. Three of us tour as standups a ton, but we,
you know, we were friends, we met when we were teenagers. We were 18, you know. So we were friends before any of us had ambition.
And so those are friendships that are like deep, like very deep.
I have memories of 18 with these guys.
So our friendships never go stale, you know.
And they're refreshed by, you know, frankly, press tours. We just did a 30-day,
17-city tour where we were just flying around the country showing the movie, you know, smoking grass
and drinking and telling jokes and, you know, got a whole bunch of new jokes for number three.
Is that something that's going to happen?
If people go in enough numbers, then Super Troopers 3 will happen. It's entirely up to
the studio. They control the property. So if they want to make the third, they could say,
raise the money again, right? And that'll mean the movie didn't make quite enough money.
But if it makes enough money, they'll go, let's make three now.
And Warner Brothers will call up and say, let's make Potfest.
Our fans are, from a standup perspective, they're last minute buyers.
They're on the couch getting high and they're like, let's go see Jay.
And they, you know, the club will call me and be like, we've only sold 100 tickets and we'll sell out because the people who walk up, you know, they're unpredictable. What can't happen if they
want to see a third one is they can't wait for video because the way studios value the money
they make, it's the same dollar, but they value the theatrical dollar more because the theatrical section of the film company is the group that greenlights films.
So if they're not happy, the film sequel doesn't get greenlit. If they make the money through the
theatrical division, they say, let's make a third. And then home video eats after that. Home video
can't greenlight the sequel. And they're also so much smaller than they used to be, right? That dollar
is so much smaller. So was there any part
of you that was reluctant
to go back to the well to
do this, given how fondly people feel
about Super Troopers? I just think they made
250 Law and Orders, right?
I mean, it's just a
cop story, right? We just
are making another one. That's all
we're doing.
I understand that cop story, right? We just are making another one. That's all we're doing. You know, like,
I understand that there's an emotional attachment to the first one. I get it. You know, like,
I'm not, we're not messing around. We're not trying to, you know, remake Caddyshack. Like,
somebody called me to remake Caddyshack. I said, no, man. I mean, you can't remake a classic, but we're not remaking Super Troopers.
We're just making another one.
Right.
You know?
Was it, you know, as I was thinking about it, I rewatched the first one and then I watched the second one.
And when I was watching the second one, I dug it.
I was laughing.
But I was like, most properties like this would be a streaming show now.
Was there ever a time when you would try to sell eight episodes to
Netflix to do a Super Troopers series instead of trying to do this thing where you got to do the
roadshow, you got to go out and sell it, you got to put in X thousands of theaters to get people
to see it? I talked to a guy in Silicon Valley who was one of the early investors in Uber.
And he was like, I'm going to create a film studio down in L.A. We're breaking your business up.
You know, we're destructive, all this fucking shit.
And I can swear here, right?
Yes, you can.
Please do.
And I'm like, I mean, I like the guy.
And he's obviously done very well,
and he has destroyed the cab business with his Uber company.
It's not the guy who started Uber, but he invested.
But I don't think we should be letting the nerds up north control Hollywood.
I mean, Hollywood is a established business.
We know what we're doing here.
We are the dream makers.
We are, you know, we push, you know, entertainment and television and film is one of the biggest
exports in the nation, right?
So we don't need the computer guys to come down and break up our business.
And this notion that we should just roll over and just put it on TV or Netflix, I think that's just such a flawed notion and a terrible idea. I think you got to like hold on.
You know, this superhero thing, it's a fever and it's been with us for a long time, but it will pass.
And when it passes, we still have to be able to make personal, interesting, raunchy, R-rated comedies that can go out in the theater and people can experience together that way.
I'm a very strong believer in holding on and trying to make these movies work in the theater.
And what it means is, you know, maybe it means making more Super Troopers because it's like
an unaided awareness property that people already know about. Maybe it means making
Podfest, you know, that's okay. We'll do that and be very happy doing that until the fever breaks and they're like, let's make something interesting and new.
And maybe there'll be a new wave of like independent style cinema in the theater.
It's not over yet.
It's interesting that you say that.
I had Kate Cannon here a couple weeks ago.
We talked about Blockers.
We were talking a little bit about Game Night.
Good for her.
That movie did well.
I haven't seen it yet, but I was rooting for it. a good one, but last year, there were not very many movies that were comedies that people actually went out and saw. Is there a part of you that is worried about that?
Certainly worried about it because people kind of, in my job, will give up.
They'll be like, oh, what's the point?
They don't want to make them, you know?
But Get Out was a comedy.
I think they made that for five and a half million bucks, you know?
And, you know, look at this movie about people being quiet this weekend.
I don't even know what's...
A quiet place.
A quiet place.
I mean, who saw that coming?
Yeah.
I mean, you know, like that can't have been an expensive movie.
No, I think it was 15 million.
There's some rumblings out there, you know?
I mean, you know, Blockers obviously is a more traditional studio comedy, but it did well.
You know, we'll see what happens with Superheroes 2.
If it does well, it'll be another,
hey, maybe there's a comeback, right?
I think so.
Even the studio executives are not happy
about having to make superhero movies.
They're not.
They're just not.
When they look back on their career
and they see like blankety blank eight, the return, the soldier comes home, you know, whatever, seven.
They're not going to be thrilled about that.
Yep.
They're going to be thrilled about having made Kramer versus Kramer, The Godfather.
That's what they want to make.
These are people who are interested in telling good stories and they read a lot and they understand what stories are
and they're being forced into making these movies
about superheroes.
Now, I get it.
That's fueling the whole business.
I get it.
I'm like the jerk who's trying to kill the goose
with the golden egg.
No, not necessarily.
We can have all those things, theoretically.
These people would love to make unique stories.
Hey guys, we're going to take a quick break
to hear a word from our sponsor. With the Google Assistant, unique stories. This movie is set in Canada. I wanted
to ask you about that too. Why did the Super Troopers, are they going to Canada?
Well, the world of the first one was on the northern border of Vermont, which is where we
had gone to a bachelor party and a wedding. and it was a very quiet stretch of highway, and we thought that's kind of a funny place, which is sort of like it's a nonviolent police place where people could be bored and could dick around on the highways.
It felt like a good spot for it.
So we were already in that world, and we thought, you know, we all kind
of read the New York Times a lot, and we're fairly political, whatever. And this idea of,
there was a reassessment of the Canadian-U.S. border after 9-11. And they did find that the
markers were in the wrong place in certain spots, which meant chunks of Canada were actually U.S. land and
chunks of U.S. were actually Canada's land. And there was a swap and they did all this thing.
And we thought it would be funny if we could, if the markers were so off that they encapsulated
a Canadian town and this town turned out was now the northern tip of Vermont. And so it meant that Canada was turning the land over to us.
And they called us up to oversee the transition from Mountie Control to, you know, basically Vermont Highway Patrol Control.
We thought that was kind of a fun idea.
I didn't realize it was situated in the real.
That's pretty cool.
I mean, it was situated in the real, but the markers weren't as off as we had them.
Sure.
But did you have reams of Canada jokes ready to go?
There's a lot of very good Canada humor.
Well, we wanted to make, you know, the best film rivalry films tend to go both ways, I think.
You know, and so we did go after Canada hard, but we gave, you know,
the Canadians come after us too. And, uh, that's, I loved, I love when they come after America. I
think it's hilarious. You mentioned that your Mounties, how did you go about picking and
choosing the other members of the cast here that isn't Broken Lizard? We wanted to hire as many
Canadians as possible. So Will's Canadian, uh, Will Sasso, Tyler Labine, Emmanuel Shrieky's Canadian.
Because ultimately, when you're making fun of a country, you want to put their countrymen
in front so that you can just point at them when you get grief, you know.
And that's what we're doing.
You know, Canadians have always been portrayed as these really sweet, nice, oh, gosh, hi,
thanks, cool, nice to see you. And we wanted
to show, I mean, if you go out in say Vancouver after midnight, you'll see fights on the street
because the flip side of the Canadian coin is the hockey tough. And we wanted to show that side of
it. Let's talk a little bit about Rob Lowe. This is quite a Rob Lowe performance. Was it easy to sell Rob Lowe on the evil dick-punching character in this film?
I mean, Rob and I worked on his show, The Grinder, with Fred Savage, and we really hit it off.
He's got such amazing timing, and I kind of joke with him that he's like a comedian trapped in a leading man's body,
because he just gets it.
He understands the joke. He understands why the joke's funny because he just gets it. He understands the joke.
He understands why the joke's funny.
He knows when to push it over the line.
And he's got beautiful timing.
I mean, we did three-minute, three-and-a-half-minute dialogue takes
with him and Fred Savage where you shoot the wide and you're like,
it's really all we need.
We don't need a single bit of a close-up.
We don't because the guys understand the timing and they're nailing it.
They know every line.
You know, as he says, they're ninjas.
Yeah, he does feel that way.
I mean, 25 years under his belt, right?
He is a ninja.
And after the fourth episode, he and Fred and I were in his trailer.
And it was the end of the season.
And I said, hey, Rob, we have a script for Super Troopers 2.
Is there?
And he goes, anything you want, I'm in.
I don't even need to see it.
Amazing.
And Fred's like, what about me?
And, you know, so.
You have a moment for Fred, too.
We worked them both in.
You know, he played Canadian in Youngblood, the hockey movie.
That's right.
And he wanted to play a Canadian again because he has a lot of strong opinions about Canada and their mental inability to make a quick decision.
And we talked at length.
He goes, I want to get into this whole idea.
He cited an example of something called the Halifax Explosion. And that was a hundred years ago, a ship that was like
packed with dynamite was coming into Halifax Harbor and another ship was going out to meet
that ship. And I guess, you know, get the crew off or whatever, because maybe the big ship was too
big to go through, get close enough. And his joke was that, you know, the captain of the dynamite ship and the captain of the
greeting ship could not decide which way to turn.
And so the captain of the dynamite ship is like, well, because they're coming right at
each other.
And the captain of the dynamite ship is like, oh, should I go right?
And they're like, well, if I go right and he goes left, then we're going to hit.
And then on the other ship, he's like, should I go left? Well, if I go right and he goes left, then we're going to hit. And on the other ship, he's like, should I go left?
Well, if I go left and he goes right, then we're, you know.
And the two ships hit.
And what happened is it caused a spark, which set the dynamite ship on fire.
And it was a slow burn.
And thousands of people came to the docks to watch a ship burn.
Because that's kind of fun.
I would do the same.
Of course.
Little did they know it was full of the most dynamite ever.
And the thing blew up and wiped out, I mean, thousands of people.
It was the biggest explosion on earth before Hiroshima.
And Rob was like,
that's a funny story.
Yeah, well, that's a good lead into another conversation,
which is like,
that's obviously a horrifying thing
that happened,
but we have a great deal
of distance from it.
That's right.
There's a great joke
about it in the movie.
Also, you know,
you mentioned earlier,
you're playing cops,
you're in a nonviolent
part of the world,
but playing cops now
means something slightly different
than maybe it did 15, 20 years ago.
Sure.
Did you guys think about that at all, about how to portray yourselves?
Obviously, Super Troopers is very lighthearted, but still.
It's unfortunate, you know, and it's interesting.
It's like it's always, you know, black guys are getting shot and killed by police.
And part of your brain is like, well, it's not highway patrol, it's local police,
but it's police, right? It's police. And part of me says, when we made this film, and I gotta tell
you, I have a very strong political opinion, right? But I was listening to Dennis Miller,
actually, I was reading his tweets, and he was, you know, he's tweeting pro-Republican tweets, right?
And I love Dennis Miller, and I've done his show a couple times, and he's a fan of ours, and I love him, and I've seen him live.
But the tweets made me a little angry.
And I'm like, well, that's an interesting reaction, that I'm angry at a guy I love simply for tweeting about politics.
And I'm like, because when I tweet about politics, a lot of, not a lot, but some people will be like, do you not want us to ever see your movie, you cuck, whatever.
And I'm like, I see.
I mean, that's how they feel.
They're angry about my reaction to politics.
And I'm angry at Dennis Miller. And I said to the guys, I'm like, let's just take, that's how they feel. They're angry about my reaction to politics. And I'm angry at Dennis Miller.
And I said to the guys, I'm like, let's just take, let's stop.
Let's try to let the movie.
The thing about our fans is like, if you go to a standup show of ours, half of the crowd
are cops and half of the crowd are stoners.
And the two crowds are laughing at the same jokes.
And they're in the same spot, you know, and they're watching our movies, Cops and Stoners, Cops and Stoners, Republicans and Democrats, both sides.
And I'm like, you know, there's so much political commentary.
There's so much sniping on both sides, but definitely by the left.
And the right is sniping, too.
I don't think they're doing as good a job, but that's my opinion.
Okay.
The point is like the world – the president is not going to be impeached or not impeached based on my tweets.
Right.
I think about this all the time.
Robert Mueller doesn't care what I think about Trump. So maybe instead what we can do is try to be what entertainment is sort of supposed to be, the role it should play in society, which is like a unifying force around art.
So our goal with this is to get the country to go, okay, we disagree out there, but in this one movie, we're going to come together and say, you know what?
We all agree that we're just going to enjoy that film and let it be funny and
whatever you know i mean that's i think that's that's the goal and if you ask me about what i
think about cops i'm against them shooting black people we share that you know it's why i thought
i was voting for legalization of marijuana in california i was like i don't think it's
i think it's more fun if it's illegal you You know, I think it's like a little more forbidden.
I think teenagers will be more likely to see that as a rebellion instead of looking at cocaine as a rebellion.
And I think it's a good thing that it's illegal.
The bad thing is it's one more friction point between black people and cops and they're getting shot.
So I voted to legalize it for that other reason.
So I'm against it.
I'm also sure that these cops are worried that they're going to get shot.
And so they're probably thinking there's a gun.
And, you know, certainly there are some people who are just flat out racist and they're killing people.
I get it.
But the amount of guns in our society is making cops be, you know, on edge, you know.
Do you worry about a movie like yours, which is intended to draw people together, getting super
politicized, and then there'll be the think piece about
what Super Troopers 2 gets wrong about X?
Do you have to deal with that stuff?
No, I don't.
I don't.
I don't, because we're trying to make...
I mean, it's going to be eternal.
We can't live without cops.
We need them. Without cops...
I mean, the crazy is... My father is a police officer, for the record. We need them. Without cops, I mean, the crazies...
My father is a police officer, for the record. I get it.
The crazy... There are a large number, not a large, but enough of a number of violent and crazy and
predatory people in our society. And if we didn't have cops, they'd be turned loose and it would be
a nightmare. We need police. And police stories are so fabulous because the stakes are so high. You know, if you get busted, you're going to jail.
That's a high stakes thing.
They have guns on their belts.
That's a high stakes thing.
These are great stories for Hollywood and for books and movies and TV.
So these stories will always be there.
There will always be cop stories because there's always going to be criminals.
We are, you know,
there's probably some politics in the movie,
but that's not overt.
It's, you know,
we don't mention the president.
You know, we don't mention Clinton.
All purposeful, I assume.
Well, frankly, we didn't know who was going to win when we finished the film.
You know, I mean, that too.
That was part of it too.
Let's talk about Jay a little bit.
What else do you want to do?
You've made a bunch of movies.
You've made 110 episodes of television.
I started at 24.
I mean, that's why I was able to get so many in.
I mean, congrats.
No, it's impressive.
But what else do you, what else is on your bucket list?
I have a film.
It's called American Indian.
And it is a conversation on race and language and, frankly, a little bit of politics, too.
Not a little bit.
A lot of politics.
I want to make a movie just about this political moment.
Because, you know, Indians occupy a spot between black and white. We're part of that,
that like dreaded model minority category. And I say dreaded because some of the other minorities
are like, fuck you guys, model minority, my ass. Right. And white people are, you know,
to some degree, I'm going to be general or like, Hey, why don't you just act like the Indians?
And it's a funny spot to be in
because we're watching this black-white fight from the sidelines to some degree, you know,
from the sidelines. And I think it's an opportunity to talk about race in a way that I think can be
very funny and hopefully interesting. I mean, you know, it's like, the thing I say on my stand-up stage
is that, like, the way the media portrays racism
is that all white people are racist
and all minorities are innocent angels.
And I say, you know, you should have talked to my grandmother.
And the reality is,
if you talk to these Indians
who are coming here from India,
some of them, when they first get here,
they're anti-black.
That doesn't fit the narrative, right?
But if you really bear down with these people, they're also kind of anti-white.
And not because they think that white people are bad.
They just think they're superior.
They're brown supremacists, right?
And that part of the conversation, I mean, you see it in in minority communities they're
racist just like we are because we're all tribal we're all animals we see someone a little different
we have a we have an opinion right and so it's not like a convenient part of the narrative
but it is part of the narrative that we don't really talk about in this movie american indian
it that's what that's really what this is about. It's about what language you're allowed to use now and what you're not allowed to use now.
Like like the N word.
Right.
I've been called that.
Like, can I use the N word as an Indian?
I'm not here to adjudicate that.
Right.
Right.
I think I think a lot of people would say no, but I've been called the N word by a white guy and I've been called it by a black guy. Right. So by the logic that,
you know, that the black people sometimes talk about who can use the N word. Well, if you,
if you've been called it, then you can use it. Well, theoretically I can use it. I can't use it,
but that conversation is part of this movie. Is this a narrative movie or is this you in
more monologue form? It's a narrative movie. It's basically the premise of it is I go with a friend down to Austin, Texas.
I meet a girl.
We have a one-night stand and she gets pregnant.
And her father is like a hardcore political Republican.
And she doesn't want to tell him that she's pregnant because she doesn't want a pity
party wedding. She wants a good, nice, innocent wedding. So we're having a wedding. And his
view is like, why are you bringing this Indian guy? And obviously a Democrat and from New York
and all this stuff. So it's a movie that pits the Democrats against the Republicans,
white against the Indian, you know, gay rights against not gay rights. It's all like,
but also about language. Like, you know, it opens with a discussion of language among New Yorkers
about what you're allowed to say and what you're not like, you know, when I was growing up, you
could call if someone walked in with a pair of salmon pants.
You'd be like, hey, those pants are kind of gay.
You can't say that anymore, right?
But these conversations are, you know, that's what the movie's about.
Is this movie happening?
Are you in the process of trying to make it happen?
I've written 30 drafts of it.
Okay.
You got to get to 37 then.
That's the plan.
I get to 37.
Hollywood,
if you play it right,
it's all about timing, right?
So,
if the film makes,
Super Troopers 2
makes a certain amount of money,
I can walk in with the script
to a lot of places
and they'll say,
how much?
And I'll say,
15 million.
They'll go,
okay.
Because of the success
of the box office.
Now,
if the film doesn't make
that much money,
this American Indian
won't get made.
Or it'll get made
on a super independent level.
Either way is fine.
I don't really,
I don't really take no
for an answer.
It just means
it'll just take me longer
to do it.
You know,
like,
if the studios say no
to American Indian,
then I'll raise,
you know, five and a half and I'll make it that way.
I hope you do. I want to see it.
Okay.
Jay, I end every episode by asking the guest, what's the last great thing that you've seen?
So what's the last great thing you've seen?
The last great thing I've seen.
The crown.
I fell into the crown on Netflix and I think it's like—
You're like the third person to say it in that chair. What is it about The Crown that you like so much?
Well, I like to watch British women speak.
And what I find is that I watch the queen and her sister speak, and then I pressed the back button that goes
back about eight or ten seconds, and then I watched them say that line again, and I'll
do it like five or six times.
I'm like a little psychotic weirdo.
But I like the way they tilt their heads and the way they pronounce certain words in ways
that are like, they don't even seem British.
They're like a high
crust of British that you can't even imagine. Like the way they pronounce certain words. You're like,
wow, is that great? I love that answer, Jay. Thank you so much for doing the show today.
I appreciate it. Thank you.
Thanks for listening to this week's show, stoners. For more on movies, head to TheRinger.com.
I've got a new column on the glut of Netflix movies the service has added and what they're really good for.
And tune in next Monday.
I've got a special bonus episode and a special bonus guest.
The iconic filmmaker William Friedkin was in the house to talk about his new movie, The Devil and Father Amort, and a whole lot more.
See you then.