The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - South Beach Sessions - Mina Kimes & Bill Lawrence
Episode Date: June 26, 2025Things are pretty strange right now... let's get into it. In this special episode of South Beach Sessions, Dan wants to know how his friends have been handling the neverending vacuum that is thei...r phones and social media. Meeting for the first time, ESPN's Mina Kimes and writer/creator Bill Lawrence (Scrubs, Ted Lasso, Cougartown, Bad Monkey) share their experiences carving a path for themselves in their respective careers, dealing with self-doubt, and how they've navigated the criticisms over the years. Mina also gets Dan to reveal one of his biggest insecurities... and why it has gotten worse more recently. It's a good time to make some new friendships... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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What is the longest you'll go without being in your phone over the course of today?
Is this it?
Will this next hour be the longest over the course of the day?
No for me only because I had to ban phones from the writers
room because if you're talking in a group setting and you say what does
everybody think and two out of the seven people in there are looking at their
phones you're screwed. So you banned it? Banned it in the writers room. You have to, if you have to go to your new parents get to keep it you know in their pocket but can't have it on the table. It's too much, too toxic.
Is that common in writers' rooms?
Yeah. We are, by definition, a scattered and a group of people that aren't great at maintaining
focus. And so, finding the excuse to go, hey, I'll look that up on the internet is usually
an immediate 20-minute trip to nowhere. Because up on the internet is usually an immediate 20 minute
trip to nowhere.
Because look, the job is trying to find ways not to work.
You have to consciously get out of it though, right?
Because it's beyond the addiction of it, our jobs are perpetually rewarded by whatever's in
there, right?
Like it's got punishments, but the pursuit of content is something that is, it's a hamster
wheel.
A hundred percent.
I think though with phone, like there's, are we using it as a stand in for social media
or group chats or just having constant stimulation
of news and stuff?
Because I find different aspects of it do different things to my brain.
The actual phone itself is just an innocuous device, piece of hardware I can use to call
my mom and FaceTime with her and show my kid.
The social media apps in here are the actual problem, in my experience.
Don't you find it all though to be just a giant package of addiction?
I mean, have you ever looked at that, you know, how you can access how many hours you were on it?
You looked at that thing?
No.
It's like staring at the sun.
Absolutely not.
It's bleak.
No, thank you.
Are you on your phone all the time?
The two of you, yeah.
I'm on it too much, but I've made some conscious decisions over the last five years, just because for the first time,
I have felt like the encroaching gray of,
ooh, this does not feel good too often.
There are too many times there are things happening here
where I'm going to a thing that doesn't feel that good
when I'm in it, and then it feels really bad
when I'm done with it.
And so I have to be conscious about watching myself,
because Meena and I have had some experiences with this
in terms of how it is we've experienced social media.
Cause I, at the very beginning of her career,
she's sort of walking into just a firestorm
of garbage tornadoes.
Cause she went from business reporter to famous, right?
Like there's some intermediary steps along the way, but...
But social media famous?
No?
Do I...
Yeah.
I've definitely seen countless attacks on you based on gender and your connection to
sports.
So that must have happened fast.
Yeah.
It happened, yeah.
The biggest difference is just scale.
I mean, when we first started doing stuff together, I was not as prominent as I am now
and wasn't as discussed as I am now.
And thus I looked at it a lot more than I do now.
And my relationship with social media has changed a lot
just because of that.
With me, I, cause I remember explaining to Mina
at the very advent of what was her ESPN time, that
as a newspaper columnist in my 20s, developing the voice that would make people write in,
I enjoyed for a long time whatever feedback was, like pre-social media, didn't mind criticism,
get to pardon the interruption, start doing it with Tony and Mike,
and I'm delighting in the fact that nobody wants me there.
Like nobody, they want Tony and Mike, they don't want me,
and so I sort of enjoyed that because I had
what was at the time a pretty impenetrable
professional confidence, but it's been weird in my 50s
as I'm doing things that I'm less confident in,
as I'm trying to study business to feel
delayed what you were feeling at the beginning when I met you.
Like I got into my 50s before some of this stuff started affecting my head.
Do you think that those feelings are because of your, I guess, sensitivity to where you
are and the things you're doing?
Or do you think it is just the nature of the response, what's being amplified, what's being sent your way,
that's different?
It's super interesting to live it this way.
It's aging in all its forms because I'm not talking about all social media.
I'm not on Facebook or Instagram.
I'm in one place that has been rotting. I'm in Twitter land where everything there has changed some
and whatever used to not bother me
in terms of being politicized as a weapon for takes,
which you get a ton of now,
that was something that wouldn't bother me once upon a time,
but now I'm in an environment
where it feels like I'm surrounded.
Well, you can't escape it, man.
I find you're generally going to say it's going to hurt my heart.
You're a different generation than me.
It's really upsetting to me.
We're the same generation.
On some level, everybody that does what I do at some point in time relish the anonymity
of being a writer.
Because by the way, if it works out for you, you get some of the
perks of celebrity, restaurant tables and, and access and, and financially rewarded,
but you don't have to deal with all the negatives.
And for me, social media has brought what sounds like a good opportunity is the ability
to brand yourself, you know what I mean?
And to then, by extension, get to make more stuff, you know?
And get to do more things that you like.
But it opens a door to the stuff that I think,
subconsciously, I was always hiding from,
which was what you had to face immediately,
which is suddenly people going,
hey, this is why I think this guy sucks.
And that, by the way, and that never, ever
happened to writers before. You know what I mean? And now you're seeing it. And are you ever happened to writers before.
And now you're saying it.
Yeah.
And are you saying it?
I do see it. I see it. You know, it's a combination of clickbait. And do either of you guys, I
said, I told Dan I was going to ask you about the ever search your own name?
No.
I used to.
I used to.
I do it on the daily. Not only do I do it on the daily, but I have this perverse side of me as I answer some
people.
I surprise.
I try to do it always comedically.
As some dude really went in hard, they're rebooting the show Scrubs.
If you guys ask me my reasons for it, we're all friends.
Nobody's making anything.
I'm in a weird time in my life that I get to make stuff. not only have friends I would want to spend time with anyways, but people that
aren't working, getting to work, production in LA could all be very cool. But I just read
somebody going, look at this asshole rebooting the show that is already over and already
blah blah. You shouldn't do it. It's so stupid. And so I just like going on with people like
that and going, hey, thanks. You totally turned me around on this.
Just because in my head, I think without being mean, the value of people knowing that the
stuff they think they get to anonymously put out into ethos.
You boop them.
Yeah, it's fine.
Yeah.
Pretending that there's someone human at the end of this.
Yeah, man.
Because you don't have to give any kerosene to a brush fire type of thing, but just to go, hey, occasionally
there's other side to what you're putting out there.
But the reason I said used to, and I don't know if it's the same for you, it was a conscious
decision because there was something happening.
When I talk about the encroaching gray, I don't know what it is about human nature.
Like obviously social media can be a poison pit in a number of different ways if you're
just comparing yourselves to people.
But to have access to 10 items of praise
and then get stuck on the handful that aren't,
like, there was a deterioration there that was happening to me
that I was, there was something happening with me where I was not
Absorbing the positive like that's everybody. Yeah. Yeah phrase like I don't think that's everybody
I think that's everybody. I don't know
You know, I think you have to if you're gonna believe the good you probably have to believe the bad on some level
but um, I think the game is the second you go looking to anonymous
outside faces for anything to boost your self-esteem, positive or negative, you're doomed.
You know?
Okay, but you're talking about you're putting your work out into the world.
You're not putting it in a drawer.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Look, it's I talk a big game.
I wanted to call my production company Noble Failure Productions because if you could
just show something that your friends and family didn't think was awful, you know, I
mean, that's really there's so many things out of your control. That's all you can shoot
for. But I talk a big game. But no, I hate it. You know, it's it affects me is is is
on a logical level. I know I should distance myself from it on an emotional level. I always
take those blows and carry them around for at least a couple hours.
But when I say I used to though, like it's not, that's not an absolute.
It's I've been, it's a weaning.
Well, I got a question for you guys.
It's a chicken and egg question that I was obsessing about before I got here because
of what you do is we're all so very quick.
It's going to be me turning a spotlight on the media.
All right.
We're all so very quick to go the anonymity of these social media platforms has created an
environment for people, young people to spew venom without
consequence, right? But do you think that's what came first?
And then different media sites and platforms said, Oh, that's
working, we're going to do it? Or here's the opposite side of
the chicken and egg thing, which is, in's working, we're going to do it. Or here's the opposite side of the chicken and egg thing,
which is in my business, even before social media started
grabbing, I noticed a cultural turn, a desperation clickbait.
And I used to read criticism and reviews of shows,
my own shows and other people's shows.
And I found them constructive.
There was even a critic, I mean, you guys were pulling a kale and people that people
would read what I did for fun, you know, because it was eloquently written, the negatives were
well spoken, the positives were well spoken.
And now, Dan made me read one on the air once, like the review of Shrinking by Time Magazine,
and I only care because my parents read it, was
Shrinking is an insult to therapy, comedy, and Harrison Ford. And I'm like, who
writes that headline? By the way, you know what I mean? By the way, that's such a different, that's such a different pool than, hey, I didn't love this show. You know what I mean?
So the question is, do you think it started as a competitive thing amongst your business
to grab people's eyes and look, or do you think it started as people found a way on
social media to do this and it worked so everybody, because I sometimes point my finger at the
media types.
Yeah, and you're basically asking, were people always this mad?
Yes.
Mad and shallow in the madness, right?
Because even if there was criticism before, at least it felt kind of more earned or developed.
It felt earned, it felt constructive, and it felt like you said there were kernels of
truth because it didn't feel like everything that I have to deal with is at least starting
from a place of wanting people to go, oh, no way, I can't believe they said that.
Well, you can speak more to the olden times when people wrote letters to TV shows
that they were mad at.
But jeez, but jeez, but jeez.
People would bring them on a horse and stuff, you know?
I do miss the-
Even in 10 years, though.
I do miss that your rage and hatred
had to reach me by mail with a stamp before it got to me.
And now it gets here a whole lot quicker than it used to.
But when you talk about our people angrier, it's the difference
between shouting in a bathroom by yourself and now having it heard and seen. Getting
that anger heard and seen so that young people can be in the business of being famous. Right? Yeah.
Well, I would also say, to make it more narrow, even in the last five to seven years versus
10 years ago, because I've been doing this now for about 10 years, the pipes, meaning
the platforms, are incentivizing.
The thumb is on the scale now.
The matter, the better.
Not just the matter, the better.
The more likely, the more provocative you are, the more of a gotcha, the more angry, more provocative you are the more of a gotcha the more angry
The more political the more likely it is to go crazy
So there is an actual incentive sometimes financial for people to be angrier than even five to seven years ago
There's on Twitter. For example a for you page that didn't exist before it's algorithmic and when you go there
The mad stuff does well the gotchas do well. So
I would add to that the thing that blows me away is there, the mad stuff does well, the gotchas do well. So there's actually incentives.
I would add to that, the thing that blows me away is absolutely no consequences to be
completely uninformed on the topic. Even if you're going head to head with an opinion
or an issue from someone that has spent a lot of their adult life or of their working
career pursuing knowledge
in that topic.
That there's no weighted thing to experts anymore.
I find that fascinating.
Yeah, certainly.
An insult to therapy, comedy, and Harrison Ford.
I got all three.
It's a trifecta.
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Visit your local Chevrolet dealer for details. You've had a remarkable amount of success early and a lot of people would say that you are wildly confident.
It's not...
It's a trademark of my family,
is completely unearned confidence.
But it's earned in your case.
Oh, nice.
Well, but I mean, you've had monster successes.
I've had, you know, I did not expect
to have a career renaissance in my mid-50s.
Part of my business is highs, lows,
and I've had plenty of peaks and valleys.
And the only thing that remains true
is nowadays more than before, when you're in a peak,
you have this general sense, just because of what
Mina's talking about, of excitement for you
to hit your next valley, which is so weird.
Because I root for the people
I love to do great, you know, I mean, I don't I don't
Sit around going. Oh, man. I can't wait till this one goes badly
But you both know when you've made something well, right? Like how much more impenetrable are you to whatever the cruelties are in this?
If you know, it's good
I don't know if you guys can do this because the nature of business my
personal epiphany was when I realized that success of something creative, you can't use your metric to be how financially successful it is or you're doomed.
And yeah, that's an easy thing to say for someone that was doing well financially, but it really
helped me.
I made this show that I thought was awesome called Whiskey Cavalier and horrible title,
don't worry about it.
It was really good and I had to move to the Czech Republic to shoot it because it was
a big action TV show and we could only do it in an affordable way there.
It took place in Europe and Paris and Amsterdam and the show was cool and I challenged people to
go watch it and say that it stinks. I'm now gonna get 9,000 tweets but it failed
miserably and I found myself going I was in the Czech Republic for six months
away from my family.
And it did not feel like a success.
It felt like a giant mistake.
And I finally got to a point that I was really lucky because my youngest kid watched it.
He's like, dude, that show is good.
My friends and I really dug it.
I'm like, oh, cool.
Yeah, right?
It has merit.
So I think what success means to you is the biggest life change for me that's positive.
I think, and this sort of connects to what we've been talking about with social media,
for me a challenge and something I've really spent a lot of time is trying to disentangle
my perception of whether something I've done is good from two things.
One, the reaction on the internet, which is hard and real and especially when we're now
in an internet business and it's like, well, this didn't go real, and especially when we're now in an internet business,
and it's like, well, this didn't go viral,
this didn't get X-Men reviews, so it must be bad.
No, sometimes the internet is wrong.
Sometimes...
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa,
go back a second.
Sometimes the internet is wrong?
I know! That's crazy.
Sometimes it happens.
If it's on there, it's mostly true.
I'm gonna blow your guys' minds.
Sometimes bad things go crazy on the internet.
It's unbelievable that it happens.
And then the other is to find the opinions that people actually value and trust and really,
not just say it, but really privilege those above, again, the masses or what, which isn't
to say the masses are wrong.
Sometimes they're right.
And sometimes somebody who's been watching my stuff forever is one of those voices that
I should trust.
But really trying to see what on that.
I mean-
To curate, like to curate the people that you listen to?
An example that kind of connects both of them is back when I did read more of my internet
mentions and I think I've told you this before, I was really upset that day because a bunch
of fans were just like saying really vile stuff to me
and I was bitching about it as my husband.
We get in a car, we go to a party,
we're on the way out of the party, someone stops me
and it's Don Cheadle and he's like,
hey, you do a great job.
I just want you to know, this is such a humble rag story,
I don't care, I'm such a fan.
And I'm like, wow.
We walk out and I'm like, you know what, those fans.
And my husband's like
You gotta like step back and learn how to weight things better and come back to that though You guys think everyone's like that you think that everyone is like that
That you get that everyone who gets 15
Compliments focuses on the one negative?
I think that's how humans are wired.
I think it is, but I would also say this.
Minus narcissists.
I was excited to try and find a way to do this.
So I am in a real, you know, my daughter is in it, even younger generation than Mina.
It's fun to say.
I see young people that live in this world.
My daughter was in this world.
She's got a million Instagram followers, it's part of her career, she self promotes her
music and I've witnessed things that are confusing to me.
Example, I've seen her once a friend had a pair of jeans on that my daughter thought
were amazing and she said it's ridiculous that these jeans are like $400 or $500.
And I'm like, yeah, you shouldn't buy them.
She's like, no, no, just wait.
And she had a friend take a picture of them, her in them.
And on that, she said, you know, not an ad, really like these.
They fit great.
They're fun.
And within a week, that company contacted her.
And she's like, now I just have to not be a jerk
and say I want 20 pairs and just say,
I want one or two pairs.
And she lives in that world.
And I think she takes the negatives in stride
even more than I do.
You know what I mean?
Because she is at least savvy enough to know
that if you're gonna make a living on,
the same way that we know the pluses and minuses
that came with our career going in,
young people, I think, don't go into this with blinders on.
They go into it with tons of stories from their friends
of the negatives and of what can happen
and what you have to be careful about.
And they're so much more savvy.
It's an extension of that joke metaphor
of how I don't know anything about technology.
I don't know anything about entering that world.
My daughter will educate me all the time.
I'm surprised to hear you say though that you made something that you knew was good
and your...
Whiskey Cavalier.
I just wanted to say it.
I hadn't got a chance to say it.
You should say it like that too.
It's fun to say.
We were talking about it today because I thought it was going to be a huge show.
It was my last network TV show.
I thought it was going to be a huge ABC show.
And then we went to Upfronts, which
they still did when you bring you there.
And they talk about what show.
And it was relegated to a mid-season replacement.
And then Jimmy Kimmel, who's just an absolute buddy of mine.
I love the guy.
And he had to do the big presentation.
He made fun of the title.
So I went from going, this show is going to be huge to,
it's a mid-season replacement He made fun of the title. So I went from going, this show's gonna be huge to it's a mid-season replacement.
He mocked the title and then it was over in like seven weeks
and no one ever watched it.
And then for it to come full circle,
we were out trying to sell a show about six weeks ago.
And someone's like, we're looking for a show
that's kind of like action comedy,
like Whiskey Cavalier, if you know that show.
And I almost lost my mind.
I almost went across the table and choked the person. I'm like I made that show! I
went to the Czech Republic it was very cold and there's castles everywhere.
That's a roller coaster though. You had the standard. You believed that that was good and then you were taken off of your position by
results. Yeah yeah it really upset me. That doesn't happen to you very often, does it?
No, usually the stuff that doesn't work is so bad.
Have you ever made something that you knew was bad?
Anyway, I made, yeah, my career was in a valley
when I was trying to just get work
and I turned the movie Rush Hour into a TV show.
Was it your favorite?
That sounds good.
Check it out.
It's a great movie.
I haven't seen the show.
Who was in the show?
Wait, did you do an Asian person and a black person
in the show?
Yes, I did.
And by the way, they're both great young actors,
but no, it just didn't work.
You know, the funniest thing was
it came back to haunt me in a good way.
So Wendy Malick was on that show
and she's in shrinking now.
But...
On a front to comedy therapy and
Still there and she I called her up a guy. Hey, you got to do this show and she's like
I don't think it's that good
She even said it, you know in a great way and I'm like look just I think it might work
Come do the show and if it doesn't go well, I'll put you in something
Great eventually and she came and did that show and was a disaster and then when I was putting Shrinking
together she literally was like hey you owe me one. That's how bad it was.
Which character is she? She plays Harrison Ford's wife.
Okay. She was like on it's just shoot me and stuff she's been around for a long time.
Is that where your confidence was lowest there me? No
Because Mike sure when Mike sure speaks of Bill Lawrence
He speaks of meteoric rise Mike sure is not you know
Jealous of many people as somebody who was in his early 20s doing Saturday Night Live and this it was like the one person
that he was
Looking at and being like that guy's career path is meteor Saturday Night Live and this was like the one person that he was looking at
and being like that guy's career path is meteoric. I search the internet for
anybody it's not a lot because Mike's killing it for anybody that says that
he's a poor man's Bill Lawrence and if I find it I find a way to get it to him.
Whoever sees this please put that out there as a test of that.
But you bothered people with your confidence at that point
Yeah, look the I think I learned a lesson that you spoke of a second ago
very young which is growth from failure and
You know, I talked about way too much, but I was
Mercilessly fired off my first three big jobs
I was mercilessly fired off my first three big jobs. Three?
Yeah, I got fired off of Friends, the Nanny, and Boy Meets World all in a row.
Bam, bam, bam.
I know.
It was a...
And the fact...
And that was my lowest, you know, because I would...
Watching Friends become a...
I mean, I wrote on the first season of the show and watching it become a juggernaut with
young writers that I'd become friends with and just seeing it explode while I was in my boxers like fetal on a futon was rough.
And I think that experience of getting canned off all those shows that all went on to be
very successful and actually getting another gig gave me this feeling of like, oh shoot,
failure actually can point you in the right direction.
So I stopped being, that's my luckiest thing that happened to me, I stopped being afraid
of failing very young.
You lacked confidence at the beginning, right, at ESPN?
Because this is the most confident version of you I've seen, but it's at least in part
because of the sheer extraordinary amount of preparation that she has done in order
to meet this moment.
Like, you were talking before we started here
about one of the secrets in Hollywood
is you can actually outwork people.
I've seen what happens when you wanna work
because it's so important to be like,
more on top of things than everyone else is.
I would imagine, I'm speaking for you here,
but I would imagine this is the most confident version of you.
I'd like to answer this for me. Just give me a second.
Yeah, I guess so. I feel confident now in a way that I definitely didn't when we first
started doing television together. But that makes sense because I was very green and bad
at doing television at the time. And I didn't honestly deserve to be confident doing it.
And I've just been doing the exact job I'm doing now for a few years now, quite some
time.
So I should hope that I am more confident.
I would take this all back to Dan's original question.
When you asked if, you know, does everybody feel it, the negative harder than the positive
and all that stuff
is the one thing I've noticed in Hollywood and that's why I was so interested in what
you guys saw yourself getting here is I am constantly amazed that and I don't say this
in a judgmental way that people that started with the goal of being the face or being famous
or being in that situation they've thought about it much. I'm often amazed by how teflon they are about when they land there, as opposed to people
that ended up there because of a career path.
Because by the way, there are young people right now who you can, there's a horrible
article I read that, and it's on the internet, so it's true, that said, they asked kids, would you rather be the, you know, they gave them one job that
seems like it really matters or the assistant to someone famous and the assistant to someone
famous blew the other one out of the water.
You know what I mean?
And so it was saying early on that they're grown up in a culture of, I want people to
know who I am.
And I think that anybody that starts there, maybe in a good way, maybe in a bad way, does
not suffer the same things that we will talk about suffering as people that have ended
up there.
That's 100% true, by the way.
This generation, fame, I feel like has an appeal and a premium and it is seen as a viable career path for kids in a way because of social media whatever and I like the for a lot of them like it's
not like this is the thing that I want to do and maybe fame will be a
consequence of that it's what can I on the savviness from it is so off-putting
I've met people both through my daughter and my son especially being in LA that
I was talking to a young woman I won won't name check her, that said, you know, that she's like,
look, right now I'm kind of Insta-famous, you know, and that's that buys me a window
of a few years to figure out what it is that I want to do.
Oh my God.
And in my head, I'm like, oh, this kid's scraping by.
And I'm like, what, you know, she's like, no, I mean, I make like $700,000 a year on
Instagram.
This is somebody in their 20s.
Crazy.
And by the way, and the foresight to go, and I know that has a shelf life.
Yeah.
But that buys me a window to figure it out, you know, and I'm like, oh, that's a level
of savviness that maybe that's cool that there's opportunities like that for young people.
I don't know.
I don't want to give Dan affirmation because I like watching him struggle.
But I think you also have to look at anything that affects people emotionally.
You guys both live in that world too.
I told my folks that I was coming to talk to you again.
The interview you did with me that you talked a lot about what your brother and I talked about my dad and stuff
It was so meaningful and helpful to so many people in my family
That I ended up being just really grateful for it
And I think if you also if you touch yes, if it's really funny and yes if you have those those moments
But also I think you probably know when you've hit an emotional thing that feels a little universal. I mean, because I've seen
you do it a bunch.
Well, she makes fun of me for being the grief eater. She's...
Is that by the way, is that an official nickname? That's fantastic.
Yeah, I stole it from, there was a show on HBO, a limited series called The Outsider.
Did you watch that? It's one of their like, yeah, anyways, there was a monster called a grief.
He feeds off of sad people.
But I think a lot of people have the same reaction
to a lot of your work.
We're like, oh, this family dynamic really resonated.
We had this emotion that they talked about
or this experience or the lightness of it
helped me get through hard times.
But, and this circles back to what you were talking about,
like, do you engage with the audience?
When you see things like that, when people tell you things like that, does it resonate?
Does it enter into your cortex?
So they're two different kinds, right?
So I was talking about the writing, it's lonely.
Writing is lonely and then you release it out into the world and you get whatever the
feedback is of that.
But I made a choice at 30, the choice that I made that had less to do with performer than it
had to do with, oh, that seems like it would be a lot less lonely, was seeing the group
of people who were working behind the scenes at Pardon the Interruption before they ever
went on the air.
And that community of people be, I mean, it's your writer's room, it's the community of
people that we work with now, that you work with on television, the vibration of the laughter and the communal nature of it
was like open air, it was like breathing compared to,
because writing, for me, I didn't enjoy writing either.
Writing's awful.
For everybody?
Yeah, I always, I teach.
Screciating.
I say the same joke every time I teach,
which is I say, raise your hand if you like writing,
and a few people do, and I always say, if you really mean that, you're a sociopath,
because it's not real, writing's awful.
What you like is having written something, like being done with something and then showing
it to people.
I get that.
I don't get anybody that says they actually enjoy sitting down there in that mental struggle.
But so the community of what I'm talking about,
going out from whatever that sculpting,
obsessive compulsive sculpting is,
into a group of people that you can laugh with.
I mean, that you're sharing any part of the human experience.
He's mentioning the South Beach session that we did.
I don't know how much time.
You're exceedingly amusingly not introspectively male in some places that I
find...
It's true. It's true.
No, but I mean, we're not...
It's true. It's true.
No, I mean, look, we're the worst. Men are...
Oh, we're awesome.
We're not mature. We're not... There are any number of places that we have not looked in
a way that would have value for us. And you specifically, when we talked about the stuff
in the deep and the dark places,
I don't know how much time you spend there with others,
like volunteering it.
It's not my favorite.
I think you can distance yourself from it
with writing about it.
And you forced me to talk about it
in my own personal experience,
which is not my favorite jam.
But I think that's why I ended up being so grateful for it.
But I'm just saying people who love you
would have seen you talking about something there.
My friends will all make fun of me
because I'm terrible at small talk.
I'll just go right.
I mean, she spends a lot of time mocking
that I'll go right there to give me the good stuff
on whatever it is.
Give me all the best parts of motherhood.
Just before we get to the car,
then I wanna listen to music.
Also just being bad at small size
makes you the world's worst texter.
Oh yeah.
I mean, have you ever tried text with him?
It's a nightmare, literal nightmare.
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So hard to understand. You didn't actually answer though, like, do you, when you were making good shows now,
are you actually looking to the audience at all?
And do you feel that when people like it?
You say the audience.
Yes is the short answer, but it's not the feedback of the audience.
My audience is the people in the room.
Again, for 20 years, I've been doing something that doesn't take hardly any inventory of
who's actually listening.
It's the five, the seven of us,
the nine of us. Does it feel good in here? And then other people happen to be watching it.
But the entire, I mean, it's going to be hard for me to explain how different radio is from all the
other things. But it's just the intimacy of it is something. It's why I've chosen it to be the thing that sustains me professionally
because it's just different from the other things in terms of how intimate it feels.
Back to the original topic that was so interesting as you kind of load social media into this.
And Dan said like, oh, you know, there's so many things wrong with men.
Do you feel the obligation as a young woman in
specifically in what you're doing, is there a responsibility you know as you
kind of enter the fray of this stuff and how you determine how you behave?
Yeah. To be a role model for young women that now can see it like by the way it's
so weird that we're saying this now. Yeah. I can't imagine a young woman who wants
to be in the world of sports who isn't looking at you and going, oh, that's a thing I can do,
so you have to be super extra, super secret careful, right?
So, some of it, I would say less careful and more like,
there's pressure to be perfect, right?
And not make mistakes and to be extra prepared
and be 110%.
And that, to me, is like the best role model I can be.
It's just like doing my job really well
and having the respect of the players in my round.
That's the best thing I can do for Young Women.
But, and this again goes back to what we were talking about,
like, do you read the internet? Do you engage?
A big part of the re...
I don't know if this is gonna sound solipsistic
or self-aggrandizing, but the big part of the reason
every now and then I punch back is because women love it.
Yeah.
The number one thing when I meet young women in the industry, and they're like, hey, you know, how do you do this? now and then I punch back is because women love it.
The number one thing when I meet young women in the industry and they're like, hey, you
know, how do you do this?
I'm like, oh, yeah.
And they're like, so like I saw you dunk on this dude and it just made me feel so good.
Just give me joy.
Give me a moment of pure joy.
Yeah, they're like, just for once, one of us hit back and won.
And like, I don't, I hope that doesn't sound like I'm like, no, it sounds awesome.
Like, yeah, I'm justifying my own trolling because it makes me a roll
I don't think that's valid
But it is that I swear to God is that first thing women tell me is that they love it
I think the pure form of that is people knowing that they can fight young women especially knowing they can fight back
I think it's cool. Look D that there's so much overlap between what you all do and what I do
And sports and entertainment even the contracts feel like you're on a sports team.
And I ask that knowing that, you know, I'm not that old.
I mean, I'm not like Dan old.
I think you're younger than me, aren't you?
We're about the same.
The way he's dressing now makes it a little confusing.
The way you're dressing now.
I'm very cool and hip.
Gucci sneakers under the table.
They might not get captured by the camera,
so I just want to make sure that's not the right fit.
I just looked at them, and it bummed me out.
They're sick.
They're pretty nice.
I have a white version.
My career started with comedy rooms were maybe nine people,
and eight of them were white dudes.
And there was one woman who
was most likely also white, you know?
And just the way that that business has changed from then to now is both heartening, but also,
I mean, it's not that hard to look up and see, you know, how many show creators are
women as opposed to men.
It's still skewed and still drastically imbalanced.
It's still skewed in our world too, dramatically. So like that she would still pass for representation
in 2025 is kind of a stinging indictment for the industry at large.
Just because there's so few of us or?
Yes, I wasn't. I was just saying it's 2025 and still.
Yeah, right.
I know, I get the same questions.
We're talking 2025 and you're saying like,
and it's okay to fight back.
And it's like, you treat social media as sport.
It feels like you are a cat playing with yarn.
On acid and hatred, like,
I know that that's not the lived experience,
but it's the way that it looks from over here.
I, yeah.
It's also a calculated response
that's both safe and fun at the same time,
a little bit, yeah?
Mostly, yeah, sometimes I probably
walk the line a little bit too much,
but like I, listen, like I said,
I get called DI bitch all day.
Like, if you guys search my name, I'm sure like the first
thing to see that's new, right? Because of the last couple of
years. But like, yeah, I, I am. And it's not the way that it's
being interpreted now, which is a stand in for a slur as a
stand in for being unqualified. It's because when I first came
into this industry, the people who had me on the shows like Dan, like ESPN who hired me, had to open up their Rolodex and think
like, well, this person is doing something entirely different, but she also seems to
love football. What if we gave her this opportunity and it's something that we hadn't considered
before? Let's see if we can include her. And they did, and I took it and I ran with it.
And that is what it means, even though it's been bastardized.
I would also argue that there's a sound and smart business decision beneath it, because
I don't think any of these corporations are just benevolent. I could be wrong. But I think
on some level, that starts with how dumb are we that we're not opening ourselves up to a bigger fan base by bringing someone like you into the world?
Yeah, I wish we still were able to have that conversation in our industry and it feels like now people are shying away from it a lot, and I know I don't know if you're, obviously that's not something you're doing, but something you've thought a lot about
over the last few years, over the last 10 years plus
as a manager.
Well you guys talk, look, I did not know
where all my blind spots and privilege was in this regard
until Mina and Sarah and Katie taught me
because on our show, I've made this joke with her before,
I'm stumbling onto the set with mac and cheese in my beard
and she's doing her third hour of research
for a show where I'm like,
Mina, we're just gonna watch a guy get hit in the balls
by a sledgehammer, like what are you,
you don't have to prepare that much for.
My least favorite part of the highly questionable
is I couldn't prepare for it,
the guy's getting hit in the balls.
Yeah. Which is what was our special feature.
As someone who, I think, has watched a pretty fair amount
of your programming,
sometimes when people ask me about, like,
do you feel like you have to take a stand?
And I will say, like, sometimes just me being on a stage
with a bunch of former players talking football,
that in itself is a stand.
And to draw a parallel here, like,
I do feel like watching a lot of your shows,
just like, you'd see the normalization of,
like, obviously the shows have a pretty wide breadth of representation
in their cast, and they're not talking about, you know,
the biggest issues of the day or whatever.
But just like seeing people like that laugh with each other
and share jokes and be friends and relate in that way,
to me in
a self like that sort of modeling which is much closer to real life than the
things we see on the internet I think in is enough in and of itself saying
something I feel that way when I watch it I feel better about people I feel
better about a world where people like that our friends and live together and
work together and are cool and I don't know. So I love it.
By the way, it's going to sound incredibly insecure, but I need to hear that because
we live in a time that I'm sure everybody is going like, hey, am I doing or saying enough?
You know what I mean?
And so I think about it a lot.
I was thinking about it today because I'm working on a, we're doing a new college show
starring Steve Carell and the guy's awesome, great dude.
And to do a show that's set authentically on
a college campus right now is very tricky.
Yeah.
You sit around in the writer's room going,
what happens if we put these things that are out in
the world on a day-to-day basis in
what is essentially escapist entertainment,
and it is a scary tightrope.
Yeah, right. By the way, I'm not necessarily right or wrong, but I don't love
being preached at when I watch, you know, if I'm turning to a show for an opinion, I
love it.
If I'm watching entertainment, I don't want to be preached at about what I should think.
Yeah, I hear you.
But I get to go back to a joke I made. I've made a couple times now.
Like just me, like Asian women doing mock drafts on ESPN is escapist for some people
and revolutionary for others.
Yeah, okay. I got it.
That escapist television can fill the same role. Like everyone in the country, we're all just picking our spots.
And you, I feel like maybe you're having a little bit of trouble, it sounds like, with
that, not in action, but in thought.
Like where are the moments where I want to be outspoken,
where I want to be.
Well, it just feels weak.
It's the same thing he's talking about there
where he's saying he makes things,
look, Ted Lasso landed at a time people needed
what his message was, like that,
I don't know if there's another time
that that show could have landed quite that way,
given where we were and the need for
Hey, give me something give me something that feels good. Yeah
Yeah, I mean look we're all talking about the same fear is the fear of numbness, right?
And if you become inured to something to almost as good a word is that word mean and used earlier was it sol sol up something?
Well, it's good stuff. She does to use that one. Well, she likes that one. It a good one. I'm gonna just nod and pretend I know what that means and nerds pretty good though
The I don't know what it means either, but I'm sliding there
But you know, it's a general fear that for me anyways
I don't know if you guys have it that the sheer weight and the amount of stuff that's coming out is so fast
That you become so numb that you just
back out of it completely.
That's why I'm looking at what the type of work I'm doing and going, is this hiding from
the stuff that I'm really feeling?
Yeah.
No, I mean, I sometimes, you know, like I could, instead of doing my first mock draft
of the week, I'll stop talking about mock drafts, I could be like, hey, instead of doing my first mock draft of the week, I'll
stop talking about mock drafts, I could be like, hey, I just saw that I read this article
about tariffs.
I used to be a business like, let me talk to camera.
But yeah, I, and I don't, and sometimes I'm like, is it cowardice for me not to address
more serious things?
But I think there's a lot of things that I think about one, am I actually the best qualified
person to be talking about this?
A lot of times it's no, to be honest.
I'm not that book smart.
Who can I amplify is something I ask a lot,
rather than myself needing to this, to do something.
Recognizing that people do come to me
for a lot of different things,
and one of it is escapism and feeling better about people
and getting away from that information,
which they can get elsewhere.
And then when I do pick my spots in every now and then, I do, I want to make sure it hits.
And I think the feedback that I've gotten is like, okay, like it feels good sometimes to see a person
who I go to for escapism or entertainment or fun occasionally picking a spot to take a stand.
But it doesn't have to be the substance of what they're doing.
Thank you guys for spending this time with us. Love you both. to take a stand, but it doesn't have to be the substance of what they're doing.
Thank you guys for spending this time with us.
Love you both.
Love you, buddy.
I said that to a guy out loud.
Me and her were getting to know each other.
It was hard for you, wasn't it?
It was hard for you.
I don't really hug my kids that much from getting there.
There's still growth for you.
There's still hope and possibility for you.
William Bend user Lawrence the fourth.
Oh, God.
Wow.
I'm so sorry. Oh, God. Wow. I'm so sorry.
No, no.
This has been super fun, super validating, not quite as validating as Don Cheadle.
One of the things that I used to love about the feedback that we used to get, we used
to have a Reddit community that was very passionate, outsized in its passion, and it was a positive place and I have seen over the
last however many years it turned on me in a way that was like hurtful it was
like whoa I'm like these are my people I mean I'm gonna say that it sort of
alerted me to the idea that there might have been a political division in this country that was racial that I wasn't quite aware of
like it's been several years since I've been there as it turned but I when I say it alerted me I can only see what with the
clarity of hindsight I didn't see it as it was happening I didn't see this was almost my introduction to a pure place that was a pure place that felt so good that I was willing
To actually seek out the constructive criticism. Yes, like these people really care
Let me see if they can help make me better and then and I had to check out of it because of how much it was
Hurting the the entire atmospheric change of it. Did it affect you emotionally?
Yes.
This is the thing I found with Reddit or with things
like this is the people that are there to do the thing that
attracted you in the first place,
you just have to realize that the tide really
hasn't changed in a massive way.
But what happens is I find that once those Reddit streams turn
to that, everybody that was there for the other reason just goes peace out and what you're left with is
that and it can actually convince you that that's the general consensus
that's the you know that's the group think and it's not it's just that the
people that were there for other reasons were like oh this turned into something
not cool so pretty much every TV show or podcast reddit turns on someone who has been on some of these at some point, especially for TV shows, not podcasts for me.
And I think it is kind of a little bit of a version of the George R. R. Martin thing
where the fans are like, where's the books, dude? Where's the books?
And then they knew more about the books than him.
But it's like you take the most ardent fans of anything, eventually they'll get upset with the creative output,
I find, which isn't to say that their objections
are always wrong per se.
It's just like too passionate a little bit,
but it's different.
Well, Reddit is different from Twitter
and these other things because,
and you were talking about this,
usually if somebody's mad at me on Twitter,
they don't actually watch my stuff, right?
People on Reddit are actually consuming
the things that you make.
They know it and they get you too.
But it's what you said, by the way,
if there's a kernel of something correct,
like a mistake that you made
or a way you've contradicted yourself story-wise,
that you're like, I can't say,
I was really tired and I've made 9,000 episodes of TV
and you're right, so I gotta come up
with some other crafty response.
I'll have a character continuity in this one episode. You said that this person went to this school
and they actually went to Columbia and what were you thinking?
Am I supposed to believe,
anytime someone starts with am I supposed to believe,
I know I'm in trouble.
Am I supposed to believe that a character
who only episodes before.
I gotta tell you guys though,
I find it super weird that I'm in my 50s
being more affected by this than I was in my 40s,
in my 30s, in my 20s.
Like it's a, it's a mind f**k.
I think it's partially though, because if you're in the position as you two both are of world
building, the second you enter into that nowadays, you have to be concerned about the culture
that you've created, right?
And that's not something that we necessarily worried about when we were first starting out.
And if you're worried like I am about the culture at work
and how it feels to be around all these people,
which is a topic that you didn't used to get in the way,
so to speak, in art or what you were trying to make,
you're much more susceptible to anybody
that pokes at that will.
It just feels weaker.
It just feels, I don't know how.
No, Dan, we're strong.
Let's stick with it.
I don't, I do not, the very subject matter
we're talking about right now,
it feels, I feel weakness in it.
Our roles are so reversed from when we first started.
It's crazy, right?
It's crazy, it's crazy.
When we used to talk, I've told this story before, but there was one highly questionable
where I just screwed up a lot and I was like so upset.
I was on the verge of tears.
Dan talked me down and I think about it all the time.
What's solpsistic mean?
If I know.
This whole conversation could be classified as it.
You went to Google it, then you'll...
Oh, she's making me do homework.
Do you want to try and spell it? Do you want to try and spell it?
Do you want to try and spell it?
I really don't, but I'll tell you this.
Is that a B or a P?
As an end gag for the show, I will put it in the Steve Carell show, and you'll see that
word in there.
Oh, look at that.
Congratulations.
It's a private joke for us and whoever's listening.
Look at that.
What a gift.
When that word is thrown out there.
What an Easter egg.
Juicing your ravens is what he's doing.
I'll make sure Steve character, no idea what it means.
