The Rich Roll Podcast - Thrilling Tales Of Modern Men: Danny McBride On Ego, Grievance & The Stories Men Tell Themselves
Episode Date: July 6, 2026Danny McBride is the writer, actor, and producer behind “Eastbound & Down,” “Vice Principals,” and “The Righteous Gemstones.” For 30 years, he's satirized the aggrieved modern male, the g...uy who grew up on Rambo and ended up working at Geico. His first collection of short stories, “Thrilling Tales of Modern Men,” puts it all on the page. We get into masculinity, disappointment, the manosphere, and a world that already feels like the extended McBride universe. Beneath the comedy, the only real antagonist in these stories is the man himself. Danny is a master of his craft, and a rare eye on the foibles of the modern American man. Enjoy! Show notes + MORE Watch on YouTube Newsletter Sign-Up Today’s Sponsors: Seed: Use code RICHROLL25 for 25% off your first month of DS-01®👉🏼https://www.seed.com/RichRoll Rivian: Electric vehicles that keep the world adventurous forever👉🏼https://www.rivian.com LMNT: Get a free 8-count Sample Pack with any purchase👉🏼https://www.drinkLMNT.com/RICHROLL BetterHelp: Get 10% OFF the first month👉🏼https://www.betterhelp.com/richroll Birch: Get 27% off ALL mattresses + 2 free eco-rest pillows👉🏼https://www.BirchLiving.com/richroll Check out all of the amazing discounts from our Sponsors👉🏼https://www.richroll.com/sponsors Find out more about Voicing Change Media at https://www.voicingchange.media and follow us @voicingchange Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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You're illuminating the foibles of the modern American man.
Like, all right, Danny, so what's the solution?
This is your self-help guru moment, you know.
Danny McBride.
has come up with some of the funniest characters on television ever.
He brought the mullet back.
Kenny Powers is a man.
Kenny Powers is an athlete.
Kenny Powers is a lover.
Now he's tapping into the spirit where his new book it's called
Thrilling Tales of Modern Men,
the short story collection explores modern masculinity through a cast of characters.
There is this idea of like what it is to be a dude.
Growing up in the 80s,
and you're watching Rambo or Chuck Norris or all this stuff,
the reality of that comes crashing down.
that it's like you're not going to, you know, karate fight an army of men and win.
Sometimes you just got to take a desk job.
There's something just about disappointment that I just find fertile for comedy.
Danny, thanks so much for doing this.
You're the funniest fuck alive.
I'm so grateful to be able to hold you hostage today.
Talk to you, man.
So thank you for coming all the way out here.
It's awesome to be here. Beautiful out here.
Congrats on the book.
I'm curious around how this experience has been different from you.
I mean, it's very much of a piece with everything that you have done.
over the last 30 years, but, you know, it is a different kind of offering.
Yeah. You know, I, like you said, I've been doing this for a really long time.
And I wanted to see if I could translate what I had been doing in TV and film into just a
completely different format, you know? It's, it's obviously getting like harder and harder to make
TV and make movies. And so I felt like if I could somehow crack this space, it sort of offers
unlimited potential creatively. If you can get out the middleman,
and it can just be you in the audience,
you know, then you can kind of tell stories
about whatever you want to.
Yeah, I mean, you're a master of the collaborative
kind of art of film and television.
You have your cohort of people
that you've been working with since day one,
but writing's a solitary affair.
But there's the unfiltered, you know, Danny.
I mean, did you rely upon some collaboration in this
or is this just directly from your imagination onto the page?
Yeah, it was directly from my imagination to the page
And that was kind of what I was looking forward to with it.
You know, I love the collaboration.
I love, I think that's one of the things I love the most about making a TV show or a movie is, you know, you have this idea.
And then the next journey is sort of, you know, stockpiling a bunch of cool artists that have their own points of view and then all kind of working together to elevate it.
And that's such a fun thing.
And it's so unique to, you know, to film and TV, you know, a lot of art.
forms are really independent. And so I've always enjoyed that. But, you know, with that comes,
you know, you finish writing something and it's sort of like just the beginning of a negotiation.
You know, then it's like, who am I going to get to be in this? Will they give me enough money
to make this? Is it going to rain on the day that I planned this beautiful sunset? And with
writing, you know, in this format, it's, once the story's done, it's finished. Like it's completely,
yeah, there's like there's no one else to do other hoop to jump through. Uh-huh. When you were
writing it, were you thinking about how this would play
cinematically or were you able to kind of put that aside?
I would imagine on some level, you're,
you're thinking visually all the time.
You know, I definitely think visually,
and I think the way I craft stories is, you know,
I'm definitely inspired by all the years of writing for the screen.
But yeah, with these, I really wanted them to exist as stories,
as written stories.
So I wasn't really thinking past that of, you know,
whether they would be adapted or whether it could translate to something,
I think that some of these definitely could, but yeah, it wasn't part of the motivation.
I was really just trying to land the plane in this format.
Yeah.
It's perfect timing because it sort of lands at a moment where the discourse, the kind of public current discourse that's happening right now is all about like the crisis of masculinity and this epidemic of loneliness and, you know, alienation, etc.
But for you, you've been writing these characters with these themes for like 30 years.
Like, this is nothing new.
Are you noticing that there's something acute about this moment?
Or do you feel like it's always been this way?
And finally, we're paying attention to something that you have been kind of keen on for your entire career.
It's probably a little bit of both.
I mean, I definitely feel like, you know, I feel like some of these things that I've been making fun of or poking at for all these years.
I do think they're sort of like universal things, you know,
disappointment, you know, having your ego, you know, chop down. Like, these are all things that I
think people have always dealt with. Men have always probably dealt with through, throughout time.
And I don't know, there's something just about disappointment that I just find fertile for comedy.
And so I would always stack these characters to just sort of be avatars to explore all that stuff.
But, you know, I think with it, too, it's, you know, my, the growing up in the 80s, it's like I lived at the video store.
I lived at the Cineplex.
Like, I just, I consumed so many stories and so much media.
And you were definitely in that time period presented with like a certain type of, uh, of alpha, you know.
And I think if you're just like some artistic kid living in Spasovania, Virginia and you're kind of like, you're creating your images of what it's going to be like when you get older and you're watching, you know, Rambo or Chuck Norris or all this stuff.
there is this idea of like what it is to be a dude and uh i think it's funny as we get older it's
obviously the reality that comes crashing down that it's like you're not going to necessarily
be able to you know karate fight an army of men and win sometimes you just got to take a desk job
yeah you had said uh you're of the generation of men that grew up watching rambo and ended up
working at geico that's pretty much it and the kind of aggrieved you know the aggrieved you know
fragile ego of that guy who's, you know, staring in the mirror of his own disappointment
and trying to contend with how to move forward with this, you know, kind of sense of
injustice, you know, like we've been ripped off on some level. Yeah. Yeah, I've been lie. You've
been lied to, right? You know what I mean? And how do you compensate for that by like fronting in all
these like egotistic, like, you know, unbridled id ways that always end up, you know,
going terribly awry.
Totally.
It's like they,
you know,
a lot of these characters,
a lot of these stories,
there is no antagonists.
Like the person
who's the biggest threat
to them having a good existence
is ultimately themselves.
Yeah.
And that's the last person
that they're aware of
that's getting in their own way.
It's everybody else.
Yeah.
It's also an interesting moment
because we're all kind of living
in the extended Danny McBride universe right now.
Like you look around.
Like I was thinking,
if Danny were to write
like his version of the West Wing or
Veep, of course there would be
UFC happening, you know, on
the front lawn. And of course
the, you know, the, the
reflecting pool would like turn green
and the guy who made it turn green
would look like a Dick Tracy
villain, you know.
And so when you look at that, you're like,
how do you even like,
as a satirist, like
where do you go? Like, because
you know, like fiction and reality,
are so closely aligned with your sensibility.
You know, it's, I think that what you have to just focus on ultimately is I think you
have to focus on, you know, what's true for people, you know, regardless of what the time period is,
you know, like what, you know, there's just these universal ideas of what, of how people act
and how people respond to things that I think if you stay focused on that, you can always
kind of stay one step ahead of the insanity of what's happening right now, you know, and hopefully
you're making a story that will, you know,
resonate far beyond. I mean, even, you know, we sold eastbound in, you know, it was 20 years ago this summer.
And it's, it's kind of amazing to me that they'll still be young people that find it now.
And that's, you know, when you really look at comedy, that's a pretty long shelf life for something.
You know, a lot of things usually are, you know, they come out and they might be popular for four or five years and then new stuff comes to replace it.
But I really think that why it's stuck around is I think because we were just trying to, we were trying to, we were
trying to make it timeless. We were trying to not necessarily make it about that one moment in
like American culture, but like the larger picture of how, you know, this type of guy is
born. Because you're like, yeah, I know that guy. Everybody like knows that archetype. There's
somebody in their life that, you know, resembles that person. Totally. And that that transcends the
moment in which it was created. It's also a side benefit of the streaming world that we're in right
now. Like I, you know, you have kids, I have kids. And it's been fascinating to see them fall in
love with things that, you know, happened like decades and decades ago, whether it's music or
television shows or films. And I just think of the encyclopedia, like, sort of awareness that
young people have now that we didn't have growing up. It was just, this is what's on the
radio and this is what happens to be, you know, broadcasting on the three channels right now,
you know what I mean? And you're either there to see it or not. And that's gone. I think it's,
I mean, it's pretty fascinating. You can go, you can enjoy something as a young person now and go,
and go really deep and have access to every version of it or, you know, what was inspiring what,
and it's all right there for you. And like you were saying with us, it was like you did. There was,
you know, not to be talking like an old timer, but, you know, there was like 12 channels and
whatever was on those channels like that's what you were checking out. And now there's, you know,
we went from that to channels like specialize in just exactly one thing, like whether it's history
or cartoons or whatever. And now we're beyond that where you just have access to everything that's
ever made and you can just really, you know, zoom in on what you want. And, you know, I think there's a
benefit to that, obviously. It's fun to be able to curate what you like. But I also kind of find,
like, I've noticed it with like even music, you know, having all of my music on like, you know,
on my iPhone and being able to just always listen to my music. It also closes you off from new things,
you know, because you tend to kind of, you can go infinitely into your own kind of likes and once. And sometimes
it keeps out you finding new things because you're just sort of curating almost infinitely what you like.
And sometimes it's nice to be surprised by things outside of what you think you would want.
And even like, you know, we have like YouTube TV and I purposely like go through the guide and get rid of like all the channels and only keep like on the guide like, you know, 13 or 14.
Because I do kind of like the idea of just like it's just this.
This is all that we're going to like look at and, you know, put on that movie that you don't.
don't think you want to watch.
Put on that show that you think is boring and just see what happens.
Yeah.
My kids are the curators of finding new, cool shit.
Like my 19-year-old daughter, like she's listening to stuff 50, 60 years ago for music,
you know, musical taste.
And, you know, can you imagine being like that age and like watching something that
was created 40 years ago?
I think about it all the time.
I'm constantly playing that numbers game.
I'm like, my kids are listening to something from the 80s.
That's 40 years ago.
That would have been me in the 80s listening to something from the 40s.
Unimaginable.
Yeah.
Unimaginable.
But that gives me hope, you know, especially, you know, there's always people saying,
ah, you cinema's dead or like, you know, the form is not, it's not like it used to be.
And then backrooms happens.
Yeah.
Obsession happens.
And you're like, oh, wow.
Yeah.
This is youth culture, you know, telling us what they are interested in.
And then it goes wide and, you know, a whole new world is born.
I totally agree.
I think that that's like, honestly, like, you know, the movie industry, I think always goes
through its rhythms of what's working and what's not.
And sometimes they'll stick around in genres that are dead for too long and then they
come into something else.
But I definitely feel like what's been missing is, is youth having a grasp on what the
movies are that are being made.
You know, it feels like people in my generation a little bit older, maybe have, like,
held on to the range just a little bit too long that, you know, you think of some of these guys.
And I feel like, I think Robert Evans when he was running Paramount and Greenlit Godfather was like 28 years old.
You know, it's like the idea of somebody that young, uh, making those calls, you're like, yeah,
that's what this town needs.
It's what this industry needs.
Because ultimately, if this doesn't appeal to young people, then it dies away, you know, it needs to,
uh, it needs to feel relevant to them.
And it doesn't need to be just like constantly relaunching things that we.
gravitated towards from our youth, that, you know, there can be time for that, but you've got to
have this new stuff too. And you've got to have, you know, you've got to have young people
seeing that there's a pathway in the industry, you know, that they can see the guys making
obsession in backrooms. And they're like, those guys are not much older than me. And they're, like,
crushing it. And you need that inspiration. In your fertile mind, how do you know when an idea
is worthy of like investing the amount of time that it takes to like flesh it out and turn it
into something like he's bound it down it's interesting it uh you know there isn't like one thing it's
like i'm always thinking of ideas all the time and you know i'll try to have a few different things
open at once but inevitably some one of them will stick more than the others you know you will
just wake up yeah you'll find yourself coming back to it more and more your brain will just like oh i keep
my I can't get my head off of that one idea and you know with gemstones it was that way I moved to
charleston south carolina and i was trying to figure out what show i wanted to do next what story
and i had like three or four different ideas and uh that gemstone family like that just kept
that was the one that my brain kept going back to so i just followed that and because a lot of times
writing is you know because it's by yourself you have to have fun doing it has to be something that
you want to like spend your time on you don't want to make it homework so i'll just gravitate towards
things that feel like they're going to be fun.
It seems like you're having a good time.
You know, it doesn't, I'm sure it's a lot of hard work.
And people may not realize like you're the showrunner, you're doing all the writing.
You're not just the guy who's appearing on screen.
But you made this conscious decision in 2017 to like split LA, move to Charleston as a better
place to raise your kids.
But you also brought all your people with you.
And you've got this community now, this creative community and your company.
And it seems like that's allowed you to not only be a better observer of life,
because, you know, L.A. is sort of a little bit of a bubble where you're removed from how
normal people live, but also has allowed you the freedom outside of the Panopticon of the
studio system to, like, do your thing without too much interference, right?
Yeah, it's true.
You know, we learned that, honestly, when we were shooting eastbound and we were shooting in Wilmington,
North Carolina. And the idea that there was not a direct flight at that time from L.A. to North Carolina,
we noticed that the executives never came to set. We're like, oh, we just got to choose cities that
it's not easy to get to from L.A. And then we'll have more freedom.
Allowing you to push the boundaries. I'm sure you get notes still, but, you know, it's a different
thing when somebody's not showing up every day to like, you know, up for you do. We've been really
lucky with HBO. I've had a great relationship with them and have had an awesome time working with them.
And, you know, we, even when we don't agree, it never, it's never contentious.
And there's never do this or, you know, or it's done.
Like, they're, they've always been supportive.
And, you know, I think that that trust has just been built between us over the years.
And I think that allows us to take more chances and take more risks.
Let's go back to the beginning.
Like, where did this all begin for you?
Like, when did you first realize, like, this was something you wanted to pursue?
You know, I always, I always wanted to do this. Even from, you know, as young as I can remember, I, you know, I have, like, notebooks in my house that are, like, stories I wrote when I was, like, in third, fourth, fifth grade. I mean, I always just wanted to tell stories. And, you know, I remember when, you know, our family got our first VCR and, you know, and all of that of just, like, having access to stories and watching movies. It was just something that I just, you know, I kind of instantly knew that that's where I want.
wanted to spend all my energy and time. And so I was fortunate in that, that I just put everything
I had into pursuing that. So, you know, I would make movies in my backyard. I wrote plays in high
school that our school performed. And then I went to film school. So I was just constantly trying to
figure out how to do this. What was it, what was the home life like? Like your dad was a prison guard?
He was a prison guard out in Lompoc, California. So we lived on the prison reservation out in Lompok
for a few years. And then he got transferred to the federal bureau prisons in D.C.
And so then that brought us out there to D.C.
And at that time, Fredericksburg is about an hour south of D.C.,
but that was really rural.
It was out in the country.
Now DC's sprawl is so far that like that's now even like it's like a suburb.
Yeah, it's like a suburb of D.C., but then it was really out in the sticks.
It was like far away.
But yeah, so then we, that brought us there when I was and when I think we moved to Virginia when I was maybe like in first grade and
Yeah, and then grew up out in Virginia.
I lived in northern Virginia for a little bit in Burke and then moved down to Fredericksburg
and graduated high school there.
Yeah.
But in Spotsylvania, though, which is just a little bit further south of Fredericksburg, right?
Yep.
Civil war territory.
Lots of civil war action.
So I grew up in Maryland and every weekend, it feels like my dad would say, get in the station wagon
and he would just take us to some Civil War battlefield.
Oh, yeah.
It was a history lesson.
You know, there's just like this obsession with my parents' generation with the Civil War,
with men of that age, you know?
And Spotsylvania was a place that we went to often because in Spotsylvania, there's a place
called Spindle Farm.
Do you know this place?
I've heard of it, yeah.
So Spindle is my mother's maiden name.
Oh, wow.
So that is, apparently this is our family, our family lineage.
That's wild.
That's awesome.
And that was the site of, you know, quite a bloodbath.
like this very contentious moment in the Civil War.
So I've spent time in Spotsylvania.
Like I know it well.
It is a really cool place to grow up.
It made for very boring field trips in school because all your field trips were like, you know.
You get off the bus and it's just a field.
Yeah.
And you're like, I pass this every day going to the grocery store and now we're walking around it.
But it was a I honestly like loved it.
I thought it was really cool to live somewhere where all of this stuff you're learning about in school happened in your back.
and that there's like a point of reference for it.
And I thought it was like, you know, I remember in downtown Fredericksburg, there was like a,
like a slave auction block just like right in the middle of town.
And I remember just being there and seeing that and then seeing the town that I'm familiar
with and be like, oh, it's crazy to think that this was going on right here where, you know,
and then you, you know, the older you did, you're like, it wasn't even that long ago.
Like that was, you know, that wasn't that, that wasn't as ancient as what you think when you're a kid.
And I liked being around those battlefields and finding out those stories about, you know,
it got me into history.
And I think that was also part of why Charleston was so appealing to me when we shot down there
was I liked the idea that massive things have happened there.
And now it's a new place.
It is unusual, though, for a kid in rural Virginia to decide that he wants to go to film school.
Yeah, it is.
There weren't a lot of people in your community.
They're like, you know, pulling their cameras out and making short films.
I would imagine. Yeah, no, there really wasn't. And I would, I would incorporate, like, all the kids in
the neighborhood to, like, be a part of my films. And none of them had interest or, you know,
it wasn't like they were trying to do that. And, uh, and then I would just rope him into the stuff I was
doing and employ them that way. And yeah, it was, it was, uh, it was cool. I think that's what I
liked about when I ended up at North Carolina School of the Arts, where I went to film school,
it was the first time that I had really been around other people that had any interest in this. And it was,
I think I made fast friends with so many of these guys that I still work with because it was sort of so, I don't know, it was like, it was kind of groundbreaking for me of like, wow, there's other people that like have been the same guy I've been where I've been, you've been in a small town and you like all these crazy movies too and you wanted to dedicate your life to trying to figure out how to be a part of that industry.
How long were you there before you connected with David Gordon Green now?
First day I lived there.
First day. Yeah. I moved to the dorm.
and David lived.
David was my next-door neighbor on one side, and Jody Hill was my next-door neighbor on the other side.
Wow.
And so, yeah, I mean, a lot of the John Couture and Jeff Radley, who are two of the guys I've
written on Eastbound and Vice Principals and Gemstones with, they live in Charleston now.
Like, those guys all lived on our hall.
I mean, it was a lot of these guys that to this day, for our production designer, our music
supervisor, they're all guys that, like, basically we all lived on the same hall in our
freshman year of college.
And have all gone on to have huge careers.
Yeah, everybody has their own sensibilities.
And yeah, it was a, it was cool.
I know, you know, I think whenever you decide to go to college for the arts, there is always this question of like, oh, is it needed?
Like, is it better spent instead of the, you know, the student loans?
Is that better just to take that money and go make a movie?
And, you know, I don't think there's any real answer for that.
Obviously, it's different for everyone.
But for me, why that was important was, you know, there's so much time to get jobs and to work.
your whole life is going to be that.
But to force yourself for four years to just focus on movies and focus on watching movies
and talking about movies and just sort of digesting them that way, I think it was so beneficial.
And finding your people.
Finding your people.
And I really think if I would have just taken that money and jumped to Los Angeles,
I think there would have been more attention to survival as opposed to gearing up and studying.
It's kind of akin to, you know,
Seattle and Grunge. Like there was a this very specific place that isn't, you know, like the
in the first three or four that come to mind. Like it's like there's NYU and there's USC and
UCLA is like, okay, UNC Winston-Salem. Yeah. It's got a film school there. Like who knew it was
going to, you know, like, you know, germinate like such talent at a very specific time. It also
reminds me of like Mike Barbiglia and Nick Kroll and like John Mullaney all being at Georgetown and
right around the same time, like these, like this convergence of time and space that like gives birth to like, you know, almost like a whole new sensibility in the arts.
I mean, I feel grateful that that I was there at that time and a part of that because it did feel that way.
I mean, even when I was applying for schools, I think we were the third class to graduate from that film school.
So that film school was brand new.
And, you know, coming from, you know, Spotsylvania, Virginia, it wasn't like, you know, we were pretty middle class.
there was the idea of NYU or USC was just that wasn't going to be like that wasn't going to be feasible for
for me that wasn't in the cards and if you didn't want to go to those place at that time it's not like
every college offered a course in filmmaking i mean they didn't at all i remember i was like
applying to all these schools and you know they might have like a little bit of like tv production or
i remember i called vc u which was in richmond and i was like unclear from you know the information i
was getting where they had a film program and i got a hold of somebody in the media department and i was like
you have a film school? And he's like, you know, what are you trying to do? I'm like,
well, I was like, I want to learn how to like make movies. He's like, we might be able to get a camera or
something. That was like the level that it wasn't, it was not a, it wasn't a major that was like,
you know, that present. And so when I found out about North County School of the Arts, it was a state
school, it was in the realm of what I'd be able to afford with student loans and everything. And then the
thing that was cool about it is that it's a conservatory. So even if you'd been to college before,
You have to be in that program for four years.
So it puts you in there with a wide variety of people.
There were people who had been to college.
There was a housewife.
It was a random assortment of people, but you were all on the same four-year journey.
And what was cool about it was it wasn't like the rich kids made the best movies.
Like everybody was given the same exact budget from the school and you had to make your
films in that with that budget.
And you had to figure it out.
And so it was cool because the class aspect of it was taking.
out of the creation.
Everybody was given the same resources.
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When did you first know that this is going to work out?
You know, I don't, it took a while to realize, even when it started to work out,
there's still just the idea of like, there's no way that this will continue to work out, you know?
So I think there's been a level of always sort of being apprehensive of, oh, it's all working.
I think that, you know, once Footfist Way got made and everything, we started getting all these opportunities.
It was really like a whirlwind.
But even that didn't go exactly to plan, right?
Wasn't the original idea you're going to go to Sundance and like light the world on fire?
Yeah, and then we went and it didn't sell there.
Like, you know, we made that movie for 75 grand.
We shot it in, you know, less than three weeks.
And Jody Hill and myself had been out in L.A. for a while at that point, all just trying to make a living.
And I think both of us were at the point where we're both realists and we're like, we've been out here for a while.
But I'm not, I don't want to, you know, I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to be here in my 40s like just like pretending like I'm trying to make movies.
Like I want to, you know, we got to, there's still time to pivot.
We're young.
So we, you know. Did you have a plan B or not?
You don't seem like a plan B guy.
You know, I didn't really have a plan B. I was, I, I felt like if we, if we really stuck with it, that we would be able to eventually find that success.
And so I think for a while we got out here and I think you're kind of like waiting for someone to find you.
And I think Jody and I had been out here long enough that we're like, I think it's just, I think it's time to show them what we can do.
And then hopefully, you know, opportunities will come from that.
And so Will Ferrell and Adam McKay, like the movie circulated. Some interesting people saw it. Those guys jumped on it and decided to distribute it.
They decided to distribute it. And then that really launched everything. I mean, I was, you know, doing these interviews for this book and just thinking about being walked through the history of it. It's really sort of insane because when that, you know, I went from not having a job to that movie coming out in Sundance in 2006. And in the next year, basically in one,
year, I booked a hot rod, then Drillbit Taylor, Heartbreak Kid, Pineapple Express, the pilot for
eastbound, and then Tropic Thunder. And so it was going from never having any experience
in this industry at all to like, that's what the next year. It happened like in such a compressed
period of time. Because I think when you did Tropic Thunder, I mean, you were only, you were like
a year into this. I was a year into it. I had met Ben on the Heartbreak Kid, and he showed me the
script and wanted to know if I wanted to play. And I mean, even just meeting Ben Stiller was
awesome. I mean, I always loved Ben Stiller, and I really loved him as a director, too. I thought that,
you know, I loved Cable Guy when it came out. I remember thinking, like, how dark and awesome it was.
And so the idea that he was making a movie like that, and I remember reading it and just like,
this is awesome. I love the scope of it. It's so funny. And he's going to direct it. And yeah,
it was just a real pinch me moment to be involved with that. I mean, I remember going to the table
read for that. And you're just like, I mean, every, it was, that was insane. Yeah, it was a murderers,
bro of talent, man.
What am I doing?
He was trembling every time my guy had to speak, like, oh, Jesus.
I mean, that's an all-timer.
And that really was this golden age and, you know, feature comedies.
Like, it's, they're, they're so rare and few and far between these days.
Like, the culture is shifted.
It seems like all the comedic sensibility is now in television.
And obviously, that's your, you know, that's your, that's your sweet spot.
Why do you think that is?
Why aren't we, why don't we see, like, what happened to the wedding,
Crashers and something about Marys and all of that that we used to see pretty consistently coming out.
You know, I, I, you know, I think there's probably a bunch of reasons. I do think that TV has allowed, you know, comedy really works well when it's niche, you know, like when people are get really specific about their sensibilities. And there is always something about you and your friends finding that like weird comedy that speaks to you guys, you know, and it becomes your shared language. And I think TV has allowed that. It's allowed you to have.
all these really unique voices from the Nathan Fielder's, the Tim Robinson to Eric Andre.
And, you know, this stuff is, is really specific and it's really funny. And if that stuff had
to be boiled down to like a four quadrant, you know, movie in the theaters that like worked for
everyone, like who knows if those voices would be as funny by the time it did that, you know?
So I definitely think that that has given an opportunity for comedians to get really specific
and find their audience and have success in it. But I also kind of
to think it just kind of happened that like that group of all the guys who had the power,
they all just got rich and all stopped making comedies at the same time.
You know, and so then it was like, I think it was like left where there was suddenly,
like everybody was wanting to get into serious movies.
But ultimately, and, you know, it's not like anybody could make Tropic Thunder.
You know, Ben Stiller could make Tropic Thunder because he had put in the work and he was
respected in the industry and he had a record of success.
And that's he, that was a moment in time.
Like, you know, I think people are like, well, they wouldn't make that now.
But I don't think they were looking to make that then.
I think it was because Ben wanted to make that then.
It's insane. That movie got made at all.
It really is.
But again, it's like you need it, it wouldn't have if it wasn't him.
If it wasn't him with his track record pushing something so provocative and so cool and competent at the end of the day.
It also feels like when you're making a feature film, there's so much money involved.
And that means that studio executives are going to start asking questions about likeability of the protagonist and stuff.
like that. And when and when kind of simultaneously shows like the Sopranos are really, you know,
gaining traction in the in the cable television space, you're seeing an opportunity to explore
more anti-hero type figures. And, you know, I don't know if you would consider your
protagonist anti-heroes, but, you know, you're certainly not thinking about how likable they are when
you're making them. I mean, there's a humanity to them and you have, obviously, have an affection for
these people and you're you're you're not judging them but uh you know it's it's you're you're you're you're
you're you're you're you're really pushing people to like get on board with these guys that that 100
percent and i think it would that that that way of telling stories with those kind of guys i think
was an answer to that very note that everything was you know we were being told that you know
how likable characters needed to be and jody and david and myself you know going to film school
we really responded to like those 70s movies where you would
have these complicated characters, you know, Jack Nicholson in Five Easy Pieces or Rip Torn and
Payday or even De Niro and Taxi Driver. You know, these were not likable guys and those movies
were awesome and they were having an impact on us and they were telling stories that,
that felt distinct and they felt unique. It didn't feel like something you'd seen before.
So I think when we started kind of getting into it, you were like, especially at that time, too,
I feel like in the 90s and the early 2000s, a lot of the comedy was just,
so like he doesn't want to grow up or he's unlucky in love and you know which you know can be fruitful
for comedy but it also just felt like it had been well traveled that it was like you had to find
a comedic engine that wasn't just a guy looking for a girl you know that there need to be more
and so i think when we started turning that lens on to oh it's somebody who's out of crisis in
their life and it isn't just centered around like whether they'll find love or lose their virginity
It's sort of like their entire worldview is shattering or they're not who they think they are.
It just started to feel like it was more dangerous area to tell a story or something that you could do a little more unique.
It feels like there's a lot of white space for the backrooms, Kane Parsons of comedy to suddenly appear right now and like rewrite that whole narrative and come out with something like we never thought of before.
I think it will, it's only a matter of time.
Inevitably, I think that is exactly what will happen.
Because right now it's sort of horror, sci-fi.
But horror and comedy are, I think, are more aligned.
I mean, you've obviously written in horror and you've made these horror movies.
But they're like bedfellows, I think, more than people realize.
I think they definitely are.
And I don't think it's like a coincidence that you have, you know, guys like Jordan Peel and Zach Greger, who are, you know, their start was in comedy.
And then now they're successful horror guys.
I think ultimately, like my opinion on it is that,
you're creating a ride for people. And whether the outcome is you're making them jump or you're making them laugh, you're thinking about your pace. You're thinking about how to sleepwalk them into thinking one thing's going to happen and then hitting them with something else. And I think that when you're looking at stories through that mindset of like architecture and structure, you know, it's, I don't know, it's a fun way to tell the story. How does the process work for you? Does it begin with, you know, you see a guy or you overhear a conversation?
at Costco or something like that and you make a little note or is a narrative appearing in your mind
or is it a character and then how do you take that and then flesh that out into something
that's going to work on on the screen you know whenever I have an idea for something I kind of
just will open up a document on my computer and I'll just like free write anything like all right
I'll just you know and it won't even have to be fully formed it can be a scene that I run out
of steam on and just draw a line and just jump to something else and I'll just peck out a concept like that
for a little bit. And then usually if you get like a scene or two that's like, oh, I like what this is.
I like what this is doing. And then you kind of, I'll start building things out from there and figuring
out what works. And kind of the, you know, so I feel like that's in my past. It's been finding
things that way. But then once I'm committed to a story, everything I'm taking in ends up just being
me looking into the world of how the stuff I'm seeing can inform what I'm trying to write.
You know, so if it's on gemstones and we're working on that, like suddenly every,
I'm seeing on my day to day is all sort of processing, like, how can this, how can this
factor into what I'm doing? And I don't know, it's kind of like, it creates a weird
alchemy because you start kind of looking at life and your situations you're in of like,
I'm working on this story and then I happen to be in this grocery store the same time this
random person is. And the pants they're wearing is making me laugh. So now the pants that my
character in the show are going to be that. And like, that moment would have never happened unless
I wasn't paying attention in my life and seeing how things.
around me can influence what I'm working on.
For gemstones, did you, like, drop in on megachurch services, or did you interview some of
these pastors?
I interviewed a few different megachurch pastors.
And this is before I had really written anything.
You know, when I moved to Charleston, you know, there was a big adjustment to go from
Los Angeles to Charleston.
You know, growing up in the South, I knew what I was getting into.
But it was just a lot different.
I mean, even just driving around, I would just oftentimes just get in my car, just trying to
They'll figure out the town and I would just go on these long drives, just, you know, just cruising around, get lost, trying to figure out all the roadways and where everything was and what was around.
And I really couldn't shake the idea of, like, how many churches I was seeing.
I'm like, oh, this is kind of crazy.
I hadn't really thought about that.
But in L.A., I just wasn't, you know, it wasn't as prevalent as it is here.
Like, they were everywhere.
And even on the radio station, it was like every other station was a religious station.
And it just got me thinking about, you know, church and about my upbringing and how I went.
And it made me wonder, like, how was it different than when I went?
And so I started slicking into these megachurches and seeing how these things functioned and what the services were like.
And yeah, and then from there, I was like, I kind of want to talk to people who are a part of this world and learn about the process and how these things are structured and how they're built and how they do it.
Also, it's just another one of the pillars of American society.
Totally.
It's sports, education, and now religion.
Religion.
Yeah. What's left?
We have politics.
There is, your VEEP is waiting for you right now.
Although it's, you know, we're just watching episodes of it every day already.
That's cool, man.
It's such a keen insight into, you know, what's ludicrous about how we live our lives.
And I would imagine, like, on this press junket that you're on right now, it's like, okay, you're illuminating the foibles of the modern American man.
Like, are people like, all right, Danny, so what's the solution?
This is your self-help guru moment, you know.
You know what?
I have no answers.
I feel like, you know, we've been pointing out this, we've been pointing out this type of dude for a very long time, you know, that this is that this, you know, I think we, yeah, we just saw where culture was going and where our ideas of what it takes to be a solid dude.
Like, you know, I don't know, like how, what was it.
expected and what the outcome is.
And I don't have what the answers are for it.
I mean, I, you know, in these stories,
the answer usually always kind of like lands
on the person themselves, you know,
coming to terms with who they are, what they want,
and being okay with the idea that like,
life isn't always gonna be about what you think you need.
With that, how do you make sense of like the quote unquote
manosphere and like these characters like Andrew Tate
and like clavicular and like looks max
you know, as a parent also, like the impact that, you know, these people, the sort of influence
these people wield on, on young people. Yeah, you know, luckily, like my kids haven't gravitated
towards any of that stuff. And I don't really even know much about any of it other than what I,
like, you know, hear, you know, here and there. Because these are, these people are speaking
directly to your characters. Yeah, totally. Yep. I, uh, yeah, I mean, you know, in my house,
I really have, I try to like limit my kids having access to all this stuff, you know, and being,
and I just try to be present in their lives. So if they're listening to anybody's take on the world,
hopefully it's mine and my wife's and not a stranger online.
But inevitably it's going to be harder and harder.
But even outside your house, just on culture, you know, writ large.
Yeah. You know, I think maybe that's part of the benefit of being in Charleston is like,
we live on a creek and the kids in our neighborhood are into fishing and they're into, you know,
getting out in the water and I don't know it doesn't uh I don't see it as it's not as pervasive there I guess
it is pervasive though I think it's I think it's it's it's just a reaction to the you know kind of the
the existential crisis that these people have like there's an emptiness in their lives and then so
and so comes along and says I'm going to solve this problem for you this is what you got to do you have to
sign up for like my academy or whatever it is and you know here's the 12 steps and then you can be
you can be, you know, in your full expressed masculinity.
And it's always, and it's, it's, it's always rooted in grievance also.
You know, it's somebody else's fault.
It's not your fault.
And you have to claim your power.
Well, it's preying on the vulnerability of, you know.
It kind of feels like that's what everything does the right.
I mean, isn't that, that's like, that could be, that's kind of what religion has done for years and years for, you know, generations of people is that everyone is always like looking for the answers outside of themselves.
And, you know, I think when you have the Internet, obviously, there's like, there's more people that you have, you know, the ability to reach that you can give the answers to. And, you know, I think that that's just, you know, that is just what we're up against, right? I mean, that people are always looking to find out the answers. And it's a matter if they align with the right person that's going to give them the real answers or if they're going to, you know, get wrapped up in something that ends up turning them upside down.
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sitewide, 25% off lux mattresses, and 30% off elite mattresses. How does the evangelical community
perceive you when you run into people? Yeah. You know what's funny is I think that because we,
I was really adamant when we made that show that I didn't want the joke to ever be.
be religion. I didn't want the joke to be about people's beliefs. You know, I really wanted the joke to
be about this family and about their level of hypocrisy, but I didn't want to paint it like this is
what everybody who's religious behaves like or acts like. And I really didn't want it. No jokes about
like, isn't this crazy? These people believe this. Like I didn't, I never wanted that to be part of what
that story was. And I think because of that, we were able to get religious people watching that show too,
because I don't think they felt like they were the butt of the joke, you know. I think if you're really,
religious, you see gemstone people in your world. And I don't think that you necessarily like it.
You know, I think that there is, you know, false prophets have been around for a long time. And it's
something that people can identify. And so I feel like that actually worked in our behavior, in our,
you know, in our benefit. I had spoke to this one megachurch pastor early, early before we,
before there was even a concept out in the press about what the show was. And,
And this family was very kind to me, and they showed me, you know, kind of how, you know, just very basically how this operation worked and how what their thought process was behind church planning.
And it was really enlightening.
It was a cool conversation to have with them of how they approached building churches and where they decided to put them.
And I made the show.
I didn't see that pastor again for years and years.
Then I ran into him one time.
And I was like, oh, God, this is after the show was done.
And I was thinking like, oh, God, what's this conversation?
going to be like. And he came up and whispered to me. He said, you know, I can't tell people that I've
seen it, but you nailed it. You're like the secret guilty pleasure of the hardcore evangelical,
you know, that's hilarious, man. The book is 10 stories, it's sort of anthology, you know,
the misadventures of the modern male. Why do it that way? Why not write a novel? Did you just
have too many threads in spending around in your mind or you know i think it was a little bit of just
creatively as an answer to what i was trying to kind of like change up is that you know gemstones i
wrote on for seven years and so i loved writing on that show i love writing those characters but it's
seven years of every time you sit down to create you're you're doing it through the lens of these
characters in this world and i think there was just a lot i had a lot of ideas and so for me it was kind
of i liked the idea that i could think of something you know a lot of
lot of different ideas, a lot of different characters.
And with each story, I wasn't having to like, you know, TV writing is so much that every
episode is a part of the story.
And then they're all connecting to tell a larger story.
And then each season is telling an even larger story.
Yeah.
This was kind of nice to be able to, like, launch into a story and take it to its completion.
And then that's what it is, you know?
And then you can jump to the next one and start from a completely different place.
And so there was something that was fun about that of not committing to just one story,
but being able to really explore a lot of different ideas
and different types of people.
They all occupy the same world, though.
I feel like all of your characters live in this.
They could all be, you know, they could be interacting with each other.
You know, there is a universe of, you know, that could be expanded upon it.
You know, and the stories are great, man, you know.
It opens with the, you know, the frustrated divorce guy who decides he wants to be a magician
and he's going to put himself in a cube in the mall, hang, you know, on a crane.
And it's just like insane, you know.
The former sitcom actor, it's just, you know, and they all have these weird turns and then everything goes insane, you know.
It's really well done, man.
I appreciate that.
I mean, and there is something durable about writing a book, you know, that's different from, I mean, it's cool that younger people are, you know, kind of cottoning on to eastbound and down and, et cetera.
and there's an extended lifespan for some of the work that you've done.
But a book is a whole different deal altogether.
It's really been interesting because, you know, I was talking to my wife about it.
It's like it's not like I haven't done things that people have seen before, but this does feel different.
Even just my friends who sort of will roll their eyes at whatever new thing I have out, like,
yeah, sure, another TV show.
Great work, Danny.
This one is sort of like, there is like, you wrote a book, man.
Like it's an accomplishment.
Yeah, I don't know.
David Gordon Green said that your media diet is basically being a voracious reader of great books and then watching the trashiest reality television.
So it's this like high, low approach.
But people might be surprised that you are such an avid reader.
And like this is what you spend like most of your free time doing.
I just like, you know, I've just been enamored with stories and storytelling.
I always have.
And so I just read because I love watching.
how people construct stories or how people tell stories to take the ride that someone has
constructed and and take that journey. I love it.
Yeah, and with TV, my TV viewing is really crazy because I just,
I have a really hard time just kind of like investing in TV shows.
And usually I'm always behind on all the stuff that everyone says is amazing.
Yeah, because you're fucking busy. You're making it.
It is. And then when I sit down at night too, I just don't want to,
I don't want to be trapped where I have to watch something.
Like so that reality TV is, I,
can half pay attention. And all of it, honestly, though, is like great character work. It's like,
you're just seeing all these train wrecks. You're seeing all these ways people position themselves
in group dynamics. And I just find it really entertaining. Do you feel like any of the stories in
the book could be fleshed out into film or television projects? Or is that you're just,
this is what it is. You know, I was approaching it where this is what it is. But definitely now that I'm
past that point now, there is, there are a few stories in here that I, that I'm,
I'm like, oh, I would like to do more.
And, you know, one thing that was a lot of fun with this is we did the audio book for this.
And I'd never done anything like that before.
I'd never read on an audiobook.
And that process was so much fun.
And I was able to get a bunch of, a bunch of really talented people to come in and read these stories.
You had people voicing the different career.
Oh, that's cool.
Yes, like Walton Goggins reads and Goodman, some of our Adam Devine and Edie.
But then I got Sam Rockwell and Billy Crotup and Sturgle Simpson and Eric Andre and Shane Gillis and everybody,
reads these different stories and I even got my composer Joey Stevens who does all the music for
our shows. He created a score for each of the stories that kind of like takes you in and out.
And I think it's a really fun way to experience this book. It really is. And just hearing actors
bring these characters to life, it definitely inspired me into thinking like, yeah, it might not be
bad to see some of these things pushed further. You're also an entrepreneur. I mean, you've started
this company and it allows you to do what you want to do with, like working with the system,
but sort of outside of it, it's kind of like a dream situation. But you're running a business also
at the same time. You got all these people that you're, I guess, semi-responsible for, their salaries.
I mean, there's so many projects that you guys have done. But it's a whole enterprise on top of
this whole thing. It really is. And especially moving to Charleston, you know, part of the idea of that
was, you know, we had always shot eastbound in the south. We shot vice principals in the south.
We provided a lot of jobs year after year for a lot of people in that region. So being able to
bring something like gemstones there and give the really talented people in that part of the
country, like steady work in their backyard where they weren't having to travel to another state
to find jobs. It was really awesome. And then like, you know, when gemstones wrapped up and it was
time like to write this book, I really felt the weight of that of like, you know, there's a lot of people
that are like looking for gigs now.
Like we need to, we need to come up with.
And they're not working when you're writing a book.
Yeah, exactly.
And I felt that for sure this last year.
I definitely felt that I wanted to, I didn't want, I don't want people to start looking for
other jobs, you know.
There was a lot of really talented people that we've worked with for years.
And, you know, so much of the production is going overseas or into other countries.
And yeah, I just think it's important to keep things here and to give people in this
country, a chance to work on these projects. And I loved that we could make things in South Carolina.
You have people who probably feel like they're so far outside of the entertainment industry showing
up to be extras. And it's their first experience ever being around something. And, you know,
who knows what that inspires in them. And I like trying to create those situations for people.
How do you think about the future of media? I mean, here in Los Angeles, it's just a constant
conversation about like AI and how you know production has fled Los Angeles and the economy
is cratering and all these people that you know we're basically like middle class um employed people
within the studio system in their various jobs like that's disappearing and you know what's going
to become of this industry you're in a whole like your own little bubble out there doing your
thing and it seems like it's all going fantastic but we feel it even out there i mean it's you know
It's people aren't buying as much stuff.
There's not as much action out there.
I mean, we, we definitely feel it too.
And, yeah, I mean, you know what?
I have no clue.
I mean, I definitely think it's a scary time of the industry.
But I really would think at the end of the day, people aren't going to get tired of seeing stories and hearing stories.
And, you know, the business is just going to have to sort itself out.
But it's really amazing to see something like obsession that's made for 750 grand and the reach that can have, you know.
And hopefully that, um, inspired.
buyers more people to approach filmmaking that way.
It's made young people psyched about going to movie theaters.
100%, you know.
I think about when I went off to film school in 95, you know, it was like that, that like year was
sort of like Pulp Fiction had come out.
It was all happening.
Yeah, clerks had just been out.
Desperado was out.
Brothers McMullen, like Billy Bob Thornton was making Slingblade.
There was just all of these movies in that short period of time that were coming out of left
field and that definitely inspired my friends and all of us. And so it doesn't take much, I think,
to light the fire for a new talent. You know, I think you just, you have to see those examples of those
kind of stories breaking through. And then it inspires a whole new batch of people to try their
hand at it. Yeah. The old guard is always going to, you know, lament like the way that it used to be.
But, you know, I think I'm like 10 years older than you. But I remember distinctly when sexelized
and videotape came out and reservoir dogs. And it was.
Like there was so much excitement.
It was like, this is new, this is different.
These guys are rock stars.
And then everybody wanted to be an independent director.
And it made people believe that they could so that Kevin Smith could cobble together five cents and like make clerks.
Yep.
And people like you who are even younger could start to, you know, marinate in that dream.
Oh, we like, you know, we're sitting there in film school watching those movies, watching West Anderson and Owen Wilson and Luke Wilson made bottle rocket, you know.
And to us, we were living and breathing.
that stuff. I mean, it was, for us, it was like, this is exactly what we want to do. And here's
some young guys doing it. And yeah, it's not to be underestimated, the value of even one thing
finding success, what that can generate for other people. And that was a period of time where
it's still, even at the lowest budgets, like, you needed film and you need to, it's like,
you don't need any of that now. And you don't even necessarily need distribution because we all
have YouTube. And, you know, we've seen what Kane has done by building his audience over time with
the work that ultimately found its way and kind of matured into backrooms. But, you know, it's a whole
different time right now. And I think there's so much to celebrate and be excited about.
That's what I think, too. I think that it's never been easier to find an audience. And now
we just need those artists that take advantage of that. Yeah. So what is next for you then?
Like, how do you think about the next project? I mean, you're coming off like, I mean, I'm sure
gemstones was exhausting. It was exhausting. It was so much fun. But yeah, it was down. It was
definitely exhausting. And so I definitely need it to, I need it to decompress after that. And that's why this book was
honestly perfect is because, you know, my hobby is writing. And so once I finished gemstones,
it was like, I need to take a break from that level of work, but I still want to write. I still want
to create things. And so this was like a perfect thing to drop into and dedicate my time to. And,
you know, it's been fun to now this is out there in the world and people can enjoy it. But yeah, you know,
I've got a few things over at HBO that I'm developing now.
And the thing I'm the most stoked about is that John Coture and Jeff Rally, two of the other, my collaborators on Gemstones, we sold our pitch to Paramount to relaunch G.I. Joe.
And so we got those script that we're really fired up about.
And we're trying to shoot that next year.
Uh-huh.
Yeah.
You were a G.I. Joe guy growing up.
That's right.
Yeah, I read that.
I read that.
I'm not going to be the guy who's going to ask the artist to explain his work.
work, but if you did have to kind of crystallize, you know, this guy that, you know, that it's like every one of your
characters is a different version of kind of the same guy on some level, like, who is that guy?
And why does he mean so much to you? Why do you keep kind of returning to this exploration of
the modern American male and his, you know, frailties and fractured relationship with his masculinity?
You know, I don't, you know, I'm not sure why it is. I mean, I think that in my brain,
where it goes is, you know, like I said, growing up in a town like Spotswania, Virginia,
where it's just like you're in the, you're in the everyday world. That's the world where
stories that appeal to me take place. And, uh, but you want those stories to resonate with
people. So I love the idea of characters that live in our world, but have sort of this
epic imagination of who, of how they fit into the world and what they're doing. It's almost
like all these guys have read Joseph Campbell and they're assuming that they're the hero. And
then the reality is that they're not. You know, and I just think there's something interesting
about taking a character on that journey. And maybe that's because that's the ultimate thing
that maybe we're all quietly up against. And like what you were saying with people searching
for, you know, clavicular or any of these influences, it's just like everyone is trying to figure out
how they win and that's what it is.
And you have to walk a tightrope to portray these characters in a way where they're not
cartoon figures or people that you're making fun of.
Like there's always this like heart and compassion.
Like how do you do that?
How do you infuse them with that so that we're kind of on board with them?
And despite all their bad behavior,
we still kind of wanted to work out for them.
I think it's just like treating them real, like giving them depth.
I think that's what all of it comes.
to you know i would find myself a lot of times when i would watch like traditional comedies that i would
always like be laughing in the first 30 minutes and then in the second act you kind of like they start
introducing reasons of why you should care and then usually the third act you're kind of like checking
your watch it's like okay it's done i've got the joke um and so i think all of this stuff is ultimately
like let's make these characters not just uh you know vehicles for punch lines like let's do that
and let's make them as funny as we can but like let's inject depth into them and
layers into them so that once you get to the third act, there's actually something for the audience
to care about or to root for or to want to see resolve. And I think you get that from depth. I think
you get that from treating them like they're real. And, you know, the people that I really have
enjoyed working with, you know, in front of the camera, like Walton Goggins or Edie Patterson,
John Goodman, like these are all great, great actors. And the thing I love about them is they're never,
they're not, they don't get excited about just the jokes. They get excited.
excited about the idea of how to inject the humanity.
The humanity.
The humanity.
Like, Goodman is just oozing pathos and no matter what he's doing.
Yeah.
You know he's going to bring that.
And so when we, when I find those kind of collaborators, that's the perfect recipe for
what we're trying to do because at the end of the day, that's what we want.
We don't want, we want people to laugh, want them to be entertained.
But at the end of the day, you do want people to care about these people and imagine that
they could be real.
And I don't think it's about justifying that type of person or what that person does.
But I do think it has to, we're all capable of like empathy and we all kind of want to
understand the people around us.
Even the worst examples of the people around us, I think it's better to try to have
understanding of why they are, they, they tick that way as opposed to just write them off.
Do you think you can still find the satire in like our incredibly satirical world?
I think, I think I think you still can.
Yeah.
I really do.
How did you learn how to how to do that?
Was it just through experience, like just the many years?
of banging, you know, banging it out, script after script?
I think so.
I think that all of the, every project I've done,
there's always been a sense of when you approach the next one,
like you just, I'm never satisfied with what we've done.
I'm always sort of, I like this and I like that,
but I'm always very like, but next time I would do this or I would do that
or I would have a character that does this instead.
So I think with all of it, it's just trying to push myself to,
to, you know, refine it, to make it better,
to push myself to try,
something different. And on the day-to-day basis, is it more Stephen Pressfield War of Art? I'm a
pro and I sit down and this is the time and nobody bother me, or is it like you and your buddy's
getting stoned and fucking around? No, it's definitely, you know, it used to be that for sure.
But it definitely has a, you know, it was really easy to do this job when I didn't have kids,
you know, and even just my, you know, it was just a girlfriend at the time before my, before
where Guy and I got married, you could be really selfish with your time. And I could, I could,
you know, I could work all fucking day long until four o'clock in the morning. And like, you know,
I could just, I just would give all my time to the job, you know, to creating. And then once
kids came around, it started to be like, I don't, I don't want to give that much time to this.
I want to get the, the result. But I also want to, I have other jobs now, too. I want to be there
for these kids. I want to be a good partner for my wife. I don't want to,
like, you know, push all these things off just because I'm making a TV show, you know,
I got to find the balance of it. So, you know, it just, you kind of just end up adjusting.
And I found what work for me is just I just get up at the ass crack of dawn every day.
Like, I get up at like five in the morning and I just jam in the morning before everybody else is awake, you know.
And then by the time the kids go awake, I already have started something that's got my mind working that has me excited.
I can sit down and be present for those guys and get them to school.
and I drop them off, then I come back home and I jam more.
And then I just, yeah, I just try to find the time that works that doesn't like make me sequestered off while the rest of life is happening.
And I'm, you know, hammering away nonsense and dick jokes.
You've worked with so many brilliantly talented people.
Like what lessons have you learned from, you know, I don't know, Will Ferrell, Ben Stiller, uh, Judd Apatow, Seth Rogen, like all of it.
Like, what are some of the lessons that have translated and kind of, you know, found their way into your work that have been meaningful to you?
You know, one thing that I admired about all those guys is everyone that you mentioned, they're all really nice people.
They really are.
And I think that even, you know, you hear these horror stories of how, like, how people can be divas in Hollywood or how they can, you know, it's cutthroat.
And with all of those guys, there is always a sense of camaraderie, you know, Jud and Seth and their camp.
Like, there were so many guys that were always on those sets that were around from.
freaks and geeks and there were all, you know, friends and buddies and, you know, Stiller has
his crew and, you know, Will had, you know, there was so many friends that were in that circle.
And so I liked that. I felt like that, that spoke to what my experience was with my friends,
of that you can, you can do this job and it's more fun to do it with friends.
And it's more fun to give buddies opportunities and to be loyal to people.
What's the advice that you give to young people, young filmmakers, aspiring writers?
You know, the advice I got when I first moved out to Los Angeles was it was from a guy who was, I had a meeting with.
He was like, you know, working out of his like Toyota Corolla.
And he was, you know, he was like looking at me to see if he wanted to manage me as a writer and he didn't want to.
But the advice he gave me is I was like, well, what do you think?
Like, how do I get going here?
He's like, look, you're not going to do what you want to do for.
a very long time, find a job that you'll be okay with in the meantime that doesn't make you want to
kill yourself. And then he drove away and it was like, shit, this is going to be harder than I thought.
And, but I think that that was really solid advice because I think sometimes, you know, not relying on
your art to pay the bills. Yeah. And to know that like it's going to be different seasons of your
relationship with your art, you know, and maybe in the beginning, just getting that proximity, that could be,
even though it seems like it's the right move, like, oh, I got to live in L.A. where it's happening.
But if to afford to live in LA means that you got to like work 16 hours a day and you're, you know, living with four people in an apartment, you know, that might not be the most conducive way for you ultimately to like write or to achieve what you need to do.
So I think it's like finding a position for yourself where you can actually live a fruitful life and you can find inspiration and you can figure out to pay the bills.
And it might mean not being in the heart of an expensive city.
It might mean like, you know, living somewhere that's cheaper and in figuring out how to.
to create your masterpiece outside of the system.
And what's the feeling that you want people to have after reading your book?
I hope that honestly that they're entertained.
I mean, reading has been something that I've, like, been passionate about since I was a kid.
I mean, I started reading Stephen King when I was like an elementary school.
I've always loved, I've always loved books.
I've always loved being in the middle of stories.
And I think in this day and age when these screens are so present and there's just this
constant flood of information coming to us and seeing everything, for me, books have been a good
antidote to that. Every time I feel like I want to scroll or I want to look at something I have no
control over and get angry about it, I find that it's more useful to put that thing down and to pick up
a story and to pick up a book. And I think in general, it just chills you out. It just puts you in a
mind space that, I don't know, my life always feels healthier when I'm in the middle of a good story.
Who are your guys? Like other than King?
I grew up on all the horror stuff. Like that was, I think, what got me into reading
because it didn't feel like homework. I was always with the horror and the thriller,
I always was curious of what was going to happen. And that was the way where I, as a kid,
wouldn't just like be intimidated by the page counts. Like the pages I would stop paying attention
to because I just wanted to know what was going to happen. But as I got older, I mean,
I love Larry McMurtry. I love Cormick McCarthy, George Sondon.
I love Jack Vance, this fantasy writer.
I love Jim Thompson.
DeWillow.
Yeah, I really go through so many different writers.
When you started writing horror, you did Exorcist, the Halloween movies.
What did you have to learn or unlearn from being so kind of comedy-brained?
You know, it's interesting because even when we write our comedies, we don't write them like
their comedies.
Like, we will write them like they're serious.
you know, and then we'll find ways to inject humor,
but a lot of times we'll strip jokes out of the scripts
just because like, oh, this is like pushing it too much.
So I think in that regards,
we approach that first Halloween,
the same as we would approach anything, you know,
just like, what's the story?
How do we land it?
Who are these characters?
How do we make them real?
Same principles.
Same principles, yeah.
This was great, man.
Oh, thanks for having me out here.
Weather is incredible.
This son even came out.
Thank you.
Thank you for traveling all the way out here,
all the way from Spotsylvania.
Originally to be here today with me,
it's a treat to talk to you.
And congrats on the book, man.
You did a bang-up job.
It's fucking awesome.
And I'm sure people are going to love it.
I mean, it just came out this Tuesday, right?
This Tuesday, yeah, yeah.
So we'll see like a week and a half from now
when people have finished reading it.
What's this dude think he's doing?
But the audiobook, when is the audio book coming out?
The audio book is out now.
Oh, it's out now.
I didn't know that.
I thought it was still being worked on.
Yep, no.
The turnaround time.
on that is fast.
Yeah, yeah, that's right.
No overhead either.
No shipping.
No, no shipping.
All right, man.
Well, best of luck to you and win in your sales, my friend.
Thanks, dude.
Thank you very much.
Cheers.
