The Severance Podcast with Ben Stiller & Adam Scott - Points of Vibration (with Conan O'Brien and Allen Stare)
Episode Date: June 26, 2025It's been a few months since the season two finale, but Ben and Adam just couldn't stay away from the mic. For their first episode back, they sit down with Conan O'Brien, a Severance superfan, to disc...uss how he inspired a pivotal scene from the finale, the fear and risk involved with making creative work, and they try to get to the bottom of why Ben wasn't invited to Conan's Mark Twain Prize event. Then, Ben and Adam talk with another Severace superfan -- Allen Stare, host of Severed: The Ultimate Severance Podcast -- about why he started a Severance podcast as his retirement hobby. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, I'm Ben Stiller.
I'm Adam Scott.
And this is the Severance Podcast with Ben and Adam.
Now we recorded our last podcast episode when the season two finale aired a few months ago,
and there was so much more we wanted to talk about and we're still getting new questions
from the hotline.
So we figured why not start the podcast back up.
So starting today, we've got new episodes for you
coming out every Thursday for the next five weeks.
Yeah, and in each episode,
we'll be talking about the movies and TV shows
that have influenced us while making the show,
and we'll bring on Severance super fans,
which I'm excited about, like today's guests.
We've got a big Severance Superfan, like physically big,
big in stature and import and show business too.
Physical mass.
Yeah, physical mass and height.
We're talking about Conan O'Brien.
Conan's on the show.
Oh my God, Conan O'Brien, the best.
And he has this new show, this new travel show.
Yeah, Conan O'Brien must go.
Yeah, which I haven't seen it,
but you've seen it, you said it's great.
It's so good, it's hilarious.
Yeah, it's interesting to me that Conan can't go through
life without being recognized,
and I'm gonna ask him about it, what's life.
Yeah, he can't like hide in a crowd
because he sticks up because he's nine feet tall.
Yeah, exactly.
So after all that, we're also gonna be joined
by another Severance superfan, Alan Stair,
who hosts Severed, the ultimate Severance podcast.
I'm gonna ask him how tall he is also.
I'm gonna ask if he likes staring at things.
Oh yeah, good.
All right, so here's the spoiler warning.
In this episode, anything and everything
from the entire first two seasons of Severance
is on the table.
So I don't know why you're listening to this at this point unless you just stumbled on
it.
But if you aren't caught up yet, you know, just go do that.
And then this podcast episode will always be here waiting for you.
Yeah, we're just waiting for you.
Like if you I think it's good that we be clear like both seasons in their entirety are up
for grabs spoiler wise.
Like if you watched all of season one
and the second half of season two,
you're out of luck because the first half of season two,
we may be talking about that.
Right, and I feel like if you had done that,
you should listen to the podcast episodes in order.
Yeah.
Right, yeah.
100%.
So probably if you're hearing this,
this is not an issue for you.
So how have you been?
It's been a few months since we've been doing this.
So how have your few months been, Ben Stiller?
You know what?
Honestly, doesn't it feel like a lot longer
than a few months? It does.
It feels to me like a really long time
since we did a podcast and since the show stopped, you know,
like we had the last episode,
and it seems like, I don't know,
it just seems like forever ago.
Yeah, the finale feels like a year ago.
Yeah, yeah.
Like when the finale came out
and we had that big screening,
which was so much fun watching the show
with a theater full of fans.
Yeah, that was literally one of my favorite experiences
in life of screening something, was to be in that theater the Dolby theater
And with all those fans and I felt like everybody who was watching it had sort of watched it already
They might have watched it the night before yep
So they kind of knew what was going on and it was just so much fun and then the crazy
USC marching band coming in at the end incredible Incredible, and Tramiel marching in with them
and the crowd just went bonkers.
And that was Tramiel just freestyling totally.
Yeah, afterwards I was like,
how long did you guys rehearse that?
He was like, we did not.
That we kind of just did that, which is crazy.
Yeah, it was great.
So how are you doing as far as the Knicks go?
Well, you know, look, it was a really, really good season.
I don't want to make people have to deal with my Knicks stuff
if they're not interested in it.
Just suffice it to say, the Knicks went to the Eastern
Conference Finals, which is a huge, huge thing for them
first time in 25 years.
And then they proceeded to let go of Tom Thibodeau,
the coach, which was kind of a rough thing.
And as of this recording, we're still in process with that.
So there's a lot of mixed emotions, but it was a great run.
I had so much fun, never been more invested.
And you have to have a few weeks maybe at the end of it
because it always ends badly. You know, right? It's like few weeks maybe at the end of it, because it always ends badly, you know?
Right?
It's like always not, unless you win the championship,
there's always gonna be some sort of frustration.
But it was fun, in terms of Severance, it was cool,
because we had like a little Karl-Anthony Townes
Severance crossover for one of his hype videos
for the first round of the playoffs.
And wouldn't they play the theme too,
during games sometimes?
Yeah, they would play it like sometimes
when someone go to the foul line,
which is pretty cool.
It's amazing.
Yeah, I have to say, when the Severance theme
played at Madison Square Garden,
that was sort of like all the elements
of my life coming together.
Yeah, I mean, that has to be,
that's like REM going on stage
and playing the Severance theme song or something.
Yeah.
I have a question though.
I went to two Knicks games this season
and as you pointed out, both games I'd been to, they lost.
Correct.
So I was just wondering your feelings generally about that
and if you think I'm some sort of a curse
on the New York Knicks.
I don't think you're a curse.
I think you might be just not, you know,
it might be bad luck. Just bad luck
Yeah, yeah, yeah
I think sure look this happens with anybody who shows up at a game who doesn't usually show up at a game and an important
Game and it gets it throws off the energy. Yeah, it's like you just look at the the data
It's like okay, you know Adam shows up loss Adam shows up loss
So I'm just saying, no, not necessarily a curse, but are you gonna be first in line for, you know,
to go watch a game with next season,
maybe early in the season, but come playoff time,
I think we have to, you know,
think long and hard about that.
Like when it really matters, you're,
you would go out of your way to make sure
I am not allowed in the doors at Madison Square Garden.
No, no, no, no, no, I would never do that.
I just would make it difficult,
whatever strings I could pull.
Maybe throw an obstacle or two in my way.
I have one question for you.
When the Knicks lost and you went to that game,
did you feel anything?
Did you care at all?
Did it bother you at all?
I was sad for the city of New York
because I love New York city so much.
I don't feel like I don't buy any of that.
You don't care about that.
You don't care about New York as much as I do.
What I felt though mostly because a few minutes beforehand
you had yelled quite loudly, hey Adam,
last time you came to a game they lost too because I was a few seats over from you,
so you had to project, and there were a lot of people around.
So when they did in fact lose, while being sad
for the city of New York and the incredible team members
of the New York Knickerbuckers,
I was happy how sad you were.
Cool, all right, can you name two team members from the New York Knicks?
Of course I can.
So is Conan, is he?
Okay, Conan's here.
Conan O'Brien is here.
Let's bring him in. No way.
Let's bring him in.
We're gonna take a break.
We'll be right back.
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Every Thursday you'll hear us and see us chatting
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I love doing Conan's show.
I mean, he's sort of the man in terms of podcasting.
Oh, yeah.
It's probably the easiest show to do because you just get into a conversation
and you forget that you're being recorded.
And also, Conan has no hi, Conan.
Yeah, I'm here. You're talking about me.
It's rude. It's rude.
I've been listening to you guys for 40 minutes. Well, cool.
We were just watching your Zoom screen
that just had your name, but then there was like a mute thing.
And so we were just sort of doing
what they call tap dancing or, you know,
in showbiz when you gotta do filler.
Yeah, filler, my whole life has been filler.
It's been, I was once in front of a huge giant crowd
at Bonnaroo and I did whatever short thing I was gonna do
cause comedy doesn't play in a venue like that.
So I did my short, quick thing,
crowd seemed happy, and then I was about to get off
and I looked at the guy at the side and was doing this,
stretch, because Stevie Wonder still wasn't out of his
trailer.
And I said, okay, Stevie Wonder's coming.
He'll be here sometime soon and just walked off.
And the guy was like, hey man, I told you to do this.
And I was like, yeah, fuck you.
I'm not gonna get shooed up
because Stevie Wonder is getting a foot massage.
That's actually a great, that's a great,
I have to remember that for when someone tells me,
hey, you didn't do this thing that I asked you to do,
to say, hey, fuck you.
Yeah, I do that.
I started doing that with my wife recently.
How'd that go?
She's like, I told you,
I thought I told you to pick up our son at the airport.
I'm like, fuck you.
I'm on television.
And then she says, no, you're not really.
It's a podcast.
And then it's sad.
That's the beauty of a long-term relationship.
Exactly.
That's sort of like those shortcuts.
Yeah, she's packing right now.
So.
By the way, what we didn't mention in your introduction,
I think I just talked about your immense height
and how like kind of slightly jealous I am of it.
And that was one of my questions I wrote down.
What's it like being tall that I was gonna ask you
at some point, but later in the interview,
but maybe you wanna think about that.
Well, I'll tell you this, there are downsides.
You cannot hide.
And it's really funny
because when I put on like sunglasses and a baseball cap,
it looks like Big Bird from Sesame Street
is wearing sunglasses and a baseball cap.
That's what we said.
We said that in your intro,
that you cannot hide as a famous person.
What is it like in life for you to walk down the street?
You can't hide.
People are just like, hey Conan.
Well, have you guys watched,
if you've watched the movie King of Comedy,
there's a great sequence where Scorsese just shoots
Jerry Lewis walking down the street and very smart.
Yeah.
He had Jerry Lewis play Jerry Langford.
So and he records everyone on the street shouting Jerry, Jerry.
And this sounds like I'm humble bragging or something.
I'm not.
People between my hair and my height and a certain kooky face, people just shout.
And so I kind of act like I'm an elected official.
And I just, I'm like, yeah, buddy, right back at you.
Oh, look out for him.
Hey, you, that's some salami sandwich.
I'll join you in an hour.
I just, I'm constantly just shouting stuff at people and-
And they love it.
I don't know what they do, but I mix it up with people.
Like I just use, there's an Irish politician side of me I don't know what they do, but I mix it up with people.
I just use, there's an Irish politician side of me
that's just, I act like I'm running for something
and I don't know, I'm sure a really good,
either a CAT scan or a good therapist
would trace it back to some incredible deficit inside.
But then we wouldn't have that career that you've had
if you had gotten the CAT scan back in the day
and figured it out.
Yes, yes.
As my father once said,
I've repeated this many times, but it bears repeating,
my father was a scientist and he once looked at me
and he wasn't kidding.
He looked at me and he went,
I think I understand.
You're making your living off of something
that should be treated.
Wow.
That's like, I love you too.
I love you too, dad.
Wow.
And Conan, by the way,
congrats on the Mark Twain prize for humor.
Thank you.
Yeah, man.
Yeah, and I saw recently that, yeah,
they had a whole event at the Kennedy Center.
I missed it because I was, I guess, not invited.
Yeah, yeah.
Or my publicist missed, something like I got caught up in.
What happened was you called me early on
and said, I'd like to be there.
And I said, we're good.
Right.
We're good.
I thought you meant we're good, like we're great.
Let's do it.
I know, but I was really trying to communicate,
we are good.
And I was under the mistaken impression
that since the Ben Stiller Show, you hadn't done much.
And I said, look, that's nostalgia.
And that was cool.
And you guys won that Emmy and you and Odenkirk
and what a great team.
And then I was horrified to learn
that you have had this just explosive power,
incredible dominance in film.
And I was embarrassed, that's on me.
That's cool, that's cool.
It's weird because I was at Sandler's Mark Twain Prize
thing, which I think you were at too.
I thought you were a caterer.
I thought you were catering.
No, no, no, I did a tribute too.
I thought they let the caterer have a shot.
That was part of my bit.
That was part of my bit.
But I thought, honestly, I thought I killed.
I thought I killed.
You did.
I had a really good thing.
Yeah.
You did.
And afterwards, there was a lot of talk amongst the group.
It was like Dana Carr and people.
They were talking about who's gonna get the next one,
who's gonna get the next one.
And I thought that, okay, they just did a Jewish guy.
Probably not me next year.
But I thought I was rising into it.
And Chris Rock killed too.
And the Rock didn't even prepare, but he still killed.
And I thought, okay, I feel like my name's gonna be
in the Mark Twain people's consciousness
because they saw how good I did at Sandler's.
And not only have I not gotten,
this was years ago now, like three years ago,
I didn't even get called for your thing.
Yeah, you know what's interesting?
This is true, all joking aside,
they wouldn't tell me anything,
no one told me anything about who's coming.
They don't tell you-
They don't tell you.
They don't tell you anything, which is really nerve wracking.
And of course, the predominant feeling I had was,
I'm embarrassed that anyone's gonna be put out.
You know, like I don't want-
Of course, of course.
And then I had some people apologize.
Like they contacted me and, you know, I can't do it.
And I'm really sorry.
And I go, no, no, no, no, no, I don't know anything about it.
You know, and they're like, no, no, I'm really sorry, Conan. I know you asked. And I'm like, no, I can't do it and I'm really sorry. And I go, no, no, no, no, I don't know anything about it.
And they're like, no, no, I'm really sorry, Conan.
I know you asked.
And I'm like, no, I didn't.
And then they would say, I'm in Washington DC next door
that night and I don't have much to do,
but I still won't do it.
Right.
That's rough.
Yeah.
Isn't there an event the night before as well?
Yeah, and that was fantastic.
Everyone was great.
I mean, the craziest thing is,
I use my assistant on my podcast.
We put her in the podcast and then she's just, she's so great and she's done so many great
remotes with me.
And the trick with her I found is, as you guys know, most people who are, I'm just going
to use the term civilians, because it's so derogatory towards non-performers, but most
people, if you just put a camera on them, they change.
Everyone changes when you put a camera on them.
Sona does not.
So we would bring her out on the late night show
and she would destroy, and then it was over
and she would say, okay, I'm gonna get a sandwich
and then I'm gonna go home now, bye.
So they asked her to speak
and she followed a bunch of really professionally funny people.
And she got up there like she had been playing
the Catskills for 700 years.
Wow.
And she just, you know, and the audience, I mean
David Letterman came to the dinner the night before.
And so Dave's in the audience and she just destroyed
and had this casual, and then I went up to her afterwards
and I said, Sona, I hired you to be my assistant.
There was never any indication
that you'd ever become a known person.
And you just got up there and she was like,
oh yeah, no, I think it went well.
Anyway, you know, I'm gonna go,
I wanna get some, there's a chicken salad sandwich
in room service and then I gotta get to sleep
and I'm gonna call my kids and you're just, I mean, she's really remarkable.
I wonder if Sona has that deficiency,
that fear deficiency, that that guy that frees solos.
Free solo guy is missing something in his amygdala.
He has no fear.
I don't know, but it is quite remarkable.
Does Sona, does she like to free?
She also, yes.
Oftentimes when she's on the podcast,
she's not there in studio, she's hanging off a cliff.
That's incredible.
Conan, thank you for being on our podcast.
I honestly, I was saying it before,
but you are like, we've known each other for a long time.
I'm a huge fan of yours.
You're amazing as a comedic writer.
That's when I first met you at SNL.
SNL, yeah.
I think I'm like 86, I think.
But you are like one of the best podcast people, so.
Oh, thank you.
I appreciate you.
Yeah, you really are.
And we'll get into Severance,
and just like what you love about Severance in a second,
but I just wanted to say, like when you do your podcast,
I'm curious how you prep for it,
because when I sat across from you the last time,
I did, I've done it a couple of times,
you don't really have notes,
you kind of have a little notebook or something,
but it just goes, it just flows.
And is there like some sort of prep you do,
or do you just kind of let it happen?
Yeah, I think about the person,
and I think about how do I connect with this person?
And I'm very sentimental.
So if I'm talking to you, Ben,
I think about knowing about your parents,
because I was a fan of theirs theirs and meeting you at SNL,
but knowing that, you know, still are a mirror,
that's still our mirror as a kid, that's been,
and then just the different ways we've crossed paths
and also what it is that you do that has resonated with me,
like where are our points of vibration that I feel?
And so I'm really just thinking about
whoever I'm talking
to, Adam, when I talk to Adam, it's just,
it's hard to access anything.
Yeah. So cold.
Yeah, well, that's just, that's just Adam.
So cold.
Nothing to connect with.
But I write myself little notes.
What's really funny is I was talking to Harrison Ford once
and sometimes I just write a bunch of different things
and I hadn't written much about Harrison Ford
on my notepad because you don't need to,
but there was a point I wanted to make about Han Solo.
So I just wrote Han Solo and I'm talking to him
and he looks at my pad and he just is like,
what the fuck?
And he grabs my pad and he goes, Han Solo,
you had to fucking write the name Han Solo.
And he's screaming at me in the podcast.
I think people know Han Solo.
And I'm like, no, it's not to remember.
And it was too late.
He had won the comedy battle.
That's so amazing.
He was screaming at me for,
bring up this, what's that name again?
Was he Luke or Han?
So yeah, I just try and find things that,
if Adam's coming on, I'll wanna talk about,
yes, there's so many things
that people know about Adam's career that are no brainers
and we're going to talk about those.
But I also want to make sure I mention the time,
my whole family and I were in Seattle
and we stayed up all night to watch his crazy recreations
of classic, was it 80s and 90s television shows?
Yeah, the opening credits.
Yeah, you go to this insane length to, it's hilarious.
They're amazing, I've seen them.
What's it called, the greatest television event
in history or something?
Greatest event in television history.
Look, Ghost look at greatest event in television history
that Adam made, and so what I have to remind him of
is that we were, my family and I are went to Seattle
cause my wife's from there and we're staying at this hotel
and we'd stayed up quite a while watching all of them
and just howling.
And then in the morning we go downstairs to get breakfast.
And while we're eating breakfast,
we finished breakfast and we're headed to the elevators
and the elevator doors open and Adam walks out with his son.
And my kids thought that I had ordered him online
or something.
Like, if you liked greatest, you know,
event in television history, click here
and Adam will step off an elevator tomorrow,
wherever you live.
That's what it was like.
And so there are things like that
that I know are just gonna be hot points
and then something will spin off of that.
Yeah, well, I love that you go from your,
just sort of your gut and sort of like,
just sort of, like and sort of like,
just sort of like you said, like vibe with,
or like those, what resonates with me.
And after so many years of doing your TV show,
is it almost like doing the podcast
and getting to talk to people on the podcast
for large chunks of time without commercial breaks
and everything, is it everything you kind of always
wanted to do, interview wise?
You know, it's interesting.
It would be a mistake for me to say, I prefer this.
What I would say is, I prefer this now.
Right.
You know, no one knows more than Ben,
cause Ben was, we had trouble early on.
We were, the word was we were gonna get canceled
and we'll be gone soon.
And Ben would show up and roll up his sleeves and say,
I have this crazy, insane idea. And Ben was show up and roll up his sleeves and say, I have this crazy insane idea.
And Ben was a known quantity much more than I was.
So that was a great gift.
That was what my people call a mitzvah.
And Ben would show up and he would do these things.
And-
I've never heard that word.
What is that?
I'll tell you later.
Mitzvah.
Yeah, please. There isn't time right now.
But over the years, all the different things that Ben did,
he was nice enough to come on the show
just regularly to talk about it.
I liked the lazy, Ben Stiller, crowd goes crazy.
Ben comes out, ba-da-ba-da-ba-da-ba-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da about, and I know that I have five minutes, get out on a laugh, commercial, band.
It's a very unnatural environment,
but I kind of loved being in that crazy insane world.
But now I love that if you and Ben come on,
we can talk for literally 50 minutes
and we can go down weird roads and there's no harm, no foul.
I mean, I always tell my guests, this is not a gotcha podcast.
This is for you.
You're here because I admire you.
And so this is as much for them as it is for me.
So I love the spontaneity of it, but I think it's this time of my life that I like it.
I really love that I got to do the other thing for 28 years. I loved it's this time of my life that I like it. I really love that I got to do the other thing
for 28 years, I loved it,
but I very also happy that it's over.
I was very much knew this has got to stop.
I can only imagine what that is.
By the way, here's a question, Severance related.
Why do you think late night hosts love Severance?
Cause you love Severance, Jimmy Kimmel loves Severance, Colbert love Severance because you love Severance,
Jimmy Kimmel loves Severance,
Colbert loves Severance.
Fallon, I don't know, and I know Jimmy pretty well
and I feel like I don't know if he's really,
I don't know if he likes it.
I think he hates it.
He's told me he hates it.
Really?
In song, yeah.
Oh, in like a funny song?
And it's really fun and it's trending, but.
That's cool, another one of viral video. Yeah, yeah.'s really fun and it's trending. But- That's cool.
Another one of viral video.
Yeah, yeah.
RxMens.
So what is it Conan, seriously, like, you know,
you're busy, you're living your life,
you're doing all your stuff.
Like, do you watch a lot of television?
What is it like that connected you with this show?
I think that I can't speak for the others,
but what I can say is,
and I don't know if there's anything particular
to late night hosts,
but I know that myself, my whole day is comedy.
And when I get home,
I do not wanna watch a standard sitcom
where someone enters and there's laughter.
I don't usually wanna watch a comedy.
What I wanna watch is something that's highly well done.
And if it has great comedic moments, terrific.
But I love any work.
I mean, sometimes I come home and I watch very depressing things, but what I know that
I love about Severance is that my work philosophy has always been God is in the details.
I used to watch SCTV and I used to love that they're putting so much thought into this
and they have a religious belief that other people are going to see what they're doing. They're putting so much thought into this and they have a religious belief that other people are gonna see what they're doing.
They're putting so much work into their comedy.
What I found about Severance right away is the aesthetic,
the set design, the look,
there's a mix of so many different textures.
I just found myself falling in love with the care,
the craftsmanship that went into it.
And so for all those reasons, I know the work has been done.
It's been done beautifully.
And I find myself really pulled into it.
It's something I, it's a connection point between my son and I, because he loves it.
He's a very smart kid and we talk about it.
And then my, my wife will get into the conversation and we'll really drill down on it and discuss things.
And that is my favorite thing,
is shows that invite discussion, debate afterwards.
When someone else makes a world that I believe is real,
I'm taken for this great ride
and I am invited to be part of it.
And it's just, you know, joyous. It's great. You guys built a world. for this great ride and I am invited to be part of it.
And it's just, you know, joyous.
It's great.
You guys built a world.
And is part of it too, like mired in comedy all day
and kind of, I mean, whether you like to admit it or not,
you're one of the people who have modern American comedy
is the way it is largely because of you.
Are you a person that like, one of the reasons,
the last thing you wanna do
is turn on comedies because,
whether it be a sitcom or another late night show
or whatever it is,
you know exactly what's around every corner.
You can predict absolutely every rhythm that's coming up.
And if not, you just find yourself in the rhythm of,
even if I can't,
if I don't quite know what's gonna happen,
you spent your day making donuts and then you come home
and your partner says,
we're gonna make donuts tonight for fun.
That's kind of how it can feel sometimes.
And I also like the format in Severance is
something very serious is happening.
And Mark has, we know that he's widowed,
believes he's widowed, he's gone through a terrible tragedy,
he wants to escape, it's very dark,
there's some truly dark moments,
but then Tramiel will, as Seth Milchik,
will go into that dance.
And I laughed, I mean, I was stood on my feet
when that happened.
I just, I, and because when you set up a world
like Severance, when the comedy does come in
or not even comedy, just this,
something comes in at an odd angle
and there's so many very funny moments,
but it can come 30 seconds after someone really believes
that the love of their life has gone forever
And so I'm at the mercy of the show, which I really like I'm not I'm just there to
Witness this world. I also have to say I love the the way the computers look the way there's this kind of
mid-80s late 80s design ethic And so the cars are very generic and square
and all of the stuff, I just, I find myself looking
at the stuff and the way it's lit
and the way the shots are composed.
And you know, we live in this world now where people say
was it a TV show or is it a movie?
I think, well, I think we're beyond that now because yes
this is technically a television show,
but as someone who has hosted the Oscars,
I don't really see the difference anymore.
You string all of Severance together with different edits
and you make some cuts here and there
and you make something that's three and a half hours long
and I don't see why that's not an Oscar worthy film.
That's actually what we're doing.
We're about to do that.
I think it's a little, I think it's late.
I mean, I'm sorry.
It's a good idea though.
No, we're gonna submit it as a movie next year.
The same material.
Okay, cool.
Same material.
And all it has to do is I think is play in a movie theater
for 11 minutes.
That's the rule.
I ran into a movie theater and projected my HBO travel show
onto a screen in Westwood, onto the screen illegally,
and I was arrested and taken away,
but I know that that's now an Oscar.
It's a movie.
It's a movie.
Right, right.
So you do what you have to do.
You do what you have to do.
That's something.
Right, yeah.
When I first met Ben, he said, he was so,
he remembered he took me aside and he said,
hey, you do what you have to do.
And I was like, why is he saying this?
You do what you gotta do.
And you were dressed as Eddie Munster in shorts. And you were like, why is he saying this? Do what you gotta do. You were dressed as Eddie Munster in shorts.
And you were like, you do, and you were smoking.
Do what you gotta do.
So weird.
And my father was standing behind you.
We're going to take a break.
We'll be right back.
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Okay, I have one question I have for you
and then I want to ask you if you have any burning
questions about the show.
Yes, yes.
But my question for you is, when I came on your podcast,
I said to you, there's a scene in the last episode
of season two that I think you will appreciate.
And-
There are so many scenes.
I mean, that's why-
But there was one specific scene.
You're asking me what's the best sandwich I had
in the last two years.
I'm like, wait a minute.
There was like a weird scene in the last episode
that involved Tramiel Tillman
and it involved the Keir Egan statue.
Oh my God.
The comedy routine.
Yes.
I just thought of you when I was making that
because I thought-
Oh really?
This thing is so weird,
and the first edit of it, there were like two more jokes
between the statue and Tramell that didn't go well.
And I was, honestly, when we cut it together,
I was like, this might be my favorite scene
I've ever been a part of.
And then everybody, when they got the first cut
of the episode, I was like, hey, the scene with Tramell
and here, the statue thing, it's really great, maybe we could cut it down a little bit.
It goes on for like 45 minutes.
Well, that's what always fascinates me
is what did it start as?
Do you know what I mean?
What was the original conception of it?
The idea of bad jokes, of doing this comedy routine
with a mannequin and somehow bombing,
but then also like him going off script, I just thought,
I thought that would be like something somebody might do on your show back in the day.
Yes, back in the day, we would have done that.
We actually used to do a thing where we'd pretend
that a guest had canceled and I would go to a big glass box.
It said in case of emergency,
and it was called emergency guests and I'd break it.
And I would put the guest in the, a dummy in the chair.
And my favorite thing is that it was just a crash test dummy
in a tuxedo.
And then the last one we did, the dummy threw to a clip
that we spent a fortune on, where the dummy's riding.
It's a crash test dummy in a tux that doesn't speak,
riding on a horse, having a shootout with some.
It was insane.
We didn't, we blew our budget for the year on that.
But yeah, I love the, I mean, I love that.
I love when Milchik gets the drawings
throughout the years, the paintings.
There's a, what I like is that some people say,
oh yeah, that's great, cause it's weird.
And I think, no, it's exquisitely weird,
which is the term I would use.
I always think there are comedy writers that say,
oh, I get it, arbitrary.
I like things that are just arbitrary.
And I think there's good arbitrary,
which is hard to find.
And then there's just arbitrary,
which is not that interesting to me.
So when someone says a guy comes out in a gorilla suit
and throws a pie in the air and it comes down,
it's not a pie anymore, it's a balloon,
I go, I'm not laughing.
But if someone changes the equation a little bit
and some different things happen,
there's a little bit of backstory, I'm laughing really hard.
So I think that Milchik is someone who has so
bought into this completely, he's deified here and now-
Yeah, and he's also having to deal with the reality
of how the company's treating him at that point too.
And he is, he's wrestling with that
and it's in a weird comedy routine.
Also, I have to say, you did this,
it was an episode where we see Milchek leave
and he puts on a motorcycle jacket and a helmet
and gets on this motorcycle and he's got a tie.
And I watched it and it was aspirational for me
because I thought that's how I want to go through the world.
I want to, I want, I've always loved like a really good,
cool leather jacket to ride a motorcycle like that
with a tie.
I thought he was, I just wanted that to be my life.
I wanted my life to be-
He looked incredible.
He looked fantastic. Yeah. And I just thought, yeah be my life. I wanted my life to be- He looked incredible. He looked fantastic.
Yeah.
And I just thought, yeah, that's the way,
why would you ever not dress like that
and drive around on a motorcycle at night?
100%.
And I wanna be him.
I wanna, I want that for myself.
I don't wanna get into my car
and drive slowly down the 405 to go do a pod test.
I want to be darting through the night
to accomplish something,
but it's very important that my white shirt is perfect.
My black tie is perfect.
I love it.
I think that comedy routine thing that Tramiel
and the mannequin feels like a old Conan bit,
but the thing about it,
as far as where it occurs in the show,
it's we're also getting essential information about Milchik. the old Conan bit, but the thing about it, as far as where it occurs in the show,
we're also getting essential information about Milchik.
It's not just, like you were saying, Conan,
like, oh, it's cool, cause it's weird.
Yeah, maybe it's weird, but it's also,
we have to learn this information about this character.
It's essential to get from A to B,
this little bridge right here.
And this is the thing that invites re-watching,
which I think there are many shows below deck
that don't merit re-watching.
I don't know about that.
I'm sorry, that was a crazy thing to say.
And I brought a housewives,
real housewives of Beverly Hills merits re-watching.
Okay, you're in a bunch of those, I know.
I am not in any of them.
You're in the background.
They do actually, they do recaps within the show
because something will happen, they go to commercial
and then they come back and they recap what they have.
They go back like 15 minutes.
I thought of this bit a long time ago
and maybe someone's done it, but I thought of,
I had this idea which is a show that recaps so much
that it goes backwards.
So you never, they just keep saying,
as you remember on last episode,
and it goes for 15, 10 minutes about the last episode.
And then they say, they open on the new one
and someone just drives up and opens the door.
And then they start,
they go to commercial and recap.
It starts going into the past.
And yeah, and then it just starts before you know it,
like Lincoln's there and it's just,
you're being pulled backwards.
It's like the last line in a great Gatsby,
just pulled backwards, fighting the tide.
But anyway, that's something for you guys to make happen.
Great, we're gonna work on that.
Yeah, we should do that.
Do you have any burning questions about the show before,
we're gonna have a couple of questions from calling people,
but yeah, any burning questions.
Well, burning questions, and I don't wanna,
obviously you can't tell me a lot of things,
but I love Gwendolyn Christie.
I also think she's absolutely hilarious and divine.
And I-
Yeah, amazing, amazing.
And when we did the panel,
I was so happy that she was there.
I hadn't seen her in a couple of years
and she was so, she's so funny and vibrant.
That was a delight.
I want more of her.
But one of the things that is, you know,
Britt has this challenge as Helly and Helena,
which is, I feel like I've had to go back
and try and figure out when Helena is pretending to be Helly,
it gets so nuanced, but trying to,
this is so nerdy, but trying to figure out,
well, first of all, I was obsessed with, is it cheating?
For Adam's character, for Mark, is it cheating?
And basically that's just me trying to find loopholes
wherever I can.
I was severed, Liza.
Would you wanna be severed, Conan, ever?
For the sole purpose of cheating.
Yes, because then I can say, yeah, it wasn't me.
You know, there is something, I've thought about this,
there is a reason why people drink and do drugs.
They want to sever.
Yeah, 100%.
I think that there's a lot of metaphors
within the idea of severing.
Yeah, and people who are going through grief,
the classic thing for them to do would be drugs
and alcohol repeatedly over and over and over again,
because they need to sever.
So yeah, there have been obviously times in my life
where I've thought I'll just have a couple of glasses
of wine after that show or after that disappointment,
because I will, I never got into drugs,
but I just wanna numb that and oh, now I'm not worried drugs, but I just want to numb that.
And oh, now I'm not worried anymore,
but of course it doesn't work in the long run.
People learn that.
No, but it's part of human nature for sure.
Yeah, so I'm just, I don't know,
my burning question would be,
where does heli stop and helina start?
Where does helina start and heli start?
But there's not really an answer to it.
It's just something that kind of fascinates me,
you know, for good reason, I think.
For sure.
I mean, that's to me, what's so interesting
about the whole premise of the show is like how much
of Mark is, you know, that he's cutting off from is integral
to who he is, no matter any or Audi, you know?
Besides what memories they share, just like, just general,
like the makeup of what makes a person a person.
Yeah, when you say any burning questions,
there are too many.
And almost in a way, I wanna let my mind play a lot
with a lot of this stuff and rather than be told,
no, you're wrong, which I don't think you would do anyway.
Yeah, no, no, I agree, honestly,
because we get asked it all the time,
what is this about, what does that mean?
And it's like, of course you don't really wanna tell people
because you want them to have the experience
of their own interpretation.
I think people just wanna know that you have a plan.
Yeah, I don't think anyone actually wants to know
the answers to any of the questions.
It's just fun to think about.
I'll say this, that there have been shows
with this kind of power before and this kind of,
you know, attention and that have drawn people in and everyone can talk about it and make their
cut down videos and give their theories. There've been these kinds of shows before, I use that
broadly because I think this show is exceptional in its execution, but there've been this kind of thing before, and then the television audience at some point starts to
get the feeling that the people driving the boat don't really know where they're going.
But that has not happened with Severance, and I feel like I'm in good hands.
Well, I'm glad you feel that way.
You don't know what you're doing, do you? I see you're writing.
I see you're randomly...
What if you asked me how do you think it should end?
Why?
Just what would you do if you didn't have an ending?
I mean, I do, but what would you do?
All right, we have a couple of hotline questions.
Adam?
Yeah, Conan, while the second season was airing,
we asked fans to call in with questions
and reactions and stuff, and we got so many voicemails.
People are still calling in.
We'd love to have you help us answer a few of them,
if you're in.
Sure, yes I will.
The first one comes from Kristen Bell and Dax Shepard,
who they've been fucking harassing me
throughout season one and two.
Look, these are terrible people.
And really within the business reviled.
Yeah, no one likes them.
But anyway, please continue.
Nobody wants to hang with them.
So this one they sent after receiving screeners
through episode six, but before the rest of the season
had aired, so they were stuck in that limbo,
having seen six episodes and then having to wait
so we can play that one.
Well, here we are again.
You've led us to the slaughter once again,
you selfish prick.
Only thinking about yourself and your craft.
Dick move, give us six,
and then shut off the floodgates.
It's unconscionable.
You should be ashamed of yourself.
And then even worse to say that you were delivering
in the next floor, and here we are,
sitting with our dicks in our hands,
looking like fools with our family in town.
You embarrassed me in front of my father-in-law.
Fuck you.
I'm glad that someone else had their dick in their hand while they were watching Severance.
I don't feel like a perv anymore.
That's our goal.
Again, I cannot stress enough.
I know that these, you know, I like their commercials as much as anyone else, but they
are within the industry
and Adam and Ben agree they are reviled, Dexter and Kristen.
Very cute, both of them.
I didn't say they weren't maybe two of the most attractive
people I've ever seen, but reviled.
That's right.
It's the contrast, but how attractive they are, but yet.
Yeah, it's the devil.
The devil will come to you as a very good looking,
successful businessman or actor.
That's right. But I do, I see where they're coming from,
which is they're living in their,
I'm not in the bubble, the Hollywood bubble.
I've just was never invited.
Like I wasn't invited to-
You're in the bubble.
Mark Twain thing?
Okay, no, sorry.
No, no, you're in the bubble.
No, no, I'm in the bubble.
You're so in the bubble that no one
had the guts to call you.
Right, that's what I've heard too.
No, no, you're like a director. That's how in the bubble you are. Yeah, you're so in the bubble. You're so in the bubble that no one had the guts to call you. Right, that's what I've heard too. No, no, you're like a director.
That's how in the bubble you are.
Yeah, you're so in the bubble.
You're in like three bubbles.
Adam's in and out of the bubble.
He came to the bubble late.
He's still trying to find where things are.
He's on the bubble.
He's on the bubble, inside a bubble.
I'm still getting used to it.
Yeah, you're still acclimated.
Where is Michael Buble?
Where does he fall?
He's in the bubla. Okay? He's in the bubla.
Okay, he's in the bubla.
Yeah.
That's so stupid, but it's making me happy.
But I think that's a common thing.
Celebrities like that, who've been in the bubble so long,
think I get to watch, they think they're the president
and that Ben Stiller is gonna come and screen all of Severance at the Oval Office, you know.
Right.
Yeah, they get to watch whatever they want
whenever they want.
Yeah, and that's the kind of arrogance,
if they're listening.
Yeah, entitlement.
Yeah, Dax.
And I don't even think Dax is his real name.
I don't think that's some kind of-
Of course not.
Gigabyte or something. I don't- think Dax is his real name. I don't think that's some kind of gigabyte or something.
I don't.
Probably Richard.
Yeah, his real last name is Shmulovitz.
It's Dax Shmulovitz.
I knew it.
Yeah.
Okay, here's another question, question two.
Hi, my name is Vanessa.
And my question is,
what do you think the cast or severance
would be in the Muppet remake of the show,
a la Muppet Treasure Island or Muppet Christmas Carol?
I play this with my husband, and the rules
are everyone is a Muppet except for one person who is a human.
So just curious what your thoughts might be.
Thanks so much.
We're enjoying the show.
Bye.
Okay, so these are people who think about the Muppets
quite a bit.
I have to say, this is tricky for me
because I haven't watched a Muppet venture
in quite some time.
I know Jason Segal did a very good Muppet reboot.
Oh, he did.
It was very good.
That was awesome.
It was really good.
And I remember watching it and loving it.
And he actually invited me on set.
I've never been invited on set anywhere, Ben.
Were you on, oh, sorry.
Were you on Sesame Street ever?
I think I was on, yes, I was on Sesame Street
and had one of the most horrifying experiences in my life,
which is they invited me to that studio, that iconic studio. And I walked in and I was gonna Sesame Street and had one of the most horrifying experiences of my life, which is they invited me to that studio, that iconic studio.
And I walked in and I was going to shoot my thing on Sesame Street.
And I looked up and Snuffleufagus was being stored.
So Snuffleufagus was lashed to the ceiling.
And it looked like Anthony Hopkins from Silence of the Lambs had gutted him and flayed him out
the way he does with the security,
the policeman in the guard in Silence of the Lambs.
Yes, exactly.
And it just looked like he was the victim
of a cruel, sick mass murderer.
And I just thought, if you're gonna store him,
put a tarp over that, because it's upsetting.
That's a really good question.
I don't, I think Michael Churnis, who plays Rickon,
I think he's the Swedish chef.
Oh, 100%.
Yeah, perfect.
That is perfect.
This is interesting.
I have to think about this too,
because also there's the other layer
of the Muppet Treasure Island or Muppet Christmas.
So then there's like a Muppet character and then there's another character on top of it. Oh, you're right. There's like the Muppet Treasure Island or Muppet Christmas. So then there's like a Muppet character
and then there's another character on top of it.
Oh, you're right.
There's like Muppet characters playing characters.
So that's even more confusing, right?
Yeah, like if they're just a Muppet, there's one thing.
But then if it's like Ebenezer Scrooge,
who was the Muppet Scrooge?
Was it, I guess it must've been.
Was it Kermit?
Kermit, Kermit, I guess he got all the leads.
Michael Caine played Scrooge in the Muppet Christmas. Oh, wow. Oh, not Kermit. It was like they got to run it. Not Kermit, I guess he got all the leads. Michael Caine played Scrooge in the Muppet Christmas car.
Oh, wow.
Oh, not Kermit.
It was like they got to ruin it.
It was another amazing actor.
Yeah.
So maybe Michael Caine would play Mark.
I think Kermit would be Mark, right?
Yeah, probably.
Yeah.
How many female Muppets are there?
I just realized there aren't nearly as many.
You know what?
Muppets, now we're realizing voice club.
Yeah, right?
That's right.
I hope I didn't just say something that topples an empire,
but if I did, my apologies to Lisa Henson
and the Henson gang.
Okay, let's do one last question.
One last question.
Hello, Ben, and I assume Adam.
I'm just calling because I'm wondering
if you guys can discuss some of the inspirations
that went into Severance.
You know, movies, TV shows, books, that kind of thing.
It's such a cool and unique concept.
I guess I'm just wondering what, you know,
brought together.
Anyways, praise here.
Lots of love, Mark.
Talk to you soon.
First of all, what does he mean,
hello, Ben, and I assume Adam?
I guess he just assumes that you're on the podcast too.
Pretty rated.
Yeah, sometimes.
No, I think, yeah, it's kind of sad like,
look, we know, yeah, Ben's there
and I guess Adam's probably warmed his way in, you know?
Yeah, he might be there somewhere, who cares?
Cowering, cowering.
Can you tell us what our inspirations were?
Yes, I think I'm gonna take this question.
This will enrage this fan
that I don't let you guys talk
about what the inspirations were.
There's so much I could say,
but it feels stupid for me to talk at all during this.
I think you guys have the mic and you should go.
Go!
You know, what I would just say to that,
going back to what you're,
like when I asked you about you doing your interviews
for your podcast,
how you said you kind of like go from like,
this is what resonates or whatever.
I feel like,
cause I've been asked that question a lot,
we've been asked about like, what are the influences,
but at this point in our lives,
when you've been like doing this stuff for a long time,
I feel like a lot of the influences of things
are just sort of the things that are in you
and that you're in tune with, right?
And that you resonate with, like you were saying,
and you kind of go to an image or to, you know,
of course we like pull out photographs
and talk about movies and things like that,
but ultimately it's something that just resonates
within you that feels familiar, but its own thing.
And I try to go off of that as much as possible
because it's getting back to the thing of like,
okay, what are you interested in
when you're talking to somebody?
Is the same thing when we're making something,
it's like, what am I interested in seeing?
What would I want to see?
Also what comes to mind and feels right in this moment
and that's at this point for all of us,
it's not a choice I could spend my life stream
to recreate the war room in Dr. Strangelove.
That's what I want to do.
Now I always think of it
because it's the same thing in music.
Imagine you're a blender.
And since you were born, people have been throwing stuff in there or you've been adding
things.
Things have been going in there that resonate with you.
So I'm a blender that's got Warner Brothers cartoons, the Marx brothers, but it also has
for better or worse insane seventies television, but also SCTV, but also watching Johnny Carson with my dad.
And Johnny Carson's a blender that watched a lot of Jack Benny.
So I've picked up stuff from people I don't even know.
And so a good musician, they're supposed to have big ears, which is be listening to everything.
And then they're channeling.
They might be channeling something they're not even aware of.
And so I think I agree with what you're saying that you're not consciously coming in saying,
okay, last night I watched Bridget Jones' diary
and I want that to be the aesthetic for the show.
But that was actually the original.
I know, but you failed.
But that's, I can just see that we're making decisions
that we're not even aware where they're coming from.
But maybe at this point, if, you know,
like at least knowing enough to try to trust a little bit.
Yes.
To take, right, to sometimes take those chances
and just go, okay, at this point, like, if it fails,
yeah, it sucks, if it fails, it doesn't feel good,
but it's not the end of the world.
And so you just kind of go for it.
Yeah.
There's also that like almost sixth sense
that you have to have of this thing will work
or this thing works and this does not.
And that sort of fine line between something working
and not working is an educated guess based on all
of the things we've absorbed over the years.
And it's a guess, it's always a guess.
And that's when I talk to young people, I say,
that's the bad news is I always think I'm
maybe 30 seconds away from making a very bad choice or making something that's not good.
And you need that little freeze on of fear of, I'm afraid, I'm afraid this might not work out.
And I think that's the secret sauce. I hate to say it. Be nice if we were just happy-go-lucky chaps making stuff
and it was all great, but that's not how it is.
So you can mostly trust your instincts,
but then you have to ask people around you,
did we overdo it with the ochre color that we're using?
Did we, is this ceiling too low in the shot?
Is this, there's always gotta be self doubt.
Yeah, for sure.
Making stuff means there's a risk, there's a risk.
And even though you guys have had great success
with all kinds of stuff, I'm sure you're like me
in that it doesn't matter.
When something doesn't work, it really hurts.
It's still painful.
Yeah.
Not for me, I figured that out.
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha.
Conan, thank you for coming on our podcast.
This was not a chore.
This is like, hey, do you wanna hang with these two people
you really love and admire and talk about your favorite show?
And I go, yeah, I'll do that.
That's nice. Thanks, man.
Well, thank you, man.
Yeah, I really am very excited for what comes next
and happy for both of you that the show has been recognized
and hailed and it means so much to so many people.
This is great.
It's great. Thanks, man.
Thank you.
And I'm happy for you.
You just killed in the Oscars and you're hosting next year.
I think that's incredible.
You know what I could do on the Oscars next time around
is just announce quickly.
I'll just bring an envelope out
and say in the winter is Severance.
Yeah, see, I was gonna say.
I'll do that.
Great if you could.
Thank you.
$75, Venmo, if you each Venmo me.
$75?
$75 from each of you.
We could figure that out.
That comes to over.
$150?
I think that's $300, spent a while.
Yeah, we could actually put that on the budget
of the podcast.
Sure. We can do that. Thanks, Conan. actually put that on the budget of the podcast. Sure.
We can do that.
Thanks Conan.
Thank you guys.
Can't wait.
Take care.
Thank you Conan.
Thanks man.
Take it easy man.
Oh, that was great.
Conan's the best.
He is, he is really so frigging funny.
Yeah.
It's annoying, right?
It is annoying and I'm glad you said that
because I also wanted to talk about just,
aside from how annoyingly funny he is,
also just annoying generally.
Yeah, I know.
He's always on and I love him,
but I wish there was an off switch.
You know what I mean?
Me too.
Me too.
I love that you were able to articulate it.
Yeah, thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. Well, our next guest we are not gonna talk about
after they're off the show.
Not at all.
This is exciting though,
because we have an expert Severance podcaster.
He's the host of Severed, the ultimate Severance podcast.
He stole our name because that's what we wanted.
I know, we did.
Yeah, so we should talk to him about that.
His name is Alan Stair, also known as Alan S.
Alan S, welcome, thank you for being with us.
Hey, Alan S.
How you guys?
Oh my goodness, I feel like I know you guys.
I've been talking about you for so long.
It is so wonderful to meet you.
Thank you.
Alan, you have this great voice.
Do you have a radio background?
I started in radio in 1980 at 15 years old.
Three months before my 16th birthday,
I walked into a radio station.
They were looking for somebody and I got a job.
You obviously have the more professional radio voice
and thank you for devoting this time to the show
and creating this podcast, which is incredible and goes
so deep. I mean, how did this begin?
Well, this is my retirement hobby, basically, this podcast thing. During the pandemic, my
business, I had an advertising marketing little company that I ran out of my house. I had
a couple dozen clients, most of them closed because they were retail, so the pandemic shut them down.
So it was kind of a situation
where I'm closing in on 59 years old.
It's like I can go out and try and build the business back up
or what if I just quit?
So I retired and I still had all this
audio production equipment.
So we're bopping around the house,
just looking for something to do.
I'm a huge fan of WKRP in Cincinnati. It was the reason I got into radio from 1978 to 82, the sitcom.
That's great.
Yeah.
So great show.
I love that show.
So we did this 90 episode WKRP podcast and my wife did it with me and we just had a blast.
And my wife did it with me and we just had a blast. So when it was all done, I was looking for another podcast project and I was seeing Seth Meyers talking about this incredible show he'd watched called Severance.
And then Stephen Colbert is talking about Severance.
And I thought, I ought to check those guys out.
And I knew Adam Scott was involved with it too.
I always, you know, I'm a big fan of yours going back years and years.
I was a big parks and rec fan.
So I binged it that summer after it came out, summer of 22.
And I watched the entire thing in one night, uh, did all episodes.
I was so drawn into it.
And the first thing I did was go look for a podcast talking about the show.
I wanted to know who wrote it, where'd you shoot it?
What are the motivations for it? Who directed it, you know, just everything.
And there were at the time only like four or five podcasts out there. So I got on a
couple of them and listened and they were people sitting around a microphone going,
wasn't that cool? That was amazing. Can you believe they did that? And I'm like, where
did they shoot it? I want to know what that building is where they show up in that first episode.
That was the first piece of information I looked up about the show.
I Googled where did they shoot those scenes?
And I found the Holmdel complex and that kind of launched me into it.
And it was six months of writing and research and finding articles and finding
interviews and working on scripts.
And it was not until the following January of 23 that I dropped the first episodes
covering the first season.
Oh my goodness. So you actually prepared for this and you wrote stuff.
I'm in advertising, man. You don't say anything off the top of your head in
advertising. Every word is written out. So I just don't do that. I'm not much of an extemporaneous kind of guy. So I do write out all the scripts and that also,
I'm concerned about getting the info and the details right. As this is going on, I search out
interviews and I'm looking for interviews with people who are actually involved with the show.
You guys, your crew, the cast, anybody who's directly involved with the show. You guys, your crew, the cast,
anybody who's directly involved with the show is going to know the most about what's going on.
For the first season, I bookmarked about a hundred articles that contained information about the first season
and were interviews and type things. We're currently at over six hundred articles about season two,
the research that is going on, going into these podcasts I'm creating for season two.
So it's taking a lot longer and it's winding up.
I'm doing two to two and a half hours
on a single episode of the show
because we've got so much more information out there.
And I'm taking a couple of weeks off
because I need to kind of catch up.
I was gonna say, Alan,
I think you should take a vacation.
Well.
You deserve a break.
This is, like I said, this is my hobby.
My wife in retirement is painting and needle pointing.
I'm making podcasts.
I get up every day looking forward to it.
It's like, ooh, I'm scripting this
or I'm gonna edit this.
I'm, you know, working on something new here.
I mean, what a treat for us, you know,
to be able to have this conversation with you and really
feel how passionate you are and also how much attention you pay.
I know it's there, but it's honestly like I've never, I've been doing this for a long
time.
It's like very rare that people pay this much attention and care this much about something
to analyze it and to ask the question.
So I just want to say really, really appreciate it.
And it's really cool for us.
So let me ask, what's your favorite part of the show?
What is it that you love about the show the most
in terms of like what pulls you into it
and really draws you in?
It's the overall conceit of the Severance theory,
of the Severance procedure, the idea of that.
And I remember in the second
episode when we saw what was happening through the portal, the doorway portal with Heli and how
things were happening on the other side, that's when it dawned on me. And when we had Mark coming
down in the elevator again and again and again, and that that relentless repetition of being an any it just bowled me over I thought this is so cool that so intrigued me and I got
it like you know the first time it was presented I'm like oh I understand that
and wow that would be a weird existence and that is really what drew me into it
was that central conceit of the severance procedure. That is so cool, Alan, because that is exactly what drew me in the first time.
Ben just sort of told me the idea over the phone before I had ever even
read a script or anything.
He just told me the central conceit.
And I was like, that is cool.
That's it.
That's cool.
And it's something you can just keep turning over in your mind and start
kind of thinking about and considering all of the potential of this idea.
That's really, really so much fun that that's the thing that triggered your interest.
It was so different, so unique, so, you know, so out there, but then also so
incredibly relatable as someone who spent 12 years
out at an advertising agency in cubicle land.
Yeah, if you could switch your brain off for eight or 10 hours a day, that might be cool.
Sometimes, not always, but some days it just might be a really good thing to do.
But yeah, that was the thing that really drew me in.
And then the performances are fantastic.
The writing is so tight and so there's there's rarely a clunky
scene where you feel like you know didn't feel natural or the text didn't
come off very well there. You guys really you know really the writing is so
great. So just just a lot of that came together to to draw me into it but I
think that just that being severed and right now I'm working on the rewatch
episodes for season two going back through and ripping those all apart in great detail
And I'm right now working with the scenes actually where you're talking to heli in the hallways
after it's been revealed that she was the imposter for four episodes and
She's trying to convince you she's really heli are and you're very hesitant
Yeah, believe that and that added another layer onto it. It's like, wow, not only are you,
you know, potentially this any, but now you could maybe not be the any.
And that even adds another level of intrigue to it. And you know,
now looking, you know,
the way I am going back through starting this,
this rewatch and really ripping apart every detail and looking at every scene
very, very closely.
There's so much foreshadowing.
By the way, I have to say that's a director's dream
to have something.
To rip it apart frame by frame, cut by cut.
Yeah.
I mean, that's amazing that you actually
are spending the time doing that,
but it actually is appreciated as,
when you're making this stuff,
that somebody cares enough to spend the time
watching it like that.
Well, it is that good.
What's like the biggest sort biggest interaction you have with people
in terms of what they ask you about
or what people are interested in discussing?
Because there's so many different things.
Is there one area or one question that comes up a lot
or anything that you, even thoughts or questions
that you have about the show?
I have, sitting in front of me, here's some notes
that I've been putting together.
One of them, and I based this, okay,
now I've got a very strong theory on this
and I firmly believe one way versus the other.
But when we saw the elevator panel in the security office,
I identified that as being the severed floor
is 13 levels below Judd's desk. You are down 130 feet plus
when you're on the severed floor and there are all these floors in between
that are listed there on that panel that show you, you know, there's IT I think and
you know there are a couple of executive suites. There are so many folks that
believe that window in Cobell's office has natural light coming from like 20 feet above it.
That you're just a level or two below the main building.
Where I believe we're 13 floors below ground and that is entirely artificial light outside of Cobell's floor.
So that is my question and that is a debate that I could throw that out right now and have 50 people jump on it on Reddit
and tell you you'd have 50 different explanations
of what's going on.
So are they really 13 floors below ground?
We can neither confirm nor deny any of these things.
All right, so that's one.
Well, that's a good one.
What's the other one?
What's the other one?
Yeah.
This is a big one and I've also got a very strong belief
one way or the other one? Okay. Yeah. This, this is a big one. And I've also got a very strong belief one way or the other on this.
Is the Severance chip a switch or is it a storage device?
I've always believed it's a switch and it uses the storage capacity of the brain
by partitioning the brain like it's a hard drive.
So one hard drive is your any one hard drive is your Audi.
You might have multiple, like with, we find out with Gemma, she has multiple hard drives. She's been partitioned into you know 25 different rooms. So there's a big
faction out there that believes the chip is a storage device that we're actually loading the
entire Innis personality onto that chip which then means that chip could be moved from one person to another and carry on any personality to another or to a goat you know that's also out there so that is
another one of those huge questions is it a switch or is it a storage device
well my background in neuroscience speaks for itself
sure your ears and ears I know your wait're. We, I know we did, you know, look, I'm not gonna say anything either way on this at all,
but I feel personally that I have a clear sense
of what it is too.
And I think at the end of the day,
we're trying to like just be true to the rules
of what we've established.
And you don't wanna have any things that feel like,
oh, this was created for convenience
or things like that, right?
Or you're changing the rules down the line.
Exactly, you're not allowed to change the rules
down the line.
That's not happening.
But Alan, can I just say these are such excellent questions
and observations.
I know. Oh, good.
And all I'll say about that one,
the storage device versus a switch,
those are two vastly different things.
That's all I would say about it.
Well, we can't thank you enough, Alan.
We hope you cover this podcast appearance on your podcast.
Everybody listen to Severed,
the ultimate severance podcast with Alan S,
Alan Stair, our buddy.
Yeah, appreciate it. Thank you so much, Alan.
Appreciate you keeping the word alive in between seasons too. Thank you so much, Alan. Appreciate you keeping the word alive
in between seasons too.
Thank you so much guys for letting me be on the show.
This is amazing.
So great.
All right, man.
WKRP in Cincinnati.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
All right, that's it for this episode.
We are so happy to be back.
And the Severance podcast with Ben and Adam
will be back next week to talk more about
the movies and TV shows that have influenced us.
And you can stream every episode of Severance on Apple TV+.
The Severance Podcast with Ben Stiller and Adam Scott is a presentation of Odyssey, Red
Hour Productions, and Great Scott.
If you like the show, be sure to rate and review this podcast on Apple Podcast, Spotify,
or your other podcast platform of choice.
It really makes a difference.
If you've got a question about Severance, call our hotline, 212-830-3816.
We just might play your voicemail and answer your question on the podcast.
Our executive producers are Barry Finkel, Gabrielle Lewis, Naomi Scott, and Leah Reese
Dennis.
This show is produced by Ben Goldberg.
It's mixed and mastered by Chris Basil.
We have additional engineering from Javi Cruces.
Show clips are courtesy of Fifth Season.
Music by Theodore Shapiro.
Special thanks to the team at Odyssey, Maura Curran, Eric Donnelly, Michael LeVay, Melissa
Wester, Kate Rose, Kurt Courtney,
and Hilary Shuff.
And the team at Red Hour, John Lesher, Carolina Pesikov, Jean Pablo Antennetti, Martin Baldarutin,
Ashwin Ramesh, Maria Noto, John Baker, and Sam Lyon.
And at Great Scott, Kevin Cotter, Josh Martin, and Kristi Smith at Rise Management.
Thanks again to our good friend, Conan O'Brien,
for joining us on the podcast.
I'm Ben Stiller.
And I'm Adam Scott.
Thank you for listening.