The Severance Podcast with Ben Stiller & Adam Scott - S2E5: Trojan's Horse (with Michael Chernus)

Episode Date: February 14, 2025

This week, Ben and Adam welcome Michael Chernus — who plays Ricken Hale, the visionary author of “The You You Are” — to help unpack Season 2 Episode 5. And while you might expect Ricken to hos...t a podcast of his own, Michael reveals that Ricken is actually post-podcast, so today’s episode is a really big deal. Together, they discuss Ricken’s writing, his relationship with Devon, and the actorly impulse to be liked. Then, Ben and Adam break down the rest of the episode and the challenges of crafting this soft-reset for the MDR team. 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

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Starting point is 00:00:31 Hey, Adam. Yeah? Is your experience at work a bit dysfunctional lately? I don't know. I think it's... it's... Okay, I'll take that as a yes. Your team could undergo a highly controversial surgical procedure that would mercifully sever any and all memories of that work experience from your home lives. Or you could try Confluence by Atlassian.
Starting point is 00:00:50 Oh my god, well if it's the choice between those two things, I think I would 100% choose Confluence by Atlassian. Confluence is the connected workspace where teams can collaborate and create like never before. Where teams have easy access to the relevant pages and resources their projects call for while discovering important contexts they didn't even know they needed. A space where AI streamlines the things that normally eat up their time, letting teams generate, organize, and deliver work faster.
Starting point is 00:01:17 In fact, with Confluence, teams can see a 5.2% average boost in productivity in one year. So that would equal out, like if we're playing with, like, let's just say 100%, 5.2 of those percentage points. Yeah. That's the improvement. I mean, I'm not great at math, but that sounds very close. Well, I'm doing the math in my head right now as we speak,
Starting point is 00:01:38 and I think that's great. So why not keep your team unsevered? In Confluence, the connected workspace where teams can do it all. Set knowledge free with Confluence. Learn more at Atlassianed. In Confluence, the connected workspace where teams can do it all. Set knowledge free with Confluence. Learn more at adlassian.com slash Confluence. That's atlassian.com slash c-o-n-f-l-u-e-n-c-e. Hey, Adam. Yeah. Apparently a lot of people have been calling
Starting point is 00:02:02 the hotline after watching episode four and had some pretty strong opinions about it. What? Yeah. And they left some messages. Oh, can we listen to them? Yeah. If you haven't watched episode four, you probably shouldn't listen to these voicemails. But for those of you who have, let's listen to a couple of them. Get them stiller on the phone. We've got questions. Hi, I just watched the episode of the show that runs called Blow It's Hollow. How the fuck could you end episode four like that? Oh my God. Just watched the episode, got some questions for you. First of all, what the fuck? Hi, this is Adam. This is Sydney H and I'm just calling to ask, who gave you the audacity?
Starting point is 00:02:46 Second of all, what the fuck? I was pretty sure that Helena was actually Helly, so yeah, I figured that out. I knew it. I knew it! But I can't pick you up the next episode. Tell me, I need to know what is happening. What, how could you? I'm also way more mad than this, but I'm in an Airbnb right now and we're in quiet hours. And thirdly, and probably most importantly, what the fuck?
Starting point is 00:03:14 Great stuff, love the show. I hope Adam's having a good day. Praise Keir. That's great. Well, I love the energy and the, That's great. Well, I love the energy and the, yes, the what the fuckness of everybody's reaction. Yeah, it's amazing to hear people reacting
Starting point is 00:03:33 rather than like reading reactions, you know? Yeah, and obviously it's a lot of stuff that happens in the episode that's probably, it seems unexpected coming off of episode three in terms of the heli helena Yeah reveal which you know a lot of people had very strong feelings about and Different opinions and you know knowing that that was coming. It's great to see how invested people are Yeah characters the way we are, you know, and have totally been living with them for a long time. So yeah, what the fuck?
Starting point is 00:04:03 What the fuck? Hey, I'm Ben Stiller. I'm Adam Scott. And this is the Severance podcast with Ben and Adam, where we break down every episode of Severance. Today, we're diving into the fifth episode of season two, which is titled Trojan's Horse. It was written by Megan Ritchie and directed by Sam Donovan.
Starting point is 00:04:30 And we have a really fun episode for everybody because we have the honor and privilege of talking to the most inspiring writer in all of Keir, Rick and Hale himself, the man who plays Michael Chertis. It's going to be great. So exciting. Michael is the very, very best. And after we talk to Michael, Ben and I will break down some of our other favorite scenes from the episode. And of course, we're gonna talk to Zach Cherry. We'll check in with him to see what he thinks will happen
Starting point is 00:04:58 in next week's episode. And okay, you should know the drill by this point, but in case you don't, here's the spoiler warning. We'll be talking in depth about episode five of season two of Severance. So if you haven't watched that yet, please go do that before you listen. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:15 It's just, it's gonna be spoilers all over the place. I mean, like I said before, we are going to dive into this episode. We're gonna go deep. It's been so much fun to see how the people who watch the show are paying such close attention to it. I mean, I know we've talked about this before, but it's crazy to me the level of scrutiny that people are looking at scenes with and freezing the frame and looking at details.
Starting point is 00:05:44 And I just want to say, I appreciate so much, how much thought people put into the show. It's like, there's no better feeling when you're working on something to see that people are really, you know, like just digging in. And that shot that in episode two, the shot of everyone going into the elevator, timed with episode one, like that really worked
Starting point is 00:06:04 and people found it and I know how excited you and Sam were about that. Yeah, it was literally maybe like an hour after the episode came out, somebody had put together a cut with both scenes. Yeah, and we had planned that out and Sam and I worked together and Jeff, our Richmond, our editor,
Starting point is 00:06:23 we made sure that we edited it so that the timing worked. And I'm just so relieved that it actually came out the way that we wanted. I remember Sam had the any version on set while we were shooting the Audi version. Yeah, we were there and we each were like, you know, coordinating and like episodes, a beautiful looking episode. And I have to also shout out
Starting point is 00:06:46 Suzy Lavelle who's our cinematographer on episode two and just beautiful composition, beautiful lighting and you know it's the first all Audi episode so Suzy it was definitely uncharted territory for us right? Yeah just that scene particular, see them at their lockers and stuff. That was really fun. But also, yes, getting to really dive into their Audis is so fun. It's just fascinating getting to know them better. And speaking of people in the outside world, today we have with us our very own Michael Cherness
Starting point is 00:07:19 who plays Rick in. Michael, first of all, thanks for standing by while we did all that just now on the Zoom as a silent audience. What did you think of our intro and stuff? Oh my God, I thought it was really good. You guys sound very professional. Oh my God, thank you so much.
Starting point is 00:07:34 What a relief. Okay, because I kept on checking like your reaction as we were talking about stuff, and I felt like you were either moderately amused or just sort of tolerating. Me too. I thought he was super mad at us. Well I am, but that's about other stuff, not about the intro.
Starting point is 00:07:51 No, I thought that sounded great, congrats on this podcast. It's been so fun to follow along and listen at home. Oh thanks man. I feel like Rickin should have his own podcast about the show, what do you think? I think he thinks he should have his own podcast for sure. I don't know that he should. Don't give that man a microphone.
Starting point is 00:08:10 If there are podcasts in the Severance world, I'll bet you anything, Rickon has one. I think he had one, but now he's post podcast. That's right. He's transcended. He's too analog, yeah, he's transcended podcast. That's right. You know, Rickon is such an important element
Starting point is 00:08:27 in terms of obviously the humor of the show, but he's more than that too. You know, he's, I don't know, tonally to me, like he kind of defines what the Audi world is in a way. This sort of like very bespoke world that Dan created in terms of just, I'm thinking about like the first episode of season one, the non dinner dinner party. That's so nice to hear. I mean, first of all, it's an honor to be a part of this show. I
Starting point is 00:08:53 mean, and that's not any kind of hyperbolic praise. Like I think this show is incredible and I am a fan of it first and foremost. And when you're speaking about Rick and being this window into the Audi world, I think what's so cool is I think he's a representation of one subsect of the population. You know, like he's, he is our way into like this sort of maybe more like erudite kind of group of people.
Starting point is 00:09:18 But, um, you know, I'm interested to see in other seasons how even more of that world gets fleshed out. Cause I think Ricken and his literati friends are just one section of our universe. And, um, I'm interested to see who the like anti Rickin is in this world. Yeah. And Rickin is such a unique character in the outside world, because in the Audi world, it tends to get smaller and more almost naturalistic and it's just a slightly different, almost tone, but it just feels, it does feel like a separate world from the Innie world, certainly.
Starting point is 00:09:58 And Rickon is a character who it's such a specific, finely tuned performance that you give because you could see this character being pushed way too far in one direction or the other and not quite working, but you're able to really ride this line between him being ridiculous sometimes, but still both feet being planted on the ground because you have to buy that he's a part of this sort of more grounded naturalistic world out there, but he's also sort of has this larger-than-life
Starting point is 00:10:34 persona that he's really pushing out there and he's married to this woman who's incredibly grounded and holding them both down. What was, was there a balance there when you approached to the world? Oh, completely. And I feel like it's a balance that we're always trying to calibrate every time that I'm on set. I mean, I think it's something Ben and I talked about a lot when I first came onto the show. And yeah, I think it's a bit tricky
Starting point is 00:11:01 because he is sort of this larger than life character. And I think even within a tone that is very grounded, you have to allow for those, I certainly know people, my background is in the theater originally in New York City. And I know people who are very sort of big and almost foppish or clownish in their life and have a love and a facility for language and often sound a little affected. And I think in a great way, one thing he does is he maybe helps open up that Audi world. You believe that he exists in that world, but he isn't like everybody else.
Starting point is 00:11:34 And he marches to the beat of his own drum. And that's cool. We all have people in our lives who are a little odd or a little eccentric or a little annoying sometimes, but we love them. And yeah, I think one of the things that's hard for me with him is, you know, fighting the actor's impulse to want to be liked.
Starting point is 00:11:53 And I think that's an impulse that Ricken has too, but you know, knowing that there are some people out there are going to be like, ugh, Ricken and his friends are so annoying. And having to remember like, well, maybe that's a good thing that people are kind of put off by him be like, oh, Rick and his friends are so annoying. And having to remember like, well, maybe that's a good thing that people are kind of put off by him at first.
Starting point is 00:12:09 And then eventually the onion starts to get peeled back and you start to like discover, oh, there's more to him than that. Or he has sensitivity, he has vulnerability. And so continuing to discover those ways in for the audience to see a different side of him is really what's been a fun challenge. It's just fascinating.
Starting point is 00:12:28 And there's nothing that makes me laugh harder whenever we're working than Rickon. But also, it's just so fascinating whenever we get that peek behind his sort of grandiosity, like in the finale of season one where Ian Emark and Rickon have that moment outside where Rick and is kind of like, I know you think I'm a fool. And you kind of see his humanity certainly, but you also see shades of these two guys that have known each other for a long time and maybe
Starting point is 00:12:58 shift or change. They've kind of gone through together. It really is a, an incredible performance. The fact that you're able to do so many things at once. Well, right back at you, I mean, I remember that night that we shot it. It was like, it was such a dance between us because we're holding so much. Um, you had so much going on of like any Mark meeting his idol, but all the other circumstances of the larger scene in that moment and trying to keep it together and not be found
Starting point is 00:13:29 out. And so you had all that going on. And then I had all the stuff that Rickens going through going on. And so I think I love that scene so much and it's such a simple scene, but there's so much packed into it. I think that speaks to the tone of this show so precisely of trusting the audience to the audience is smart and that they're going to be watching and listening and knowing all that nuance that we don't have to play everything at once, right? You know, there may be all of this
Starting point is 00:13:58 stuff happening, but you as an actor can't do all those things. You just have to be there and sort of listen and play the scene with your partner. Yeah. Maybe that idea though, that Rickon wants to be liked as an actor, I wanna be liked, isn't it? You know, you're right. Like that instinct, right? When you play a part, it's like you want,
Starting point is 00:14:16 you don't want people to think you're an asshole, even if you're playing a character that sometimes can be like that. And maybe that in a way works for you too. Like you're wanting people to like Rikin is also kind of what Rikin wants too. That's a gift of the character. Yeah. Is that those two things match.
Starting point is 00:14:32 I mean, I think for me, one of the things is I've been in this business for a minute now is just a constant meditation on trying to let go of what the audience is going to think. Right. Like there are millions of people who will see it, like there'll be various responses to Rick. And, and so like, I can't control that, but what I
Starting point is 00:14:49 can control is that I'm giving it as much dimensionality to him as possible, that I'm not considering him a joke. Right. Even if somebody else does. Right. And by the way, that allows for the interpretation for an audience to see
Starting point is 00:15:03 different aspects of the character. And it comes down to also a really important part of the show, which is why is Devin with Rickon? Because we see a lot of the time, not the intimate positive interaction between Devin and Rickon that must be there. That is the basis of their marriage. We see it.
Starting point is 00:15:24 He's a generous, attentive lover. Well, that's what I was gonna ask you. What is it that Devin loves in Rick and that we don't see? You know, I can't speak to what for a sheep. Because they're an interesting couple. They are an interesting couple, but that is one thing that surprises me when I see people on Reddit or whatever say like,
Starting point is 00:15:40 why are they together? I'm like, have you seen couples ever in the world? Like opposites attract. Yeah, totally. Like there's so many people in my life that I'm like, how are they together? And it's like, well, you don't know what happens behind closed doors.
Starting point is 00:15:56 And I don't even mean that like in terms of romantically. It's just like, it's a mystery why people fall in love with each other. It's one of the great mysteries of the human race. Why are you drawn to someone? And that in a way makes it even a more interesting and believable couple to me. Me too.
Starting point is 00:16:11 And I think he brings a lot of different things to the table that she doesn't possess and vice versa. I think she grounds him and he helps her discover the more artistic, spontaneous improvisational side. And it's also that we might be just meeting them in a hard moment. Long-term relationships, there are ups and downs, there are rifts, there are separations. In any given day, there are a thousand different coming together and retreatings that happen and we just see small windows into their life together. I remember early on having conversations with us here and then Dan and Jen as well talking about the foursome of these two couples and when Gemma passed away it was kind of this schism,
Starting point is 00:16:59 it was this change. There's this kind of dividing line and Mark certainly went in his direction and Devin went to maybe take care of Mark and Rickin had his own reaction. And the relationship between Mark and Rickin at one point was probably different than we see it in the show. I mean, I certainly think so. I think it was very different.
Starting point is 00:17:24 And that's, you know, when there is loss, when there is a great loss like that, like a family member, there's the immediate impact, but then there are all those ripple effects, right? And I mean, you know, when someone starts to have success and we can talk about exactly how successful or not Rick is, but when in their own mind, they start to become famous or whatever. What that does to, if in my opinion, I feel like you're not reading my books and you're not taking my art seriously and like the pain that that causes for me. And I'm sure we can all speak to like when you start to have more notoriety, what that does to. Relationships.
Starting point is 00:18:02 Relationships. Yeah. Yeah. I also think in Rickens work life balance it probably, he went into his writing. Completely. And found some sort of comfort there probably. I think, you know, Ricken as a writer, he is kind of in love with his own words. And I mean, what do you think of him as a writer?
Starting point is 00:18:21 Because I feel like he is successful on some level in this world and yet he also probably inflates his own success in his head. Oh, it's such a tough thing. You know, I don't think he's a great writer. I think he's a genre writer, right? He's in this, within the realm of sort of a philosophical self-help book, he's good at doing that genre. And I think there is a lot of truth to some of his little sayings, but it certainly is not a rigorous craft for him. I feel like the writing, it can be a little stream of consciousness. It is certainly true to who he is, which is a compliment. You're getting the full Rickin.
Starting point is 00:19:05 But yeah, I think it's why on some level it appeals to the innies is there is, if you're this sort of pure, unjaded, unsynical, kind of almost childlike mind, he's saying these things that have a nugget of truth in them. But it's just all the trappings of the sort of pretension and the self-importance that go around it. Yeah. I feel like you and Dan have this special, truth in them, but it's just all the trappings of the sort of pretension and the self importance that go around it.
Starting point is 00:19:25 Yeah. I feel like you and Dan have this special, like you're a great mouthpiece for this certain side of Dan and I know how much he loves writing Rick and stuff and you're the perfect sort of cipher for all of that. Like you saying the hamburger waiter line and stuff like that.
Starting point is 00:19:42 It's just, it's that belly laugh that feels so good. I love it so much. And Rick and really just gets me every time. I mean, I love him so much. And I know Dan does too. I just, for better, for worse, I feel like I get him. And I really, I really care about him, but I think at the same time, that's, I can also honestly make fun of him.
Starting point is 00:20:04 I mean, he's, he's ridiculous. Can I think at the same time, that's I can also honestly make fun of him. I mean, he's ridiculous. Can I ask how are things going with Balf? Yeah. Balf is a disappointment. I thought he was like raw clay that I could mold and he's more just the clay is dried. Too much of his own guy.
Starting point is 00:20:23 Well, yeah, I just have to explain everything. How many Belf's have proceeded Belf? Hmm. Yeah. He's Belf 12. Rick and goes through assistance. You just named them all Belf. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:35 They're all just Belf. Yeah. Okay. Let's take a quick break and catch up on Rick and his latest version of the UUR. And when we come back, we'll talk all about it. This is Carry the Fire. I'm your host, Lisa LaFlamme. Carry the Fire, a podcast by the Princess Margaret Cancer Foundation
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Starting point is 00:22:20 When you sit on your aeroplan points, it's like you're sitting on your next trip. Like a sunny getaway sitting on a terrace. But instead, you're sitting on your aeroplan points. So the only place you're sitting is in your car coming back from work. Use your points and go from sipping on your leftover latte to sipping on the local vintage. So stop sitting on your next trip and start enjoying your aeroplan points. Talking a little bit about Rickens writing, in episode three, we see that Natalie shows up
Starting point is 00:23:01 at your house, which to me is like a kind of a weird little chilling moment that all of a sudden she's just there talking to you and Devin discovers and she's kind of, you guys are kind of laughing together and it's very clear that she's offering you a chance to do a version of the book for Innies, The You You Are. And that sort of sets off this sort of trajectory here
Starting point is 00:23:24 that we end up with in episode five in terms of Rickon kind of having to make a, some sort of a moral decision, I guess, right, about what he does with the book. Babe, it's the literal opposite of what you were saying before. Okay. I... I see how you'd feel that way, but one point that Nat made was...
Starting point is 00:23:45 Nat, okay. She said that innies tend to thrive in an environment of structure. And once that is established, then they are more open to self-expansion. So I am just trying to speak their language. I know, but this sounds like Lumen's language. Well, it's a Trojan's horse. If I can get my ideas to severed workers all across the world, it might beget a revolution.
Starting point is 00:24:11 But these aren't your ideas. These are not your ideas and also... And what? Okay, Lumen hurts people, you know that, and if you want to water down your work so they can use it for their fucking propaganda, then you're hurting people too. Okay. It's completely a moral decision. And I think it's such a great piece of writing to introduce this idea because
Starting point is 00:24:32 it helps the audience really enter into that conundrum of, of Rick and like this ego side of being like, Oh, that's enticing. That would get my work out to so many more people. If I'm a big deal in there, and those workies really are fans, that's great, being enticed by the fan base. But also this other part of him that knows that maybe this is a problematic decision,
Starting point is 00:24:55 that wrestling with himself, I think, is really interesting. Yeah, and I think it's really interesting to see a little bit of the inner workings of the relationship with Devin there in that little sort of the inner workings of the relationship with Devon there in that little sort of negotiation or moment or question where you basically put out to her that, hey, you want me to take this moral stance, but also are you willing to give up the creature comforts
Starting point is 00:25:18 that come along with the success that we have? Yeah, I mean, I can relate to that as a working actor. You know, you have to make these decisions. I mean, not necessarily working for Lumen, but sometimes you're like, I have to take this money gig. I have to take this job. You know, it's like, I got offered this, you know, 24 episode police procedural or something, you know,
Starting point is 00:25:39 and I'm, I have to go do it, honey. Oh, but it's not Shakespeare in the park. Okay. Yeah. Well, yeah. And these stances that were so easy to take before suddenly when faced with the kind of reality of something, it gets a little
Starting point is 00:25:52 fuzzier and more dicey. Completely. And I, you know, I don't know to what extent Rick and really understands how big of a star he is in the indie world, but this idea that he has this fan base, you know, like what that does for him. Not just an opportunity to make money or to expand his reach, but just that there are finally people who really get him. Right. Yeah. Any Mark. Any Mark is his biggest fan. Can I ask Jen Tullock, just the greatest, can we ask-
Starting point is 00:26:23 What a gift. About working with Jen. Jen is the best. I mean, I loved y'all's episode with her. She's extraordinary. She really is a singular talent. You guys were talking on the podcast about how everything that comes out of her mouth just feels
Starting point is 00:26:37 so real and I couldn't agree more. She's so smart. She's very funny. And yet everything comes off so grounded and so true to her and yet it's a character. It's such a funny blend. Devin feels like Jen but also feels like Devin if that makes sense in the best way. Did you guys talk before you started shooting the first time about your history? How do you approach being a believable married couple?
Starting point is 00:27:06 That's a great question. We didn't know each other beforehand. And if we remember the first season was in the height of COVID times. So I think we met in the testing tent the first time, like in hazmat suits, basically, getting our COVID tests to work. And through our face shields,
Starting point is 00:27:22 we're trying to discuss Ricken and Devin's history. That was hard, man. That was hard, but I know it's been said before, but it really, I think, added to that dystopian feel of the show. For me, showing up and we couldn't hug each other and we could only take our masks off when the cameras were rolling and the poor crew was just covered head to toe in strange futuristic gear. It just, for me, it added to the strange
Starting point is 00:27:47 severancy vibe of the show. Yeah, for sure, for sure. Well, yeah, I mean, I do think just the casting somehow came together between you and Jen and Adam. It just, it worked off the bat with you guys. And that also is something you don't really know if you're directing something, making something, you have this idea, like this seems like these people
Starting point is 00:28:11 might be good together and that one reading they did together seemed really good, but you don't really know if it's gonna gel and feel like something real. And it really did, like that was like something that is really like a gift that these people are just falling into this and really instinctually understanding how to connect. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:29 I mean, I didn't know you, Adam, and I didn't know Jen and how do you create relationships when they don't exist? It's a tough one. I think there's a lot of yes to ending that just happens. I mean, if you are an actor and an improviser, there's just kind of going with the vibe that's happening and not like kind of saying no to things, but just giving over to what Adam and Jen were doing.
Starting point is 00:28:53 And then I would also credit you, Ben and Iifa, a lot that first season of just allowing a lot of different takes of choices. I mean, I remember, Ben, you would early on just be like, try one this way, now try one that way, now try this. And just trusting that you guys were gonna also edit some of that together, because we didn't know the tone yet. I think we all had a guess, but especially
Starting point is 00:29:12 with the Audi stuff, especially with Rick and Devin, like what is this world? How does this book party fit in with the rest of the vibe? I remember you, Ben, coming up with the bell ringing app. It's still one of my favorite. Just gross. Unring the bell ringing app. Bell ringing app.
Starting point is 00:29:37 Yeah. I remember your, I mean, look, I laugh endlessly at the stuff you do. And especially that scene, you're just being emotionally sort of just exhausted from putting yourself out there from the reading. Um, and you really need to take a moment. His voice is worn out. Yeah. Um, and then you did, it said in the script that like, what is this to say that your voice is something,
Starting point is 00:29:58 you asked Bal first on the neti pot, right? Because you were throat. Yeah. So you had to... Because it's like warbling. So you as an actor had to create whatever this issue in your throat that was going on before, and the weird warbling trill, it's like a trill,
Starting point is 00:30:14 it's so ridiculous. Yeah, he doesn't get raspy, he goes higher. Oh yeah, it's so ridiculous. So ridiculous. It makes me laugh so much. All creatures from the leaping cat to the cowering shrew, So ridiculous. It makes me laugh so much. All creatures from the leaping cat to the cowering shrew think of themselves as you, a logical center for the universe.
Starting point is 00:30:34 Yet the cat eats the shrew and we, like Schrodinger, live on to wonder what it means. But even that we had to, I feel like we could all crack each other up all day long, right? But like the quest was how do we make this funny, but be in severance though. Yes, for sure. But I have to say like off the bat, the first photo shoot that we did for the cover
Starting point is 00:30:59 of the You You Are, when I saw you doing these looks and this vibe of this guy, it was so perfect to me. I was like, yeah, this is what it's going to be. This guy is going to be ridiculous and funny, but also you have to totally believe him. And that's, that's the thing. Right. I remember we, we needed that prop. So you guys went and shot those photos before you had ever shot anything for the show, Michael. So I remember seeing the book and being like, Oh yeah, this is, this feels right.
Starting point is 00:31:34 That's Rick. I don't know if anyone had shot a frame. I think it was the camera test. Oh, you're probably right. Yeah. And I came in and yeah, I didn't know really who Rick and was. And we tried a bunch of different like hairdos.
Starting point is 00:31:46 And I remember Ben being like, could he look like leaf Garrett? Yeah. And the UUR, the book, it was actually written by Dan. He wrote a good portion of the book and it's actually available on. Apple books now. And you read it. Yeah. There's an audio book too, right?
Starting point is 00:32:05 There's an audio book read by Rick and Hale. Now was Balf there when you recorded to have the neti pot in case your throat got dry? He had to be, I mean. Yeah, yeah, Balf 13 was there actually rubbing my feet and my feet cramp when I read. Interesting. Yeah, yeah, that was really fun and really hard. Really? And my feet cramp when I read. Interesting. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:32:25 That was really fun and really hard. Really? Yeah. I mean, joking aside, my voice was like a mess after those, I needed a ball. It's so funny. Yeah. I mean, it's really great.
Starting point is 00:32:38 It's so good. Dan is just so smart. And as we know, is just so invested in this world that literally every corner has been thought about. There are passages in what he wrote that just blew me away. And I was reading a lot of it for the first time in the recording studio and just laughing out loud.
Starting point is 00:33:00 I mean, it's, it's so good. And there's some passages that are really actually affecting too in it. Well, that's the thing. Cause Rick and yeah, Rick and it's so good. And there's some passages that are really actually affecting too. Well, that's a thing because Rickon, yeah, Rickon is not a joke. Rickon is, there's some real something there that we can't hold on to. I mean, we have to. There is. And we learned some stuff about him in the audio book.
Starting point is 00:33:16 I won't give anything away, but there's some history and backstory that gets revealed that I think hopefully fleshes him out a little bit more for viewers. Yeah, and relates to the story that we're telling. So check it out, the UUR. So, so fun. Michael, thank you so much for coming and doing the show. Oh my God, guys, thank you so much.
Starting point is 00:33:36 So fun. Thanks, man. Thanks, guys. Ben, before we take a break, why don't we answer a question from the hotline? What do you say? Yes, let's do it. This hotline segment of the Severance podcast is sponsored by Confluence by Atlassian, the
Starting point is 00:33:51 connected workspace where teams can create, organize, and deliver work like never before. Set knowledge free with Confluence. Hi, Severance employees. My name is Emma. I'm curious why melon for the melon party or incentive or whatever. Curious if you could have any other fruit, what would it be instead of that? Because in my opinion, it's the worst fruit possible. Hello, Emma. Melon catching some strays. Yeah. What's your issue with melon, Emma? I mean, if you're talking about the egg bar for me, the egg bar is not coveted as fuck. It's a, actually my least favorite thing in the world is a, is a hard boiled egg or a,
Starting point is 00:34:37 what we had in that scene, which the scotch eggs, you know, at the time we were wearing PPE for COVID and I was really grateful because it just, I'd stay as far away as possible from them. What would happen to you if you were forced to eat a Scotch egg? I would probably throw up. Yeah. Okay. How about you? What would happen? I would enjoy it. I enjoy eggs. Oh my God. See, now I know what Emma feels like with melons. You know, I remember also Zach and Britt were vegans so they couldn't eat eggs. So you got, didn't you guys have to find someone who made, yeah, fake replicas of eggs.
Starting point is 00:35:13 Yeah. Which was better than real eggs. So I was grateful for that. Um, I love melon. I don't love all melon. I like cantaloupe as my favorite melon. Honeydew I don't care for as much. Of course you do. You love cantaloupe as my favorite melon. Honeydew I don't care for as much. Of course you do, you love cantaloupe.
Starting point is 00:35:26 But I do enjoy how Zach does his little toothpick search for which melon balls. Melon balls are definitely not my thing at all. I enjoy cantaloupe cut into like circular shapes. You do? I don't like the little scooper because it makes me think, well, that's like ice cream. It's like a mini ice cream scoop,
Starting point is 00:35:43 but then it's like, oh, but it's not ice cream, it's melon. I want ice cream. Okay, well, I guess that's it. That's my thinking on it. All right, it's time for us to take a quick break. We'll be right back. The MDR team continues to search for answers as they try to piece together memories from the overtime contingency.
Starting point is 00:36:10 But luckily, you don't have to take a mind-erasing elevator to work every day. So your workplace productivity can be much simpler with Confluence by Atlassian. Confluence is the connected workspace where teams can collaborate and create like never before. Where teams have easy access to the relevant pages and resources their projects call for, while discovering important context they didn't even know they needed. A space where AI streamlines the things that normally eat up their time, letting teams generate, organize, and deliver work faster.
Starting point is 00:36:40 In fact, with Confluence, teams can see a 5.2% average boost in productivity in one year. So goodbye severed workplace alienation. Hello teamwork with Confluence. Set knowledge free with Confluence. Learn more at Atlassian.com slash Confluence. That's A-T-L-A-S-S-I-A-N dot com slash C-O-N-F-L-U-E-N-C-E. Okay, it's time for us to dive into the rest of the episode where we see the fallout from last episode's somewhat disastrous orth bow, starting with Helly slash Helena back at Lumen slash MDR. Helena is not happy about having to go back down there. Let's listen to the scene where Mr. Drummond basically tells Helena that she has to make the sacrifice for Lumen.
Starting point is 00:37:37 My any who tried to kill me. And then the other one tried to kill me. They're fucking animals. I'll just fake it again. We can't take that chance. We need to clean this up. Milchik's many errors this weekend have forced our hand. And father approves.
Starting point is 00:38:11 Father encouraged it. Dari is so good. Oh my god. Dari Oleson, a friend of mine who I met when we did Secret Life of Walter Mitty. When I met him, I was told he was probably like the most popular actor in Iceland, which I think he is. That makes sense. He does stage, television, film. He produces, he writes, and he came over to do Drummond for us, which has just been, I think, just so much fun to see this sort of, you know, he's kind of in that world of the, not the new Granner, but he has, I think, a more, probably a more complicated
Starting point is 00:38:46 position than Grainer had. It seems like he has quite a bit of power. Yes, he does. At this point, he's telling her something she doesn't want to hear in terms of, obviously the fallout from the Orpah and what Milchik screwed up sort of on a big scale. And she's having to deal with a lot of the fallout from that. And I think he's trying to be sensitive to it, but he's basically telling her that she's got to tow
Starting point is 00:39:15 the company line and go back down. Yeah, but something he's kind of not saying, either out of politeness or deference, is that she fucked up too. Like she got found out, she didn't pull it off. So that's part of what's going on here too. And she doesn't like any of it. And she calls Innies fucking animals,
Starting point is 00:39:34 which is really crazy. But you can- Yeah, I think it's an interesting thing, right? The Egan perspective on Innies. Yeah, they're not like a whole person. Cause if they thought of them that way, how would they be able to do any of this? Yeah, and I think that for Helena,
Starting point is 00:39:49 she's now at this point learned how people feel about Heli down there. And I feel like she's feeling like she's missing out on something it feels to me, that she's definitely not getting in her Helena life. Totally. The interpersonal connections or the friendships, let alone the feelings for Mark.
Starting point is 00:40:10 Think about that. I mean, this relationship has blossomed on her watch in an intense way. I mean, they got physical and have this strong connection. Yeah, I mean, and what are her feelings from that? I mean, they slept are her feelings from that? I mean, they slept together, you know, they were intimate with one another.
Starting point is 00:40:29 So I think when she's calling them fucking animals, you know, there's a real complicated reaction that's going on there to what, you know, what she feels about Helly. Yeah, for sure. Yeah, and then she has to go back down there. Not as Helena, but you know, she has to go through the separate transition and go back down as, not as Helena, but she has to go through the separate transition
Starting point is 00:40:45 and go back down as Heli. Good morning, Heli-ar. Who the fuck are you? This is interesting because to me, one of the big questions was, now that Heli is back, this is having to sort of reset everything that got set up in the first four episodes in terms of having to bring Helly up to speed.
Starting point is 00:41:11 And the Ortbo happened and Irving was basically killed, any Irving. And this question of how does Helly process all this, not knowing anything that's happened that we all have seen for the first four episodes, and how does Milchik deal with this situation of all of them freaking out on him? Yeah, and I remember it being really important to me that it not just be a situation where Helly's back,
Starting point is 00:41:42 okay, let's catch her up and just like continue figuring stuff out. It's such a betrayal and such a Mark's entire kind of emotional world was turned upside down. So there needed to be some trust issues there. If you find out that the most important person in the world to you is not at all who you thought they were, there would be a strong kind of reaction in the other direction. And so yeah,
Starting point is 00:42:09 that's a reset for Helly. Sort of a reset for everything because all the progress that they've made looking for Miss Casey is out the window completely. You know, everything is sort of, the game board has been tossed or whatever you say. Yeah, and there's no trust and Milchik had to then sort of reset them all again. Yeah. MDR. Together again.
Starting point is 00:42:33 Come on in. I need to know what's going on. Like right now. Where's Irving? And why was he trying to drown me? Because you're a fucking Egan. Was she spying on us? Wait, what?
Starting point is 00:42:45 The whole time. It's called a Glasgow Block. It allows one's outie to- Wait, wait, wait. Are you saying that she was down here as me? Maybe she still is. Hey, I repeat myself. Where is Irving?
Starting point is 00:43:00 Yeah, where is he? I'm so confused. Answer my question! Excuse me. Dylan becomes hyper focused on Irv and needing everyone to acknowledge Irv dying essentially and not getting quite what he wants from anybody and Heli like no one's quite giving her what she needs either. She's like, what the fuck? I'm just like, no one, you know, everybody's sort of off in their own world.
Starting point is 00:43:31 And how does Milchik explain that Helena was down there spying on them? And so he comes up with this story of the Groxupon. Have you ever heard this story of the Grakshupan? Uh, let's assume we haven't. In ancient times, the king of Sweden himself was known to go incognito amongst his people in the hopes of learning their true grievances. He would don an old gray robe, a grokshupan, the name for which he
Starting point is 00:44:09 was remembered. The grokshupan was based on a true story, you know, the true legends of the king or queen who would go undercover amongst the people when they didn't know what the king or queen looked like to understand the needs of their people. And the Grakkapan is actually a true story. I will say that we came up with that idea of that story. And then Tramiel, I think he called me up the night before we shot, and he was asking about the pronunciation of Grakkapan.
Starting point is 00:44:42 And I did not know the, and so he came in with this Grachupan pronunciation. I don't know where he got it from, but I think he did some research on it. It was impossible to not laugh whenever he did that. And we did it a lot and we had a tough time because it's amazing. Yeah, Swedish, it's Swedish
Starting point is 00:45:03 because Dylan calls it Swedish horse shit, right? And what I like about that scene is that it's kind of believable enough that you could chew on it a little bit, but also nobody's really buying it also. Nobody's even listening to what he's saying at this point, I don't think. But it's also, at this point, it's sort of like, I'm just gonna tell you this point, I don't think. But it's also, at this point, it's sort of like,
Starting point is 00:45:26 I'm just gonna tell you the story, and then he's gonna immediately take you out to the new MDR desks and show you the three desks. And all of a sudden, it's like the mind games are like, okay, this is it, he's gone. This is the reality. And I think there's an understanding that you don't really wanna dig much deeper on this
Starting point is 00:45:47 because your desk will be gone too. And the whole Lumen is listening thing is basically out the window too. Oh yeah. It's just like, oh yeah, that's all done. Let's talk about the funeral because Dylan really insists that they need to do something to remember Irving.
Starting point is 00:46:05 This is in this aftermath of everybody just, I think, being so disoriented by what happened at the Oortbo and the news of that Helly wasn't Helly and everybody's sort of retreating to their own corners. And for Dylan, he's just focused on Irving and Milchik puts together the bereavement ceremony. To me, it's this ominous little moment where you see him picking out the Irving cup. So the Irving coffee cup is going to be for Irving's bereavement ceremony. But you also see
Starting point is 00:46:36 there's a heli cup and there's a mark cup. And in the back of your head, maybe there's like, oh, someday each one of these people will have their own cup at their bereavement ceremony. And the printout that he's, you get the sense that there is a checklist for a bereavement ceremony and they're just running through it and getting it ready. And by the way, how about that watermelon head? Oh my God, the watermelon head. There's something about that with that little, it has that little like papal cap on it. He looks like little Pope Irving.
Starting point is 00:47:07 Yeah, he does. He does. And I could see John- I mean that totally respectfully. I could see John being the Pope. He could pull it off. He should have been in Conclave. I agree.
Starting point is 00:47:18 I haven't even seen Conclave, but I feel like he should have been. I saw Conclave. Yeah. Everyone's incredible. T'Torah should have been in there somewhere. But then Dylan gives this very sweet eulogy for Irving. He asked me for help with something near the end
Starting point is 00:47:36 and I didn't listen. And in his final moments, he would have been totally justified in telling me to suck my own fuck. But he didn't. Um... He was awesome and I miss him. Thank you, Dylan G.
Starting point is 00:48:10 A little sugar. with your usual salt. I remember shooting that and just thinking, Zach is so great. Yeah. I love Ms. Wong and her theremin playing, how she just, the sound design on that one, I know you and Jeff probably found the timing of this, the one little peep of theremin we get before Milchik tells her. It's just a perfectly timed comedic thing. Yeah, they've got their own little, you know, kind of work situation happening, the dynamic going on between the two of them.
Starting point is 00:48:42 And you get to sense that she's not really being given the chance to spread her wings as much as she might want to. Sarah Bach, the great Sarah Bach. Yes. Yeah. It's also interesting because you're not really into it as Mark. No, I think that I'm at a place where, or Mark is
Starting point is 00:49:00 at a place where it's all a waste of time. Like, what are we doing? What difference does it make if we have a funeral for Irving or we don't have a funeral for Irving? He's gone. He's not dead by the way. He's out there in the world.
Starting point is 00:49:16 We're stuck down here. If we're here, sure, go do your funeral, whatever. He's just, it's cynicism. He's experiencing cynicism for I think, for the first time. Yeah, well, it's also interesting because you have spent 40 minutes in the outside world. You have an experience of the outside world
Starting point is 00:49:34 that Dylan doesn't have. He's had like maybe 30 seconds in his closet. But when you say like, Irving's not dead, you really like coming at it from a place of like, I think you're just so sort of over the whole thing, but also I think in my mind also feeling this hurt from the Helen Ops, Helly lie. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:49:55 And Dylan's feeling this hurt having lost Irving. Yeah. And Helly feels hurt because no one is coming up and saying, hey, are you okay? Like, what are you feeling? Like everybody, everybody is deeply hurt and isolated. At the same time, you're processing the fact that you now don't trust Heli,
Starting point is 00:50:18 because you don't know, you really don't know. So everything is sort of upended. What was she like? Like you? Or... You're like her? I don't know. I don't know who you are, I guess. Yes, you do. Okay. It's not my fault that my Audi hijacked me.
Starting point is 00:50:51 Yeah, no, no, totally. I get it. It sucks. Mark. Yeah? What happened to you up there? Doesn't matter. It doesn't matter? Nope. Do you want to hear what happened to you up there? Doesn't matter. It doesn't matter. Nope.
Starting point is 00:51:06 Do you wanna hear what happened to me? No, I don't. And let's just try to forget it. The bathroom scene between Britt and I was tricky to get just that tone exactly right. Kind of Mark's reaction to her and her approach to Mark. Just, it was complicated and difficult in it and very fine line, very subtle differences. But we, I think I love that scene,
Starting point is 00:51:30 but it wasn't easy to nail down. No, there were so many different agendas to juggle in terms of what would be on the characters minds after this huge revelation. Because it's a really important scene, not like eventful, but a really emotionally important scene. Yeah, because the audience has, I felt it was like incredibly important
Starting point is 00:51:49 that the audience after episode four can get reinvested in what's going on and it's not going like, oh, wait a minute, this happened, or that happened, how could they even not worry about that? And that, it took a little while to figure out what were the important things that the characters had to address for while to figure out what were the important things that the characters
Starting point is 00:52:05 had to address for us to really kind of reset the story and keep it going forward in these little sort of interaction moments. It's not like a bigger story thing, it's more like little emotional tracking stuff. But it was also storytelling wise, we thought, you know, Mark has to rethink everything that happened in the first four episodes.
Starting point is 00:52:27 And so he has to really go back and process that. And what it does is it takes away any trust he really has in Helly. And so they have to kind of figure out how to rebuild their relationship. Yeah. And I think up until their conversation at the end, he's made a game time decision of, let's just do whatever they say. It doesn't matter if we do one thing or the other, we're gonna end up right back at the spot.
Starting point is 00:52:53 Might as well just refine and keep going. Yeah, it's kind of like Mark has become, from the first season, if he was the young child in the second season, he's becoming much more aware, much the first season, if he was the, like the young child, you know, in the second season, he's becoming much more aware, much more rebellious, but now he kind of has like a, I don't give a fuck sort of attitude, which kind of makes him even more,
Starting point is 00:53:15 I think, of a loose cannon, because he really doesn't know what to believe in, what's true, what's not true. He knows he doesn't trust Lumen, any mark, and he's kind of lost trust in Helly. But what we see also is how much Helly and Mark have feelings for each other too, that regardless of that. Yes.
Starting point is 00:53:35 Like he, as we see, because we see you come together and that part of it is a very important element of the story that it kind of, in a way, helps bond Halley and Mark by the end of this episode. Wouldn't you say? Yeah, I do, and I think that it's in that last conversation in the hallway, but there's still this secret between them that Milchik exploits at the end
Starting point is 00:53:59 that's particularly diabolical on Milchik's part, I think. Yeah, you mean the elevator scene. Yes. Yeah, I mean, that to me is this moment where Milchik is under the gun because he's just gotten this performance review, right? Where we're really starting to feel the companies turning the screws on him.
Starting point is 00:54:21 Yeah, he can't find an ally at all. He's just alone. Welcome, Mr. Belchuk. Today, I will be conducting your monthly performance review. This review can take anywhere from two to six hours depending on the number of atonements and approbations required. If the review is to take longer than four hours,
Starting point is 00:54:43 there will be a break for lunch with the order taken in advance. Well, I hope that won't be necessary. Here is the lunch menu. The performance review with Milchik is, I think, part of this trajectory that we're seeing of, you know, Milchik is kind of doing a lot that is probably new for him, new responsibilities within the company as being the floor manager. But also after three, we're feeling like, well, he's questioning also like what the attitude is really towards him.
Starting point is 00:55:20 Yeah. The company. He's quietly questioning, which is what's so fascinating about it. Yeah. Yeah. Well, he's, I think, incredibly loyal to the company. Yeah. The company. He's quietly questioning, which is what's so fascinating about it. Yeah. Yeah. Well, he's, I think incredibly loyal to the company. Yes. And what I like about this whole little trajectory that's evolving is people see Milchik as a very mysterious and sometimes scary character. And I'm starting to feel, especially as we see him relating to Drummond, who is this, you know, obviously his superior and is kind of putting him through the wringer on this performance review that, you know, that Milchik has to answer to someone as well. It's just interesting to see
Starting point is 00:55:59 Milchik be put in this position where he has to respond to his superior. It's not Kobell and Kobell and him, I think we look at that in relation to Drummond and Milchik. Cobell and Milchik have a much deeper relationship. There's a friendship there. You can tell even if it's underneath, Cobell would confide in him about things that she was doing that were possibly not totally kosher at the company. And there was sort of a, it felt like there was like a trust. Yeah. And he's without that now. Yeah. There's no one to talk to. No. And Drummond is there with Natalie
Starting point is 00:56:31 going through all of these infractions and also trying to figure out who reported him. And you see that he's taking it really hard. Yeah. And in three, when Natalie brings him the paintings, Tramell is just so deeply excellent through all of these things he's going through. He doesn't have anyone to confide in or talk to, but we, the audience, we get led in on these questions that he's having, but it's none of it's verbal. We just experience it with him.
Starting point is 00:57:01 Yeah. And he's so good that we don't need it to be verbalized. No. We see him going through it and we get it emotionally. And you do see that he reaches out to Natalie before the performance review. Oh yeah, right. To try to connect on what happened with the paintings.
Starting point is 00:57:14 Right. And this question of like, did you feel weird too when you got these paintings and she's not gonna go there with him. No, he doesn't get anything. And it kind of goes the other way. And then of course you see that trickle down effect of post performance review when he's told to tighten
Starting point is 00:57:30 the leash that he takes it out directly on Mark in the elevator. Sure does. Did you and Haley are catch up? We did. Did you tell her that you fucked her outie at the Orpah? We did. Did you tell her that you fucked her out at the Orpah? Helena Egan.
Starting point is 00:57:52 Leader in waiting of this company. First time we ever see Milchik, I think, talk like that. You know, use bad language like that. It's shocking. Do you remember the documentary, The Cove, about the dolphins in Japan? Yeah. It came out maybe 10 years ago,
Starting point is 00:58:12 and I think it won the Oscar. There was a character named, they called him Personal Space because he would get up in the face of one of the protesters. They call, anyway, to me, I think of when I think of Tramiel coming right up to you, he's like getting into your personal space there. I mean, it's so uncomfortably close.
Starting point is 00:58:30 Just the two of you are face to face in profile and you're really kind of, you're giving him more shit than you've ever given him. Yeah, I mean, it's post the conversation with Heli, it's after all this stuff and it it's just like, okay, dude, I think that Mark is far more free to kind of call him on his bullshit, or feels far more free to milk you on his bullshit
Starting point is 00:58:54 than he ever has. He has nothing to lose at this point, essentially. Yeah. And then meanwhile, on the outside, Ragabi is there living with you. And you've sort of agreed to this reintegration process that's very arcane and weird, and you have to drink special liquid,
Starting point is 00:59:12 and you're kind of over the fact that you have to live with her there. I love what she says to you, something about like the washing machine's not working or something, and you say something like, yeah, or you could just just not live here. I think Ragabi and Mark are opposites in a lot of ways,
Starting point is 00:59:30 and she has no real party manners. She's just all business, and I do not think they're best friends. I like the theme though, that's developed in the show of people living in Mark's basement. Like you have Peony living in your basement in season one, here for Gobby in season two. Karen Aldridge is just fantastic. I love Karen. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:59:53 She's so good. You know, like, Tucker, I like the Gentell, like how she can't not do something that feels real. Yeah. I feel like with Karen, you never get a take that's the same way twice. Because it's always coming from a place of, she's processing whatever she's heard in the moment, and whatever's gonna come out is gonna come out in a way that feels right for that moment.
Starting point is 01:00:12 And so it's always interesting, you know? And it's always believable. Totally. And she carries a lot of water that way in terms of having, we have to believe that she can do this process. So what do you think, Mark, at this point, he's decided he wants to do this reintegration because he wants to you know
Starting point is 01:00:26 He believes that this is his chance to contact Gemma Yes, but he's also kind of like getting a little bit maybe skeptical of Ragabee because like at the end of day She's just this this person in his basement who's telling him that she's doing this up But he has no other proof really of it But he's kind of desperate because he believes her now that he has enough information from what Cobell told him that he thinks this could actually be a real thing. Yeah, and you know, he knows that she's the one
Starting point is 01:00:52 that was trying to reintegrate Petey and she's convinced him that she's figured it out since then because obviously it ended up killing Petey. But I think at the end of the day, him finding out that Gemma is in fact alive. This is a real piece of information. It's worth dying for. I think that it is the most important thing, obviously, in his life,
Starting point is 01:01:15 but maybe the most important thing, he has to do this no matter what. It had to be that. Yeah. You've taken the first steps and you're starting to reintegrate. I mean, we're starting to be that. Yeah, you've taken the first steps and you're starting to reintegrate. I mean, we're starting to see that. And the end of the episode is really where we see it start to happen for you in a way that for the first time, you're kind of dissociating from where you are
Starting point is 01:01:36 and you're starting to have these flashes of being on the severed floor. And all of a sudden you're in the long dark hallway from the break room. And it's the first time we ever see you, Audi Mark having a glimpse into any Mark's world. Yeah, that was really interesting shooting in the MDR hallways as Audi Mark in like those clothes
Starting point is 01:01:59 and stuff, it was so bizarre. And it's really- Yeah, you were like in a sweatshirt, in a sweatshirt in the MDR hallways. I was like, this is crazy. It's crazy. And seeing just the visual of Audi Mark down there is super interesting too. It's really weird.
Starting point is 01:02:13 But yeah, and we shot all of that stuff, both Innie and Audi. So Sam would have me walk down that hallway and keep staying in the exact same, trying to keep everything exactly the same in two different pieces of wardrobe. So we could do those flashes back and forth and not have it be green screen or whatever,
Starting point is 01:02:31 but actually do all of it. And it was really meticulous. Well, you did that also in episode three when we did it for you waking up on the table at the end of episode three, where you had to do every different permutation. But I think to me, what I take away from that scene and the way the episode ends is the feeling, right?
Starting point is 01:02:49 The emotional toll that this is taking on you, because all of a sudden, Audi Mark is seeing, for a second, he sees Gemma, a Miss Casey version of Gemma, but it's Gemma. And we end on this moment of you back in reality in your living room or wherever. And you know, you're basically almost crying there because it's such a deep feeling. And to me, that's really effective the way that it was done, because it reminded me of like waking up from a dream. If you've ever had a dream where you see someone
Starting point is 01:03:23 who you missed or you know, you have a deep emotion in a dream. And for've ever had a dream where you see someone who you missed or you have a deep emotion in a dream. And for me, a lot of times my dreams are like our feelings that I associate with them as much as the imagery. And I've had that where I've woken up almost crying. And that to me was the most impactful part of that whole sequence was the fact that, oh, wait, this is going to take an emotional toll on Mark, this journey of trying to reintegrate.
Starting point is 01:03:46 Yeah, because what we were figuring out and really zeroing in on shooting that scene was this is the first time he has seen Gemma in three years and he's not looking at a photograph of her, he's not watching something on his phone. She is standing in front of him. And you know, when someone dies, you're never going to see them again.
Starting point is 01:04:10 And she's right there. And yeah, she's dressed weird and hair is different and everything, but just sort of the emotional shock of standing right there with her, or that's how it feels anyway. Yeah, to me it was very emotional at the end of that episode.
Starting point is 01:04:25 And I think that gets back to kind of the core of what I think we always want with the show is keep it grounded in that as much as any of the weirdness or anything is really Mark's journey, you know? -♪ Piano music playing. -♪ Before we say goodbye, it's time to hear Zach Cherry's prediction of what's going to happen in the next episode, in episode 6, which I'm really looking forward to.
Starting point is 01:04:51 Oh yeah, let's see. Hi y'all, Zach Cherry here again, and it's time for that part of the episode where I make a prediction about what's going to happen next. Next time on Severance. You know, I think that Dylan is gonna be inspired by watching Miss Wong play theremin, and he's gonna take up an instrument of his own called the voice.
Starting point is 01:05:16 That's right. Dylan's gonna start taking voice lessons and it will sound a little something like this. La la la la la. That's just his first lesson. It will sound a little something like this. La la la la la. That's just his first lesson. And he is going to submit himself to be on a music competition reality show. What's your favorite music competition reality show?
Starting point is 01:05:36 Write in to Ben and Adam and let them know what your favorite music competition reality show is. I love it. Yeah. You playing, music playing, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter, yeah, I think Dylan, you know, the guy is very lovable and that goes a long way on those competition singing shows. 100%, I think he would have gotten further than Bo Bice, that's for sure. Ah, Bo Bice, I was a big Bo Bice fan. Did Bo Bice win?
Starting point is 01:06:15 He was the runner up, but I wanted him to win. I wanted him to win. Me too. Do you remember what song he did? I think he did- Vehicle, vehicle. What's that? I'll be your vehicle baby. I'll be your vehicle baby. Do you remember what song he did? I think he did... Uh... Vehicle. Vehicle. What's that? I'll be your vehicle, baby.
Starting point is 01:06:27 I'll be your vehicle, baby. Oh, yeah. He did a lot of songs like that. Well, I think Dylan should definitely go on a reality show. In the Lumen reality show for singing, I'm sure that Ms. Cobell would be judging. Ms. Cobell would be like the Simon. Right. She'd be the Simon Cowell.
Starting point is 01:06:43 And you'd have to sing the not-punitive rendition of the cure hymn. That's the only song anyone could sing. That's the only song you can sing, just different interpretations of it. And all the judges would be Simons. Everyone would be mean. Okay, and that is it for this episode.
Starting point is 01:06:58 The Severance Podcast with Ben and Adam will be back next week to talk about Season 2, Episode 6. Yes, and you can stream every episode of Severance on Apple TV Plus with new episodes coming out every Friday. And then make sure you're listening to our podcast, which drops right after the episode airs. The Severance podcast with Ben Stiller and Adam Scott is a presentation of Odyssey, Pineapple Street Studios, Red Hour Productions, and Great Scott
Starting point is 01:07:25 Productions. If you like the show, be sure to rate and review this podcast on Apple Podcasts, the Odyssey app, or your other podcast platform of choice. Our executive producers are Barry Finkel, Henry Malofsky, Gabrielle Lewis, Jenner Weiss Berman, and Leah Reese Dennis. This show is produced by Zandra Ellen, Ben Goldberg, and Naomi Scott. This episode was mixed and mastered by Chris Basil. We had additional engineering from Javi Krustus and Davy Sumner. Show clips are courtesy of Fifth Season. Music by Theodore
Starting point is 01:07:55 Shapiro. Special thanks to the team at Odyssey, Maura Curran, Eric Donnelly, Michael LeVay, Melissa Wester, Matt Casey, Kate Rose, Kurt Courtney, and Hillary Schuff. And the team at Red Hour, John Lesher, Carolina Pesachov, John Pablo Antonetti, Martin Baldorudin, Ashwin Ramesh, Maria Noto, John Baker, and Oliver Ager. And at Great Scott, Kevin Cotter, Josh Martin, and Krist Christie Smith at Rise Management. We had additional production help from Kristin Torres and Melissa Slaughter. And this has been really fun. I'm Ben Stiller. And I'm Adam Scott, and I agree that it's been super fun.
Starting point is 01:08:36 And remember everyone, that your Audi once captured a butterfly. And you can too. Thank you. Bye.

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