The Severance Podcast with Ben Stiller & Adam Scott - What’s Your Deal? (with Seth Rogen, Evan Goldberg, and Cat Miller)
Episode Date: July 3, 2025This week, Ben and Adam welcome longtime collaborators Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg, who recently co-created the Apple TV+ series The Studio. They talk about what influenced their distinct style of co...medy, making amateur movies as kids, and they try to get to the bottom of the age old question: Is falling funny? Then, Ben and Adam are joined by Severance’s brilliant Prop Master, Cat Miller, to talk about building out the world of the MDR office and help answer some fan questions. 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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Hey, I'm Ben Stiller.
I'm Adam Scott.
And this is the Severance Podcast with Ben and Adam, where we are talking all about Severance
and in this time where we're in between seasons, the different influences and movies and TV
shows and people that have kind of contributed to our making
the show I guess in some way. And this week we're joined by two incredible
multi-hyphenates and longtime collaborators Seth Rogen and Evan
Goldberg who most recently co-created the Apple TV plus series The Studio. Yeah
I'm very excited they're coming on they've made so much great stuff for
years but they also have the studio
that's out now. So really really good and really has this very unique style to it and is also a comedy and we're gonna
talk to them about making that and sort of the crossovers with Severance and also how they got going and you know
how they connected which was at a very young age, and what they've
been doing together, which is really, I don't know, they just have such a unique and identifiable
style. And I think with the show, they've taken it to another place now that's new.
Totally. Yeah, it's such a great show. And by the way, if you haven't seen it, this is
a big spoiler alert. We're probably going to be talking about the entire first season in detail.
Yeah, I'm excited to talk to both of them. You know, kind of a freeform conversation
about show business. Can't wait. I love talking about show business.
Me too. Yeah, I like talking about deals. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. You know, I hope we can
really get into it with them about deals. I'm curious what their deal is.
That's what I want to know. I want to know what's is. That's what I wanna know. I wanna know. What's your deal?
What's up?
That's what we should rename the podcast.
Right, so what's your deal?
What's your deal?
That's gonna be fun talking to them.
And then after that, after talking to Seth and Evan,
we're gonna bring on Kat Miller,
our unbelievable prop master on Severance.
And we'll talk about work on Severance.
And we will also answer
some of your burning fan questions with Kat.
Yes, we're going to get into some nerdy details.
She's the perfect person for nerdy details.
All right, let's get into the episode.
Ben, how are you doing, man?
I am doing well.
I'm doing well.
I'm in New York.
Right now you're in Los Angeles, right?
Yeah.
When you say New York, you mean New York City, the Big Apple. I think people know when you say New York, it's not like New York right now. You're in Los Angeles, right? Yeah, when you say New York, you mean New York City the Big Apple
I think people know when you say New York. There's only it's not like New York, Minnesota
So I know I know people know that but just in case there's someone that does it's never heard of New York
I'm just specifying. No, I'm good. It's super hot here. There's a heat wave. Is it still super hot there?
It feels hot. It's not as hot as it was the last couple of days, but it's definitely, I did a shirt change already today.
Whoa, now.
Yeah, not to get too, you know, I don't want, but yeah.
No, but I know you pretty well.
You don't usually do a shirt change
till much later in the day, if at all.
No, my shirt change usually comes around
five or six p.m. for evening wear.
And you have two guys with bugles who enter the room
and go, ba-ba-da-ba, and go, ba ba ba ba, shirt change.
And then you do a shirt change.
Just for me, nobody's there.
It's just my own little,
you know how we all have our little rituals in life.
I did do a shirt change because it's very muggy.
I mean, it's exactly what you would think,
like hot New York City muggy.
It feels like, okay, we're in summer, it's happening.
That's right.
It seems to happen a lot earlier these days.
And sometimes it happens in February too, which is weird.
I was there like a week ago and it was freezing.
Yeah, it's very unpredictable, but you know,
it's just like you're just moving through the atmosphere.
It feels to me in the dead of summer in New York,
walking down the street,
it's like walking through a warm milkshake.
Yeah, yeah, for sure.
Then you're like extra alert for the rats.
Gross.
You know, like everything's at night,
you know what I mean?
You just feel like everybody's out
and just trying to get some air.
And then sometimes you walk through
just like a cloud of turd smell.
Yeah, yeah, or garbage smell.
Garbage smell.
Yeah.
It's why we love New York. It was like 103 a couple of days ago, right? Apparently, yeah, or garbage smell. Garbage smell. Yeah. It's why we love New York.
It was like 103 a couple of days ago, right?
Apparently, yeah.
And then they, yeah, they said then with the heat index,
it was even more.
Ah, I don't understand that.
I don't understand the heat index.
Heat index?
I'll explain it to you sometime
because I understand it completely.
Do you want to get rid of it, like daylight savings time?
No, no, it's not a thing.
Daylight savings time is a thing that is, you know,
that we could all decide on.
Heat index is just an actual calculation.
I feel like they're the same thing.
I'm not gonna go there right now.
Oh, okay.
What's your 4th of July plans, though?
Oh, the birthday of our nation.
Yeah.
You know what, we're gonna hang out with some friends
who've invited us to hang out for a Fourth of July party.
What are you doing?
See, I never get invited to stuff like that.
And then when there's nothing going on at home,
I've never do a barbecue.
Almost I feel like there's pressure to have to do something
and I don't do anything.
But that's cool that you got invited to a party.
It is cool, I feel cool.
By the way, there is a New York in Texas, Missouri,
New Mexico, Kentucky, Iowa, and Florida.
You know what we need to do is a live podcast
from one of those New Yorks.
All right, if anybody is listening in New York, Iowa,
call up the hotline.
Tell us what New York, Iowa is like,
and are they having a heat wave?
Well, Seth and Evan are here. Yeah, we should bring them on
Let's do it
Hey guys, hello, what's going on? Welcome to our radio show
We're live by the way
Yeah, I did Howard Stern recently and it was like,
oh, this feels like doing a podcast,
but it's not, I guess it's not a podcast.
I guess he's been doing this for 30 years.
Yeah, exactly.
I love it when Howard gets going on podcasts.
They annoy him so much.
Oh, he hates them, it's great.
But he's right, like people are not qualified
and they're doing the same thing that he does.
It's like if just people start making TV shows
and movies on their own and like saying,
hey, look at my show.
Not calling it a movie, calling it like my entertainment cast.
My show cast.
Well, thanks for doing this.
No problem, thank you for having us.
You guys have this incredible, long-standing
working relationship that started like when you were 12 or is that right?
In Bar Mitzvah class.
It is.
It is right.
We came of age and instantly linked up.
Yes, exactly.
We became men together.
What was it like being kids going to Bar Mitzvah class
in Vancouver in the 90s?
What was it?
I guess it was 1994 when we were 12 years old.
And I would say it's as good as you picture.
Yeah, exactly.
Awesome as you might have been.
As exciting.
As amazing as you could.
And did you immediately connect,
you just liked the same movies
and that's kind of what you connected on?
I think it's even worse than you picture
where none of our friends really were into it at all.
We were just the only two guys
who were really into movies and comics.
And Evan wrote short stories and I was like starting to want to do stand up
comedy.
And so I was writing jokes and I just never met another like kid who like wrote
recreationally who like, like, like a thing they did in their spare time.
Wasn't like only playing video games or sports or something like that.
Neither of us like sports.
Video games rule.
We did like video games.
I actually think the fact that neither of us
were into sports had a lot to do with us hanging out,
especially in Vancouver.
Everyone was so into hockey and stuff like that
and we just were not into that.
Well, you said this the other day
at a dinner we were at together,
but I didn't know you had the same moment
where I found out that the sports team players
are not from the city.
Yeah, I know.
And in that moment I was like, sports are dumb.
I know, I was like, why do I care?
I'm voting for some Yugoslavia.
I thought we were Vancouver Canucks.
I get very nationalist and
I have real questionable beliefs about.
I'm usually the only person I know
that doesn't follow any sports whatsoever.
Yeah, you also follow no sports?
None.
I play hockey every Monday.
I couldn't name one NHL player.
I don't know a single name.
But it's like in your blood hockey,
so you can go and actually play.
I think it was in my shame.
My mom wouldn't take me,
because she didn't want me to get hurt,
and it was too early in the morning,
so I only started like eight years ago.
We did play rugby though, in high school, both of us.
Yeah, which was very Canadian.
Very Canadian.
Wow, I never played rugby.
I never played rugby. Yeah, that's really hard. Very Canadian. Very violent sport. I never played rugby.
Yeah, that's really hard.
It's quite hard, but we never followed rugby.
Yeah.
When you started, you were doing stuff for fun.
You made like home movies together.
Yeah.
Right?
We made a spoof of space balls.
And which is a huge.
I play all the time.
How do you make a spoof of space balls?
You won't believe this.
We couldn't finish it.
We couldn't figure it out.
I'll tell you, it really ran out of energy
in half a few minutes.
It was just that his dad had all the toys.
Right, the video camera.
We had what we needed, string and X-wings.
Yeah, I remember my dad had a garage sale,
bought all the Star Wars toys in a big box.
So I had all the Star Wars.
So we were using miniatures, and we
were making our own silly Star Wars uniforms and a big box, and so I had all the Star Wars, so we were using like miniatures, and we were making our own like silly Star Wars uniforms
and stuff like that.
And then we made a spoof of Pulp Fiction
and Reservoir Dogs with the Little Blues Brothers.
We only finished the opener on that one,
we didn't get far.
We did, we did a scene in retrospect,
the joke, it was like Pulp Fiction had just come out,
and we were making one of the scene
where Christopher Walken like hid the watch in his ass,
and it was Evan with like a giant like Hanukkiah.
Wow.
And the whole joke was like Evan explaining
how he like hid this Hanukkiah up his ass
to escape the Holocaust with it.
That's funny.
That's really funny.
It was funny.
We tried to find the footage, his mom had it,
but it's gone.
You were pushing the limits even then.
Even then.
Edgy comedy.
Exactly.
Fortunately, it was just between the two of us.
We were the only two men.
We found it funny.
We were just doing it for ourselves.
Our audience loved it.
I'm sure there's someone who was
offended in your family, probably.
Were your parents creative?
And I'm just curious how you got into it so young.
For me, it didn't have to do with my parents.
It was that the rental stores in Canada,
they just never checked you for anything.
You could get a rated-R film.
So when I was really young, I was watching rated R films,
and that hooked me in hard.
My brother just fed me a diet of comics and movies.
He's a little older.
And for me, it's my brother.
He got me into it.
It's the slightly older brother.
And my parents just loved movies.
Like, they were not in any creative field.
I just grew up watching tons and tons and tons of movies.
And they-
Did they show you movies?
Like, would your dad or mom sit down and say,
hey, you gotta watch?
Yeah, and I would just watch what they were watching.
In the 80s and 90s, just as like when Harry Met Sally came out,
and they loved it.
So we would watch that movie all the time.
And Hannah and her sisters came out, and they loved it.
So we would watch that all the time.
And the Three Amigos and Ghostbusters and just like,
whatever movies they liked, they would just watch all the time time and we would just sit there and watch it with them.
And I think a lot of people are age, it's like your taste in movies really is reflective to
like whatever those like your VHS collection was, I guess. And so we had these like 80 movies that
my parents had like taped off of television. And you would watch over and over and over and
over and over again and it is funny
because I think looking back those movies like really shaped my sense of my parents are also
very unlike Evan's parents my parents were incredibly supportive of us pursuing creative
my parents were confused why we were wasting our time and encourage us to go play sports that we
would never had nor shown any want yeah like we would literally be like 13 year olds like sitting
at his family's computer like trying to write a movie, like seriously trying
to write a movie for hours.
And his mother would just be like, why are you doing this?
You're wasting your time.
And my parents conversely were incredibly supportive
and really encouraging and thought we actually
could become movie writers.
So you guys both sort of absorbed Seth's parents'
support and kind of took that.
His mom bought us final draft.
Yeah, my mom bought us final draft
at a very early age.
So you wrote Superbad truly when you were 14 years old?
We started in high school.
We started before we were 14.
Yeah, we started I think in eighth grade.
That starts rough.
It was rough.
And not good.
Sure.
Not that good. But it was a Yeah. And not good. Sure.
Not that good.
But it was a start.
And there were some ideas in it that I think made it
all the way through to the final actual movie.
That's pretty amazing.
Yeah.
I had to, very few, if any, writer, directors I've ever met
wrote something when they were teenager
that then they actually made into a movie.
That actually became a good movie.
A really good movie, like kind of a classic comedy now
and that's amazing.
I actually do think that is why few people are more shocked
that that movie has resonated to the degree
that it has than we are.
And something we're always marveling at
is how short a shelf life comedy has at times
and how things that are amazing seemingly just, you know.
But sometimes that doesn't happen.
And I really think a large part of the reason
that people still relate to it is
cause we were in high school when we like came up
with a lot of it.
So I think there's like in some like fundamental raw way,
it is like imbuedued with the actual anxieties
and fears of 14, 15, 16 year old kids
that somehow does resonate through it.
But you also had Greg Metolla instead of someone
that's just going after, there's terrific dick jokes in it,
but someone that's also emotionally coming in.
Well that all came from like-
The first time he did like,
he did a wonder in one of the scenes,
and we were like, amazed.
The thought that someone in a thing we wrote was like,
we're gonna do this scene in one shot.
We were like, are you nuts?
Well, also just that he had shot,
like it was so much more composed than anything
we had made up until that point.
And we would improvise a lot as well.
So it was sort of like like you were always trying to get
to cross coverage, basically.
Like, that was always like the name of the game is like,
how do you get to people not moving?
So you can shoot a camera at each of them.
And it was great, but that wasn't like Greg's thing
all the time.
And I think it gave the movie like a look and a style that,
yeah, like that we didn't even,
but we were big fans,
it's funny when we were writing it,
we were big Martins Corsese fans and Wes Anderson fans
and Steven Soderbergh fans.
And so we actually, I think, pictured it being very cinematic
and then it was funny because then all the stuff
that we were making before it,
it was all about how do you capture improvised comedy.
You know what I mean?
But that was because the other really interesting thing
is that, I mean, you came to LA,
you guys were still teenagers, right?
Yeah.
I mean, you were what?
I came when I was like 18, 19.
Yeah.
Okay, so you came first.
Why did you come on your own, Seth?
Because I got cast on Freaks and Geeks, and so I-
Out of Vancouver.
16 years old.
Out of Vancouver, yeah.
And it's, I mean, and it is inextricable from you, Ben,
in many ways, like it was And it's, I mean, and it is inextricable from you, Ben, in many ways.
Like it was coming off of, you know,
Judd had done the Ben Stiller show,
and like these were like the things that to us also
were like benchmarks.
And Jake Kasdan, who directed Freaks and Geeks,
had just done Zero Effect, you know?
Yeah, which was one of the first movies I was in.
Yeah.
It was his first movie.
He was 20, he was like 21 when he made that movie.
Zero Effect is so rad.
It's so good and Bill Pope shot Zero Effect, I think,
who shot the pilot of Friction Geeks.
And we loved Zero Effect.
We were completely obsessed with it.
And so to us it was like,
oh, we were getting to work with these people who,
like I didn't know who Judd was,
but I know who Jake was because of zero
Effect right we were friends of and I knew what the Ben Stiller show was and things like that
So like Judd was sort of like we realized a person who was like involved in a way
We just didn't know but we were fully stepping into what we viewed as like the the world that like Ben and you know
You guys were kind of creating like at that time, you know, right and I remember Judd telling me
Oh, yeah, this kid Seth Rogan He's like he's so funny and he writes and he does comedy and he's like really I remember him talking about you
I was pretty ferocious at the time
Yeah, what do you mean?
I would like write scenes for freaks and geeks and give them to Judd and I would write them and give them to the other
Actors and I would film I would film us doing scenes that I had written for the show to try
to advocate for myself to get to write for the show
and to get to like write contribute
to the show creatively.
And was that just because you were reading it
and you're like, I can do this.
I can write a scene.
Yeah, well, and we were writing super bad at the time.
And I felt like we had like a very specific writing style.
And I was trying to offer it up, basically.
I was trying to offer up like, here's
how I view conversational comedy between high school kids.
And no one was super bad.
It wasn't even done at the time.
We were writing it.
And so I was like, I feel like I have
a perspective on how these kids could speak to one another.
And I was trying to impose it on everybody.
And so then did Judd kind of scoop you up
and he saw something in that and started shepherding you along or helping you out?
Yeah, well then Freaks and Geeks got canceled
and we did a show called Undeclared.
Yep, I auditioned for Undeclared.
For what part?
I don't know.
Maybe Jason Segel, maybe the Jason Segel
fired us up like that? I really don't remember,
but I remember Alison Jones and Judd.
Yeah, I was probably there.
Yeah, probably.
Because first I was hired as a writer on,
because he had read what I'd done, so he hired me as a writer on the show. And I probably. Because I was, because first I was hired as a writer on the, like, because he had read
what I'd done, so he hired me as a writer on the show.
And I was 18 and I was like a writer on a Fox network.
Right, no, no, that's, no, it's so crazy.
And then did you summon Evan to come join you?
Yeah, and then during the summers, we finished Superbad around then, right?
Yeah, and then it was, Judd read Superbad and said, bring your friend down for a little,
let's see if we can jam together and come up with something and that led to yeah
We would sit in Judd's like fucking giant house in the Palisades
Like this is crazy. Are we staying for dinner? How long do we stay? When do we leave? Are we allowed to leave?
The answer was staying for dinner a lot more than I expected.
Are we his friend? Are we working for him?
Are we getting paid for any of this?
What is happening?
Are we in danger?
What is happening right now?
Are we in danger?
That's amazing to me, honestly.
And I have to say like Judd, you know,
really was like one of the pioneers, I guess,
in terms of this like improvisational work on film
where he would set it up so that you could really riff
and get the best out of people,
let them go free to try stuff,
and then be able to edit it, right?
And I just wanna say,
because you're talking about the movies you guys love,
you guys are such cinematic comedy filmmakers,
which I feel like doesn't always go together,
and it goes all the way to the studio,
which is, I think think really, really great
in terms of how you guys have such a clear,
specific visual style to the show.
You really, I think kind of like figured out
your own style that has a lot more
of a cinematic vibe to it, you know,
looking at like, this is the end or something,
like a genre kind of movie that has all that,
but also there's a lot of crazy,
huge cinematic stuff that's going on in it.
Yeah, thank you.
I just think that's unique.
Yeah, it was really like, I mean, it's sort of,
it's funny, because we would look back at movies
like Blues Brothers and Ghostbusters and stuff like that,
and they're pretty cinematic, you know?
And again, I grew up loving,
we grew up loving Woody Allen movies,
and Gordon Willis and the Carl DePaul
was shooting those movies.
Like they're, you know, like the guy who shot Apocalypse Now
shot Husbands and Wives.
Like they're very beautiful films, you know?
And so this at the end was the first movie we directed
and we hired a cinematographer named Brandon Trost
who was around our age,
which right there was like kind of a revelation.
Yeah, that is like a bold thing to do
because I think if I was in your position
making that movie, I'd be like, you know,
get me whoever, you know,
Oh, we went to Janusz.
Oh, we went to Janusz.
Yeah.
We immediately did that, don't worry.
Don't get us wrong.
Yeah, we went to Janusz and he said he was too busy,
but he also said, you should get some young guy like you.
Yeah. That's the move.
So we kind of actually.
That's great.
Janusz Kaminski was Spielberg's cinematographer.
And he shot funny people.
So Judd actually also then clearly
started to want to explore a more cinematic style
for his film.
No, no, but I mean, what Judd was doing was its own thing.
Yes.
It was a lot of cameras always, you know?
And we talked a lot about how, with that movie,
how to allow the actors to improv.
Because we knew we had some of the funniest
improvisational performers that were around.
And we knew that in order to capture stuff that would really
feel magical, and we had to allow them to improvise.
But then we talked a lot about lighting and the set
and to have some sequences that were incredibly composed
and pre-planned and storyboarded,
and then other sequences that we knew we were going to just
put a bunch of cameras on and some shots that we, yeah,
knew were like, OK, this is like a,
we'll break us out of this sort of, you know,
riffy camera style.
So you were able to do the cross-coverage,
just mixed it in with all these other, yeah.
Exactly. Yeah, exactly. Right, right. There's like scenes where it in with all these other, yeah. Exactly, yeah, exactly.
Right, right, there's like scenes
where it's like more of that way,
but it all feels of a whole,
and then there's these huge visual effects sequences,
which is like, visual effects,
I feel is the enemy of comedy.
It can be, for sure, and Ghostbusters to us,
and things like that are like the reason we thought
it could work, you know what I mean?
Yeah, like because Ghostbusters,
people forget that Ghostbusters actually was scary
at a certain point.
And visually impressive at a certain point,
like looked as good as what you would expect from anything.
And what's funny is like, I mean, talking about space balls,
like it's like, I knew always that like ILM
also did space balls.
And I think that's why to us,
it was so impressive when we were kids,
because we're like, oh, it actually looks like Star Wars.
It actually looks better than Star Wars a lot of the time.
And so we, actually, yeah,
the first hires we had on This Is the End
were our visual effects supervisors.
And those were by far the most conversations we had
were about the visual effects of the movie
and how we could afford it
and how we could make something that had this reckless quality to it,
but also good enough visual effects
that you weren't taken out of it
and that it supported the stakes
instead of reducing the stakes.
Yeah, totally.
While also being an extension of the comedy,
but also presenting just how scary
and fucked up the whole situation was.
It really was frightening, but also hilarious.
Yeah, because there are scenes where there's like a punchline
that is a visual effects show, you know what I mean?
And that's not easy to do.
I just always say it's the enemy of comedy
because it's really hard
because when you're doing visual effects, it's all pre-planned
and you have to, every single frame,
you have to know exactly what it's going to be.
And there's not really a lot of room to improvise
in visually or in terms of the script.
It's also scary because you don't know till post.
You don't know for months and months and months,
so you can't pick up the shot
because you don't even know if you need to pick up the shot
because the shot didn't work.
Yeah, like on the studio, you wouldn't,
I don't know if one would assume,
but we had a visual effects supervisor on set
all day, every single day of the shooting of that show.
And it's something that we learned from this to the end,
is like, so much sleight of hand is required at times
to make these things seem seamless.
And so it was always like a very close relationship
we had as directors was people who do visual effects, you know?
You know, something that I love about the studio, too,
as far as you guys go, like's also, you're turning the page
to a new color comedically as well.
There's just this really fun madcap,
for lack of a better term,
kind of harkening back to the sort of screwball comedies
of the 70s like Bogdanovich.
I thought you were gonna say Zany.
You seemed on the edge of Zany.
That's just as bad as madcap, by the way.
Just as bad.
I know, sorry, sounds stupid.
But whenever you have Seth and the whole gang together
and it's just chaos and you eating shit is so funny.
Falling a lot.
Falling and then also when you fall,
stuff spreads on the ground, like ice or whatever it is.
It's the evidence of comedy.
It's so funny.
And it like had the feeling of Altman and Bogdanovich
and Blake Edwards in these like free flowing comedies
of the seventies too.
Oh yeah.
Just that chaos.
Yeah, we love those.
I mean, yeah, I mean like, I think chaotic comedy, comedy where everyone's kind of,
it's a heightened, like, that's what we're always trying to do
with the show is, like, find ways to, like,
pressurize the situation and condense the timeline,
have a real ticking clock and stakes that,
to the characters at least, feel, like,
incredibly important, you know?
Well, and I think we also have this advantage
where it's not a movie
and it's a TV show, but it's not a highly serialized TV show.
And so like, we can crank it way up with the panic
and the stress because it just ends.
That's right.
You don't have to carry over that stress
throughout the rest of the week.
You know exactly how it sadly ended for Matt.
Yeah, and that actually like, for me,
like I, we produce a lot of highly serialized television,
and I've always struggled, honestly,
to be incredibly contributive towards it,
because my brain just doesn't work that way.
Like, I struggle with, like, the 10-hour story, you know?
Which is one of the...
I totally empathize with that.
I feel the same way.
Yeah.
It's really hard. And so. Yeah. It's really hard.
And so the idea.
It's really different.
It's very different.
The idea is like, what if each one has like
a beginning, a middle, and an end?
We can give each one a build in its own little shape
and they kind of stand alone
and they're more like short films.
Yeah.
And stylistically, they seem to have their own thing,
some of them too.
Yeah, exactly.
Like the missing real episode kind of had this sort of
like China Town war.
Yeah, and it's so fun to try to do that
within the overall visual rules of the show as well.
But yeah, it was, that's always what we would try to do
is like kind of create these situations
and to go for real comedy and for better or worse,
me and Evan just think people falling down is really funny.
And like, and how to, it's for better. And, me and Evan just think people falling down is really funny. Yeah, better. It's for better.
And how to, it's for better. And that was honestly a challenge we would have for ourselves,
is how do we keep it grounded and real and feeling of human emotion and desire,
but can we get it to a place where it kind of has one foot in this real, silly kind of comedy world you know.
And we've only seen how his character falls. All the other characters could fall.
I can sit by a car.
Oh that's true.
Cranston falls also a few times.
All right let's take a quick break and when we come back Adam and I will be
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Every Thursday you'll hear us.
NC is chatting with big name celebrities.
And every Monday you're stuck with just me and Dana.
We react to news, what's trending, viral clips.
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You were talking about before though, with this 10 hour thing, which I really, like I say,
I really identified because what you've done on the show
is that you can say to somebody, hey, you know what?
They haven't seen the show, but you know what?
Check out this episode.
I think this episode's so funny.
And like, even if you don't have time
to watch the first six episodes,
watch this one and you can get it, you know, I think.
And that's something we can't do on Severance,
and it's really, it's really challenging.
Just try, just give it a shot, guys.
It happens, yeah.
I'd be really curious.
We'll help out, we're here.
That happened with my mother over my shoulder one day
while watching Severance at home,
and I can attest she was very confused.
I'm sure, of course.
I mean, yeah, confused probably is a nice word.
I mean, I feel like people sometimes are like,
what the fuck is going on?
And a lot of times I get from people too,
like should I feel like I'm not smart enough or something?
Right.
But you've given enough answers fast enough
that people trust.
To me it becomes a question of faith, honestly.
It really does.
And I think, like, for me, when I engage in a show like
Severance, which is like inherently revolving
around a mystery that will reveal itself to me over time,
I think for me personally, I'm totally
OK not understanding things if I have faith
that that is what I'm supposed to be feeling.
Right.
And that at some point I will understand what I need to
in order to make this a gratifying experience.
And that's why I enjoy not understanding things
and I enjoy things that seem almost completely unexplainable
because I have faith that they will be explained to me
because I have faith that you're good storytellers
and you wouldn't do things that, you know,
don't do that basically, you know?
And so-
That was kind of what Conan said when we talked to him.
He was like, you know, he like, okay,
I can just like sort of relax into knowing
that whatever it is, it's gonna somehow be.
And I appreciate that, but when you're making the show,
you're trying to think about like,
well, what is gonna be entertaining to people
within watching this?
And I never was, for me, there was something about
what Dan created in the pilot episode that he wrote
that was so funny to me and unique
that the down the line aspect of the mystery,
yes, I was like intrigued, like what's going on?
What are they doing?
What are the numbers?
But that wasn't the first thing that drew me to it
when I first read it. Was just more like, oh, it's got this weird tone that really makes me laugh and
feel strange or reminds me of different things I've seen.
Well, you've made it fun and you made the world really fun and funny. And you can tell
that you're not afraid to be funny, which I think also adds like a level of enjoyment
to what you're saying in entertainment to watching the show
in like a week to week basis where you're like,
okay, yes, it's mysterious
and I don't always get what's happening,
but you're also not afraid to just make jokes
and to make like set pieces
and to make things that are kind of silly, honestly.
Like there is sort of like a silliness
to certain aspects of it,
which I think also like takes the weight of it off you.
You know what I mean?
And you're not, because I remember like,
you know, I've watched so many shows,
like Lost and Shit like that, and like,
you're just waiting for more information.
It's all you want.
You're like, all I fucking care about
is what these guy in the hatch is doing.
That's it.
It's all I want to know.
And other than being given that information,
the show is like entertaining sometimes,
but that's like what you really are waiting for
is that information.
And I think Severance is very, is fun.
Like honestly, like the fact that it's funny
allows it to constantly be giving you like a dopamine hit
that is separate from just sheer like revealing of mystery.
You know what I mean?
I think without the comedic beats,
it would be really a tough thing to,
it would be a lot.
There is one episode this season
that is essentially completely serious,
and that one plays like a movie.
I thought it was so interesting,
it's the only one where it's like,
it is not bouncing back.
That's right, that's right.
That 10 episode thing is really interesting
because I think it's one of the most challenging things
with Severance that we're always
kind of thinking about is maintaining
the tension throughout.
And the tension that has to do with the characters,
the tension that has to do with the mysteries,
it's all of that, which is why I always think
like horror is really hard for television because,
you know.
It's so prolonged.
Yeah, and you don't have enough time
with an hour to build the tension.
And then with 10 hours, it's too much time
to maintain the tension that makes something scary.
Whereas comedy, like you were saying,
it's great to have those little pressurized segments.
No, very much so.
What's hard about it is we have to think of like 10 ideas
that you feel.
And that's where we're at right now,
is like, it's so hard to just decide,
like what are the 10 ideas?
You know what I mean?
And you wanna really love every one of those ideas
and really make sure everyone allows you
to like reach the heights that you want it to reach.
And I do often, like there's so many ideas we come up with
that would only really work in a more serialized show
because they just play out over such a long period of time.
Like the Kool-Aid stuff.
Exactly, and that is the thing where we're just like,
we can have basically one of those a season.
Like a thing that's sort of like a running joke
that is something we go back to all the time,
but it's not like.
But it's still like the Kool-Aid thing,
if you didn't have the other beats of it,
it would still work.
The Kool-Aid thing was great because it was like,
everything was connected to it because it was the
big compromise that he makes to get the job.
Yes, everything's in the wake of that.
That's right, that's right.
I love the moment at the end of the first episode
where you guys are just watching Goodfellas after
having fucked over Martin Scorsese because your
character Matt is just a fan when it really comes
down to it.
And it's kind of a deeply felt moment
right after this horrible thing happens.
That's actually a real tradition of ours.
Whenever we ruin someone's project,
we watch something good they made.
We have a martini.
And we think, you know what?
Cheers.
Cheers to this.
But did you guys have like a meta moment at all
working with him?
Because I read that you guys,
he basically, he showed up,
like you hadn't really met him before, right?
He just showed up on set.
Never even zoomed.
Not even a zoom.
Wow.
Yeah, that sounds to me like a nightmare.
I would be so nervous.
We did have this thing, Jonah Hill was there
and had worked with him, of course,
and he kept being like, you're gonna love him,
he's so nice, you're gonna have a great time,
and it was really nice to have someone telling me that.
Right, right, right.
And he's so good in the show.
Yeah.
You also had to direct him.
Who's the scariest person, I mean,
I imagine working with Robert De Niro as a young man.
Yes, yes.
It would be a similar energy.
Yes, I had a, honestly, yes.
De Niro's like, we're doing another
Meet the Parents movie.
And I had a call with him yesterday regarding casting
and he called me up and I got like two messages
like Bob's trying to reach you, Bob's trying to reach you.
And I was like doing stuff in the morning
and then I was like, okay.
And Adam, by the way, just worked with Robert Deere too.
So you know what this is.
But he calls me and I'm like, hey Bob, how you doing?
He's like, good, good, good.
And he starts talking to me about like, you know,
his point of view on this casting choice.
And I was so scared.
I was like, shit, I hope that I'm,
I hope that I were on the same page with this thing.
Cause I could picture him just like, you know, saying,
no, no, no, you gotta do it, you gotta do it.
You know, like it's, but, but he, were you like nervous
with like Scorsese that he would know his line?
Like, because everything's one, or...
We had no idea what to expect at all.
Well, first of all, it was funny, like, I think his call time was like,
he was supposed to be on set at 9 a.m.,
everyone got there at, like, six in the morning.
Sure.
Like, we were there for hours before he got there.
Which also, again, we'd never spoken to him,
so we were like, if anything goes wrong.
Right.
He's like, where's the rewrite?
We're like, what rewrite?
Like, we need a tie.
And we're just blocking the scene.
And I remember being like, we had all these conversations
for hours and hours.
And we had a second camera.
I think it was our second week of shooting.
So we had committed hard to this one camera, one lens thing.
Yeah, commitment.
And that day, I was like, I want to have a second camera
crew there in case Scorsese.
I was like, if he seems judgmental of how we're
shooting, I won't be able to take it.
And I will later reconcile that this scene stylistically
doesn't match the rest of it.
What do you mean?
Like, if it seems like he thinks it's pretentious
or if he says something?
Yes, literally.
Casey was like, what, you got one camera?
You're shooting?
It's a comedy scene.
You use two cameras and you do like, I hit it.
You're like, yes, sir, we have another camera right here.
Literally.
And not only that, it was a camera crew
that had worked on Killers of the Flower Moon.
So they were like familiar faces in case he wanted to see them.
But like, yes, and they literally were sitting
in a hotel room all day, well, like on call
in case we were like, we need you to come in.
We also only been filming for two weeks,
so we hadn't anything edited yet.
So there was no proof we were actually doing something good
at that point. That you could like show him.
Yeah, or show ourselves.
We were still like, I think it's working.
So then he shows up and is it just...
He's just the best dude ever.
Instantly like a rapturous ball of energy.
Like you picture him as like the host of a show.
It's like I remember I could hear him coming from down behind.
You just hear that Scorsese sound.
He was like, ah, ah, ah.
And in that moment I was like like, this is gonna be incredible.
Like, you could just like feel his positive energy.
And he comes on the set, hey, how's it going?
Hey, what's happening?
Okay, hey, how are we, and he's making jokes.
How are we doing this?
Where do I stand?
What are my lines?
What do I do?
Like, and he's like, he's just so, and he loves it.
He clearly was having a really good time.
And as soon as we got some shots off,
we were like, so, He was like, keep going.
He clearly decided to just go.
And I remember we were like, it's one camera.
And then you forget, oh, enough.
He's like, oh, he knows more about me.
He's an 81 on Earth.
And so I'm like, so we think we're doing this original thing.
And I'm like, oh, we have one camera.
He's like, oh, yeah, Fresh New Wave, Traffaut,
whole history of that.
That's right.
They only had one camera.
That's why they used one camera.
They couldn't edit.
So they had an eight camera.
They'd shoot sequentially. And you're like, oh, yeah, OK. You. That's why they used one camera. They couldn't edit. So they had an eight camera. They'd shoot sequentially.
And you're like, oh, yeah, OK.
You.
You get it.
That's amazing.
Cranes are flying.
Wide lens.
Got to have that Russian aesthetic.
Very wide.
Have everything.
And we're like, OK, yeah, you understand
what we're doing here.
Yeah, you're like, we just thought it would be cool.
We thought it would look cool.
We were talking also, Seth, about that thing
of the cinematic nature of what you guys do.
And you can talk about a single shot,
and all the scenes are a single shot.
But the way that that works is because the blocking
of the actors, blocking being where the movements
of the actors in the scene is going to affect
where the camera goes.
And you have to figure out the blocking
that's going to work in concert with the camera.
And we would block for hours and hours and hours sometimes.
Like we wouldn't shoot before lunch a lot of days
because we would just be blocking from like 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
And we also did no rehearsals ever.
Prior to shooting, yeah.
So like it was on the day.
It was all on the day.
Why was that?
We just didn't have access to like.
It wasn't an option to get everyone,
we could do a piece meal,
but even so, like, the cast we had,
we had and we knew that they could deliver what we needed.
Honestly, part of me was inspired by,
I always think of the musicians at the scoring session,
and how they're just like, handed the music in the room,
and there's a hundred of them,
and the conductor's like, all right, third one, boom, boom,
boom, and everyone just does their thing.
And when they're all doing their thing, it comes
together into one beautiful thing, you know?
And it reminded me of that where I was like, I know
my shit, I know he knows his shit, I know she knows
her shit, we've never done it all together at the
same time, but if we all know he knows his shit, I know she knows her shit. We've never done it all together at the same time.
But if we all know it as we should, it will just work.
And you know you can trust everyone that's in that room.
And then it would, and I would be standing there
being like, holy shit, like this,
it feels like we've rehearsed this for weeks.
That's what was really fun about the day I spent,
or a couple days I spent with the studio,
was that we would, and we had a few wonders
on Severance as well, but all of the scenes
in the studio are wonders, but we would do it,
like, I don't know, six, seven times.
And then the scene is over.
Yes.
Like, I would go home at like 2.30 in the afternoon.
But how many times would you rehearse before you'd shoot?
Like, just a few times?
We would block it once or twice,
then we would start filming knowing the first four
are utterly useless for sure, completely unusable.
Except in the Globes, where we were playing
with a limited capacity.
We shot, we would do 16 to 25, on the Globes we did six.
Yeah, oh is that right, that was shorter than-
There were so many people and so many moving parts
that that one we had less chances.
The resets were taking so much longer
because there was so many background and stuff like that.
Your relationship with your DP though,
your cinematographer must be really great.
Yes.
Was he operating too?
No, our operator was this guy Mark Golinick,
who's a giant, giant muscular monster of a man.
And a subtle artistic genius.
Yes, and a subtle because his timing was like imperative,
you know?
He understood you could be like, hold on Ike's reaction
for a split second longer and push in just the tiniest bit
and then whip over to O'Hara for her reaction
and do it a little faster.
So he would be like, got it.
Well, and even more impressive than that
is in the nine minute scene,
sometimes he just has to trust his gut.
Yeah.
I don't think people quite get
how much was on his shoulders
and how in the moment, every scene,
he did something that was his and his alone
that fixed it or made it.
Yeah, like another actor.
He really is.
He has to have the timing of an actor.
Yes, he knows all their lines, like it's nuts.
Oh yeah.
There are so many moments like that in the studio,
like when you interrupt Greta Lee in the shot
and then you walk out of frame
and he stays on her for just that split second
till her face changes and then whips away.
And like he was so good at that.
And it was like editing.
And our editor was on set all day every day as well
cause there wasn't a lot of editing
that could be done after the fact.
So our editor, Eric Kisak, would be there.
And like what you're saying.
Kind of saying what he would do editorially.
He would say like, he'd be like,
you have to whip sooner for it to hit
the way it needs to hit.
Yeah, yeah, he'd be like,
I would shave a few frames off that reaction
if it was just a normal reaction shot.
And so we would. Which we can't do right now.
Which we can't do, so we would have to do it
as we were shooting it basically.
But yeah, no, we would shoot the scene with an iPad
and that was a few times.
And that was sort of the rehearsal.
And that was how like-
As though we'd watch it again, which we almost never did.
But Evan, are you holding the iPad?
No, the DP-
Okay, and then you're watching the iPad
and you're kind of like communicating with him
as he does it?
Yeah, I would run behind
and we would run around together in circles.
Right, right.
And then we would all watch it together and be around together in circles and meet Mark and Adam.
And then we would all watch it together and be like,
oh, it's too wide there.
Like on this line, it should be only on Ike.
And then on this line, it should be all of us.
And then this line, it should go to these two.
And then as they walk away, it should be behind us,
not beside us.
And we would sort of figure all that out
just like as we were doing it basically.
And then pretend you're also on Mushrooms.
Yes, exactly.
We were on Mushrooms the whole time. Oh yeah, the whole time. But the whole episode was actually probably the hardest
because of the amount of people.
Like, there's a lot of people.
It was a ton of people.
And like, that shot, like, the shot
that you, our first scene is like, it's like.
It's you in the car.
Yeah, it started me in the car.
I walked the whole red carpet, walked through the lobby
and then meet up with you guys and it ends in the, in the thing.
And so it was like every reset of that took so long.
And so it really was incredibly high stakes, but at the same time, we don't
want it to feel like rigidity is like the enemy of this, you know what I mean?
And that's, and that's why it was so great having people really
comfortable with like looseness because like it was very regimented
and precise in some ways.
But we always hoped the actors would like saw off
the rigid corners and kind of make it feel
a little more real, you know what I mean?
Well, when you're entering a shot two and a half minutes in
Into it, yeah.
It is fucking nerve wracking.
Yeah, I had the experience on Empire of the Sun
where there was like a two minute steady cam shot
that I was at the end of and I had one line
and I screwed up my line.
Oh gosh.
And I said cut.
Oh no.
I've told this story before,
but it's literally one of the most mortifying moments
of my life.
I have to say also the look of the studio
that you guys have to just shift gears for a second
is so cool to me, this sort of Frank Lloyd Wright vibe.
Literally the first episode I was like,
wait, that looks like it's Warner Brothers,
but I've never seen that building before.
What was your idea behind that and how did you do that?
Because I feel like both Severance and your show
have a very specific vibe and style
in terms of the production design.
I mean, that's not a coincidence.
We referenced Severance and honestly, like,
in my head, like that's,
you guys made something so iconic,
something that, and I actually thought that was like,
important in this day and age in television,
is there's like so much stuff on. There's so many shows.
I watch eight spy shows personally right now, you know?
And they're all good, but I think it's so hard
to like assert any sort of like differentiation,
I feel like, in a lot of ways.
Yeah, and the thing we said about Severance is like,
if you flip onto the channel for four seconds,
you know it's Severance.
Exactly. Like you know instantly.
You can see a still frame of it
and know what show it is, instantaneously.
No, you said it right the first time.
Instantaneously, because of how specific it looks,
you know what I mean?
And so we talked a lot about specificity
and that was like a word that as we were like
just designing the show and the wardrobe and all that stuff, we were like, how do we make it just hyper specific and hyper different?
And you picture it being in like, I know everyone at Apple that we pitched the show to just
pictured it being like an office, like this office, just like a normal office.
And we never-
That's what they said to us though when we first, when we were first making Severance.
They said, oh, we can find like an office, like an abandoned office in an office park. And we're like, no, no, no,
no. It's weird. We actually are going to kind of try to do some stuff that you can't find in,
you know, Tentafly, New Jersey. Yeah, exactly. And we liked, and so that was like really a part of
it was like, how do we give it like an incredibly specific look. I'm just like a huge Frank Lloyd Wright fan. There's this documentary about Frank Lloyd
Wright's work in Los Angeles that I find really interesting and we kind of quoted in the show
where like he came to LA and made buildings that were like purported to be kind of monumental,
but they almost all became uninhabitable because of how tomb-like they ultimately were and
kind of how like mausoleum-like they ultimately felt and
sort of like, you know, the parallels between like a temple and a tomb were very kind of
good symbolism for the show we thought and also just like to anchor it in like a real history of Hollywood.
The studio would have been made at the exact time Frank Lloyd Wright was in LA making buildings.
These old studios, a lot of them do have beautiful architecture.
Their art deco they had at their time,
like great minds dedicating themselves to the design
and kind of grandeur of these buildings.
And that was also our thought, it's like, how do we like,
try to make it seem like it was there?
Yeah, and it's very accurate.
It's very accurate. I went to a meeting at Warner Brothers,
like a couple months ago, right when I was watching the show,
I was like, I'm literally in the space.
It's just less cool looking.
Yeah, exactly.
Less cool looking version.
It's funny, that was actually like when
our Apple executives started watching the show,
that was one of their first comments,
was like, should we be dressing better?
We were like, yes.
You should.
Should we wear double-breasted, cool coats?
Exactly, like you guys,
they used to look cool in your job, what'd you do?
Yeah, like in the play, or everyone looks awesome.
They all look cool.
Yeah, I don't know when it all fell apart
at some point or another.
I think like going into making a show,
like our show or your show, or really any show,
you kind of like dive in and especially with streaming
where you're gonna make all the episodes and nobody's gonna see it, and then it's gonna go out. You really any show, you kind of like dive in and, especially with streaming, where you're gonna make all the episodes
and nobody's gonna see it and then it's gonna go out.
You really have to take this kind of leap
and like make these choices and take these chances.
I know like I have a certain amount of, you know,
when it's before it's gonna come out,
like I get nervous or, you know,
fear is not gonna be well received or all that,
but like it's all after the fact
because you've done all this work.
You've already done it.
That you've committed to.
Did you guys ever have that feeling?
Were you ever... Do you ever have any fear of,
like, oh, we've made this huge commitment to this thing?
Or did you feel it was working as you were going along
and by the time it came out, you felt like,
okay, we know what this is?
I believed in this one from the get-go.
I was just like, this is gonna work.
I know this is gonna work.
I'm just... I feel like we're all vibing on the same wavelength
and I felt like it was gonna rock.
I hope so. Yeah.
I think as I was so front and center,
I was pretty self-conscious about it.
Sure.
And it did.
Well, I'm not in a shot where if I say my line wrong,
it goes to hell and it's all on me.
Yeah, and it's been a long time since I had written
and directed and starred in a thing.
And I think the like
Pressure of that is something I have not subjected myself to in a very
I haven't done it for a while for the same reason. Yeah, and the last time I did it
I almost started a war with North Korea
I totally get that. I totally get that.
I totally get that.
You guys are awesome.
Thank you so much.
Thank you.
Thank you.
You guys are so fun.
Congrats on the show.
We'll do a mashup podcast next year.
Mashup episode.
Absolutely.
Thank you.
Thank you guys.
Our conversation with Seth and Evan might be over, but we've still got some more of this
episode for you. Next up, we're joined by Severance prop master, Cat Miller.
This episode is brought to you by The Farmer's Dog.
So, employees on the separate floor of Lumen Industry know their work is mysterious and important. The Farmers Dog, on the other hand,
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Hi. Hey, Kat. Hi. How are you? Great. How are you?
I'm good. I'm so excited to see you guys.
Oh, it's so good to see you.
Thank you for doing this.
No, it's so cool.
First of all, I just wanted to say I had such a great time working with you.
Do you do you remember the first time we met?
I do remember the first time we met. It was in December of 2019. It was on my birthday
actually. It was my birthday. Yeah.
Really? I think it was this like little weird production office in like Midtown Manhattan
or something.
It was and like an editing suite in there or something and it was ushered in.
Yeah, we hadn't like really set up our offices or anything and it was just like a temporary space.
And you know when you're hiring a prop person, it's such an important aspect of filmmaking.
Maybe just like can you tell people a little bit about like what your are on a movie or a TV show generally?
Yeah, absolutely. So a prop is considered anything that the actor touches. So that's
a really broad range. It can be the glasses that they wear, a cell phone that they use,
the food that they eat, the cars that they drive, the guns that they use, any kind of paperwork they have, any kind of bags,
and any other kind of then larger, very scripted objects or things that come up that they have
to interact with.
Generally, anything that's not a piece of furniture would fall under the props realm.
Yeah, which is a huge responsibility because if there's an actor who has a diary or something,
you have to create that diary and put the writing in there
and all of those things.
Or a newspaper article.
Yeah.
And everything with being able to freeze frame
and screen grab and especially on Severance,
everything is so examined that you can't just get away
with just having some random text on there,
just some random words in a diary.
It has to be specific to the story.
It wasn't always like that.
I think that honestly, it's really in the last few years.
I mean, someone would be reading a newspaper.
I don't remember props in movies 10 years ago
where people were worrying about
what was actually
in the real newspaper, maybe the headline
or something like that.
Well, correct me if I'm wrong, but before HD,
there was no capability to read whatever article,
even if it was a quick shot of it,
you couldn't really see it.
Yeah. Yeah.
When I started out, you had to actually describe
to the person what it was, because there were no cameras.
Right. That's how long I had been in the show.
It was all vocal.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I remember talking to you, and there was a cameras. That's how long. It was all vocal. Yeah.
And I remember talking to you, and there
was a project you had worked on where you told me
that you had, like I was saying, a character that had a desk
or something, and the desk was completely functional
in terms of if you opened any drawer,
it would be filled with real stuff
that the actor could use, right?
Yes.
Yeah, that was it.
I had just done a Derek C. in France project,
and he believed, and he said,
prop the life outside of the frame
and do that for the actors
so that the actor could not have to act so much
and pretend and be able to really use
and interact with the environment.
And that was a huge kind of light bulb for me,
like, oh, the objects that the actors are holding
or seeing or even potentially being able to create
in an environment for them could be a helpful tool
in telling the story.
And that really helped like open up a door for me
to realize that it's not just about handing, you know,
the backpack or the briefcase to the actor.
It's actually really, how the briefcase to the actor is actually really
how can I contribute to the story? How can I help tell the story that the director wants to tell
and is telling? And how can I help the actors with their ability to tell that story as best as I can?
So, and you know, you did help so much because, you know, so much of the story obviously is lumen and then the culture of lumen,
which is directly reflected in the props that you created.
But then you guys really did fill our drawers with stuff
at the cubicles, and so much of our time there
is spent just sitting around and fiddling with stuff.
And those drawers we could pull out like Post-its
that had the lumen on them or the finger traps all that stuff you guys made and we'd throw
stuff at each other and it all ended up you know in the show but it also made us
just feel like we had our own little culture in our cubicle space which is so
important. I think I think it's really important that there's nothing random
especially in a show like this. Like, everything that we do in all departments
is just so considered and so specific.
Because any, like, a random thing that isn't,
that doesn't have a reason, like, endowed in the story,
then it's just, it doesn't make sense,
and it's gonna pull the audience out.
Our audience is too smart for that, you know?
But then this, you know, development of this thing,
I had never done this either in terms of developing a world
and we moved to these stages in the Bronx
and Jeremy Hindle, our production designer,
was there and starting to create, you know,
ideas for the look of Lumen and all that stuff.
But you really, I just remember you,
your department there starting to do the R&D on the computers and
how deep you went with that.
And could you just talk a little bit about your process of how you started that?
Yeah, the computers, when things started to have a retro feel within the severed floor,
like Lumen was curating and designing an office space, an environment for the innies
that was slightly retro back when design was a point of pride in offices. That started to inform
us about the tech. The tech was a really big question. Is it going to be super sleek and high
tech? And we started to think maybe it could be analog, maybe it can be along the lines of
this kind of retro feel. So we started to think about,
okay, the computers, which the characters are interfacing with for so many hours in their lives.
What are the computers? And so I went up to the Rhode Island Computer Museum and got Dan up there
to open up this back warehouse. So we opened up this warehouse, it was huge,
it was Costco size warehouse.
It was like going into the Raiders of the Lost Ark
and the last scene with all of the things,
just this history just created up.
And there was just shelves and shelves and shelves
and shelves of old computers.
Can I ask you, how did you know
that there was a Rhode Island computer museum?
Like where do you find that information?
We just kind of knew it.
It's sometimes, you know, one of the vendors
will rent something from them or something,
but we, you know, little inside prop, prop business.
Incredible, okay, keep going, sorry, yeah.
And I was just allowed to be in there,
in that space for a whole day
and just kind of roaming through the shelves
and just trying to find really interesting shapes
of old computers that would make sense to start,
a starting point, a jumping off point
of what our MDR computers would be.
And so I pulled down as many as I could fit in the minivan.
I think it was like 13 of them.
And I was like, okay, I can't do anymore.
And I drove back and then we cleaned them
for a very long time because they had decades
of grime and cigarette stuff on it.
So we tried to clean them all up,
make them look presentable.
And it was really, I don't know if you remember,
it was our kind of like first big show and tell.
I totally remember it.
I remember them all laid out there
and also all looking at them.
Yeah, it was really fun.
Yeah, but everybody came.
Everyone in the office were coming around.
All this nostalgia of, oh, that's the Atari I used to have
or the Commodore my parents used to have.
And it was a big first moment.
I was a little nervous about like, oh.
But then you went through all of them and looked at them all.
And a lot of them are really tall and boxy.
A lot of them are really rigid or have a height to them.
And then I felt like you were drawn to the data general
Dasher, which we had a little bit lower profile,
and could also articulate.
It was on a yoke, so it could articulate up and down and pivot left to right.
And it just seemed like you could already see how that could be directed and used.
And we were drawn to that and we said, OK, this will be our reference point.
And so we 3D scanned it, we 3D modeled it, we 3D printed it.
And we had to get actual CRT tubes and screens to put in it because
we didn't want to just do an iPad behind something that looked old.
We wanted to actually do what the real texture, you cannot fake that real texture of what
a CRT and old school tube screen looks like.
So we found matching ones.
We found nine matching Commodore nine inch CRT TVs.
We ripped them apart.
We tried to put the tubes within the housing.
We had to make some adjustments
because all the old computers just used to be monochrome
and just one color,
but we wanted to have multicolors on our tubes.
So the color tubes were longer than what our housing was.
And that one color was that green.
That's right. Or orange. Or white. Or white, that's that one color was that green. That's right.
Or white.
Or white, that's right.
There was also white, I had a RadioShack TRS-80,
I think, that was my first computer
and it was like, I think it was white.
Yeah, but the green was also, that's like such an iconic.
So are all the tubes used on our computers,
are those all vintage?
Those are old tubes?
Those are old tubes from the late 70s, early 80s.
Because they don't make them anymore.
They don't make them anymore.
And so there's very few left.
We gathered as many as we could find at that time
because we knew what if one breaks.
We weren't even sure it was going to work
because we had to rearrange where all the transistors were
and all the power sources were and that kind of
made the the tube so you know we had to do a lot of R&D that it would make the the images go wavy
but we kind of finally got it right and was able to figure out a way to then splice the
input and the power cables and dig out a channel within the yoke so that we could run all the cables
through the yoke of the computer and down through the desks
that it could peer wireless, which was a cool little thing.
It's a lot of cable.
It's a lot of cable.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And then to make them functional was a whole other level
to it also in terms of the actual programming, right?
Yeah, so they're fully interactive,
they're fully on and they're fully functioning
in real time and nothing gets laid in
in post or anything like that.
You had said early, I think in that first interview, Ben,
that you wanted the actors to be able to actually interact
with the computer in real time. Because not only in the story were they supposed to be
in front of those computers for a long time, but, you know, Adam, you guys are actually
sitting at those desks for so long while we shot for hours at a time that not having that
actual functionality and that's something to interact with just seemed like a lot.
Yeah, the development of that was, I think,
such an important aspect of the show,
even to the point of having them be functional
so that you guys on set could actually know
what you're doing and like be able,
like so much easier as an actor actually doing something real
than pretending, you know?
And I guess in between setups to you guys
would start to do a lot of refining.
Yeah, I mean, just to pass the time,
I would refine and you could also adjust the size
of the numbers and kind of learn how to refine
enormous groups of numbers all at once or single number.
There's all different ways of doing it.
And Zach and I were always debating
which was the most efficient.
No, incredible to just have that ability.
I think it made so many things easier on set.
And there's so many more things to talk about with you,
but we have some hotline questions from our listeners
that we're gonna play for you
and get some answers, all right?
Yes.
Hi, my name is Madeline and these are my roommates, Tyler and Kendall.
And our question is, what is the stuff that Mark has to drink in real life?
Like, what was Adam Scott drinking in that weird little yellow thingy?
Looks like washroom or sour trout.
Those are our guesses. so let us know.
Okay, praise Keir, bye.
Oh, the stuff in season two.
In season two.
Correct me if I'm wrong, Kat,
but was there coconut in there?
There was, there was.
It was the reintegration elixir.
And we auditioned so many, so many different things.
We had this whole debate in our prop department before we even showed anything. And we auditioned so many, so many different things.
You know, we had this whole debate in our prop department before we even showed anything, like,
do we really make it taste disgusting?
Do we want Adam to really drink something disgusting?
And they were like, no,
we want him to drink something that tastes okay.
There was, it was a pina colada flavored protein shake
with applesauce to thicken it up.
And then we floated and suspended the coconut chunks
inside of it.
Yeah, it was not disgusting at all actually.
It was quite pleasant and lots of fiber
because of all the coconut.
Yeah, it wasn't gross at all.
It was a pleasure.
My question for Madeline would be,
what is colostrum?
Or maybe that's Kendall.
What is colostrum?
I think that was Kendall.
Just kidding, I don't know.
And it does have a sauerkraut-y kind of color to it.
I'm so glad it wasn't sauerkraut.
That would have been a bummer.
Oh, and now I just remembered what colostrum is.
It's the first form of milk produced
by the mammary glands of humans and other mammals
immediately following delivery of the newborn.
Colostrum is like a-
And then the back of my head.
You can get little packets of it
and eat it throughout the day for health reasons.
Maybe Tyler Kendall is a doctor.
All right, let's go to another question.
Hi, Ben and Adam. This is Taya calling in from California, and I need to know when you
guys are making the Irving mugs for real because I need one for my mug collection. So give
me a call and praise Keir.
Yes.
It's a good idea.
It's not. It's a great idea. It's a great idea.
I've had so much fun making mugs on this show.
I don't, it's just the branding of the Lumen mugs
and making the trigger mugs,
they're the ones that have the handle
with the kind of indents,
so you put two fingers through it.
Yes.
I just love making the mugs on this job.
It shows.
Yeah.
It's such a great prop because it's so usable in life.
I must have like, I don't know,
I must have like six different Lumen mugs at home
that are a combination of maybe stolen from the set
or from some promotion or whatever.
I have a big green one.
Did you ever make the green ones?
I did make the green ones, yeah.
Yeah, and yeah, one of my favorite moments
in I guess it's, is it episode, is it five?
The funeral and you know,
Milchik's in the back supply closet with the other mugs,
the other faces.
You know, that was something that I think,
you know, it was a great development of the Irving mug
from the funeral and the idea that, oh,
there are other mugs with the faces of other people
at MDR that someday might be used.
Yeah, they're ready.
They're just ready.
They got them ready.
It's a really clever moment.
Ominous face mugs.
How about the Irving watermelon head, Kat?
Oh, we actually have a hotline question about that.
So let's play that.
Hi, my name is Joan Musa.
I'm from Seattle, Washington.
I have got to know who carved Irving's Watermelon Head.
It was one of the most beautiful pieces of art I've ever seen.
And the touch, the nose,
the Rhine nose was such a special touch.
I just wanna make sure that whoever did that is honored.
Thank you.
Oh my God.
That's like, I've seen people online really obsess
over this watermelon head. Yeah.
You know, our fans are amazing
and the super fans are so detail oriented
and they have created,
tried to create almost all the props and they do it with such high fidelity.
They have tried to recreate the Irving watermelon head and it's just amazing.
The results are amazing.
We tried to do it.
So Pankov, Pankov who is our Platonov, who is our master sculptor on the show and does
so much great work, tried for many weeks to, for a
couple of weeks to carve out a real watermelon Irving space.
Oh, yeah.
And it was just so mushy and it just couldn't hold the detail.
The water content of the watermelon was just so, too, way too high.
And so, you know, I was like, okay, okay, you got to keep trying.
And he's like, I'm going to make it, I'm going to try out a foam.
And I said, no, it has to be real watermelon.
Everyone will know.
And so he's like, give me a day.
And he got some foam, I came back the next day
and I was like, oh, you made it out a real watermelon.
Amazing.
And he was like, no, that's the foam.
And I was like, he's just a genius.
And I feel like when he had that little cap,
he made the rind out of the cap
with the little vine coming out and his hair.
So good.
No, it's brilliant.
It's like a little pope cap or something.
I don't know, there's something very ecclesiastical about it.
But yeah, let's listen to one more question.
Hi, Jackie, I'm an Audi from Down Under.
I am absolutely loving this series, especially
the art and design. And I was just hoping you could give some insight into the design
of the show's sort of two worlds. I feel like the Audi world is quite modern and, you know,
has some really modern parts of it, like the severance presentation while the in the world has a real distinct
Like retro futuristic style and I just wanted to know how do you approach?
Designing each of these worlds and do you have a favorite prop or piece of set dressing?
Mine personally is the goat eye chart on the table. It's amazing
I felt like the art department had a lot of fun.
Anyway, praise Kier.
Great show.
Thanks, guys.
Aw, thank you.
That's so nice.
What's your favorite prop, Kat?
I gotta say the break room table, making the break room table in season one and then pushing
it against the wall and having it evolve in season two in the break room.
That was a real fun adventure.
Yeah, that was really challenging.
That was challenging because it was something that didn't
really exist in reality in terms of the idea of this sort
of brainwashing room and to figure out how to get
and still have the elements of the retro,
the sort of like table projectors.
What's that called?
It's an overhead projector.
Yeah, like old school, super old school. Yeah. Yeah. Which I loved. And those elements. And I remember
you creating that and looking at all those specifics. And I remember as a director being
so excited. It's like, oh, there's like a knob I can do a close up on. I can do an insert
here. So many fun inserts. Which was amazing. And then also to figure out even like the
throw on that, the projector so that it could be in focus
for her to look at the words, for Heli to read the words.
Then seeing how we could shoot through that,
it was all created the ambiance of that scene.
The feeling of that scene was because of that table
and how you designed it.
And then repurposing it for the second season break room
was insane.
And I have to say, it was one thing that I felt like,
unfortunately, I couldn't figure out
how to do in the second season was to use that table.
I had originally blocked a version of the scene
in episode 201, where you guys go in the break room,
the new break room for the first time.
And originally, the scene where you guys are all
talking after Milchik leaves with Ms. Wang
was a scene where you guys stood up and started talking
and one of the blocking moves was that Dylan went over
by the table, I think.
I thought he did.
Yeah, he did.
And then that was a scene actually that I went back
and looked at and felt like it wasn't quite working
and we reshot the scene with you guys
just sitting around in a circle.
But the sort of collateral damage of that
was that we didn't get to see that really ridiculously
funny idea of that table which became like a game table
where you had two paddles that were in the shapes of hands.
Yeah, so we used the, we wanted to use the same
break room table that Helly, you know,
Helly's hands were in.
Right. Exactly.
The hand forms that she used where it picks up her, you know, all her like vitals were used now as paddle.
Yeah, we made hand shaped ping pong paddles and we had a whole game that we created, which was with a ping pong ball,
and you would try and hit the glass
that was now against the wall,
and the projector would have a little,
like the old pong,
where it was just a floating little target,
and you would have to try and hit it.
And if you hit it, it would explode in a firework of color,
and then you'd try again.
I will say it was really challenging
because the hand ping pong paddle was really hard to use.
But then you were really good at it.
You got that up and you were really good at it.
I found it impossible.
I actually, I have a picture of Zach Cherry playing it.
Like one of the Bendo pictures that I can,
I have never posted that because I thought people
wouldn't necessarily know what that is,
but now I could post that of him playing
and like having fun with it.
But yeah, that was such an inventive, you know,
and great sort of, you know, thematically saying like,
hey, we took this thing that used to be a torture device
and turned it into a fun game, which was very looming.
Well, Kat, this is so great.
Thanks for joining us.
Yeah, thanks, Kat.
The show is just such an honor to work on and just the most
creative and collaborative.
And you guys are just such artists.
And it's just such a great, it's just such an awesome thing.
Well, you are an artist.
And honestly, the more, whenever we talk about doing the show
and talk about this collaboration,
we literally couldn't do the show without you know, whenever we talk about doing the show and talk about this collaboration, we can't literally can do the show without.
No, there's no way.
So the reality is this the the show is a collaboration of all these
different artists and creative people, you know, making stuff.
And I just feel like, you know, from the beginning,
it's great to meet somebody when you meet someone for the first time
and you don't know where that working relationship is going to go.
That I feel really grateful
for our creative working relationship.
Yes, me too, ditto.
Kat, you're just incredible.
It's such an honor to work with you
and thank you for being here.
Thank you so much, guys.
And that's it for the episode.
The Severance podcast with Ben and Adam
will be back again next week.
Yeah, this was really fun.
Remember, you can stream every episode of Severance on Apple TV+.
You can't stream it anywhere else.
Just on Apple TV+.
That's the place.
What if we started saying, there are multiple places you can stream the show
and started directing them to Netflix?
Yeah, or stream it wherever you get your streaming shows.
Yeah.
Like they say with podcasts, right?
That's right.
Stream it wherever you like your streaming shows. Yeah. Like they say with podcasts, right? That's right.
Stream it wherever you like watching shows.
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 Podcasts, 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 Leve, Melissa Wester,
Kate Rose, Kurt Courtney, and Hilary Shuff. And the team at Red Hour, John Lesher, Carolina Pesikov,
Jean Pablo Antonetti, Martin Valderruten, Ashwin Ramesh,
Maria Noto, John Baker, and Sam Lyon.
And at Great Scott, Kevin Cotter, Josh Martin,
and Christie Smith at RISE Management.
I'm Ben Stiller.
And I'm Adam Scott.
Thank you for listening.