WTF with Marc Maron Podcast - Episode 1102 - Peter Berg
Episode Date: March 2, 2020Filmmaker Peter Berg and Marc never would have predicted their respective futures when they were living together in a shared apartment back when both of them were just starting out in Hollywood. Now, ...after they embarked on wildly different careers, their paths converged again, with Pete directing Marc in the new movie Spenser Confidential. Pete explains that once he started acting, he got the idea to write his own movie from James Mangold, learned the ins and outs of directing from working on Chicago Hope, and came to form a partnership with Mark Wahlberg that has lasted for five consecutive films. This episode is sponsored by Dave's Killer Bread, Greed from Sony Pictures Classics, and Stamps.com. Sign up here for WTF+ to get the full show archives and weekly bonus material! https://plus.acast.com/s/wtf-with-marc-maron-podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Lock the gates!
Alright, let's do this.
How are you, what the fuckers?
What the fuck buddies?
What the fuck sticks?
What's happening?
I'm fucking sick, man.
And I'll tell you, it's not a great time to be sick.
Or maybe it is.
I don't know.
I don't think it's a thing.
I'll let you know.
But I got, I don't know what other people have.
Anyways, look.
Fucking hate it, man. i'm sweating right now my fever is
breaking right now on the mic right in front of you i'm sweating i think the last time i was sick
you guys would know i talked to you about it i think it was in ireland right had this exact same
thing kinda like basically what's happening right now is I felt sick the other day.
And then that night I got really like my throat was kind of shitty.
My sinuses got fucked up.
I felt tired.
I went to sleep. It felt like a devil had shit in my mouth down my throat, burning hot poop.
And I woke up and my mouth was all sticky and gross with the fucking virus phlegm.
And it's the worst, man.
And I just kept trying to clean my mouth with that shit.
But it was a little throaty, a little heady,
and then the next day I was just fucked.
It basically feels like my face is about to blow off in my head,
like my head's about to explode and I'm tired.
So the other day, the next
day, I just drank a shit ton of fluids, like at least two gallons of water with electrolytes in it
and I took some Tylenol, took some Musinex at night, took some Sudafed during the day,
got a little jacked. I think, if I'm not mistaken, the Sudafed makes it hard to pee if you're a dude.
Is that correct?
It feels a little like, you know, some of you older guys will know.
Do you remember back when you did blow?
And if you had to pee, sometimes you'd just like stand there waiting to pee.
So long you'd have to sit down to wait to pee.
And you didn't know what it was, but it had something to do with blow.
Am I making that up?
But that's not a great part of it a little
jangly though that's nice a little freebie but yeah so i got this fucking thing temperature's
been riding like 99 to 101.5 last couple of days hasn't gone to my chest yet but i drank that first
second night i had it i drank like two gallons of water and that night probably more with the
electrolytes in it. And that second night took Mucinex instead of NyQuil, which I can recommend.
I sweat it out. I was swimming. The entire bed was soaked and I felt so productive. I thought,
this is great. Look at my body working, just trying to get that shit out of me.
And I felt better that morning, yesterday morning.
But now, like, not so great.
I'm not great right now.
I'm a little better.
I hope it doesn't go to my chest.
I don't think it's the coronavirus.
I don't know.
Apparently, about 70% of us are going to get one strain of it or another.
But the degree of which we get it is, who knows?
I guess I could go get tested.
Can I wait, though?
I'm self-quarantining right now.
I'm self-quarantining.
Yesterday, I didn't go out.
Today, I'm not going out.
I canceled my spot at the comedy store.
And tomorrow, I'll fucking lay low, see what happens.
Oh, by the way, Pete Berg, the director, is on the show today.
Yeah, he's a big director.
Big director, producer, did the directed very bad things,
The Rundown, Friday Night Lights, The Kingdom, Hancock, Battleship,
Lone Survivor, Deepwater Horizon, Patriot's Day, Mile 22 mile 22 spencer confidential is what he came
in for that's the one i'm in with mark walberg and eliza schlesinger schlesinger eliza sessions
was in it and um i couldn't even go to the premiere because i didn't feel well i didn't
want to push it because i care about other people and i want to see look if i'm fucking you know just a viral goddamn sprinkler dispenser
i'll stay at home i'll wait it out i can right now it's a fucking travel man it's the fucking
travel but berg berg and i lived together way back in the day briefly. I've told this story before. I lived with my buddy Steve Brill.
We were close then.
And we're okay now.
We don't hang out.
He's been on the show.
He's directed a lot of movies.
Adam Sandler stuff.
Adam Sandler's a lot of special.
Good guy.
I think we should hang out.
But so Berg kind of moved in to Steve's house
and Steve and Berg were friends.
They pushed me out onto the sofa, which is bad.
And it was a bit of a bullying situation.
I was a fragile, sensitive, lost guy who moved to L.A. to pursue his dreams.
And these guys seemed to have an angle on what they were doing.
And it was a difficult situation.
So eventually I moved on to the comedy store
and got fucked up on drugs.
I'm not blaming them,
but that's where I graduated to.
And the rest is history.
But Brill showed up on the set of Spencer Confidential.
We were all going to do a scene together,
like old times.
Didn't make the cut though.
Wahlberg was a nice guy.
So I did like two scenes or three scenes in that thing and uh i think i did okay i think i showed up for myself
also got my mri results back so i'm sitting here i'm sweating with this fucking whatever it is this
hybrid of a flu and a cold i'm literally sweating right now now. But let's relax, folks. Let's relax.
We're not all going to die yet. Well, we are all going to die, but not today.
So I did go to a real doctor and I got my MRI done. The doctor said, look, man,
I'm not going to refer you to a surgeon, nor do I think you need spinal injections.
Let's try physical
therapy the guy said it wasn't that bad sounds bad protrusions sounds bad to me and you know
what's fucked up about it is that i it's a vanity injury a fucking vanity injury what do i need to
fucking squat the big weights for i'm 56 fucking years old i don't
give a fuck what am i trying to prove i'm not competing i got nothing to prove but i was
squatting the big weights and i stupidly set it on my one of my vertebras and it popped the fucking
three down man fucking vanity injury that i'm going to be stuck with my entire fucking life. I guess
what I'm saying to you folks, you old guys, take it easy. What do you got to prove, man? I'm 56.
I got love in my life. My health is pretty good if I don't die from whatever I have right now.
And I can stay in shape by hiking up the mountain, maybe doing some yoga and light workouts. What am
I fucking squatting?
You're better off having good core strength.
And balance and that kind of shit.
And walking and stuff.
Dumb vanity injury.
I'm very mad at myself.
Because now I'm going to have this thing for the rest of my life.
Which, you know, depending what happens.
We'll see.
We'll see.
Might not be that big a deal.
Who knows how long we're all going to be here.
Oh, the David Bowie movie Stardust that i made a while back i can give you an update on i actually got a link to a screener of it and it came out pretty good and i'm fucking amazed given the
run and gun way we shot that thing gabriel range you you know, the way he shot it, how quick we were
going, like the time we had. This guy
Nick Noland, this dude, he must be
80 plus,
the DP, British guy,
running around with that fucking genius.
I can't even believe they got a movie
out of this thing, let alone a good one.
But, so we'll see what happens
with that thing. Just a,
I was very surprised.
So that's for real.
Oh, I'm sweating fucking my balls off right now.
Now, got a couple of these texting stories,
you know, the I'm shitty.
I'm a shitty person.
If you guys were listening,
you know, I told the story about accidentally
texting a text to saying that this guy and his wife were shitty to the guy.
Yeah, that happened.
So then I solicited, I asked for some stories and I got some stories and I've mixed it up here.
There's some good ones, some ones that are kind of human and nice.
My whoops, that was meant for someone else story.
Hey, Mark, I love your story about sending a text to the wrong person. Here's my story. A while back,
one of my coworkers was driving me a little insane. He used to try way too hard and really
wanted to be one of the cool kids in the office. Instead, he came off as a needy attention whore
and I wasn't having it. So this one day I was talking to one of my friends when he decided
to butt into the conversation. So like any rational adult, I got mad and stormed off.
When I got back to my desk,
I emailed my friend to complain about this dude
and how he drives me bananas when he interrupts
and how I hate that he tries to force his way into our clique.
Well, you guessed it.
I sent that email to him with the subject line,
big red because he's over six foot tall and has red hair.
Definitely not my finest moment.
We emailed back and forth about it a bit
and I apologized and he seemed to be cool with it. It was then that I learned an important lesson
about shit-talking people. Never put it in writing. Now, six years later, we're both managers,
and I share an office with the dude. We sit 10 feet apart, 40 hours a week, and I can honestly
say he's a good guy, and I enjoy having him around. I think we both just had some growing up to do.
Anyway, I hope things work out with your buddy.
Dude, you were probably projecting, man.
I bet you guys are good for really get along.
Usually when you have that type of fucking feeling, it's because he, you know, he reminds you of you, right?
Email sent to unintended recipient.
Hi, Mark with a K.
You, right?
Email sent to unintended recipient.
Hi, Mark with a K.
My wife and I own a small business, and about three years ago, one of our suppliers via an email to me raised prices to an unconscionable level. Filled with rage, I forwarded the email to my wife accompanied by the sensible recommendation that we never do business again with the cock-sucking supplier,
who I suggested should be driven across the land like the vermin that they
are. As you can guess, my comments were sent as a reply to the supplier by mistake. Long story short,
the shocked vermin in question replied to me immediately, apologized profusely, and lowered
the prices we were charged to levels that were effective two to three years earlier. We still do
business with them today. Never underestimate the weird righteous way the universe works,
We still do business with them today.
Never underestimate the weird righteous way the universe works.
And my guess is that your relationship with your friend will end up stronger in the end.
Best of luck.
Oddly, the weird thing is like, I don't know those people that well.
We're sort of in the same circles.
Maybe I should try to reach out.
I'll try.
You're right.
You're right.
These ones are pretty.
Yeah.
This one makes your fucking heart drop a little. Texting the wrong person.
Hi, Mark.
11 years ago, I slept with a friend in a moment of weakness and my wife found out about it.
She was livid, of course, and I was left in an absolute panic that she would end our marriage.
Despite my actions, I was crazy about her and didn't want her to leave.
After a few bleak months, she agreed to try and reconcile.
I was willing to do absolutely anything
And our therapist recommended that we renew our wedding vows
Not in any kind of public way like a whole second wedding
But in some sort of personal way that would be meaningful
She said it would help to rebuild the trust that I had betrayed
I was absolutely on board
So my wife agreed to go away with me for a weekend on the coast
Stay at our favorite B&B and do some kind of personal ceremony Just between the two of us. I spent days planning out what I was going to say, editing and
rewriting obsessively. She was going to do her part as well, but I was the one that had fucked
everything up. So I was definitely headlining the show. We performed our little renewal, went fine,
and we had a nice weekend. I was left hopeful that it was a good start to getting back on track.
On the drive home, I stopped to use a restroom and saw that a close friend of mine had texted to ask, how did it go?
I texted to my wife who was waiting for me back in the car, no doubt contemplating her renewed but tenuous affection for me.
To be honest, the whole weekend felt contrived.
Dude.
The whole weekend felt contrived.
Dude.
We navigated through three more years together before she was officially done with my shit.
We're still friends.
She's moved on to great success in life and love.
And I now triple check my texts before I send them. I love the show.
Mike.
To be honest, the whole weekend felt contrived.
Mike. Dude. to be honest the whole weekend felt contrived mike dude wow all right well everyone seems to be okay last one recipient of mistaken text i work with a
married couple i've worked with the wife for 15 years the husband started working with us
about seven years ago and that's when they met.
Anyway, I'm reasonably close with the wife and always have been,
and the husband is 100% comfortable with our close platonic relationship.
A while back, she had left work for the day, but her husband and I were still there.
Our shifts ending soon.
I sent her a text about something.
I don't even remember what I was asking her, and I was awaiting a response. About 30 minutes later, I received a response. It was a pic of her with a run-of-the-mill sex toy
inserted into her vagina. I like the description. Run-of-the-mill. I'd like a little more detail.
I immediately knew that it was not meant for me. I'm cool and easygoing
and could see myself sending something like this to the wrong person. Really? You could see
sending someone a picture of you with a run-of-the-mill sex toy in you? Okay. I immediately
text her back and said not to worry that I had already deleted it and her secret was safe with
me. She felt really stupid, as we discussed later.
She was relieved it went to me and not someone else.
And I was the ideal accidental recipient.
Up to this point, I still haven't said anything to anyone,
and I don't really think this counts.
What a great secret to have.
And, you know, it was an accident, and it was so intimate and weird.
And you guys have to keep that weird little secret forever.
Forever.
Seriously, come on.
Mono e mono here.
Did you delete it?
Did you really delete it?
I believe you, pal.
I believe you.
So, Pete Berg is the director of Spencer Confidential.
He's directed a lot of great stuff.
He's a big personality.
He's a good director.
I actually think he definitely has a style and a point of view that's for real.
If you watch Friday Night Lights and Hancock, he's got a great way of shooting action.
And we go back and this is one of those a kind of closure uh talk because he's such a big fucking you know alpha male guy
and you know he they really the two of them him and Brill really fucking made me feel shitty
I don't know if I totally got closure here, but it's good to see Pete.
He's sort of a charming monster, and he's still got a big personality,
but he's on his best behavior, and he gave me a nice interview.
And I think I got a little bit of closure.
I think I got a little bit of closure with big bad Pete Berg.
So this is me talking to Pete Berg.
The movie is Spencer Confidential.
It premieres on Netflix this Friday, March 6th.
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I just got a shingle vaccine.
How does that feel?
It hurts. It hurts more than usual. Did you ever get them? No.. How does that feel? It hurts.
It hurts more than usual.
Did you ever get them?
No.
You get the flu vaccine?
I did.
You did get that?
Yeah.
Yeah, I didn't get shingles.
Did you?
I don't know.
I don't have it.
Did you have chicken pox at one time?
I don't remember.
I don't know.
People get shingles.
I get to the doctor.
They said, give me the...
They're like, you want the vaccine?
I'm like, all right.
Shingles sounds terrible to me.
Who's gotten shingles? People get shingles.
It's out there, Pete.
Okay, I believe you.
I have no proof.
I'm telling you, why would they all of a sudden have
a vaccine? Do you think that they'd get anything out of that?
Yes, money. How much money?
How much? Probably $50.
I don't know. It didn't cost me anything. It's on the coverage.
I went over to the Bob Hope Health Center.
Exactly.
You know the Bob Hope Health Center?
Bob Hope?
Come on.
That's the-
I'm on Brea, SAG, AFT.
Yeah, I've been out there.
But you're a DGA guy now.
So what, they got a special hospital for your health care?
No, we just go to the doctor.
Oh.
I just don't-
Don't you have a doctor?
I have a doctor at the Bob Hope Health Center. I see. I see. Does the- I mean, can you have a doctor i have a doctor at the bob hope health center i see
does that i mean can you choose your doctor yeah yeah usually i would think you would be a pain in
the ass for a doctor you'd be a comp not anymore not anymore i'm good really i don't go much unless
i'm really hurting i kind of have a back thing right now i gotta go that's why i went what's
wrong with your back i had i did a set a, it was an exercise accident.
You're a boxer, right?
Yeah.
You're a thing.
You do stuff.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But exercise is meant to prevent you from injury.
Well, no, I was, what happened was I was setting the bar down on my shoulders for a squat
and I set it down wrong.
And I, and it's something, I set it on a vertebrae or something. And something popped.
Oh, geez.
What do you do?
I don't squat.
No?
No.
Not anymore?
I mean, occasionally I'll squat because as you get older, if you don't do some squat, your ass drops.
And it's like you can't let your ass drop.
That's like the goal.
Go as long as you can without having your ass drop.
You don't want anything to drop that much, do you?
Well, you don't want your ass to drop and you don't want your bowels to prolapse.
Right.
That's kind of my...
Well, so, right.
So, you got to be careful with the squatting.
Right.
If you don't squat, your ass can drop.
And if you do squat too much, your bowels can prolapse and all kinds of things.
So, you got to...
Is that an injury you've seen before?
Prolapse bowel?
Yeah.
I mean, I think I wrote it.
What does that mean, when your asshole falls out?
Yeah, your asshole falls out of your body.
You can Google it.
There's pictures.
I don't want to.
There's pictures.
I don't want to do that.
I mean, I think just being on sets for so long would sometimes get bored and look up gross medical procedures or medical injuries.
And someone on some film pulled up, started talking about prolapsed bowels.
And they said you can get it from squatting?
Yeah, you can get it from squatting or anything that causes you to exert pressure on your
rectum, I guess.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Sneezing hard.
You can sneeze your asshole out of your body.
I don't know.
I mean, it's a horrible thing.
So I watched the movie that we made together.
Spencer Confidential, it's called now.
Yeah.
We went through a few titles.
Well, is that because there are like dozens of these books and they came out so good,
you think that you got a franchise on your hands?
Well, hopefully.
I mean, I'm really happy with the movie.
I think-
Moves quick.
You're very good at that.
It's a crowd pleaser.
It's a crowd pleaser it's a crowd pleaser
humor, violence, bad guys
getting beat up
a little bit of Marc Maron
fair amount
driving that narrative
you were so fucking funny
that was a lot of work
but it was literally after I got done
with dumping all that story
you were like we didn't think it would work
but you did it you pulled it off But it was literally after I got done with dumping all that story, you're like, we didn't think it would work. Yeah.
But you did it somehow.
Yeah, you did it.
You pulled it off.
You made it.
I mean, the movie was based on the Spencer books.
I never heard of those books, but people love them.
Well, you heard of Spencer for Hire, though, right? Yeah, right.
Remember when we were kids?
It was a TV show.
That's the same guy?
Yeah, same guy.
This guy, Ace Atkins, who wrote, like, he literally wrote 700 books.
700?
Think about that.
Well, give or take, give or take.
Of that one guy?
Of the Spencer character, yeah.
And, I mean, Ace Atkins was just an extremely prolific-
Boston guy.
Boston crime writer.
Yeah.
But I just think about, like, you know, we all think we're busy and accomplished and, you know, prolific.
Right.
This guy wrote 700 books.
How old did he live, Till?
100?
I don't, probably like 30 or something.
Come on.
No, no, he was old.
I think in his 70s.
That's like two or three books a year, knocking them out?
He was just in a flow.
Yeah.
I have read one of the books.
Right.
The one that we made, Wonderland.
Yeah.
But our editor, Mike Sale, has read pretty much all of them.
Is he a Boston guy?
Yes.
Mike Sale is a Boston guy.
But, you know, just loved these books.
Yeah.
And, you know, could talk about them
and would talk about them while we're cutting the picture,
telling me about all these different stories
and these plot lines and the history of Spencer.
Yeah.
So, you know, if the movie plays well
and everybody wants to do another one, we definitely will.
Now, did you do a deal?
Was this always with Netflix?
I don't know if I knew that when I did the movie.
It was always a Netflix movie.
Yes, this was straight up Netflix.
And it's not going to do a theater run at all?
It might do a limited theater, just—
So you can get it into consideration?
Well, no, this I don't think will be in consideration.
It's not—it was certainly not, but you never know.
The one thing I've learned, Mark, is you never know, right?
I like that you acknowledge your limitations.
We know what this is.
I mean, but we do kind of know what it is.
And I think one of the things that attracted me to doing it and Mark to doing it is we've been making some heavy movies.
You and Wahlberg.
Yeah, we make like stories where real people die generally.
What was the first movie you guys did together? We did that was the first one yes that was the one with the navy
seals the navy seals and they all get killed and all but one yeah and he ends up with those uh
arabic people afghans yeah yeah yeah no that's a good movie i saw it and then um you know 19
navy seals were killed in in that film yeah uh And so that was like, I had to go.
And he had Ben Foster in that too.
Yep.
I like Ben Foster.
He's great.
He's directed a movie.
I just talked to him yesterday.
You did?
He's directing one?
He's directing one.
He directed his first movie.
Very talented young man.
And you produced his movie too?
No.
A Hell in High Water?
Oh, yes, yes, yes.
I did.
I did.
With Taylor Sheridan.
I produced it for Taylor Sheridan, yeah.
All right, so okay.
So Lone Survivor is the first Wahlberg movie.
First was Lone Survivor.
Then it was the-
Deepwater.
Deepwater Horizon, which was another true story about the oil rig that blew up in south of Louisiana.
I didn't see that movie.
Oh, it's a good movie.
Yeah?
Yeah, I think so.
Pretty intense.
Yeah.
But that's like, how do you-
Well, we can get to that.
So you and, with that relationship, you guys got along, you knew each other before Lone Survivor.
How do you all of a sudden decide, like, we're a team, we're going to do these movies?
Well, we knew each other, like, loosely use the word friends.
We were like, you know, kind of like Hollywood friends.
Like, we'd say hi to each other and occasionally, like, run into each other.
And, you know,
it was,
it was a friendly,
cordial relationship.
And we talked about working with each other.
Um,
and then finally lone survivor was kind of the,
the film that,
that worked out.
Yeah.
And I think,
um,
you know,
the movie did very well.
It was a success.
Um,
and we just kind of both have a very similar outlook and perspective on the business.
And we have an approach to working.
We don't like to waste time.
We take it seriously, but we don't take it maybe as seriously as some people do.
And that's not to say we don't take it seriously.
We do.
And we want to do good work and we want the films to work.
But we don't like to waste time.
And I think both of us related well to each other,
and we quickly developed a shorthand,
and that went right into Deepwater Horizon,
and that movie did well also.
It was a good film.
You don't like to waste time,
but it must have taken years to pull that movie together.
I mean, we've got to shoot in the water, build a thing,
flaming things.
Yeah, but even, yes,
but there's economical ways of moving through
a film like deep water horizon where it could take eight months you know instead of three months and
you know so much of of the of the hard work with something like deep water is is done for the year
prior leading up forget about the script just tremendous amount of prep like yeah for deep
water horizon we built the biggest set ever built in the history of filmmaking.
Is that true?
Yeah, we built this 120 foot, I mean.
In the history of filmmaking. History of filmmaking, the biggest set ever built.
Congratulations.
Well, it was completely unnecessary and we wasted a fuckload of money.
It made shooting, it's a very long story and there's some people that predated me that deserve a little bit of...
The blame?
Well, I'm not going to use the word blame.
I'll just...
They own the responsibility of starting to build this massive...
So you came into that later?
I came into it later.
Yeah.
And the ship had sailed on this giant set, but they were going to make it even bigger.
It was in the water?
No, it was in the parking lot of an out-of-business Six Flags amusement park outside of Louisiana
in a swampy, giant parking lot with alligators and wild pigs and water moccasins.
That's where they built the thing, the drilling thing?
Well, they built this massive rig.
Yeah, the rig.
One of the thinking, the thought behind building 100 feet up in the air was that when you get up that high,
you can shoot a shot of an actor's face and you won't see the ground. You can feel like you're out in the air was that when you get up that high, you can shoot a shot of an actress'
face and you won't see the ground.
You can feel like you're out in the water.
But the truth is, you do see the ground and you can put someone on the ground and just
maybe get two inches below their face and shoot up.
So there were so many flaws and I came in and actually stripped the set down, but it still turned into,
I mean, Google pictures of it, still was the biggest set ever built.
It was still sitting there?
No, they ripped it all apart like a week after we built it. But we had like 500 welders from
all over Louisiana and the states around Louisiana. There was a working helicopter pad on it.
One of the mistakes of logic, I won't say blame, but the flawed thinking was that no one realized
that if you're going to build something this big, A, if you want to land a helicopter on it,
the Department of Engineering, they license it. We were talking about your garage. You just had
some inspection issues. Well, they come and and inspect that and you're subject to the same standard as if you were building a real
building that was going so every weld had to be signed off by two engineers it had to be yeah
inspector it had to be built to last and you know normally build a hollywood set you you can throw
it away yeah cheap out you had to land real helicopter but we didn't actually have to land
the helicopter we could have cheated it.
And then the other thing I was like, I'm like, okay, so it's 110 odd feet up in the air,
which there's an elevator to get you up there, or it's six stories of stairs, right?
And the elevator I knew didn't work all the time.
So I'm just thinking, well, okay, so we're going to be up 110 stories in the summer in Louisiana,
so it's going to be 105 degrees.
There's all kinds of issues with the weather.
And we'll be up there, and say Mark Wahlberg wants to go to the bathroom.
Right.
He's going to have to go down six flights of stairs, get in a golf cart, drive to his trailer.
Yeah.
He's going to get in his trailer.
It's going to be high.
He's going to take his shirt off and do it. It's an hour or two. He's going to get on the phone with his wife. Yeah. And it's going to be four hours. Yeah. He's going to get in his trailer. He's going to be high. He's going to like take his shirt off and, you know, do it.
An hour or two.
He's going to get on the phone with his wife.
Yeah.
And it's going to be four hours.
Yeah.
Right?
Between his shot.
Between.
Because he went to the bathroom.
He went to go pee, right?
I'm like, this is crazy.
We can't do this.
So then we had to bring outhouses
up to the top of the thing
and then the outhouses started to, you know,
reek.
So we had to build air conditioning tents
around the outhouses.
It's like the set just kept growing like a tumor.
Yeah, it was.
But the movie broke even?
Yeah, yeah.
The movie broke even.
The movie did really well.
Got, you know, did a very good movie.
I'm very proud of it.
But that's a lot of money that you handle now.
I mean, like, we're going to have to go back because, you know.
Deep back? Pretty deep. Lawler? Yeah. I think we should. Lawler Street. handle now i mean like let's we're gonna have to go back because you know deep back pretty deep
lawler yeah i think we should lawler street yeah because i know you man i mean i knew you when you
i took your first headshot and i don't know if people know that yeah why would they but i i i
lived with steve brawl set this up for the audience i went to college with steve brawl they've heard
of steve i've done a show with him and And when I moved out here, I moved to LA.
I moved in with Steve on Lawler Street in Culver City.
In the apartment that Steve's uncle owned, but Steve charged and kept rent for.
Yeah, I didn't really know that.
Yeah, and he raised my rent one day.
That was it.
Well, the thing is, you kind of pushed me out, I remember.
Did I get the bedroom?
Yes.
Because you were on the couch.
That's even what you think I chose to couch.
No, I don't. I couldn't remember whether you were- I'll That's even what you think I chose the couch. No, I don't.
I couldn't remember whether you were.
I'll tell you exactly what happened.
I know what happened.
I don't.
I was paying rent.
No, I was paying.
So both of us were paying rent to Brill.
No, but Steve, I don't remember that well, but I know that we weren't getting along great.
You guys had your little crew.
I came out.
You didn't really know me.
No, we didn't.
But it was you and Brill and Mendelsohn and Andy, what's his name?
Miller. Andy Miller. Andy Miller, yeah. Aubrey Rappaport was uh harry redlich harry harry redlich that's right so all these people and i'm
just this fucking weird guy that wants to do comedy so i'm living with steve and uh you guys
are living your young hollywood life right right you You're across town. I'd met you, and you're living,
maybe your roommate is dating Ari Gross?
Were you living with a girl?
Yes, yes.
Yeah, wow, you have a good memory.
Because I see Ari at the Whole Foods now.
Yes, I was living with...
An actress.
Yes, an actress named Karen Lee Hopkins.
And yes, and we were, I was asked to leave
because I would always have like 10 guys in the apartment
and Ari Gross would be trying to like hang out
and, you know, be romantic.
And we would be like shotgunning beers and fighting.
He's an actor.
Well, that's right.
And he kind of like, he stood up to you guys.
He got you out.
The chick got you out.
He got her to stand up to us.
I don't know.
I don't recall Ari got up.
I respect him, but I don't think he stood up.
But Karen, she stood up and kicked me out.
But to me, you guys were starting to make it.
I remember Ari was in some movie
and you were
like...
Here's what I remember.
The primary points
about you. I don't know.
I know you had dated an old actress
or something at some point.
Uh-huh.
And then, like, you were also working on a Prince documentary that you wanted to bring together.
Like, I don't know who you were, but you're like, this is, it's going to be, it was called something city.
Purple, erotic city.
Erotic city.
No, it's up, erotic city.
This was your thing, but I didn't know what you were doing.
What that involved was every night, me and Maria Dillon, Bob Dillon's daughter, who we were trying to produce this doc,
going to a restaurant that Prince's manager owned, trying to find Prince's manager, who we never found.
That was as close to getting-
That sounds like a good movie.
Yeah, but it's-
Just that.
Yeah, that was as close to making that movie as we ever came.
But you're like, what are you, 20 years old, 20 years old now?
No, no, 20.
I just out of college, 23, 24 maybe.
Yeah, 23 probably.
So you're trying to do that, I remember.
And then I remember like, you know, you wanted headshots and you saw I had a camera.
We went outside, we took pictures and you used yours for years.
I know, I remember I was wearing a checkered shirt.
I think I sat in a bulldozer.
You put me in a...
But it was just your face.
You couldn't see it.
No, I know, but I just remember you said... We're walking around. What do you call the bucket of a bulldozer you put me in a um but it was just your face you couldn't see no i know but i just remember you said walking around what do you call the bucket of a bulldozer the thing that yeah you
know is that true yeah you had me squat down and it was actually a picture i squatted down and
the light was the shine of the metal was good and you used that picture yeah it was my headshot i
got work off of that i owe you i got all my first jobs on we evened up you put me
in the movie but then like steve and you were buddies and so you get kicked out and then i
got to move out of the room onto the couch and then you do the same thing you bring 10 guys over
i'm asleep on the couch every morning with women coming over and you wake me up i would hit you
yeah you'd wake me up come on we want to listen to music you're listening i remember you listening
to easy yeah i was the first one yeah before anybody i was listening to easy that's right and you also turned me on to uh the richard
and linda thompson i think maybe the maybe i had that record maybe i don't know that sounds like
your stuff yeah but i taught you three chords on the guitar she did a d and e right but you never
let me sleep and then you fuckers i can't i'm just i'm just laying i'm just laying some groundwork
no get it out and i don't know what to do with myself, and I got to get another apartment.
So they set me up down the hall with the woman who lives down the hall who lost her roommate.
Remember?
And I moved down the hall into that girl's apartment, and within a week or two, I drank her booze.
I tried to have sex with her, and they ran an intervention on me.
But I just remember you and Brill coming down there laughing at me like, so this is your new place.
Was this the girl that Brill would pound on the wall and she would come to the room and they would have sex?
No.
That was the other side of the building.
The girl he would knock on the wall and then she would come over.
That was his maiden call.
He was.
And eventually I ended up at the comedy store
but i taught you how to play guitar i took your headshot you talked about the prince movie i lent
you my walkman my rock man so you remember you got a job on a fishing boat yes and you took my
yes that that bought that tom schultz and i could play the guitar on through it yeah i man you've
got a good memory mark do you remember that yes do. I remember working on the fishing boat.
And you brought the guitar. And I brought an electric
guitar. And I gave you that thing. Yes, and I would
sit on the, because it was such a boring job,
we were floating off of, you know,
200 miles off the coast of Long Beach
for five days and had nothing to do.
We were waiting for the nets to fill with fish.
And I would play that guitar. Yeah.
Through that thing. Wow.
Yeah, I still have that thing.
But so that's my memory of it.
But where did you come from before?
But do people know what a great guitar player you are and singer?
Yeah, they do know.
It's common knowledge, right?
Because I remember you.
I don't know if I'm great, but I'd work at it.
I'd play after each podcast.
I'd noodle and noodle.
But you were very talented.
I appreciate it.
Yeah, and I remember when we were,
like I do remember tormenting you a bit,
and I apologize for that.
But we would get up, and you were sleeping on a couch,
and the couch was sort of your bedroom, but it was everybody's room.
It was a tight spot for everybody.
Not great.
It was a tight spot for everybody.
But, I mean, Brill was a bastard, and I've told him this.
But I mean, Brill was- You had a good time.
But Brill was a bastard.
And I've told him this.
I mean, he was getting that apartment for free from his uncle, who's some like plastic surgeon,
kind of weird dude in Bel Air.
Yeah, there's some old stories about that.
Yeah, kind of a creepy dude.
Yeah.
But he gave Brill the apartment for free.
Right, right.
So I was being charged rent.
You know, like I paid $600 or whatever a month rent.
Yeah.
I think this was after you left.
My rent went up.
Yeah.
And then I remember like two months into me living there, he calls me into the kitchen
and he has to have a meeting with me.
He's like, Pete, I hate to hear this.
I got to raise your rent.
I'm like, bro, what do you mean you have to raise?
You're just saying I have to give you personally more money.
We don't have any money.
And all your money is my money.
You're just taking my
money yeah but he had to raise my rent yeah and i um i think i threw a bottle of mount gay rum in
his head you did yeah and then like missed and did but did you guys have a real falling out at
one point at some point because i remember that like see i lost touch because i went to the comedy
store and entered that hole for decades and i I know that then Brill kind of became a Sandler guy,
and then he got mad at me, and then I heard things about you.
But let's go.
Before we do that, I want to know, you grew up in Westchester, though,
because I remember you grew up in the same town as my first girlfriend,
in Chappaqua.
Chappaqua, New York, yeah.
But you didn't know her, I don't think.
What's her name?
Sarah Rubin was her name.
Sarah Rubin?
Yeah.
Sarah Rubin? Yeah. No, you don't know her. I don't think. What's her name? Sarah Rubin was her name. Sarah Rubin? Yeah. Sarah Rubin?
Yeah.
No, you don't know her.
I mean, I could have.
She dated a guy named Andy Gilchrist, who was a guitar player.
But I think they're like, it may be a little, it doesn't matter.
No.
But like, so what was the story there?
You come from regular Jews?
No, I come from, I'm a half Jew, but I come from Jews in denial.
So my father was half Jew.
My father was Jewish. My mother
was Catholic. But they were embarrassed of
their Judaism. So they pretended
we were basically
atheists.
But who celebrated
Christmas because it was sort of a fun
vacation. But there was no
religion.
No, there was nothing. And
kind of an aggressive denial of
of our jewish heritage really why is that um i don't know it was it was the culture that my
family was in they were your dad's family my dad and my mom's family in particular just were not
kind of down with the jewish culture did you have grandparents? Your dad's parents? I did, but they were equally non-religious.
No kidding.
No one practiced religion.
I was not bar mitzvahed.
Yeah.
What'd your dad do?
My dad was an advertising guy like Mad Men.
Oh, really?
For gray advertising.
That's a big one.
That's like a big one.
He was Jeff Peanutbutter.
Jeff Peanutbutter.
Oh, Jeff.
He did Jeff.
That was his account.
That was his account. He was the Peanutbutter. Jeff Peanutbutter. Oh, Jeff. Remember Jeff? That was his account. That was his account.
He was the marketing guy.
I mean, the client relations guy.
Yeah.
So he would, I mean, it's crazy.
Like Mad Men, he was a little bit after Mad Men, like a little bit, sort of a couple years
after that generation.
In the 70s.
Yeah.
They would still have three martinis at lunch.
So they'd come in, they'd take the train into the city.
They'd have from Westchester into Manhattan. They'd have three martinis at lunch. So they'd come in, they'd take the train into the city. They'd have from Westchester into Manhattan.
They'd have three martinis at lunch.
They'd work all morning, sort of.
I don't know what they'd do.
Then they'd go to lunch, have steak, steak tartare, lobster,
and three martinis, come back to the office,
and just basically pass out on their desks until it was six.
Then they would all-
Is that what they did?
They passed out?
They just couldn't do any work.
Because in the TV shows, they always just go back to work, but how the fuck is that
possible?
No, they would pass out.
They also did smoke cigarettes.
They'd chain smoke cigarettes and just, God knows, they were fucking hammered.
And then they would march of the penguins, like the drunk penguins from the office to
Grand Central,
where there was a bar car, okay?
And so then the men would all start drinking, reloading right on the bar car.
The trains would inevitably break down, so they'd have three more drinks on the train.
So we'd come home shit-faced every day?
Well, yeah, but I have these memories, and as do a lot of my friends from Chappaqua.
We would all go with our parents, you know, my mom and my sister and I and other wives and their kids would go to pick up at the train station, the husbands.
And these trains, like they were to get off, you had to like three steps.
But the third step was a good two feet off the ground, right?
And I have memories of these men falling off the train. And one in particular, a man landing on his face and breaking his nose and knocking out some teeth
and us screaming.
And everybody was drunk all the time.
And that was my...
If you really ask me my memories of Chappaqua,
it's like just alcohol.
Yeah.
The parents were just drinking.
That time, the 70s.
I got pictures of my kids.
We're about the same age. I remember I see pictures of everyone just drinking. It's that time, the 70s. I got pictures of my kids. We're about the same age.
I remember I see pictures.
Everyone was drinking.
Yeah, and on weekends, it would be like a drink called a stinger.
Do you know what a stinger is?
No, I don't remember.
I think it's like brandy and whiskey.
Yeah.
And they would have brunch, like stinger brunches on Saturday.
Yeah.
And there would just be like 30 adults.
Getting shit-faced.
Just fucking crazy drunk. Were they swingers?
Crazy drunk.
My parents weren't,
but do you remember
the movie Ice Storm?
Yeah, I know, I know.
So that was literally
the time I grew up in.
Ice Storm was filmed
in Bedford,
which is,
you know,
a town near,
right next to Chappaqua,
neighboring Chappaqua.
And the Ice Storm
had the key parties, right,
where the couples would.
So I think,
I don't, I'm sure some of my parents' friends were swingers.
There was something, you know, they were all starting to experiment with drugs and, you know, my.
Yeah, because the kids were.
Yeah.
In the 60s, late 60s.
Yeah, but we, yeah, we weren't doing it though.
No, no.
But I was too young.
No, no, I mean that generation, once the 60s happened, it kind of got into the grown-up
culture.
That's right.
That's right. That's right that's right
that's right and so there was like a little bit of coke i think and there was a lot of weed i mean
nothing much harder than that but was your old man in the military my dad was in the marine for
marine corps for two and a half years he was he was actually in the korean war but he was he never
got off a boat he was a colonel a lieutenant colonel in the marine corps because my dad did
two years in the air force i guess they did that yeah did Yeah. Did he go to Korea? No, he was more Vietnam era. I think he
was in the service like 69, 69 through 71. Yeah. My dad was- Was he older? My dad was, yeah,
he would have been older. Is your dad still alive? Yeah. How old is he? He's 80. Yeah, so my dad died three years ago at 84.
So my dad's a little bit older.
And my dad, like, basically, as he got older, his loyalty and connection to the Marine Corps grew and grew and grew.
Really?
Yeah, deeply patriotic towards the Marine Corps, towards the military.
And did that sort of, like, what, did that influence you? I think so. And your way Corps, towards the military. And did that sort of like, did that influence you?
I think so.
And your way of looking at the military?
Because you definitely do movies that are sort of honest depictions of current warfare.
Yeah, I think particularly with like Lone Survivor, I think when I read that book, I was hooked on the book, but there was a wanting,
a respect for the military that was instilled upon me at a young age.
By him?
Yeah.
But he wasn't a great Santini guy.
No, no, he wasn't great Santini, but he was like the kind of guy who like after 11 drinks, you know,
not to say he was a heavy drinker because that wasn't heavy drinking back then.
That was normal.
After lunch.
After lunch.
You know, he might on any given Sunday be sitting there
and like during halftime of a Giants game or watching on TV,
he would turn and apropos of nothing say,
you know, if they reinstall the draft, you're going.
You're going.
It was the resentment
that your life was too good.
Yeah, but it was just like,
he just like,
and if I even said anything
other than, of course,
I'm going.
Yes, of course, I'm going.
I hope they do reinstate the draft.
And if I even paused,
he would attack.
Really?
Yeah.
Oh, you think you're not going to go?
You think you're not going to go? You think you're not going to go?
Oh, you're going to go.
God damn it, Pete.
You know, it would get crazy.
And so I think, yeah, he was a war historian.
He could have – my dad could have walked at any given time in any college in the country and taught a course in Civil War history,
Revolutionary history. He knew it cold. I mean, I remember we lived in Chicago for a year and we
went to the museum. Why? He got transferred. Did you have business? Yeah. Well, Tide. He got put
on the Tide account. But Gray has a big office in Chicago so we lived there
and I remember
I was like in third grade maybe
third or fourth grade
and we went to the Museum of Science and Technology
in Chicago
have you ever been there?
no
it's a good science museum
and they have a
captured German U-boat
submarine
and you can tour it
and I remember
you wait and you go
and it was our family and
there's like you know eight other people there are families so there's like 30 people all we
don't know each other we're all going on this tour and there's some nice like you know 23 year
old girl from like northwestern who's giving the tour and she's like and this is where the radio
room was and they would communicate through a series of signals and my dad be like that's not
accurate that is not accurate and he you know and she'd be like like, that's not accurate. That is not accurate. And she'd be like, sir,
no, that's not accurate. What you're saying about
the communication technique, it's completely inaccurate
actually. And then he
would take over the tour.
And we would be like really embarrassed. But he knew
his shit from a military
standpoint. And what did your mom do?
So my mom, when I
was growing up,
she was always volunteering.
She started like 15 different charities, some of which are still going today.
But when I was young, at that time, when my dad was at Gray,
she was a volunteer at a psychiatric hospital in White Plains.
And she would come home with these wild stories of like Alice Cooper,
like had a breakdown of some kind. The rock band guy? Alice Cooper, the musician? Alice Cooper, yeah, the musician like Alice Cooper, like had a breakdown of some kind. The
rock band guy, Alex Cooper, the musician? Alice Cooper. Yeah. The musician. He was a patient
there for a while and he took a liking to her and he was having this whole, you know, friendship.
And yeah, but she would come home, like she came home once and her ears were all bloody and she
had been wearing hoop earrings and a patient just reached up and pulled the earrings out of her ears.
She would have all these crazy stories.
She was a, and still is, just like an active.
She's still around, huh?
Yeah, she's doing well.
That's great.
She started like five different charities and very.
Busy with service work.
Busy, yeah, but it wasn't really the service.
She would just make, she would come back.
Like my mom started a group. My mom started a group.
My mom had breast cancer.
And she started a group called Share.
She started the first self-help group for women that had breast cancer.
At the time, there were no support groups.
So there were women with this horrible trauma of having the cancer and having a breast removed and having two breasts removed and having a surgery.
And it obviously is a very complicated thing for anyone and for a woman.
There was no support groups.
She started this support group, and she was on 60 Minutes.
They profiled her.
But she was big on cancer and helping women with breast cancer.
But she would come home, and she'd be like,
I'm so sick of these fucking AIDS people.
They're getting all the money, these fucking AIDS people.
Fuck leukemia.
Fuck leukemia.
This is bullshit.
Yeah.
You know, and so she would turn it all into like this game.
Yeah.
Where she really did care.
Yeah.
But she would get so caught up in.
Politics.
The politics and having fun with, you know, if you remember there was a certain amount of money and age research was going to get so much, leukemia and breast cancer and so on and so on.
And my mom was way out before the NFL was wearing pink, you know, and breast cancer was something that was so commonly fought for.
My mom was really fighting.
Now it's like it's like so prevalent.
It's crazy.
And your sister's not in show business, is she?
No, no.
My sister's a CASA.
My sister has one of the most intense jobs.
Do you know what a CASA is?
A CASA?
CASA.
It's an abbreviation, and I can't remember what it's for,
but basically she works in child service protection.
So if a kid is being horribly, you know, has a cracked out father and no mother and is being sexually abused or, you know, these are unbelievably horrible stories.
Oh, my God.
She has to come in once the child's been separated from the parents and do deep investigation to determine whether the child should be reunited with the kid, with the parent,
whether the child or should go into foster homes. It's like, I mean, not to get heavy on with,
but it really is like the stories above, you know, she's in Newark, New Jersey and not surrounding
it. But when you hear the stories of what these people are, these children are going through and how these children are born at, you know, so far away from home plate.
It's ridiculous.
You know, it's like they don't have a fighting chance.
And what does she try to find them healthier situations or what?
Basically, the dream job is to get a child adopted by a good family.
So that's the big win.
But it's really hard. And you see these children
that she works with when they're 12
and they're in foster homes
and then 14.
And by 16, no one's going to adopt them.
And they've been...
But then when they're 18,
they age out of the system.
So it's bye-bye.
Does she keep in touch with them?
She tries.
But it's like you've got to draw some line
of course and so is she a social worker then yeah it's a form of social work but it's called
casa and for anyone that listens and knows anyone in the world of casa these people are like true
angels and they're doing the work that that nobody wants to look at and I mean the stories of abuse and neglect that I hear are like mind-blowing
and so like so you come out you went to college did you study acting I studied theater yeah well
so um I didn't get into my backup college I applied to like five colleges and were you bad
in high school yeah it's horrible yeah I'm just I think I was I was maybe underdeveloped mentally because I was really stupid in college.
I just couldn't.
But were you partying and beating people up?
Yeah, I was fighting and drinking and chasing girls.
But I just refused to study.
But I could coast by with Cs and an occasional C- like maybe every once in a while a B minus.
You got a lot of charisma.
Charm him out of it.
Yeah, I don't know.
I guess I did have some, but my backup.
Sports?
No sports?
Not really, no.
I tried to play football, but I wasn't.
I wanted to be, I thought I could be a great quarterback.
I had no skill for it.
And finally my senior year, they put me as a defensive end
and I really like and i
should have done that the whole time but um um i didn't get in to any of the schools i applied to
and my fallback was tulane yeah and i didn't get into tulane and my college guidance counselor
came up to me and was panicked he's like dude you were you didn't get in anywhere this is very
unusual and he goes there's a school in Minnesota called Macalester College.
It's not much of a school, but they'll take you.
And I called my parents.
I'm like, there's a school called Macalester.
They're like, take it.
And I took it.
And I went there.
And I'd never been to Minnesota.
All I knew was the Minnesota Vikings were the purple people eaters.
And I thought they were cool when I was a kid. But I knew nothing the Minnesota Vikings were the purple people eaters. And I thought they
were cool when I was a kid, but I knew nothing other than it was fucking cold. I like Minnesota.
I do too. Yeah. I love Minnesota, but I didn't know anything about it. Um, and when I got there,
uh, it was very confused and never seen the school. I had no idea what I was doing. And like
the second day I had blind. blind? Yeah, totally went blind.
And I had to meet with my faculty advisor, right?
So, you know, right?
Did you have a faculty advisor?
Yeah, I did actually.
Be you, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So my faculty advisor's name was Dan Kaiser.
And it happened that he was like in the theater department, which was just an awful theater department.
Tiny little St. Paul, minnesota liberal arts college theater department
uh and they're like uh he said you know i went he was a nice guy and he was in charge of building
all the sets and doing all that right and he's like so you got to take a history course and okay
i'm gonna take american yeah take a math course you're all the and he's like you know do you have
any interest idea what you want to do i said no he's well you got to take an arts course and i
said okay he's like listen would you have you ever done any acting i said nope he said well
you know would you be interested in taking acting one i'm like i don't think so it's like like
here's the deal our department we have nobody in it we're about to be closed down would you take
acting one just we need bodies yeah we need bodies. Yeah. And I went in for my first doctoring class, and it's a good story, I think.
There was me, eight girls, and a guy of non-clear gender, unspecified gender.
But a group that I had never been around, right?
Right.
And I'm sitting there, and this teacher comes in, Dr. Hatfield was his name,
and he starts talking about, you know, we're going to learn about acting principles.
And the door opens, and this older guy, like 75-year-old dude comes in,
and he's like, you guys are in the wrong classroom.
And Dr. Hatfield's like, no, this is acting 1A.
And the older teacher's like, no, I'm Professor Wilson,
and I've got a debate class, and you're in the wrong room.
And they start arguing.
And it gets bigger and bigger, and they start screaming at each other.
And we're all sitting there like, what is happening here?
And this old man's getting right in the head,
and he's screaming and spits flying,
and they're just screaming at each other about whose class it is.
And we're just like mesmerized watching these two guys scream.
All of a sudden, the old guy stops and he reaches up and he grabs his forehead and he pulls his face off.
What?
He was a senior theater actor and it was a mask.
And he was, oh, his name was Conrad something.
He was the best actor in the school.
And this was part of his senior project.
And I was like, oh, my God, that is so cool that he did this.
And I was like, that's what acting can be.
And I got the chills.
And I'm like, I kind of think this is awesome.
And that hooked me.
That was it.
That was then.
That's a pretty dramatic way to get hooked.
Yeah, I mean, it was wild.
And then to my parents' horror,
I just kept,
I declared myself a theater major.
And the great thing was,
it was St. Paul, Minnesota.
We had this shitty little theater,
tiny little-
It's a good theater town, though.
Well, Minneapolis, that's the truth.
Minneapolis had the most theaters per capita.
It was a great theater town.
Yeah.
Had the Guthrie Theater.
But there was no pressure in my college.
Nobody thought about Hollywood.
Right.
I didn't know.
I couldn't name an agent.
Yeah.
An agency.
Of course, no one knew.
But we were just in Minnesota having fun, writing plays, directing plays, making little
movies.
You stayed there the whole four years?
All four years, yeah.
And my roommate in college was Ari Emanuel,
who's become a successful agent slash tycoon.
Yeah, he's big.
And his brother, Ari, went to that little college?
Yeah, he was one year ahead of me.
At that little shitty college?
He didn't get into any of his college.
It was a school full of Midwestern kids
from, you know, Wisconsin and Minnesota.
Is that how you met the Dillon kid?
Yeah, Maria Dillon went there too.
Did they school?
Yeah, we all went to the same college.
Get the fuck out of here.
Yeah, we all went there,
but none of us got into any of the schools.
So this is like upper middle class fuck ups?
It was upper middle class,
yeah, I would say,
I was like lower upper middle.
Right, well those, yeah middle we weren't upper middle
we were
we were just above
middle class
but you guys had money
but you couldn't get
into the good school
so you end up
at this shit school
we end up there
why Maria
she's from there
though right
but yeah Bob Dylan
had some Minnesota blood
and so
she had some connection
but still
it was never clear
exactly why
what Maria was doing there
but like Walter Mondale went to Macalester.
Hubert Humphrey went to Macalester.
Really?
So it's not a bad school.
No, but it was on a downward tick, I guess you would say, when we were there.
Right.
Okay.
But in terms of meeting a few people, just by coincidence in college.
We had no idea.
But it was, what I would say is like, my son is a freshman at University of Texas now.
And, you know, I see the agonizing that people go through with college.
You see what, you know, the trouble that Felicity Huffman is in or Lori Loughlin's.
It's like crazy lengths that people are going to.
Right.
Because they're just so focused and they think the college decision is so critical.
I mean, for me, my college was, it was an accident.
Yeah.
I had no idea what was going to happen.
Yeah.
And I just truly fell into something that I really loved doing.
So when did you come out to Hollywood?
Right after college.
On whose suggestion?
I mean, why would you think to do that?
Well, I was thinking about going to film school.
Yeah.
I just had this vague idea.
Were you making some little films in college?
Little.
Like 16, eight, what?
Eight millimeter videos?
Less than eight, like three.
There weren't even eight millimeter films.
But no, we would make eight millimeter films
or shoot videos.
But no hands-on, no lessons about filmmaking.
No, no, none.
But there was a college in Minneapolis called Minneapolis College of Art and Design.
It actually had a decent film program.
And I was just always interested.
I would go down there and I would volunteer to work on little shoots.
And I had this feeling.
I just was like in deep.
I can't explain it.
It was a calling of some sort.
Was that where you got interested in Prince in Minnesota?
Yes.
Yes.
Oh, God.
We used to see Prince.
We'd get the call that Prince was going on at 2 in the morning at First Ave.
And we'd all go down there.
And it would be like Prince, Keith Richards, and Mick Jagger.
The Stones would have done a show.
Yep.
I saw Prince with Ike and Tina Turner.
Really?
I saw Prince with Robert Plant and Jimmy Page.
So that was his bar?
It wasn't his bar.
I don't think he owned it,
but that was the bar, First Avenue.
That's where they shot Purple Rain,
the movie Purple Rain.
Okay.
But Prince was just beginning.
The music in Minneapolis at that time was Husker Du,
if you remember Husker Du.
The replacements were just started.
I did all the band bookings at my school,
and I booked the replacements three times.
Really?
Yeah, one time, Paul Westerberg,
I went backstage with his check after the show,
which was for $3,200.
And I walked back, and they were just hammered
in this classroom that they were using.
He was taking his guitar and smashing it through the drywall.
And I just stood there, and I watched him hit five times. I'm like hey and i just ripped a check no you didn't i go you just
keep going dude you just bought the wall and he was like you didn't care but there was like a band
called the suburbs yeah sure yeah who screwed dude too did you book them um bob mold went to my
college for two years he went to mccallister bob mold went to mccallister he was scary dude he was um not so scary no not at all sweet man but he would wear combat pants and military boots
and you know black he looked like a white supremacist or something i didn't know that
he was this like very sweet sensitive gay man like and you would never know that for me they
were a little tortured and i think they were loud, Husker Du was a loud, loud band.
It was amazing.
It was really quite a music city.
And same with Boston.
When I was in college,
there was a lot of shit going on there, too.
But that's interesting,
so you knew the replacements a little bit.
Yeah, I knew Paul Westerberg a bit
and the Stinson brothers and Prince.
And then there was Prince.
You knew Prince?
Well, no, I didn't know him,
but I mean, he was- Yeah, you knew him, yeah. But it was, then there was Prince. You knew Prince? Well, no, I didn't know him, but I mean, he was good.
But it was then, it was Prince,
and then there was Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis,
who ended up producing all of Janet Jackson's music.
Morris Day, too?
Morris Day.
So we'd go and watch The Time,
and Steve Brill and I thought we were,
well, that came later,
but we thought we were Morris Day,
and we wore Paisley sports jackets
out to clubs in Hollywood like fucking morons
and like trying to pick up girls.
It never worked.
It worked a few times, actually,
but it rarely worked.
It never went the way we wanted it to.
So you just come out here on like,
but no one tells you to come to LA?
You got no friends here?
Are your friends with Maria or what?
So the only guy I really know
because everyone else
moved to New York
and Maria wasn't here
but that wasn't,
she was going to law school
actually I remember.
I knew a guy
named Sam Galletti
who works for a family
called the Galletti Brothers
down in San Pedro
which is a very connected family,
Italian family,
was at the time
and I met him
when I was in college.
They control Terminal Island.
They control the port.
And they were a powerful Italian family, like connected, like legit.
So you knew that guy.
And he invited me to stay with him.
You went to college with that guy?
I met him at college.
We had an interim.
The month of January was so cold.
They would encourage you to do some sort of program.
So I went to Miami.
No, I'm sorry, Orlando.
And to this college, Eckerd College.
And there was a one-month business seminar.
And I just wanted to go somewhere warm.
And I met Sam Galletti, who was the son of the Tony Soprano guy that ran the Galletti Brothers.
And he was like, Pete, if you ever come, you should come live in Long Beach, San Pedro.
Come to L.A. We'll show you some of the clubs in Long Beach, you should come live in Long Beach, San Pedro. Come to L.A.
We'll show you some of the clubs in Long Beach.
And I called Sam and go, hey, I'm moving to L.A.
He was like, great.
I moved to L.A.
They took care of me.
I stayed at their house for a month.
That's where I ended up working on a fishing boat
where you gave me the guitar
because I needed to make money.
And Sam's like, what are you going to do for money?
And I'm like, I don't know.
I saw a wait table.
He's like, work on a fishing boat.
You make $5,000 cash.
I'm like, really?
He's like, yeah.
Yeah, Pete do it.
And I'm.
Well, how'd you meet Brill?
I met Brill at, I spent the summer before my, this was a crazy summer.
The summer before I went to college, I worked at the Concord Hotel in upstate New York.
Oh, yeah.
Which I don't think is there.
But that was like.
In the Catskills.
Yeah, the Jewish Poconos.
Yeah.
The Jewish Alps.
Yeah.
And this was a huge hotel, right?
Dining room had thousands of people.
And working there was just wild.
Like it was.
All Jews all the time.
Yeah.
And like every, I'll be the busboy
and you'd have the same family for a week.
Right.
And the father would be like, son, come here.
And you pull out a hundred dollar bill,
he'd rip it in half and go, here,
you get the other half at the end of the week
if we're happy.
And so we had all these taped hundred dollar bills
all over it. Really?
But we had the shit job.
Brill got to work in the bar at the comedy club,
at the shit job. Brill got to work in the bar at the comedy club, at the Concord.
He had this, like, Brill just always knew how to work it.
Like, I had the shittiest job there.
Brill had the best job there.
So we knew each other from that summer,
and we became good friends.
And then, like, two years into L.A.,
I'm at the Coconut Teaser.
Do you remember that?
Yeah, up on Sunset.
Sunset, where Hyde is, the club Hyde now.
Which the Coconut Teaser was a great, wild club.
They had eight different bars.
It was right at Crescent Heights.
Crescent Heights and Sunset.
But you could get lobsters and tequila shots at four in the morning.
It was this crazy club.
And I was waiting in line to get a lobster and a tequila shot at four in the morning.
And I hear like, Berg like and it's Brill and I'm like you know I really loved him and I still do I always will love him yeah like I will always love you um but we just immediately reconnected and um so
after the fishing boat when do you start like doing show business because Brill's doing like
because Brill seemed to like know what he was going to do the whole time so the first job I ever got yeah was working as on a Eurythmics
video called missionary man and Brill knew somebody who knew somebody somebody Brill was
the bottom line product bottom barrel PA yeah he got me in to be right under me so all he did was
order me around and like I had to go get ice at four in the morning at Vons.
And some guy pulled up in a car as I was loading the ice in my car.
And he was like, do you know where the 134 freeway is?
And I'm like, I think you go up.
And he's just staring at me with this kind of odd look.
And I'm like, you go up to Vine.
And then he's like, I'll give you $25 if I can blow you right now.
I'm like, what? He's like, I'll give you $25 if I can blow you right now. I'm like, what?
He's like,
I'll give you $25.
I'm like, no, no, no, no, no.
Come on, you did it.
I got $40.
I did not do it.
But I come back,
I'm like, bro,
this is horrible.
This isn't show business.
I'm being propositioned
in the parking lot
of Vons with ice.
It is show business. It kind of is.
And that was my first
shoot that I ever worked on.
Missionary Man? Yeah. This was when
Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart were huge.
Right.
And then he just kind of, that
started just spiraling
and just hundreds of production jobs.
I worked in almost
every job.
As a PA?
As a PA, as a prop guy, as a grip,
as a go do whatever it is.
What, assistant?
You can't be a grip without being a grip.
No, like a PA grip.
Right, right.
But back then in independent films that were non-union,
you could actually be a grip.
And they bring you in as a PA,
but you're Holland Dolly.
So that's sort of how you learned what everything was?
Yeah, it was like film school for me,
and I learned quite a bit. So that's sort of how you learned what everything was? Yeah, it was like film school for me. And I learned quite a bit.
So then I started missing acting because in college I did act a lot.
But you were friends with Jacob too.
I talked to Jacob here.
Jacob Dillon?
Yeah, years ago.
Yeah, because I would hang out in Maria's, in the Dillon house, Sarah Dillon.
And I can remember like.
You told me one of the funniest stories.
Dillon with the noses yeah
that was the first the first time I ever went into that house in Beverly Hills yeah I went up and I'm
standing this big house you know and I've never been in these kind of I'm standing by the door
and I'm knocking and no one's and I kind of turn it and the door opens a little bit and it's this
big entryway and I can hear screaming like but it's coming from way down this hallway and I kind
of like Maria Maria and i kind of i'm you
know that you sort of slowly walking into a house but you don't want to and i i'm standing there and
i'm looking down this hall all of a sudden the door opens and at the end of the hall it's it's
bob dylan and he slams the door and he's coming at me charging like pissed right yeah and i'm
frozen i'm locked eyes with dylan and he stops and he turns back around. He goes back to the door
and he opens the door and he goes,
and I ain't paying for no more noses.
And one of the Dylan
daughters had, I guess, had
a series of nose
reconstructive enhancement surgeries.
She wasn't happy. She wanted another one.
And Dylan was having none of it.
It's a no job. He screamed, I ain't paying for She wanted another one. Yeah. And Dylan was having none of it. It's a no job.
No job.
And he screamed, I ain't paying for no more noses.
And then he just stormed right by me.
Didn't acknowledge me and stormed out of the house.
And that was it?
Did you ever meet him again?
Oh, yeah.
I met him a bunch of times.
Yeah.
I used to go to his boxing gym.
So I got, Dylan has a boxing gym in Santa Monica.
And where we used to go, kind of this
like private gym, and I spent a lot of time with him.
And then I left and started my own boxing gym.
So you have a boxing gym?
Yeah, I own a boxing gym in Santa Monica, Churchill Boxing.
And you and Jacob still friends?
Like, not really.
I haven't seen him in a long time, but we're not, it just-
Because you were there at the beginning of the Wallflowers. You guys were playing. So I remember sitting with Jacob
waiting for Maria at the same house,
and we're watching MTV,
and that Prince video to Kiss came on.
Yeah.
And we're watching, and Jacob had a guitar,
was just picking at it.
And within 40 seconds, he was playing the song.
He had it down. Yeah, yeah. And I was like, damn. Yeah. And I'm like, he was playing the song. Like, he had it down.
Yeah, yeah.
And I was like, damn.
Yeah.
And I'm like,
is that normal
that you could just pick up?
He was like,
I don't know.
But he was,
and he was probably
maybe 15 at the time.
Right.
Maybe not even.
Yeah.
But he was,
I was a very talented fan.
A lot of guitars around.
So,
but so you started acting
because I remember
like the weird one with, who's it, Linda Fiorentino? Oh, yeah, Last Reduction. talented family a lot of guitars around so but so you started acting because i remember that i
remember like the the weird one with who's it linda fiorentino oh yeah last seduction the last
seduction you were in that and then i remember like did you didn't you and brill both do 21
jump street 21 jump street was my first job and um i had uh i got i got cast for me i was playing
in a softball game i was playing catcher with no face mask on in North Hollywood.
And some dude came up and ripped it hard,
foul tipped it right into my mouth and blew up my mouth
and ripped my whole face open.
And Steve Brill's uncle, the plastic surgeon,
he put like 200 stitches in my mouth for free
because I had no health insurance and sort of fixed me up.
So I own that.
That's why your lip's fucked up?
Is it fucked up?
No, I'm just wondering.
If my lip's fucked up... It's a little scar, right?
It was like all the way down the middle.
It was like just two pieces of meat hanging off my face.
From a softball?
Yeah, but I wish it was a better story.
No, it's good.
First of all, it was a hard softball.
Sure, yeah.
To this day, if you ever see someone playing catcher in a softball game,
even if it's a soft softball, this was a hard softball.
And I see it all the time.
Some guy's just casual.
Some girl's dead, thinks it's a safe position.
You're behind.
They don't understand what can happen.
A hard swing and a foul tip.
Say a pitch is coming in at 20 miles an hour or 10 miles an hour.
A hard foul tip can jettison that ball to 30, 40 miles an hour,
and it hits you in the face.
You've got to wear a mask.
You've got to.
I, for a long time, would stop if I was driving by a softball game of strangers.
Come on.
I'd be like, you've got to wear a mask.
Or they'll put a little kid behind there just
like that's crazy it's you could get killed by a mask pete berg says so so uh i have like i've got
like three vikadin in me yeah 200 stitches and ari and i are doing what we always do on saturday
nights because we have no money and no we, we're not. We're just driving around. You know Gross?
No, R. Emanuel.
Oh, R. Emanuel.
We're driving up and down Laurel Canyon.
We just had nothing to do.
Is he your agent?
No, we're just friends.
Oh.
He was an assistant at CA at the time.
And we see this giant party, right?
You know, all these cars and valets.
And we're like, let's go.
Yeah. You know, and so we like park and somehow sneak in this party.
And it was the woman that produced One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest.
I can't remember her name, but it was her house.
Yeah.
I thought Mike Douglas produced it.
Well, he was one of them.
But there's a woman also, if you look it up, who was like the main producer.
Okay.
Who produced it with Michael Douglas.
And we go in.
It's a big party.
There's security, but somehow we go in, it's a big party, there's security, but somehow we get in and my face looks like a baseball,
a deformed baseball is attached to it.
Like I look like the elephant man,
like some version of the elephant man.
And we get in and we get this big buffet of food
and we're sitting down and I go sit because we're hungry
because we have no money, it's all this food.
I just want to eat and I'm eating,
but I can't really get the food in my mouth
because it's falling on my,
I'm sitting by the fireplace on the stone.
And all of a sudden, I'm looking down,
and I'm staring, trying to get the food in my mouth.
And I hear, I sense someone standing over me,
and I hear, what are you doing?
I look up, and there's this woman standing.
It kind of looks like Cher.
Yeah.
I think it is Cher.
Yeah.
She's like, what are you doing?
I'm like, I'm sorry, and we're going to leave. She's like, no, I'm just like, what are you doing? I'm like, I'm sorry. I'm going to leave.
She's like, no, I'm just asking, what are you doing?
And what the fuck is wrong with your face?
I started trying to tell her my story.
She's like, are you an actor?
I'm like, well, kind of.
Yeah.
You know, I sort of want to be.
And she's like, call me.
And that was a woman named Lori Rodkin, who at the time was like the star manager.
She did Brad Pitt.
She did Robert Downey Jr. Yeah. time was like the star manager she had did brad pitt she did robert danny jr she did um uh judd
nelson virginia managers sarah jessica parker yeah but and others she was like if laurie rodkin
blessed you yeah and laurie rodkin for some reason took an interest in me and it was literally you
know so people ask like well how do you get in a business? I'm going to classes. I had 200 stitches, three Vicodin, and I snuck into a party and was opening my mouth to get like beef in there.
Yeah.
And this woman thought that was, I caught her attention.
And she immediately got an agent to sign me just because she said so.
Yeah.
And that led to my first audition ever,
which was for an episode of 21 Jump Street.
Holy shit. Where I played a bully that extorted money
giving wedgies to students.
Really?
Yeah, and at the end of the movie,
Johnny Depp and Peter DeLuise gave me a wedgie
at the end of the episode of 21 Jump Street.
But then you sort of like,
but you still, you acted for like a bunch of shit.
Yeah, yeah, I did.
I mean, but that was sort of your main bag.
I mean, you did a little bit in Brill's movie.
You were in Aspen Extreme.
I remember though, I ran into you and you're like, shocker.
You were shocker.
Shocker boy.
Yeah.
Every time you go to the airport, it's shocker boy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Shocker.
That brought me up with the African-American community greatly.
Yeah, and The Midnight Clear, that got you good reviews.
Ari Gross was in that too, yeah.
Yeah, he was in that one.
And then like the weird movie with Linda Fiorentino.
Yeah, that was the first one that actually kind of hit.
It didn't make money, but it was the last seduction.
And that was the one that was like the first film that was like,
you know, John Dahl directed it.
Aspen Extreme.
Which was a cult classic, by the way.
Okay, fine. Yes. Yeah. I've had people Which was a cult classic by the way. Okay fine.
Yes.
Yeah.
I've had people.
My character's name was Dexter Reteke.
I've met a lot of kids named Dexter Reteke.
So it would be like not just Dexter Marin.
It's Dexter Reteke Marin.
I get it.
They named them the full name.
So but yeah.
But you did Copland.
So you're saying that The Last Reduction is the one that got you some attention and you were sort of in it?
Well that was the first
like legit
you did a lot of
fucking movies dude.
Yeah I did.
I was acting
I was acting my ass off
and it was James Mangold
when I did Copland.
I had a small role
in Copland
and at the time
Copland was
Should have been
a great movie.
Well it was the movie.
This was Harvey Weinstein
in his glory days right?
All the power in the world. He had Robert De Niro in it. He had Stallone, who had gained all this weight, who was going back to trying to win an Oscar. De Niro, Ray Liotta, Harvey Keitel. This a bunch of people and I'd wait for my line, right, you know? Yeah. And I was watching
this young director,
James Mangold,
who's had a tremendous career,
you know,
just did Ford versus Ferrari
and has, you know,
done many great films.
Did he do that remake
of Yuma or the last?
Yeah.
Yeah, 310 to Yuma?
Yeah.
Yeah, he did that.
That's good.
He's had a great career.
I mean, this was his,
he had done some little
art film
and Harvey Weinstein saw him and
he got this, you know, Copland.
But I would sit there and I'm like, I would be watching, I was bored out of my mind and
I was watching this young kid, you know, he was my age, and he's in the middle of like,
you know, arguing with De Niro and negotiating with Stallone and having these, and here's
Harvey Weinstein and he's, and I'm like, whoa, that
looks like, that's where the action is.
What's that job?
Yeah.
And, you know, I knew what a director was, but I'm like, wait, he's my age.
Right.
Like, can he roll?
If I wonder, I'm like, James, can I talk to him?
Like, how do you do this?
He's like, you gotta write.
You gotta write a movie.
Yeah.
If you write a movie, you have a shot.
They can't, you can hold your own.
Right.
You can fight back.
Yeah.
Right?
And I'm like, wow, okay, how do you write a movie?
He's like, well, do you have an idea?
And I kind of did have an idea.
He's like, what I do is I take note cards and I write like first scene, second scene.
And when that's all done, I start writing it.
But I don't write until I kind of have a good idea.
So I'm like, okay, I'm down with that.
And at the time I was staying at the Essex House Hotel
on Central Park South.
Do you know the hotel?
So it's like this beautiful hotel.
What were you doing there?
That's where they put me.
For the movie.
Yeah, for the movie.
I was living at this hotel.
And most of the rooms look out over Central Park.
It used to be on SNL.
They used to be like, all guests of SNL
at the Essex back in the day.
Yeah, because, you know,
these beautiful views.
But I wasn't in one of those rooms.
I was on the back side.
I was in the cheap side.
Looking at Jersey?
Looking at a,
well, not even,
just looking at a wall.
Right.
I had this tiny little room,
like maybe 300 square feet
with a bed.
And I immediately went
and bought note cards
and pens
and did what James Mangold, his system, which is you color-coded according to characters.
And I would come home, and so all the actors would be going out partying, going, I'm going back to my room.
And I would start writing out, like, scene one, this character and this character getting their wedding license, scene two, scene three.
And I would lay the cards out.
I would come back every night and lay the cards out. i had to push all the furnitures because the room was so
small and i had this whole floor of my room and some was all right yeah my script and i came back
one day and the cleaning lady had put all the cards away right and i had numbered them so i'm
like oh fuck that i'm like and i had talked to like, please don't do that. I'm writing a script.
And she's like, what a script.
I go, it's a movie.
And I'm like, what's the movie about?
And I tell her, right?
And she steals her idea.
And her name is Jennifer Lopez.
Her name was Elena.
Yeah.
And I start telling Elena about this movie.
It was going to be about four guys that go to Vegas and accidentally kill a hooker at the barrier in the woods.
And she's like, my writing, like, mute.
Like, I'm telling her.
And she's like, what's going to happen next?
Well, I'm like, well, then they're going to come back.
And one of them is going to be about to rat.
They're going to kill him.
She's like, oh, I like it.
Right?
And so she, I've got the room.
My whole room is the script.
It's all over the walls.
I'm like crazy. Right? Like, I'm living in my script. It's all over the walls. I'm like crazy, right?
Like I'm living in my script.
And I'm deep into it.
And I'm going to work and I just want to come back and write.
And I come back and I try to put my key in the door.
And the door won't open, right?
Which happened.
You know, it was like magnetic.
So we go down the lobby.
I'm like, my key.
And they're like, oh, manager comes up, Mr. Berg.
We had a problem. We had to change rooms. I'm like, my key. And they're like, oh, manager comes up, Mr. Berg. We had a problem.
We had to change rooms. I'm like, what? It's like I have this system that's like, I can barely,
I'm like, what? I'm sorry, but there's a problem. Come with me. So we go, I mean, you know, I was on like the third floor and the back, right? So we go down, we're on like the 34th floor. We're
going up high and we get off and I go to go left to where the cheap rooms are.
And she's going over this way.
And we start going to the right to where the good rooms are.
And we start walking down the hall and we're going by the rooms and there's like how they
have suites at the end.
Sure.
And we're getting this suite, like the double door and it's like the park suite or something.
And it's getting closer and I'm looking to turn and she walks right up to the park suite and she opened the door and it's this big ass suite, right? And living room and
dining area. And they pulled out all the furniture and they laid out my whole script for me. And she
goes, Elena has been telling us about what you're doing. We at the Essex house want you to know we
support you and we want you to be successful and do it. I still get choked up and I should go dig she
finished your script and and that was my first movie very bad things that's that's where that
movie came from Wow and that became the beginning of me wanting to not you know I started I love
acting but then I got bit and for anyone that hasn't seen Very Bad Things, what we like to say is Very Bad Things
walked so The Hangover could run, okay? And I've told Todd that before. We were a little bit ahead
of ourselves and maybe not quite as organized as The Hangover was, but we were a dark story set,
four or five guys go to Vegas for a bachelor party and some very bad things happen.
After you do Very Bad Things, does that automatically put you in the running as a director that
can do things?
I mean, how do you get jobs after that?
So Very Bad Things was pretty unanimously just devastated, ravished by the critics,
right?
No one liked it.
Well, there were a couple.
So the thing about Very Bad Things that was interesting was for every 10 were negative
reviews and there
were some real bad reviews.
Anyone that thinks they've gotten a bad review in their career, read my review of Kenneth
Turan, LA Times review of Very Bad Things.
And I've done this with friends of mine, directors.
I've got freaking out about a review.
I'm like, dude, you have no idea what a bad review feels.
Read Kenneth Turan's review of Very Bad Things if you have a free moment.
Okay.
If you're sitting on the toilet.
But for every 10, there would be one great review.
Right.
Yeah.
So there'd just be just enough that people...
So I'm going through this disaster of the film didn't make any money and I'm getting
these bad reviews.
Yeah.
And I literally threw up at one point and I was devastated.
And I get a call and it's from um a guy named Ron Meyer who ran Universal Studios very powerful guy he's calling
me it's an international call and he's with David Geffen and Steven Spielberg on vacation on a boat
yeah and they had just watched Very Bad Things and they Stephen gets on. He's like, I love this movie.
David Geffen gets on.
Pete, you made me laugh.
I needed to laugh.
That's David Geffen and Stephen Spielberg.
And I'm like, I'm getting ravished by the critics.
And then Ron Myers is like, Pete, you got to make a movie for us at Universal.
You got to.
And that went.
Holy shit.
That moment got me the rundown.
This movie I did with Dwayne Johnson.
That was a big movie.
Which, yeah, that was my first.
But it went from, like, I was done.
I was done.
But you managed to, like,
but we didn't even talk about that.
So you finished your script for Very Bad Things,
and then how'd you set up the movie?
I got Christian Slater to be in it.
Yeah.
Who was a-
Had a little juice then?
Was a huge star then.
Yeah.
Yeah, had a lot of juice. And I got Cameron Diaz, who had just be in it. Yeah. Who was a- Had a little juice then? Was a huge star then. Yeah. Yeah, had a lot of juice.
And I got Cameron Diaz, who had just done The Mask.
Yeah.
I got Jon Favreau, who no one knew.
Right.
I got Jeremy Piven, who no one knew, and Daniel Stern.
But it was Christian Slater that was the trigger for the money.
Okay.
And you did it independently or set up a studio?
So we did it independently with this company, Graham King,
who has gone on to make a fortune, who did, oh, he produced the Queen movie and others.
But the whole movie was hinging on Christian Slater.
And it took us months to close his deal.
We didn't have that much money to pay him.
And finally we closed the deal.
And like three days before we were supposed to start shooting, Christian calls me.
He's like, we're in.
We're doing it.
And I'm like, great.
And he goes, let's celebrate.
And we go out.
And I didn't know Christian that well.
And we, Christian at the time, could really go.
And we were really going.
And at a certain point, I'm like, I got to go home.
I got to start shooting in three days.
And I go home.
And at 5 in the morning the next day, I get a call from the lawyer of the company that's putting up the money.
He's like, are you watching this?
I'm like, what?
Turn your fucking TV on now.
And it was actor Christian Slater arrested for attempted murder of an L.A. police officer.
That night?
That night.
After I left.
And I'm like, we spent three months trying to get the movement.
You can Google it.
It's all in there.
Christian went a little hard
and went to another couple of parties
after I went home.
Yeah.
And the cops came to one of them
and suggested that he leave.
Yeah.
And he got into a little tussle
with the cop
and somehow got the cop's gun.
Oh.
And they don't like that.
Yeah.
But so he miraculously was able to stay in the movie and go to jail Cubs gun. Oh. And they don't like that. Yeah. But so we,
he miraculously was able to stay in the movie and go to jail after the movie wrapped.
And then he cleaned up?
Yeah, he cleaned up,
and he's doing great.
But Christian was the one who,
it was him,
he was a huge star back then.
The attachment,
you attached him.
His attachment got to film.
And then like you get this amazing call,
and so you do the rundown, right?
Yep.
But then, so now you're going.
Now, how are you figuring out the style that you sort of get known for?
Because Friday Night Lights and then on into Hancock, you have a certain way of lighting
and a certain pace.
There's a crackling to it.
Was that from working with a specific DP?
So it came from...
Do you know what I'm talking about?
Yeah, well, so I shoot a lot of handheld cameras,
and I do a lot of improvisation,
and I like things to feel very real, right?
So that's like the method behind my madness
for when you're coming on the set and being like,
Mark, just go over there and start doing this.
I don't want you thinking too much.
I'm watching you very closely.
You actually had a really hard job in uh spencer
confidential he's got a huge amount of information you know backstory that had to get out that was
you know actually if you're paying attention it's interesting but it's very hard to do right you
know one of the things are one of the reasons i thought you were could do it is you know you
you're you're a great orator and you've got stand-up experience and you know
how to deliver lines and you understand, you know, the power of the spoken word. And I felt it
required that, but my approach is like, all right, I'm just going to watch Mark and see what he's
doing. And rather than trying to control Mark, I'm going to be there to help or to guide or to,
you know, encourage you. You know, If things really go sideways, okay,
but you were able to deliver.
And that came from, I really learned how to direct when I was an actor on Chicago Hope,
where we would do, nowadays people do TV series,
they do eight episodes.
That's like a TV series succession is eight episodes,
10 maybe.
Well, we were doing 28 episodes a season,
28 episodes of TV
that would make
people understand
8 hours a day
8 days a week
we would shoot
16 hours a day
and so I would have
28 different directors
right
that I could learn from
and you did like
100 episodes of that
I did a lot
yeah
until I did
very bad things
and then asked
to leave the show
and I got written
off the show
because all the other
actors wanted more
and I wanted to start directing.
Yeah.
But I learned, you know,
we would have all these directors.
You must have gotten checks for that for years,
Chicago Hokes.
I did okay.
I did okay.
You know, back then,
there were only three networks,
and we would be on Thursday nights
opposite ER at 10 o'clock,
and we would come in second.
We would lose to ER every Thursday.
And ER would have 39 million viewers.
And we'd have 34 million viewers.
And everybody would be furious.
God damn ER.
They're killing us.
I mean, 34 million viewers every Thursday.
It was crazy.
Like, I was famous.
But I would look at all these directors.
And we would have two types of directors.
Like, we'd have these older guys that wanted to be feature directors who wanted to prove they still had it, right?
Yeah.
And they'd be setting up marks and talking to you about your character and taking hours to light shit, right?
Yeah.
And they would be bad.
And the worst ones would be the young graduates from the film schools, right?
Right.
I just graduated USC film school, blah, blah, blah.
I'm going to show you what a film.
And we would waste so much time.
Yeah.
And it was so tedious and slow.
So the second I started directing and having real control,
which was Friday Night Lights, I'm like, we're shooting handheld.
We're improvising.
We're winging it.
We're going to, I want to destroy the preciousness of filmmaking.
That's just never been my style.
Chris Nolan is obviously a wonderfully talented filmmaker,
and I love his movies.
That's not the way I work.
Well, who are your guys then?
Who do you look to?
Like who are either your mentors or your contemporaries
that you can sit and compare notes with?
Todd kind of shoots. Philip shoots kind of like that. your contemporaries that you can sit and compare notes with.
Todd kind of shoots,
Philip shoots kind of like that.
Yeah, I mean, directors are sort of islands.
It's rare that we all get together and talk,
but I do have quite a bit of respect for Todd.
I like Alfonso Cuaron quite a bit.
Michael Mann has always been a bit of a mentor to me. He's produced a couple of my films
and someone who I've looked up to.
We have different styles of work.
Jon Favreau is someone who I've remained close with.
I know how hard it is to do the job consistently.
It's like someone comes out and makes a great movie,
their first movie, and everyone's talking,
and I'm kind of like, okay, good, let's do it again.
Well, yeah, and now you do,
like, when you do
these really big movies,
though, it's like,
what is it about,
what is the disposition necessary?
I guess because I've noticed it
from working with directors,
I mean, you've got to be
pretty focused
and not overwhelmed
with, you know,
what's resting on your shoulders.
Yeah, I mean, for me,
you know, I direct
all kinds of things.
I just directed a documentary
on Rihanna.
I followed her for three years.
It comes out later this year.
I just directed two Super Bowl commercials.
I'm getting ready to direct a TV series for Netflix, a limited series.
I've directed little things, big things, medium things.
For me, I treat it all equally the same.
I really don't
think about the money I think about I don't I I just try to focus on the moment and capture like
make every moment as as real and as good as you have a DP that you use regularly yeah Tobias
Schleuser German DP and I have a team of guys that I've worked with, like my core group, my editor, my DP, my first AD, my visual effects guys, my special effects guys.
You know, it's like, you know, because I work a lot, so I'm almost always on a film set.
It's very helpful to have a short hair with those people.
And, you know, we've all had horrible breakdown fight, you know, knock down, drag out fights and and you know also been there for each
other and too thick and thin and um so as a result i've kind of reached a point where i'm like i'm
like when i first started directing mark when i was doing very bad things i didn't know what i
was doing right if you walked up to me and said good morning i'd be like fuck you mark what do
you mean good morning yeah fuck does that mean yeah, Pete, I'm just saying good morning, dude.
Really, that's all it means?
Can I get you breakfast?
I was so insecure, and I didn't know what I was doing,
that I was tense, you know?
Now, I've done a few of them.
I don't have that insecurity.
Right.
So I'm much more relaxed.
I'm much more willing to let things flow.
If an actor looks at me and goes,
I don't understand what we're doing,
I might easily say, I don't either.
Yeah, yeah.
Or what are we doing?
I really don't know.
I haven't figured it out yet.
You've worked with big guys now.
I mean, you work with big actors.
I mean, like,
what are some of the challenges of that?
Like, you're dealing with, like,
John Malkovich on two movies.
I mean, most actors love this style.
Like, when I did Hancock with Will Smith,
I had Will Smith, Jason Bateman.
That's a good movie, yeah.
Yeah, I had Will Smith, Jason Bateman, and Charlize Theron.
Three pretty heavy hitters.
Will had heard
I had worked with Jason Bateman and Will had
heard about how I shoot which is
very loose. I won't
cut. I'll talk to you during the
shot. You keep talking over the intercom.
Yeah. I say try saying this. Try saying that.
Do you always use that? The intercom? A lot.
The bullhorn? Because I can stare. You stay on the intercom. Yeah, I say, try saying this, try saying that. Do you always use that, the intercom? A lot. The bullhorn?
Because I can stare.
You stay on the monitor.
I can stare at the monitor, and I feel like I'm in your brain.
I can be like, Mark, try doing this.
Say this, Mark.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Just tell them to do that.
Yeah, it's just like speakers.
Okay.
Ask them why there's two steering wheels, Mark.
Right.
You know, whatever it is, right?
And if I sense that you're cool with it, which most actors are, it's like I'm just like in your head.
And because I've acted, I'm not afraid of, you know, some of the directors are terrified of actors because they think there's some magic thing around them.
If they touch the wrong button, the actor is going to explode.
I sometimes like to be touched and pushed around and told what to do.
So when we were doing Hancock, Bat bateman who i'd work with told will and
so will was interested he asked me a lot of questions and i told him i showed him how i do
it he's like yeah let's do that and i hired me and then we brought charlize on and the first day
of rehearsal charlize was like can i talk to you i'm like yep and she's like i've heard about that
thing that you do and you know will likes it i just you know i it. I don't do that. I don't want that.
I need to cut and I need to regroup.
I'm like, okay, no problem.
We'll do it.
And she's like, okay, cool.
So the first day of shooting,
we're shooting and I'm getting into coverage
and I'm talking to Will
and I'm talking to Jason
and then we get to Charlie's stuff.
I do take, I cut.
And I'm sitting there going, okay.
And she's looking at me
and I'm looking at her
and the hair and the makeup people coming off. I'm like, should we do it again? Yeah, sure. Do it again. do take i cut yeah no i'm sitting there going okay and she's looking at me i'm looking at her and
the hair and the makeup people coming off i'm like should we do it again yeah sure do it again cut
yeah and then but halfway through at lunch she comes up to she was that thing you're doing with
will and do that with me i like that and it was like it's i've never had an actor not love it you
know yeah the only um the only negative reaction sometimes is like wow that
like we get it quickly you know actors are used to working on something for four or five hours
when you the way you shot this one that i was in i'm like how's he gonna make a movie out of that
i didn't i couldn't even do the last part yeah and so sometimes actors are like you sure it just
went by so fast it was like um but that came from me hating the preciousness
that was kind of pounded on me when I was acting in television
at Chicago Hope, and these directors would like,
and you'd see that you'd shoot 18-hour days,
and 90% of the footage never made it into the final product,
so it's all a waste of time anyway.
And I think also that kind of wears down actors too
in the sense of like, feels like what am I garbage?
What am I just?
Yeah.
Unless you're a huge actor
it's like do they even
respect what you're doing?
It takes all the joy
out of the process.
It does.
That's why I was so
hell bent on getting
out of television acting
at the time.
It was really
kind of a treadmill
to oblivion.
Yeah.
You know someone
described it to me once
it's like you just
it's no fun. It's like you just,
it's no fun.
I mean, it's.
Well, now everyone's going back to television because television is where it is.
But yeah,
but it's much different.
This was back at the time.
Three networks.
No, you were doing 28 episodes a season.
It was just,
and you're on the same three sound stages
or the same two sound stages.
Yeah.
We're in the same blue scrubs.
I was a bowel doctor,
so I was always doing the bowel surgeries.
Maybe that's where I learned about the prolapsed bowels.
But I'd be cutting animal intestines
and sewing them up.
I'm like, this is crazy.
This is not what people think it is.
But then there were guys like David Kelly,
who people don't necessarily know who David Kelly is,
but the most prolific television writer
I know of.
And producer.
And producer.
He's doing Pretty Little Liars now, the show on HBO
with Nicole Kidman, which I like.
But he at the time.
What was the big one with Khaleesa Flockhart?
What was the first big one?
Ali McBeal.
Ali McBeal.
I mean, he's done, and he did the one with William Shatner and James Spader.
But at the time, he was doing a show called Picket Fences, which was a very popular show.
And he was doing Chicago Hope.
Both were Emmy Award, not consistently.
I mean, he was writing, what's 28 by 28?
He wrote 56 episodes of television every season.
Two episodes a week by himself of two different shows.
He'd write all of it.
And that was where the action was.
And David Kelly was so prolific.
And nobody's ever, ever put up statistics like that.
But do you, so when you made the, when Friday Night Lights got popular and you sold it to television somehow, how did you get that story?
How did you, why did you choose Friday Night Live?
So my cousin is Buzz Bissinger.
I just made a documentary on him.
I was involved in it.
The guy who wrote it?
Yeah, who wrote it.
You should watch the documentary.
It's called Buzz.
It's on HBO.
He's a genius.
You would like him.
You should have him on your show at some time.
You've never heard of him?
No, not until now.
He's a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist.
He's written, used to write for Philadelphia Inquirer.
And he's your cousin?
My cousin.
And he wrote the book Friday Night Lights.
Yeah.
And he went and lived in Texas.
And, you know, is this like short Jew who's now like cross-dressing and trisexual and
has deeply into S&M and all kinds of crazy stuff.
But this Harvard educated, very, very intelligent, wonderful guy. Yeah. Who's just had an incredible plot twist in the second half of crazy stuff. But this Harvard educated, very, very intelligent, wonderful guy
who's just had an incredible plot twist in the second half of his life.
Wanted to try something new.
He did. He tried a lot of new things. So watch the Doc Buzz. He wrote the book and I loved the book
and I was starting my career and before Rundown, he's like, you should make this. And
they couldn't get a director to make it. But after Rundown, I had a little bit of clout and I'm like,
I'm going to make Friday Night Lights. And that, um, that was really the beginning of my directing
career taking off. And I went and I lived with a football team in Texas for a year and kind of
walked in the shoes that Buzz Bissinger had walked in and fell in love with that culture, you know, and realized that football, you know,
was more than a game to those people.
And it was a way that culture,
that, you know, neighborhoods and towns
and communities were organizing themselves.
And it was a big deal.
And while we were filming the movie,
we would film some real playoff games,
high school football playoff games,
so we
could cut those into the film.
And I was at a high school game in Austin, Texas.
We had two cameras there, and I'm watching the game.
And in the fourth quarter, it's a close game, and the home team's coming back.
There's 55,000 people at a high school football game.
The place is going crazy.
I mean, it's wild.
Yeah.
And in the fourth quarter, the home team throws a pass, and the receiver goes up for it, and
this defender hits the guy with his head and tackles him hard, and the defender, who's
a 15-year-old boy named David Edwards, broke his neck and was an instant quadriplegic.
And I was there, and it was chilling, and the place went dead quiet.
Did the guy tackle him?
Yeah, because he lowered his head.
And that's how you break your neck.
If you hit someone with the top of your head, your neck can go any way but down.
And so it's called an explosion fracture.
And the explosion fractured his vertebrae.
And it was really the first truly horrible thing I think I ever witnessed.
And the stadium went dead quiet.
And the only sound you could hear was his mother screaming,
but you couldn't figure out where she was screaming and screaming,
and she came on the field,
and you could just tell this was a horrible accident.
And he became a quadriplegic, and I got to know him well,
and he ended up dying three years later.
But I felt after the movie like I still had so much connection to that
culture yeah and then I wanted to do a tv series so I wrote the pilot and in the pilot the first
episode the quarterback the star breaks his neck and I really did it just because I think I had I
wanted to get something I wanted to do something about David Edwards. And then it just turned into this kind of popular TV show.
Yeah, but you produced it.
How many did you write?
I wrote like the first two.
Oh, so you didn't do a David Kelly thing.
No, hell no.
Jason Kadams deserves like, you know, I directed a bunch of them and came in and did the casting
for the reloading for the second season when we brought like Michael B. Jordan and some
of the other actors.
But I couldn't,
I ran one show called Wonderland
before that about science.
I know you brought me in on that one.
On a psychiatric hospital.
No, the psychiatric hospital?
Yeah.
Don't you remember?
That's what,
I was in New York
and I think you gave the part
that I read for to Esposito.
Or no, to Piven.
Oh, right.
Yeah, Piven had a part in it.
Like it was almost like a stand-up part.
Yeah, you had me coming in for it.
Yeah, I'm sure I did.
Stand-up comedian who went insane, yeah.
But was there another one?
Was Giancarlo in one of them?
Yeah, Giancarlo was in,
that was a really good one.
He played, he was in,
so Wonderland was about,
was a little ahead of its time.
Right, no, because I think,
like you were thinking of me for the stand-up,
but then I read for the stand-up,
but then I read for the Esposito part because he was on the floor.
I was on the floor. Yeah, that was a multiple personality character.
He had like eight characters.
Yeah, I couldn't.
It was out of my ballpark.
I remember sitting there with you.
That was an acting.
He was a beast in that.
I think I read for both of them.
I'm glad we've been able to work together.
But what happened with that show though
well so it was
it was a show
you know on
it was on ABC
right
owned by Disney
and it followed
who wants to be a millionaire
yeah
and it was a very very dark show
about a psychiatric hospital
about mental ill
yeah yeah
and in the pilot
in the opening
you know the opening episode yeah
a doctor uh a guy goes and shoots up a bunch of people in new york yeah and and they bring him in
and the doctor this pregnant female psychiatrist yeah recognizes him because he'd come in two days
earlier and she thought he was lying and she kicked him out and so she's feeling all this guilt and
she's trying to talk to him when the character character grabs a syringe, a big needle,
and starts trying to kill himself.
He's poking himself in the neck with it,
and this pregnant doctor grabs the syringe, and they're fighting,
and the gurney flips over, and when all that clears,
the needle is sticking into the belly of the pregnant psychiatrist.
And that was the end of the series.
So I was young, and everyone I knew told me to just not have the end of the series. And well, so I was young, and everyone I knew told me
to just not have the shot of the needle,
but I knew better, right?
And I'm like, you know what?
This is my show, and everyone's like, okay.
And they aired it,
and they gave me every break opportunity,
and it was Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?
It was a huge hit.
We went right into that, the show.
And back then, you had the Nielsen ratings,
so you could track exactly how many people were watching second but when it stopped and the second that needle right 90 of tvs turned off just pull them off right
for a week right so i'm i'm i'm at my house and and i knew we had a problem with the ratings right and i get a call it's like 11 30 at
night i get a call and it's it's late yeah and uh no i'm no i was in new york so it's 11 30 in
new york and i get a call and it's from la and so this is uh i'm calling from this is michael
peterberg there yes peterberg this is my michael eisner's assistant can you hold for michael eisner
so michael eisner if for people
that don't know was the chairman of disney was the most powerful guy in hollywood at the time
was the big boss like he was the shit yeah and i'm like michael yeah i'm sure this is michael
eisner i don't believe it right so i hear this voice hello i go go fuck yourself joe because
i think it's my friend joe yeah playing a prank on me. You hear these kind of prank mistakes so often.
So I hang up on Joe, right?
The phone rings back again, and it's Michael Eisner.
And Pete, this is Michael.
I don't know who Joe is.
This is Michael Eisner.
Oh, Mr. Eisner, I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry, sir.
I'm sorry.
I thought you were somebody else.
He's like, yeah, I got that.
He's like, I'm calling about your show. Yeah, I got that. I'm calling about your. I'm sorry. I thought you were somebody else. He's like, yeah, I got that. He's like, I'm calling about your show.
Yeah, I got that.
I'm calling about your show, Wonderland.
And I'm like, and now, you know, they basically just told me they're going to cancel it.
Ari is now like kind of working as an agent.
He's like, they're canceling your show.
And we've done nine of them.
No, no, we hadn't done nine of them.
We were scheduled to do nine.
We had nine scripts.
I'm like, I am deeply passionate.
This is before the rundown, right?
This is like my big move before the rundown.
And he says, you know, I've seen this show about mental illness.
And let me just tell you one thing.
It's diarrhea.
I'm like, thank you.
He goes, you can tell me it's creative, and I'm going to tell you it's creative diarrhea.
You can tell me it's stimulating and it's original, and I'll tell you it's stimulating original diarrhea. You can tell me it's stimulating and it's original
and I'll tell you
it's stimulating
original diarrhea.
You can tell me
it's important
and I'll tell you
it's important diarrhea
and there's no important
diarrhea, Peter.
I'm like,
okay, I got it.
I got it.
Thank you.
He's like, yeah, okay.
So we have a problem
and I said,
what?
He's just killing me, right?
I go, what?
He goes,
my wife loves this show.
She says, it's the best thing we've got.
We've got to put it on the air.
And I'm like, oh, your wife has very good taste, sir.
I admire that.
And he's like, I want this show to be 70% medical
and 30% of your little psychiatric diarrhea.
And I'm like, 60-40.
diarrhea and I'm like 60 40 he's like he's like 70 70 30 30 diarrhea 70 medical he wants me to turn it into er yeah I'm like 60 40 he goes 50 50 and you got to pick up I go deal and so I made
that deal with him yeah we had to recast and turn it into you know kind of half doctors saving lives
and have um but there's still some really good episodes there how many did you made the air we
ended up doing um i think we made eight uh two made the air and then he killed it and but then
um so you can get them they were on netflix for a while. They were wild shows.
Yeah, I remember it seemed really wild.
So a couple things.
I forgot.
I just might have this other memory.
I remember there was another time I saw you
where we went to Brill's first wedding in Kentucky.
Yeah, when the dude fainted.
Do you remember that?
I just remember being at a table,
not knowing anything about Hollywood.
It must have been 94 or 95.
I don't remember when it was.
And I'm sitting there with you and your wife, your first wife.
Elizabeth, yeah. And I'm sitting next to Elizabeth
Shue. And everybody knows
Hollywood. And I don't know anything. Elizabeth Shue
is like telling me about being and leaving
Las Vegas, which hasn't been out yet.
Yeah, she was famous. Almost. But
I guess like all bets were on it.
And I was sort of like, well, good luck with the movie.
I can do nothing. And I just remember her being so cold and so horrible to me. And your wife were on it. It was, and I was sort of like, well, good luck with the movie. I can do nothing. Yeah.
And I just remember her being so cold
and so horrible to me.
And your wife was rough too.
She was just tough.
Yeah,
she could be rough.
I was just a little intimidated.
But you know,
you were also like the easy guy
to be rough to
because you were sort of like
supremely,
you were always just dangerous.
Like no one knew
what the fuck was going to come
out of your mouth.
They still don't.
Yeah.
You were,
you were, you cared, but you didn't.
Yeah.
And, and you were kind of on your own path.
So these women, nobody really knew what to expect from you.
They couldn't just write you off as this like weird dude from Boston.
Right.
Because you had too much swagger for that.
And I think, you know.
Yeah.
Just sort of like, well, maybe that guy will land.
But. Well, yeah. swagger for that and i think you know yeah just sort of like well maybe that guy will land but well yeah but like for a woman like my ex-wife or lisa shu you're gonna be like they don't know
what to make of you so they're gonna like clam up and not give you a lot because you're you're
you're kind of like a human weapon system come on you are you you you mr swagger well like well
but like when i was dating whitneymings, like, and you know,
she would talk about you
like you were this god
and I'm like,
Mark Barron?
You know,
I might go do his podcast.
She's like,
you be careful of Mark.
You don't know what he's capable of.
I'm like,
Whitney,
what are you talking about?
No,
you don't know what he can do to a person.
I'm like,
come on.
But you know,
so Whitney was a slight,
a little bit younger than us.
Oh,
she says hi,
by the way.
Oh,
she says hi to you too. I told her. No, I saw her last night. I went to the store and I said I was going to interview her. Was she bit younger than us. Oh, she says hi, by the way. Oh, she says hi to you too.
I told her.
No, I saw her last night.
I went to the store and I said I was going to interview her.
Was she going out?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
She's always there.
I mean, that was...
I can't imagine it.
She's quite a woman.
Yeah.
You guys still okay?
Yeah, we're good.
I mean, I love her.
It's just as I said to her after several months of dating her,
you are a lot.
You are a lot.
She'd be the first to admit that.
Yeah, she is.
But as generous, loving, intelligent.
The work ethic is unlike anything I've ever seen.
That's nice.
She will always have love in my heart.
And your kids are good?
My kid is good.
I don't know if there's kids.
If there are, I don't know.
You only have one kid?
Yeah, just one son.
He's a freshman at University of Texas.
And you get along with the ex, too?
Very well.
The ex that was mean to you.
We get along very well.
That's not what she was mean to you.
They're just intense.
Well, she was intense and mean to me, so I did join the party.
Is she still in the business?
She actually works for my company.
Oh, really?
Yeah, she's doing, she's great.
She's someone i trust and do you find
that it's hard to find people that you trust the longer you go in this well you know the weird
thing about my business is very small is that you know i've got my business partner my producer of
this show who i've worked with for a decade and i don't spread out i don't know how to uh delegate
delegate stuff so that's why i have a small world. You have a big fucking production company.
Yeah, I got a whole company
and like, you know,
a hundred people working there now.
And it's interesting how it's,
it's just hard as you get older
to find people that, you know,
that you trust and that you can count on.
And then like suddenly you wake up
and you know, you're the oldest guy in the room.
You're the boss.
And you look like, all right,
we got to get someone to solve this problem. And you realize you're the guy. You're the boss. And you look like, all right, we got to get someone to solve this problem.
And you realize you're the guy.
At the end of the day,
I'm happiest writing and directing movies and TV shows
and learning how to manage a company
and have a business.
So each department,
each one of these departments have heads.
Yeah, they all have a head.
And then I have a great CEO,
this guy, Matt Goldberg, who's, you know, a really great businessman. Yeah. But still, I have to
assume some responsibility for understanding, you know, how much costs. I mean, we have human
resource. We have two human resources people and three accountants. And I'm like, what's going on?
You know, like it's turned into a real company. But you definitely have to trust people.
You know, like it's turned into a real company. But you definitely have to trust people.
Yeah, you have to delegate in trust.
And you realize that, you know, there are just not a lot of people out there that you can trust.
Yeah.
Not that they're untrustworthy, but if you're looking for people to kind of grow a business or, you know, you've got the aspiration of opening up a larger
operation yeah and that requires other people doing their jobs right and and as i say as like
i don't know tacky as it may sound as i get older i realize you know in business the most
important job by far is the person that can divorce the other person from their money
right so i've got to be if if I'm going to direct a movie,
I have to be able to go and look at my bosses at Universal or Netflix
or wherever it is, look them in the eye and say,
you know, I need a ridiculously large amount of money.
You need to give it to me.
I am going to take it.
I'm going to make up this story and film it,
and I'm going to make a movie.
I'm going to give it back to you.
And people are going to love it.
You're going to make a lot of money and you're going to say thank you to me.
Yeah.
So give me the most important.
That's the hardest job at the end of the day.
Like,
and if you're in business,
like that's what we do.
We're sellers.
We're a production company and finding people that can actually go out and
close deals and bring the work in is a very it's a very
hard skill set to find no kidding like is there something is is there some sort of like thing that
you want to do that you haven't accomplished yet with the movies yeah so i'm i'm i'm doing uh like
make your oscar movie i want to i want to make a love story so the film film, I'm doing, I'm writing it now.
And I always joke if, like I'm always telling people,
I make, where you working, I'm making a love story.
Because my movies are very violent generally.
But they actually are kind of love stories.
They just generally tend to be about kind of male brotherhood
and male camaraderie.
But I've joked for a long time that I want to make a love story
and people ask me what I want to do
and I would always be in the middle
of some giant action sequence
and I'm like,
I just want to be on a beach
with a boy and a girl
and a bottle of wine
and south of France
on a camera
and they're kissing
and they're crying
and I don't want this shit.
And I joke
but the truth is
I do want to make a love story so i have i have the idea and
i'm writing it now this is going to be the big departure for people well it's still pretty
twisted and there's a military component to it but it's it's a thank god it's a good story
it won't disappoint your fans it is a love story good talking to you pal i love you we did it you
too man i thought i thought it was going to be uh I thought you were going to just, I don't know what I thought.
It worked out good.
You seem relaxed and nicer when you're older, but I don't work for you.
I am relaxed and nicer, and you seem relaxed and nice too, and you didn't attack like Whitney
Cummings said you would.
Why would I do that?
I don't know what the fuck she's talking about.
Ask her.
Say, why?
You scare people.
How am I going to attack Pete Berg?
How does that end well?
You never know, but especially when there's a hammer on your desk.
No, it wouldn't have been a hammer
and you weren't going to say anything you didn't want to say.
What am I going to do?
But why are people scared of you?
Because I'm intense.
I don't think you're that intense.
No, I know.
If you know me, you don't.
See, people make assumptions about me.
Me too.
Yeah.
People think I'm intense or I'm mean
or I'm not going to attack.
I heard that you are prone to sometimes physically guiding your camera people around the set.
No, like throwing them around.
Yeah.
Like, fucking go, move, move.
Because I'm trying to get the shot and they're not getting it.
I got to help them.
But not hurting.
I've never hurt anyone.
No, I know.
I forgot to bring that up.
I have probably done that.
Well, good luck, and thanks for putting me in the movie,
and I'm looking forward to the military component in the new love story.
Thanks, buddy.
All right, that was Pete Berg.
As I said, that movie, Spencer Confidential, premieres this Friday, March 6th on Netflix.
My special, End Times Fun, premieres March 10th.
That's Tuesday.
Very exciting.
Now I will play my new guitar badly.
Can't get the hang of it.
My hands are stiff.
I'm sick.
I'm sick.
Hopefully I'll talk to you on Thursday. Thank you. Boomer lives. on cannabis marketing. With cannabis legalization, it's a brand new challenging marketing category.
And I want to let you know
we've produced a special bonus podcast episode
where I talk to an actual cannabis producer.
I wanted to know how a producer becomes licensed,
how a cannabis company competes with big corporations,
how a cannabis company markets its products
in such a highly regulated category,
and what the term dignified consumption actually means. I think you'll find the answers interesting
and surprising. Hear it now on Under the Influence with Terry O'Reilly.
This bonus episode is brought to you by the Ontario Cannabis Store and ACAS Creative.
It's a night for the whole family. Be a part of Kids Night when the Toronto Rock take on the
Colorado Mammoth at a special 5 p.m. start time on Saturday, March 9th at First Ontario Center
in Hamilton. The first 5,000 fans in attendance will get a Dan Dawson bobblehead courtesy of Backley Construction.
Punch your ticket to Kids Night on Saturday, March 9th at 5 p.m. in Rock City at torontorock.com.