May 20, 2025 · 1:14:25

Philly Justice on Good Hang with Amy Poehler

The Hang, in Short

Mike Schur came on to finally unveil Philly Justice, the mythical Parks and Rec in-joke trailer that fans have been begging Amy to release (she read their pleas: "The entire world is in shambles, Amy. Please give us Philly justice so we have a reason to live"). But first, Boston talk. Mike drops the perfect Boston metaphor about crab trap mentality: "You don't even have to put a net over the traps when you catch the lobsters. Because with Boston lobsters, if one tries to crawl out, the other one will just pull them back down." He loves the city anyway, he swears. They also learn their parents share a barber in Bedford, Mass. Amy admits her dad used to ask for headshots to hand out while renting apartments. Classic Bill Poehler move. The episode promises the Parks cast (Rashida, Adam Scott), behind-the-scenes stories, and the trailer premiere you can't see anywhere else.

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  1. 0:00

    Welcome everyone to a very special

  2. 0:02

    episode of Good Hang. This is kind of um

  3. 0:05

    an episode for um our listeners, for

  4. 0:08

    fans of Parks and Wreck, for fans of

  5. 0:09

    Good Hang. We have been kind of teasing

  6. 0:13

    this thing called Philly Justice, which

  7. 0:16

    is a fake idea of a TV show that was

  8. 0:19

    created on the set of Parks and Wreck

  9. 0:21

    that we made a one and a half minute

  10. 0:23

    trailer for. And we've been talking

  11. 0:25

    about the existence of it for a while.

  12. 0:27

    And we've been listening to you. Your

  13. 0:29

    comments have been saying things like,

  14. 0:31

    "Amy, you cannot be gatekeeping comedy

  15. 0:34

    at this at a time like this." Or, "The

  16. 0:37

    entire world is in shambles, Amy. Please

  17. 0:39

    give us Philly justice so we have a

  18. 0:41

    reason to live." Or, "In the name of Lil

  19. 0:45

    Sebastian, please." Um, so people are

  20. 0:49

    asking to see this dumb thing that we

  21. 0:52

    did and we thought why not premiere it

  22. 0:56

    only on Good Hang. It's the only place

  23. 0:59

    you can see it slash hear it is on this

  24. 1:01

    podcast. And who better to talk about

  25. 1:05

    the creation of this particular little

  26. 1:08

    inside joke that was on Parks and Wreck

  27. 1:11

    than the creator of Parks and

  28. 1:13

    Recreation, the wonderful, amazing Mike

  29. 1:15

    Sher. Mike Sher is a producer of all the

  30. 1:18

    shows that you love. Mike helped work on

  31. 1:21

    the uh American version of The Office.

  32. 1:23

    He went on to create Parks and

  33. 1:24

    Recreation, Brooklyn 999, The Good

  34. 1:28

    Place. He's in his second season of A

  35. 1:30

    Man on the Inside at Netflix. He is just

  36. 1:34

    an incredible writer, friend, person in

  37. 1:38

    the world. And um I love him dearly and

  38. 1:41

    owe a lot to him. Nothing pleases Mike

  39. 1:43

    more than um this kind of dumb joke. an

  40. 1:46

    idea. So, Mike is my guest today. We're

  41. 1:48

    going to talk about Philly Justice, the

  42. 1:51

    creation of it, and we're going to all

  43. 1:52

    watch it together. We're also gonna talk

  44. 1:54

    about other things. We're going to talk

  45. 1:55

    about the beginning of parks and

  46. 1:57

    recreation. We're going to talk about

  47. 1:58

    meeting at SNL. We're going to talk

  48. 1:59

    about systems and how important they are

  49. 2:02

    to both of us, that work is a place of

  50. 2:04

    joy. Um, we're going to talk about all

  51. 2:05

    the crazy names he likes to come up with

  52. 2:07

    for his characters. And we're going to

  53. 2:09

    be visited by some very special actors.

  54. 2:14

    uh Rashidita Jones, Adam Scott. We're

  55. 2:18

    going to hear from a bunch of people um

  56. 2:21

    who were in Parks and Recreation and in

  57. 2:23

    Philly Justice who are telling us about

  58. 2:26

    how we made it, including the great

  59. 2:28

    Morgan Sacket, who is a producer on a

  60. 2:31

    lot of the shows Mike and I work um on.

  61. 2:33

    He's uh an incredible producer, and he's

  62. 2:36

    going to let us he's going to remind us

  63. 2:38

    how we got away with making this dumb

  64. 2:40

    trailer. So, there's a lot of things

  65. 2:43

    going on. Um, but basically interview

  66. 2:45

    with Mike Sher. We're going to talk to

  67. 2:48

    the cast of Philly Justice. We're going

  68. 2:49

    to watch this minute and a half trailer

  69. 2:52

    for the hopefully the one first and only

  70. 2:56

    time here on Good Hang. And um, this one

  71. 3:00

    is for this one's for the fans. This one

  72. 3:02

    is for the fans. We heard you loud and

  73. 3:04

    clear. We're giving it to you. We don't

  74. 3:06

    like to tease around here. We We like to

  75. 3:10

    please

  76. 3:12

    and we like to squeeze and we like to do

  77. 3:14

    it with ease. Is this sounding any less

  78. 3:16

    gross? Okay. All right. Let's get

  79. 3:18

    started. Welcome to Good Hang. Woohoo!

  80. 3:22

    What do you say?

  81. 3:25

    All I ever wanted

  82. 3:29

    I'm sure I realize I'm with

  83. 3:32

    probably the most accomplished podcaster

  84. 3:35

    I've interviewed yet is you.

  85. 3:38

    That just means you haven't interviewed

  86. 3:39

    No, I have not talked to a lot of

  87. 3:41

    podcasters

  88. 3:43

    because I realized on the way over here

  89. 3:45

    I'm like you you've had a podcast, the

  90. 3:48

    Pausecast, correct? For many years.

  91. 3:51

    Yeah. For like an absurd number of

  92. 3:53

    years. I mean, you were ahead of the

  93. 3:54

    game. I don't know if it if the first

  94. 3:56

    seven years even count because it was we

  95. 3:58

    like were barely recording it. We were

  96. 4:00

    just screaming into our computers. We

  97. 4:02

    didn't have microphones. Who's the Wii

  98. 4:03

    that you speak of? Joe Pnansky and

  99. 4:05

    myself. Uh, sports writer, award-winning

  100. 4:08

    sports writer Joe Pnansky and me. And we

  101. 4:10

    started it a million years ago, but we

  102. 4:12

    haven't really, it hasn't been like

  103. 4:14

    anything approaching a an actual extent

  104. 4:18

    e like enterprise

  105. 4:20

    for more than like five years. I would

  106. 4:22

    say the word Xant really uh lets us know

  107. 4:25

    that we're with Mike Sher, Harvard

  108. 4:27

    educated writer and creator pitch p.

  109. 4:32

    I'm so thrilled to have you here and

  110. 4:35

    we're going to talk about something very

  111. 4:36

    exciting today. But I do have you in

  112. 4:38

    this studio. So I do want to talk about

  113. 4:41

    us a little bit and our work together

  114. 4:42

    before I love us. I do love us. Oh, this

  115. 4:45

    is us.

  116. 4:48

    One of another great show from NBC. Um,

  117. 4:51

    but before I do that, I when I plug this

  118. 4:54

    thing into my laptop, it goes weird. So,

  119. 4:57

    well, like, so you know, I don't know if

  120. 4:59

    you know, Bill Simmons told me um in the

  121. 5:01

    very beginning, we we love Bill. Sure.

  122. 5:03

    Boston, one of Boston's greatest. One of

  123. 5:06

    Boston's most one of Boston's most one

  124. 5:08

    of the most Boston people there is.

  125. 5:10

    Yeah, that's very true. I mean, and and

  126. 5:13

    I think of you as a Boston person.

  127. 5:14

    You're not. You're a Connecticut person.

  128. 5:16

    Yeah, but I I identify full Boston.

  129. 5:20

    literally wearing a Celtics sweatshirt

  130. 5:22

    right now because it's the Celtics are

  131. 5:23

    playing a playoff game right now. I

  132. 5:25

    can't watch it cuz I'm here with you and

  133. 5:26

    so I wore this as like a shield to

  134. 5:28

    protect myself against evil and the city

  135. 5:30

    of Boston for that matter. Yeah. You and

  136. 5:32

    you're a huge Red Sox fan. Yes. And I do

  137. 5:34

    want to talk about sports because this

  138. 5:36

    is a podcast. Yeah. But um before I do

  139. 5:39

    So Bill told me not on Bill Simmons's

  140. 5:42

    network. Yeah. And you really law I was

  141. 5:44

    a law. Yeah. You have to you do have to

  142. 5:46

    do 10% of sports sports talk or you get

  143. 5:49

    if you don't mention Jim Rice once

  144. 5:51

    you're cancelled.

  145. 5:55

    Um but Bill said maybe not don't use the

  146. 5:58

    laptop and I kind of have fought to keep

  147. 6:00

    it and what's happening now is it's

  148. 6:02

    going cuckoo when I plug this thing in.

  149. 6:04

    So don't use the laptop for what? For

  150. 6:05

    like notes or just for like referencing?

  151. 6:08

    He was like why do you need the laptop?

  152. 6:10

    And I was like, "Hey, you know, what's

  153. 6:12

    it to you?" You know, and he was like,

  154. 6:14

    "I'm just giving you a suggestion." And

  155. 6:16

    by the way, this is a very Boston

  156. 6:18

    exchange. Just someone offering advice

  157. 6:20

    and the person coming back at them hard

  158. 6:22

    with like, "What?" Like, "Let's fight."

  159. 6:24

    I got to get Bill on the podcast because

  160. 6:26

    you're right. It is like

  161. 6:30

    You once described to me, do you

  162. 6:31

    remember this? You once described to me

  163. 6:32

    the as the that the uh you said to me

  164. 6:35

    that this city motto of Boston should be

  165. 6:37

    must be nice. You remember this? Must be

  166. 6:39

    nice. Yeah. And you described a

  167. 6:40

    situation in which we when we were at

  168. 6:42

    SNL, you would go home and see your

  169. 6:44

    friends or people that you grew up with

  170. 6:46

    and you would go out for drinks and if

  171. 6:47

    you paid, the attitude would be like,

  172. 6:49

    "Oh, must be nice. Got a big Hollywood

  173. 6:51

    show, whatever." And if you didn't pay,

  174. 6:53

    it was like, "Oh, must be nice. Make all

  175. 6:54

    that money in Hollywood and still get

  176. 6:56

    your friends to pick up your drinks."

  177. 6:57

    Like it you can't win. You can't win.

  178. 6:59

    You can't win. You know what they say

  179. 7:01

    about Boston?

  180. 7:03

    You don't even have to put a net over

  181. 7:05

    the traps when you catch the lobsters.

  182. 7:08

    Because with Boston lobsters, if one

  183. 7:09

    tries to crawl out, the other one will

  184. 7:11

    just pull them back down. I've been

  185. 7:12

    pulling back down.

  186. 7:15

    But I love my city.

  187. 7:17

    I do love myself. Can I tell you one

  188. 7:19

    quick thing that is going to be of vital

  189. 7:22

    importance for this podcast? Yeah. I

  190. 7:24

    found out a piece of shocking

  191. 7:26

    information today. Oh, exciting. Is this

  192. 7:28

    breaking news? Breaking news. Okay. Your

  193. 7:31

    dad Oh, no. and my mom

  194. 7:35

    go to the same barber.

  195. 7:37

    What? Yes. My mom lives in Bedford Mass.

  196. 7:41

    Went to her barber today. Got her

  197. 7:43

    haircut. Barber said, "You know who

  198. 7:45

    comes in here?" Oh boy. Do you know Amy

  199. 7:47

    Polar? Amy Poler's dad comes in here.

  200. 7:50

    And I guess your dad recently switched

  201. 7:52

    barbers for reasons I don't want to get

  202. 7:54

    into that are very, very private. You

  203. 7:57

    can tell me off the air. I'll tell you

  204. 7:58

    off the air. But my mom said, "You're

  205. 8:01

    not going to believe this." to her

  206. 8:02

    barber. My son and Amy Polar are friends

  207. 8:05

    and used to work together and you can

  208. 8:07

    imagine the fireworks that happened in

  209. 8:10

    that barber shop. That is so cute. Isn't

  210. 8:13

    that adorable? That That's really That's

  211. 8:15

    a really nice Very happy. I was

  212. 8:16

    literally breaking news as of like 2:00

  213. 8:17

    p.m. Pacific time today. Yeah. My

  214. 8:20

    father, Bill Polar, he'll want me to say

  215. 8:22

    his first and last name. And you should

  216. 8:24

    say your mother's first and last name.

  217. 8:25

    An Herbert. Yep. So Ann Bill and Anne,

  218. 8:27

    thank you for keeping your hair tidy.

  219. 8:29

    Number one. Yeah. first of all, um, and

  220. 8:32

    two, um, for raising us. Yeah. Um, we

  221. 8:35

    appreciate that. But my dad likes to

  222. 8:37

    start most conversations in the Boston

  223. 8:40

    area with, um, going up to random people

  224. 8:42

    and saying, "Do you like TV and movies?"

  225. 8:49

    And they go, "Yeah." And he goes, "Oh,

  226. 8:52

    well, my daughter is Amy Poland." What a

  227. 8:54

    coincidence. My daughter. My daughter.

  228. 8:56

    And they go, "Oh." Oh, cuz they're like,

  229. 8:58

    "Okay, how what percentage of people say

  230. 9:00

    no to that question?" No. My dad used to

  231. 9:04

    rent apartments as like a side hustle,

  232. 9:06

    you know? He was like he was in real

  233. 9:08

    estate renting because he was a public

  234. 9:10

    school teacher. Both my parents were,

  235. 9:11

    and they would have summer jobs. And um

  236. 9:14

    he used to uh ask me for a stack of head

  237. 9:17

    shots so he could hand them out when he

  238. 9:18

    was renting apartments. And after many

  239. 9:21

    years of therapy, I realized that was a

  240. 9:23

    boundary that maybe I should set. So I

  241. 9:27

    So you gave them to him. I did at first.

  242. 9:29

    Yeah, because it's Boston, you know,

  243. 9:30

    like it must be nice. Like, oh, you

  244. 9:32

    don't think you think you're so great

  245. 9:34

    you can't Oh, well you you people in

  246. 9:36

    Boston looking at your headsh shot. Your

  247. 9:38

    father's proud of you. Oh, boohoo. Um

  248. 9:42

    Mike Sher is here and um all this will

  249. 9:46

    be cut, right? Oh, this word can't I

  250. 9:48

    mean literally the I mean all it will be

  251. 9:50

    is just very slow typing on this laptop.

  252. 9:53

    That's all this that's all this. Well, I

  253. 9:56

    just sip water and wait for you to find

  254. 9:57

    whatever you're looking for.

  255. 10:02

    Oh, can I ask you though? Um, uh,

  256. 10:04

    because you like organizing, you like

  257. 10:05

    systems. I do. You love a good system.

  258. 10:08

    Love rules, love systems. And I would

  259. 10:12

    say overall

  260. 10:13

    being in your simulation, and I know I

  261. 10:16

    can speak for many people, is kind of

  262. 10:17

    the best feeling in the world. You have

  263. 10:19

    great systems. Thank you. You take pride

  264. 10:21

    in them. People that are in your systems

  265. 10:23

    are very well taken care of. very well

  266. 10:25

    considered and in my case like it

  267. 10:27

    changed my life to be in your system and

  268. 10:29

    I love a good system too and what I love

  269. 10:32

    about your systems is you think long and

  270. 10:34

    hard about what would be the best way or

  271. 10:37

    approach to do things like you're not

  272. 10:38

    you're not a um you are not a strict

  273. 10:43

    person who doesn't take feedback about

  274. 10:45

    your system but you like your systems

  275. 10:48

    love them and I believe that people do

  276. 10:50

    their best work when there's like a

  277. 10:52

    strong system that also allow allows for

  278. 10:55

    freedom within the system. That is why I

  279. 10:58

    love working with you and people like

  280. 11:00

    Andy Samberg, people who are like from

  281. 11:02

    the SNL world specifically because

  282. 11:04

    they're roll with the punches people.

  283. 11:06

    Yeah. But and all you have to do is like

  284. 11:08

    set up the boundaries. You put out the

  285. 11:11

    gate, you put lay out the fence and

  286. 11:13

    you're like anywhere in here is fine.

  287. 11:15

    And then and this is actually very

  288. 11:17

    appropriate for what we're going to be

  289. 11:18

    talking about today. Once you've, I

  290. 11:20

    believe, set up a sort of like boundary

  291. 11:22

    and like a mechanism and like you're

  292. 11:23

    going to be in the yard from 2:00 to

  293. 11:25

    4:00. You here are your toys. You can do

  294. 11:27

    anything you want from 2:00 to 4:00 and

  295. 11:28

    then you're back inside. That and then

  296. 11:31

    you get the funniest people you can who

  297. 11:33

    are the most comfortable and happy and

  298. 11:35

    you say like, "Don't worry, everything's

  299. 11:37

    taken care of. Rules are in place.

  300. 11:38

    Fences in place. Go crazy." And you let

  301. 11:41

    people like do their best, most fun,

  302. 11:43

    most joyous work. I really tr and this

  303. 11:46

    isn't like revvelatory but I really

  304. 11:48

    believe that is the best way to work

  305. 11:49

    creatively with in a group and the

  306. 11:52

    reason this is relevant and I don't want

  307. 11:54

    to jump the gun here but the thing we're

  308. 11:55

    going to be talking about today very

  309. 11:57

    much came out of a world where because

  310. 12:00

    we had this really great system in place

  311. 12:02

    and then went out and just found the

  312. 12:04

    funniest people we could find to come

  313. 12:06

    make this thing with us. Crazy things

  314. 12:08

    happen like wonderful things happen that

  315. 12:10

    are just the result of just creative

  316. 12:12

    juices flowing and people feeling happy

  317. 12:14

    and free. Someone said to me once and I

  318. 12:17

    believe this is true that in creative

  319. 12:19

    enterprises everyone is either in

  320. 12:21

    survival mode or creative mode. And if

  321. 12:24

    you're in survival mode like you're

  322. 12:25

    worried about your job, you don't feel

  323. 12:27

    safe in your place of work. There is a

  324. 12:29

    threat somewhere. You feel like you're

  325. 12:31

    not being listened to whatever. No one

  326. 12:33

    can be creative. And your job as like a

  327. 12:36

    manager of any kind at any level is to

  328. 12:39

    like flip that switch and get people

  329. 12:40

    back into creative mode where they feel

  330. 12:42

    like comfortable and warm and happy and

  331. 12:43

    safe. And that's when people do good

  332. 12:45

    work. And I think the maybe the defining

  333. 12:49

    pro like principle of parks and wreck

  334. 12:52

    was that everyone was in creative mode

  335. 12:54

    all the time. Like we were in survival

  336. 12:56

    mode with outside forces. Like are we

  337. 12:58

    going to get cancelled? Is this it? Are

  338. 13:00

    we done? But that that's over there like

  339. 13:03

    that. We can control that within the

  340. 13:05

    fence that we put out for the show. We

  341. 13:08

    worked at all times to make sure

  342. 13:09

    everybody was in creative mode and

  343. 13:10

    that's why crazy things like this

  344. 13:12

    happened. God, so well said. Thank you

  345. 13:14

    for setting that up. Um

  346. 13:17

    I often and always speak about you and

  347. 13:20

    our experience on parks and wreck as the

  348. 13:22

    perfect example of what it's like to be

  349. 13:24

    creative and not chaotic. Yeah. And I

  350. 13:26

    think you and I both have worked in all

  351. 13:28

    kinds of different areas where chaos was

  352. 13:30

    kind of part of the deal and you know

  353. 13:33

    there is certainly an energy that comes

  354. 13:35

    from that but you one does not have to

  355. 13:38

    have a chaotic or dysfunctional

  356. 13:39

    experience to have a creative

  357. 13:41

    experience. That is correct and for a

  358. 13:43

    very long time in Hollywood I think

  359. 13:46

    especially uh but it's not this is not

  360. 13:49

    located only in Hollywood this is

  361. 13:51

    everywhere. I think there's a belief

  362. 13:53

    sometimes that like if something good

  363. 13:57

    results from a chaotic atmosphere, then

  364. 14:00

    there's like a weird response where it's

  365. 14:02

    like, well, this is the only way that

  366. 14:03

    something good can happen. Like we got

  367. 14:05

    this good thing and the process was

  368. 14:07

    chaos, so we better not try to fix the

  369. 14:09

    chaos. When like a rational person would

  370. 14:12

    think, let's fix the chaos and then

  371. 14:15

    there will be more opportunities for

  372. 14:17

    more creative things that will also

  373. 14:18

    cause less pain and suffering. That's

  374. 14:20

    what I just can't stand about though

  375. 14:22

    about Hollywood specifically. I think

  376. 14:24

    it's weirdly gotten better. I don't know

  377. 14:25

    if this has been your experience. I

  378. 14:26

    think so. I think it's just like there's

  379. 14:28

    a little bit more um like uh uh diverse

  380. 14:32

    gatekeepers and a little bit more um you

  381. 14:36

    know push from frankly generations

  382. 14:39

    behind us. Oh yeah, who have just like

  383. 14:42

    reminded us that we don't need to put up

  384. 14:44

    with behavior that we were used to

  385. 14:46

    putting up with. and just a little bit

  386. 14:48

    more quality of life stuff where people

  387. 14:50

    are just a little bit less um okay with

  388. 14:53

    having their lives ruined at work.

  389. 14:57

    I mean like when you and I were coming

  390. 14:59

    up it was like whatever the system was

  391. 15:01

    you were just like okay. Oh yeah. You

  392. 15:03

    just like grit your teeth and you like

  393. 15:05

    put your head down and you try to

  394. 15:06

    survive. Yeah. And the generation behind

  395. 15:08

    us and especially the one behind that

  396. 15:10

    generation looks at chaos and goes like

  397. 15:12

    oh then no thank you. Like then no. like

  398. 15:15

    I don't I I don't want to they just they

  399. 15:18

    have a they don't have the I think the

  400. 15:20

    sort of like like structural fear that

  401. 15:23

    we had of just like if this is what's

  402. 15:25

    going on then I will just suffer and

  403. 15:27

    tolerate it and I think younger folks

  404. 15:29

    are just like oh then I won't be a part

  405. 15:31

    of it. Well, my bad standup about it is

  406. 15:33

    boomers are all about money. Gen X is

  407. 15:36

    like, "Is it all about money?"

  408. 15:38

    Millennials are like, "Where is the

  409. 15:39

    money?" And Gen Z is like, "What is

  410. 15:42

    money?" That's my bad stand up about it.

  411. 15:45

    Not bad. It's good. Thanks. I have been

  412. 15:47

    doing that on stage. Uh, okay. So, we

  413. 15:50

    could talk forever. I mean, we could do

  414. 15:52

    two, three, four podcasts. Maybe someday

  415. 15:54

    we will. And I'd love to have you back

  416. 15:56

    as a guest to talk to dig in even deeper

  417. 15:59

    with like Park Super Fans and all the

  418. 16:01

    other projects that you do, but those to

  419. 16:03

    me are like other wives that you have

  420. 16:05

    and I'd rather not discuss them all

  421. 16:07

    together. I am very It's painful for

  422. 16:09

    you. Congratulations on the success of

  423. 16:12

    Hacks and the success of Good Place and

  424. 16:13

    congratulations on second season of A

  425. 16:15

    Man Inside. But right now, you are with

  426. 16:17

    your family and I need you. And this is

  427. 16:19

    Thanksgiving and we are going to put on

  428. 16:21

    nice sweaters and god damn it, we are

  429. 16:23

    going to sit down and have a nice meal.

  430. 16:24

    That's right. And it's 6:00 p.m. That's

  431. 16:26

    right. The uh the your new girlfriend

  432. 16:28

    will come and pick you all up and drive

  433. 16:30

    you away from me. Fine with her and I'm

  434. 16:32

    very happy for you. But um so we're

  435. 16:34

    going to talk about parks, but to do

  436. 16:36

    that, let's talk about So you went to

  437. 16:38

    Harvard. Yeah. Um which by the way, a

  438. 16:41

    great great month for Harvard. You know,

  439. 16:43

    I've talked some [ __ ] about Harvard on

  440. 16:44

    here already, but I'm I'm a big

  441. 16:46

    flipflopper now. I love Harvard. I'm

  442. 16:47

    going to say first truly good month for

  443. 16:51

    Harvard

  444. 16:53

    since its founding in 1636.

  445. 16:56

    I was like, when how far back do I have

  446. 16:58

    to go? Oh, maybe all the way. Yeah,

  447. 17:01

    listen, we took it on the chin. We have

  448. 17:04

    our share of Jared Kushner and Ted

  449. 17:05

    Cruz's and also I'm everyone in the

  450. 17:09

    Supreme Court and all that sort of stuff

  451. 17:11

    and it's been and Zuckerberg don't you

  452. 17:12

    can't forget about Zuck. I never do.

  453. 17:17

    But Facebook finally Harvard is like hey

  454. 17:20

    we have all the money. Yeah. And so

  455. 17:23

    we'll say no to the bully. And people

  456. 17:26

    were like oh my god you can do that.

  457. 17:28

    It's exciting. But you came from Harvard

  458. 17:30

    and we met. Do you remember when we

  459. 17:32

    first met? Uh, no. I remember when I saw

  460. 17:36

    you for the first time, which was at a

  461. 17:39

    uh UCB

  462. 17:41

    uh sketch thing that happened at Fez.

  463. 17:43

    Oh, yeah. Um, I've told the story

  464. 17:45

    before. I don't know if you want I don't

  465. 17:46

    know how in-d depth you want to go here

  466. 17:47

    given. I'd love to go in depth because

  467. 17:49

    we don't get we we're going to talk

  468. 17:51

    Philly justice, but we have some time.

  469. 17:53

    Um, great. So, I uh I moved to New York.

  470. 17:55

    Radford, graduated 97. In 98, I was

  471. 17:58

    working for John Stewart. Oh. No, late

  472. 18:01

    '9 I was working for John Stewart. He

  473. 18:02

    was writing a book and I was pitching my

  474. 18:03

    ideas for the book and he used none of

  475. 18:05

    them and gave me $3,000 and it was a it

  476. 18:08

    was amazing. It was my first

  477. 18:09

    professional job. Um, thank you, John

  478. 18:11

    Stewart. So, we he gave you that money

  479. 18:13

    to go away. That's right. He looked at

  480. 18:16

    my ideas and was like, "Oh, no." Yeah.

  481. 18:18

    He was like, "You're you're making me

  482. 18:19

    nervous. Please go away." He was like,

  483. 18:21

    "Does three grand get you out of my

  484. 18:23

    office?" So, I went to I heard about all

  485. 18:27

    these comedy shows that happened and I

  486. 18:29

    was very excited to see comedy. went to

  487. 18:30

    Fez uh to see John do standup and and so

  488. 18:34

    you came out on stage. I did not know

  489. 18:36

    who you were and you said, "Hey

  490. 18:37

    everyone, I know you're excited to hear

  491. 18:39

    the standup the John Stewart and all

  492. 18:41

    these other comedians. Uh my name is

  493. 18:44

    Carol Johnson. I'm from HBO and I'm

  494. 18:46

    casting a pilot." And um so before if

  495. 18:50

    you don't mind with your indulgence, I'd

  496. 18:51

    love to just do some and and I was like,

  497. 18:53

    "Oh, there's a nice woman from HBO here

  498. 18:55

    who is casting a pilot. This is so

  499. 18:57

    interesting. This is how show business

  500. 18:59

    works." I 100% bought it. Hook, line,

  501. 19:01

    and sinker. I did not understand that I

  502. 19:02

    was at a comedy show and that this was

  503. 19:04

    probably a piece of comedy. And then you

  504. 19:07

    announced that you were doing this pilot

  505. 19:08

    and you asked if anyone you you said

  506. 19:10

    that someone needed I don't remember

  507. 19:12

    exactly, but it was something like

  508. 19:14

    someone needed to be able to do um a uh

  509. 19:18

    Bill Cosby impression. That shows you

  510. 19:19

    how long ago this is. Yeah, sure. And

  511. 19:21

    Matt Basser, another person I did not

  512. 19:23

    know, was like volunteered and you're

  513. 19:25

    like, "Oh, yes, sir. Please come right

  514. 19:26

    on up here." And then he proceeded to do

  515. 19:28

    like the worst Bill Cosby impression of

  516. 19:30

    all time. And you in the role of

  517. 19:32

    straight person were just like, "Ah,

  518. 19:35

    boy, I'm not sure if that really fits

  519. 19:36

    the bill." And he kept doing it and kept

  520. 19:38

    doing it. And then I think Matt Walsh

  521. 19:40

    was like, "I can do one." And he got up

  522. 19:41

    and did it. And you were It was even

  523. 19:43

    worse. And you were like, "Yeah, this

  524. 19:45

    isn't really what we're looking for."

  525. 19:46

    And I I remembered this so clearly. I

  526. 19:48

    was like, "This poor woman from HBO is

  527. 19:52

    just trying to cast her pilot and these

  528. 19:55

    guys are terrible. These guys are

  529. 19:57

    And when I was having that thought, I

  530. 19:59

    was like, "This is a sketch." I'm pretty

  531. 20:02

    sure. And but there's a reason I tell

  532. 20:05

    this story, which is your performance

  533. 20:08

    was so real and grounded. I legitimately

  534. 20:11

    was blown away. I was like I was brought

  535. 20:14

    3 minutes into this incredibly stupid

  536. 20:17

    premise before it occurred to me that

  537. 20:19

    you were not really Carol Johnson from

  538. 20:21

    HBO. No. And I and then I remember going

  539. 20:23

    I remember talking to someone after the

  540. 20:25

    show and being like who was that? And

  541. 20:28

    they were like uh you this this group

  542. 20:31

    called UCB and I was like that woman was

  543. 20:33

    incredible. And they were like the

  544. 20:36

    straight woman. And I was like yes she

  545. 20:39

    was incredible. Who is that? How does

  546. 20:40

    she have time to be in a sketch group

  547. 20:42

    when she works at HBO? She's a

  548. 20:44

    multi-talented person. But I I I

  549. 20:47

    remember then repeating that like this.

  550. 20:48

    They were so funny and everything and

  551. 20:50

    then someone was like that's Amy Polar

  552. 20:52

    like everyone in New York already knew

  553. 20:54

    you and I was just like that that I you

  554. 20:57

    just like you just like burrowed into my

  555. 20:59

    brain and then when you joined the show

  556. 21:02

    I I started working as an a few months

  557. 21:04

    later. Yep. That year was what year did

  558. 21:06

    you start as I started January 98. Yes.

  559. 21:08

    98. Yeah. So you came what? 2001. 2001.

  560. 21:11

    So September 2001. And um I I don't

  561. 21:15

    remember where we interacted between

  562. 21:17

    those dates, but I remember that when

  563. 21:19

    you auditioned, you came to my office

  564. 21:21

    and we smoked cigarettes in my office

  565. 21:22

    cuz I was running Update. Remember

  566. 21:24

    cigarettes? Let's just take a minute. I

  567. 21:26

    mean, I know they're bad for you, but

  568. 21:27

    they're so bad for you. They're and

  569. 21:29

    like, you know, they're they truly are

  570. 21:30

    bad for you. They shorten your life.

  571. 21:32

    They make your skin terrible, but

  572. 21:33

    they're Oh, remember them? They're

  573. 21:34

    really really terrible. They're terri so

  574. 21:37

    terrible. And I I looked so cool doing

  575. 21:39

    that terrible thing. And we would smoke

  576. 21:41

    cigarettes and we would we you know at

  577. 21:43

    at 30 Rock you could just kind of open

  578. 21:45

    your window and look at the Empire State

  579. 21:47

    Building. Yeah. SNL was like

  580. 21:48

    grandfathered into all rules everywhere

  581. 21:51

    and you could just like no one except us

  582. 21:53

    was on the 17th floor and you just open

  583. 21:55

    your window and smoked out the window

  584. 21:57

    and it was terrible. And it was

  585. 21:59

    terrible. And then you were eventually

  586. 22:02

    when did you start running update

  587. 22:03

    weekend update? Your first show was my

  588. 22:06

    first update show. That's right. So

  589. 22:08

    gosh, I forget that that was your first

  590. 22:10

    my I took so Robert Carlock was running

  591. 22:12

    it and he left and I remember talking to

  592. 22:14

    Mike Shoemaker, beloved producer at the

  593. 22:17

    time, now runs Seth Myers's show and I

  594. 22:20

    was like, boy, I'm not sure I can do

  595. 22:21

    this job. Like I don't really know what

  596. 22:22

    I'm doing. And he was like, it's super

  597. 22:24

    easy. Like you just choose the best

  598. 22:25

    jokes and you whatever. And I was like,

  599. 22:27

    okay, like it sounds fun. And then 9/11

  600. 22:29

    happened. And so my first show running

  601. 22:31

    the like funny fake news was 911. And it

  602. 22:35

    was your first show on the show. That's

  603. 22:37

    right. And and so Right. So I was this

  604. 22:39

    new cast member and you were running

  605. 22:41

    Weekend Update at a time when comedy was

  606. 22:44

    declared over. Yes. And when We'll Never

  607. 22:47

    Laugh Again. That's right. And our and

  608. 22:49

    the first thing that happened on the

  609. 22:51

    show for your first show and my first

  610. 22:53

    showing update was like Rudy Giuliani.

  611. 22:56

    Yeah. Pre-Insanity Rudy Giuliani and

  612. 22:58

    like cops and firefighters and MTA

  613. 23:01

    workers standing at home base and

  614. 23:03

    talking about like resilience and and

  615. 23:05

    the power of humanity and then Paul

  616. 23:07

    Simon singing the boxer. Yeah. And then

  617. 23:10

    it was like okay and you're Britney

  618. 23:12

    Spears. Go. Remember that was your

  619. 23:14

    sketch. You had a new snake right there.

  620. 23:16

    It didn't make it. It got cut. Oh, did

  621. 23:17

    it really?

  622. 23:18

    It It's good that it did. And And by the

  623. 23:21

    way, I was not Britney Spears. Let me

  624. 23:23

    snake. I was the very uh sappic snake

  625. 23:27

    wrangler. Who was the Britney Spears?

  626. 23:29

    Was it Reese Witherspoon? Oh, she was

  627. 23:31

    the host. Yeah, that makes sense. Yeah.

  628. 23:32

    Yeah. So then Mike says to us, "I'm

  629. 23:35

    going to go work on a show. Um I'm

  630. 23:37

    really excited. I'm going to leave SNL.

  631. 23:39

    I'm going to move." And um uh you know,

  632. 23:42

    everyone always wants to kind of like

  633. 23:43

    launch away from SNL hopefully with some

  634. 23:45

    kind of project or something and you

  635. 23:48

    told us the idea and we were like, "Oh,

  636. 23:51

    this is a bad idea." A bad idea. Yeah.

  637. 23:52

    It was the the American adaptation of

  638. 23:54

    The British Office and we had watched we

  639. 23:58

    had all watched the British Office

  640. 23:59

    together, including the very special

  641. 24:02

    Christmas episodes that we watched in

  642. 24:04

    your office. Seth got early from his

  643. 24:06

    friend in England and we watched them in

  644. 24:09

    my office and it we all like laughed and

  645. 24:12

    cried and when Dawn came back and kissed

  646. 24:16

    him. Spoiler alert. Yeah. For spoiler

  647. 24:18

    for a 20-year-old British show, we all

  648. 24:21

    like jumped up in the air and like like

  649. 24:23

    we were celebrated like we won the Super

  650. 24:24

    Bowl. And then a couple months later, I

  651. 24:28

    was like, I'm going to go turn that into

  652. 24:30

    well help turn that into an American

  653. 24:32

    show. Yeah. And we and I remember us

  654. 24:34

    thinking like, "Oh no,

  655. 24:36

    this is never going to work." We were

  656. 24:39

    really like, "Oh, this is this is

  657. 24:41

    terrible. Perfect show. How can you redo

  658. 24:44

    it?" And then, of course, we heard a

  659. 24:45

    couple things. We heard Steve Carell,

  660. 24:46

    who was a Second City guy that we knew

  661. 24:48

    in Chicago. We were like, "That's a good

  662. 24:50

    idea. That's a that's a good pick." And

  663. 24:52

    we were like, we knew that you were

  664. 24:54

    working on it, and others who are genius

  665. 24:56

    writers. And um so and and Greg Daniels,

  666. 24:59

    we thought, well, look, you got a good

  667. 25:00

    team. You're going to go down in flames,

  668. 25:02

    but it's going to be fun. It'll be like

  669. 25:05

    a cult classic thing or whatever. Yeah.

  670. 25:07

    I mean, I signed on for two reasons.

  671. 25:10

    Number one, it was only job offer I got.

  672. 25:14

    But more importantly, because I met with

  673. 25:16

    Greg and

  674. 25:18

    uh my wife J.J. Philin had worked on

  675. 25:20

    coupling, which was another British show

  676. 25:23

    that had been adapted and had not worked

  677. 25:25

    out. And Greg was like so scientific

  678. 25:28

    about it. He was like, "What do you

  679. 25:29

    think went wrong and where did what did

  680. 25:31

    they do and what did they not do?" And

  681. 25:32

    we ended up talking in his office for

  682. 25:33

    like 3 hours. And I was like, "This

  683. 25:36

    isn't going to work. It's a bad idea.

  684. 25:38

    Everybody thinks it's a bad idea, but

  685. 25:39

    this guy is so smart and has thought

  686. 25:41

    about this so carefully that this will

  687. 25:43

    at least be an incredible like he's

  688. 25:46

    going to teach me things about writing."

  689. 25:47

    And so I was not expecting it to work. I

  690. 25:49

    don't think anyone was except maybe

  691. 25:51

    Greg. But it was like this is going to

  692. 25:53

    be an education for me and going from

  693. 25:56

    sketchw writing to real or a half hour

  694. 25:58

    writing you know. And then on that show

  695. 26:01

    you are on for how many years? Four. The

  696. 26:03

    first four first four plus and then

  697. 26:06

    decide with Greg to create a new show

  698. 26:10

    and it might be fun to talk about just

  699. 26:14

    the like the all the kind of I think

  700. 26:16

    it's always a good reminder. I think you

  701. 26:17

    and I are very much like this. Like I

  702. 26:19

    think it's kind of important to show

  703. 26:21

    your work. Like I think people think

  704. 26:22

    that ideas are these like fully formed

  705. 26:25

    things that are just realized instantly.

  706. 26:28

    And in my opinion, people that are less

  707. 26:30

    secure tend to pretend that they are.

  708. 26:32

    But secure people, I think, tend to kind

  709. 26:35

    of talk about all the ways that they

  710. 26:38

    approach something and how it they had

  711. 26:40

    to reapproach, I guess. But in the very

  712. 26:42

    very beginning, the idea for the

  713. 26:44

    spin-off of The Office or was it even an

  714. 26:46

    idea for a spin-off was what? Well, so

  715. 26:49

    Bencame Parks and Ben Silverman was

  716. 26:52

    running NBC and they asked he asked Greg

  717. 26:54

    to like do a spin-off. And so Greg's

  718. 26:56

    response typically thoughtful and

  719. 26:58

    considered was I would love to do

  720. 27:01

    another show. If the best idea that I

  721. 27:04

    have for a show is a spin-off, then I

  722. 27:06

    will do a spin-off. If the best idea I

  723. 27:08

    have is something else, I'll do

  724. 27:09

    something else. Greg is a real one of

  725. 27:11

    the the main things that he gave me in

  726. 27:14

    terms of like how to do this job is best

  727. 27:16

    idea wins. Doesn't matter who it comes

  728. 27:19

    from. If it's staff writer or a 25-y

  729. 27:21

    year veteran co-EP or a person who works

  730. 27:24

    in costumes or whatever, best idea wins.

  731. 27:27

    That's it. No. And there is no uh

  732. 27:30

    correlary to that. In every situation

  733. 27:32

    that you're in creatively, best idea

  734. 27:34

    wins. And so that's what he said

  735. 27:35

    basically to Ben. And he was like, "It's

  736. 27:37

    very important to me that you understand

  737. 27:38

    that if the best idea I have is not a

  738. 27:41

    spin-off of The Office, uh, then we're

  739. 27:43

    going to do something else." And Ben was

  740. 27:45

    like, "Totally hear you, buddy." And the

  741. 27:46

    next day in the variety, he was like,

  742. 27:47

    "Office spin-off is coming." Then just

  743. 27:50

    totally ignored him and just announced

  744. 27:51

    an office spin-off. Sure. So, uh, so

  745. 27:55

    Greg and I started meeting. Greg asked

  746. 27:57

    me to do it with him. So, we started

  747. 27:59

    meeting. We would go to Norm's Diner in

  748. 28:01

    the Valley uh like twice a week for

  749. 28:04

    breakfast and we would just think of

  750. 28:06

    ideas and we would talk about what

  751. 28:08

    interested us and what was going on and

  752. 28:10

    we would inch down a little path and

  753. 28:12

    then hit a dead end and then inch back

  754. 28:14

    and we would um we just met constantly

  755. 28:16

    over showing your work. We met all the

  756. 28:19

    time forever and eventually

  757. 28:23

    came up with the idea of like, you know,

  758. 28:25

    and and by the way, just to say it, some

  759. 28:27

    of the ideas we talked about were office

  760. 28:29

    spin-offs. There were like Craig

  761. 28:30

    Robinson and Rain Wilson and all these

  762. 28:32

    people on the show who could clearly be

  763. 28:34

    on their own show. So, we talked about

  764. 28:36

    family shows with them or whatever. Greg

  765. 28:39

    was, I think, wary of taking assets away

  766. 28:42

    from a show that was very successful in

  767. 28:44

    part because of its large, rich cast. We

  768. 28:47

    stumbled upon this idea of like, okay,

  769. 28:48

    Dunder Mifflin on the office is a fake

  770. 28:51

    company and it's a way to saterize the

  771. 28:53

    private sector. What if we create a

  772. 28:55

    whole fake town and sadderize the public

  773. 28:57

    sector? And as we're having that idea,

  774. 28:59

    the world economy goes kabooy and

  775. 29:02

    they're talking about like massive

  776. 29:04

    government bailouts and we start to

  777. 29:05

    realize that like the government,

  778. 29:08

    obviously federal really, but also state

  779. 29:10

    and local was like going to be very

  780. 29:12

    present in people's lives.

  781. 29:13

    people like

  782. 29:19

    that. I had this idea for an abandoned

  783. 29:22

    lot that would be turned into a park

  784. 29:24

    over the course of the entire run of the

  785. 29:26

    show. Very wirey idea. I was obsessed

  786. 29:29

    with The Wire as were you. Yeah, we're

  787. 29:31

    we share that. We um and I thought like

  788. 29:34

    the the way that The Wire portrayed like

  789. 29:38

    calcified systems and how slow gears

  790. 29:40

    grind and stuff was fascinating to me.

  791. 29:42

    And I thought it would be really funny

  792. 29:44

    where in the p if it if you did a show

  793. 29:45

    that ideally lasts for a long time and

  794. 29:47

    in the pilot it's like we're going to do

  795. 29:49

    this and then it literally doesn't get

  796. 29:50

    done till the very end of like 9 years

  797. 29:52

    later. So that was the idea that I

  798. 29:55

    really like. Greg then was like, "What

  799. 29:56

    if it's not a lot? What if there's like

  800. 29:58

    a giant hole in the ground? What if it's

  801. 29:59

    a pit?" And I was like, "That's so much

  802. 30:01

    better." And so that idea of all the 73

  803. 30:04

    ideas we had started to like fizzy fizzy

  804. 30:07

    up. And it obviously is not a spin-off

  805. 30:09

    of The Office. And Greg, true to his

  806. 30:12

    word, was like, "This is what we want to

  807. 30:13

    do. At some point, we called you because

  808. 30:16

    we heard you were leaving and you were

  809. 30:18

    like, I'm theoretically interested in

  810. 30:20

    this. Let me know." The show was given a

  811. 30:25

    guaranteed 13 episode order, which now

  812. 30:27

    is very common place at the time was

  813. 30:28

    like insane.

  814. 30:31

    And The Office was going to be on after

  815. 30:33

    the Super Bowl that year. And this show

  816. 30:36

    was going to launch after The Office.

  817. 30:38

    Then you called us back and said,

  818. 30:40

    "Actually, sorry, prego." That's exactly

  819. 30:42

    what you said. You said, "PreGo, prego.

  820. 30:44

    I I sent you a telegraph."

  821. 30:48

    Stop.

  822. 30:50

    Shows off. Stop. And it was like, "Well,

  823. 30:53

    you're going to give birth like the week

  824. 30:55

    we have to shoot this, so no go." And

  825. 30:57

    then like I remember very clearly two

  826. 30:59

    weeks later I went into Greg's office

  827. 31:00

    and I was like you know there's no like

  828. 31:03

    we had we were working on the show at

  829. 31:05

    that point pretty strenuously and I was

  830. 31:07

    just like I just don't think there's

  831. 31:08

    anyone but Polar who can do this and he

  832. 31:10

    was like I had the same thought last

  833. 31:12

    night and very quickly we made a phone

  834. 31:15

    call to NBC and said if we can get Amy

  835. 31:17

    for this we will give up seven of the 13

  836. 31:20

    guaranteed episodes cuz we'd only be

  837. 31:21

    able to make six. Dang. And give up the

  838. 31:24

    Super Bowl slot. Boy, you guys were I'm

  839. 31:26

    so appreciative you did that. I mean, it

  840. 31:28

    the thing was it was actually a very

  841. 31:29

    simple decision because we were like,

  842. 31:31

    you know, getting Amy Polar on your show

  843. 31:34

    is a long-term decision. Like that's a

  844. 31:36

    decision you make for like this what you

  845. 31:39

    hope will be a very long chunk of time.

  846. 31:40

    Like the Super Bowl slot is a short-term

  847. 31:42

    decision. It's like yeah, you'll get

  848. 31:44

    this like fisson of of energy, but like

  849. 31:47

    it doesn't last. Like no one ever like

  850. 31:50

    very rarely does that determine the fate

  851. 31:52

    of a TV show. And so we then called you

  852. 31:56

    back and said, "What if you could start

  853. 31:58

    shooting three months after you give

  854. 31:59

    birth?" And then we made the show. And

  855. 32:02

    it proved to be the most satisfying

  856. 32:05

    creative experience I've ever had. And I

  857. 32:08

    like more than this podcast. No, this is

  858. 32:10

    my number one. Number two, it's number

  859. 32:12

    two. Yeah. This is I mean besides this

  860. 32:22

    now one of the ways like very concrete

  861. 32:25

    ways to that is I feel like an example

  862. 32:27

    of what I'm talking about which is like

  863. 32:28

    the joy in the details is the way you

  864. 32:31

    like to name characters. Yeah. And I

  865. 32:35

    think you gave me um I think you allowed

  866. 32:37

    me to use this in my book actually, but

  867. 32:39

    you gave me like a list of possible

  868. 32:42

    names instead of Leslie Nope, the

  869. 32:44

    character I played on Parks Rec. Like

  870. 32:45

    you gave me like a bunch of different

  871. 32:47

    alternative names. But you also love to

  872. 32:50

    name characters left and right. What is

  873. 32:52

    it? What is fun about names for you and

  874. 32:55

    naming? Okay, so it's two things. The

  875. 32:57

    first is growing up, first major comedic

  876. 33:01

    influence, Monty Python. MontiPython,

  877. 33:04

    experts at silly, stupid names, like

  878. 33:06

    hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of

  879. 33:08

    them. You can go look them up and their

  880. 33:09

    sketches. But the actual the actual

  881. 33:13

    thing that's going on here is different.

  882. 33:15

    So I would go to actors IMDb pages to

  883. 33:19

    see what they had been in when we were

  884. 33:20

    casting them in the early days of the

  885. 33:21

    show and you would see like woman number

  886. 33:24

    two or like man in crowd or guy with

  887. 33:28

    sandwich. And it really bummed me out

  888. 33:30

    because I love actors. I love them so

  889. 33:34

    much. I think that their job I I people

  890. 33:37

    will scoff when I say this. I think they

  891. 33:39

    have the hardest job of any job when it

  892. 33:41

    comes to like making a show. It is so

  893. 33:44

    hard. Anyone who doesn't believe this

  894. 33:46

    should try it, by the way. Try acting.

  895. 33:48

    Our buddy Ted Dansen gave me the best

  896. 33:50

    line, which is acting is embarrassing.

  897. 33:51

    It's embarrassing. It's hard. You have

  898. 33:53

    to summon

  899. 33:55

    something. comedic timing or dramatic

  900. 33:59

    performance or tears or anger or

  901. 34:02

    whatever like instantly with cameras on

  902. 34:05

    you and lights on you wearing makeup and

  903. 34:07

    clothes that aren't yours and a hundred

  904. 34:09

    people staring at you and a big dude

  905. 34:11

    holding a microphone 4 in from your face

  906. 34:14

    and when it's when people can do it well

  907. 34:16

    I think it's like a um it's like a a

  908. 34:18

    miracle worthy of beatatification in at

  909. 34:21

    the Vatican and so I would see these

  910. 34:24

    people on IMDb And it would be like man

  911. 34:27

    in crowd and it would be like that

  912. 34:28

    person like auditioned for this and

  913. 34:31

    booked this gig and drove all the way

  914. 34:33

    across town and like put on fake clothes

  915. 34:35

    and put on makeup and whatever and had

  916. 34:37

    to stand in a certain place, follow a

  917. 34:39

    million instructions, say a line or two,

  918. 34:42

    and then they yelled cut and then that

  919. 34:44

    person drove all the way home and they

  920. 34:46

    got paid like $600 for like a week's

  921. 34:48

    worth of work. And they should be there

  922. 34:51

    should be something better than man

  923. 34:53

    number two or man and crowd. Yeah. And

  924. 34:55

    so I decided at that moment, this is

  925. 34:56

    early in season one I think of Parks

  926. 34:59

    Wreck, that every character who appeared

  927. 35:02

    on the show was going to have a first

  928. 35:03

    and last name. So when you saw instead

  929. 35:06

    of if it says man and crowd, you're

  930. 35:07

    like, "Oh, well that it doesn't really

  931. 35:09

    count as an acting gig." But if you see

  932. 35:11

    Marv Vavma, which is a name I gave a

  933. 35:14

    character once, you're like, who the

  934. 35:16

    hell is Marv Vavma? What was Marvma up

  935. 35:19

    to? So I and it has been that was it

  936. 35:23

    started with that intention and has

  937. 35:25

    become one of the great truly one of the

  938. 35:28

    great joys of my life is to give every

  939. 35:30

    because here's the other thing sorry you

  940. 35:32

    can cut all this out but the other thing

  941. 35:34

    is if you name a character um Jack Smith

  942. 35:38

    you can get away with it because there

  943. 35:39

    are 10 trillion Jack Smiths but if you

  944. 35:41

    name a character anything even mildly

  945. 35:43

    interesting like Winona Cooper there's

  946. 35:46

    going to be like four Winona Coopers in

  947. 35:48

    the state that you're setting the show

  948. 35:50

    in and then the legal comes back and

  949. 35:51

    says you can't name your character that.

  950. 35:52

    A lot of people don't know that. You

  951. 35:54

    have to get names cleared. Be cleared.

  952. 35:55

    And there have to be either none or so

  953. 35:58

    many that not any one of them could be

  954. 36:01

    could think that you're saying anything

  955. 36:03

    about them. So I go for none. None.

  956. 36:06

    Yeah. I go for the weirdest names. Uh we

  957. 36:09

    had a character recently on the show on

  958. 36:12

    a man on the inside named Ailio Pepa

  959. 36:15

    Pepe. There's no Ailia Pipa Pepes

  960. 36:18

    anywhere in the continental United

  961. 36:19

    States. So, you get to use that name.

  962. 36:22

    That has been my goal is to have none

  963. 36:24

    have have the Google search come up

  964. 36:26

    empty with every name of every

  965. 36:27

    character. Okay. With that in mind, will

  966. 36:29

    you please read some of these names that

  967. 36:31

    you have invented? Yeah. Like just a few

  968. 36:34

    here on the bottom of this page. Okay.

  969. 36:36

    Uh Mona Lisa Sapperstein. Yes. Jenny

  970. 36:39

    Slate's character. Yes. Uh

  971. 36:44

    do you remember all these things?

  972. 36:45

    Amazing. Trod Frankenstein. Okay, tell

  973. 36:48

    us about Trod. So Trod Frankensteype was

  974. 36:50

    a local reporter or he had a like almost

  975. 36:53

    like a little show like this in Pawne

  976. 36:55

    where he would interview political

  977. 36:57

    people like Leslie Nome. A a great way

  978. 36:59

    to come up with a name that doesn't

  979. 37:00

    exist is to take a normal name like Todd

  980. 37:02

    and then just stick another letter in

  981. 37:04

    there somewhere. Trod and then

  982. 37:05

    Frankenstein is just Frankenstein with a

  983. 37:07

    P at the end. Uh, Tyrion Fonzerelli.

  984. 37:11

    Tyrion Fonzerelli. Obviously, a

  985. 37:13

    combination of two characters from TV

  986. 37:16

    history. Tyrion Lannister and Arthur

  987. 37:18

    Fonzerelli. This name goes to Matt

  988. 37:21

    Murray. Matt Murray did this. Ah,

  989. 37:22

    Panther. Yeah. Panther. Matt. Tyrion

  990. 37:25

    Fonzerelli was writer Parks and Wreck

  991. 37:27

    among other things. was a guy in a

  992. 37:28

    jewelry store who was buying a um an

  993. 37:32

    engagement ring for his to be betrothed

  994. 37:35

    when an and and Chris Trager were

  995. 37:38

    shopping for rings. Great. Uh Leslie,

  996. 37:40

    Nope, we know who that is. Gretzky Susan

  997. 37:43

    Pellegrino. Okay, this so

  998. 37:47

    Gretzky Susan Pellegrino was like the

  999. 37:49

    fourth in a series of names that that

  1000. 37:51

    for some reason all involved the last

  1001. 37:54

    name of the greatest hockey player who

  1002. 37:55

    ever lived, Wayne Gretzky. I don't

  1003. 37:57

    offhand remember who Gretzky Susan

  1004. 37:59

    Pellegrino is. Also, it should be noted

  1005. 38:01

    hyphens. Huge part of my naming process.

  1006. 38:03

    Yeah, I'm so excited. It's a way to get

  1007. 38:05

    another name in there. Another name. And

  1008. 38:07

    also, there's no way that someone's

  1009. 38:08

    going to have this name. No one's first

  1010. 38:10

    name is Gretzky Susan. Gretzky hyphen

  1011. 38:13

    Susan. Typhoon Montelbond. Oh, I love

  1012. 38:16

    Typhoon. Typhoon was uh was Don's

  1013. 38:18

    hairdresser. Y uh Ty Typhoon also Matt

  1014. 38:22

    Marie, I believe, named gave Typhoon the

  1015. 38:24

    first name Typhoon. We needed a last

  1016. 38:26

    name. Where do you go for the last name?

  1017. 38:28

    Ricardo Monttobond. Typhoon Monttobond.

  1018. 38:31

    Ceandra Sassnorb. Okay. Cassandra

  1019. 38:33

    Sassnorb was I believe I could have this

  1020. 38:36

    wrong. Was just Sandra. It was like

  1021. 38:38

    Sandra Snorp. Okay. And then the legal

  1022. 38:40

    was like doesn't didn't clear. We found

  1023. 38:42

    a Sandra. So guess what you do? You add

  1024. 38:44

    five more S's. Now you're good. Sandra.

  1025. 38:47

    Cassandra. Sassnor. Summer. Oolie.

  1026. 38:49

    Kraken. Frog. Frog. Okay. This is a

  1027. 38:52

    Montipython ripoff. Straight up. Okay.

  1028. 38:55

    Um, olay o le e with an accent and uh

  1029. 38:58

    and I guess just that part in there's a

  1030. 39:01

    there's a Monty Python sketch called I

  1031. 39:04

    think election night special where

  1032. 39:05

    they're just going through election

  1033. 39:07

    election results and local elections all

  1034. 39:08

    over the country. And there's a there's

  1035. 39:11

    a a silly party and a sensible party. So

  1036. 39:14

    all the people in the sensible party

  1037. 39:16

    have names like John Smith and all the

  1038. 39:18

    people in the silly party have very

  1039. 39:19

    crazy names. And there's also a very

  1040. 39:22

    silly party and a slightly silly party.

  1041. 39:25

    It's if you want names, go watch that

  1042. 39:27

    sketch. It'll it'll uh it'll it'll sate

  1043. 39:31

    you. Summer Olay Kraken, Frog Frog.

  1044. 39:34

    That's a good one. Frog Frog is a great

  1045. 39:36

    last name. Yeah. Now, and then this one.

  1046. 39:37

    Do you have Are you involved with this

  1047. 39:39

    one with hacks? No. CC Homo. I thought

  1048. 39:41

    that wasn't sure. CC Homo. And you know

  1049. 39:43

    what? I don't want to talk about hacks.

  1050. 39:44

    That's fine. They'll be here at 6. Um CC

  1051. 39:48

    Homo. H O M E- AU X was all Jen Statsky

  1052. 39:52

    and Luchian Yellow and Paul DS. I don't

  1053. 39:53

    know which one of them came up with it,

  1054. 39:54

    but yes, but said but spelled

  1055. 39:56

    differently than it said. It's a very

  1056. 39:58

    funny moment in the show because she

  1057. 39:59

    introduced herself as CZ Homo and Jean

  1058. 40:01

    Smart goes spell that.

  1059. 40:06

    Okay. Oh, and you know, we're going to

  1060. 40:07

    let's let's get into Philly Justice

  1061. 40:09

    because we have some special guests that

  1062. 40:11

    are going to be joining us to talk about

  1063. 40:12

    Philly Justice. Um, for those listening,

  1064. 40:14

    stand by because we have very, very

  1065. 40:17

    exciting guests. Probably should have

  1066. 40:19

    mentioned this so long ago. Oh, yeah.

  1067. 40:21

    Can you do me a favor and go back and

  1068. 40:22

    record that? Well, we do record. We

  1069. 40:24

    often record the beginning after the

  1070. 40:27

    interview so I can talk about what we

  1071. 40:29

    talked about. Please don't make people

  1072. 40:31

    sit through summer crack and frog prong

  1073. 40:33

    before they get to the famous people.

  1074. 40:35

    And I and a lot of people don't know

  1075. 40:36

    though, we record the interview after

  1076. 40:38

    the person leaves. So So yeah. So this

  1077. 40:41

    is just recorded. No.

  1078. 40:46

    Um, this is just to capture the AI

  1079. 40:48

    modulation of my voice. Yes. And then

  1080. 40:50

    you make me say whatever you want me. Of

  1081. 40:52

    course. I mean, it's just so hard.

  1082. 40:54

    Honestly, it's a relief at this point.

  1083. 40:56

    AI is a relief. I keep saying that. It

  1084. 40:57

    really is. Um Um and um we we might also

  1085. 41:02

    want to like do a little teaser too to

  1086. 41:04

    say that you and I are thinking when

  1087. 41:06

    this comes out Yeah. we will have

  1088. 41:08

    announced that we're working together

  1089. 41:10

    again on something exciting. Very

  1090. 41:11

    exciting. So, we're back together again.

  1091. 41:14

    We are renewing our vows, if you will. I

  1092. 41:17

    um I had my fun. That's right. I ran

  1093. 41:20

    around town. Yes. And I realized that

  1094. 41:22

    what I really needed was under my nose

  1095. 41:24

    the whole time. Yoko knew that John

  1096. 41:26

    needed a break. Okay. And she let him

  1097. 41:30

    wander and he came back. So,

  1098. 41:34

    you know, everyone needs a break

  1099. 41:35

    sometimes. But you're back. Back. We're

  1100. 41:37

    back. And we're very very excited to

  1101. 41:39

    work together again. We'll have to

  1102. 41:40

    That's a whole separate podcast. I think

  1103. 41:42

    it is. I think it is. But it's just a

  1104. 41:43

    little teaser. Okay. So, we will do

  1105. 41:46

    another episode on Parks, We Promise,

  1106. 41:48

    for those listening. But in the

  1107. 41:50

    meantime, we need to get to I think a

  1108. 41:51

    more important TV show by far. And and

  1109. 41:54

    that is called Philly Justice. Yeah.

  1110. 41:57

    Now, to explain to people listening,

  1111. 41:59

    what the heck is this? I don't know

  1112. 42:00

    about a show called Philly Justice.

  1113. 42:02

    Well, you shouldn't. It's not real. But

  1114. 42:05

    on I'll just set it up and then I need I

  1115. 42:07

    need you to tell us the history. So,

  1116. 42:10

    Very briefly, Philly Justice is a fake

  1117. 42:13

    TV show that we made up, a few cast

  1118. 42:16

    members made up on the set of Parks and

  1119. 42:18

    Wreck one day because we looked at a

  1120. 42:20

    picture of ourselves and we laughed and

  1121. 42:21

    we said, "Oh, we look like we're in a TV

  1122. 42:23

    show called Philly Justice." That small

  1123. 42:26

    inside joke onset laugh grew into a

  1124. 42:30

    beast that is still discussed today. So,

  1125. 42:32

    what do you remember about the

  1126. 42:34

    beginnings of Philly Justice? So, this

  1127. 42:35

    is like season 4 of Parks and Wreck. I

  1128. 42:38

    think you're running for Leslie's

  1129. 42:40

    running for office. And we have in this

  1130. 42:43

    season incredible regular guest stars on

  1131. 42:46

    the show. Kathern Han played uh a

  1132. 42:48

    campaign manager, high-powered campaign

  1133. 42:50

    manager from DC who was running the

  1134. 42:52

    campaign of Bobby Newport played by Paul

  1135. 42:54

    Rudd. Yeah. And Bobby Newport was the

  1136. 42:56

    [ __ ] son of a wealthy businessman who

  1137. 43:00

    didn't want the job at all. uh and but

  1138. 43:03

    was running against Leslie and it's

  1139. 43:04

    Leslie's greatest dream and it's he

  1140. 43:06

    Bobby Newport does not care at all and

  1141. 43:08

    in fact in the finale of the show when

  1142. 43:12

    he loses there's a brief clip of him on

  1143. 43:14

    TV being interviewed and he says

  1144. 43:16

    honestly this is a huge relief which is

  1145. 43:18

    one of my favorite it's an incredible

  1146. 43:20

    Paul Redd moment. So, in this episode we

  1147. 43:23

    were shooting, you were all in like

  1148. 43:26

    campaign mode, which meant you were un

  1149. 43:28

    maybe uncharacteristically wearing like

  1150. 43:29

    a very smartly tailored suit. Yep. And

  1151. 43:32

    Rashida was Anne Perkins was also

  1152. 43:35

    wearing something like that. And then um

  1153. 43:37

    Jen Barkley, Catherine's character, is

  1154. 43:39

    always highowered suit lady and Paul Red

  1155. 43:41

    is there and Adam Scott is there who

  1156. 43:43

    usually wore ties and suits and stuff.

  1157. 43:45

    And so this is what I remember is that

  1158. 43:47

    someone came running up and said, "Look

  1159. 43:49

    at this picture." And it was all five of

  1160. 43:50

    you and I think it was just a wardrobe

  1161. 43:52

    picture. It was like let's get a

  1162. 43:53

    picture. They take pictures of

  1163. 43:54

    characters all the time just to say like

  1164. 43:56

    okay this is what they look like in case

  1165. 43:58

    we have to recreate this. And then I

  1166. 44:00

    think maybe Rashida had said someone had

  1167. 44:03

    said we look like we're in a David E.

  1168. 44:04

    Kelly show like a legal drama. And I

  1169. 44:06

    think Rashida maybe just said Philly

  1170. 44:08

    Justice and we'll put the picture up

  1171. 44:09

    here but it look we're just kind of

  1172. 44:11

    nailing it drama in the mode of that of

  1173. 44:14

    that kind of show. That's right. So then

  1174. 44:16

    what I heard and this stuff was like

  1175. 44:18

    bleeding up to me in the writer room is

  1176. 44:20

    that you guys had started kind of just

  1177. 44:23

    you were like this is the thing we're

  1178. 44:24

    doing now is we're coming up with like

  1179. 44:27

    characters and scenes and like moments

  1180. 44:29

    of dialogue for our characters from this

  1181. 44:32

    fake show that you had invented called

  1182. 44:34

    Philly Justice which was a David E.

  1183. 44:35

    Kelly show from like 2005

  1184. 44:39

    that had shot the pilot and that had

  1185. 44:41

    never aired and you were all goofing

  1186. 44:43

    around and improvising, right?

  1187. 44:44

    improvising just like who you were and

  1188. 44:46

    what the show was about. So it it just

  1189. 44:50

    kept wafting up to the writer that they

  1190. 44:53

    everyone was really enjoying this.

  1191. 44:55

    Great. Fantastic. Then I think we all

  1192. 44:59

    collectively blacked out. Mhm. And when

  1193. 45:02

    we woke up the writers had written

  1194. 45:05

    scenes for Philly Justice. Like we like

  1195. 45:08

    a 20page script. Yeah. Like writers, it

  1196. 45:10

    should be noted in comedy rooms will

  1197. 45:12

    take any excuse not to work. Of course,

  1198. 45:14

    writing is the worst. It's the worst.

  1199. 45:16

    And it's And if there's like a fun a

  1200. 45:18

    more fun thing. Yeah. Great. And I I do

  1201. 45:21

    remember at one point divying up scenes

  1202. 45:24

    for Philly Justice the way that a good

  1203. 45:27

    showrunner would be like, "Okay, why

  1204. 45:28

    don't you guys take act one of the next

  1205. 45:30

    episode and you take act two and

  1206. 45:31

    whatever." And instead I was like,

  1207. 45:33

    "Okay, you guys write the scene where

  1208. 45:34

    the Adam Scott and uh and whoever are

  1209. 45:38

    like fighting and you take the scene

  1210. 45:39

    where this and we just started writing

  1211. 45:43

    scenes, fake scenes for a fake show that

  1212. 45:45

    didn't exist for you in character while

  1213. 45:47

    we were making another show." Correct.

  1214. 45:49

    Now, we have in season 4 of the show, we

  1215. 45:53

    have built the city council chambers

  1216. 45:55

    where Leslie was hoping to work someday.

  1217. 45:56

    The city council chambers looked kind of

  1218. 45:59

    like a courtroom if you squinted. Y so

  1219. 46:02

    it was like okay and then at some point

  1220. 46:04

    I remember Morgan Sacket Yep. who we're

  1221. 46:06

    going to talk to today talk to today

  1222. 46:08

    coming in and saying like I think we can

  1223. 46:10

    shoot all of this stuff in the in the

  1224. 46:13

    city council chamber and I don't

  1225. 46:15

    remember when we decided to shoot it. I

  1226. 46:18

    like that again we blacked out. Yeah.

  1227. 46:20

    But suddenly we were just going to do

  1228. 46:21

    this. We were going to make We're going

  1229. 46:23

    to use NBC resources

  1230. 46:27

    while we're supposed to be making the

  1231. 46:29

    show they paid for which never suffered.

  1232. 46:31

    Never suffered. And then we're going to

  1233. 46:33

    take some of those resources and divert

  1234. 46:35

    them without anyone knowing. Sure. To a

  1235. 46:37

    different part of the same set. Yeah.

  1236. 46:39

    And then shoot the scenes from Philly

  1237. 46:41

    Justice. And and by the way, this is

  1238. 46:43

    very important for everyone to

  1239. 46:45

    understand. To no end. There was not a

  1240. 46:47

    point to this. It wasn't like we're

  1241. 46:49

    going to put this on the DVD or we're

  1242. 46:52

    going to this is like a backdoor pilot

  1243. 46:54

    or if this works we could really do XYZ.

  1244. 46:56

    And it wasn't like vir it wasn't like

  1245. 46:57

    we're going to make a viral thing or

  1246. 46:59

    we're going to be talking about it 15 16

  1247. 47:01

    years later. No, it was because it was

  1248. 47:03

    fun. And and really the thing that I

  1249. 47:06

    think is the most important thing to get

  1250. 47:07

    across is that the that show was so fun

  1251. 47:10

    to work on. Everyone was almost

  1252. 47:13

    singularly devoted to the concept of

  1253. 47:16

    having fun. Yeah. And this just seemed

  1254. 47:18

    fun. And it we didn't question it. We

  1255. 47:20

    didn't ask why we were doing it. Morgan

  1256. 47:23

    Morgan's job basically is to like make

  1257. 47:25

    the show that we're making. He was as

  1258. 47:28

    gung-ho about this as anyone. He was

  1259. 47:29

    like, "Yeah, of course we of course we

  1260. 47:30

    have to do this. Like we have to do

  1261. 47:32

    this." And then next thing I know, well

  1262. 47:34

    then a bunch of stuff happens and I

  1263. 47:36

    don't want to go too far. Well, I think

  1264. 47:37

    this might be a good time to jump onto

  1265. 47:39

    our Zoom. Perfect time actually because

  1266. 47:41

    we're going to be joined on our Zoom

  1267. 47:43

    with some the cast of Philly Justice

  1268. 47:46

    basically. And what we'll figure what

  1269. 47:48

    we'll discuss when we get everybody is

  1270. 47:50

    there was a casting change. I forgot

  1271. 47:52

    about that. Okay. And also what we'll

  1272. 47:55

    talk about is this small joke became

  1273. 47:59

    hours of emails. Yeah. Character

  1274. 48:01

    descriptions, tons of um scripts, an

  1275. 48:05

    actual shoot day, a trailer that we're

  1276. 48:08

    going to show at the end. And nobody has

  1277. 48:10

    seen this particular trailer. It's very

  1278. 48:12

    exciting. We now we did put on the um

  1279. 48:15

    end of one of the blooper reels like a

  1280. 48:18

    small kind of like fake trailer of

  1281. 48:20

    Philly Justice, but we never showed the

  1282. 48:22

    real deal. And not only we're going to

  1283. 48:24

    show it to our um uh to on this podcast,

  1284. 48:28

    but we're also a lot of the people here

  1285. 48:30

    today have never seen it, and we're

  1286. 48:31

    going to watch them watch it in real

  1287. 48:33

    time. Very exciting. And just like those

  1288. 48:34

    video games, and we're going to play

  1289. 48:35

    video games over them watching the

  1290. 48:38

    video. Yeah. And then I'm going to

  1291. 48:39

    Twitch. I'm going to do a Twitch stream

  1292. 48:41

    that has that in a small square while I

  1293. 48:44

    play Castlevania. Yeah. And then me and

  1294. 48:45

    Kai Snat are going to go out and give

  1295. 48:47

    out Nintendo. We're going to And then

  1296. 48:50

    that whole thing will be on a video on a

  1297. 48:54

    phone that Mr. Beast is holding at the

  1298. 48:56

    NBA Slam Dunk contest when he jumps out

  1299. 48:58

    of the helicopter.

  1300. 49:03

    Okay, so let's see. Do we have anyone on

  1301. 49:06

    yet? Oh my gosh, this is exciting.

  1302. 49:09

    This episode is brought to you by Degree

  1303. 49:11

    Cool Rush deodorant. I'm a big fan of

  1304. 49:14

    people owning their mistakes. Like how

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    last year Degree changed their Cool Rush

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    formula and man were mad. One guy even

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    started a petition. So Degree listened,

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    admitted they messed up, and they're now

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    bringing the OG Cool Rush scent back.

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    antipersperent for the last decade. And

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    it's in Walmart, Target, and other

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    stores now for under $4. Just look for

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    the light blue one. Degree Cool Rush is

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    back. And it smells like victory for

  1317. 49:45

    everyone. Woohoo. So joining us uh now

  1318. 49:49

    uh uh Rashidita Jones, Morgan Sackett,

  1319. 49:52

    and Adam Scott. Welcome everybody. Thank

  1320. 49:54

    you so much. Thanks for having us.

  1321. 49:55

    Thanks for having us. Um where is

  1322. 49:57

    everyone zooming from? I'm I'm I'm

  1323. 50:00

    upstairs at a a barbecue. A family

  1324. 50:02

    barbecue. Great. in LA. Morgan, I'm at

  1325. 50:06

    home in LA. Adam, I'm in New York and

  1326. 50:09

    I'm I happen to be in Aziz's apartment

  1327. 50:12

    right now. H And is Aziz there? No. No,

  1328. 50:16

    he's I locked him out. He's downstairs.

  1329. 50:18

    He can't get banging on the door. That's

  1330. 50:21

    right. He's furious. Wait, Sheeta

  1331. 50:24

    upstairs at a barbecue. Yeah, not mine.

  1332. 50:27

    I'm in a I'm in a a person's home. I

  1333. 50:29

    asked them where their office was. This

  1334. 50:30

    is where I am.

  1335. 50:32

    So, thank you. That's the That's always

  1336. 50:34

    the best place at a barbecue is just

  1337. 50:36

    upstairs by yourself away from in like a

  1338. 50:39

    stranger's office. It's great. Just

  1339. 50:42

    going through their stuff. Yep. Emy's up

  1340. 50:45

    here just telling you guys. Dang. Whose

  1341. 50:47

    barbecue is this? Can Can we guess whose

  1342. 50:49

    barbecue it is? It's also Aiz's

  1343. 50:51

    barbecue.

  1344. 50:54

    And he's not allowed in. He's also not

  1345. 50:56

    there. He's not in either place. By the

  1346. 50:59

    way, guys, where's Aiz? Yeah. Don't I

  1347. 51:03

    haven't heard from him in years. If Aziz

  1348. 51:04

    walks through the background of Morgan

  1349. 51:06

    Zoom right now, it'll be the greatest

  1350. 51:08

    moment in the history of podcasting.

  1351. 51:11

    I guess we wanted to just start um

  1352. 51:14

    Morgan if we could. Um

  1353. 51:18

    we were talking about how this picture

  1354. 51:21

    on set then became a private joke that

  1355. 51:24

    then became a show that then was written

  1356. 51:26

    by the writers while we were actually

  1357. 51:28

    doing a real show.

  1358. 51:31

    So, what do you remember about the first

  1359. 51:34

    time you heard about it? And could you

  1360. 51:35

    talk to us about the email that you

  1361. 51:37

    sent? And also, how how were you this

  1362. 51:39

    irresponsible that you allowed this to

  1363. 51:41

    happen on your watch? Yeah. Really?

  1364. 51:44

    It just sort of floated around for a

  1365. 51:45

    while. Everybody I don't know. I thought

  1366. 51:47

    Colleen, who was our photographer

  1367. 51:49

    forever, took it, but I talked to her

  1368. 51:50

    this week. She didn't. I don't know who

  1369. 51:51

    snapped that photo, but little did they

  1370. 51:54

    know, it was just with one of our

  1371. 51:55

    phones. It was on my phone, and we got

  1372. 51:58

    somebody to do it. I don't remember who

  1373. 51:59

    did it, but Okay. So, you you

  1374. 52:01

    commissioned the photo yourself cuz you

  1375. 52:03

    were enjoying how you all looked in your

  1376. 52:06

    smartly tailored suits. Okay. We were

  1377. 52:08

    enjoying ourselves. Yes. Right. The

  1378. 52:09

    photo was commissioned like like actors

  1379. 52:11

    do. We were like, "Look at how cool we

  1380. 52:14

    look. Let's take another." We were like,

  1381. 52:16

    "We've been photographed all day, but

  1382. 52:18

    yet it's still not enough, right? Not

  1383. 52:20

    enough. I don't feel satisfied somehow.

  1384. 52:24

    While people around us are doing work

  1385. 52:26

    like setting up the next shot, get

  1386. 52:28

    carrying cameras and equipment stuff,

  1387. 52:30

    we're like, "Oh, look at us in front of

  1388. 52:33

    this, you know, just like Yeah. We were

  1389. 52:35

    like, "So, Rashidita, somebody take a

  1390. 52:37

    picture with Rashidita's camera. How

  1391. 52:38

    cool we look." And Rashida, do I have it

  1392. 52:41

    right? I thought I remembered that you

  1393. 52:44

    were the one who who first said the

  1394. 52:46

    words Philly Justice as if it were a

  1395. 52:48

    fake show. Do I have that right or do

  1396. 52:49

    you remember? It's probably I mean I I

  1397. 52:51

    I'm not going to take credit but it's

  1398. 52:53

    probably right because I I'm I mean I

  1399. 52:55

    spent two years on a David Kelly show

  1400. 52:57

    and like a you know in David Kelly land

  1401. 53:00

    and I think I was like this is a

  1402. 53:02

    procedural this is like a legal

  1403. 53:04

    procedural maybe I don't know my memory

  1404. 53:07

    is not great but also credits. Well if

  1405. 53:09

    if you pay attention everybody is facing

  1406. 53:12

    one way except for Adam and that really

  1407. 53:14

    did end up informing his character.

  1408. 53:17

    Yeah. Everybody's Yeah. So, Adam is the

  1409. 53:21

    rebel. Nick something, right? Yeah.

  1410. 53:24

    Nick. Yeah. We'll get We'll get to Nick.

  1411. 53:26

    So, Morgan, you are busy working on a

  1412. 53:30

    show and you hear this stupid thing and

  1413. 53:33

    you're like, you just hear us talking

  1414. 53:35

    about it. When did you realize that you

  1415. 53:39

    wanted to be part of making it into a

  1416. 53:42

    trailer?

  1417. 53:44

    I don't know. I think we it just kept

  1418. 53:47

    coming up and it's like and I I feel

  1419. 53:48

    like it was when we had that the city

  1420. 53:51

    council chambers, you know, that Leslie

  1421. 53:54

    and we're like that courtroom and then

  1422. 53:56

    we knew the Barkley group was coming up

  1423. 53:58

    which was Hans characters like high-end

  1424. 54:01

    DC lobbying firm and it's like that

  1425. 54:03

    looks like a law office. So I sent I we

  1426. 54:05

    just talked about it forever and noodled

  1427. 54:07

    around scripts and you guys had a very

  1428. 54:09

    active chat going on about it and I sent

  1429. 54:11

    out an email. We I have the email. Can

  1430. 54:14

    you read Morgan? Can you read us the

  1431. 54:16

    email? Sure. Dear cast of Philly

  1432. 54:18

    Justice, we're planning to shoot

  1433. 54:20

    Wednesday, September 19th. The brief

  1434. 54:22

    storyline is that there's an EPK for

  1435. 54:24

    Philly Justice pilot shot in the spring

  1436. 54:26

    of 2002. We're talking to Dylan

  1437. 54:28

    McDerman, and it looks like we'll work

  1438. 54:30

    it out to have him join us. We also may

  1439. 54:33

    get a interview with David E. Kelly,

  1440. 54:35

    which we really thought we were going to

  1441. 54:36

    get. We should decide what angle we want

  1442. 54:39

    to take with him. He wrote it, he saw

  1443. 54:42

    it, he hated it, he advised Dylan not to

  1444. 54:43

    do it, etc. We're planning to convert

  1445. 54:45

    the Barkley Group set into the Office of

  1446. 54:47

    Billy Justice team. We're also going to

  1447. 54:49

    set up a courtroom set. The plan is to

  1448. 54:51

    shoot a couple of short scenes for the

  1449. 54:53

    pilot and then interviews with the cast.

  1450. 54:55

    Most of the piece will play out in the

  1451. 54:57

    interview segments. The plan is to dress

  1452. 54:58

    and groom everyone as 2002 lawyers. That

  1453. 55:01

    need from everybody is character names

  1454. 55:03

    and backgrounds. Any bits you want to

  1455. 55:04

    try and name for the law firm, please

  1456. 55:07

    respond. And at the end I said, "Thanks,

  1457. 55:09

    Morgan Sacket, assistant to the

  1458. 55:10

    associate producer of Philly Jo."

  1459. 55:14

    I Okay, Morgan, why? I just want to know

  1460. 55:16

    why, Morgan. Why? Why did you Why did

  1461. 55:19

    you let

  1462. 55:21

    I remember emailing David Kelly's people

  1463. 55:23

    and he was in and then I got a call like

  1464. 55:26

    two days before he was going to come and

  1465. 55:27

    it's like, "I'm sorry." from like some

  1466. 55:30

    big CA agent or something like, "I'm

  1467. 55:31

    sorry, what is this? Did he come?" Ah,

  1468. 55:35

    of course. And they killed it. that went

  1469. 55:37

    away very quickly. I remember getting

  1470. 55:40

    that email and being so because there

  1471. 55:43

    were like rumblings like we're actually

  1472. 55:45

    I think we might shoot something and the

  1473. 55:47

    writers might be coming up with

  1474. 55:48

    something and then getting the email and

  1475. 55:51

    knowing for sure Morgan was on board

  1476. 55:53

    meant that we might actually be doing

  1477. 55:56

    this. Yeah. If he puts his brain on it,

  1478. 56:00

    time will be carved out. And it was I

  1479. 56:02

    remember just being so excited that we

  1480. 56:05

    were gonna get to do it. Yeah. Because

  1481. 56:07

    we'd been talking about at that point

  1482. 56:09

    maybe for like six months or I I I don't

  1483. 56:11

    know. Did you figure out how long from

  1484. 56:13

    when we had taken the picture to when we

  1485. 56:17

    shot this? How long? I don't think it

  1486. 56:19

    was that long. It was at least most of a

  1487. 56:20

    season. It was like between Yeah, I

  1488. 56:24

    thought it was a while. Rashidita, do

  1489. 56:25

    you have any memory of that early part?

  1490. 56:28

    I can't believe how long it was. I'm

  1491. 56:29

    like in shock that we spent so I do

  1492. 56:31

    remember there was a lot of we talked a

  1493. 56:34

    lot about our our backstories

  1494. 56:37

    not just as characters but as the people

  1495. 56:40

    playing the characters and how we

  1496. 56:42

    interacted with each other on the set of

  1497. 56:44

    Philly Justice. So it was like meta meta

  1498. 56:46

    meta like many many levels of Inception

  1499. 56:49

    had been had been crafted to like really

  1500. 56:52

    support the the the truth of this

  1501. 56:54

    experience. I feel like you two and Han

  1502. 56:57

    and um uh whoever were on was and Amy

  1503. 57:02

    who were on the chat had gotten you had

  1504. 57:05

    done so much work in just like in

  1505. 57:08

    texting and like doing the bit of the

  1506. 57:10

    show that you had accidentally created

  1507. 57:12

    this very elaborate backstory and one of

  1508. 57:14

    the pieces of the backstory was that

  1509. 57:16

    Dylan Mcder had been in the pilot. He of

  1510. 57:18

    course a veteran of The Practice and of

  1511. 57:20

    other shows like that. And then at some

  1512. 57:23

    point, and this is where we need Morgan,

  1513. 57:25

    when did we reach out to Dylan McDermott

  1514. 57:28

    to say, "We're doing this insane thing

  1515. 57:30

    for no reason. Do you want to be a part

  1516. 57:33

    of it?" And how did that go exactly? Do

  1517. 57:35

    you remember? I think that we were we

  1518. 57:38

    wanted to do it and we're like, we have

  1519. 57:39

    these sets and we can shoot it and Rudd

  1520. 57:43

    was doing a movie or something was not

  1521. 57:45

    available. Right. That should be clear

  1522. 57:46

    that Paul Rudd was not available. So

  1523. 57:49

    instead of killing the fake show within

  1524. 57:53

    the real show, we said let's recast with

  1525. 57:55

    Dylan McDermott who very very nicely

  1526. 58:00

    said yes I'm in. Yeah. What? He didn't

  1527. 58:03

    even he said I don't even think he said

  1528. 58:04

    what is this? He just said I'm game. I'm

  1529. 58:06

    in. Well, also so then the but the lore

  1530. 58:09

    in the meta meta meta world became that

  1531. 58:12

    Paul Rudd had been that character and

  1532. 58:14

    had been recast after the table read and

  1533. 58:17

    been replaced by Dylan McDermott which

  1534. 58:19

    is why he was going to be in it and not

  1535. 58:21

    Paul. And during that time we started

  1536. 58:22

    talking about our characters and if we

  1537. 58:24

    have a second cuz I know I don't have

  1538. 58:25

    everybody for very long. if we could um

  1539. 58:29

    read the character descriptions of our

  1540. 58:31

    characters. Um if if Bones, now you're

  1541. 58:35

    in a car. I see you're in a car.

  1542. 58:38

    Fleeing fleeing the Now you're driving.

  1543. 58:41

    This is This is a real active Zoom here.

  1544. 58:43

    I'm going to Yes, I Yes, I'm here. Okay,

  1545. 58:46

    I'm sending I'm I'm sending you the um

  1546. 58:49

    character description. Are you actually

  1547. 58:51

    driving or is someone driving? No.

  1548. 58:54

    Wouldn't that be terrible? No. Okay, I'm

  1549. 58:55

    I'm No. Okay. So, um if I may, um uh uh

  1550. 59:00

    have our our actors here and then we'll

  1551. 59:02

    we'll we'll fill in with Hans and um and

  1552. 59:04

    Rud/ McDermott's character. Sure. Um

  1553. 59:07

    Rashidita, would you mind telling us the

  1554. 59:10

    character you came up with for Philly

  1555. 59:11

    Justice? So, when we watch the trailer,

  1556. 59:13

    we know what you know what kind of stuff

  1557. 59:16

    you were working with. Yeah. Yeah, you

  1558. 59:18

    got it. Okay. So I I was um I was

  1559. 59:22

    playing Joey Martinez who was a first

  1560. 59:25

    year associate. She had a really rough

  1561. 59:28

    background like her she had she came

  1562. 59:30

    from a hard hard family background. Um

  1563. 59:32

    she doesn't like to talk but she's the

  1564. 59:35

    one that gives it to you straight when

  1565. 59:38

    you don't ask for her opinion. And

  1566. 59:39

    that's that's the beauty of Joey is that

  1567. 59:42

    even when you don't ask she's going to

  1568. 59:43

    tell you what she thinks. Yeah. That's

  1569. 59:45

    Joey. Yeah. That's Joey. That's Joey.

  1570. 59:48

    And women don't like her in the firm,

  1571. 59:50

    like especially Holly, but women in

  1572. 59:52

    general don't like her in the firm cuz

  1573. 59:54

    she's, you know, and Holly was my

  1574. 59:55

    character and it was fun for us to play

  1575. 59:57

    enemies. I'm sorry. I just got the text

  1576. 1:00:00

    that Polar sent with these descriptions.

  1577. 1:00:01

    They are so long. They're so long. Yeah,

  1578. 1:00:05

    there's hundreds of charact There's more

  1579. 1:00:07

    work put into this than there was into

  1580. 1:00:08

    the actual characters from Parks and

  1581. 1:00:10

    Wreck. Yeah. Well, that's what that's

  1582. 1:00:12

    when it makes sense that we spent six

  1583. 1:00:14

    months doing this. That's when it really

  1584. 1:00:16

    really makes sense. All right, Adam, you

  1585. 1:00:18

    want to talk to us about your character?

  1586. 1:00:19

    Sure. Nick Bellows, uh, he's a district

  1587. 1:00:22

    attorney.

  1588. 1:00:24

    He wrote rides his motorcycle to work,

  1589. 1:00:26

    leather jacket with a tie, was one of

  1590. 1:00:29

    the fastest rising attorneys in

  1591. 1:00:31

    Manhattan and was being groomed for

  1592. 1:00:33

    partner at Powers Cooper and Powers

  1593. 1:00:36

    under the toutelage of his mentor/f

  1594. 1:00:39

    father figure Blaine Powers. Cool. But

  1595. 1:00:42

    the morning of September 11th, 2001,

  1596. 1:00:45

    Nick was late to work because he was in

  1597. 1:00:48

    bed with a woman he'd been secretly

  1598. 1:00:50

    seeing.

  1599. 1:00:52

    Molina Powers, Blaine P. White. Whoa.

  1600. 1:00:55

    Whoa. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.

  1601. 1:00:58

    Yeah. Uh, the location of P Cooper and P

  1602. 1:01:01

    offices, World Trade Center, North

  1603. 1:01:04

    Tower, 67th floor. Bellows is the only

  1604. 1:01:08

    survivor from his firm. Wow.

  1605. 1:01:10

    Unbelievable back story. This is quite a

  1606. 1:01:12

    backstory. It's crazy. I mean, think

  1607. 1:01:15

    about the guilt.

  1608. 1:01:17

    I mean, you can't imagine. Just below

  1609. 1:01:19

    the surface, you know. So, Bellowos went

  1610. 1:01:22

    off the grid. He was believed to have

  1611. 1:01:23

    perished along with his colleagues. But

  1612. 1:01:25

    in fact, he grabbed his suitcase,

  1613. 1:01:27

    leather jacket, and a 357

  1614. 1:01:30

    Magnum and found his way to Afghanistan,

  1615. 1:01:33

    determined to fight for justice in the

  1616. 1:01:36

    one place, the only place that truly

  1617. 1:01:38

    needs it.

  1618. 1:01:40

    Good lord. That's also not true. There's

  1619. 1:01:43

    a lot of places that need justice. Quite

  1620. 1:01:45

    a few. Yeah. Uh Bellows has more demons

  1621. 1:01:49

    than he can count. And now that he's

  1622. 1:01:51

    back, he's on the right side of the law.

  1623. 1:01:53

    He cares about only one thing. Uh one

  1624. 1:01:57

    thing and one thing only, justice. Wow.

  1625. 1:02:00

    So he's just to be clear, he's a

  1626. 1:02:02

    district attorney who works at this law

  1627. 1:02:04

    firm. Yeah. for some reason. Yeah, he is

  1628. 1:02:07

    at a private network. He didn't know. We

  1629. 1:02:10

    didn't know. You know,

  1630. 1:02:13

    he went in. Wait, see 911 made him grab

  1631. 1:02:17

    a pistol and go to Afghanistan. Get his

  1632. 1:02:20

    leather jacket and a gun and go to I I

  1633. 1:02:25

    guess independent of the armed forces,

  1634. 1:02:27

    he's just over there. Yeah, he just went

  1635. 1:02:28

    over there on his own. Hey guys. Hey

  1636. 1:02:30

    guys, how can I help? So, I'll I'll

  1637. 1:02:32

    blaze through the other fast one. So

  1638. 1:02:34

    then we had Katherine Han who was

  1639. 1:02:36

    Valerie McNeel partner criminal

  1640. 1:02:38

    prosecutor a machine and no kids never

  1641. 1:02:42

    married. She isn't here. She also is

  1642. 1:02:44

    very tough. She cares about the case

  1643. 1:02:46

    over everyone else. And in the trailer

  1644. 1:02:49

    there's a moment where you and Catherine

  1645. 1:02:51

    kiss Adam. Yeah. I'm not sure why, but I

  1646. 1:02:56

    always remembered it like um uh um

  1647. 1:03:00

    what's what's the um the Mandela effect?

  1648. 1:03:03

    I always remembered it as Rashida and

  1649. 1:03:05

    Catherine kissing. Oh, wait, no, you're

  1650. 1:03:07

    not wrong. There was a joke, and this is

  1651. 1:03:10

    now coming back to me. I think there was

  1652. 1:03:11

    a joke that we were going to do a scene

  1653. 1:03:12

    where like Adam and Catherine kissed and

  1654. 1:03:14

    then Adam and Rashidita kissed and then

  1655. 1:03:16

    Catherine and Rashidita kissed and it

  1656. 1:03:18

    was it was like everyone is is like

  1657. 1:03:20

    making out with everyone. Okay, I

  1658. 1:03:22

    remembered it as such and I even said it

  1659. 1:03:23

    on the pod and a lot of people were

  1660. 1:03:25

    excited to see that and I just want to

  1661. 1:03:26

    let everybody know that doesn't happen

  1662. 1:03:28

    in the trailer. I'm so sorry. There's no

  1663. 1:03:30

    footage of that. All right. What's your

  1664. 1:03:32

    character? And very quickly, mine is

  1665. 1:03:35

    Holly McIntyre. Let's see. Holly

  1666. 1:03:37

    McIntyre,

  1667. 1:03:39

    junior partner, head prosecutor, stiff

  1668. 1:03:42

    and quick to anger, doesn't make friends

  1669. 1:03:44

    easily. Everybody doesn't make friends.

  1670. 1:03:46

    Everyone's the same. Her dad is Cameron

  1671. 1:03:49

    McIntyre, owner of the firm. Oh, she's

  1672. 1:03:51

    the daddy's girl. Yeah. And she's really

  1673. 1:03:54

    worked her butt off to be taken

  1674. 1:03:55

    seriously. She's a tough litigator. Her

  1675. 1:03:58

    father, played by Corbin Bernson, thinks

  1676. 1:04:00

    that she cares too much. She does. Wait,

  1677. 1:04:03

    I'm sorry. Read the one right before

  1678. 1:04:04

    that. Holly became a lawyer after a

  1679. 1:04:06

    bunch of kids in her town died from lead

  1680. 1:04:08

    poisoning. Yeah, sure.

  1681. 1:04:12

    Jesus.

  1682. 1:04:13

    She's hard on Joey Martinez, but al but

  1683. 1:04:16

    only because she sees a lot of herself

  1684. 1:04:17

    in her. Yeah. And she tends to go for

  1685. 1:04:21

    married men who are older and a little

  1686. 1:04:22

    mean. And then we also have um Shane

  1687. 1:04:26

    Shains.

  1688. 1:04:28

    Shane. That's Dylan's character's name.

  1689. 1:04:30

    Also, um let's not forget Nick Offerman

  1690. 1:04:33

    played the judge. Yeah, Nick. He says he

  1691. 1:04:36

    remembers nothing other than he was just

  1692. 1:04:37

    hanging around and someone said, "Can

  1693. 1:04:39

    you play the judge?" Do you remember

  1694. 1:04:41

    that, Morgan? Yeah, I I remember. We

  1695. 1:04:44

    were talking about it the next day we

  1696. 1:04:46

    were doing it. It's like, "You guys

  1697. 1:04:47

    don't work tomorrow." And Nick's like,

  1698. 1:04:49

    "I'll come in tomorrow. What What do I

  1699. 1:04:51

    do?" And I said, "We need a judge." All

  1700. 1:04:52

    right. Well, we are very excited. We're

  1701. 1:04:55

    going to have a world premiere. Yeah.

  1702. 1:04:57

    And you know, it's really exciting. I

  1703. 1:04:59

    mean, there there's not a lot of things

  1704. 1:05:01

    that um we've just kept in a vault for

  1705. 1:05:05

    all this time. No, we we threw almost

  1706. 1:05:08

    everything we did and then wrote new

  1707. 1:05:10

    stuff for the gag reels that uh that we

  1708. 1:05:12

    would release just to just to like in

  1709. 1:05:15

    have let people enjoy the goofiness of

  1710. 1:05:17

    the show. But this has remained locked

  1711. 1:05:20

    in a vault. So this would have been made

  1712. 1:05:22

    in what Morgan 2011

  1713. 1:05:24

    2012. Wow. So it's 13 years old. 13

  1714. 1:05:29

    years. That's pretty wild. I just want

  1715. 1:05:31

    to say a lot of people have asked me

  1716. 1:05:34

    like what the life what the what the

  1717. 1:05:36

    future life of Billy Justice is. Yeah. I

  1718. 1:05:39

    mean we got to you know it's it's it

  1719. 1:05:41

    could be nothing but I think that people

  1720. 1:05:43

    are very interested and you know or it

  1721. 1:05:46

    could be re it could be rebooted. We

  1722. 1:05:48

    could reboot. made me called about doing

  1723. 1:05:50

    this. I'm like, this is going to end

  1724. 1:05:52

    with us shooting more Philly justice.

  1725. 1:05:54

    This is what I'm saying is that that's

  1726. 1:05:56

    what I hope happens. Like rebooting a

  1727. 1:05:58

    show that never happened. I mean,

  1728. 1:05:59

    there's nothing better than that.

  1729. 1:06:00

    Rashidita, Philly has never needed more

  1730. 1:06:03

    justice than now. I mean, justice is

  1731. 1:06:04

    needed. So, I think it's time to make

  1732. 1:06:07

    it. I mean, if there's ever a time, it's

  1733. 1:06:09

    now. Couldn't agree more. I will say

  1734. 1:06:12

    that we we people that are listening to

  1735. 1:06:15

    Good Hang, we hear you. You have been

  1736. 1:06:17

    demanding to see this. It is release

  1737. 1:06:19

    Philly justice now. That have been the

  1738. 1:06:21

    com that has been many of the comments.

  1739. 1:06:23

    The comments are like the ark of the

  1740. 1:06:25

    moral universe is long but it bends

  1741. 1:06:27

    towards Philly justice.

  1742. 1:06:30

    Show it to me Amy parenthesis Rachel.

  1743. 1:06:34

    Release the tape or accidentally group

  1744. 1:06:38

    text it to all of us which is another

  1745. 1:06:40

    great one. Um please please please in

  1746. 1:06:43

    the words of Leslie note please please

  1747. 1:06:45

    please please please please please

  1748. 1:06:46

    please please please please please

  1749. 1:06:46

    please please. So, we are listening,

  1750. 1:06:48

    we're learning, we're sharing. We are

  1751. 1:06:50

    going to play and and will they be able

  1752. 1:06:53

    to see it on the Zoom? Okay. Are you

  1753. 1:06:54

    guys ready to watch it? Yeah. Okay. Here

  1754. 1:06:57

    we go.

  1755. 1:07:00

    Yes. Really exciting.

  1756. 1:07:04

    Amy, are you going to play it from your

  1757. 1:07:10

    supposed to play it? I'm supposed to

  1758. 1:07:16

    Here we go. Oh my god. I'm I'm in

  1759. 1:07:19

    charge. Oh no. Oh no. You have to keep

  1760. 1:07:23

    that

  1761. 1:07:24

    17 seconds of silence. Okay. So sorry

  1762. 1:07:27

    about that, guys. Thank you for waiting.

  1763. 1:07:30

    Here we go.

  1764. 1:07:33

    For the first time ever on DVD,

  1765. 1:07:38

    the legendary courtroom drama that no

  1766. 1:07:41

    one has ever seen. Any more witnesses,

  1767. 1:07:44

    counselor? Just one, your honor. Joey

  1768. 1:07:46

    Martinez, the defense attorney. What?

  1769. 1:07:49

    This is preposterous. Your honor, you

  1770. 1:07:51

    can't possibly overruled. I hope you

  1771. 1:07:53

    know what you're doing, McNeel. Just

  1772. 1:07:55

    follow my lead. The show that broke all

  1773. 1:07:57

    the rules. Your honor, I only have one

  1774. 1:08:00

    more witness.

  1775. 1:08:02

    It's you.

  1776. 1:08:03

    You can't do that. The courtroom drama

  1777. 1:08:06

    that revolutionized television forever.

  1778. 1:08:09

    The hell are you doing here? What the

  1779. 1:08:10

    hell are you doing here? I work here

  1780. 1:08:12

    now. I work here now. So do I. So do I.

  1781. 1:08:15

    Well, we'll see about that. Well, we

  1782. 1:08:17

    will see about that. Keep your history

  1783. 1:08:19

    in your pants, boys. These lawyers play

  1784. 1:08:22

    by their own rules. Permission to treat

  1785. 1:08:24

    the witness as beautiful.

  1786. 1:08:27

    Granted, and they play for keeps.

  1787. 1:08:30

    Counselor, will you marry me? She can't.

  1788. 1:08:33

    She's already married to her job.

  1789. 1:08:37

    Bring it home for the first time. [ __ ]

  1790. 1:08:40

    You're a playboy and a social climber.

  1791. 1:08:43

    I'm a rebel and an outlaw who plays by

  1792. 1:08:45

    his own rules. Of course, they're never

  1793. 1:08:47

    going to let me in their little club and

  1794. 1:08:49

    experience what no one else has ever had

  1795. 1:08:52

    the chance to experience. Let there be

  1796. 1:08:54

    justice in Philadelphia

  1797. 1:08:57

    [Music]

  1798. 1:08:58

    once again.

  1799. 1:09:00

    Amy Poland, Adam Scott, Rashidita Jones,

  1800. 1:09:06

    Catherine Han, and Dylan McDermott. I'm

  1801. 1:09:10

    a judge now, and you're guilty, your

  1802. 1:09:13

    honor. Philly justice.

  1803. 1:09:17

    Coming this spring on DVD. Welcome to

  1804. 1:09:20

    Philly [ __ ]

  1805. 1:09:24

    Wow.

  1806. 1:09:26

    Wow.

  1807. 1:09:28

    Yes. Wow.

  1808. 1:09:31

    Wow. I feel like whoever wrote per wrote

  1809. 1:09:33

    per Happy's intros wrote the text for

  1810. 1:09:36

    that trailer. Wait, Morgan, I have an

  1811. 1:09:38

    important question for you and I don't

  1812. 1:09:39

    want to get too inside baseball. Is Is

  1813. 1:09:41

    that steady cam? That is right. Maybe.

  1814. 1:09:44

    Did we hire a steady cam operator?

  1815. 1:09:47

    We never used steady cam on the show

  1816. 1:09:49

    once. Probably. We hired a steady cam

  1817. 1:09:52

    operator to shoot that. It looked like

  1818. 1:09:54

    steady cam to me. Yeah, it probably was.

  1819. 1:09:56

    Do you remember? Did we I think it was

  1820. 1:09:59

    we built a rig. We were going to do

  1821. 1:10:01

    these walk-in talks down the hallways. I

  1822. 1:10:03

    think

  1823. 1:10:05

    you know it really is shorter and less

  1824. 1:10:07

    exciting than we really built it up to

  1825. 1:10:10

    be. Yeah. Yeah. Well, it's it's we shot

  1826. 1:10:13

    more. That was just that was the

  1827. 1:10:16

    trailer. Somewhere there. We were

  1828. 1:10:19

    shooting like a an episode essentially,

  1829. 1:10:22

    right? Yeah. I never finished it. and we

  1830. 1:10:25

    were shooting a EPK to go around the

  1831. 1:10:27

    pilot, right? Yeah, there's there's

  1832. 1:10:30

    definitely my guess would be that we

  1833. 1:10:32

    looked at all of the footage and we're

  1834. 1:10:34

    like, "This is a trailer. The way to do

  1835. 1:10:37

    this is a trailer, not like long scenes

  1836. 1:10:41

    or something." I My favorite part of it

  1837. 1:10:43

    is when Adam, when you say, "You're a

  1838. 1:10:46

    social climber and a playboy. I'm a

  1839. 1:10:48

    rebel who plays by his own rules."

  1840. 1:10:50

    You're just like speaking the bios of

  1841. 1:10:52

    the characters out loud. That's right.

  1842. 1:10:54

    But in character and you bring your

  1843. 1:10:56

    motorcycle helmet to court. Yeah. Yeah.

  1844. 1:11:00

    Also, I can't I'm confused as to who is

  1845. 1:11:03

    able to object.

  1846. 1:11:06

    It's a lot of objecting.

  1847. 1:11:08

    Yes. Well, I mean I feel like it, as

  1848. 1:11:12

    Mike said, it was an example of how much

  1849. 1:11:14

    fun we were having and how much fun we

  1850. 1:11:16

    were allowed to have. So, thank you Mike

  1851. 1:11:18

    and Morgan for making Philly Justice a

  1852. 1:11:20

    reality. mean

  1853. 1:11:22

    our thank you for naming the show. Oh,

  1854. 1:11:25

    my pleasure. And Adam, thank you for

  1855. 1:11:27

    your work in Afghanistan. It seems like

  1856. 1:11:30

    Yeah. Yeah. Thank No, thank you. Thanks

  1857. 1:11:32

    for creating space for me to go to

  1858. 1:11:35

    Afghanistan with your pistol with a gun.

  1859. 1:11:38

    Yeah.

  1860. 1:11:40

    And um I know I'm sure Aziz is right off

  1861. 1:11:43

    frame out out of frame there. So tell

  1862. 1:11:45

    Aziz I'm sorry he wasn't in it. Aziz

  1863. 1:11:48

    everyone says hey. Uh, sorry you weren't

  1864. 1:11:51

    in Philly just to Oh, he just walked

  1865. 1:11:53

    out. Yeah. Oh, he's in Rashidita's car

  1866. 1:11:55

    now. Oh, he's here. Everybody say thank

  1867. 1:11:58

    you. All right. Thank you guys so much

  1868. 1:12:01

    for jumping on. It means a lot and I

  1869. 1:12:04

    think this will be a very special

  1870. 1:12:06

    episode. Thanks for doing this. So fun.

  1871. 1:12:10

    Bye y'all. Love you guys. Love all of

  1872. 1:12:12

    you. Bye guys. Love you. Love you.

  1873. 1:12:15

    Morgan, let's get Philly Justice back

  1874. 1:12:17

    together. Let's get a call sheet.

  1875. 1:12:19

    Morgis.

  1876. 1:12:21

    All right. Thanks all and thank you Mike

  1877. 1:12:23

    for joining and talking about this. It

  1878. 1:12:25

    was the best. It was so fun. So fun.

  1879. 1:12:27

    Love you. Love you too. Bye all.

  1880. 1:12:32

    That was amazing. Um we got to see the

  1881. 1:12:35

    trailer of Philly Justice, which really

  1882. 1:12:37

    was the only thing we ended up making.

  1883. 1:12:39

    And um and we got to talk to the great

  1884. 1:12:42

    Mike Sher who uh we need to have back to

  1885. 1:12:44

    talk more about parks and wreck because

  1886. 1:12:46

    there's just so much to talk to him

  1887. 1:12:47

    about. And um if you want if you're

  1888. 1:12:50

    listening to this podcast and you uh

  1889. 1:12:52

    want to watch it, you can go to Spotify

  1890. 1:12:56

    or YouTube and see it there. It's only

  1891. 1:12:59

    there uh on our podcast. But um you

  1892. 1:13:02

    know, also it might just be fun hearing

  1893. 1:13:04

    it uh described

  1894. 1:13:06

    then never watch it. But either way,

  1895. 1:13:08

    thank you to everybody who joined us.

  1896. 1:13:09

    And I think there's one person that's

  1897. 1:13:11

    just joining our Zoom right now um that

  1898. 1:13:14

    we were trying to get uh let's see if we

  1899. 1:13:17

    can There she is.

  1900. 1:13:22

    Catherine on

  1901. 1:13:25

    Catherine.

  1902. 1:13:27

    Catherine. Catherine, you missed it.

  1903. 1:13:34

    Catherine, I'm sorry. We we did talk

  1904. 1:13:36

    about your character though and we're

  1905. 1:13:40

    thanks Katherine on zooming in. Zooming

  1906. 1:13:43

    in. I love you so much. Zooming in.

  1907. 1:13:46

    Muted. Okay. Okay. Bye.

  1908. 1:13:50

    Thank you so much, man. I love my

  1909. 1:13:51

    friends. Okay. Better late than never.

  1910. 1:13:53

    I'll take her any way I can get her.

  1911. 1:13:55

    Okay. Thanks everybody. See you soon.

  1912. 1:13:59

    You've been listening to Good Hang. The

  1913. 1:14:01

    executive producers for this show are

  1914. 1:14:02

    Bill Simmons, Jenna Weiss Berman, and

  1915. 1:14:04

    me, Amy Polar. The show is produced by

  1916. 1:14:06

    The Ringer and Paperkite. For The

  1917. 1:14:08

    Ringer, production by Jack Wilson, Cat

  1918. 1:14:10

    Spalain, Kaia McMullen, and Alia

  1919. 1:14:13

    Xanerys. For Paperkite, production by

  1920. 1:14:15

    Sam Green, Joel Levelvel, and Jenna

  1921. 1:14:17

    Weiss Berman. Original music by Amy

  1922. 1:14:20

    Miles.

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