Transcript: Quinta Brunson on Good Hang with Amy Poehler
Full Transcript
Click any timestamp to jump to that moment in the video.- 0:00
Welcome to another episode of Good Hang.
- 0:02
I'm so excited about our guest today. It
- 0:04
is the incredible Quinta Brunson, who is
- 0:08
not only funny and smart and gracious
- 0:12
and a seemingly great boss, but is a
- 0:16
mogul. Is kind of a just an incredible
- 0:22
driving force in an industry and kind in
- 0:24
many ways saving it from extinction. Not
- 0:28
not no no no no no no pressure. But
- 0:30
anyway, um I'm so excited to have a
- 0:32
Quinta here to talk about all of those
- 0:34
things and to hang and we always uh like
- 0:37
to do uh something at the beginning of
- 0:39
of our shows where we gather people
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together that know Quinta, that have
- 0:44
worked with her, that um know stuff
- 0:47
about her that we would never know and
- 0:49
ask them how they feel about her and
- 0:52
what they think I should ask her.
- 0:55
This episode is presented by the Toyota
- 0:57
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- 1:00
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Grand Highlander is up for every grand
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challenge. Learn more at
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toyota.comgrandhighlander. Toyota, let's
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go places.
- 1:29
[Music]
- 1:37
Let me just tell you who I have here um
- 1:40
with me. I have Kate Peterman. Kate's a
- 1:42
writer on Abbott Elementary. Hi Kate.
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Hi. Zach Evans, also writer, creative
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director in LA. um founder of Create
- 1:51
Repeat, an online community for
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creatives and also a Buzzfeed alum with
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Quinta. Hi, Zach. We have Ash Perez. Hi,
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Ash. Ash also a Buzzfeed, I guess, like
- 2:02
we you could say a Buzzfeed alum, right?
- 2:06
Buzzfeeder. Buzzfeeder. Okay, welcome.
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And then we have the big boss, Andrew
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Goautier. French name. Congratulations,
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Andrew. You were the head of BuzzFeed
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video when Quinta and all and and Zach
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and a lot of you were and Kate and and
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Ashley were all making content um
- 2:23
together. This is not a deposition.
- 2:26
Nothing you say will be used.
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But welcome to Good Hang. How's everyone
- 2:33
doing? Feel a bit like I'm I'm in a
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performance review with Andrew, but
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besides that, great. Andrew, do you like
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to do performance reviews? Speaking of
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performance reviews, yeah. Um because I
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think a lot of a lot of performance
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reviews are just like criticisms and I
- 2:49
think I always tried and I think we
- 2:51
always tried at BuzzFeed to focus on
- 2:53
positives. You know, we wanted to like
- 2:55
be an incubator for talent. So it was,
- 2:58
you know, focusing on what people were
- 3:00
best at. Andrew, uh I can uh say that's
- 3:03
a lot of corporate speak you just threw
- 3:05
at me. You said incubator. You said
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incubator. You said it. Let's go around
- 3:09
before we start and say some of our most
- 3:12
fun corporate slang. I'd like to circle
- 3:16
back and piggyback off of what Andrew
- 3:17
was just saying. I too. Yeah. Follow up
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on that, Kate. Uh I would just like to
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plus one all of your comments on that as
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well. I just want to ping that plus one
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real quick. Do you guys know the
- 3:28
comedian Lisa Beasley?
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Um she does a corporate character that's
- 3:35
so funny. She does a um on Tik Tok she
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does a character called corporate Aaron.
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Yes. Oh yeah. She did it during co that
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incredibly
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long
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nasly beginning of a meeting where she's
- 3:51
like it's 9:29 and I guess we'll get
- 3:53
started and she has like tons of vocal
- 3:55
fry and she's definitely trying to get
- 3:57
the meeting started and she's really
- 3:58
upset and she has a lot of stuff to get
- 4:01
through.
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It's not easy. It's not easy. Anyway,
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okay, Kate, why don't we start with you?
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Um, tell um tell me um how you and
- 4:10
Quinta met. We met in college. I met
- 4:13
Quinta um when we both got on the same
- 4:16
improv team at Temple University, Fowl
- 4:18
Play, cuz our mascot was the Owls. I'd
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love to hear that you did like I did
- 4:25
very nerdy improv stuff because Oh,
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yeah. I think sometimes in comedy there
- 4:30
are two types of people. There are the
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cool people
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And then there are people that did
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improv
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and you write for Abbott. How long have
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you been writing for the show and what's
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that like? Uh since the first season. Um
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it is sick cuz I remember being with
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Quinta on her uh like balcony at this
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old apartment and she was like she had
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just gotten home from uh Philly and she
- 4:55
was like I was visiting my mom and I
- 4:57
just really want to do this show about
- 4:59
teachers. And this was like years before
- 5:01
Abbott actually happened. So, it's been
- 5:03
in like it's cool to see it go from that
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idea and then um I was in the pilot with
- 5:10
her and getting there to film and seeing
- 5:13
her like walk around calling the shots
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and just cuz I got there and I was like
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it was my first ever time like whatever
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and I so I was so nervous and trying to
- 5:22
be professional and then she just turns
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the corner was just like KP and just
- 5:26
like nice and loud and I was like oh
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this is so [ __ ] cool. I'm
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interviewing Quinton today. Okay, I'm
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going to ask her a bunch of, you know,
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stuff that maybe we, you know, one would
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expect me to ask, but is there anything
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you think I should ask or or or any
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anything you think she'd like to even
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talk about or something you think people
- 5:44
would want to hear from her? Um, ask her
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if she now knows if Bon Joy and John
- 5:48
Bonjovi are two different uh things. She
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asked me in confidence, like in a little
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whisper, she was like, "Are Bon Joy and
- 5:56
John Bonjovi the same guy?" like as if
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she had to go talk to him and it was for
- 6:00
no reason and it's so funny to me. Okay,
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that's a great one. Okay, Zach, moving
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on. How do you and Quinta meet each
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other? I met Quinta in 2014 at BuzzFeed.
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I was an intern at the time. It was my
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first job out of college and she had um
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just got brought in to do a couple
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comedy videos with um our friend Justin
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Tan. Quinta to me has always been so
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amazing at how um how forward thinking
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she was. She was really adamant that the
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internet was a stage for her to play in.
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And you know, of course, we all grew up
- 6:34
wanting to be on SNL or and wanting to
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go this traditional route, going the
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standup route. And she did all those
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things. And I truly believe she could
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have done it any path, but she decided
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to go this internet direction. And
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truthfully, I don't think she gets
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enough credit for being that first one
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of the first people to make the leap
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from being an internet personality to
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being in the mainstream and dominating.
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Thank you, Zach. That was awesome. Okay,
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Ash. Yes. Tell me your origin story and
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your question. Okay. My origin story
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with Quinta is that we sat next to each
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other at BuzzFeed and notoriously
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probably unlike these people where uh
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the Quinta's original thought was Kate
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is tight, Quinta did not like me. My fun
- 7:20
fact of my whole life is that the
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character of Janine is based off me or
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loosely based off of me on Abbott. Um do
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you have confirmation of that? Yeah,
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it's it's she said it in interview. She
- 7:31
said it in Variety so I have it. She
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said it in the writer room. Yep. Okay. I
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have two questions. One is a serious one
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and then one is going to make her grown
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and she's going to know why I asked it,
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which I'm so excited for. Um, so the
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first one is just uh as an avid student
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of comedy, what are the top three
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sitcoms that influence your sense of
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comedy? Like so much of my memories of
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Quinta, we used to like she used to come
- 7:54
over my house and we used to watch old I
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Love Lucy episodes and just like talk
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about like what structured the comedy or
- 8:00
we would watch pilots to stuff and like
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just like an actual student of comedy in
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a way that I think is so valuable and
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that people don't um necessarily know,
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especially because she got her start on
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the internet. She has a deep deep
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lexicon. So I would love to hear her
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answer to that. And then uh do you think
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you would have been as famous if you had
- 8:23
ordered a medium instead of a large? I
- 8:26
can't guarantee it's gonna make the cut,
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but I I am curious to know the answer.
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Well, her first one of her first viral
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videos ever for He Got Money was her um
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she orders a popcorn. Oh, the popcorn
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and the Skittles. A large and so become
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very much like and that was I would say
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one of her very first like memes along
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with he got money. So great. Okay,
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thanks Ash and Andrew. Maybe this is
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corny, but I would actually be
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interested in what, you know, 2014
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Quinta would think about Quinta now. You
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know, if you went back in time a dozen
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years ago while she was at BuzzFeed,
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like how would she react? All right.
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Well, thank you so much for your time.
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It was really nice to see all of you
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again and to meet some of you for the
- 9:11
first time. Thank you, Amy. Bye. Thank
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you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you for
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your time.
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Okay, Quinta Brunson is here. Quinta,
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I'm so grateful you're here. Thank you
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for doing this. I'm grateful you are
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here and that you were born and that you
- 9:32
exist. I'm grateful that you were born.
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What day were you born? I was born
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December 21st, 1989.
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Capricorn,
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Sagittarius. Oh [ __ ] I'm d I'm directly
- 9:43
on the cusp. Directly on it. So, you're
- 9:45
you're not wrong cuz some books do say
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Capricorn and then so much on the I'm
- 9:49
right at like 11:38 or something. I
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asked my mom. She was like, "I don't
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know what time you were born." I was
- 9:54
like, "Okay, sorry for asking." But, um,
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she said it was between like 11:30 and
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12. So, directly on the cusp, which is
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good because I think if I was full-blown
- 10:03
Sagittarius, I would have been a
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stripper. I think if I was full-blown,
- 10:06
nothing wrong with it, but I'm just
- 10:08
saying that I would have been a
- 10:09
stripper. And then if I were a
- 10:11
Capricorn, I would have been Elon Musk.
- 10:13
would have been really like I feel like
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there is a total mogul vibe that I get
- 10:20
from you. I know. I'm not going to
- 10:22
capitalize on it. Don't want to be a
- 10:24
mogul. Okay. Okay. Let's talk about this
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because you kind of are already. So,
- 10:28
it's
- 10:31
you're not. What do you think classifies
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a mogul? Well, this is a really good
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question. I feel like you are the
- 10:37
captain of a huge ship. Mhm. One ship
- 10:40
though. That's true. But, you know,
- 10:42
that's just because you're acting when
- 10:44
once you stop once you get off set and
- 10:46
have to do those hours, you're going to
- 10:48
be the captain of like four ships. We've
- 10:50
talked about this, Amy. I want to I just
- 10:53
want to do my thing. I just so relate to
- 10:56
this grind that you're on. And also,
- 10:59
Quinta here to say
- 11:01
like it is phenomenal what you are
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doing.
- 11:06
That show is number one saving and has
- 11:09
saved sitcoms.
- 11:11
Thank you. It has it. It is It is proof.
- 11:14
It is what everybody points to. Yeah, I
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do. Yep. As a as a as a you know, as a
- 11:20
speck, as a as a comp for how comedy can
- 11:24
still work on broadcast TV and there's
- 11:27
not many left. No, I hope that changes.
- 11:31
I do. And I do admire the
- 11:34
other sitcoms that are that are out
- 11:37
there maintaining. They don't
- 11:40
grasp the same kind of attention that
- 11:42
Abbott does. But I do think there
- 11:44
are other, you know, producers and
- 11:47
showrunners out there attempting to do
- 11:49
good work specifically on network
- 11:51
television. And um there's a a show
- 11:53
Ghost on CBS has a bigger audience than
- 11:55
we do. It just doesn't garner the same
- 11:56
attention. So, I just always try to
- 11:59
acknowledge that there are other shows
- 12:01
trying, but I do also understand that
- 12:02
Abbott occupies a very unique and
- 12:04
specific space. So, you know, it's funny
- 12:07
cuz we're four seasons in now, and I
- 12:11
really want like counterparts, you know?
- 12:15
I want I want um
- 12:18
I I live for a renaissance. I don't
- 12:20
enjoy the the feeling of uh St. Dennis
- 12:23
is a show on NBC and I feel like that
- 12:27
but so much of this and maybe I don't
- 12:29
know if it was like that back then but
- 12:30
so much of it is about timing and when
- 12:33
and presentation and and so much goes
- 12:36
into making something an overall success
- 12:38
now that I would I don't call myself
- 12:41
lucky because I think about all the
- 12:43
things that go into it but I do think it
- 12:45
you have to think about so many
- 12:47
different factors to make your show a
- 12:48
success at all now. Totally. And I know
- 12:50
you're a big student of the sitcom. Like
- 12:52
you're a big comedy student in general.
- 12:55
What were the what were the shows that
- 12:57
you cared about growing up? What were
- 12:59
the sitcoms that you think about and
- 13:00
what were the ones you thought about
- 13:01
when you were making Abbott? Coach was a
- 13:03
show that was very formative for me. I
- 13:05
forgot. My mom and I, we loved Coach and
- 13:09
it just reminded me how much Coach was
- 13:11
on in my household. That was like if
- 13:13
that was on, we were stopping and we
- 13:15
were watching. I'm not sure if it was on
- 13:16
Nick at Night yet, but that was a big
- 13:18
show for me. Uh, Mary Tyler Moore. Um,
- 13:21
King of Queens, very big for me. I just
- 13:24
I don't know why, but one of the biggest
- 13:26
influences in my life. I I still love
- 13:29
that show to this day. Um, 30 Rock,
- 13:33
huge. I know you're a big 30 Rock fan. I
- 13:36
know that about you. It's so ridiculous.
- 13:38
Um, little show called Parks and Wreck.
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Um, The Office, of course.
- 13:43
Martin, Living Single, Curb Your
- 13:46
Enthusiasm. I don't know if that counts
- 13:48
because it's not network, but um Always
- 13:50
Sunny, same kind of bucket as Curb.
- 13:54
Um I'm forgetting things. Well, I'm sure
- 13:57
you're asked this question, but what do
- 13:58
you think? I always thought that for me,
- 14:02
what drew me to a sitcom was the fact
- 14:04
that I could I could picture in my mind
- 14:07
what the characters were doing when I
- 14:09
wasn't watching them. Yep. And that's
- 14:11
exactly what happens on Abbott.
- 14:13
Definitely, that's a big part of it. And
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I think it's important if I can see the
- 14:18
end of their journeys in the sitcom. And
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I don't know, that doesn't mean I know
- 14:24
when it's going to come, but I see maybe
- 14:27
that's just important for writing. You
- 14:29
know, you see a destination for your
- 14:31
characters but
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um very important to me when it comes to
- 14:35
making a sitcom. when I visit sitcoms
- 14:38
like parks or or the office and I think
- 14:41
about where those characters began and
- 14:42
where they end that is what kind of
- 14:45
inspired me to tell that story about a
- 14:48
different set of characters. I also
- 14:49
think
- 14:50
like worlds you can that really have a
- 14:53
dayby-day engine, you know, like
- 14:58
it's there's something there's some
- 15:00
silly thing. I would say friends was
- 15:02
huge for me too because it was when I
- 15:03
started to really grasp on to plot lines
- 15:06
that were so you know Monica lost her
- 15:09
earring. I think that was like big for
- 15:11
me for some reason when when it's like
- 15:13
you can make a whole plot about but
- 15:14
that's like a dayto-day of a friend
- 15:16
group and that's what happens in Abbott
- 15:18
just day-to-day issues that we turn into
- 15:21
hilarious conundrums and situations. I
- 15:24
read something that really struck me,
- 15:26
felt so familiar when you were talking
- 15:27
about Janine, your character on the
- 15:29
show, that you wanted her and her look
- 15:32
to
- 15:34
feel appropriate with her job and her
- 15:37
town, which um and I I felt that because
- 15:41
I remember when we were first starting
- 15:43
to build Leslie Nope's character, like I
- 15:46
really wanted her hair to be very blonde
- 15:50
and because
- 15:53
because she's getting her hair done in
- 15:55
Indiana. No offense to the great stylist
- 15:57
in Indiana. I bet there are many now.
- 15:59
But, you know, like she's not going to
- 16:01
get low lightss at the best salon. She's
- 16:03
trying what she can do. She's like she's
- 16:06
not quite getting it right. Yeah. And
- 16:08
it's that's beautiful though. That's so
- 16:11
human. And you're doing that. You've
- 16:12
talked about that with Janine. How how
- 16:14
are you doing it with Janine? Janine
- 16:15
started in a place where I think a lot
- 16:19
more about Janine than I think shows up
- 16:21
on screen, which honestly is what you
- 16:22
want. I don't need the audience to think
- 16:24
about her as much as I do. But I knew
- 16:26
from the beginning this is a girl who
- 16:28
had a weird relationship with her
- 16:29
mother. Maybe her mother didn't teach
- 16:31
her how to like take care of her hair or
- 16:34
even her dress comes from I want to be
- 16:37
the opposite of my mother because I
- 16:39
don't think my mother's a good person.
- 16:41
So, I should dress like a good person,
- 16:42
which is the opposite of how she
- 16:44
dresses, which is kind of But Janine
- 16:46
doesn't believe it's lavendly or bad.
- 16:48
Janine looks in the mirror and goes,
- 16:50
"This is a good outfit.
- 16:52
You did it,
- 16:54
girl. You did it, girl. You did it. You
- 16:57
did it. She does that trick where she
- 16:58
turns to the and she takes one accessory
- 17:00
off to
- 17:02
I feel like she goes, "You look exactly
- 17:05
like Holly Berry." And like it's like,
- 17:08
"No, you don't." But she believes she
- 17:11
does. And I think that's sweet. I think
- 17:12
when the character believes so
- 17:15
deeply that the show doesn't care what
- 17:18
the audience thinks. That was a
- 17:19
challenge with Janine because I'll be
- 17:22
real with you. You know, she's a black
- 17:26
character. Black audiences have so few
- 17:29
still um representative characters on
- 17:31
screen and black womanhood alone is so
- 17:36
touchy. So when a lot of women were
- 17:39
seeing Janine not present as they wanted
- 17:43
her to, that became tough and I
- 17:45
understand it. But I think it's
- 17:47
important for us to have characters who
- 17:50
are more realistic than they are the
- 17:52
absolute best representation of us. I
- 17:54
think it creates layers for us, not only
- 17:58
on TV, but in the public eye. When I was
- 18:01
thinking about her, I wasn't really
- 18:02
thinking about representation, but she
- 18:04
became representation. I don't know if
- 18:06
you dealt with that with like I think
- 18:08
it's always the interesting struggle
- 18:10
about playing comedic characters is you
- 18:12
want them to be flawed and have stuff to
- 18:15
learn and the minute people uh either
- 18:18
yourself or other people start to get in
- 18:21
your head about what they should be
- 18:23
representing. What it often does is
- 18:25
limit the way honestly that men get to
- 18:28
play characters which is they get to
- 18:30
play these like really flawed people
- 18:32
with a lot and I think it's often the
- 18:35
burden um that women are made to carry
- 18:38
which is we're supposed to be a lot of
- 18:40
things at once which few people are. So
- 18:42
it's it's kind of it's hard to do both.
- 18:44
It's hard to play somebody funny who's
- 18:47
also like really got it together. Yeah.
- 18:49
and is very, you know, like uh at the on
- 18:52
chapter 10 when you meet them. Yes. And
- 18:55
I think Janine, it was like one of the
- 18:58
most exciting things about that show was
- 19:01
you could see, oh, we're really going to
- 19:03
go on this ride with her. Like, we're on
- 19:05
this ride with her. Yeah. And it's
- 19:08
sometimes I think the the it's hard to
- 19:11
get people on the ride because they
- 19:12
don't know they're on the ride. And I I
- 19:15
think you Abbott really started where I
- 19:17
was like, "This is going to be a ride."
- 19:18
And I I feel like that goes into
- 19:20
thinking about things. This is going to
- 19:22
go for seasons. I want to tell stories
- 19:24
here. We got to start. We got to start
- 19:26
somewhere. We cannot end, you know,
- 19:29
where we want to get to in season 10.
- 19:31
And I think when audience members don't
- 19:32
know they're on a ride, it can be very
- 19:35
frustrating for them. And maybe this
- 19:36
wasn't always the case before the
- 19:37
internet, but now I don't know if you
- 19:40
dealt with this on parks. I have had
- 19:42
people come up to me on the street and
- 19:45
go, "I don't like what you're doing.
- 19:49
with Gregory's
- 19:52
character and
- 19:56
Yeah. And you're like, "Oh, thank you so
- 19:58
much for caring. It's you're you're
- 20:00
caring all over me. Thank you so much."
- 20:04
What? Uh, it's insane. It's become a
- 20:06
real direct like And oh, and then that
- 20:09
person went I I messaged you on
- 20:11
Instagram about it.
- 20:15
Well, I tried to get in touch with you
- 20:16
and I wanted you to know that I like
- 20:18
what you're doing with Gregory's
- 20:19
character. She's really coming to me in
- 20:20
a club, mind you. Like very much like,
- 20:22
"Oh, I'm so glad I'm seeing you. I sent
- 20:24
you an Instagram message. I like how you
- 20:26
pretended you didn't see it, but now I
- 20:27
got you in person. I don't like what
- 20:29
you're do." I was just like, isn't
- 20:31
aren't those times times where you wish
- 20:33
you were like the enigmatic um film
- 20:36
actress who people feel nervous to
- 20:39
approach? I do. I do. I very much do
- 20:41
because television people feel like
- 20:44
really really you're part of their
- 20:45
family. You're part of their family and
- 20:46
we love that. Well, you have this
- 20:48
incredible
- 20:50
um uh claim like I don't think it's it's
- 20:54
um spoken of enough that you took
- 20:57
advantage of the window
- 21:00
kind of you know you're 10 years after I
- 21:04
was coming up which was basically that
- 21:06
there was this Buzzfeed video window
- 21:10
where people were producing stuff online
- 21:13
early online Buzzfeed was interesting
- 21:15
because it was so international that you
- 21:17
were aware that like, oh man, like
- 21:19
people in Japan are watching our stuff.
- 21:21
We're being dubbed in different
- 21:22
languages. So, you were aware of that.
- 21:23
But for me, I was never very proud of my
- 21:28
online presence. I felt like as someone
- 21:31
who came from improv and sketch, I was
- 21:34
still performing at IO every night. And
- 21:38
then I realized that my improv group, we
- 21:40
realized people were coming to see our
- 21:42
group because of my online presence. And
- 21:46
we were more used to, all right, guys,
- 21:48
we got 10 people in the crowd tonight.
- 21:50
Let's go crazy. That's three more than
- 21:52
last week. We're killing it. No parents.
- 21:55
No, it's so good. And then all of a
- 21:57
sudden, we have a packed IO for when
- 22:00
we're like, "What is going on?" But
- 22:01
they're coming because they're actually
- 22:04
paying attention when I post. Uh I have
- 22:06
a show at IO tonight. And like people
- 22:08
were coming. So what are these people
- 22:10
doing here? And they're like, "You said
- 22:11
you had a show." I was like, "Oh, you
- 22:13
get so used to know." I don't know. But
- 22:14
you were part of like the heyday of UCB.
- 22:16
But I'm just saying like in my world, it
- 22:18
was like if you got eight people in the
- 22:20
audience, it was like, oh, a hundred.
- 22:22
That was our always trying to get PE.
- 22:24
But you were kind of ahead of your time
- 22:27
because there was this feeling to your
- 22:29
point like where that content didn't
- 22:31
count. Like it almost felt Yeah. like a
- 22:34
a side gig while you were trying to get
- 22:36
the gig. But now, however many years
- 22:39
later, you look at it now and it's like
- 22:41
the way that everybody is discovered. I
- 22:43
came to just appreciate it as another
- 22:45
stage. If if
- 22:48
you can get on a stage and do standup,
- 22:51
get on an improv stage and do improv,
- 22:52
why can't you make a video to garner an
- 22:57
a isn't that what we want to do as
- 22:58
performers anyway? Totally. And also,
- 23:00
it's it's a way to just practice
- 23:03
writing. Absolutely. Absolutely. That's
- 23:05
what it really did for me. Um, I had
- 23:09
taken writing courses. I had studied
- 23:11
comedic writing, but I do think writing
- 23:15
for BuzzFeed was the best way to learn
- 23:18
how to do it for massive audiences,
- 23:21
which is a skill that I still see
- 23:25
writers peers
- 23:29
um, h they don't they don't technically
- 23:33
teach you that in school. Yeah. Um, I
- 23:36
think it's something you learn by doing.
- 23:38
I think you're right. And I think what
- 23:39
improv and sketch teaches you is just
- 23:41
like picking your battles. Like you find
- 23:44
people that write stuff and they don't
- 23:45
want to change it and they want to kind
- 23:47
of lock it in. And there's the one thing
- 23:49
with sketch and improv is your ideas,
- 23:52
they just are thrown away over and over
- 23:54
and over again. And you get this muscle
- 23:58
totally that you haven't had your last
- 23:59
good idea.
- 24:02
Yes. Absolutely. which is so freeing.
- 24:05
Yeah. It makes you a more collaborative
- 24:07
person and makes for better work. And um
- 24:10
I think so BuzzFeed definitely did that.
- 24:12
We made which was insane. We would make
- 24:14
like three videos a week that were going
- 24:17
to be shared and seen by like millions
- 24:20
and millions of people and if if one
- 24:22
bombed it was like I'm already on my
- 24:25
next video. I'm going to you know I'm
- 24:27
already I'm I've moved on. You're like I
- 24:29
don't know what you're talking about.
- 24:30
Yeah. Literally, I can't remember half
- 24:31
that half the things I made there, which
- 24:33
is both good and bad, but I feel like
- 24:35
you probably can't remember half the
- 24:37
sketches you you did for Oh, god. No.
- 24:39
Yeah. Well, speaking of Buzzfeed. Oh,
- 24:41
no.
- 24:43
I lost my glasses. Oh, are you just
- 24:45
getting glasses? Oh, I got scared. I was
- 24:47
under Check out my new glasses from
- 24:49
Buzzfeed. Oh, actually, I'm going to
- 24:51
take a lip a lip balm break if you want
- 24:53
to take one, too. Quint and I brought
- 24:55
our lip balm lip balm and water and cut
- 24:57
it cut it close. And I'd love just to
- 25:00
take Oh, this is my camera. Mhm. Get in
- 25:02
there. Hold on. Yours looks better cuz
- 25:04
it has a little wand. Mine is my grubby
- 25:05
little finger. But No, it's cute. That's
- 25:07
how the girl puts it on in the Sephora
- 25:08
commercial. She does it with her finger.
- 25:10
Yeah. What else you going to do with it?
- 25:12
Um I just love once again to ask Lanz uh
- 25:15
if they ever want to sponsor. Y'all
- 25:17
sponsor Amy. This is a lip sleeping
- 25:19
mask. For now, I'll turn it to the side
- 25:22
so you I won't um sully your brand. But
- 25:25
um I want you to know that I've stuck my
- 25:28
disgusting finger in that pot many times
- 25:30
and it's always And not just at night,
- 25:32
right? That's not just lip sleeping
- 25:35
mask. It's not just for night. Not just
- 25:37
for night time. Um okay. So we do this
- 25:40
fun surprise thing where before I talk
- 25:43
to you, I get on a Zoom with some people
- 25:45
that know you.
- 25:47
Whoa. Yeah. And and just to talk about
- 25:50
um you and and really to like get some
- 25:53
perspective on what uh uh I think I
- 25:56
should ask. So earlier today I was talk
- 25:58
I was on a Zoom with Kate. No way. Did
- 26:02
Kate freak out? She's the best. She
- 26:04
loves you so much. Did she pretend she
- 26:06
was very cool? Everyone was very cool.
- 26:08
That is so funny. Oh my god. Okay. I was
- 26:09
on the Zoom with So it was like it was
- 26:11
like a Buzzfeed reunion. It was Kate. It
- 26:14
was Ash. No. Zack. Which one? Evans.
- 26:19
Stop. These are people who probably were
- 26:21
freaking out. Amy, they seemed very
- 26:22
cool. They seemed cool because they
- 26:23
probably got it together first. But you
- 26:25
need to know that this probably And then
- 26:27
your old boss, Andrew. Andrew Goautier.
- 26:30
Oh, French last name. He's so hot, guys.
- 26:33
Not a I don't work for him anymore. I
- 26:34
can say that. He's a sweet man. And they
- 26:37
Oh, so we were talking about It was
- 26:39
really cute. And we It's kind of like
- 26:41
talking well behind someone's back is
- 26:43
the goal. And um they were so happy to
- 26:46
do it. And we were just kind of talking
- 26:47
about um that time there and your time
- 26:51
there. And it was really cute because
- 26:52
they everyone was,
- 26:55
you know, kind of going back to when
- 26:57
exactly what you were saying when
- 26:58
producing a lot of stuff and trying to
- 27:00
everyone was trying to figure out where
- 27:02
to live and it's a very tender time and
- 27:06
the people that were there and a lot of
- 27:10
you know like Kate especially are people
- 27:11
that you still work with and who kind of
- 27:13
Kate told this amazing story about like
- 27:15
the one of the first days on set and how
- 27:19
she can remember you saying I want to I
- 27:22
think I want to do this show you know
- 27:23
about teachers like and then you know
- 27:26
smash cut to crazy the it happening.
- 27:29
Yeah. I have such a random weird so
- 27:31
someone this is so bad someone tried to
- 27:33
sue me to say they me WB ABC and say
- 27:36
that that they came up with um Abbott
- 27:39
and my memory is [ __ ] There's something
- 27:41
to know about me. Same really bad. I
- 27:42
think it's cuz we have to learn lines. I
- 27:44
think so too. Kate's memory
- 27:46
is locked the [ __ ] in. And Kate was
- 27:49
like, "No, no, no, no, no. I will go
- 27:51
into that courtroom for you." Because
- 27:53
she was there the the moment I had the I
- 27:56
knew that it wasn't true, but I had
- 27:57
nothing to back it up. And it's okay.
- 27:59
That's why we have lawyer. I was never
- 28:01
going to have to back it up anyway, but
- 28:02
I'm just like, damn, I cannot remember.
- 28:04
Kate like remembers time, date, where,
- 28:06
when. Incredible. Incredible. So, she's
- 28:09
she's my best friend, but she's also
- 28:11
just incredible for stuff like that. She
- 28:13
has the memory that I don't have, which
- 28:15
I need a lot. You I think we share this
- 28:17
in common, too. Your female friendships
- 28:19
are super important to you. Super
- 28:20
important. Like why? What do they do for
- 28:22
you? Oh, that's a good question. Um
- 28:27
Oh, man. That's such a good question. I
- 28:29
I I don't know what they do for me spec
- 28:32
Well, you just said something that I
- 28:33
feel like, if I may, I feel like a lot
- 28:36
of women in my life would testify for
- 28:38
me. Yes. They really do. Yes. They
- 28:41
experience life with me and they we all
- 28:44
kind of remember for each other. For
- 28:47
each other. Yeah. And maybe Kate and I
- 28:50
particularly have been through so much
- 28:54
together as friends, as women, as comedy
- 28:58
writers. Kate wanted me to ask you this.
- 29:01
Hey Kisha, uh KP, um are you aware now
- 29:04
that Bonjovi and John Bonjovi? Shut up,
- 29:07
Kate. Shut up. Don't go through Amy to
- 29:10
do that. That's not nice, Kate. That's
- 29:13
not okay, Kate. But can we are you aware
- 29:16
that
- 29:18
See, I don't know white people. I know
- 29:21
you. I know Tina Fay. I know that's it.
- 29:24
I know white people in comedy. Okay.
- 29:29
You don't need to know that. You don't
- 29:30
need to know the one black girl. I just
- 29:33
like don't know some people. I don't I
- 29:36
understand the name Phil Collins. I
- 29:38
don't know what Phil Collins look like.
- 29:39
I I I don't know that he's different
- 29:41
from Sorry to That man. That Kiki
- 29:43
moment. Unbelievable. Was so on point.
- 29:46
That is how I move through life if
- 29:49
they're not in comedy truly. Yeah. I
- 29:53
don't know. I actually think that's also
- 29:55
a wonderful way like a almost a a gentle
- 29:58
form of rebellion which is I have to say
- 30:02
my generation was told that we had to
- 30:04
know a lot of these people and now we
- 30:06
don't really need to know them. It's
- 30:08
okay. It's okay. And and also you were
- 30:10
working in in in pop culture too. I mean
- 30:13
SNL is still essentially working in pop
- 30:15
culture. You have to know I don't have a
- 30:17
reason to know who I'm not crazy. It's
- 30:21
crazy to be in a band called John. Is he
- 30:23
John Bon Joy? Is the Bon See, she
- 30:26
doesn't know. I couldn't tell. Uh, and
- 30:28
it's crazy cuz now I'm going to blow
- 30:30
your mind even more. His original name,
- 30:32
come on. Was John
- 30:35
Bonio and then he changed he he the band
- 30:39
name was BonJovi, a shortened version of
- 30:42
his real name. So then he started going
- 30:44
by John Bonjovi, but true fans know that
- 30:47
it was Bonjiovi.
- 30:49
You know, everything you just said
- 30:50
sounds crazy, right? And the thing is
- 30:52
I'm supposed to know this, but then I'm
- 30:54
supposed to deal with people who can't
- 30:55
tell me and Kiki Palmer apart
- 30:58
or or say my name or or can't I just
- 31:00
can't if you know about Bonji Vio and
- 31:03
I'm too difficult. It's two syllables.
- 31:05
Quinta, same person. I don't understand.
- 31:08
Anyway, so that was that was so and I
- 31:10
don't you know what else is crazy? John
- 31:13
Wait, I lost my point, but I was going
- 31:15
to say something about John Bon Joy. Joy
- 31:17
band. I'm trying to think of a band name
- 31:19
like who could I compare it to that had
- 31:21
a band that was named after their last
- 31:23
name? Oh, well, there's another bunch of
- 31:26
white boys. Remember Hansen?
- 31:29
I understood that.
- 31:31
I I understand that. You know who I got
- 31:33
mixed up for the longest time? Not
- 31:35
anymore.
- 31:36
But there was no reason for me as a
- 31:39
young girl in Philadelphia to understand
- 31:41
the difference between Sandra Bulock and
- 31:43
Julia Roberts. There was no reason for
- 31:46
me to know the difference. You might
- 31:47
have a little bit of face blindness. I
- 31:49
do. I do. I do have that. And they know.
- 31:53
I know Sandra knows now cuz that's my
- 31:54
girl. Of course I can tell you guys
- 31:56
apart now. But when growing up Sure. No
- 31:59
reason for me to know that. Sure. And
- 32:01
when people are like, "You don't know."
- 32:02
No, I don't.
- 32:05
I like that. I'm glad that you Yeah, you
- 32:07
absolutely do not need to know. Yeah, I
- 32:10
can't believe Kate. Okay. Okay. Ash, I
- 32:14
Ash Ash, three sitcoms who have
- 32:16
influenced you. We talked about that.
- 32:18
And then Andrew asked um um what would
- 32:23
2014 Quinta think of Quinta now? Oh,
- 32:26
Andrew. I know. Such a and and such a
- 32:28
managerial question, too. Oh, Andrew.
- 32:31
Andrew is so lovely. Um I think
- 32:35
2014 me would be like exactly
- 32:39
period because I was a very determined
- 32:43
knew where I was going girl I do not
- 32:46
like to do that thing where people
- 32:48
pretend I'm like I had no idea like this
- 32:50
could happen to me like no I made every
- 32:52
single move in my life so that this
- 32:54
could happen to me including leaving
- 32:57
Philadelphia I knew specific things had
- 32:59
to happen and even the way I came into
- 33:00
BuzzFeed I had vision I like I I see
- 33:03
where this place is going. I see what I
- 33:05
can do here. I see how not only it can
- 33:06
help me, but how I can help it. And I
- 33:09
think it's a means to something much
- 33:11
larger. So 2014 me didn't exactly know
- 33:15
this, but I think that's the beauty of
- 33:19
vision. You you can feel see something.
- 33:23
You're working in accordance with
- 33:24
something. And I'm a big believer in
- 33:27
that. I think you know what I love that
- 33:28
you're doing too and from from here on
- 33:30
out I guess we would call it like the
- 33:32
shalom
- 33:33
um in terms of like I want to be the
- 33:35
greatest but but what but what I that
- 33:38
kid go ahead. Yeah. What did you think
- 33:39
of that moment? I loved it or no what I
- 33:42
thought was so interesting about that
- 33:43
moment whether whisper because he can
- 33:46
hear us. Whether it was coordinated or
- 33:49
not I thought him mentioning Viola Davis
- 33:51
in his speech I was like that is [ __ ]
- 33:54
smart 100%. whether it's coordinated or
- 33:58
he really really meant it. Very smart to
- 34:01
do. Smart kid. That um that that alone
- 34:05
had me. Me too. Had me. And
- 34:09
and in a way that I don't care if it was
- 34:11
like I'm going to say this because or I
- 34:13
genuinely really mean it because even if
- 34:15
you were going to say it because Yeah.
- 34:16
Just say it because because mention
- 34:18
Viola Davis 100%.
- 34:20
It was at the very least it was the
- 34:23
example of someone paying attention. And
- 34:28
I think I I think that you know not to
- 34:32
gender it, it happens to men too, but
- 34:34
women are especially uh required uh to
- 34:37
um be very surprised by their success
- 34:39
and really be they're asked all the
- 34:42
time, can you believe it? Can you
- 34:43
believe it? Like how does it feel? And
- 34:47
you and I, I think, share the similar
- 34:49
thing, which is it feels good. I've been
- 34:51
working really hard. I imagined it would
- 34:53
happen for me. I've been there along the
- 34:56
way. I've watched it slowly grow. It
- 34:59
hasn't been overnight. And it was, you
- 35:02
know, and yes, of course, luck, and yes,
- 35:04
of course, privilege, and yes, of
- 35:06
course, time, all of that stuff. And
- 35:08
also, I believed it could happen. And so
- 35:11
now there's sometimes an expectation or
- 35:13
people want the kind of anenu vibe
- 35:16
of how did I get here? Oh my god, the
- 35:20
lights, the camera, I just tripped and
- 35:22
then I was here. I can't believe it. Oh
- 35:24
my it's I'm not doing that. One thing I
- 35:28
love about I've always appreciated about
- 35:30
you is you you also do that without
- 35:34
sacrificing your sense of like whimsy.
- 35:37
You have you I don't know. you just you
- 35:39
still have fun and you don't apologize
- 35:41
for that either. And I think that's
- 35:42
really cool when I went to see you and
- 35:44
Tina um at the in Vegas and that was so
- 35:49
fun cuz actually Ash and Kate came with
- 35:51
me and I told you that was like our
- 35:53
Super Bowl. But you tried you you did
- 35:56
what I would it's storytelling standup
- 35:59
and seeing
- 36:00
you do new things. I was like like yes
- 36:06
yes yes you are not apologizing for the
- 36:08
fact that you have this show or all the
- 36:09
things that you've done but you also are
- 36:12
having enough fun with trying new things
- 36:14
and you just have fun like you have a
- 36:16
smile on your face. You're not like I
- 36:18
mean this is kind of honestly why I'm
- 36:19
doing this is because it's kind of like
- 36:21
I want to talk to people. I have a good
- 36:23
time. I listen to a ton of podcasts.
- 36:24
Yeah. I don't think that because you get
- 36:26
to a certain level of something that
- 36:29
you're supposed to get really tight and
- 36:31
get worried about trying new things.
- 36:33
You're supposed to do the opposite
- 36:34
because you're feeling like you're lucky
- 36:36
enough to be confident. You're lucky
- 36:38
enough to have some currency or some
- 36:39
people who believe in you. So that's
- 36:41
when you're supposed to keep staying
- 36:42
flexible, trying and failing over and
- 36:44
over again. And I think you you are
- 36:47
similar like we learned it early. We
- 36:49
learned it with improv and sketch.
- 36:50
You're just supposed to keep trying
- 36:51
things. You keep you're supposed to keep
- 36:53
trying. I think I have seen a lot of
- 36:56
other women who are in similar positions
- 36:59
become harsh over time because
- 37:02
so if you're going to be that confident
- 37:04
now you almost have to take up a harsh
- 37:07
demeanor or something. That's right. So
- 37:09
you have to like That's right. be
- 37:11
masculine. Like if you're going to say
- 37:12
I'm good at it and I know it, then you
- 37:14
better be masculine, too. Don't you dare
- 37:16
smile ever again since you know you're
- 37:18
so good. But it's um it's it's some it's
- 37:21
weird. Like I and I'm I'm really
- 37:23
interested in watching women push back
- 37:27
out loud. Not just talking about it, but
- 37:30
actually doing it. Which is why I say I
- 37:33
like to see you like smile so much. Cuz
- 37:35
to me that is the act of doing it and
- 37:38
like have fun in front of people's
- 37:39
faces. It's weird. It's almost like that
- 37:41
kind of makes people angrier than
- 37:43
anything else. When I am like having
- 37:45
pure unadulterated fun, I feel a a small
- 37:48
sense of like how dare you. Oh, it's a
- 37:50
revolutionary act as a woman to have
- 37:52
fun. And the other thing is I that I
- 37:54
would say about you that I said behind
- 37:56
your back is Quinta plays loose. Oh, and
- 38:00
what I mean by that as a good athlete,
- 38:03
you're to me you're like a good athlete.
- 38:05
Amy, don't talk sports to me right now.
- 38:06
I'll fall in love. I love sports. I
- 38:09
mean, this is a podcast. We should
- 38:10
probably only be talking about sports.
- 38:13
You want this thing to do well, but you
- 38:15
play so loose because you are so good at
- 38:20
what you do and you are in charge. But
- 38:22
you would like you have the you just
- 38:26
have that ease and you have it when you
- 38:29
when you act, you have it when you're in
- 38:32
giving a speech. I mean, your Emmy
- 38:34
speeches when you win are so good
- 38:37
because they are exactly what you say.
- 38:39
You are in the moment. You're not You're
- 38:41
not going who me? I didn't even know.
- 38:43
It's like this is a correct choice. You
- 38:49
chose you just go thank you for choosing
- 38:52
the winner that I am the winner. That's
- 38:54
the correct. But you're also super
- 38:56
gracious to everyone who is in your
- 38:59
category. You give um you know you put
- 39:01
things in context which few people do.
- 39:04
Oh, thanks Amy. And it's really relaxing
- 39:07
to watch you.
- 39:10
Thank you. You're welcome. I love sports
- 39:12
so much. And I love sports, too. My
- 39:14
honor to be called the Josh Allen of
- 39:19
I I don't know who that is. No, he he he
- 39:22
he's the um he's the quarterback for um
- 39:24
the um not the Giants. Sorry, not the
- 39:28
Jets. The Bills. Sorry. Thank you. Oh,
- 39:30
the Bills. Oh, he's so nice. He's dating
- 39:32
Haley Seinfeld. I never even knew that
- 39:34
information. I know that he's dating
- 39:36
Haley and he and he did a very sweet
- 39:38
thing where he knew every all the young
- 39:40
children that he visited at a recent
- 39:42
hospital. He knew all their names that I
- 39:45
don't know his stats. Um you know there
- 39:47
he he's controversial but as a player
- 39:50
yeah people like think he's I'm not
- 39:52
going to whatever but he's got he has a
- 39:53
beard. This is what I think about sports
- 39:55
players. No one I don't need don't tell
- 39:58
me I don't need to talk to them. I don't
- 39:59
need to know about their personal lives.
- 40:01
I'm trying to do this with the Eagles
- 40:02
now. Do not look at them. They don't
- 40:05
perceive them. They do football well.
- 40:07
Don't come over here. Okay. I'm the
- 40:08
exact opposite. I don't care so much
- 40:10
about the football, but I want to know.
- 40:12
You want to know everything. How's it
- 40:13
going with mom? See, you know, like I
- 40:15
want to know. I want to know. That's a
- 40:17
problem. People What do you do in the
- 40:18
offseason going into Josh Allen's life?
- 40:20
No, let's talk about what he does with
- 40:22
the past with the football on the field.
- 40:23
That's what's important to me. I hear
- 40:25
you. But anyway, but that's like the
- 40:27
Olympics though. when the when the when
- 40:29
the thing starts, when the um when the
- 40:31
whatever they're competing in starts,
- 40:33
I'm like, but I like all the stuff when
- 40:35
they're back in their hometown. I feel I
- 40:37
mean, I guess it is important. I just I
- 40:39
guess I'm only talking about the Eagles.
- 40:41
I just don't want people to ask.
- 40:42
Congratulations on your on your win, by
- 40:44
the way. That must have been exciting.
- 40:46
It was so much has happened to me in the
- 40:47
past 10 years, but I would say top five
- 40:50
is the Eagles winning the Super Bowl.
- 40:51
Wow. Yeah, I know. I'm feeling so good.
- 40:53
Quinta, is there anything I mean we have
- 40:55
to just I guess promote Abbott which
- 40:57
please watch Abbott Elementary. It's on
- 41:00
um ABC which is a network we all know
- 41:03
where it is. It's so on Hulu and I know
- 41:07
during co Mhm. I had so many people come
- 41:11
up and say that that parks got them
- 41:14
through and I know the same for Abbott.
- 41:16
Totally.
- 41:17
I just I took that at the time as this
- 41:20
bigger feeling that comedy is like is a
- 41:24
comfort and there's some kind of giant
- 41:27
warm feeling I get from being a part of
- 41:29
anything that special. Did you get the
- 41:31
same experience people say that to you?
- 41:35
And it is a mark that you get to
- 41:40
leave with the world not on the world
- 41:43
but with the world which is so special.
- 41:45
There was a girl that came up to my
- 41:47
co-stars on the street, Cheryl and Lisa.
- 41:49
I can't stop them from walking around on
- 41:50
the streets. I try I can't do anything
- 41:53
about it. Um I they we just filmed in
- 41:56
Philly and you know I had I had one
- 41:58
thing I was just like guys maybe don't
- 41:59
walk around here cuz very recognizable.
- 42:02
Maybe just take it easy. No, they go to
- 42:04
get their nails done. They're walking to
- 42:06
different stores.
- 42:08
I can't control them. Anyway, so but a
- 42:10
girl walked up to them and and Cheryl
- 42:13
took a video of this girl talking about
- 42:16
how in our show because Philadelphia has
- 42:19
a huge Muslim population,
- 42:21
we try to represent the city as much as
- 42:24
we can and we had an episode that
- 42:27
featured a young Muslim girl and in her
- 42:30
hijab and this girl was crying, came up
- 42:34
to Cheryl talking about how much that
- 42:36
meant to her. It's like the opposite
- 42:37
effect of someone being like, I don't
- 42:39
like what you're doing with Gregory.
- 42:40
It's someone being like, you you don't
- 42:42
like get like she said she was already a
- 42:45
fan of the show. That wasn't going
- 42:47
anywhere. But then to see that like
- 42:49
shifted her [ __ ] And I think that is
- 42:52
like the power of a sitcom. We're making
- 42:54
you laugh and then we're making you cry
- 42:57
and we're in your house with you either
- 42:59
in the binge format or once a week. And
- 43:02
it's that laugh that's special because I
- 43:04
can be in the house with the drama all
- 43:06
the live long day, but I'm like scared
- 43:09
of people after I watch them on a drama
- 43:11
for too long. Like, oh god, you scared
- 43:14
the hell out of me. Even though they're
- 43:15
very nice people, it's like y'all are
- 43:16
scary, but the laugh is like you cannot
- 43:21
you cannot
- 43:24
I think it's holy. I think it's holy. I
- 43:26
think so, too. I don't want to be corny,
- 43:27
but I mean, I love being corny, so I
- 43:29
think it's straight up holy. Maybe I'm
- 43:30
about to be in my corny area. Come on
- 43:32
in. Come on over. I'm in it. And it's
- 43:34
great. And you can just say things like
- 43:37
laughter is holy. And everyone goes,
- 43:38
"Oh, oh, that's but you know, Ann
- 43:41
Lamont, you know, Ann Lamont, the great
- 43:42
writer, she she says that laughter is
- 43:44
carbonated holiness, which is like kind
- 43:46
of how it feels for me." Like when la
- 43:48
when laughter actually happened, it
- 43:49
feels like you're getting some some kind
- 43:51
of spiritual thing is happening. It's so
- 43:52
spiritual. I agree. Why is that corny?
- 43:55
It's so the same to every I it's it's
- 43:59
the same everywhere. It's in the same It
- 44:02
was a Mean Girls line about math being
- 44:04
the same in every um country, but
- 44:06
laughter is that to me except for French
- 44:09
people. I don't I don't get I'm so proud
- 44:12
of Abbott making French people laugh.
- 44:15
There's almost nothing I'm more proud
- 44:17
of. By the way, I just was saying this
- 44:19
to my friends the other day in our group
- 44:20
chat. I was like, the fact that like
- 44:22
French people, they love Abbott. They
- 44:24
watch it and they like it. It's like
- 44:26
weirdly one of our biggest markets. I'm
- 44:28
so proud of me. Those are the things
- 44:30
that make me proud of me that French
- 44:33
people are like, "We I enjoyed the
- 44:34
show." That is the
- 44:37
French proud of it because French people
- 44:39
are so embarrassing and I don't think
- 44:42
people talk about it enough. I find
- 44:44
French people are in what ways? They
- 44:47
French people got two strikes and
- 44:49
they're just
- 44:51
In what ways? Yeah, the way they how
- 44:54
French they act all the time. The way
- 44:55
they walk, the way that they talk, the
- 44:57
way they used to be a really Amy has a
- 44:59
Kendrick like feeling towards the
- 45:02
French. Well, the um No, I I'm probably
- 45:05
feeling like I'm not as cool as them and
- 45:07
so I'm I'm acting out because Fred
- 45:09
Armison and I used to do a bit where we
- 45:10
wanted to do a sketch called French
- 45:12
Teenagers and it was just like really
- 45:14
cool French teenagers like like with
- 45:15
leather jackets like doing back flips
- 45:17
and smoking cigarettes. Totally. I love
- 45:19
that. French French people are cool, but
- 45:21
they're embarrassing, too. They're
- 45:22
embarrassing. I got to meet him for the
- 45:23
first time. What a nice man. You've
- 45:24
never met Fred? Never. That was also
- 45:26
what was cool about the SNL50 was like
- 45:28
people I never met before. And he was
- 45:30
talking to um Tim um Tim Meadows. Tim
- 45:34
Meadows. And so I was going to say hi to
- 45:36
Tim, but I did not know he was talking
- 45:38
to Fred Armison. And I did the thing
- 45:40
that I hate where I just assumed that
- 45:42
which is so bad to say, but I was like,
- 45:43
"Oh, he's probably talking to a writer.
- 45:45
I won't interrupt, but I'm just going to
- 45:46
say hi to Tim." And I was like, "Hello,
- 45:48
Tim." And Fred goes, "Hi." I was like,
- 45:50
"Holy [ __ ] I thought you were a writer.
- 45:52
That came out wrong. My bad. What's
- 45:54
going on, man?" It was so But he was so
- 45:56
sweet and kind. He was a nice man. He
- 45:59
was a nice man. Zach Alfanak is nice
- 46:01
man. Oh, he's the nicest guy and so
- 46:04
funny. You like Payton Manning? Love I
- 46:08
He's a good time, too. Payton loves He's
- 46:10
just like He's so funny. Naturally
- 46:13
funny. He's so funny. He's so, you know,
- 46:16
and I'm sure you've worked with this
- 46:18
already. Like at SNL, there's athletes
- 46:20
that come come through and they're like,
- 46:22
I'm really funny. And you're like, okay.
- 46:24
Okay. Um, but Payton is genuinely
- 46:27
genuinely funny. Really a really nice
- 46:29
man. He became my MVP of the weekend.
- 46:32
Not going to lie. Do you carry you
- 46:34
around like a football? No. It's just
- 46:35
that as soon as I walked in and I saw
- 46:38
such so many wonderful people that I do
- 46:39
know, but when I walked in, I had a
- 46:40
coffee in my hand. He was like, "Hey,
- 46:41
where'd you get that coffee?" And I was
- 46:43
like, "Uh, sorry, man. and I bought it
- 46:44
from the hotel. I knew it might be a
- 46:46
little crazier. He's like, "I should
- 46:48
have did that." And it was just so
- 46:50
human. And and then I got to talk about
- 46:52
football with him at the park. It was
- 46:54
just like super sweet. Do you do what
- 46:56
sometimes happens with guys like that
- 46:58
where they're so giant and you're
- 47:00
little? I'm little too where sometimes I
- 47:02
find myself just kind of like touching
- 47:05
them. Yeah. Without knowing like, "Wow."
- 47:08
Like you're a tree. I also feel like we
- 47:11
aren't the same species. I don't feel as
- 47:14
though and I know we're both human. No,
- 47:18
you know, I know we're both human. I'm
- 47:19
saying, but you know how there's like,
- 47:20
oh, I'm a I am a domestic dog. You are a
- 47:23
wolf. Yes, exactly. You know, so maybe
- 47:26
it's the same species. And I feel I
- 47:27
think it's an instinctual thing where
- 47:29
like I was talking to Jason Mimoa and I
- 47:30
found myself putting my like hands on
- 47:32
like
- 47:33
like help like like a like a tin like
- 47:36
like a little Yeah. dead animal, I
- 47:38
guess, just trying to hang on and and to
- 47:42
touch it. Jordan, you know who Jordan
- 47:43
Mali is? He's a um football player. He
- 47:46
came to my set the other day. He's
- 47:48
massive. He's massive. Football players
- 47:50
are big. He's a big football player and
- 47:53
he's just huge. And I'm just looking up
- 47:56
and you just did you get your little
- 47:59
Your hands are just on his shoulders
- 48:01
like I'm so sorry. I don't mean to Why
- 48:03
am I touching you? But I know they I
- 48:06
feel like big men must get that more
- 48:09
than you think, which is people just
- 48:10
going, "Hey," and touching it. People
- 48:13
touch us a lot, too, though. Yeah, they
- 48:14
pat us. They go, "Hey, little buddy."
- 48:17
They do. They do. You get a little pat
- 48:18
on the head or you get a little um Have
- 48:20
you ever been picked up against your
- 48:22
will? Uh it is one of my least favorite
- 48:24
things. Least favorite things in the
- 48:25
world. Um people are laughing. Yeah. Why
- 48:27
are y'all laughing at me? I've gotten
- 48:29
picked up. It's a very It's a comedy
- 48:31
improv thing. You get picked up in
- 48:32
scenes and it it's I I don't know how to
- 48:34
explain it other than pure rage. It is
- 48:37
ins and it to have your feet lifted off
- 48:40
the ground against your will. If I'm
- 48:42
going on a roller coaster, I signed up
- 48:43
for that. If I'm doing something, you
- 48:46
know what I'm saying? But to just be
- 48:47
lifted off and me, I'm so sturdy. I
- 48:50
think I'm super like I'm 10 toes down
- 48:52
all the time. To be lifted off my tin
- 48:54
toes is so unless disoriented. Unless
- 48:57
it's the right person. It's the right
- 48:59
person. And then you're like, "Oh my
- 49:00
god." You're like, "What? How can you
- 49:03
lift me?" But it changes my whole my
- 49:06
whole purview. I think I'm so big and
- 49:07
I'm so strong. And someone lifts you up.
- 49:09
I'm like, "I'm a pet." I feel like, you
- 49:11
know, you pick your pet up and they
- 49:13
don't have any. That's what happens to
- 49:14
me. I Or you go or you say, "Put me
- 49:16
down. Put me down." But like like then
- 49:17
you feel very stressed when people are
- 49:19
like, "Why are men?" So I get it because
- 49:20
as a woman, I'm a little like iffy about
- 49:22
my height sometimes. So yeah, I mean
- 49:26
whatever. I get six foot men, but
- 49:28
nothing wrong with the, you know, I
- 49:30
think you identify as tall. That's what
- 49:31
I say. That's why getting picked up
- 49:33
throws me off so much because I do
- 49:36
identify as tall and that's a break in
- 49:38
reality for me. It is. I really feel
- 49:41
like it's my cat. My cat feels super
- 49:43
tough. He thinks he runs [ __ ] and then I
- 49:45
pick him up and he's like, "Whoa, whoa,
- 49:47
whoa, whoa. Hey, hey, don't be picking
- 49:48
me up. I run this house." No, you don't.
- 49:50
I can pick you up. So that's what that's
- 49:52
why it throws me off when someone picks
- 49:53
me up because I'm just like, "Oh, I
- 49:54
don't like it either." Well, you heard
- 49:56
it here first. Don't go up to Quinta and
- 49:58
pick her up and do not Yeah. give point
- 50:01
and give any thoughts and try to not um
- 50:05
say who uh she reminds you of. And No,
- 50:09
that was a you thing. That's a me thing.
- 50:10
That's me thing. You can say it. I'm not
- 50:13
That's just me. So, before we wrap up,
- 50:14
I'm doing something, you know, I'm
- 50:16
asking uh because again, this is we're
- 50:18
attempting to have a good hang here. And
- 50:21
um I'm asking people like what are you
- 50:22
what are you going to right now that's
- 50:24
making you laugh. You know what is the
- 50:25
thing that you go you look up or a place
- 50:28
you go or a person you talk to or a
- 50:31
thing that you know is kind of the way
- 50:33
that you escape. Um I'm I regret to say
- 50:36
that there's this these videos online.
- 50:39
Now I don't really watch Tik Tok really.
- 50:42
Why? I just don't I I never really So
- 50:45
there's these video I'm learning of this
- 50:49
cat and it's an and I don't like it
- 50:52
because it's AI. Okay, look. Look, this
- 50:55
isn't a shame based I mean there's no
- 50:56
shame here. I'm shaming me for it's an
- 50:59
AI cat. Hold on. I got to check this
- 51:02
out. And he like always is he starts his
- 51:06
day.
- 51:10
Okay. Already. Okay. Okay. He starts his
- 51:12
day. What's his name? H SS I N. I don't
- 51:16
know how to pronounce him. He is Okay.
- 51:18
from Mia. And he H ss I N. Cat. Yeah. Do
- 51:22
you see him? HS uh HSN. Okay. Let's see.
- 51:26
Oh, H S I N. Yeah. Cat. It's a breed of
- 51:30
cat. Can I Yeah, let's let's look at it.
- 51:33
No, you're gonna have to search for him
- 51:35
in Tik Tok. Okay, very good. Stand by.
- 51:39
Look him up.
- 51:40
Um, and he he always begins his day. Um,
- 51:44
he wakes up and he just he decides he
- 51:47
goes to the market and he buys some
- 51:49
vegetables and then he goes and finds
- 51:51
Are you looking at him?
- 51:54
No, it's not. No, hold on. No, that's
- 51:57
Oh, this cat. Yeah. Okay. So, we'll
- 52:00
we'll put him up here. But he's So, he
- 52:02
he he will find a friend like a chicken
- 52:04
or a rabbit. He's finding a chicken in
- 52:06
this one, is he? And so what he does and
- 52:08
he's also and then he cooks the chicken
- 52:09
and he so but he always he drugs them
- 52:12
first. He he invites them over for a
- 52:14
drink and then they drink it and they
- 52:17
pass out. He's drugging these friends.
- 52:21
Wait. Okay. This is a whole story. Yeah.
- 52:26
And he and then he cooks them and he
- 52:28
eats them and he then he even has a
- 52:30
little funeral for them after he cooks
- 52:31
them. It's like you killed him. And uh
- 52:34
he has his friend he has his friend the
- 52:36
lion who he calls over to eat cuz I
- 52:39
think the the lion is the only apex
- 52:41
predator in his life cuz he cooks and
- 52:43
eats. Sometimes he drops a bomb in the
- 52:45
ocean and then he kills a shark. He has
- 52:47
shark meat that day and the caption is
- 52:50
always like I was in the mood for
- 52:52
something different today or the
- 52:55
caption's like
- 52:57
uh met a friend today and you think it's
- 52:59
going to end well this time. Nope. He
- 53:03
cooks whatever. One time he met a
- 53:04
crocodile and I was like, "This is
- 53:05
seeming like a budding friendship."
- 53:07
Cooks a Now he's in jail. He's in jail.
- 53:09
He gets There are consequences, but his
- 53:11
friend the lion always bails him out.
- 53:13
Mhm. He Sometimes he whacks someone over
- 53:16
the head and then he eats them. And but
- 53:18
sometimes they get him back. Like this
- 53:20
fox whacked him over the head once. And
- 53:23
I was like, "Finally, this cat is
- 53:24
getting what he [ __ ] deserves. This
- 53:26
little [ __ ] maniac." But then he
- 53:27
calls the lion. The lion comes and
- 53:29
whacks the fox. They have they have Fox
- 53:32
for dinner that night.
- 53:34
And you watch it? I watch every single
- 53:36
one
- 53:38
because I don't look up anything else on
- 53:39
TikTok. My algorithm is just this cat.
- 53:42
And every time I'm like, I hope this
- 53:44
little bastard gets what he wants. But
- 53:46
then when he is in the hospital, I'm
- 53:47
very scared. I'm like, "Please go to the
- 53:50
hospital. Please let him leave." Yeah.
- 53:51
Cuz he really gets beat up sometimes.
- 53:55
I hate how much they're laughing. But
- 53:56
also, I know what you mean. I I as I'm
- 53:59
watching it, what is weird about it is
- 54:02
it's like the cat is like giving another
- 54:05
cat a bath. The cat the cat is a human.
- 54:08
Like it has human qualities but looks
- 54:10
like a cat and now is eating a chicken
- 54:12
that made that he made and it's a really
- 54:15
fat cat. Yeah. And so he changes sizes
- 54:18
too throughout scenes. And it's like why
- 54:20
in this scene are you bigger than the
- 54:22
lion? I'm interested in how he perceives
- 54:23
himself to other animals. And he he
- 54:26
saves a baby every once in a while cuz
- 54:28
he you see him saving a baby. He doesn't
- 54:30
eat the baby. He doesn't eat the baby.
- 54:32
The first time he saved a baby though. I
- 54:33
thought he was going to eat that baby,
- 54:34
but he's all and I think that's like him
- 54:36
being like, "See, I'm I'm cool." But no,
- 54:39
you are a psychopath. You are drugging
- 54:41
other animals and eating them. And um so
- 54:44
that's Yeah, that's how you escape.
- 54:49
Yes, that's how you escape from working
- 54:51
too hard. But I get why you like this
- 54:53
because it's story. It is like
- 54:56
and and it's AI so it gets it wrong a
- 54:58
lot and uh and it also makes me feel
- 55:00
good. I have a friend Ash actually told
- 55:02
me. Ash told me that Ash has a friend
- 55:06
that works in AI and they and that
- 55:08
person was like look the day AI really
- 55:11
figures it out the day everyone should
- 55:13
be really scared Alzheimer's will also
- 55:16
be solved. And I was like, "Oh, because
- 55:20
if AI can really get that close to how
- 55:23
our brains really function,
- 55:27
we will have then also had the keys to
- 55:31
figure out Alzheimer's." And so that
- 55:32
brings me comfort and it brings me fear
- 55:35
because I I like what you just said. I
- 55:38
mean, and also I like that that's the
- 55:40
kind of thing that an expert would say
- 55:41
on a podcast, but
- 55:44
and I'd be like, "What? I heard it from
- 55:47
a friend who from a friend who heard who
- 55:49
said that's hilarious. Okay, love you.
- 55:52
Thank you so much for doing this. You're
- 55:53
the best. Bye.
- 55:56
Thank you so much, Quinta Brunson. You
- 55:57
are amazing and so talented and it means
- 56:01
a lot that you came and you're the best,
- 56:04
Quinta. Um, and yeah, you know, this is
- 56:07
the end of the show where we go a little
- 56:10
deeper on something that um brings me
- 56:13
joy or changes changes my brain. And so,
- 56:18
uh, we mentioned Lisa Beasley at the
- 56:21
very top of the show when we were
- 56:22
talking, um, to some of Quinta's friends
- 56:25
who worked at BuzzFeed. And I just want
- 56:27
to mention her again. Lisa Beasley
- 56:29
Experience is where you can find Lisa B
- 56:31
experience is where you can find her.
- 56:33
And, um, she's just a hilarious
- 56:34
comedian, does a ton of characters, and
- 56:36
she did that really funny character,
- 56:38
Corporate Erin. Check that out if you
- 56:40
haven't seen it. It's just corporate
- 56:42
speak at its best and the maddening pace
- 56:46
in which people deliver
- 56:48
non-news in in work spaces. Um it's
- 56:52
really funny and so is she and um yeah
- 56:56
so if you have not seen her comedy check
- 56:58
it out and always check out the great
- 57:01
Quinta on Abbott and check us out always
- 57:04
here at Good Hang. Thanks for hanging.
- 57:05
Okay bye.
- 57:07
You've been listening to Good Hang. The
- 57:09
executive producers for this show are
- 57:11
Bill Simmons, Jenna Weiss Berman, and
- 57:12
me, Amy Polar. The show is produced by
- 57:15
The Ringer and Paperkite. For The
- 57:17
Ringer, production by Jack Wilson, Cat
- 57:19
Spelain, Kaia McMullen, and Alia
- 57:21
Xanerys. For Paperkite, production by
- 57:24
Sam Green, Joel Levelvel, and Jenna
- 57:26
Weiss Berman. Original music by Amy
- 57:28
Miles.
- 57:30
So really good.