Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
So is this the new norm? Is my question? Is
the new norm that you come five minutes late to
all of our sessions? It's three minutes, you fucker. Let
me tell you something. We have a very fancy We
got a very fancy guest, and the very fancy guest
sitting sitting alone in his closet, and you're what are
you doing making a drink? No, I was about to
(00:21):
get my GTS kombucha. Actually I was asking. I was
gonna ask for like five minutes so I could get
a GTSC. We'll not five minutes five seconds shipment. Today,
I got a big old ship. I got a ship like,
I got a real shipman, not like not that like
you know what interested Yeah, now, not that we're interested
in advertising in your on your podcast shipment. I got that, yo.
(00:44):
You know you got to talk about it. You got
to talk about us every time you talk to start
this podcast shipment. So I got that big ass Kimbuocha shipment.
And I've already gone through two of them bad boys.
You might Yeah, Donald, we were on a call Kimbuche
has become a sponsor of the show, and we are
on a call with them, and Donald and I genuinely
drink it. So it was a no brainer. And Donald's like,
(01:07):
let me ask you something. Since we have the inventor
of this on the phone, how many do you recommend
I can have a day? And the guy the Guy's like, well,
I think three is probably probably the max you want
to have a day. And Don was like, okay, good, good, good,
So you might want to pace bro, They're gonna be
(01:28):
gone soon. Man, They're gonna be gone. Listen, let me
my wife, my kids. Oh it's a rap. We have
a very First of all, this episode is fucking hilarious,
very funny episode. I laughed so many times. And I
was on a text with with Donald then Bill right
before this and about something, and I was like, this
episode one twenty is one of the funniest of season one. Yeah. Easy, easy,
(01:49):
And we're very handsome guests. Are you nervous? I put
on a nice sweatshirt for him. No, I'm not nervous.
He and I have worked a lot together. Actually we
did Felicity together, we four scrubs and then after Scrubs. Uh,
we did a little movie called Let's Kill Ward's Wife
together and I played Ward and he directed, and so uh,
(02:11):
you know, well, I get I get nervous every time
I see Scott Folly because really, yeah, I'm I'm a
straight man for the most part, but there are certain
men that I get a little shy in front of,
and okay, Folly is one of them. Really, I don't
want to play hide the peep with him, but I
get a little, I get a little jittery. Would you play?
(02:33):
Would you play tip to tip? I don't want to
touch tips. I just listen. I am secure enough in
my in my sexuality to be able to say that
I get a little, I get a little a flutter.
Oh okay, I don't want to go tip to tip
with Scott Folly, but I I do think he's a
He's very dreamy to look at, and I I also
really like him as a human being. He's a he's
(02:54):
a very sweet man. Okay, should we invite him in? Yeah?
Why not? I mean, I'm excited dan him in, Dan
allow him in. We put him in a green room.
Oh my goodness, look handsome man. Just talking about you
you were yeah, Donald was saying that you guys have
worked on several projects together. Not wait before we get
(03:16):
into this, Let's make sure he's recording. Are you record?
I think I'm recording on here right the phone? Yes, yes,
good many A guess I got this sub scuff fully,
but there's something that tells me that you're going to
do it right. Look so handsome looking at him, Look
at him. I'm looking wait wait, I was gonna wait
a beat to tell him he was handsome. Donald, You
went right for it. Can I tell you this. I
(03:39):
watched the episode not that long ago. I've watched it
a couple times since we talked about me being on this,
and this is the first time my hair has been
the same length as it was during that episode. And
I have the pandemic to think, Scott, you got an intro.
I don't think another man in nine years got the
intro that we normally reserved for the beautiful woman. And
(04:00):
walking in with the slow motion and the fan and
the literally angels going oh, it was a bit much
and I was a little overwhelmed. And I think you
can tell that in my performance. It was hilarious though.
And eating jello eating jello, I mean I remember them,
I remember them coming to me saying like, what do
you want to eat? I was like, that's a hospital right,
(04:21):
and they're like Jello. It is the way Sarah's character
is so randy for you in this I had forgotten,
you know, we obviously, Scott, we go back. We haven't
seen these in twenty years, and so it's fun for
Doll and I because even though we're the stars of
the show, we're watching it like a new being, like, oh,
that's a funny episode. And I had totally forgotten how
in this episode Sarah is like really horny, frankly and
(04:45):
riled up, like she's like she's She literally says if
I don't sleep with him, I'm gonna kill myself, right,
and then says she said she she'd suck on his
foot or something, and he's like what they went? They
went to a law of lengths with this, between the
sucking on the foot, talking about needing to sleep with me,
begging me to ask her out do it, dropping stuff,
(05:06):
and doing bizarre contortions, which, by the way, works for
anybody out there. It was really funny though, because it's
not something you often see on a show, like you
always see like the man being like neurotic and frantic.
How do I get her? And I'm so attracted to
her I'm so horny, you know, and this. I thought
this was funny that Sarah. First of all, Sarah was
very funny doing it, but she's so on a mission
(05:29):
to get laid. Yeah, I am, you know, it's funny.
I had so many thoughts watching this. Sorry, you're gonna
see my lights go on and nobody can see that
because we're I'm a podcast. I'm gonna I'm in a
closet where it's got one of those automatic lights. You
walk in and it turns on, and if I'm sitting
here and not moving, then it's gonna go dark. That's
the kind of fancy house that Scott Foli has. Everyone
he has a light that turns on with his mom.
(05:51):
Some people have the clapper, some people have light switches.
Scott Foli has movement Listen. One day, if you have
the level of success of legendary actor Scott Fully, you
could get one of these motion lights in your closet.
Uh huh. I think all of your closets have that.
Um no. I was so impressed. First of all, what
a time capsule. These things are right, like not just
(06:13):
the references, but everything you see, like the TV you
guys are watching in the beginning. It is an old
vacuum tube television, right, you know, which you just don't
see anymore. Plus, you guys are talking about watching Iron Chef,
which somehow has stood the test of time, because I
think it's still on. I think they're still making Yeah.
I think back then it was like Iron Chef was
an import and now it's domestic. I don't know that
(06:36):
there is there a domestic Iron Chef, yes and stuff. Yeah,
but it was also it was also so impressive to
me to see, you know, this is the we're getting
towards the end of the first season, if I'm not mistaken. Yeah,
And you guys have your characters dialed in at this
point already. I've been on a bunch of television shows
where it's not until like end of season three where
(06:57):
people are like, oh, oh, I know who this guy is. Right,
you guys are dialed in to a person like from
Kelso to Cox to you guys to Sarah to like,
it's amazing and being able to jump into that, you know,
it was such an interesting character that I got to
play here. But but you're right, watching Sarah and that
character totally go for it was such an interesting thing
(07:19):
because you always see it from the other side, don't you. Yeah,
And she's really fucking funny. I mean, we say this,
this is our twentieth episode of this Scott, fully believe
it or not. It's become a hit and we can't
believe it ourselves. But this is our twentieth one, and
I We've said it a bunch of times, but Sarah
Chalk is so fucking funny. I mean this episode in particular,
she is so fucking funny in this episode. She's so talented,
(07:40):
she's so beautiful, she is so good at what she does,
and she goes for it, man. And that's what I
appreciated most about this show is that, you know, there
are things that you would read on the page, you
think like, oh, how am I going to do that?
And everybody, to a person goes for it. And I
think that's what really made this show successful and what
makes it stand the test of time, even though we're
still looking at old TV. It's all good. Well, let's
(08:02):
speaking of we have a lot to talk about, Donald,
but I think we should sing first, um and we Scott,
I was about to say, speaking of successful, let's get
into that successful theme song about six seven eight so
you want to do it? No, I like it the song.
I would like Scott fully to count seven, okay, go
(08:23):
five six seven, eight? Stories about show we made about
a bunch of dots and nurses said, he's a stories
should so yetto around here? Are yeado around here? A M.
(08:48):
That's the first time in podcast, sister, we stopped the
opening theme song. And I'm sorry, Donald, I didn't mean
to question your no no no no no no no
no no no no no no no no. It's just
excited about a VIP guest, and I like, give him
the honor. He was really excited to go for it.
I'm not I'm not at all hurt in any way. No,
you know you're we are we are, we are partners
in this, and I don't want you to ever think
(09:09):
I would ever question when it's time to sing the song.
It was to your harmony. Your harmony with that song
is something that that my wife and I have had
conversations about. We go for it, We go for it's
really good. No listen, Scott. When we made the song,
we were like okay, but I was like, well, how
do we how do we do it? Now? How do
we you know? We made the song, but how are
we were both gonna sing all the lyrics? And Donald's like,
(09:31):
don't worry, I got this, and he like came up
with all those harmonies. I was like, Zach was like,
I'll just send you a I'll send you my verse.
I'll sing the whole song and I'll send it to
you and you just sing, because originally we were going
to do it where we split up the words. Yeah, right,
And he was like, I'll sing the whole thing and
you just pick where you wanna sing and we'll have
(09:52):
Charlie cut us in. And I heard him sing and
I was like, I think he sounds amazing. The only
way that this is gonna work is if I just
back him up with some If I sing the whole
thing too exactly exactly, this is good, but you know
what's gonna one's gonna make it better if I do
really need if I do really showy harmonies over all
(10:14):
of this, well, it works and we are fans, so
good job, right right? Right? Of course, Donald, I knew
we should go back to what I was gonna say
that let's go obvious Scott's career. I'll do a little
we'd have to go back a little bit, Scott. The
first time I remember hearing about you was on a
very very successful show, solely successful because of Donald's phase on,
(10:36):
but I believe you were on it too. It was
called Felicity, that's correct. Donald and I met for the
first time on Felicity, and I remember being like, holy shit,
the clueless guy's here. That's what happens every time he
walks into a restaurant. Of course, of course, but I also,
I mean Donald was great on that, and you were you.
You had that, you were going through this phase where
(10:57):
you were trying to be ripped. You were. I remember
I think the first table read you came in, you
were carrying like a three gallon Jerry can of water. Yeah, crazy,
the amount of water you would drink every day, and
you were shredded and we'd play basketball in the parking
lot out there. And actually I remember, I think you've
been on the show off and on for a season
(11:17):
or two, maybe three, and before before Scrubs came around, right, yeah, yeah,
And I remember talking to you. You had done the
pilot and you were telling me about it and you said,
I don't know, man, it's really funny. It's from this
young Rider. Uh, he did Spin City and we got
a good group. And I saw the pilot and it's
really funny. I think it's gonna take off. And I
(11:39):
was like, yeah, good for you. Let's keep playing basketball. Yeah,
and I season later. Yeah, we had a lot of
conversations just about work back back then. Also, you know,
I don't know how knew you were to the game,
but you had been working. You did you had done Felicity,
You had done Scream two or was it Scream three?
(11:59):
I've done before Felicity. I had done Dawson's Creek, which
was sort of my introduction to the back then was
the WB the now defunct WB World, Um, which was
Felicity your first big leading part. Felicity was my first
big leading part. Yeah. Yeah, and you know it was
it was really the uh the springboard that and I'm
so grateful for it that that allowed me to be
(12:20):
a part of your show and sort of everything that's
come sense. And um, and when you guys, are you
guys still friendly? Um? The three of you, the three
of you, the love Triangle, we're not not friendly. Um,
you don't like you know, I mean Donald where you're
not like having him over and and and putting his
putting his kids in a in a bouncy castle. No,
I'm We're not like that. But but we got together
(12:42):
last year four It was the twentieth reunion of Felicity UM,
which was amazing and we got so many people together.
We went to the u at X, the Austin Television Festival,
and I think they screened an episode and we all
sat on stage with a bunch of people ask us questions.
There was a modern It was really great with the
first time we'd all been together in you know, seventeen
(13:04):
eighteen years. Wow. Yeah, it was really really fun man.
And I, you know, I'd always said I don't think
you know, they talk about doing reboots, and I always said,
I don't think you can do a reboot of Felicity
because it was so specific to UM, not just that
time in a person's life when we were all so
much younger, but to that period of the world of
(13:28):
our existence. And I sort of changed my mind, UM
after being with him, because I I just missed them
all so much, and I remembered the feelings that I had,
both good and bad, and I sort of yearned for them.
So if you know, you I think we have an
exclusive right here on the Fake Doctors will friend Scott
(13:48):
Foley is willing to do a Felicity reboot. Everybody that
would be interesting around again, it wouldn't be anough could
Donald be on too? I would only support it different
My character lives. My character lives, so it's a possibility,
right good, Um, I only supported if you get to
go back Tonal. It would be very interesting to see
if everybody is h still friendly from the cast in
the show, you know what I mean, Like guys from
(14:10):
in college together, and you guys all lived together kind
of sort of, and you guys all dated each other,
but it was college and usually you know, I didn't
go to college, but I don't have a lot of
fringe from my you know, early that I still hang
out with from my early twenties that I still hang
out with. So it would be really interesting to see
what happened after you guys all left NYU. So I
(14:32):
remember when there was a controversy when Carry Russell cut
her hair, like people lost their minds? Right yeah? And
I remember being like, I remember, I remember I didn't
watch the show, but I remember being like, are people
really up in arms that Garry Russell cut her hair.
People were up in arms and it was it's to
this day. I think the thing that um people talk
about the most when they talk about the show, and
(14:53):
the interesting thing is that it was scripted, like she
cut her hair on the show and somehow it it
gained tracks. And is this urban legend that she did
it on her own because she was angry or wanted
to change or get away from the character. We cut it.
You actually see it in season two of the show,
her cutting her hair, and I thought she looked more
beautiful with the short hair than she did with the
(15:14):
long But you know that people just loved it. I'm
just just making up that people loved her hair so
much that they were like, how dare you? It was
a lot of hair, dude, it was a lot of hair.
I'm assuming, as I recall, she had beautiful, curly, long hair,
and people were like, dare you? Yeah, I mean it
enviable hair. Yeah, yeah, it looked like she had been
growing it since birth. That's how beautiful the hair was.
(15:37):
Russell was on our show. She was a love interest
of mine. Is that right? On Scrubs? Yeah? Yes, she
did a couple of episodes just like, well, you did
way more episodes. Your character tracked four yeah the end.
Don't worry, Scott, you did way more, but uh, do
me a favor and look up how many she did.
But she did too. Yeah, oh Donald, you know that.
Yeah that's cool. So now she's talented and great. I kissed,
(16:00):
I think, I mean on the show. I think we kissed.
It might be we might be lip guarantee, I would
guarantee that you remember whether you kissed or not. No,
I know. I I remember being very excited that she
was a love interest. But JD didn't make out with
all his love interests. Joel will look it up for me,
did JD? But anyway, Scott, we might be lip cousins. Uh,
we're We're definitely weener cousins. We're definitely weener cousins. Donald
(16:23):
and I were touching talking about touching tips just before
you came on, but not in real life Donald, with
Sarah in the character. Yeah, Oh well, I think I
hope that's the only crossover. I don't think we had
any real life crossover, Scott, fully, and I hope not
because the woman would have clearly preferred you. I don't
know about that. Although you know, I'm kindly. How dare
(16:45):
you you know how handsome you are? Listen, listen, listen,
you might be handsome, you know, listen. I know that
all of your supporters are out there right now. You know,
just you probably bought, you know, quite a few downloads
to our podcast just now. Yeah, but it's very kind
(17:06):
people who oh your scandal crew? Hey, girls, how y'all
doing scandal crew? I'll take that three of us have
something else in common, and that is we've all had
ABC canceled our shows in season one. Yes, thirteen episodes.
He's got thirteen. I got I only got ten, Scott,
(17:27):
how many did you get? We got thirteen? Thank goodness?
And a trip to Prague? Right right? So for those
of you don't know, um, because I guess not enough
of you knew. None of us watched. Scott was on
a huge budget action series that shot in Prague. He
moved his whole family there, which is no small deal
(17:47):
because you have two children, right, I have three children.
They were three school over there. Yeah. Um. And it
was not a, by no means a simple show. I
was about. I was going to direct it, but then
I had a conflict. But it was a huge budget
at sort of James Bond comedic James Bond action show
that Bill Lawrence uh six Degrees of Bill Lawrence was
the showrunner of, and I thought it was amazing. The
(18:10):
pilot was unbelievable. I couldn't believe the scale of it.
It looked like it looked like a giant feature. Oh
thanks man, and you were so good in it. But anyway,
I was, as I was preparing for today, I went
all three of us we were stars of ABC and
then got a new ABC show that only went half
a season. Man, it was just and it's still heartbreaking.
(18:31):
My wife and I had a conversation about it a
couple nights ago where you know, she was like, oh,
I wish we were still in Prague. You know, we
just we were so fortunate. And you know, that's one
of the great things about and one of the reasons
I'm so excited to talk to you guys today because
you know, Scrubs for me was it started out as
just a gig, right and coming in doing something fun,
(18:51):
doing something different, and it has morphed into the relationships
that I've made from it. Have I've sustained a lot
of what I do and it's it's made me happy.
The people that I I've gotten to work with and
gone on to work with because of Scrubs have been great.
And like you said, Bill Lawrence was the showrunner of
(19:12):
Whiskey Cavalier and we were over in Prague together, and
you know, without Scrubs that wouldn't have happened. And I
think he really showed that you were really funny, Scott.
I mean, I think I think that with your other
shows that you've known for, um, you know, whether it
be Felicity or Scandal. Uh. You know, obviously people know
that you as a as a as a great dramatic actor,
but I think on Scrubs Bill really gave you a
(19:33):
chance to be hilarious. One of my favorite moments of
of of of Sean's character was in the script. I
say this to Scott all the time and Bill all
the time that it literally said in a script Sean
forlornly rides a dolphin. And then when I saw the
shot of you forlornly riding a dolphin, I thought he
(19:55):
fucking nailed that. He literally maybe he really the best
screen direction of my That's how I would sum up
that shot is Sean forlornly rides a dolphin. Oh thanks man. Well,
I will look before I will say this, though, I
knew you were funny from when we did Felicity together,
when Noh went off the rails and went a little
batshit crazy, and you got to explore this character who
(20:19):
was kind of by the book and did everything by
the book. Uh refined himself. And I remember doing a
bunch of episodes where they were looking for you and
we finally found you, and you were like, you were
completely out there, and I remember not being able to
hold it together when we were doing the takes because
you were so funny. So I knew you were funny
way before we still before you came on Scrubs. Oh
(20:42):
thanks man. I um yeah, I think I think Zach
you overstate my my talent by saying I'm a great
dramatic actor. I think I'm passable. But Donald, that was
that was a bizarre like Season three Tangent where my
character Noel decided to change his name to Leon, literally
just reverse the letters in his name. They put like
(21:03):
a weird wig on me, so I had like blonde
tips on my hair. It was the strangest thing. But
thank you, Donald, that was It was at least a
little chance for me to stretch myself in that character.
Now did j j Abrams run all the seasons every season? Yes,
every season. He was a gone a little bit on
season four on our final season because he had started
(21:26):
a show called Alias and so was sort of doing
his time between both sets. But he was there the
whole time. Why I was really fortunate. Um you know,
obviously no one knew that jaj Abens would become JJ
Abrams back then. You know, do you like Donald occasionally
put it out there that you're open to being in
any Star Wars franchises that he's just can I tell
(21:50):
you it's been. It's been like if if I was
ever in anything Grunberg, he keeps getting all the love.
I mean, where the Fox's happening with with Donald and
Scott Foley. Grumberg and JJ Abrams have been friends since
they were three years old. Like they were best friends
in elementary school. They made you know, crappy movies together
on their Super eight film cameras when they were kids. Uh,
(22:11):
they were best man at each other's weddings. Look, I
think JJ knows just by the fact that I'm an
actor but I would like to be in Star Wars.
The gotta be more. Donald's very but I would Yeah,
of course I would love to. And I you know,
every time he signs on to direct a new one,
I sent him a text like, Wow, way to go.
You're not going to see your family for a while.
(22:31):
I want some friends around. UM. So I'm not sure
how to take it that he hasn't cast me in.
You know, you always there's the old story that you
know someone likes working with you, if they if they
hire you again and again and again. And I've been
I've been fortunate with Bill that that that's happened multiple times.
JJ not so much, you know, build a direct a
(22:53):
giant ten pole movie. I mean, what's going on? Bill?
Do you remember he was gonna do Fletch. He rate
script for Fletch, and I went and I met with him,
I read with him, and there was a whole long
Mirramax story that goes with it. But but he was
on his way. Man. I thought he would have been
great at that. I know we really need him. I
don't think he is interested. He loves TV so much.
But I think for all of us, we would like
(23:13):
Bill to become a studio tent pole filmmaker, if he
doesn't mind movies anymore. They do. There's a couple coming out. Yeah,
they're saying July. They're saying, like the end of July,
things are gonna pick. You're saying that Chris Nolan movie
is coming out no matter what Tenant. Oh really right,
That's what I've been hearing. And then I mean, maybe
they'll change their mind. But I read something on the
(23:36):
interwebs that said they're still saying July, which assumes that
people are going to be willing to go to the
theater in July. I don't, I don't, I don't know.
It seems pretty ballsy to release like a two hundred
million dollars I mean, I don't know if it's not
much money, but I think sciant movies for that for
in July. But somethings are filming already, like they're filming
in certain areas. Juell just said two hundred and five
(23:58):
million and July seven teenth, that's coming up five million dollars.
That's that's going to be interesting to see how you
spend two hundred and five million dollars. I would think, like,
wouldn't you have to double the amount of theaters because
the theater is only going to be at half capacity
just because of social distancing, in order to like they're
just aren't enough theaters out there. To the money, two
(24:18):
hundred and five is the production budget, so they're gonna
put like one hundred million into releasing it. That is
that's a lot of money. That is a lot of money.
But I asked my but then you ask yourself how
much did it cost to make Endgame and all of
those things? Those things look like they cost half a
billion dollars. No, but when you've got a built in Marvelonians,
this movie has no uh mega celebrities in it at all. Yeah,
(24:40):
but I mean no, I know Chris Nolan is his
own enterprise. Don't get me wrong, I get it. But
it's got to be the most amount of money spent
on an original script. Wow fifty six, Scott, you're not
supposed to read the producer No, sorry, same thing, Sarah,
(25:02):
Sarah did the same thing. Scott Donald and I are
the hosts of the show. You as a guest to
ignore my producer's notes. Well, no, you know what I
was doing was pretending that I actually knew the budget Sarah.
We had Sarah on and Joelle was like, you know,
Joelle always gives us little things to help the conversation along,
and Sarah just starts reading him like, Sarah, that is
(25:23):
not for the guests. The fact that you needed little
things to help the conversation along with Sarah for ten
years is amazing. No, but I said, I said, Sarah,
what happens if Joelle's running like this is so boring?
Help her along? You know, like, don't read those Okay,
So I'm gonna put a piece of tape above my No, no, no, no, no, no, no,
(25:44):
I'm kidding. I'm kidding Joelle. Joel would never write Scott
Folly is so boring. Don't worry. Um. She wouldn't be
the first one anyway. All I was saying was that
Chris Nolan, I get is it's his own entity, and
I get that everyone is going to see this movie
because he's a fucking genius. But I wonder if it's
the most amount of money ever spent on a on
on a piece of material that isn't already established piece
(26:07):
of intellectual property like Marvel or James Bond or the like.
You know what I'm saying, I don't. I don't know.
That's a lot of money to have to spend on
something and it not work, you know, Yeah, I don't. Yeah,
I mean just it's just the amount of money it
has to make in order for it to be successful
is just. And especially with Scott's saying, is that the
talk is that the theaters are only gonna be half full,
(26:30):
so you can have most distance from eat from each other.
So then you need to double the amount of screenings. Um,
you know how that's going to work. What would be
really interesting is Okay, so Trolls World Tour was supposed
to come out in theaters and it didn't make it
to theaters because of the whole COVID thing, right, and
so they released it on digital the digital platform, but
(26:51):
you had to rent it. You couldn't buy it. You
could only rent it, and your rental lasts for about,
you know, twenty four hours. I wonder how much money
Trolls World Tour made. Because the model is there to
put movies out, well, at least right now, if you
if you really want to watch uh, and they haven't
(27:11):
really experimented with like big blockbuster movies, but if you
really want to watch a movie. It's fine to watch
it at home. I understand they need movie theater money
because popcorn all of that shit, theaters and everything. But
I wonder what Trolls World Tour did for Joel if
can we find that out? I wonder if even I
wonder if it's even published. Um so, seventy seven million
(27:32):
Trolls World Tour did That's a lot. I don't know. Yeah,
well that would be That would be you saying, is
that the first weekend or is that total? No, that
would be so when you rent it, because I haven't
done this yet, when you rent with this new model
where you rent the movie for twenty four hour? What
is what did what did Trolls cost you? Twenty bucks
nineteen ninety nine something? I love. I love the two
(27:54):
dads know they're like twenty bucks? Yeah, oh yeah please.
I looked at my wife. I was like, we're spending
twenty bucks on this? Yeah, all right, several times too,
so I think how much? Think how much money? You've got?
Enough the phase ons because you guys are renting it
multiple times. But it would cost more if we went
to the movie theater though, because it would be yes,
twenty bucks each person. You know what I mean, and
(28:16):
so plus yeah, that's right, plus popcorn and all of
that stuff. I don't know if they getting money for
the popcorn, but I'm just saying, I wonder if that's
a new Seventy seven million is a lot of money
to make online, Dude, that's a new model they've been
talking about it. I think it's a it's an interesting
way to go to tell be what people are going
to start doing. I mean if because I don't you know,
Spike Lee said the other day he's not going to
the theater until there's a vaccine, and I was kind
(28:36):
of like, yeah, I think I might agree with that. Yeah,
it makes sense. I mean, my wife's not leaving the
house till there's a fucking vaccine, you know, And that's
your choice, right, It's yeah, sure, I have a lot
to do with that. Donald, your wife is your wife
more hardcore than you about this? Because Donald's definitely more
hardcore than his wife. No, my wife is anxiety written
(28:59):
about everything. She is terrified not just that we're going
to get it, but that we're all going to die
from it when we get it. You know. Mind you
none of us have pre existing conditions. She has made
five hundred masks and donated them and given them the friends.
She is all over this, and I still can't leave
the house. Yeah, it's crazy. It's crazy. My wife doesn't
(29:22):
like me right now because I'm like, well, maybe it
started off like this. Maybe maybe in May, honey, maybe no,
maybe in May. Okay, Well we'll see about May. And
then May's come around and I'm like, okay, maybe June.
And she's like, June is here, motherfucker. Listen July. When
July comes around, I promise you, baby, we're gonna scope
(29:45):
out the situation and if it's all good, then we
can go outside. Well, Donald and I got invited to
go on Now there's this really popular YouTube show called
Good Mythical Morning and and it's it's a hugely successful show.
They do it in a normal time, to do it
every excuse me, every morning, and uh we got an
invite to do it at the end of July. And
(30:06):
I was like, I think, right, and you have to
go in person. They're not doing on on zoom And
I was like, I think And we were just talking
about this before the show, like and did July we
could probably do that, right, And we don't know I
mean we're both having the conversation, but in our heads
is like, are we going to be going to do
a talk show ended July? Is that seemed like are
we gonna wear masks? Like I don't understand how it's
(30:26):
gonna I'm a lot of talking face to face too.
I mean, you know, everybody's got an opinion. Mine is
I think it's gonna be okay. You know, at a
certain point, don't don't you have doesn't life have to
go on? I mean it does, and I know, but
I but I but but but choosing yeah, life will
go on, but choosing to go into like making choices
(30:47):
that are like I'm gonna go sit in a movie
theater with a bunch of people that might be coughing,
or I'm gonna go into a tight elevator or a restaurant.
I mean those choices. I don't know. I might we
might hold hold off on those. We gotta go to
a break because that's what we have to do, because
this is a real show that has breaks and ads
and ship Scott Fully, this isn't like bullshit show. This
is a show. No it's not. You guys have supporters, now, yeah,
(31:07):
we have and we have real fancy ones too, um
and here here's something, here's some of them. Are ever
do that? I that, I do that. I hold off
to see who's gonna do it. We're like that. The
(31:32):
shame you guys don't enjoy this because of the delay,
nothing we ever do is in sync. So we sometimes
asked Dan in post to make it seem like we
know how to sing at the same time, Can you
guys give me a minute to run and grab my notes?
And yeah, but don't run, don't don't take a deuce. Dude,
we got Scott Fully here. Scott Fully, I would never
deuce on your time. Okay, thank you. His minute is
(31:55):
the equivalent of him learning learning his lines on scrubs.
This is what happened, glad. You know we talked a
lot about this. Will you please say that when he
comes back or not learning his lines, I should say no,
he's gone away. He claims he's turned over a new leaf,
but I think that's just because he's worried that potential
directors and showrunners might be listening to the podcast and
(32:16):
won't hire him. So he has this whole thing where
he says that he's he's turned over a new leaf,
and now he learns his lines. Well, how it's a pandemic,
that's his new leaf. There's nothing to learn. I know.
He also said he quit weed, but I think that
I will ask him if that's if that's lasted. Why
is your wife's Instagram handle the mean Chick? She seems
(32:37):
like such a nice person, does she. Well, I don't
know where that well, but every time I've hung out
with her, she seems delightful. She is delightful her her.
She's Polish and her last name is Domin Chick or
Domean Chick, which sounds like the mean chick. So every
time someone has has a hard time pronouncing her name,
she just says it sounds like the mean chick. So
that's oh, I thought there. I thought it was like
(32:59):
a thing like, look, you might think I'm nice, but
I'm a bitch. No, no, no, she's she's an asshole.
But god, I love her. And she had a good
part on your show, too, didn't she. Yeah, I forgot.
Did she have a recurring or something? She had she
had a recurring role, And that was sort of one
of them. One of the caveats I had when I
was when I was talking about shooting this show in Prague.
(33:23):
You know. I was like, you guys want me to
move over to Prague for a year. And I got
a wife who's a working actress. I got three kids,
and I'm gonna put in school, like I can't ask
her to stop. And Bill was like, she could be
on the show. Yeah, you know whatever. Bill is a
good salesman. He's like, I just I just discovered who
our new recurring role is. Yeah, you know, but that
it was a It was a it was a smart
(33:44):
move on his part and and ours. Actually, you know,
shooting over in Prague was um obviously much better for
the budget. The tax breaks and the cost of doing
business over there a substantially lowers so and and just
the production value. You know, there's a shot in the pilot.
By the way, if you haven't seen the show, go
see it, even even if you just watch the pilot,
because you'll be be impressed by the scope of the
(34:04):
damn thing. I just couldn't. I thought it was a
pilot was really well done, and I was I was
gonna go direct one. I was sort of intimidated. I
was like, how many days you get to shoot these episodes?
Because it was just we were so excited to have
you over there. Man, we were so bummed when it
when it fell through. And I know you got a
big I got a big gig. I got a part
in a good role in a movie with Christopher Walkin
(34:25):
and my actor crush heart. Couldn't say no to that.
As much as I wanted to come to Prague and
Boss Scott foldy around well to save the show, and
I know she's that episode would have would have been
the thing. No, But I I can't wait to work
with you again because I think you're faksmastic Donald Scott.
You're so amazing in this episode. Man, Yeah, let's get
(34:46):
into the episode. Well, let's get the episode. Um. Yeah,
it's a very good episode. You know we Adam Burns
seen directed it, who directed our pilot. We've told you
and he's a very very funny talented guy, Eric, very
funny writer. I played tennis with him after this episode.
You're a good tennis player. Isn't that a bit of
trivia about you? That is a bit of trivia about me.
I'm I can hold my own. I'm not great, but
(35:08):
I can hold my own. That's That's what people who
are really good. Say, to be honest, you're really good.
I think can you beat Bill? Uh No, yeah, Bill
is really good. Bill's really good, although although these days
I don't know he's gotten older. Bill. Um, you know,
Bill and I, uh, we don't we all play together
because it's just not fun for for either one of us.
But we often hit. Um, we've we've we've we've vacationed
(35:31):
together and we would like each hit with a pro
on separate courts because I'm yeah, I just can just
get by. But I love it. And Bill's is, like,
you know, played college, is really good. Yeah, but he
would play these young pros and try his ass off too,
but he would keep up with them. I mean, you
know it was it was he was impressive. Yeah, No,
he's he's good. He and I have gone out to
hit a few times, and we have a tennis program
(35:53):
in Christian, uh Catholic who was a pro for a
while and sort of hits with a bunch of people
around town, and we've play with him. But Bill's very
talented as by the way, getting back to the episode,
was mister Weinberg, he's a very good tennis player. Uh,
I got to say that what I want to start
to say, is that you know, we're watching these episodes, Scott,
and they're all some of them are great and some
of them are just okay. As as happens when you
(36:16):
make one hundred and eighty two episodes of something. Sure,
I have to say this one is particularly really fucking
funny one quite a few times a bunch. Not only
do we have Scott's hole and Sarah's ark, which is hilarious,
but the janitor fucking with me and telling all my
patients to get surgery. It's so funny. And everybody talk
(36:38):
to everybody this episode he talks to ever everybody. Bill,
you know, as you know, Bill has held on to this, uh,
this lure that in season one the janitor only spoke
to JD. And and if he was debating whether as
we went forward, if if the Janitor would be just
be a figure of JD's imagination. I think this is
the Yeah, I think episode episode one twenty he must
(37:02):
have been like fucking because the janitors talks everybody. The
Janitor is real, He's given advice, He's given medical advice
to people. Yeah, that was really funny. Um, let's get
into it. I'm your biach very funny. Yeah, this was
this is the beginning, well not the beginning of Scrubs
being a musical, because we had Judy and Sam sing together. Yeah,
(37:23):
but this is the beginning of big product musical productions.
Though in Scrub we're all dancing in the hallway, Yeah,
singing on a on a made up fire escape. Yeah.
This was our homage to West Side Story, and we
clearly didn't have the rights because we're very clearly tiptoeing
around it being a West Side Story spoof. But it
is a West Side Story spoof. I loved it. I
(37:44):
love the musical theater references. I thought, you know, I
was I was sitting there watching this trying to think
of the sort of the theme, and you know, they
talk about competition, but but whether it's whether it's you,
uh j D and Turk or Cox and kelso like
it's it's not necessarily competition, but there's a power struggle
happening here with all these characters, which was really interesting
(38:04):
to watch. And I thought the you know, we're not
obviously not there yet, but I thought the resolution, especially
when it came to you guys, the storyline, was a
great one. Yeah. Yeah, it is about it's about I
guess that's the theme in in in the two main story,
I mean not the two main because you entier on one.
We the Cox Kelso one and the me Donald one
is competing with your peers. And you're right, it is
(38:26):
the first time we get into all these games that
Donald and I would play over the years. Uh you
these stupid, these stupid little challenges. You know, what was
the one with hide, the the salteine and all the
many things, But this was the first to tower finger.
Yeah yeah. And they're all very They're all named in
a very Bill Lawrence way, you know, like steak is
(38:48):
just called steaks like it's just but even what Cox
calls the near coffee nurse like it's it's so simple
the way Bill names things. And it's hilarious, by the way,
a little bit of trivia coffee nurse. I don't know
if you know this is uh Matt Tarsus's beautiful wife,
Katie Tarsus. Matt didn't know Matt Tarsas. Scott fully, yeah,
(39:10):
I know Matt, but I didn't know that was his wife.
Matt Tarsus is was one of our great writers on Scrubs,
and he created along with me our our ABC show
that didn't work Alex Hank and uh, he's a great
human being and has a beautiful wife. And I stopped
and I was like, that's Katie tarsus Um playing a
coffee nurse. She was great. And I texted and I said,
(39:32):
your wife is so beautiful in this episode and he
said yes, and I said, I'm not Okay, that's enough.
What do you got done? You got anything else? This
dude is fuck. What's the name of the gentleman who
played miss Fred Stoller? Is his name? So good? This guy.
(39:54):
I gotta tell you, if you are a director or
a filmmaker or a showrunner, you need to hire this
guy because every sentence he said, I laughed out loud,
out loud. I remember laughing when we were making the
show at him doing this. The lines and the chicken
that he hit had me going for days. He takes
the funniest thing, He takes the funniest stutter, and I
(40:16):
tried to write it down because the word what he's
trying to say is no, you said chicken, But when
it comes out is he goes, no, you chicken, And like,
I don't know, you can't write that in a script
that's just an actor coming up with something funny. It
was hilarious. He's been around for years. He's that character
actor guy who just pops up and he slays every
time you see him. He's got such a dry sense
(40:38):
of humor that it is innately watchable. There is this
there's this type of really funny actor. They're often called
character actors that like Fred that can that and Bill
would hire lots of them on the show over years,
and he jokingly would call him his assassins. And Bob
Flendennon is another one. And they would just come on
and they would have like a few lines, but everything
(40:58):
they said was funny. And uh and I just want
to say to Fred and anyone who knows Fred, every
single thing you said on this episode made us laugh. Yeah,
he came back to later on, not you know, seasons later. Actually,
I thought he would be somebody who would come back
into the hospital over and over again. I think, yeah,
when this was, when this episode was done, I remember
(41:19):
telling Bill like, you gotta have that guy back, you
gotta have him. Yeah, he should be a regular. He's hilarious.
He was really funny. Yeah, I agree on the treadmill yeah,
Oh god, one, you look great. You got that young
you got that young body where the shoulders haven't really
caught up yet, you know what i mean, where they're
(41:40):
like huge, your shoulders are like so high and everything.
You know what I'm talking about. When you're like a baby,
I'm talking about you start growing lats and ship anyway, Uh,
then making that the fall was that you or was
that the same question asking you to do it? The
fall was me? Um? I was. I was terrified about this.
This was the scene in the script that have me
the most nervous, and for ridiculous reasons, Like there is
(42:04):
something about watching people run on screen that you can
look the gate your gate. You can look like an idiot,
or you can look okay. You know, like if you'
you see people run on screen, you're like, that's a
weird run and it's quick and easy to judge. So
I was very nervous about that. But I also felt
that the here far be it from me to be
(42:26):
a writer, but I felt that the scene needed like
a button at the end. It didn't. It didn't come
together quite right. And I remember the first time I
thought about doing it, and in the scene, I just
halfway through the first take, I decided to do it,
and everyone flipped out like we didn't even like, They're like,
are you okay? Oh my god, what happened? Guys? Can
we get a medic in here sometime? I was like, no, no, no, no, no,
(42:46):
it was a bit. It was a bit. Guy. That's
pretty courageous of you to do a unscheduled almost pratfall
on a treadmill running. That's advanced, Scott, thank you, my friend. Well,
I pride myself on physical comedy, although I never get
to do it my wife aside from at home and
when my wife is sick of it. Um, but it was.
It was Unfortunately they liked it after they calmed down
(43:08):
and I had to do it, you know, seven more times, right, Well,
good thing you survived. I liked it because you were
such a good ying yang for for for Sarah, because
you're both sort of goofy and nervous and neurotic and uh,
and it was just so she's doing all this ridiculous
stuff and you're seemingly holding it together and then you
(43:29):
she looks away and you trip on the treadmill. I
thought that was really funny. Thanks man, It was you know,
finding it's always a hard thing when you first come
onto a show, even even though you guys were in
your first season. News was the twentieth episode, and so
to try to establish a character amongst all these other
characters is really hard thing to do. And and Sarah
and I talked about it a bit, and uh, you know,
I think what we came up with her sean and
(43:52):
worked ultimately, you know, he got a little more confident
as this the show went on, and his episodes got there.
But but it was fun play the sort of nervous, neurotic, uh,
somewhat insecure. Um, kid, it was really in interesting. Yeah, yeah,
your your your character arc throughout the show is It's
really it's very interesting because you do start off, you
(44:13):
and Sarah are pretty much the same character. You're just
a male version of her. And then all of a
sudden you developed this confidence, right, and then you lose
this confidence all of a sudden when she breaks up
with you out of nowhere, you know, when you grow
the beard and and he forlornly rides a dolphin. They
had me doing some strange things, which I hope we
(44:34):
get to talk about in future episodes. Look where I
am inviting myself over. No, you knows, Scott, you are
so good for our ratings that we are going to
have you back. Oh, I hope you'll come back on
episodes you have nothing to do with. I would love
to just to make fun of people. Know we're already
we're you're we're already inviting you back because we have
(44:55):
to talk about SeaWorld. Uh and uh oh yeah. I
would like to say that I know longer support sea World,
but at the time we were happy to go to
the Sea World. I remember being so pissed off because
I couldn't go. None of my scenes were at sea World. Straight.
Let me get this straight. Y'all are all going to
San Diego to hang out for a night in San
Diego and ride dolphins and I gotta stay back at
(45:17):
the my fucking hospital. I was so pissed it. But
this was all before we all saw the documentary Blackfish
and U yes, and now we don't. We don't go
there anymore, And now we we we we encourage people
to not go there anymore. But before we were all U,
before we knew, before we knew, before we were animal
woke and Scott, you you did get to forlornly ride
(45:40):
a dolphin, which is one of the coolest things anyone
could ever do in their career. The things that I
got to do on this show were still some of
the highlights of my career. I mean, between writing on
the dolphin, uh, doing this Betty the seal bit. I
don't know if you remember this, but I had like
a phone call with Sarah and I turned my head
and the seal turns his head towards me, and I
(46:01):
look away like it sticks its tongue out of me. Yeah.
I got to be like a like damn close to
a killer whale and a beluga whale, and it was
a It was a really amazing experience and I'll never
forget it. I think, how sad that whale was, Scott
while you were acting with it. I had no idea
it didn't let h oh, you're gonna get me up
(46:22):
for that one, Scott's I had no idea. I did
not know. It didn't say a damn thing. I would
have been I would have had his Listen, we're we're
trying to buy it back with some carma now by
saying don't support it any longer. So there you go.
There you go. Boy. All right, let's talk about let's
talk about when he goes I love when he goes, um,
(46:45):
what are you eight eleven with? With with Hoffner, I go,
he goes, what are you serving for dinner? Then I
and I go, That's that's not really my area. He goes,
I'd like chicken. That guy was great here. I'd like
just chicken, chicken, chicken. So I was, yeah, go ahead.
(47:05):
I don't know where. I don't know where in the
show that is. But I want to talk for a
second about YouTube. Singing on the fire escape, Yeah, yeah,
which was a I loved it, and I love the
musical theater references and and those are something that UH
find a home throughout the life of this television show. Yeah.
But the smile that you had on your face, Zach,
(47:27):
that you were unable to hide, made me rewind it
two or three times to be like, is he just
smiling because he's singing or Scot No, no, no, he
can't hold back his laughter. Scott, I had a Phantom
of the opera beach towel hung on my wall as
a child. I'm very aware this was me living my
best life. It was someone your Seinfeld moment, someone your
(47:48):
Seinfeld moment, unable to hide your smile. Someone was paying
me well to hold Donald and sing musical theater to him.
I was like, how could life get better than this?
It was fantastic and I appreciated you not being able
to contain your life show getting a getting a lead
in a TV show was was enough. Now you're letting
(48:08):
me sing a love song to Donald on a fire escape.
Come on? It was great. And by the way, the
way you guys did the dancing in the hallway, everybody
looked professional, like well they were everyone well obviously everyone
that wasn't a lead was a dancer. And and I'm
gonna say this was the best I've ever seen Sarah dance.
(48:29):
Also to me too, Sarah can dance, Sarah, she can't sing,
but she can dance. Dude. She was on fire and
this ship, Dude, like I've seen Sarah dance, and Sarah
dance is like, you know, Sarah dance. I'm not gonna
tells she dances, well, she knows her. She has her
little thing she does, which is adorable. But she this
she was doing like full on you know, Broadway choreography. Yeah, dude,
(48:53):
but but Rob Masio, Rob Maschio. Did you know I
wonder if Rob Mashio ever did in musical theater. I
bet he did. I bet he did. We should have
a section where we go to Rob. This is a
Bill Larns question. No, we should go to Rob and
now we go to Rob. No, he's like a correspondent Rob. Yeah,
(49:13):
going to Rob live. Rob is a he's very successful realtor.
Now at the beach, Scott, I don't know if you
know that, sir. When you're ready to buy your beach house,
you better use Rob Maschio. I'm not going to be
ready to buy my beach house for a while, but
I'll use him when I do. Yes, I encourage anyone.
We always like to give Rob shout outs. You can
get Rob on Cameo and you can pay him a
(49:33):
nominal fee to send you a video where he high
fives your friends. So go on Cameo and hire Rob Maschio.
And of course, if you're looking for real estate on
the West side of Los Angeles, we encourage you to
hire him. I'd like to go on Cameo and have
him and pay him whatever it costs just to watch
him run line. By the way, Scott, I'm gonna say
(49:56):
I don't know what's your birthday. I'm gonna send you
a cameo from Rob. Oh that's great, July fifteenth. It's coming. Oh,
it's coming. Oh yeah, yeah yeah. I hope Rob will
give it to me for free, but if not, I'm
willing no, no, no, came Okay, I'm gonna donald. Don't
you think we should hire Rob to get send Scott
Folly a high five cameo? I think that would be
(50:16):
the best thing ever. And if you have to share
it too, you know you can get Really, my brother
loves baseball more than anything, and they have like old
school you know, they have sports players. Is that what
you call them? Sports sports players? People? Sure, athletes? Yea,
they have athletes at sports players. They have famous sports
players and uh and guys, but some of them are like,
(50:43):
I don't know if you like Lenny dikestrot enough. You've
heard Lenny extra Noward Stern lately, but he's you know,
he's he's gotten a little whacky. And I was thinking
about getting Lenny Dikester from my brother to like send
him a message. Are you guys on the YouTube cameo?
I'm not on there, but I I occasionally scroll it
because there's some people that I think would be very
funny to hire for other people. Yeah, um and uh,
(51:04):
and so I've I've thought about it. But like, like
I saw Olivia Wilde I follow on Instagram and I'm
friends with her, and she she loved that that documentary Cheer.
I don't know if you saw Cheer, Yes, I loved it.
But one of her friends hired all the kids, all
the kids from Cheer are on there, hired every single
one of them to send her birthday messages and so
for her, her feed on her birthday was all the
kids from Cheers sending her birthday messages. I thought that
(51:26):
was that's so cool. That's a great idea. So there
you go. You can gift. It's a great gift idea.
There you go. I'm giving I'm giving Cameo a shout out,
although Donald and I are not on there. Um, have
you guys, have you guys ever met anyone that's as
competitive as these guys are on this show that just
you know, uh, you are competive. You think I'm competitive? No,
not in life, but sports wise you are when it
(51:48):
when it comes to when you were playing Gostable back
in the day, when it comes to playing sports against anyone, absolutely,
regardless of what it is, I want to win, you're
absolutely run away. I don't know if I turned anybody
in life that's like that, other than Bill Lawrence, I
was gonna say, but other than Bill Lawrence. Bill is
the most competitive person I know in real life. Where
you where it's like, you can't walk, don't walk faster
than him. Yeah, he's gonna think it's a race. Yeah.
(52:10):
This is probably why it's in the script, because we
have I have a funny Bill Lawrence walking story. We
were in um We took a trip from Prague when
we were shooting Whiskey Cavalier over to Amsterdam. And if
you guys have never been there, it's a huge bicycle culture, right,
Everyone rides bikes around. So we're walking down the sidewalks
and wherever you wherever you are, you're inundated with these
(52:31):
bicycle bells ringing constantly telling you to get out of
the way, and you don't know where they're coming from,
and you're looking behind you and you're always stepping off
trying to get out of the way. And we were
walking down and there was nobody around us. It had
to be two in the morning. We've just seen a
raiding concert in Amsterdam gets a shout out every show episode,
(52:51):
every episode, even the guests shout out. My wife was
he you know, Bill was like, we're gonna go flat
Amsterdam and go see him. And he does this song
and my wife was like, oh my god, he has
to sing only you. So of course in the middle
of his thing, he's like and for Marika, only you,
and she's like tearing up. I'm like, I think he's
making fun of you. Baby, he doesn't want to sing
the song. Um. But we're walking back to the hotel
(53:13):
and there's you know, it's dead, it's two in the morning,
and they are all these bikes parked along. Nobody's riding bikes,
but they're all sort of chained up along the sidewalk
and we're walking. Bill's a couple uh steps ahead of
me and I ring one of these locked up bikes bells.
He damn near went to his knees. He was so afraid.
He had such a PTSD. I've never seen Bill like,
(53:35):
oh god, stuff like he I don't think we'll ever
go back to Amsterdam, because, um, all right, we want
to Amsterdam together. Yeah, Donald and I went to Amstam together.
Oh that was dangerous. Yeah, careful. I don't know if
we can tell any of those stories. I don't think
we can. I know they want to hear it. We
had some good time. Did you guys have a good
time in Amsterdam? It was the best, the best. Yeah,
(54:00):
I mean it wasn't Yeah, it wasn't like that kind
of good time because we were sorry. I was with
work people. I don't know, but it was still that
kind of good time. Tried God's let Us and it
was delicious. Oh Jesus, they got you didn't have one
of those what are those? What? This is before God
let us? This is before God's let Us was legal
in California. We were really Yeah, they really like it
(54:21):
over there, you know. Now we had it was a
moon pie or there's something like that over there that
you eat and it just wrecks you. Um. Oh I wish,
I mean, I wish I would have known enough. No,
this is a real show. Now, We're not just two
guys doing this out of their closets. We have to
go to advertisers. Will be right, We'll be right back.
(54:48):
We're back. I'm looking at I'm looking at both Scott
Fully and Donald Fhazon in their closets. Scott's asked to
continually wave his arm to make his lights go on.
I wish we were recording the video of this because
it would be the l We'll start putting them out.
We'll start putting one. Ye, all right, bring them in,
Joel and h and Dan adjust the mic for Donald's
(55:08):
Oprah introduction because you know it can get loud. Donald,
please adjust your mic for the Okay, I'll back up
a little bit. It's okay. Worried about it? No, he's ready.
He's a professional. Donald. Here comes Jenny. Ladies and gentlemen,
give it up for Jenny Paulston. I think it's Puleston.
Is it Puleston? Jenny, Yes, that's correct, that's what I said. Hi, Jenny,
(55:37):
Welcome to Fake Doctor's Real Friends. You picked a very
good day to be on because we have a very
funny and handsome guest named Scott Foley. You might know
him from the show's scandal Felicity, Whiskey, Foxtrot, scrubs, whiskey, cavalier, Cavalier. Hi, Jenny, Sorry, Scott,
(55:58):
brutal Scott. Scott, do not flirt with Jenny. Okay, this
is She's there, got all the flags behind her. She
looks fantastic. Jenny, Where where are you calling in from? So?
I live in Canberra, Australia. Canberra is the capital city
of my fine country on the West coast. Yes, it is, Scott,
showing off that he knows it's on the West Coast.
I lived in Australia, Jenny, I know what I'm talking about.
(56:21):
Wait when did you live in Australia as a kid?
I lived in Sydney for four years and snives Sydney. Wow.
Is it near Perth? No? Okay jesus, but it's near Melbourne. No, well,
Sydney near Melbourne closer, but no, it's on the West
coast of Australia. This is so embarrassing to I want
(56:42):
I want everyone to know that the American public school
system spends very little time on geography. I think it
was like two weeks in seventh grade or Australia. Yes, yes, um, Jenny,
thank you for coming on the show. Do you have
a question for any of us? You can ask us anything,
ask us any thing. Yeah. I just wanted to say
(57:02):
I m started watching your show when I was in
my early twenties, um, like you guys were, and it
really resonated with me. Then I just started my career.
I had a mentor um, you know, learning to do
things on your own without a safety net. And then
I watched the series again a few years later when
I had my children and they were babies and I
(57:23):
was up in the night, I put it on, uh,
and certain episodes resonated in a different way because I
was a parent and researched every school holidays and there's
something new that pops up that's, um, you know, based
on an experience that I've just had. It just makes
me think of, you know, something different. So I just
(57:43):
wanted to know, with your experience of the last twenty years,
what advice would you give to your younger selves? Now?
Oh man, you mean I mean as real people are
our characters? Yeah, no, oh real people. That's a really
wild make it. While while making the show, I wish
I could have been more present, you know what I mean.
(58:04):
I hate to jump in front of you, Scott, but
I gotta get to this right away. Yeah, I was
so uh not there. Let's say when we were making that,
I was very much worried about being out and about
I was more interested in what came with what came
after work than what came with work back when we
(58:26):
were making scrubs, And I wish I could have been
more present at when it came to doing my job
back then. That's the one thing that I look back
and say, you know what, I know, I know I
had fun, and I know I enjoyed myself. I wish
I could have experienced all of that while making it. Yeah,
my actually is similar in a sense that you know,
I think we took it for granted that this would
(58:48):
happen all the time. That is to say that you know,
we've spoken this on other podcasts before, that these really
special friendships would would be on every job we did.
And and I think, and we've discussed before. You know
how we've all gone on and done these other jobs,
and some some are successful, some are not, but still
(59:09):
to this day, the bond that we all had that
comes across on the screen. I think it's the reason
people really One of the reasons, of course, the writing
first and foremost, but another reason was that the love
that you see between these characters was real. It was
it was you. We were watching people who genuinely cared
as much about each other in real life as as
(59:31):
they did as the characters did on screen. So I
think that I think I took that for granted. I
was a young actor. This is my first big job,
and and I thought, Oh, this is what it's always
like to be on a set. Everyone loves each other,
everyone wants to hang out on weekends even after we've
worked all these days, and and oh my god, the
scripts are always hilarious. And it took so many years
(59:52):
to be like, oh no, this is a diamond and
the rough. Not only the writing staff that Bill assembled
was just the dream team. I mean they've all gone
off to be hugely successful on their own right, but
but also just the bond that that the seven main
characters of Us had um was was something I haven't
really ever seen again, whether I'm an actor or a director.
(01:00:13):
It's just it was just so rare. So that's what
I think too. It's a similar answer to Donald. Now,
Scott's been on three and in my opinion, three very
successful shows. I'm interested to hear how he might not.
He might not have an answer related to ours, those
not to ours, but yeah, but I'm interested in hearing
if it was like that for each one of those successes,
(01:00:35):
you know what I mean, Like Felicity, You know, I think,
just directly answering your question, I think I for me
looking back, if I had to do it again, I
would I would try to relax. I think I was
holding on really tight. It was very important to me.
I didn't I didn't go to college. I didn't want
to do anything else. This was my only shot. Really,
(01:00:55):
Like if I wasn't going to be a working actor,
I'm be digging holes. You know, I don't know what
else I'd do. So I was. I was really uptight
and nervous about making sure I got it right and
really focused on work. And I think, I, uh, if
I had to do it again, I'd take a breather
and um be more like Donald but not that far.
(01:01:20):
But you know what I mean, Like we were. I
was young and wanted to be successful and was working
towards a goal. But um, you know, at a certain
point you got to sort of stop and smell the
flowers too. Did you guys all get along on scandal?
We did? You know? I was hoping that I was
hoping to get some clickbait going here, Scott no man
I've been I was looking for ever since I'd done Scrubs.
(01:01:41):
I was looking for a show that had a similar vibe,
a similar friendship, not just in front of the camera,
but behind it. And I found it on Scandal and
we still keep in touch. I get text where I
have a group group text chain. I get something multiple
things daily. Uh, we vacation together? Could I join that text? Scott,
(01:02:02):
if you have something to offer, I'd love I Do
you know I have a long history with Tony Goldman
and uh, I know you do, yes, And I'm I
love that man a lot. And he directed a movie
I was in called The Last Kiss, and we've stayed
friendly over the years, and I just think he's a
very very special human being. I wish he was the
real Press. I wish he was the real President. I
(01:02:23):
think we all wish someone else was the real president
right now. Sorry, Jenny, that's that's where you're getting. You
don't have to bring an Australian into our political situation, Jenny,
Do you have another question for any of us? Yes?
I do, um because I want to look up for
my fellow Australians. I just want to ask, why do
you think doctor Cox hates two Jackman so much. You know,
(01:02:47):
this is a question that's been asked so often and
we never answered it. I think we're going to throw
it to Bill. But my theory is that Cox, who
was such an alpha competitive guy, was jealous because at
the time Hugh Jackman, when we were making the show,
it was right at the time with Hugh Jackman exploding
and becoming a megastar who was not just your average megastar.
(01:03:10):
He was doing everything. He could see everything, he could
see it. He could dance, he could host award shows,
he could be an action star, he could be a
dramatic star. He was you know, he was everywhere and
he was doing everything, and everyone liked him. It wasn't like,
you know, a lot of stars become polarizing. He wasn't everybody.
Everybody loved him. This dude could, this dude could host
the Tony's and then stabbed somebody up as Wolverine Man.
(01:03:32):
It was like it was like just one eight after
one eighty. So I think, Jenny, that's my guess is
that Cox was the character of Cox was jealous of
this handsome, you know, muscular man who could do anything
and everything, and people just loved him and endured him,
and so he was jealous of him. But let's ask Bill,
because that's a good ask Bill, Bill. The fans have
(01:03:54):
been asking for many years, and now a very nice
woman from Australia has asked, and the we just to
get the answer. Why does doctor Collox hate Hugh Jackman
so much? Look, we love Hugh Jackman. When we were
trying to come up with who doctor Cox hated for
no reason, I think we thought it was important that
we came up with somebody that everybody loved and that
could do everything. I mean, who has anything against Hugh Jackman.
(01:04:17):
He's Wolverine. You know, he's in action movies. He's apparently
a lovely guy. He's handsome, he's like People Magazine's sexiest person.
He can sing, he can dance, you know, five six
seven eight, slid that one in, he starred in The
Music Man on Broadway and that Peter Allan thing. He's
(01:04:37):
just two damn talented. My buddy, Scott Folly is there?
Scott torture them? Jenny, I hope that worked for you? Yes,
five six seven eighth No, No, no, you know what
most people? Only Bill usually gets the song when he
(01:04:58):
says it. But because Scott fully so darn charming, Dan
hit the button again. It couldn't control them. Sick of it?
Let me, let me control my home, tiny little universe, please, Jenny. Yes,
I'm gonna give you one more question. Uh yeah, yeah.
(01:05:20):
And my other question was, um, what's your proudest moment
from being on the show? Performance? Oh? Wow, I really
enjoyed doing the musical theater, uh, the the musical episode.
I had a lot of fun doing that. Growing up,
I did a lot of musical theater, but not at
that scope or that level. And a lot of the
people that you know, we're in Scrubs the musical Yeah,
(01:05:44):
I saw later on in La La Land or whatever,
and that made me feel really good. Like, you know,
I danced with some of the some of LA's best
dancers and stuff like that, and got to perform with
some of LA's best and you know, as you know,
everybody comes here to make it in the industry, and
it felt good to be amongst Hollywood's elite dances and
(01:06:07):
being able to dance with them. I really enjoyed that.
I'm very proud that I'm going to do that. Yeah,
I think I'm proud of that episode too, And also
I'm really proud of you know, it was a really
underappreciated I thing, But we did this um sort of
Princess Briane homage episode. Um that was the fantasy and
sort of a medieval thing, and it kind of it
(01:06:28):
was I believe it was during the writer strike season
and uh, the season ended early and we didn't know
if the show was coming back, and it was. It
was sort of presented as the season finale and possibly
a series finale because no one knew if we were
coming back, and so it kind of got treated like, oh,
what does that have to do with scrubs or ending
(01:06:48):
the show? And but I really am proud of the
directing work I did on it, and uh, and I
think it looks really pretty and and it was a
huge scale for scope was huge, Yeah, it was. It
was big, and we spent a lot of money and
I think it looked like it and a lot of
people worked very hard on it. And then it sort
of got underappreciated because people were like, please tell me,
(01:07:11):
that's not the series finale, and I was like, no
one meant that that was the series finale. But I
thought that was good. Yeah, I love that episode. I remember,
thank you, thank you, Jenny. All Right, we have to
to move on, but thank you so much for coming
on the show. Scott, do you want to say anything, Jenny,
thank you for coming on. I'd like to thank you
for coming on the show too, Jenny. I I hope
(01:07:31):
forgive me for getting into this, but I hope everything's
everyone's okay now that you guys have those terrible fires
and we were all sort of thinking about you over
on the side of the world. So I'm glad you
guys are better. Yeah, it's been a big, very difficult year,
but yeah, we're all getting there. Because Scott's message was
nicer than mine. So I would like to say that
I hope everything's okay. Nobody cares, Zach, nobody cares. That's
(01:07:56):
what we call a callback choke. Everybody, all right, Thank you, Jenny,
thanks coming on. Yeah, very sweet, very very sweet. Y know,
j D is a rat. Hold up, let's get into this.
(01:08:17):
J D is a little bitch. He's a rat. He
is a rat. Funny though, when I go and tell
on you though, how funny is that fantasy with me
on Johnny's lab? It's very blue hat he goes, who's
my big He goes, who's my big boy? Hi? Yeah,
that was great. I love that. I love that. They
(01:08:41):
show you the two the two sides of you know,
when something bad happens, they show you the two sides.
They show you the one that runs right to the
principle and it's like and and cries to the principle,
Oh my god, and he did this. And then they
show the other person who runs to the principle and
freaking tells the principle off. John sees character Cox is
(01:09:02):
the dad that goes to the school and beats up
the bully for fucking with his kid. You know what
I mean. He's twelve year old boy fucking with his son.
Oh you're gonna touch my son like that? How about this?
Go tell your dad, don't tell your dad the doctor
Cox smacked the shit out of you. And it goes,
it goes south. But it was very interesting to watch
the two dynamics, like one guy, one guy is a
(01:09:25):
complete rat. Yeah, and it was funny. I didn't even
see that. I didn't even see that interpretation of it.
But that's smart that that is exactly what happens. It's
it's the two sides of a coin of how you
deal with the situation. Yeah, anyway, why would why would
Turk even promise to side with me? I mean, he's
a really good doctor. We know that he's not gonna
go not It's almost ridiculous that he wouldn't even say, yeah,
(01:09:46):
I don't worry hell back you up. He's gonna come
in and give his honest analysis. Right. Well, I think
he was. I think Turk was trusting the fact that
you had done your job, and you know, you were
literally calling in him in four favorito, just just tell
this dude that he doesn't have anything to worry about.
And then when Turk looked at it, he's like, bush,
(01:10:08):
hold on, hold on, right, if you gotta you got
I look at it, like, you know, if there's any
if there's a slight chance that Turk gets the opportunity
to operate, he's gonna say, yeah, I'm gonna operate, right.
I mean, I think that's the real thing. Obviously taken
from Obviously this is all inspired by what we were
told by real doctors that the surgeons are more apt
to be, like let's cut him up, Yeah, let's get
(01:10:28):
it out, let's do it let's do our let's do
our thing, and um I love in at twelve fifteen
when when when the janitor is is giving my patient
advice and he's like, I'm gonna go with surgery, and
I go, he's a janitor and he goes, but he
seems confident. Again, the guy did not say a sentence
(01:10:49):
that I didn't laugh out loud at its very funny.
How about Sarah All dolled up for Scott Foley at
thirteen forty five? Beautiful? How lucky was I? And my
stupid big overcoat? But you're Jack why? JO don't know?
Did you not have a fitting? Do you remember? It
was like the only thing I can chalk it up
to was that was just what people were wearing back then.
(01:11:12):
But it seemed really big. That was huge. It was
the Armandi baggy look back then. I don't know, do
you really think it was style or just fit wrong?
Because you're you're you're supposed to be playing this like
heartthrob and and there there you are. I mean, you
should be looking like in a nice outfit. I have
to think it's it was style or else someone. I mean,
(01:11:32):
there's you know, no less than three people, but maybe
thirty people on set who should be like, hey, he
looks really stupid in that. And it must have been
it must have been the style, because that jacket would
it came down to your knees almost, and it was
huge and it was like a doctor's smock. He's a monster,
(01:11:54):
just ridiculous. Well, I thought Sarah looked h beautiful up moment,
and then I think she looked beautiful even after her
I know, even with a U. And it was so
funny she's covered with puke and blood and poop. Yeah, yep,
they did a really good job with her, and it
was it was And then you guys film you guys,
(01:12:14):
you guys get into that really funny, awkward poop conversation. Yeah,
they cut, they cut to Judy. It's so funny because
you guys are awkwardly flirting about poop and you cut
the Judy's dead pan face. Well you know, and then
right after that, there's a there's a great moment where
the nurse has like, you know, uh um, Sarah and
Judy are talking. You know, I don't think anybody noticed.
It's not a big deal. And then one of the
(01:12:35):
nurses to walk by and says, hey, poopy, which I
thought was just hilarious. Alma, Yes, I'm really I'm really noticing.
And all these years later, many of Alma's lines are
are moving. She's always walking, always on the move, always
on the move. Hey, poopy can slaughter into someone else's shot.
But that was very funny too. You your whole conversation
(01:12:55):
on how you took a poop. Sure, not here, but
not here before, but earlier. I must get down there.
I think, you know, we we we delve into the
relationship deeper in other episodes, but I think that's really
the foundation for them. You know, poop is the foundation.
It's a house built on poop. It well, you know,
(01:13:16):
the relationship didn't last long, and we know poop is
depends on what your head. They should not have built
their house on a foundation of poop. What about in
fourteen twenty when the janitor goes, look, I'm just a genitor.
I don't know much, but I know that you need surgery.
(01:13:38):
How did he get in that room? How he was
that the was that the beginning of the speech where
at the end of it he grabs a newspaper and
goes back into the toilet. Uh No, that's a different.
That's that was geus. That's before he starts going like,
that's the that's the most moment with my patient. But
then yea, we then we cut around to him going
to all of my patients around me higher hospital, telling
(01:14:01):
them and they all need surgery. You have to Yeah,
that was hilarious and neel so funny that I'm having
surgery right now. Oh that that was great. I'm having
surgery and I'm loving it, and I'm loving it. So
bizarre infomercial and then Donald, what do you say, Let's
(01:14:22):
get you out of your skins, your skin, Let's cut
you out of your skin. I'm having that. Girl did
a great job. I'm having surgery right now and loving it.
You know, the writers always have always done a good
job on this show of um of finding really subtle
gender specific moments that there's something that and I think
(01:14:43):
Bill takes a lot of it from Christa. You know,
there's moments where he's like, there was a character at
one point in the show. I don't remember what season
it was, but a woman talks about chewing on her
thumbnail until it bleeds at the side of her thumbtail bleeds,
which is a very specific sort of woman thing, and
there was a moment in here where Judy says, m
you know, I'm I'm not sure there's a cat heaven,
Like I don't tell Turk. I sometimes cried becase I'm
(01:15:03):
not sure there's a cat heaven. Like. I thought that
was a genius, really subtle, gender specific moment, really really
spirit of what you're saying, Scott. Then they cut to
Sarah and the look on her face is like, there's
no cat heaven. What do you mean there's no cat heaven.
It's a really really it's a really subtle moment, but
they cut to Sarah's face as though she's just heard,
(01:15:25):
like for the first time there's no cat heaven, like
she's just had Santa Claus rooined for it. I thought
it was great, man, I thought it was really smart.
I'm delivered it beautifully. The amount of times I'll run
into my wife and be like, hey, why are you crying,
She's like, never mind, and you know it's because she's
not sure if there's a cat heaven, there's something ridiculous
like that. Um At seventeen twenty one, Sarah bumps into
(01:15:48):
Colonel Doctor and I just was exciting, because you know,
Colonel Doctor didn't always get a lot of foreground time,
but he got a little foreground moment Coleman's Law. I didn't.
I didn't even see that. That went completely over my head.
I missed that. Yeah, it's even in the Scrubs WICKI
uh and and I love about it. We call him
colonel doctor because that's what we thought his name was,
(01:16:09):
but because it's eventually revealed that his name is Coleman slaw. Um,
it says in the Scrubs Wiki like Sarah bumps into
Coleman's Law the Scrubs Wicky, the Scrubs Wiki is so
is so accurate that they call colonel doctor Coleman. That's awesome.
(01:16:34):
At twenty thirty five, the patient in bed is Richard Wells. Yes,
our very he was our best first AD, first AD
and UPM. Also he went on to be our up
M later on when Scott Harris and uh, that's right,
Franklin got better too, you should say, for those for
(01:16:55):
those of you don't know, a first AD, a first
assistant director is the man or woman who was sort
of running the set, making sort of the one calling
out saying, okay, here we go, we gotta move. Really
you think of that in theater like a stage manager,
but keeping everyone moving along. Uh and uh and sort
of the team leader, so the director can ideally focus
on the creative aspects of things. Well, the first idea
(01:17:17):
is usually the bad guy. Let's just put it that way.
The first idea is the one that you come to
with all the problems you don't necessarily Yeah. Well, Richard
Wells was so great at his job and one of
the best first ads I've ever worked with. And um,
and I forgot that he did a cameo and here
he is as one of my patients that finally finally
says he'll he'll go the medical route, solely because the
(01:17:39):
janitor has told him so at the end of the episode. Also, also,
Richard Wells directed a few episodes of Scrubs. Also, Uh,
he did a lot on the show. He wasn't just
the ad. Yeah, when he became I was bummed though,
when he when he decided to become a UPM and
he was no longer on set because can I ask
you a question, Yes, what is the up M? A
(01:18:00):
UPM is a production manager unit production manager, handling the
organization of everything up If you need a crane the
UPM is the one often calling the rental house and saying,
we need a crane on Tuesday. Who's bringing it? Timmy?
And John the line producer kind of underneath the line producer,
organizing anything and everything that the nuts and bolts of
(01:18:21):
a production. Scott, you switched to eating. I see, well,
I switched to my damn things running out of batteries.
I can't hear a fucking thing now. But yeah, it's
my anniversary, so my wife made me these things when
I got to eat him before I come out of
my closet, unless he's gonna say, like, why didn't you
eat the cookie? I made you? Oh? How many? How many?
Thanks so much? Thirteen years? Oh my good, thirteen years.
(01:18:43):
Wow yeah, wow, yeah, yeah, sorry, that's great and I
was excited. You know, I thought I could just listen
to your explanation of line producer versus UPM and no
one would notice. But I forgot that. I'm sure everyone
tuned out when I started describing a UPM. All right, listen,
we did it as uh as Howard Stern says, We've
said it all Um, this has been really fun, Scott,
(01:19:05):
did you have a good time? I love to be
in here. I love seeing your faces. You know, we
haven't we haven't had the chance to see too many
people recently, so it meant a lot to me, and
it it Uh, it's meant a lot to me to
be a part of this, have been a part of
this show. I look back finally on it and consider
both of you good friends of mine. So I appreciate
you having me on. Well, we miss you, dude. I
(01:19:26):
gotta thank you. Yeah, I miss you man I I uh,
I gotta tell you. You know, we talked about it
all the time. I ran in the chip at vot
voting uh chipper, yeah and uh and I was like,
you know, we gotta we gotta get together again. And
this was I thought this was back when we thought
this pandemic would last about a month and a half. Yeah,
and it's uh, you know I I'd love to get
(01:19:49):
out and play golf with you again once this is
all said and done, man, Yeah, we'll find the time
and tennis. I'd love to watch you defeat Bill and
tennis if possible, Well, if we'll find out when he's injured,
and then we'll go out and play because I can't
because I can't beat Bill in any sports. I often
try and find people that can beat him so I
can just watch I'm game. Hey, you know, I wanted
(01:20:12):
to talk about it, and I don't know if you
remember this before we go. You know, Donald and I
have had the chance to work together, not just on
a bunch of things, but you and I aside from Scrubs,
and this is something I regret very much after doing
I don't know, however, meant two or three episodes in
the first season. You wrote a short film about robots,
(01:20:32):
maybe probably I love robots, and you sent me the
script and I was busy doing something else so I
couldn't do it. But I've always regretted not being able
to work with you as a director on something you wrote.
And that was that's that's still something I look back on.
I totally remember it. It was a I can't remember that.
I vaguely remember it too. I was trying to start
directing things because I had gone to some school and
(01:20:54):
I was and I was doing Scrubs and it was
so amazing. But of course, in my mind as a
as a young getter, was thinking, I gotta start making stuff.
And I wrote that a wacky short, and I asked
you to be in it, but thank you for almost
saying yes. Yeah. I absolutely would have said yes if
I wasn't able to, But I look, I love both
you guys and will hopefully work with you until we
(01:21:15):
die on different things. I made a really cool short
film recently, Scott that you should chuck out. It's called
in the Time It Takes to Get There, And I
guess I've taken this opportunity to give a shout out
to that short, So if you're listening to this, check
it out. It's got The Time it Takes to Get There. Yeah,
it's got a Alicia Silverstone, Donald's old co star, and
(01:21:35):
it's got Florence Pugh, the very exciting young actress Oscar nominee,
and it's really good and it's on YouTube and you
can go watch it. It was Adobe had this contest
where people college kids could design a movie poster, and
the winning movie poster design using Photoshop. The prize was
that I would write and direct a short film inspired
(01:21:57):
by the movie poster. Oh yeah, you know, I saw
an article about that. Anytime I see your guy's names
in in any sort of press, I check it out.
And I saw an article about this, so I will
definitely check it out. Check it out. I recently want
a webby for it, which is a which is a
cool web award. But check it out. Nobody cares, Zach.
Oh my god. Yeah, everybody could see Donald's face when
(01:22:19):
he says that right now with his hands on his head.
I wish everyone could see my face right now, because
I've successfully didn't feel sad. You're not, but you look
like you're sitting underneath. By the way, I want you
to know that I knew every Boddy listening would be like, oh,
I can't wait for him to say nobody cares Sean.
I'm the only one in this You've said it multiple times,
(01:22:42):
Donald has I'm the only one who never said those
nobody cares, Zach. But the problem is you said them
to begin with, and not a day goes by where
someone either personally or on social media doesn't comment or
say nobody. I mean, I could say a happy birthday
to my lovely wife of thirteen years, happy anniversary of
thirteen years, and I'll get six Nobody cares Sean's well,
(01:23:05):
and it makes me equally happy and fucking I rate
all right, I get it, man, Well, listen, we got
Bills saying five six seventy on this podcast, and I
post something on on Instagram and every other comment is
five six seventy eight. Well, I mean you were You
texted me are you ready to come on? I think
I just wrote back five six seven eight, and your
(01:23:25):
response was like, yeah, okay, we get it. Listen, guys,
you've gone an hour and a half. This has been amazing.
We love the fans. Thank you for listening. We hope
we're making you laugh a little in these crazy times.
That's our hope. You can email questions to scrubs iHeart
at gmail dot com. Please follow diald on Instagram. He's
(01:23:47):
very envious of the amount of followers I have. Dude,
you have like one million, one point three million. Yeah,
you guys, I have six hundred thousand and two. Well,
listen to the way Scott follow you on Instagram. But
thanks mem it's you can follow Scott folly two and
look at how handsome he is and um and that's it.
We love you. We'll see you next time. By Jack
(01:24:09):
jis stories about Sure we made about a bunch of
docs and nurses and the janitor who loved him. I said,
he's the stories natural should know