Podcast appearances and mentions of Andy Breckman

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Latest podcast episodes about Andy Breckman

Sing Out! Radio Magazine
Episode 2341: 24-36 Humor in Dark Times, Pt.1

Sing Out! Radio Magazine

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2024 58:30


It seems we're inundated with news these days - so many stories come at us during the day. This week and next we offer a remedy for these difficult times with humorous songs with little political content. On the first installment we'll hear from Loudon Wainwright III, The Princes of Serendip, Dan Hicks and his Hot Licks, Andy Breckman, Peter Mayer and many more. So turn away from the TV, put down your phone for a little bit, and just have fun … this week on The Sing Out! Radio Magazine.Pete Seeger / “If I Had A Hammer”(excerpt) / Songs of Hope and Struggle / Smithsonian Folkways Bowhunter / “Violin vs Fiddle - L'ville (Snake Hunt)” / Four Hands Round / Self-producedLoudon Wainwright III / “Cardboard Boxes” / I'm Aright / RounderThe Princes of Serendip / “A Scientific Love Song” / Yumpatiddly Bee / Jaiya RecordsDan Berggren / “Fix it or Stop Complaining” / Fresh Territory / Sleeping GiantThe Ragtime Rumors / “Way Too Smart” / Rag 'N Roll / RufOld Man Luedecke / “Lego and Renaissance Painting” / Live at the Chester Playhouse / True NorthOld Man Leudecke / “Girl with the Pearl Earring” / Live at the Chester Playhouse / True NorthCarla Gover / “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun” / Gypsy Ways / Self-producedDan Hicks & His Hot Licks / “Shorty Falls in Love” / Where's the Money / MCABowhunter / “The Saddest Thing-Ten Strike” / Four Hands Round / Self-producedJohn Hartford / “Watching the River Go By” / A Tribute to John Hartford / Blue PlateAndy Breckman / “Railroad Bill” / Fast Folk A Community of Singers & Songwriters / Smithsonian  Folkways Robin & Linda Williams / “Herding Cattle in a Cadillac Coupe Deville / Live in Holland / Strictly CountryMaria Muldaur / “Don't You Make Me High (Don't You Feel My Leg)” / Maria Muldaur / RepriseThe Volo Bogtrotters / “Don't Try It Cause It Can't Be Done” / Old-Time String Band with Vocal Accompaniment / MarimacPeter Mayer / “The Introvert Song” / Elements / Blue BoatPete Seeger / “If I Had A Hammer”(excerpt) / Songs of Hope and Struggle / Smithsonian Folkways 

The Screenwriting Life with Meg LeFauve and Lorien McKenna
210 | "Monk" Creator Andy Breckman: How To Find Luck In Hollywood

The Screenwriting Life with Meg LeFauve and Lorien McKenna

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2024 62:46


JOIN TSL WORKSHOPS: https://tslworkshops.circle.so Whether it was writing for SNL in the '80s, writing RAT RACE in the 90s, or creating MONK in the 2000s, it's no secret that Andy Breckman has had an incredible career. What does he chalk it up to? Luck (and a whole lot of hard work).

Inside Late Night with Mark Malkoff

Andy Breckman joins Mark to discuss writing for Saturday Night Live including for Eddie Murphy, Chris Farley, & Norm Macdonald, writing for Late Night with David Letterman, & his feud with Don McLean.

The Rom Com Rewrite

Meg Ryan, Tim Robbins, Walter Mathau… this film is cute and fun with a great cast. But it needs more work. I.Q. Year: 1994 Written by: Andy Breckman and Michael Leeson Based on a story by: Andy Breckman  Directed by: Fred Schepisi Stars: Tim Robbins, Meg Ryan, Walter Mathau, Lou Jacobi, Gene Saks, Joseph Maher, Stephen Fry   Show notes: This month, Lisa and Charles Adrian go deep into this apparently light and breezy romantic comedy about the life and loves of Albert Einstein's putative niece.  If you would like to skip the plot summary for this month's film you can spool forward a little over 12 minutes into the episode. In this episode we mention the films: French Kiss (1995) (https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0113117/) and Room With A View (1985) (https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0091867/). You can read more about the novel Room With A View (1908) by E. M. Forster on Wikipedia here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Room_with_a_View.   The article about having many wealthy babies that Lisa mentions is this one: https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/article/2024/may/25/american-pronatalists-malcolm-and-simone-collins   Next month we are going to watch French Kiss. If you would like to suggest films for future episodes, you can tweet Lisa: @LisaStowaway. We record these episodes over the internet. Sometimes the audio is not perfect. We apologise for that. Music in this episode is by Martin Zaltz Austwick (martinzalzaustwick.com). Artwork is by Lisa Findley. Thank you for listening! 

Jordan, Jesse, GO!
Arbys n B, with Ken Freedman and Andy Breckman

Jordan, Jesse, GO!

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2024 69:01


This week a couple of radio and podcasting legends join JJGo! Guests Ken Freedman and Andy Breckman of Seven Second Delay talk about pulling a prank on the New York Times, shady motels, and more! Jordan Jesse Go! are going to be doing a live show and live stream on Sunday, March 24th at 3pm! The live stream is free but if you are in Los Angeles  buy your tickets now to Jordan, Jesse, Go! A Cavalcade of Stars!Sponsored by LumiLabs! Get 30% off your first order, plus free shipping today at Microdose.com, promo code JJGO. It's available nationwide.Sponsored by Nuts.com Right now, Nuts.com is offering new customers a free gift with purchase and free shipping on orders of $29 or more at Nuts.com/jjgo.

Screenwriters Need To Hear This with Michael Jamin
Ep 121 - "Bones" Executive Producer - Jonathan Collier

Screenwriters Need To Hear This with Michael Jamin

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2024 38:41


On this week's episode, I have Writer/Executive Producer, Jonathan Collier (Bones, The Simpsons, King of the Hill, Monk, and many many more) and we dive into the origins of his career. We also talk about his side hustle and how that came about! Tune in as we have so much more.Show NotesJonathan Collier on X: https://twitter.com/collierjonathan Jonathan Collier IMDB: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0171927/Jonathan Collier on Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan_CollierA Paper Orchestra on Website: - https://michaeljamin.com/bookA Paper Orchestra on Audible: - https://www.audible.com/ep/creator?source_code=PDTGBPD060314004R&irclickid=wsY0cWRTYxyPWQ32v63t0WpwUkHzByXJyROHz00&irgwc=1A Paper Orchestra on Amazon: - https://www.amazon.com/Audible-A-Paper-Orchestra/dp/B0CS5129X1/ref=sr_1_4?crid=19R6SSAJRS6TU&keywords=a+paper+orchestra&qid=1707342963&sprefix=a+paper+orchestra%2Caps%2C149&sr=8-4A Paper Orchestra on Goodreads: - https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/203928260-a-paper-orchestraFree Writing Webinar - https://michaeljamin.com/op/webinar-registration/Michael's Online Screenwriting Course - https://michaeljamin.com/courseFree Screenwriting Lesson - https://michaeljamin.com/freeJoin My Newsletter - https://michaeljamin.com/newsletterAutogenerated TranscriptJonathan Collier:It was after season eight, and I thought they were trying to get me to go to King of the Hill, and I had whatever, I had the chance to stay at Simpson's. And I thought, well, there's no way it goes past season 10.Michael Jamin:Yeah. Or any show goes past season 10.Jonathan Collier:It just doesn't happen. And so I left. I thought, I kind of felt badly leaving, but I thought, what's much better? Do you want to show with some like in itMichael Jamin:You are listening to What the Hell is Michael Jamin talking about conversations in writing, art, and creativity. Today's episode is brought to you by my debut collection of True Stories, a paper orchestra available in print, ebook and audiobook to purchase. And to support me in this podcast, please visit michael jamin.com/book and now on with the show.All right, everyone, welcome back to What the Hell is Michael Jamin talking about? My next guest is an old colleague of mine, old friend from my days on King of the Hill before I let him talk his name's John Coly or welcome to the show, but let me tell you what he's done. The Sky's credits are pretty incredible. So you sit back and relax. Lemme tell you what he's done. So he wrote on The Simpsons. Okay, we've heard of that show and I'm only giving some of the highlights, some of the highlights, some Scooby dos, which I did not know. King of the Hill Monk, the Good Family Bones, the Good Cop Law and Order. I mean, this guy has done well. He's done a lot. But thank you so much, man, for doing the show.Jonathan Collier:Oh, it's a pleasure, Michael. Thank you for having me.Michael Jamin:Let me tell you about who you are because I remember very clearly walking to my, on my way to my office on King of the Hill. Yours was, I would always walk past you and I would often stop and say hello. Or sometimes I would just sit and you always had a big smile. You're always so happy to greet me and have me there. And I never felt like I was getting in the way you Yeah, come on in. Come on. You're always very kind.Jonathan Collier:I am endlessly in search of distractions.Michael Jamin:Well, I do remember walking past you on days when you're on script and just looking miserable. IJonathan Collier:Am. Thank you. Nope, that's exactly it. Well observed. I am never more miserable than I am alone in writing.Michael Jamin:But why is that? Do you feel?Jonathan Collier:Oh, it's a horrible thing to do. TV writing is one of the most fun, engaging, productive things you can do if you're with other people. And I love that part of it. And the small portion of the job that relies on you being alone entails, I should say, you being alone and actually writing something without people around is misery for me.Michael Jamin:But is it the comedy part? You also do drama now? Which one is harder?Jonathan Collier:Comedy is harder.Michael Jamin:Okay. But yeah, I would agree with that as well. But is it miserable to write drama as well?Jonathan Collier:I find the process of keeping stuff alive and interesting and propulsive is really, really hard.Michael Jamin:And how do know? You know when it's alive?Jonathan Collier:What, sorry?Michael Jamin:How do you know?Jonathan Collier:How do I know when it's right?Michael Jamin:Yeah. How do you know?Jonathan Collier:Part of what makes it so miserable is you can always second guess yourself. And even more so when there's jokes involved.Michael Jamin:Yeah. Well, for jokes for sure. And what was that transition like for you? I'm amazed that anyone can do it.Jonathan Collier:Oh, I got very lucky. What happened was that King of the Hill was, we got canceled. You remember? It was time. The show got canceled. It was canceled two times.Michael Jamin:We left after the first time.Jonathan Collier:Yeah, left. So it got canceled. And I really realized it was for real when they started moving our furniture out of the officeMichael Jamin:Because you were going to squat there.Jonathan Collier:I had every intention of squatting.Michael Jamin:You thought it was all Big bluff until they moved at the furniture.Jonathan Collier:And so that was happening. And I had done comedy for about 17 years at that point. And I didn't love doing for camera comedy. I liked doing animation and there were no real single camera comics, comedies on the air at the time, and I didn't quite know what to do, but I knew I stopped watching comedies. I kind of could feel the sweat on them and the work on them because I worked in so many comedy rooms. And I got really lucky, which is that Andy Breckman, who was running Monk at the time, who created the show, he used to have three guest writers come in every season. And he did that because he felt like he kept him on track. If you came in as a guest to the room in New York, it made him concentrate and work harder and make sure that in five days you would break a story.Michael Jamin:Why? Because people flew in, you mean?Jonathan Collier:Yeah, because the network would fly, the studio would fly you into New York and put you up and they would only keep you there for five days.Michael Jamin:Okay, that's interesting.Jonathan Collier:I got one of those. So I got one of those guest shots. And the other thing I got way I got lucky wasMichael Jamin:Wait, but how did you get that guest shot?Jonathan Collier:I got that guest shot because this is embarrassing. My agent at the time who I didn't think was doing enough for me, got me a meeting with Andy Breckman, and I thought it was just one meeting with Andy Breckman, who's a great guy, and I love the show, but who knows if it's going to turn into anything. I fired my agent, moved on to another agent, and then Andy called me up and said, oh, we want you to do this episode a month.Michael Jamin:Right.Jonathan Collier:But there was no,Michael Jamin:But I've already fired my agent.Jonathan Collier:That was done. What happened was that, anyway, Andy used to only hire comedy writers to do guest episodes.Michael Jamin:Why?Jonathan Collier:Because his theory was that he could teach a comedy writer how to write a procedural. He could not teach a procedural writer how to be fun. So anyway, they flew into New York, I was in the room, we broke a story and I wrote it and it went well. The whole thing went well, and I got very lucky again because no one had ever really left the show or been added to it. This was the fourth season and one writer was leaving and Andy offered me the job. So I came in and went on staff the next season.Michael Jamin:How many seasons did you do there?Jonathan Collier:I did two more seasons and then the writer's strike of 2007 happened. And when that happened, I didn't know how long that would go on. Mike and the Good Family was starting up and they got what was called a strike waiver, and there were certain production companies and one was MRC, media Rights Capital, and they made a deal with the WGA, with the Writers Guild that they could do shows that were during the strike and it would not be strike breaking to work on those shows if they agreed to abide by the Wgas terms, the writer's terms. The WGA was using that as a tactic to try to force the studios to,Michael Jamin:And it's funny, they didn't really do that this last strike.Jonathan Collier:No, I don't think it really helped.Michael Jamin:You don't think it helped?Jonathan Collier:I don't know if it did or actually, no, I can't say if it did or not. I thought all I can say is I think this last strike was better run than the first one. I think a lot was learned from the first one. Anyway, I left Monk because I got a job right away rather than being strike.Michael Jamin:Right. Let me ask you that. When you're on Monk and you are with procedural writers who are not comedy writers, when they would pitch something that you and I would call a clam, or if you would pitch it in the room at the Simpson, the King of the Hill, someone would say, right? Was there a lot of that going on? Were you the guy who said, yeah, that's not really a joke?Jonathan Collier:Well, no. At Mon though, you had, first of all, it was comedy writers. It was a small staff and it was four people whose background was comedy, including Andy Breckman, and then one High Conrad, who was just a terrific mystery writer. And he had written something like 200 mystery books. Oh,Michael Jamin:Wow.Jonathan Collier:And the way he got on was that Andy met with him and took him out for lunch and said, look, I love your mystery books, and you have two choices. One is you come on staff or two was I'm just going to steal all your plots anyway.Michael Jamin:Oh wow.Jonathan Collier:Hi was on whatever came on staff, and he was on UNK for the whole run. And then he was on The Good Cop with Me Too. It was on, that was another Andy Breckman show.Michael Jamin:Right. It's so interesting. And to what did you think of that world? I mean, compared to comedy?Jonathan Collier:Well, it was a really kind of easy, delicate transition because it was a mystery show once again, written by comedy writers.Michael Jamin:Writers. It was light. It was fun.Jonathan Collier:Yeah. A procedural written by non-com writers would've been a tougher adjustment for me.Michael Jamin:But even the procedural explain to me and everyone else, how do you write a procedural?Jonathan Collier:I think there's many different ways to write a procedural. The way I write a procedural is what really happened comes first.Michael Jamin:What really happens comes first. What does that mean?Jonathan Collier:Okay. What you have to think of is what was our crime? What's the procedure about? What are we investigating?Michael Jamin:Okay, so give me an example.Jonathan Collier:It's not a medical procedural. This is a criminal procedural. I'm talkingMichael Jamin:About, okay, so someone's dead,Jonathan Collier:Someone is dead. And then you have all sorts of questions you can ask that can form the basis for an episode. You can say, oh, is it an accident? Is it a suicide? Is it a murder? If it is a murder, or who did it? Why did they do it? Who could have done it? There any number of, is it an open book where the audience knows what happened? Is it a closed book where the audience doesn't know and learns along with our investigators?Michael Jamin:Did you basically do both?Jonathan Collier:Monk did both opened and closed book. And Monk also did a combination of who done, its who was the killer, why done, its, we know who the killer is, but why on earth would they kill someone? And that's how we can prove they did it. And how done its, it's an incredibly, it's a locked room mystery, for instance, where someone was killed inside the locked room, how did the killer get in there and doMichael Jamin:It? Interesting. HadJonathan Collier:To figure out how the crime was done.Michael Jamin:And so these words are so funny. So as you were breaking the story, you'd break 'em in the room with all the writers, I assume, right? And then throw out ideas, and then someone would say, okay, but let's do this, make it a wide, let's make it a wide done at this week. Is that what it is?Jonathan Collier:Well, I think we'd look at the killing and say, what's a really, really ingenious killing? We could do?Michael Jamin:Okay.Jonathan Collier:Say, okay, let's look at the motive. And then we'd say, last, you'd spend probably say you were breaking a story over the course. If it was just us, we probably spent seven to eight days breaking a story. We weren't having a guest writer in. And the first three or four days probably spent just figuring out how the crime was done and why really gettingMichael Jamin:It seems very hard to me. This seems very hard to me.Jonathan Collier:For me, it was somewhat natural way to do it because it was really fun. And for some, I feel like I was using my comedy muscles, even my plotting muscles to figure out why you did it. And then you work backwards once, and this is just us. Other shows do it different ways. There's probably a million different ways to do it.Michael Jamin:Okay. But you start work backwards. So first you decide if it's going to be a who, what or why is that what it's,Jonathan Collier:First of all, first of all, you can't figure out who kills who and why, who killed who, who kills who. How do they do it, why do they do it, where do they do it? All those things. Then you figure out how do we solve it? And for a show like Monk, he'd also say, well, I have someone who has OCD. I have someone who was painfully shy as someone who was any number of traumas in his life. Also a comic character who happens to be the saddest person on television, and he has a tragedy to his life. And what's the world I can put him in to make him the most uncomfortable?Michael Jamin:Right? And that's how you begin. That's where you start. That'sJonathan Collier:Often where, that's often where the fun of it comes from. The comedy is from seeing him in the world where he's uncomfortable, because comedy is all about discomfort. The emotional story would often come from how he will relate to the world and what it would bring up in his own life. And then the procedural story is how you solve the crime.Michael Jamin:YouJonathan Collier:Go ahead. Sorry.Michael Jamin:No, no, go ahead.Jonathan Collier:The way one could look at it is for us on that show, the procedural story was almost with the armature. It's what you would call the plot, I guess. And the real story was the emotional story that was threaded through the plot.Michael Jamin:Right, of course.Jonathan Collier:And the two of them dovetail and one comment on the other, like a musical comedy, for instance, where songs are the twists, they provide the transition points in the story. You could say the emotional twists or the procedural twists would provide a transition point for each other.Michael Jamin:It still sounds very hard to me. Does it get easier?Jonathan Collier:Well, I think it probably sounds hard because I'm probably overcomplicating it.Michael Jamin:Well, not really, because you're solving, because see, and I are thinking of writing a procedural, and so we're watching some, and I'm like, I don't know. I don't think I know how to do this.Jonathan Collier:Oh, I'll help you with it.Michael Jamin:Oh, good. You're hired.Jonathan Collier:It is not that hard because it's actually easier I found than writing an episode of King of a Hill where someone buys a new hat and it changes their life and life. You have to make a whole story out of that.Michael Jamin:Right. But you still have to figure out, it's a mystery. You're solving a crime and you have to make it so it's smart. I mean, I've watched other ones where they throw in a clue just when you need it, oh good, I dug a new clue so I can figure out another scene.Jonathan Collier:And there's shows that do that. And there's shows that I like, if you don't get a show like Merab Town,Michael Jamin:Right? I haven'tJonathan Collier:Seen it. Okay. That's real lies procedural. And what you realize is it is not about solving the crime. I mean, it's all the crime, but it is really about the emotional drama that's happening. And the crime is, once again, is almost the backdropMichael Jamin:For it. But to me, that's what makes it so that's why I want to get rid of the crime. Can we just focus on the relationship between the mother and the daughter that I get?Jonathan Collier:And the one I thought does comment on the other, and they're both of us family, and I felt like that show worked pretty well. It's very much not a show that I would know how to do.Michael Jamin:Well, and that takes me to law and your latest, but Okay, bones, and let's talk about what you're doing now. That's very different. Law and order.Jonathan Collier:Well, I'm not doing Law and Order now. I stopped after last season.Michael Jamin:Oh, you did? Okay. But that must be very procedural. I mean, procedural.Jonathan Collier:Procedural, very procedural, very different beast. I mean, it was a challenge to figure it out, but I think I'm much more comfortable in this space where there's more character involved.Michael Jamin:Yeah, right. I would thinkJonathan Collier:The part I like best is where I've been most comfortable and enjoyed the most is character driven procedurals.Michael Jamin:Right. Which is kind of like what USA does, right?Jonathan Collier:Well, back when they existed,Michael Jamin:Back when they were doing it.Jonathan Collier:So no, in other shows, there's been a lot of character-based procedurals on TV over the years, and that's what Bones was. Keone was a character-based procedural.Michael Jamin:And you were the showrunner that you were the executive producer?Jonathan Collier:I was the showrunner for a while, yes.Michael Jamin:Yeah. And that was the first time. Was that the first time you ran a show or no?Jonathan Collier:No. I've run another show on the CW called As IfMichael Jamin:Before. Oh. But this is the, I still would imagine now that you're the boss of a procedural, I don't know. I need help. So it seems so hard to me. Wellm hung up on that.Jonathan Collier:I took over a show that was already working veryMichael Jamin:Well.Jonathan Collier:Har Hansen, who created, it was a hundred yards away on the Fox lot in his office. I could always go running to him for help if I neededMichael Jamin:It. Right. And you had the same staff,Jonathan Collier:Sorry.Michael Jamin:And you had the staff, the previous same staff.Jonathan Collier:We had much of the same staff. And I had a co-Ho Runner, Michael Peterson, who was terrific. And I had Steven Nathan, who I took over the show from and only left because I was still a very close friend, and I could call him up whenever I needed to.Michael Jamin:Yeah,Jonathan Collier:I think starting from scratch is always much harder, or walking into a situation not immediately comfortable is always much harder too.Michael Jamin:But now that you've, I see this as opening a lot of doors for you. Has it? Because now you have two genres under your belt.Jonathan Collier:Yes and no. It's always hard. I mean, you have to always be out there in whatever writing. And there's a limited number of jobs that a lot of people want to do, and the people who want to do those jobs tend to be, when you think of it, just in terms of being practical, it's a great profession when you're doing it. But it's one of the stupidest professions to try to do because your competition is really smart, really talented, really talented, really inspired, really wants to do it and works really hard. There's a lot of businesses that aren't like thatMichael Jamin:You are listening to. What the Hell is Michael Jamin talking about? Today's episode is brought to you by my new book, A Paper Orchestra, A collection of True Stories. John Mayer says, it's fantastic. It's multi timbral. It runs all levels of the pyramid at the same time. His knockout punches are stinging, sincerity, and Kirks Review says, those who appreciate the power of simple stories to tell us about human nature or who are bewitched by a storyteller who has mastered his craft, will find a delightful collection of vignettes, a lovely anthology that strikes a perfect balance between humor and poignancy. So my podcast is not advertiser supported. I'm not running ads here. So if you'd like to support me or the podcast, come check out my book. Go get an ebook or a paperback, or if you really want to treat yourself, check out the audio book. Go to michael jamin.com/book. And now back to our show.How do you know, were you in a lot of businesses?Jonathan Collier:I have a side business.Michael Jamin:What is your side business? Is it you rent folding shows for parties?Jonathan Collier:Well, no. I actually do multifamily housing.Michael Jamin:Wait. Oh, I knew about this. Right.Jonathan Collier:And believe me, my competition in multifamily housing will be damned if they want to spend 80 bucks to fix the toilet the right way.Michael Jamin:Now, do you build or you refurbish? What does that mean?Jonathan Collier:I do it with a partner who's also a writer, and we refurbish and build and rent.Michael Jamin:And Is it in LA or all over the country?Jonathan Collier:It's in Los Angeles.Michael Jamin:This is amazing. I remember, but I don't know. That's a whole different skillset. Who told you you were qualified to do that?Jonathan Collier:I think we always revert back to who we are,Michael Jamin:Which was, you were always a real estate mogul in the beginning.Jonathan Collier:Oh, I'm not a mogul by any means. We're mom and pop level of multifamily housing, but whatever. My family had small family businesses probably going back to the Middle Ages and they were butchers and bakers and ran a little in, did all those things. And that's where I immediately felt comfortable doing this.Michael Jamin:Really. Was it your idea to get into, how did that idea come up?Jonathan Collier:That came up during the 2007 strike also?Michael Jamin:Yeah, everything comes up during the strike when you're out of work.Jonathan Collier:So you're out of work, you're walking around with a picket sign. Yeah. I was thinking, wait a second. I'm walking around with a picket sign with a lot of angry, middle-aged guys. We're all mad at their fathers and taking it out in the studio.Michael Jamin:Okay,Jonathan Collier:We are at the mercy. We're putting yourself in a position where we're walking around with a sign waiting for a giant multinational corporation to pay us a lot of money to do something that we frankly love to do. And I'm not really in control of my faith here.Michael Jamin:No, we're not.Jonathan Collier:And so that's where my partner and I decided to do it. And then fortunately for us, I know what happened. I talked about it and I started talking about it with one of my daughter's, babysitters.Michael Jamin:How many babysitters does she have?Jonathan Collier:We had a hundred babysitters, a hundred best babysitters in all of LosMichael Jamin:Angeles. She required a lot of babysitters. Okay,Jonathan Collier:Whatever. When we go out, we'd have whatever, five people we call, whatever. And I've all come over at once. This woman was actually getting, I talked to her about it because while she was babysitting for us, she was getting her real estate license.Michael Jamin:Okay. Wow.Jonathan Collier:And so she called me up and said, I have a building for you, and it is a really good deal, and Washington Mutual Bank is trying to unload it really fast. This is now 2008 or so, and the whole real estate market's falling apart.Michael Jamin:And how many units is this building approximately?Jonathan Collier:This building has five units.Michael Jamin:Okay. So it's small. WeJonathan Collier:Did not know what we were doing, but we went and looked at it. We bought it.Michael Jamin:Okay. We had to make a company first. You had to do all the legal stuff.Jonathan Collier:Yeah. We formed what's called an LLC. We talked to a lawyer who was a cousin of someone, and they told us what to do.Michael Jamin:Real estate. As it turned out, a brilliant idea. It was probably the best idea you've ever had in la.Jonathan Collier:It was a very, very lucky time to do it. And so people, I found once again, like I was saying earlier, my competition in real estate was not as talented or hardworking or smart as my competition in television writing, but they were a lot luckier. And just by the strange confluence of events where interest rates went down and the economy started to pick up eventually, we all just by good fortune, by luck, it worked out well. It worked. Yeah.Michael Jamin:This is important because as you mentioned, nothing is guaranteed as a writer, nothing is guaranteed. And so to have something on the side is really helpful. Gives you some breathing. I highlyJonathan Collier:Recommend to people. I always tell whatever, when I talk to actors, I'm always thrilled when I hear that they're writing, even though they tend to be very good writers, and I don't like that. Or when they're doing something, when they're going to law school, when they're doing anything else, it's just nice to have a backup. It helps you sleep better at night.Michael Jamin:It does. Yeah, it really does. What's that?Jonathan Collier:You have your podcast.Michael Jamin:This is my empire, as you see. There youJonathan Collier:Go.Michael Jamin:Yeah. My media empire. Now, you wrote an episode of King of the Hill, because when I talk about King of the Hill, and this is 20 years ago, we were doing it. One episode people often bring up to me is Bobby is the Pygmalion episode, which you wrote.Jonathan Collier:Oh,Michael Jamin:People want to know about that. And we were just joining the show at that time. I'mJonathan Collier:Glad to hear that. I still think about that episode actually, when I said, I hate writing alone. I don't hate all of writing alone. I love the last two or three days of writing alone, punching up. I feel like face with a blank page. And once I've kind of taken a sledgehammer and beaten that script into shape, actually turning it from serviceable to good is actually fun. That part of it. And I remember the last three days or so on that script were really fun.Michael Jamin:But how did it, I mean, that was a departure. I mean, everyone there said, this is the departure. This is the episode, which ended in a really dark place.Jonathan Collier:It was a gothic thriller.Michael Jamin:How did you sell it to Greg? To the staff? I dunno if he was running the show then How did you sell? It was there. It was a departure.Jonathan Collier:Greg was there, so Greg was still there. I don't know if he was officially running the show, but he was there. Greg had to approve everything. He was basically, and Greg, God bless him. Not only did he embrace the gothic nature of it, but he pushed it even more. And some of the really strong gothic elements like killing.Michael Jamin:Yeah. The guy died at the endJonathan Collier:Who loved. I think that may have been Greg's idea.Michael Jamin:Was there a moment though, when you go, wait a minute. Are you sure that this doesn't seem like the tone of the show? I mean, it's mostly Hank watering his lawn.Jonathan Collier:Oh, no. Once we were going to do it, I was off full speed ahead. I wanted to embrace it also. Now, there were other people there at the time. It was a big staff and whatever. Everyone had valid opinions or people who did not embrace it the way that they were entitled to that. But I think we pretty much got the episode we wanted up on the screen forMichael Jamin:Sure, man. I mean, that got some big, I remember watching the Color in the animation. We watched the color in the Room. That's a big, it was like, whoa.Jonathan Collier:Yeah. There were very large twists and turns. Yeah. It is always really fun to push a genre.Michael Jamin:It isJonathan Collier:Carefully, closely observed family comedy and turned it into a large scale gothic drill.Michael Jamin:I had a conversation with Dave Krinsky. He ran the show at one point that, and the funny thing is, because people on social media, they're still watching King of the Hill. I haven't watched it since we were on it, because that's it. You leave it alone, you're onto the next show, and people really remember it. They remember it. They want to talk about it. And I'm like, I'm sorry. I don't really remember this episode. And Krinsky felt the same way, and he ran it. It's like, I don't really remember this. Do you remember everything? Oh, no. No. It's interesting that I think people have this expectation of the writers that we should still be living in it and we can't because we have to move on to whatever else we're writing.Jonathan Collier:Yeah. No, you only have so much room in yourMichael Jamin:Head. Yeah.Jonathan Collier:I mean, part of it is we're too busy hanging on every grudge and slight and moment of shame in our lives to use in our comedy.Michael Jamin:Yeah. Well, okay, so I know you don't have too much time, but what do you writing? What do you want to write next? Do you want to write procedural comedy? What do you want to do? IJonathan Collier:Really like the procedural space. I'm working on a procedural right now with a terrific writer who I was on bones withMichael Jamin:To sell as a pitch.Jonathan Collier:Yeah,Michael Jamin:Yeah. Yeah. Well, that makes sense. I mean, and given your track record, I would assume it'd probably be easier for you to sell a procedural. I don't know. There, no,Jonathan Collier:I have no idea. We are in an odd market, so we'll see.Michael Jamin:What do you know about the market? I hear just from talking to other writers, I don't think anybody really know. What do you know about the market?Jonathan Collier:Oh, nothing. I know what I read in the trades. I know what I read in Deadline Hollywood.Michael Jamin:And by that you mean what's getting picked up?Jonathan Collier:Yeah, I know what everyone else knows. I have no information. I do know anecdotally, my friends at least have had trouble selling things.Michael Jamin:They're having trouble selling right now. That's what I'm telling them, because they don't know how much money they have. Yeah.Jonathan Collier:It is an inflection point in the business, and there's been periodic inflection points, whatever, where it's pointed in one direction or another, but no one really knows what they mean while you're in them.Michael Jamin:Yeah, yeah. It's so, so smart about real estate. I'm still hung up on that, and I know this is not a podcast about that, but in a way it is. It's a podcast about having your fingers in many whatever it is, pots or something. Pies. What is it? I don't know what the expression is.Jonathan Collier:It is generally pies.Michael Jamin:Is it? What about a pot pie, like a chicken pot pie? It's generally pies, you said, man. So, okay. So that's kind of what you're taking out there is you're working on, and how often do you meet and do you work on it?Jonathan Collier:Oh, we meet every day really? More or less every day. I like to work for about three or four hoursMichael Jamin:In person. You meet?Jonathan Collier:No, we work on Zoom. And I don't like Zoom rooms, and I've been in some of those, but I like working with just one writer on Zoom, if you know them Well, it's fun. I mean, I found that in a regular room, and I'm sure people have told you this on your podcast and otherwise that, especially when you're No anything character based, any show, if it is not character based, the fun of it really is. And a lot of the creativity comes from what's not going on in the room. It comes from walking to lunch. It comes from Brow Cup coffee. It comes from killing time doing something else on the lot or your office. And that's when the ideas kind of come out of you. And you don't get that on Zoom.Michael Jamin:No, you don't. I wonder. Yeah. So was never Back. The rooms never got back. The last show I was on, it was still Zoom. Have you gone back in person?Jonathan Collier:No.Michael Jamin:No. Isn't that weird?Jonathan Collier:Really? I mean, I helped out, I did some punch up on a movie, and that was in person and on some punch up on an HBO series. Really? That didn't go, but that was whatever, a mini room. And those were both in person, but they were small and they were limited duration. So like a full functioning show in person. I have not done since theMichael Jamin:Pandemic. I wonder. Yeah, I wonder. They're just trying to save money. I don't think they're about saving lives. I think it's about saving money.Jonathan Collier:I think they're saving money. I think that sometimes one thing they found during Zoom is you get to writers in different cities. And so if you have writers in different cities to even the playing field, whatever, everyone's on Zoom rather than someone being in New York and someone being in Seattle and someone being in Los Angeles. But I certainly enjoy and benefit from the physical presence of other writers. It's hard enough to do it much easier and more fun when you're with other people.Michael Jamin:For me,Jonathan Collier:I have worked with writers who love being alone doing it. They have an entirely different experience and approach to it.Michael Jamin:Well, a lot of it's about the commute to work. You're probably central.Jonathan Collier:I'm fairly central, but I know people who actually, they don't want to be in a room. I've worked with wonderful writers who would much prefer to be alone and knock it out.Michael Jamin:Do you like going, working on set? Do you like being on set?Jonathan Collier:Yeah, I do. I mean, I think it depends. Every set has its own character politics, and it's not particularly fun being on set if you have a difficult lead or whatever, if there's something going on there or if there's tension between the stars or if there's, there's any number of ways you can have tension on the set. By and large, I've been very lucky. They've been good sets, and it's been fun. And also, it's the last step and whatever. One thing you realize on the set is when you spend significant time on the set, you realize how many people are really offering the show that you may have ridden,Michael Jamin:That you may have, I'm sorry, what?Jonathan Collier:Your name is on a script, but everyone on that set, hair and makeup, your whatever, your director, everyone has your camera operators. They're all helping create that show.Michael Jamin:Yeah.Jonathan Collier:Writers in their own way, and they're adding elements to it.Michael Jamin:Yeah. And I know I have to ask this because we have so many fans of The Simpsons, but what was that whole experience like for you? Because you were there in the early days?Jonathan Collier:Fairly early days. It was really, first of all, it was a huge break in my career that was good for me. I didn't have my first child until very late in my stay there. And that changed everything where suddenly, oh wait, sitting here with our comedy writers till 1130 at night might not be as energizing and fun when you have a baby to get homeMichael Jamin:ToJonathan Collier:That you want to see. So the hours were fairly brutal back then, but I still wouldn't trade it for anything.Michael Jamin:I can't imagine, though, that the hours were like that now, right?Jonathan Collier:No, they're fairly from what friends, were still there. And the hours are very sane now. And they're generally home for dinner.Michael Jamin:I mean, that's so interesting is that they've made a career that show's been on 30, what, 35 years or something?Jonathan Collier:Oh, yeah. And they can still turn out some terrific episodes,Michael Jamin:But it's a career. Your career, okay. You might as well be working at Exxon. That's your career. You get a gold watch and then that's you're done.Jonathan Collier:When I left, it was after season eight, and I thought they were trying to get me to go to King of the Hill, and I had whatever, I had the chance to stay at Simpson's. And I thought, well, there's no way it goes past season 10Michael Jamin:Or any show goes past season 10.Jonathan Collier:It just doesn't happen. And so I left. I thought I kind of felt badly leaving, but I thought, what much better do you want to show with some life in it?Michael Jamin:Yeah. But then again, it's also these people that's, they have job security, which is unheard of in Hollywood.Jonathan Collier:It is absolutely unheard of. And no, actually, that's one of the great gigs to have right now.Michael Jamin:Yeah, yeah. For sure. For sure. I know you got to go. We talked about this earlier, but I want to thank you in person as we want to hang up and then briefly thank you, and then I'll let you leave.Jonathan Collier:Oh, thank you for having me. This was really fun.Michael Jamin:This is, honestly, it was so interesting catching up and just hearing your perspective on all this. And yeah, you're going to be our, if the show ever goes, you're our first hire to make a procedural. I don't know how to make, I don't know how to do any of this. Oh, thank you. Yeah.Jonathan Collier:Are we on air now or are we recordingMichael Jamin:Still? Not yet. I'll sign off and I'll stop recording. Okay. Okay, everyone, thank you so much. That was John Collier. Great guy. Okay,Jonathan Collier:Everyone. He promised me a job on air. You heard it.Michael Jamin:I did say that. Yeah, but there's always got to go. That's a bigger, so it's an empty promise. So, all right, everyone, thank you so much. Go. Yeah. A paper orchestra dropped this week, my new collection of True stories@michaeljamin.com. Go check it out. Alright, everyone, thanks so much. Until next week. Keep writing.Wow. I did it again. Another fantastic episode of, what the Hell is Michael Jamin talking about? How do I do it week after week? Well, I don't do it with advertiser supported money. I tell you how I do it. I do it with my book. If you'd like to support this show, if you'd like to support me, go check out my new book, A Paper Orchestra. It asks the question, what if it's the smallest, almost forgotten moments that are the ones that shape us most? Laura Sanoma says, good storytelling also leads us to ourselves, our memories, our beliefs, personal and powerful. I loved The Journey, and Max Munic, who was on my show says, as the father of daughters, I found Michael's understanding of parenting and the human condition to be spot on. This book is a fantastic read. Go check it out for yourself. Go to michael jamin.com/book. Thank you all and stay tuned. More. Great stuff coming next week.

Serienjunkies Podcast
Monks letzter Fall - Fanservice mit Macken?

Serienjunkies Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2024 56:22


Fast 15 Jahre liegt das Serienfinale der Krimikomödie Monk nun schon zurück. Mit dem Revival-Streifen „Mr. Monk's Last Case: A Monk Movie“ wollte Peacock im Dezember 2023 die Nostalgiewelle reiten (seit dem 2. Februar kann man den Film nun auch hierzulande via MagentaTV abrufen). Alle alten Stars sind zurück: Tony Shalhoub, Traylor Howard, Jason Gray-Stanford, Ted Levine und Co. Und auch hinter den Kulissen hat erneut der damalige Serienschöpfer Andy Breckman die kreative Kontrolle übernommen.Die Grundbedingungen müssten also passen, doch hat der „Monk“-Film in der Summe seiner Teile funktioniert? Oder besser gefragt: Ist das Gefühl von damals wieder da? In ihrer ausführlichen Podcast-Besprechung gehen Sebastian und Bjarne - beides patentierte „Monk“-Fans - auf einige Probleme ein, die sie mit dem Anderthalbstünder hatten. Aber auch auf die Höhepunkte kommen sie natürlich umfassend zu sprechen.Es bleibt sogar ein bisschen Zeit, um in Erinnerungen zu schwelgen, und zu überlegen, was das Besondere an der Originalserie war. War es das preisgekrönte Schauspiel Shalhoubs, die Chemie des ganzen Casts, das Setting San Francisco, der Humor, das Herz, die Musik von Randy Newman - oder einfach alles zusammen? Ach, Mr. Monk, wir haben Sie vermisst... Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Fredericks MIND Thing
Crapper's Delight- The Interview

Fredericks MIND Thing

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2023 25:30


I recently had an opportunity to interview comedy writer Andy Breckman and the station manager of WFMU Ken Freedman. Together they host the stunt radio program Seven Second Delay on Wednesdays at 6 p.m.. We talk about music, fascism, politics, cancel culture and comedy. It was fun.   Podcasting.      The evolutionary ladder.     Fascism. Kapo.     Johnny Thunders in Michigan.       Ken's Trump prediction. Cancel Culture.     Dave Chappelle.      David Feldman. Sweet memories.    Tony Shalhoub.        ChatGPT jokes. Anti-Comedy.     High Radio Criticism.  

Under The Puppet
83 - Andy Breckman & Ken Freedman (Monk, WFMU's Seven Second Delay) - Under The Puppet

Under The Puppet

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2023 26:32


http://www.UnderThePuppet.com -  Andy Breckman is television and film writer who created the Emmy Award Winning television series Monk.  Ken Freedman is the station manager of WFMU, an independent free form radio station in New Jersey.  For over 30 years, Andy and Ken have hosted Seven Second Delay, a stunt radio program that airs every Wednesday on WFMU.  I sit down and talk to these two non-puppeteers on this episode of Under The Puppet. Download the free Under The Puppet app for iOS & Android! IOS - https://apple.co/2WZ4uZg ANDROID - https://bit.ly/2RwcFev Also, this month you can win signed WFMU stickers and a hardcover copy of Bill Baird's Art of the Puppet!  Listen to find out how to enter. Transcript of this interview is available to the Saturday Morning Media Patreon Patrons! Connect with Andy & Ken: Website - http://www.wfmu.org/7sd/ IMDB - https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0106563/ Discussed on the show: Andy is a Puppet - https://www.wfmu.org/playlists/shows/36286 Red Pepper - https://youtu.be/yJwiZjH8a1Y Muppet Babies - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muppet_Babies_(1984_TV_series) Paul Lewis - https://saturdaymorningmedia.com/2023/03/utp-81/ Mallory Lewis - https://saturdaymorningmedia.com/2022/11/utp-77/ Phillip Huber - https://saturdaymorningmedia.com/2018/06/utp-17/ Willie Tyler - https://saturdaymorningmedia.com/2021/01/utp-55/ Connect with the Show: http://www.instagram.com/underthepuppet https://www.facebook.com/underthepuppet http://www.twitter.com/underthepuppet Connect with Grant: http://www.MrGrant.comhttp://www.twitter.com/toasterboy https://instagram.com/throwingtoasters/ Art by Parker Jacobs Music by Dan Ring Edited by Stephen Staver Help us make more shows like this one.  Become a patron of Saturday Morning Media and get cool rewards!  Visit www.patreon.com/saturdaymorningmedia for info! ©2023 Saturday Morning Media - http://www.saturdaymorningmedia.com  

Ian Talks Comedy
Kevin Kelton - writer's commentary SNL 11/10/84 (George Carlin / Frankie Goes to Hollywood)

Ian Talks Comedy

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2023 82:30


Kevin Kelton joins me for a writer's commentart for the November 10, 1984 episode of SNL hosted by George Carlin with musical guest Frankie Goes to Hollywood. We talk about working with Carlin; Carlin getting a second chance to act on SNL after not doing it on the premiere; Kevin assisting with a line for Gary Kroeger in cold opening about learning a Walter Mondale impression; odd '84-'85 opening credits; Harry Shearer credited after he left; George is only 47 in this show; was in a great mood whole week; crowd is smaller because they are in a different studio; Carlin takes on religion; supposed to be his fallow period but he's still funny; Willie and Frankie; Chris Guest, Harry Shearer, Martin Short & Billy Crystal did not like other writers writing their characters; Harry would "ice" sketches at read through; Mr. Robinson's Neighborhood added to rerun; Eddie Murphy always lifted what you wrote; Eddie leaves in February 1984; Joe Piscopo thought it was his show but Ebersol didn't; Joe Franklin Show sketches written by Billy, Chris, and Marty; Chris Guests' Senor Cosa; Jackie Rodgers, Jr.; Martin Short and Gilbert Gottfried always "on"; Ghostbusters Show with Chi Chi and Consuela (Mary Gross and Julia Louis-Dreyfus); talent of these women; NY accents make people not seem birght; Kevin appears on Dating Game; Ye Olde Comedy Club - George Carlin as a Revolutionary War comedian; costumes department rents Blue Coats for the Red Coats; Hessians; 60 Minutes Parody; Harry's Mike Wallace; Harry getting fired; 1985 Writer's Strike; Nathan Thurm: Hal Wilner; Not a Cop sketch by Nate Herman; Billy Crystal is the Willie Mays of Comedy; Ted's Book of World Records; getting a sketch cut for time; Larry David's SNL experiences become Seinfeld episodes; Jim Belushi as Bobby Knight inspired chess coach; Pamela Stephenson's breasts have a mind of their own in an Update bit with Kevin under the desk; Andrea Martin; David Misch; Andy Breckman; script coordinators; musical guests; Rich Hall; Strategic Airborne Contraception; goodnights; Jerry Lewis, his new book

Ian Talks Comedy
Alan Zweibel

Ian Talks Comedy

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2023 70:57


Alan Zweibel joined me to discuss growing up where I now live (Wantagh, NY); bar mitzvahs; writing for borscht belt comics; getting his shot on SNL; his famous poetry class anecdote; writing a parody of the Passover Haggadah with Dave Barry and Adam Mansbach; "Go the Fuck to Sleep"; Emily Litella; keeping the character going by adding "Bitch" to her vocabulary; writing and appearing on Chevy's Weekend Update; the Charles Grodin episode; when SNL broke format; writing the Gilda and Elliot Gould romance episode; people loving Gilda and her death affecting people who didn't know her; her dying on his birthday; Bunny, Bunny; his and my favorite Roseanne Roseannadanna; Mr. Death; meeting his wife at the show; being a guest writer three times; doing shows four weeks in a row; Andy Breckman; the 5th season Weekend Update running gag with his picture; being a cast member for one episode for his role in the Conductors Club sketch; Joey Bishop sketch; Lord and Lady Douchebag; being asked to stay by Jean Doumanian; Steve Martin's Best Show Ever; Chico Escuela and his comeback attempt; John Stearns; It's Garry Shandling Show; Ed Solomon; differences in writing for Billy Crystal and Martin Short; Marilyn Suzanne Miller, Rosie Shuster, and Don Novello; Marc Maron; Quintlexia; Gene Wilder; OJ Simpson and the anti-Buffalo sketch he turned down; Celebrity Battle of the Sexes and Races; commercial parodies Banshee and Swill; Jim Downey; Bruce Kirschbaum; Arnie Kogen; Jay Kogen and his It's Garry Shandling Show script. For his amazing book Laugh Lines go to Amazon.com: Laugh Lines: My Life Helping Funny People Be Funnier (Audible Audio Edition): Alan Zweibel, Billy Crystal - foreword, Alan Zweibel, Blackstone Publishing: Audible Books & Originals

Ian Talks Comedy
Kiki Kazanas Steele (Script Supervisor, Saturday Night Live 1985 - 1990)

Ian Talks Comedy

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2023 54:42


Kiki Steele joins me to discuss getting hired at SNL at the tail end of Dick Ebersol's regime and the beginning of Lorne Michaels second; watching the Beatles on The Ed Sullivan Show; going to Emerson College; being mentored by Norman Lear; Andy Kaufman wanting to hang out in the ladies room at Fridays; working with Paul Miller again on Norman's Corner and Madame's Place; The Hollywood Cubes; Lorne Michaels; messing up timing at the SNL 15th anniversary and being bailed out by Robin Williams; SNL being like a family; her typical week: clean up on Monday; host pitch meeting; typing up scripts Tuesday night and Wednesday morning; putting together the read through packet; timing sketches in read through; waiting for the sketch cards to go up; asking writers for changes; bound scripts delivered on Thursday; counting down musical guest; rehearsals Friday; Herb Sargent delivering baked goods Saturday morning; dress rehearsal; live show; favorite writers: Robert Smigel, Jack Handey; Franken & Davis; the 86 - 90 cast; Bronson Pinchot worst host; Tom Hanks and John Lithgow favorites; Sigourney Weaver gave the pa's gifts; Buster Poindexter had a song ready every week; Francis Ford Coppola episode; William Shatner; Prince; 15th Anniversary show; Comedy Channel lures her away but she works two jobs; working with Marc Maron, Alan King, and Bob Hope; finding the movies for MST3K; Higgins Boys and Gruber; Alan Zweibel; women writers; Andy Breckman; first job when hired in 1985 was to clean out old scripts from all the way back to first episode; has her SNL jacket; Lorne got her a clock when she left; working with Will Durst; leaving Comedy Central; doing a pilot with Dave Attell; seeing the moonwalk for the first time; Liberty Weekend; Waylon Jennings saves her life; Terry Sweeney; Danitra Vance; Randy Quaid; Victoria Jackson; Paul Simon; Andrew "Dice" Clay; Sam Kinison; her three daughters, two work/worked at SNL; college admissions consultant

The Politics-Free Podcast
Don't Hang Your Head in Shame and Agony, Goliath Games' Stuff Happens, Round 10 Finale!

The Politics-Free Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2022 18:29


Ryan's cards - Frostbite, Lose Seven Toes; Slip on a Patch of Ice; Massive Zit on Nose.Card to place in sequence -  Break a Heel. Bonus - More about breaking the heel on your stiletto.Heather's cards - Cruise Ship Breaks Down; Hit Your Thumb with a Hammer; Internet Connection Goes Out.Card to place in sequence - Person in Front of You on a Rollercoaster Vomits. Bonus -  More of our first world problems.Tie Breaker Round!!Ryan's cards - Your Worst Clown Nightmare Comes True; Develop Agoraphobia, Cannot Leave House; Fart on Your First Date.Card to place in sequence -  Don't Hear the Tornado Coming. Bonus - Tornado story that may or may not be true.Heather's cards - You Lose Your Pinky; You're Clawed by a Rabid Raccoon; Move Back in With Your Parents.Card to place in sequence - Your Hand is Super Glued to Your Face. Bonus - Deep dive into the super gluing your hand to your face thing.Game played in the episode – Stuff Happens by Goliath Games, LLC. Created by Andy Breckman.Huge shout out and thank you to Kinemesis Music on Pixabay for the theme song, Best Buddies!!Last call! We'd still love answers to the following questions that have arisen over our time playing this game:1)      Where does eczema fall on your personal misery index, especially if this is a condition that you have?2)      Have you actually survived a baseball sized hailstorm? We need to hear your story!! 3)      Have you ever been chased by a bat, or is this a mythical occurrence?4)      What is your tattoo mistake?5)      Have you been mauled by a chimp? Are you okay?6)      Have you super glued your hand to your face?To email us or leave a voicemail, please visit our website and scroll to the bottom of the home page for links. Or you can respond to our posts on Instagram. 

The Politics-Free Podcast
Ryan Always Gets the Hard Ones, Goliath Games' Stuff Happens, Round 9

The Politics-Free Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2022 11:47


Ryan's cards - Mauled by Crazed Chimp; Shot in Leg; Poop the Bed.Card to place in sequence -  Eat a Bowl of Worm Spaghetti. Bonus - The actual toss up between worm spaghetti and getting shot in the leg.Heather's cards - Shard of Glass in Salad; No Cell Phone Signal; Favorite Show is Cancelled.Card to place in sequence - Shark Attack, Lose One Arm & One Leg. Bonus -  Ryan complains too much about Heather's "easy cards."Game played in the episode – Stuff Happens by Goliath Games, LLC. Created by Andy Breckman.Huge shout out and thank you to Kinemesis Music on Pixabay for the theme song, Best Buddies!!We'd love to hear from you! Looking for enlightenment on the following so far:1)      Where does eczema fall on your personal misery index, especially if this is a condition that you have?2)      Have you actually survived a baseball sized hailstorm? We need to hear your story!! 3)      Have you ever been chased by a bat, or is this a mythical occurrence?4)      What is your tattoo mistake?5)      Have you been mauled by a chimp? Are you okay?To email us or leave a voicemail, please visit our website and scroll to the bottom of the home page for links. Or you can respond to our posts on Instagram. 

The Politics-Free Podcast
Bat Karma, Goliath Games' Stuff Happens, Round 8

The Politics-Free Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2022 21:55


Ryan's cards - Chronic Insomnia; Find Half a Worm in an Apple You're Eating; You Fart Loudly and Repeatedly at a Funeral.Card to place in sequence -  Pen Explodes in Mouth. Bonus - A story about a real maggoty day.Heather's cards - Anesthesia Wears Off During Appendectomy; Termites; Slam Your Hand in a Car Door.Card to place in sequence - You're Fired. Bonus -  A listener story about a bat.Game played in the episode – Stuff Happens by Goliath Games, LLC. Created by Andy Breckman.Mentioned in the episode - Maggots Bring the Heat, Bats Crawling, Head Lice Myth.Huge shout out and thank you to Kinemesis Music on Pixabay for the theme song, Best Buddies!!We'd love to hear from you! Looking for enlightenment on the following so far:1)      Where does eczema fall on your personal misery index, especially if this is a condition that you have?2)      Have you actually survived a baseball sized hailstorm? We need to hear your story!! 3)      Have you ever been chased by a bat, or is this a mythical occurrence?4)      What is your tattoo mistake?To email us or leave a voicemail, please visit our website and scroll to the bottom of the home page for links. Or you can respond to our posts on Instagram. 

The Politics-Free Podcast
Vinnie & The Vomit & The Kidney Stone & The Drugs, Goliath Games' Stuff Happens, Round 7

The Politics-Free Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2022 14:42


Ryan's cards - Win the Powerball, Lose the Ticket; Pass a Kidney Stone; Swimsuit Comes Off in Public Pool.Card to place in sequence -  Car is Repossessed. Bonus - Kidney stone misery story.Heather's cards - Anesthesia Wears Off During Appendectomy; Termites; Slam Your Hand in a Car Door.Card to place in sequence - You're Fired. Bonus -  Ryan slammed our friend's hand in a car door.Game played in the episode – Stuff Happens by Goliath Games, LLC. Created by Andy Breckman.Huge shout out and thank you to Kinemesis Music on Pixabay for the theme song, Best Buddies!!We'd love to hear from you! Looking for enlightenment on the following so far:1)      Where does eczema fall on your personal misery index, especially if this is a condition that you have?2)      Have you actually survived a baseball sized hailstorm? We need to hear your story!! 3)      Have you ever been chased by a bat, or is this a mythical occurrence?4)      What is your tattoo mistake?To email us or leave a voicemail, please visit our website and scroll to the bottom of the home page for links. Or you can respond to our posts on Instagram. 

The Politics-Free Podcast
Tom Brady & The Orlando Blooms, Goliath Games' Stuff Happens, Round 6

The Politics-Free Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2022 16:54


Ryan's cards - Caught Picking Your Nose on National TV; Migraine All Day; You Eat a Jelly Donut. Wait, that wasn't jelly, it was mold! Card to place in sequence -  Favorite Local Team Relocates. Bonus - Heather learns that eating mold does not cause food poisoning.Heather's cards - Tattoo Mistake, Your BFF Moves Away, Ingrown Toenail. Card to place in sequence - Fall Down a Flight of Stairs. Bonus -  We find out just how little Ryan knows about professional sports.Game played in the episode – Stuff Happens by Goliath Games, LLC. Created by Andy Breckman.Huge shout out and thank you to Kinemesis Music on Pixabay for the theme song, Best Buddies!!We'd love to hear from you! Looking for enlightenment on the following so far:1)      Where does eczema fall on your personal misery index, especially if this is a condition that you have?2)      Have you actually survived a baseball sized hailstorm? We need to hear your story!! 3)      Have you ever been chased by a bat, or is this a mythical occurrence?4)      What is your tattoo mistake?To email us or leave a voicemail, please visit our website and scroll to the bottom of the home page for links. Or you can respond to our posts on Instagram.

The Politics-Free Podcast
Shallow Diving & Chipped Teeth, Goliath Games' Stuff Happens, Round 5

The Politics-Free Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2022 13:38


Ryan's cards - Dive Into Shallow Water, Police Break Into Your House Mistakenly, Stung on Lip by Wasp. Card to place in sequence - DVR Glitch, All Shows Erased. Bonus - Fun times diving into shallow water and the injuries we've sustained while doing so.Heather's cards - Wipe Your Butt with Poison Ivy, Lose How Water Mid Shower, Canker Sore. Card to place in sequence - Phone Falls in Toilet.Bonus - poison oak woes.Stay tuned until the end for our first listener story!!Game played in the episode – Stuff Happens by Goliath Games, LLC. Created by Andy Breckman.Huge shout out and thank you to Kinemesis Music on Pixabay for the theme song, Best Buddies!! Also, big thank you to Pixabay for the Trumpet Sound Effect as well!We'd love to hear from you! Looking for enlightenment on the following so far:1)      Where does eczema fall on your personal misery index, especially if this is a condition that you have?2)      Have you actually survived a baseball sized hailstorm? We need to hear your story!! 3)      Have you ever been chased by a bat, or is this a mythical occurrence?To email us or leave a voicemail, please visit our website and scroll to the bottom of the home page for links. Or you can respond to our posts on Instagram.

The Politics-Free Podcast
Mouse-capades, Goliath Games' Stuff Happens, Round 4

The Politics-Free Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2022 14:48


Ryan has to place Fish Hook in Thumb in the proper sequence with Parasite in Your Brain, Smell Like a Fart for the Rest of Your Life, Bacon is Outlawed. Also, we discuss how Bacon is Outlawed is way higher on the Misery Index.Then Heather has the task of placing Trapped Under a Landslide in the proper sequence with Cell Phone Blows Up in Your Face, Next Door Neighbor's Son Gets a Drum Kit for Christmas, Two-week Migraine. Plus, we contemplate what it means for your cell phone to “blow up.”Game played in the episode – Stuff Happens by Goliath Games, LLC. Created by Andy Breckman.Huge shout out and thank you to Kinemesis Music on Pixabay for the theme song, Best Buddies!!We'd love to hear from you! Looking for enlightenment on the following so far:1)      Where does eczema fall on your personal misery index, especially if this is a condition that you have?2)      Have you actually survived a baseball sized hailstorm? We need to hear your story!! 3)      Have you ever been chased by a bat, or is this a mythical occurrence?To email us or leave a voicemail, please visit our website and scroll to the bottom of the home page for links. Or you can respond to our posts on Instagram.

The Politics-Free Podcast
Misery One Upper Stubs Toe on Chainsaw, Goliath Games' Stuff Happens, Round 3

The Politics-Free Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2022 13:32


Ryan has to place Roller Coaster Stalls, You Hang Upside Down for Two Hours into the following sequence: Nude Selfie Emailed to the Entire Office, Dentist Drills the Wrong Tooth, Lose front teeth. Also, we discuss the ways one might lose one's front teeth.Then Heather has the impossible task of placing Vending Machine Eats Your Money in with: Total Amnesia, Taken Hostage During a Bank Robbery, Bitten by a Bat. Heather swears that, even though she has the cards and could easily cheat that she definitely doesn't.Game played in the episode – Stuff Happens by Goliath Games, LLC. Created by Andy Breckman.Mentioned in the episode - How Long Can a Person Safely Hang Upside Down?Huge shout out and thank you to Kinemesis Music on Pixabay for the theme song, Best Buddies!!We'd love to hear from you! Looking for enlightenment on the following Stuff-Happens-related-questions so far:1)      Where does eczema fall on your personal misery index, especially if this is a condition that you have?2)      Have you actually survived a baseball sized hailstorm? We need to hear your story!! 3)      Have you ever been chased by a bat, or is this a mythical occurrence?To email us or leave a voicemail, please visit our website and scroll to the bottom of the home page for links. Or you can respond to our posts on Instagram.

The Politics-Free Podcast
Alopecia (Hair Loss) Pros, Goliath Games' Stuff Happens, Round 2

The Politics-Free Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2022 13:56


Ryan tackles the Misery Index placement of You Go Mute in with the following: You're Having Triplets, Lawnmower Mangles Foot, Your Best Friend Marries Your Ex. Meanwhile, Heather grapples with her lack of mathematical prowess.Then it's Heather's turn to place Cricket Making Noise in Your Room All Night in with: Spouse Has a Year Long Affair, You Lose All Hair Everywhere, Eating Cheese Doodles on Couch in Your Underwear, Merry Christmas. Plus, we let you in on a major advantage to losing all your hair.Game played in the episode – Stuff Happens by Goliath Games, LLC. Created by Andy Breckman.Huge shout out and thank you to Kinemesis Music on Pixabay for the theme song, Best Buddies!!We'd love to hear from you! Namely, if you have eczema, please enlighten us. Where does this fall on your Misery Index? We're not trying to be insensitive. We are simply uninformed! Also, if you have actually survived a baseball sized hailstorm, we need to hear your story!! Visit our website and scroll down for links to our voicemail service and email address. Or you can respond to our posts on Instagram.

The Politics-Free Podcast
The Things We Google for Our Kids, Goliath Games' Stuff Happens, Round 1

The Politics-Free Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2022 18:50


Ryan is tasked with ranking First Gray Hair in with Friend Crashes Your Car, Paycheck is Lost, Earbud Gets Stuck in Your Ear. Heather vividly recalls the trauma of her first gray hair. In Heather's round, she has to place Develop Eczema in with Heart Surgeon Graduates at Bottom of Class, Jogging in Baseball Sized Hail and Booger on a Hotdog. Ryan debates whether Heather is cheating on the game, since she has all the cards. (I'm not, don't listen to him. Game played in the episode – Stuff Happens by Goliath Games, LLC. Created by Andy Breckman.Huge shout out and thank you to Kinemesis Music on Pixabay for the theme song, Best Buddies!! QUESTION: If you have eczema, please enlighten us. Where does this fall on your Misery Index? We're not trying to be insensitive. We are simply uninformed! Visit our website and scroll down for links to our voicemail service and email address. Or you can respond to our posts on Instagram.

Ian Talks Comedy
David Misch

Ian Talks Comedy

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2021 105:31


David Misch joins me to talk about directing Tales from the Darkside and Monsters; written humor; the Marx Brothers; being a funny folk singer; Sommerville; being managed by Rollins & Jaffe; Piper Houser; Jay Leno; Andy Breckman; Mork & Mindy; writing his first episode; Robin's ad-libs; writing the scenes on Happy Days for the Mork pilot; "Mork Gets Exposed", Jeff Altman; writing a pilot for a late night talk show with David Letterman; Letterman and Raquel Welch guest star on Mork; "The Mork Syndrome"; Gina Hecht & Jay Thomas; Exxidor; Police Squad comes from M Squad; "Ring of Fire"; Callahan; his two weeks as a guest writer on SNL; Larry David; smoking pot in the offices; Ed Bluestone; John Belushi's cameo on Police Squad; Jerry Lewis; Muppets Take Manhattan; Little Shop of Horrors; Funny the Book; the comedy rule of 3; comedy not getting its due; Robert Wuhl; Rick Moranis; Oscars; Duckman; --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

No Funkin', Strictly Monkin'
S08E16 - Andre, Jake, ANDY BRECKMAN, and the End - Part 2

No Funkin', Strictly Monkin'

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2021 83:34


Well, here we are. We have reached the final episode of Monk. And who better to commemorate the occasion with than MONK creator, Andy Breckman. We talk to Andy about how they came to the show's ending, and various stories from his time on the show. Then, Andre and Jake analyze the finale, and reflect on the journey this pod has taken them on. Thank you so much for listening. Share with your friends. You can reach us at @andrebarrera and @thejakechristie respectively.

monk andy breckman
Spoiler CUAC FM
Spoiler S08E07 – Mr Monk

Spoiler CUAC FM

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2021 57:00


Mr Monk es una comedia policíaca estadounidense creada por Andy Breckman (el creador de ‘Saturday Night Live’) y emitida entre 2002 y 2009 por la cadena USA Network aunque actualmente puede encontrarse en el catálogo de Amazon Prime pero solo hasta el 14 de marzo. Su actor protagonista es el fantástico Tony Shalhoub, quien interpreta […]

The Gary and Kenny Show

What to make of Andy Breckman? From performing folk song parodies to writing for Letterman and SNL, he then goes on to create the monumental hit TV detective show "Monk".  Oh. And "American Pie" guy,  Don McClean hates him.

Ian Talks Comedy
Andy Breckman

Ian Talks Comedy

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2021 80:38


Andy Breckman joined me to guess whether I was a vaginal of Casearean birth; his early childhood; only being allowed to watch one show a week on TV; realizing re never had to go to school again and leaving BU; going to LA and becoming a funny folk singer; transitioning into writing; Kevin Kelton;writing Hot Hero Sandwich; being turned down by SNL in 1980; how the SNL audition packet got him the attention of Merrill Markoe; pulling an all-nighter for his Letterman packet; going through his 13 week cycle without getting anything on the air; first joke that got on Letterman; writing a bit that bombed with Jim Downey; leaving Letterman for SNL after a year and a half; writing Dutch Couple for Eddie Murphy; why its bad for writers to get credit for sketches; Larry's Corner with milk through the nose; Winston University; The Bulge; White Like Me; Mr. Monopoly; Dana Carvey, Phil Hartman, and Jan Hooks' first sketch - Andy's Psychic on a Game Show sketch; Mike Myers joins the Crips; Japanese Game Show; his feud with Don McLean; his song Railroad Bill; The Misery Index; Monk; Tippy Turtle; --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

The Randy Disher Podcast
Episode 2 - MONK Creator Andy Breckman

The Randy Disher Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2021 71:01


MONK creator and head writer Andy Breckman visits the podcast as our very first guest, and answers many of the burning questions on the minds of MONK fans! Jason also surprises a MONK superfan with an unexpected call.   Find us online at TheRandyDisherPodcast.com

creator monk andy breckman
Seven Second Delay with Ken and Andy | WFMU
Tonight's Programme: Andy Breckman, Love Consultant from Feb 10, 2021

Seven Second Delay with Ken and Andy | WFMU

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2021


programme andy breckman love consultant
The Mark Hastings Experience
Episode #50: "Monk" (TV series)

The Mark Hastings Experience

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2020 60:23


In this episode Mark talks about one of his favourite TV shows: the American comedy-drama detective mystery television series "Monk", created by Andy Breckman, starring Tony Shalhoub as Adrian Monk who is a former homicide detective and a consultant for the San Francisco Police department who has an extreme case of OCD as well as many fears and phobias that he has to daily deal with. "Monk" ran for 8 seasons - from 2002 to 2009 - and continues to have a cult-following around the world, because of the light-hearted police procedural premise of the series as well as the engaging and entertaining characters and the actors who portray them. The series stars Tony Shalhoub as Adrian Monk, Bitty Schram (seasons 1-3) as Sharona Fleming, Traylor Howard as Natalie Teeger (seasons 3-8), Ted Levine as Captain Leland Stottlemeyer, Jason Gray-Stanford as Lieutenant Randy Disher - as well as many other amazing actors who have played memorable characters, some of whom recur throughout the series. The series is joyful, heart-warming, entertaining, funny, and sometimes harrowing - especially when the character of Adrian Monk is seen struggling to find more clues to aid him in solving the overarching mystery of the show that revolves around his wife, Trudy, and her apparent murder. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/markthepoet/message

Today's Episode
The Misery Index (S02E11)

Today's Episode

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2020 21:25


Shit Happens. It's not just an expression any more thanks to Andy Breckman, creator of Monk. The popular card game, which he kickstarted in 2016, also includes a kid friendly version, "Stuff Happens" as well as an edition specifically geared for parents and their misfortunes. Now that it has been adapted for the small screen thanks to TBS and the Impractical Jokers, we checked out the season two episode named, "Chicken, Spaghetti, and Sex."

No Funkin', Strictly Monkin'
An Interview with ANDY BRECKMAN, creator of Monk

No Funkin', Strictly Monkin'

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2020 67:29


Listen to Andre and Jake have an absolutely delightful chat with the creator of Monk, Andy Breckman. Andy shares how the show came to be, from its inception to its casting (including who was ALMOST Monk), as well as some of his favorite and least favorite episodes, and a lot more. It was a real treat to talk to him and I know you'll enjoy this as much as we did. Follow the show: @strictlymonkin Follow Andre: @andrebarrera Follow Jake: @thejakechristie Share this show with your neighbor, even if you haven't spoken with them before.

creator monk andy breckman
Conversations With My Dummy
CWMD 122 Steve is dried up

Conversations With My Dummy

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2019 20:01


Mikhail Horowitz is back, right in the front of the show talking about the acts performing at the 50th anniversary of Woodstock. I'll give you just one band that's playing: Asleep at the Wheelchair.And Steve is dried up. He can't come up with anymore ideas for the podcast. So Harry goes to work. First order of business, make sure Steve's no long dried up by getting his brain hydrated. It's funnier than it sounds. We also got Uncle Floyd doing "Deep in the heart of Jersey" and Andy Breckman singing "How I met your Mother." 

Conversations With My Dummy
CWMD 121 The Dollar Show

Conversations With My Dummy

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2019 19:10


Dollars? I used to live in Dollars. Dollars, Texas. In other words it's all about the almighty dollar folks.  Livingston Taylor is singing an Andy Breckman song. Harry and Steve perform an old vaudeville routine that Abbot and Costello stole first. And we got Oscar Brand as well.

2001 The Podcast
Rat Race and The Days Of The Phoenix E.P. by AFI

2001 The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2019 122:05


Guest - Aaron Blum - Trailer Editor - apparently Will goes to parties - talking pottery - Hey Hollywood, let Jerry Zucker out of movie jail - the crazy stacked cast of Rat Race, the ultimate cable movie - Starz - hook us up - remembering when Neo Nazis weren’t real - Mr BeanCast, cockdoggies - is narcolepsy funny? - Cuba Gooding Jr cinematic universe, putting in work in 2001 - Vince VielufCast, Joey KernCast - we contemplate the tongue piercing - the Seth Green Extended Universe, stunt talk - becoming the Las Vegas Hawaiin Shirt guy - in defense of Peggy Bundy, Married with ChildrenCast - the birth of the ‘Prairie Dogging it’ and ‘Thats What She Said’ - CrocTalk, when was the last time you grubbed? - John Cleese vs the Meteor - Amy Smart, Topanga Canyon native - road trip math, we do it - that cow puppet, Thomas E Ackerman fucks - talking to people in helicopters - Guinness World Record show appreciation, tv show tapings - Sean Kent, the black sheep of the Superman family - Rat Race, a masterclass of set up and payoff - cell phones ruin another premise in 2019 - world record road tripping, Cannonball Run talk - Good guy Google maps, Computer Legos, Tetris talk - Parie Dogging Redux, The Office talk - do smart phones ruin plots now? - The Barbie Musuem, Red Camera’s aggressive marketing - I Love the many Lucy’s - Andy Breckman appreciation (no one feel bad for him) - Smashmouth is having the best year ever - Far and AwayCast - AFI: Days of the Phoenix EP talk, music video breakdowns - Emailing directors, Petaluma CA talk - the good ol days of local band shows - the economics of keeping a punk venue open - my AFI, your AFI, their AFI - Gaslight Anthem appreciation - The Offspring: Don Cuco’s - controversial bullet trains 

Conversations With My Dummy
CWMD 101 The Store Is Open For The 12th Time

Conversations With My Dummy

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2019 17:59


The store is open again! It's hard to describe how much stuff this store sells. Suffice to say, it makes Walmart look like a little mom and pop shop. Amazon is a little start up company compared to this store. No point describing what they have, you gotta hear it for yourself. Also, Andy Breckman is doing a hilarious song called "Railroad Bill," and Steve and Harry sing "Side By Side" as a duet.

amazon walmart suffice side by side andy breckman railroad bill
Conversations With My Dummy
CWMD 98 Deep Nursery Rhymes

Conversations With My Dummy

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2019 19:20


Harry is finding deep meanings in Nursery Rhymes. He then adapts them for intellectuals such as 'Three Rodents With Defective Vision.' Also, Emo Philips does a standup routine and Andy Breckman sings about how he had a real good day.

Tomorrow Will Be Televised
Tomorrow Will Be Televised The Good Cop/Mr. Inbetween Episode

Tomorrow Will Be Televised

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2018 59:00


Special Wednesday episode of the program all about TV. Our guests: Monk creator/executive producer Andy Breckman, now executive producer of TheGood Cop, Netflix's new dramedy starring Tony Danza that begins September 21, and Nash Edgerton, executive producer and director of Mr. Inbetween, FX's new dramedy series, already set to return for a second season next year.

Passage to Profit Show
Making it in the Entertainment Industry with TV / Film Writer & Producer, Andy Breckman, 08-05-2018

Passage to Profit Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2018 53:52


In this episode, we interview Andy Breckman, TV / Film Writer, Radio Personality on WFMU’s Seven Second Delay, Exec Producer of the Emmy award-winning show Monk on the USA Network and the creator and owner of Uncle Andy Toys. He has written screenplays for a number of comedy films and is frequently hired as a "script doctor" to inject humorous content into scripts written by other screenwriters. Visit Andy at: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0106563/ Featured Pitch Presenters: Evelyn Cucchiara with The Toy Tamer, at http://www.thetoytamer.com/home.html Linda Ziemba with Aerodefense, at https://aerodefense.tech/ Kim Baker with Glamazon Beauty Cosmetics, at https://www.glamazonbeautycosmetics.com Visit the https://www.gearhartlaw.com/passage-to-profit-show/ for updates and the current pitch contest.

Passage to Profit Show
Making it in the Entertainment Industry with TV / Film Writer & Producer, Andy Breckman, 08-05-2018

Passage to Profit Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2018 53:52


In this episode, we interview Andy Breckman, TV / Film Writer, Radio Personality on WFMU’s Seven Second Delay, Exec Producer of the Emmy award-winning show Monk on the USA Network and the creator and owner of Uncle Andy Toys. He has written screenplays for a number of comedy films and is frequently hired as a "script doctor" to inject humorous content into scripts written by other screenwriters. Visit Andy at: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0106563/ Featured Pitch Presenters: Evelyn Cucchiara with The Toy Tamer, at http://www.thetoytamer.com/home.html Linda Ziemba with Aerodefense, at https://aerodefense.tech/ Kim Baker with Glamazon Beauty Cosmetics, at https://www.glamazonbeautycosmetics.com Visit the https://www.gearhartlaw.com/passage-to-profit-show/ for updates and the current pitch contest.

The Best Show with Tom Scharpling
TOM CANNOT COMPLAIN! THE VANCE AND GARY SHOW! ANDY BRECKMAN!

The Best Show with Tom Scharpling

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2016 169:18


For one hour, Tom is NOT allowed to complain! If he does, $10 goes to one of the producers and a matching amount goes to an animal shelter! VANCE returns to The Best Show in the return of THE VANCE AND GARY SHOW! ANDY BRECKMAN calls in to talk to Tom about his new board game and MORE!

complain best show andy breckman
Music First with DJ Dave Swirsky
Podcast with Special Guest/ TV Producer Seth Magalaner! Featuring music from Robin Thicke, The Smiths, Buddy Holly, Chuck Berry and More!

Music First with DJ Dave Swirsky

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2015 58:25


Special guest and TV Producer Seth Magalaner is back this week for another episode of the MFP!This week we are featuring music from Robin Thicke, The Smiths, Buddy Holly, Chuck Berry, Milt Jackson, The Monkees, Tito Nieves, Kenny Rogers, Real Estate, Andy Breckman, and Fences (feat, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis)!!!SUBSCRIBE: iTunes TWITTER: @MusicFirstPcastFACEBOOK: Music First PodcastEMAIL: MusicFirstPodcast@gmail.com

The Gist
Veteran SNL Writer Asks “Who Tooted?”

The Gist

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2014 31:16


Today on The Gist, Slate’s Josh Voorhees joins us from Iowa to discuss what the pro-pipeline supermajority in the Senate means for environmental legislation. Plus, Monk creator Andy Breckman explains why he decided to pursue a new career as a toy mogul. His new app is called Rigged Trivia. For the Spiel, impassioned nominations for the toy hall of fame. Get The Gist by email as soon as it’s available: slate.com/GistEmail Subscribe to the podcast in iTunes: itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/slate…id873667927?mt=2 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Fredericks MIND Thing

A combination of time constraints and synchronicity led to this abbreviated episode.The Blackout,     Andy Breckman talk,      Seven-Second Delay,     P.C. Mike has homework,     What Tom Scharpling learned from Miles Davis.