Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 117 days 21 hours 55 minutes
Frank Langella talks with Marc about New Jersey, Dracula, Richard Nixon, Mel Brooks, Ron Howard, and The Trial of the Chicago 7.
Actor and playwright Heidi Schreck talks with Marc about her Broadway show, What the Constitution Means To Me, which is now available to watch in your living room.
With the world still wondering what this year's Presidential election really means, it's the right time for Marc to talk with actor and playwright Heidi Schreck, who knows a thing or two about power structures and why they don't serve everyone equally. They talk about Heidi's acclaimed Broadway show, What The Constitution Means To Me, and how her recognition of generational trauma in her family prompted her to write a show about unequal rights and the people who help stack the deck...
David Cross returns to catch up with Marc about fatherhood, their dueling Jerry Wexler performances, shooting during COVID, and their problems with The Vow.
David Cross is one of Marc's oldest friends in show business. And right now is a good time for them to catch up, as David balances his life as the dad to a three-year-old with the demands of going back to work on film and television sets during the pandemic. David explains to Marc how he was feeling more antisocial even before COVID-19 hit, why he wanted to become a dad late in life, and what he had to physically endure while making his new movie, The Dark Divide...
If comedy equals tragedy plus time, comedian Melinda Hill has reached the point where she can make some funny out of the traumas from her past. Melinda and Marc talk about processing the pain, particularly dealing with parents suffering from mental illness. They also talk about Melinda's trajectory in the comedy business, starting with success in voiceovers to her influential LA stand-up showcase What's Up, Tiger Lily? to her acting, writing and podcasting ventures...
Comedian Melinda Hill talks with Marc about processing trauma, Adventure Time, Maria Bamford, and Marc’s ex-wife.
When Hari Kondabolu was a college student, he interviewed Marc for a research paper about standup comedy. Twenty years later, they're talking to each other as peers whose lives have changed considerably in the past two decades. With a newborn baby, a recent Netflix special, and a documentary about Apu from The Simpsons that spurred a global conversation about representation in pop culture, Hari gets Marc up to speed on where his life is at right now...
Hari Kondabolu talks with Marc about representation in pop culture, The Problem with Apu, being a new dad, and his persistent fear of the Comedy Cellar.
Matthew McConaughey walks Marc through his new memoir, Greenlights, and talks about Dazed and Confused, Texas, saying no, and protecting his privacy.