Episode 1587 - Billy Corben
Marc:all right let's do this how are you what the fuckers what the fuck buddies what the fuck nicks what's happening i'm mark maron um this is my podcast welcome to it you know i'm shooting i'm recording these things a day or two ahead and
Marc:And my life has really been on set.
Marc:And it's been pretty exciting in a lot of ways.
Marc:Because, look, Michael McKean just signed on.
Marc:Justin Long is in it.
Marc:You know, I knew this already.
Marc:I've already worked with these guys.
Marc:And as you know, Lily Gladstone, Sharon Stone, Talia Ryder plays my daughter.
Marc:And...
Marc:Judy Greer today.
Marc:It's just, come on, man.
Marc:So many funny people.
Marc:But I got to be honest with you.
Marc:Justin Long, who I didn't know.
Marc:I haven't seen him in a while.
Marc:He was in Dodgeball and a bunch of other stuff.
Marc:Seems like a funny guy.
Marc:But he comes in to do this thing.
Marc:He's playing an influencer.
Marc:He's already a little old to be an influence.
Marc:But you guys, one of the funniest days I've ever had.
Marc:I mean, to be around someone that just is so fucking funny that all day long, you know, we're riffing, we're improvising, and he's just doing shit.
Marc:We're breaking up on camera all the fucking time.
Marc:And I was like, this is amazing.
Marc:Why can't I have this every day in my life?
Marc:The laughter.
Marc:Where's the fuckers that can make me laugh all day long?
Marc:Where are they in my life?
Marc:It was just so good.
Marc:I mean, obviously, it makes it special when it doesn't happen every day and all day long.
Marc:And, you know, you can't laugh all day every day.
Marc:You'd be a fucking moron.
Marc:Maybe not.
Marc:Maybe not.
Marc:Maybe you'd be the happiest person in the world.
Marc:I don't know.
Marc:But it was great.
Marc:And Michael McKean's a pro, and it's great to hang out with him, sit around, talk about music, movies, people he's worked with.
Marc:He's playing my manager.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:That's what I've been doing.
Marc:We've got a week and a half more.
Marc:That's it.
Marc:I'm a little punchy.
Marc:I'm a little punchy.
Marc:Today on the show, I talked to Billy Corbin.
Marc:Now, this guy, he's a documentary filmmaker.
Marc:And, you know, he first got noticed for his 2006 Doc Cocaine Cowboys about the Miami drug trade.
Marc:He just made the documentary From Russia with Lev, executive produced by Rachel Maddow.
Marc:And the funny thing is, I've known this kid for a while.
Marc:Because, look, I know he's been making movies, these docs and stuff, but his mom and my mom were good friends down in Florida for years.
Marc:And I tell him this.
Marc:I mean, for years I had to hear about this kid.
Marc:You know, his mother was always like, well, Billy's in Hollywood.
Marc:Billy's doing this movie.
Marc:And my mother's like, what about Billy?
Marc:Do you know Billy?
Marc:I'm like, all right, enough with the Billy kid.
Marc:I get it.
Marc:He's doing things.
Marc:But now he's like he's down in Florida and, you know, he's got some, you know, a past in trying to be a child actor, which he was for a bit.
Marc:But he makes good documentaries.
Marc:And this documentary about Lev Parnas and the Ukraine debacle where, you know, basically Trump during his presidency was trying to blackmail Trump.
Marc:He's trying to coerce the Ukrainian government to feed him some kind of dirt on Biden or he wasn't going to give them arms.
Marc:He wanted a quid pro quo.
Marc:Dirt, and you get your stuff.
Marc:This is like, you know, aid.
Marc:That was the impeachable offense.
Marc:But this character, Lev Parnas, is kind of sucked into Trump's orbit.
Marc:And he's just like this guy.
Marc:I can't even explain it, the kind of experience it is to watch this guy.
Marc:being sort of this Trump acolyte and this Ukrainian national and, you know, his life in trying to do Trump's bidding in the Ukraine.
Marc:It was like a clown show.
Marc:But now he's, you know, he's reformed.
Marc:And in terms of how he he's he's apologetic and it has an interesting ending.
Marc:in terms of the conclusion and how he has come to Jesus' moment.
Marc:It wasn't Jesus, but, you know, it was—he woke up from the bad Trump dream.
Marc:But, yeah, it's a great documentary.
Marc:I really enjoyed it, and it was great to talk to Billy.
Marc:Yeah, so, you know, you guys know what to do.
Marc:I would certainly vote for Kamala.
Marc:I would do that so at least we can salvage what is left of decency and democracy and at least cultural representation.
Marc:And I would try again, I'll say to to talk reason into your friends that are not voting at a protest or throwing their vote away.
Marc:And as you know how I feel and I've always felt, this is not a Democrat and Republican contest.
Marc:This is a Democrat and fascist movement contest.
Marc:You know, it's hard to even act, you know, normal.
Marc:It's just like one of these things where you go through your life and then you have that moment like, well, fuck, this is going to happen next week one way or the other.
Marc:There's no stopping it.
Marc:And it's really, you know, on the wire.
Marc:I mean, it's fucking crazy.
Marc:But it'll happen.
Marc:And I just cannot bear or begin to imagine the type of anxiety and aggravation and anger and just insanity of another four years of that fucking clown, Trump.
Marc:And look, it's my opinion.
Marc:I've talked about it forever.
Marc:I've talked about fascism forever.
Marc:I've talked about whatever.
Marc:It's just...
Marc:I'm exhausted and it's happening.
Marc:Just remember, and I wrote this in the update, which kind of got a little juice to it because I put it up on the fucking whatever.
Marc:But in the face of cultural annihilation, do not annihilate yourselves.
Marc:Do not take that on.
Marc:Find a way through.
Marc:Find a way to hold on to your voice and live your fucking truth.
Marc:Because if the worst happens, that's going to be the challenge.
Marc:How do you hold on to your voice?
Marc:Hold on to your fucking personal truth when everything you know about what's right, wrong, and free is annihilated?
Marc:Upbeat.
Marc:That's all I'm doing.
Marc:It's all upbeat from here on out.
Marc:Look, Billy Corbin has done this movie from Russia with Lev.
Marc:It's on the free streaming service Documentary Plus.
Marc:You can watch it there.
Marc:You just go to docplus.com or get it on Apple TV, Roku, and other platforms.
Marc:It's a very good doc.
Marc:It's almost endearing.
Marc:But it is a very thorough sort of look at what a fucking criminal Donald Trump is.
Marc:And this is my conversation with Billy.
Marc:We had a lovely talk.
Marc:Now if I can just get your levels right.
Marc:Check one, check two, loud Jew, loud Jew, Jew cackle.
Marc:Yeah, yeah, not yet.
Marc:No radio cackles yet.
Marc:All right.
Marc:P-pop, P-pop.
Marc:Do you do enough radio to have figured out how to do the radio cackle?
Guest:I sort of, I back up or I'll go.
Marc:Right, but it's like, it's not, you just wait for the other two guys to laugh and go, yeah.
Guest:The other two guys.
Guest:There's always the other two guys.
Marc:I used to do a joke about that.
Marc:Like, all morning radio, it's like, there's a main guy, a funny guy, and then a baffled woman.
Marc:And it sounds like this.
Marc:It sounds like, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Marc:Oh, fellas.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:That's the structure.
Guest:Oh, morning radio.
Marc:But you're not on the morning.
Guest:No, I used to, like, drop in on that show on a Friday show.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And I actually did it because the comedians were there promoting the improv.
Guest:Yeah, that weekend.
Guest:And so I would come around and just, like, talk movies opening, and I would just meet the comedians, and that was, like, my fucking playground.
Guest:Oh, yeah?
Guest:That's why you liked it?
Guest:That is why I liked it.
Guest:I started a lot of friendships that way, and it was funny.
Guest:I discovered in that era that comedians who were...
Guest:traveling with their iPads or staying in like the club apartment or hotel or whatever, they would sit and watch Netflix streaming and they'd watch Docs and they would watch some of my shit.
Guest:So I was like, this is fucking cool.
Marc:Yeah, I'm going to go hang out with comedians to see if they know who I am.
Marc:This would be good.
Marc:And if they don't, I'll ask them if they have their iPod with their iPad with them.
Guest:That was the only... No, no.
Guest:The ones who didn't know who I was were more fun.
Guest:Gilbert Gottfried was the most fun.
Guest:I brought my Dirty Jokes DVD to have him autographed.
Guest:He was going to be there that day.
Guest:And he autographed it.
Guest:Dear Billy, stop talking to me.
Guest:That's what it said.
Marc:Gilbert Gottfried.
Marc:And he meant it.
Guest:And he meant it.
Yeah.
Marc:He was great, dude.
Guest:Amazing.
Guest:I watched him bomb that weekend at the improv.
Marc:Well, that's not an unusual thing.
Guest:It was amazing.
Marc:That's really Gilbert at his best.
Marc:Gilbert bombing.
Marc:It was amazing.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:So what were you going to say?
Marc:What were you holding for the mics?
Marc:Oh, so since about, I don't know, 2009...
Guest:My mother would say to me, Billy, when are you going to be on Mark's podcast?
Guest:Why aren't you on Mark's podcast?
Guest:And I'm like, I don't know, Mom.
Guest:She's like, I'm going to ask Toby.
Guest:I was like, that'll help.
Guest:And then in 2015, she sends me a text message with this article that says Barack Obama is going to be on Mark's podcast.
Guest:And I text back, that's amazing.
Guest:Now I'll never be on Mark's podcast.
Guest:Oh, come on.
Marc:You know who we had on after Obama?
Marc:We had Rich Voss on.
Marc:Yeah, he's a great guy.
Marc:Yeah, you know, we do have a history.
Marc:Your mom and my mom were pretty close friends for a period.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:And then, I don't know what happened there, but my mom, she's up in, you know, she's out of the apartment.
Marc:My brother moved her up into a place.
Marc:She's doing all right.
Marc:Is she?
Marc:Yeah, my brother's in Florida.
Marc:He's up in Jupiter.
Yeah.
Guest:That is that is Florida.
Guest:That's like because in Florida, the further north you go, the further south you are.
Guest:Yeah, that's like the more Florida it gets.
Marc:Yeah, I can't say he's particularly thrilled.
Marc:You know, it's not you know, I don't know.
Marc:You know, Florida is like such a fucking shit show that but you seem to love it.
Guest:I have a... Someone described it as like, Billy, you love Miami.
Guest:I'm just not so sure you like it very much.
Marc:I think maybe that's a... Yeah, but it's full of the juice.
Marc:It's got all the... Not anymore.
Marc:The juice left.
Guest:Not Jews.
Guest:Oh, I'm sorry.
Guest:Juice.
Guest:Yes, I know.
Marc:Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Marc:I know.
Marc:The Jews are running.
Marc:The characters and stories.
Marc:They ran the Jews out.
Marc:No one talks about the fundamental move right of Florida and what it's done for the Jews.
Marc:The ones that didn't die.
Marc:Are they leaving?
Marc:Well, when the deli started closing, that was like the red flag.
Marc:What was that one?
Marc:Fox?
Guest:It was.
Guest:There was Rascal House.
Marc:Rascal House.
Marc:Which is now Little Moscow.
Marc:Well, there was one, the Rascal House was down on the beach, right?
Marc:Somewhere.
Marc:In Sunny Isles.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:Not far from my mom's place.
Marc:Not far at all.
Marc:No.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:I used to love that place.
Marc:And you just see the old Jews there.
Marc:They bring the free basket of pastries and bread and they're just filling up their plastic bags.
Marc:We can just take these.
Guest:Yes.
Guest:And we'll keep bringing more.
Marc:That's how they went out of business.
Marc:People sitting there for coffee and a free bread basket.
Guest:For six hours.
Guest:Yeah.
Marc:Yeah, I guess, like, I don't, it really, I don't even know what, you know, what to make of the cultural landscape of Florida anymore.
Guest:I mean, it was, you have to remember, the Democrats have been a non-entity in Florida since the turn of the century, since Jeb Bush's, you know, era as governor.
Marc:Do we call it the turn of the century?
Marc:No, I like that.
Marc:Because, you know, your generation, for us, the turn of the century was 1900.
Marc:I don't know.
Marc:And now you're like the turn of the century.
Marc:Well, the turn of the century meant like all the old days.
Marc:And now you're you're talking about it.
Marc:It's like, you know, I was already a grown person.
Marc:It was it was 1999.
Guest:It was 25 years ago.
Marc:Yeah.
Guest:Quarter of a century.
Marc:I know I was 30 years old, 35 years old.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:At the turn of the century.
Guest:I remember.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:I think I saw Jerusalem syndrome.
Marc:Yeah.
Guest:Oh, one.
Guest:Oh, two.
Guest:Oh, two.
Guest:How old were you?
Guest:Ten?
Guest:I was.
Guest:No, I was five.
Guest:No.
Guest:No, come on.
Marc:Where did you see Jerusalem Syndrome?
Guest:Well, you came to the South Beach Comedy Festival at some point.
Marc:That was one time.
Guest:Yeah, I don't know if you did the show, but you talked a lot about it.
Marc:That was the worst.
Marc:It was the worst.
Marc:It was like nobody came to that thing.
Marc:They put me in a theater.
Marc:There was no one there.
Marc:I think Stebbins opened for me.
Guest:I think you were at the Colony, maybe.
Guest:It was a theater, right?
Marc:On Lincoln Road in Miami Beach.
Marc:A little theater?
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:Yeah, and I had Stebbins open for me, and he's doing his dark, weird shit for my little grown-up audience, and they didn't know what to make of him.
Guest:I thought it was a good show.
Marc:Both of us did.
Marc:Yeah, well, that was good.
Marc:You mean the friend you bought was the guy you met?
Yes.
Guest:You mean the other guy?
Guest:Yeah, I do.
Guest:Well, it was like, well, in those days, I think it was like our moms talking like, oh, my son's in the business.
Guest:Oh, my son's in the business.
Marc:We've never been in the same business.
Marc:It was the most annoying thing to me for years to hear my mother try to kind of paraphrase what your mom was saying about your career as a child actor.
Marc:And I was like, the fuck, who is this fucking kid?
Marc:What is she doing to my mother?
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:Like, what are you?
Marc:I always felt like, you know, Billy.
Marc:I'm like, I don't even know this fucking guy.
Marc:How much do I got to hear about this kid, Billy?
Marc:What was he on?
Marc:Parenthood?
Marc:What was it?
Guest:I was very impressed because I knew you from Conan.
Guest:I watched you in the latter half of the 90s.
Guest:Yeah, yeah.
Guest:In the end of the century, the end of the last century.
Guest:Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Guest:Before the turn of the century.
Guest:It all turned.
Guest:It turned so bad.
Guest:And I thought...
Guest:You were like a beatnik poet for me in that time.
Guest:Oh, yeah.
Guest:Oh, that's nice.
Guest:People who sort of informed my evolving worldview.
Guest:Really?
Guest:Well, there was Miami people like Neil Rogers on the radio, Cole Hyacin, the columnist and novelist.
Marc:That's what I think.
Marc:That seems to me to be the kind of root of...
Marc:of how you look at florida is carl hyacinth you knew there was menace and and and beauty and corruption and you know and uh it's something that spoke to the the country at large and just dispel me of the the notion that i was going to leave behind a better florida than the one i was born in no that was florida's designed to only get worse
Guest:By design.
Guest:Yeah.
Marc:Yeah.
Guest:I was born for crying out loud.
Guest:I was born in my dad was working in Fort Myers, Florida.
Guest:So I was born in Fort Myers, Florida in Lee Memorial Hospital in Lee County.
Guest:Not named for Spike.
Guest:Right.
Guest:So, you know, like this is floor.
Guest:I mean, that is that's people don't realize because Florida, they think of Miami or Orlando, the happiest place on earth.
Guest:And Florida is the South.
Guest:It was the Jim Crow.
Guest:Miami Beach was the Jim Crow.
Marc:I did a show at the fucking University of Florida.
Marc:Where is that?
Guest:In Tallahassee?
Guest:Oh, God.
Guest:No, that's in Gainesville.
Guest:FSU is in Tallahassee.
Marc:So FSU, Florida State.
Marc:I'm doing a show like a month after Trump won.
Marc:And it was like it was part of the series.
Marc:So I was at the college.
Marc:It wasn't like a comedy club.
Marc:So they had had Lily Tomlin.
Marc:So there was definitely an audience of sophisticated people.
Marc:But it was at that time where I realized –
Marc:Because I went to a coffee shop or whatever, and I just saw, like, you know, huddled old, you know, Democrats, almost like having a secret meeting.
Marc:I'm like, this is what it's going to be.
Marc:They're afraid to talk in public.
Marc:They've got to, you know, they can't talk too loud.
Marc:And this is what it's going to be.
Marc:It's going to be an underground movement of people who want to talk reasonably about the political...
Marc:a breakdown of this country.
Guest:No, I mean, there wasn't going to be any reason or logic or facts.
Guest:That's the most troubling thing, and I experience it every day, is that, like, there used to be a certain set of, well, facts.
Guest:We'd agree upon, you know, water is wet, the sky is blue.
Guest:Now we can have a conversation, a policy conversation about how do we achieve our goals.
Guest:It used to be, like...
Guest:Like John F. Kennedy said, we all inhabit this small planet.
Guest:We all breathe the same air.
Guest:We all share our children's futures.
Guest:We're all mortal.
Guest:Let's start there.
Guest:Now let's work together.
Marc:And at least have some barometer of journalistic integrity.
Marc:But now because of how technology and the internet works, you can just throw everything into doubt.
Marc:And once people...
Marc:The seed is planted that the doubt happens, and then there's no anchor.
Guest:And it gets malevolent because it's not just like we don't share facts.
Guest:It's that line from Kennedy, we all cherish our children's future.
Guest:It's like I'm not even so sure about that.
Guest:If we can't agree that putting more guns in schools is a net negative for children, where do you even begin?
Guest:It's like, well, the answer to these school shootings is more guns.
Guest:It's like, well, wait a second.
Guest:Hang on.
Guest:Two plus two equals 12?
Guest:Like, what are we doing?
Guest:It equals a Mexican standoff.
Guest:Russian roulette is what it, yeah, in our public school system.
Marc:But, so you're born in Lee County.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:And then you grow up in where, Miami?
Guest:Yeah, well, my parents were living, they were only living there because my dad was working there.
Guest:So I was born there while he was working.
Guest:How are the parents?
Guest:They're great.
Guest:I tell people that your mom sold my parents the home that they were divorced in.
That's what I...
Marc:That's impressive.
Marc:I think it might have been the only home she sold.
Marc:She was not really cut out for the real estate agent life, my mother.
Guest:Your mom did her a favor.
Guest:That's surprising.
Guest:And then I imagine she helped them sell it again after the divorce.
Guest:I wonder.
Guest:Two sales on the same house.
Marc:Yeah, and that was it.
Marc:That was the end of her real estate career.
Yeah.
Marc:Not cut out for the cutthroat business of real estate, my mother.
Guest:I have to tell you, there are early bits of yours that come up in our daily vernacular at home and at work.
Guest:Obviously, I travel a lot, so Lobby Waffle is a regular part of the conversation.
Marc:Oh, the Lobby Waffle.
Guest:I always loved that bit.
Guest:I'm often giving local politicians hell in Miami.
Guest:It's a hobby of mine.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:We'll very often get very self-righteous in the office, and one of us will be like, I'm Billy Corbin, documentarian, provocateur, and I want to see my FBI file.
Guest:Okay, I'll wait.
Guest:We do that bit all the time.
Marc:I'm so glad you liked that bit.
Marc:I loved that bit.
Guest:There was two, I think, from the first one.
Guest:The one where it's like, we don't have anything.
Guest:Yeah, provocateur.
Guest:We say that all the time, provocateur, like zeitgeister.
Guest:But there were two bits.
Guest:I think it was on your first album, there was the bit about worldview shit.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And I saw, you know, you're like, I think about 15 years older than I am.
Guest:I was like, was, but am.
Guest:And I was like, oh, I was like, that's this is how this is where I'm going.
Guest:It wasn't so much aspirational as it was inevitable.
Guest:Right.
Guest:I was like, oh, that's I'm looking in the window to my to my future.
Marc:Well, yeah, I think it's like, you know, it's a sign of like you can talk like that.
Marc:And that you can have those thoughts publicly, and you can make them funny, and you can blow minds.
Marc:But you weren't a character.
Marc:No, no, no.
Marc:You were the same guy on stage.
Marc:I go both ways with that.
Marc:For years, I was like, why can't I just become a character?
Marc:All these guys seem to just be characters.
Marc:And I think I was just so desperately trying to be myself that I ended up with that.
Guest:I don't know.
Guest:It spoke to me, and I...
Guest:Well, there's one bit you did about the solace you found in the thought of suicide.
Guest:I love that bit, too.
Marc:Hey, I could always kill myself.
Guest:And I was just like, I don't know.
Guest:I was just like that.
Guest:I remember my dad telling me once, like, Bill, things will never get so bad in your life that you would ever have to.
Guest:When I was a kid.
Guest:So it made me think about suicide.
Guest:And like, oh, just come to me.
Guest:Like, let's talk.
Guest:And then I was like, oh, but that doesn't mean I can't think about it.
Guest:Of course.
Guest:In a very crazy way.
Marc:But my favorite line of that was that the tag was the spiritual reprieve of the faithless.
Marc:And I thought like, I knew it was a deep thought and I knew it was not going to get a big laugh.
Guest:Spoke to me.
Marc:I'm sorry, buddy.
Guest:One of my favorites is the, it was after 9-11.
Guest:And you were in New York, of course, and you're doing like New York comedy.
Guest:Oh, that's that first record, yeah.
Guest:Yes.
Guest:And it was about, and I'm definitely not going to do it justice, but it was that the world survives because of women saying no.
Marc:That's right.
Marc:Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Marc:Without them saying no.
Marc:We're going to blow up the buildings.
Marc:No.
Marc:We have people coming over.
Marc:Go get some ice cream.
Marc:Something like that.
Guest:And I just like, well, but that, but that was like a very like profound and it prepared me for like husbandry and girl daddom.
Guest:And like it, it, it real, I think about it a lot that, that without that, like we just were left to our primal idiotic kind of state.
Marc:And that's what it looks like now.
Guest:Yeah.
Marc:That's exactly what it looks like.
Marc:And hopefully like now it's really a battle between, you know, the horrible men and women.
Marc:Yeah.
Guest:I mean, really the baby machines, Mark.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:But no, like the outside of sexism and racism, there's no reason not to vote for Kamala.
Guest:Well, but misogyny and racism are very powerful, very powerful forces.
Guest:I mean, the Democrats have either ingeniously counter program this election or it's 2016 all over again.
Marc:Well, God forbid.
Marc:I can't even I don't even know, man.
Marc:I don't even know.
Marc:I don't know what's going to happen, but I know it's going to be a nail biter.
Marc:But why?
Marc:Why should it be?
Marc:That to me is the insanity.
Marc:You can sit and ponder that all you want.
Marc:I don't fucking know.
Marc:I know I'm doing a joke.
Marc:I was doing a joke.
Marc:I shifted the joke.
Marc:Like the joke used to be like right now when Biden was still in the game, I used to say, you know, it's just everyone's just waiting for the right guy to die.
Marc:And then I'll leave it at that and I'll go, that's a bipartisan joke, actually.
Marc:And then I shifted it last night for the first time.
Marc:I said, how is it possible that 50 percent of the people in this country are just fucking shitty people?
Marc:And then I go like, I'm going to leave it there because with that, it's still a bipartisan joke.
Guest:Nikki Haley, of all people, she tweeted earlier this year.
Guest:that uh i had like covid brain like things things that i know come to like they're on the shelf too high for me to reach and then they they come like a few seconds later that's just aging brain is that mid-40s yeah it's starting i remember my producing partner alfred spellman he got he was the first person in our family to get covid and he was describing he's like i got a headache and i'm nauseous i'm like that's your mid-40s i'm pretty sure all the symptoms that's every day just i used to say i wake up like that
Guest:Yeah, I wouldn't know if I had long COVID.
Guest:I never feel good.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:But she tweeted, whichever party drops their 80-year-old candidate first will win in November.
Guest:Oh, good.
Guest:I hope she's right.
Guest:Right.
Guest:But why is that not kind of, like, if the Democrats were going to anoint a successor here, it should have been a napalm candidate.
Guest:Call it Oprah, George Clooney, Tom Hanks.
Guest:I don't give a shit.
Guest:Just like, why is it still a statistical dead heat in the only seven states that matter in this country?
Guest:I don't know.
Marc:I don't think we're going to figure it out.
Marc:But for me, it's just sort of like, wow, people are really brain fucked.
Marc:I mean, like, yeah, I think I think really what it is, is that I don't think a lot of people think in depth about the repercussions of of making this decision.
Marc:Like, I don't think that other than shameless fascists.
Marc:I think a lot of people just see this as like, well, a president's a president.
Marc:They still think that way.
Marc:You know what I mean?
Marc:Like, I like that guy.
Marc:And that's as deep as it goes.
Marc:It's fucking dangerous.
Marc:Of course.
Marc:Stupid people are dangerous.
Marc:And it's most people.
Marc:I'm going to get emails about that.
Marc:Not too many.
Marc:None of your listeners, for sure.
Marc:Yeah, I'm preaching to the choir here.
Marc:All right.
Marc:So what happens?
Marc:So you're taking in too much Marc Maron as a young man.
Guest:Yeah, that was my 20s, dude.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:Yeah, just freebasing Mark Maron.
Marc:Oh, but not really freebasing.
Marc:Do you have, are you married?
Guest:I am.
Guest:Oh, you are.
Guest:And you do have kids.
Guest:I honestly, this is like a part of my life that I don't talk about because like for really, mostly not their privacy, but like their safety because you just talked about the kind of psychopath that we live in.
Marc:Do you get pushback from anything you're doing?
Marc:Are you expecting it?
Marc:Oh, yeah.
Marc:Death threats and the like?
Marc:Sure, of course.
Marc:Just from this new thing or is it hasn't aired yet the Lev Parnas
Guest:thing no the part is yeah it's on msnbc no it predates that because i've been pretty vocal politically in on the radio wherever i mean i have a weekly podcast because miami that oh yeah i talk i online i'm i'm when i was like you know perpetually and perennially online yeah i would i would i like i just want to punch up because like that's the era of you we did a documentary called screwball
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:About A-Rod and steroids and baseball.
Guest:Right.
Guest:And it was the Wall Street Journal of all places called it like the baseball movie that explains America.
Guest:And to me, it was like about we had we talked about a moment ago, common common values.
Guest:So, like, you know, American values were like the it was the.
Guest:The golden rule, right?
Guest:Do unto others and treat people with respect and honesty, integrity, and you'll get that back.
Marc:Or tolerance.
Guest:Just tolerance, for fuck's sake.
Guest:I'd settle for that at this point.
Guest:Totally.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:Like, who gives a shit about anything?
Marc:Yeah, yeah.
Marc:Well, you don't have to like people, but this is supposed to be a democracy.
Marc:Leave the fuck alone.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:You know, people have spoken.
Marc:Shut up.
Marc:Yeah.
Guest:And so I would settle for that, but the new American values seem to be like just...
Guest:Bully, be a dick, punch down.
Guest:Double down.
Guest:And you'll become the highest paid baseball player of all time, the commissioner of Major League Baseball, or yes, kids, you can be the president of the United States.
Guest:So that's where the pushback started to happen?
Guest:I think, I don't know that, when did it start to happen?
Guest:I just, it was, I think about your friend Adam McKay, who went from making these really big, absurd comedies to making like these political movies.
Guest:Still funny, but yeah.
Guest:Thoughtful movies, yeah.
Guest:And I think really the Great Recession, for lack of a better term, radicalized him.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And he said, I need to be doing something more important.
Guest:I watched that movie again.
Guest:Make sure.
Marc:I've watched it three times.
Marc:It's a masterpiece.
Marc:It kind of is.
Marc:And at first I was like, I had a real problem with the sort of celebrity element of explaining, you know, economic policy or whatever you would call it.
Marc:But that annoyed me at first.
Marc:But the more I watch it, it's just like it's the best.
Guest:Dude, we call our subgenre of nonfiction filmmaking pop docs.
Guest:So, like, that to me is what that is.
Guest:That's like how am I going to, you know, and it's Trojan horse storytelling.
Guest:I tempt the audience with the sugar and then slip in the vegetables, you know, sneak in the healthy shit.
Marc:Well, you have to.
Marc:You have to.
Marc:That's all of a sudden, you know, because then at that moment people are like, oh, I'm thinking.
Yeah.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:But don't tell them.
Marc:It's unlearning.
Guest:It's not even what I'm thinking.
Guest:My cue has been filled with documentaries that I, quote, have to watch, end quote.
Guest:But that after I get home, after a day of dealing with the fucking world, I'm like, I'm not going to get into bed and opt in to getting angry about something that I can't change tonight.
Guest:Or confused about something.
Marc:Right.
Guest:And I'm like, I just need to go to bed.
Guest:I thought I knew how I felt about that.
Guest:And now, don't challenge me.
Guest:It's bedtime, right?
Guest:But that's why I loved it.
Guest:And I got to tell McKay, I was like, dude, one of the best documentaries of the last 15, 20 years is the end credits of the other guys.
Guest:They did this animated infographic about what a Ponzi scheme is.
Guest:And it's...
Guest:fucking, this brilliant piece of nonfiction just shoehorned into the end credits of this hilarious, absurdist buddy comedy.
Marc:Well, that was funny about the big short and also just about explaining that time is that it was all a fucking Ponzi scene.
Guest:It was all a Ponzi.
Guest:And so that is, I think, what...
Guest:The rise of Trumpism did for us at our company at Raconteur.
Guest:We felt like, well, now we have a responsibility or an obligation with this pop doc thing.
Guest:Like the gangster movies are fun.
Guest:The sports docs are fun.
Guest:Cocaine Cowboys.
Guest:The U. And that's fun.
Guest:But like we all kind of have a responsibility to channel our energies, our skill set into something more proactive.
Guest:Yeah, proactive.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:But like it seems like even with the cocaine cowboys and the sports stocks, you know, in the pop movie, I mean, you're still talking about politics.
Marc:I mean, like the weird thing about what's happening.
Marc:I'm just I'm in the middle of this book, Autocracy, Inc., that.
Marc:What is shifting is that, you know, Democratic politics are losing ground to sort of shadow politics of autocrats, that there's a world of financing and power that happens among autocratic governments.
Marc:And they're huge.
Marc:I mean, you know, China.
Marc:Russia, India to a certain degree.
Marc:Like all these people have massive economies.
Marc:So if it gets to the point where the U.S.
Marc:says we're going to put sanctions on them, they're like, we don't give a fuck.
Marc:We'll sell the gas to the Russians.
Marc:We don't give a fuck, Iran.
Guest:You know, it's like crazy.
Guest:I would say the Florida Democrats never miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity.
Guest:And the Florida of today is the America of tomorrow.
Guest:So-
Marc:Totally.
Marc:It's a petri dish.
Marc:Texas and Florida.
Marc:That's how it's going to look.
Marc:You got this libertarian shit show with people who are down there with enough money to stay out of the fray and not pay taxes.
Marc:And then you've got like, you know, these kind of brain addled either religious fanatics or just fucking angry brainwashed fucks to do the.
Marc:Hey, I call them my neighbors.
Marc:Sure.
Marc:Well, I mean, like, you know, I guess I can be a little more diplomatic.
Yeah.
Marc:But OK, so you're coming up in Florida, but like it wasn't always the intention to be this righteous motherfucker.
Marc:At some point, you're like, I want to be in show business.
Guest:I wanted to I wanted to tell stories.
Guest:And as a kid, I really.
Marc:Yeah, I really did.
Marc:I mean, like I hear about people telling stories so much now.
Marc:It's like this new buzzword.
Marc:I'm a storyteller or authenticity or there's 20 years.
Guest:25 years ago, I named our company Raconteur.
Guest:25 years ago.
Guest:I know.
Marc:But, you know, when you were a kid running out here with your mother to audition for.
Guest:Well, that was, I mean, that was, that became my, my like after school hobby.
Guest:My brother was, my younger brother was, was a real athlete.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And a really gifted athlete.
Guest:And he should be on that pamphlet, famous Jewish sports legends, my little brother.
Guest:Oh, yeah.
Guest:He was just he was just good at it.
Guest:He excelled at everything.
Guest:Picked up a bad, picked up a ball.
Guest:He was just a hockey stick.
Guest:He was just amazing at it.
Guest:And so I, on the other hand, struck out at my first at bad at the North Miami Beach T-ball optimist league.
Guest:So that was baseball was the end of this morning.
Guest:I was like, yeah, how do you?
Guest:You strike out when the ball is sitting on a stick.
Marc:I had that moment with sports.
Marc:I got hit in the face with a ball in center field.
Marc:I'm like, this isn't for me.
Guest:And I retired pretty quickly.
Guest:And so I remember I saw a girl, Jennifer Schatz.
Guest:She lived in the neighbor in the shtetl in North Miami Beach.
Guest:A high-end shtetl.
Guest:High-end shtetl.
Guest:Well, it was a pretty working class shtetl that in the Cocaine Cowboys era became a little bit nicer.
Guest:You chose to live there.
Guest:I didn't.
Guest:My parents did.
Guest:But you weren't forced there.
Guest:No, no, we were not.
Guest:Yes, it was not.
Guest:We were not ghettoized at that point.
Guest:It was self-segregation.
Guest:It was working class Jews.
Guest:Yes, absolutely.
Guest:And so I saw her on TV in a Sears commercial riding a bike.
Guest:And I thought that that was one.
Guest:I was like six.
Guest:I was like, that was the coolest thing.
Guest:I knew her.
Guest:And now she was inside the magic story box.
Guest:And I was like, I want to do that.
Guest:So my dad called her dad and was like, how do you do that?
Guest:And so my mom was totally against it.
Marc:Yeah.
Guest:What do we do to get my kid on that?
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:Who's her agent?
Guest:My agent was Ada Gordon at JFK just for kids in Miami.
Guest:Well, OK, so your mom was against it.
Guest:My mom was totally.
Guest:She had read.
Guest:She didn't want to be a show.
Guest:She didn't want to turn into that.
Guest:She read Shirley Temple's autobiography and Drew Barrymore's autobiography.
Guest:She'd be like by eight years old, he's going to be on the coffee by nine on the pot.
Guest:by 10 on on blow and like i want this is a terrible business for children i want not so my dad was my stage mom okay and then after school that was my activity in miami there was like a ton of auditions and stuff like that and in the 80s yeah yeah okay i would go out every day on auditions
Marc:So, okay, so you're doing that.
Marc:You're running around Miami doing commercial auditions and bit parts and things that are shooting in Florida.
Marc:Yeah, well, I did, like, a commercial for it.
Guest:I mean, you name a sector.
Guest:Sandwich meats or toys or cars or detergent.
Guest:And I did a commercial for it just out of Miami.
Guest:So you were a working little actor.
Guest:I was a working little actor, and I enjoyed it.
Guest:Like, it was my...
Guest:It was like what kids do after school.
Guest:Fuck baseball.
Guest:Yeah, and I couldn't do it.
Guest:So this seemed to be something, make-believe seemed to be something that I could do.
Guest:And then I did a movie with Ernest Borgnine and Linda Blair.
Guest:I had like one line in that.
Guest:Old Ernest Borgnine.
Guest:Jonas Borgnine and Linda Blair.
Guest:And I was in a scene with a guy named Scott Weinger who came out here and blew up.
Guest:He was the voice of Aladdin and he was on Full House.
Guest:He was a Florida guy?
Guest:Scott was a Miami kid.
Guest:Absolutely.
Guest:And so they, then I got, Ron Howard came to town and he was casting for Parenthood.
Guest:Okay.
Guest:And it was going to be one of the first features they shot at Universal, Florida.
Guest:Okay.
Guest:And in Orlando.
Guest:And so they came down to Miami looking for kids to play these roles where I had to curse.
Guest:That was the moment where my mom had to go with me because then it required travel for weeks or months on end in Orlando.
Guest:And so dad couldn't take off work.
Guest:Right.
Guest:So begrudgingly.
Guest:And begrudgingly, she came with me on Parenthood to Orlando.
Guest:And that's how that was her transition.
Guest:Did she enjoy it?
Guest:Sage motherdom.
Guest:I think I wouldn't say enjoyed it, but she was a very like protective mom.
Guest:So she was good at it.
Guest:But she was happy.
Marc:You were happy, I guess.
Guest:She was happy.
Guest:I was happy.
Guest:And she there wasn't any give with her.
Guest:It wasn't like she wasn't going to be negotiating for her like compromising for her kid.
Guest:So she was exceptional at it in a way that like other parents.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:In fact, one of the parents who years later would convince me to not do it anymore.
Guest:Oh, yeah.
Guest:It's not like because some of the parents were pretty awful.
Marc:Yeah.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:So you do parenthood?
Guest:Parenthood, yeah.
Guest:And do you have a real part in that?
Guest:I curse in the movie.
Guest:It's a principle.
Guest:I still get checks for that.
Guest:It's the craziest thing.
Guest:The $2.45 check?
Guest:Sometimes the checks are lower than the stamp.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:It's kind of interesting, though.
Guest:And then you're like, where was that even on?
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:and like Croatian television it says it on the state I always I'm always secure because sometimes they're like a few hundred bucks and I'm like shit this is like how does how to major run yeah this business well you gotta get a forensic accountant get your manager audit NBCUniversal you have to
Guest:Or you won't get the bread.
Guest:Dude, how would I know?
Guest:Like for $400, for $200, for $0.28?
Marc:Yeah, but sometimes like, you know, for Marin, the series, like we, my manager had them do forensic accounting at Fox or somewhere.
Marc:And there's like, there was a lot of money there, dude.
Marc:Really?
Marc:Yeah, man.
Marc:Because like, they don't know where to send the checks or they, or they don't try.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:But yeah, sometimes there's just fucking money sitting there that, you know, that doesn't.
Marc:Like they don't know where you are.
Marc:Whatever it is.
Marc:Whatever it is, it's dubious, but it's not an uncommon practice to call them on it and have them find it.
Guest:Honestly, I couldn't possibly be entitled to that much with the three or four lines that I had in that movie.
Marc:No, I know.
Marc:I get it.
Guest:My mother was appalled because Opie was making her son curse in a movie.
Guest:Come on.
Guest:Because I cursed in the movie.
Guest:She was mad at Ron Howard.
Guest:She wasn't really mad.
Guest:She thought it was funny.
Guest:But that was the joke, right?
Guest:That was the joke.
Guest:A little kid was eight-year-old, nine-year-old was running around cursing.
Guest:And that was the moment when I saw Ron Howard.
Guest:And his whole family was on set.
Guest:Everybody was in the movie or involved in the movie.
Guest:And I was like, oh.
Guest:Because I watched him on Nick at Night, like on the Andy Griffith show.
Guest:Yeah, yeah.
Guest:On Happy Days.
Guest:And I was like, oh.
Guest:I'm like...
Guest:That's the moment where I understood that that was the goal.
Guest:Right.
Guest:That like, yeah, you might being an actor is like a thing that kids do.
Guest:Like when you go to soccer or ballet after school, you don't grow up to be a soccer player or ballerina.
Guest:This is something that kids do.
Guest:And then when you grow up, you don't want to be the guy taking the direction.
Guest:You want to be the guy.
Marc:Well, yeah, maybe.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:But like, yeah, he was a lifer, show business lifer.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:And he had the freedom to kind of keep building.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:And he was terrific.
Marc:I think he's a rare story.
Guest:He was terrific, though.
Guest:He was so, like, he knew everybody's name.
Guest:It, like, felt like a family on that set.
Guest:It was very... Well, he's a nice guy.
Guest:Yeah, it was very, like, comforting and very cool.
Guest:He lives up to the nice guy thing.
Guest:Really does.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And later, years later, a lot of years later, I got to interview him for a documentary we did, and I told him, I'm like, you're the reason why I'm...
Guest:I'm here.
Marc:I'm doing this.
Guest:Did he remember you and everything?
Guest:Fuck no.
Guest:Well, I mean, no, he knew my part in the movie.
Guest:I mean, that movie is like, plays to this day.
Marc:It's a big movie.
Marc:It's a family movie.
Marc:It's a classic.
Marc:But that triggered, that got you in the game?
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:So that was and then Scott, my buddy Scott came to L.A.
Guest:for a summer.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:On a family vacation slash do some auditions because this manager came and was recruiting like Miami kids.
Guest:OK.
Guest:So I became one of those kids.
Guest:We went out.
Guest:We came.
Guest:I'd never been to L.A.
Guest:before.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:We came.
Guest:How old?
Guest:I was, this was 90, 1990.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:So how old are you?
Guest:So I'm 12.
Guest:Oh, wow.
Guest:Okay.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:11 or 12.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:We did the universal tour.
Guest:We did total tourist shit and then went out on auditions and I booked, I booked something while we were here for a few weeks.
Guest:And so the manager was like, well, why don't you come back for pilot season?
Guest:Right.
Guest:Well, what's pilot season?
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:Back when it existed.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:That's how that became a thing.
Guest:And then we got into that cycle of,
Guest:of pilot season which yeah like now now actors can be on can you be a series regular on multiple shows back then they owned you yeah that cycle so right you could come out here if you booked a pilot which i did every year you couldn't do an any you could do a guest spot you could do even if the pilot doesn't go even if the pilot and that was the thing too is they would just even if the even if the show got picked up yeah it's still fire you replace you right you out of the like so so you're starting to learn that
Guest:It took me a while to be like, I remember like year after year and every year I did the thing.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:I was, I booked a pilot.
Guest:I did a movie.
Guest:I did a bunch of guest spots.
Guest:Right.
Guest:You know, and I did some cool, some really cool shit.
Guest:I got to play Judd Hirsch's son on Dear John for a few episodes.
Guest:I think every, Ben Savage, me and you.
Guest:Every Jew.
Guest:Every Jew.
Guest:who's an actor of any kind will eventually play Judd Hirsch's son.
Guest:Judd Hirsch's son.
Guest:Well, that was when, and that was when, I remember when I was like, this is like the perfect, well, all the casting on your show was perfect.
Guest:Oh, thanks.
Guest:I mean, like, it was just like, I was like, really?
Guest:I was like, it's Toby.
Guest:I was like, that's crazy.
Guest:I was like, that's crazy.
Guest:I mean, Jesus, that was brilliant.
Guest:And then Judd, and I just like, I got to be a patient on Empty Nest.
Guest:I grew up watching Richard Mulligan.
Guest:I knew Richard Mulligan from SOB.
Guest:I watched Blake Edwards movies when I was a kid.
Guest:I was like, this is, you know, I'm not going to that bullshit funeral.
Guest:Like I just, you know, I was like, I got to be a patient on empty.
Guest:So it was really cool.
Guest:And then my, you know, here's, here's the, the way it ends is that I did a show.
Guest:It was right.
Guest:It was right.
Guest:It was on the Warner brothers.
Guest:It was a pilot, but they called it a presentation, which meant that we had fought, you know, fewer days and less money to do a pilot.
Guest:Um, and so it's called odd man out.
Guest:And, um, John Decker and Ed Strauss wrote it.
Guest:And we, uh,
Guest:there was a, fuck, I'm not going to name names.
Guest:There was a, there was a mom on that show and of one of the other kids.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And, uh,
Guest:My mother, I remember being in the car with her driving home from the Warner Brothers lot to we lived in Westwood.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And I was doing, we lived in Westwood during the Rodney King riots too.
Guest:That was wild.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And my mother was livid.
Guest:Like I could see like her white knuckles on the, and she was, she was, she had quit smoking.
Guest:So she had a styrofoam cigarette that she would like, you know, just to get the oral fixation, you know, going, get the emotion going.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And so she was like, I can't believe this lady.
Guest:I can't believe... And I'm like, what happened?
Guest:And, you know, she said to... They were just chatting the stage moms.
Guest:Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Guest:I hate that I'm calling her a stage mom.
Guest:But she was like, you know, every year before we leave Miami for L.A.
Guest:for the pilot season, Billy's father and I sit him down and go, do you want to keep doing this?
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:Are you sure you want to keep doing this?
Guest:Yeah, yeah.
Guest:Please, God.
Guest:And he says, yes.
Guest:And, you know, like... And then we do it.
Guest:And so...
Guest:This woman says to my mother about her daughter.
Guest:She says, oh, well, she knows that if she doesn't work, we don't eat.
Guest:And she was dead serious.
Guest:And this girl had been in diaper commercials.
Guest:So this was a girl who had been put to work since she was a baby.
Guest:And my mother was appalled.
Guest:And I was kind of like, you know what?
Guest:I think I'm...
Guest:I think I'm good.
Guest:I think I'm done with this.
Guest:And so also on that show, by the way, was Hillary Swank.
Guest:She played his sister in that show.
Guest:I always played like the Jewish Urkel.
Guest:I'd be like I'd be either the little brother or the best friend who would like, you know, come in from next door or kind of a thing of the lead.
Guest:So that was back when being a Jew was an ethnic type.
Guest:There was a well, there was a place for us.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And other than controlling the weather.
Marc:which is all we really do now.
Marc:I'm surprised I have time for this.
Marc:I've got to get on the computer.
Guest:George Soros, ZWB, the Zionist Weather Bureau over there, triangulating the space lasers on the west coast of Florida.
Guest:Anyway, I...
Guest:I retired basically.
Guest:I was like 14 or 15.
Guest:And then I remember my manager was like, well, the next year was like, well, go on tape.
Guest:We'll fax sides.
Guest:Right.
Guest:Nobody knows what that will fax sides.
Guest:Sure.
Guest:So I was like, okay, we'll do it.
Guest:So we did a backyard video and they fucking flew me out to play the little brother.
Guest:Again, like not a really essential role.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:In a Fox pilot called Reality Check.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And so...
Guest:It was wild.
Guest:I come in, do the last audition, and they go, okay, you got the part.
Guest:That's never happened to me before.
Guest:Go in the waiting room.
Guest:They say, you got the part.
Guest:We got to go down the hall.
Guest:The cast is waiting to do the first read-through.
Guest:And I'm thinking, this is the least important role in this show.
Guest:So I walk down the hall.
Guest:I walk in.
Guest:Hilary Swank is there.
Guest:And I'm like, Hillary, what are you doing here?
Guest:She's like, what are you doing here?
Guest:I'm in this show.
Guest:I'm in this show.
Guest:That's wild.
Guest:So my last two pilots co-starred Hillary Swank.
Guest:Giovanni Ribisi was in that show.
Guest:Oh, my.
Guest:The younger sister.
Guest:She's like one of the highest paid actresses in television now from Big Bang Theory was on that show.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:In that pilot.
Guest:The blonde?
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:From The Flight of Town.
Guest:I like her.
Marc:What's her name?
Guest:It's crazy.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:Don't spoil this for everybody, but the EPs, the creators and showrunners on that were named David Crane and Martha Kaufman.
Guest:And so what happened was is that we do this show.
Guest:It was this pilot.
Guest:It was not a good pilot.
Guest:And I left high school.
Guest:I was now enrolled in a normal person's school, not like Valley professional, like some strip mall, like child actor.
Guest:I did like strip strip mall, child actor school.
Guest:Like I, I went to, I was going, I was, I call it a real school.
Guest:It was new world school of the arts, which was like based on the high school, uh, the performing arts.
Guest:And yeah, so Florida in Miami.
Guest:So it wasn't a normal high school, but I was enrolled.
Guest:I was going.
Guest:And so this was kind of disruptive.
Guest:And so, um, um,
Guest:Needless to say, the show that you've never heard of did not get picked up.
Guest:And so what happens from there, because David Crane and Martha Kaufman did two pilots that year.
Guest:They did reality check for Fox and they did something called the untitled Courtney Cox project for NBC at the same time.
Guest:And so reality check does not get picked up.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:I become the youngest filmmaker in Sundance history at the time.
Guest:Hillary wins, what, two, at least two Oscars.
Guest:David Crane and Martha Kaufman get their other show.
Guest:The NBC pilot did get picked up and it got a title.
Guest:And that was Friends.
Guest:And so to me, like that was the moment where I'm like, oh, like life isn't just about what happens.
Guest:It's like what doesn't.
Guest:happen and like that because that show gets picked up yeah because that's when i realized i was like mom what are we doing here i'm like the goal is to get on a pilot that gets picked up i'm stuck on some probably terrible show years for years i'm i'm a lot richer but i don't know that i'll be happy i don't know that i'll ever fucking work again and i'm like i just want to go and like do my own thing and and i realized like reality check gets picked up it might have ruined all of our lives of course that's
Guest:By the way, there was definitely people on that show who were like, the fact that that show didn't get picked up ruined my life.
Guest:It was the worst thing that ever happened to me.
Marc:What was that girl's name?
Marc:Christina something?
Marc:Who was the one from Big Bang Theory?
Marc:Why can't I remember her?
Marc:I don't know.
Marc:Mid-40.
Guest:Well, I never watched the show, you know.
Guest:I didn't either, to be fair.
Guest:She's got a really... Kaley Cuoco?
Guest:Yeah, that's it.
Guest:Good for you.
Guest:Oh, see, it's the- You did it.
Guest:It's coming.
Guest:You did it.
Guest:It's slow going.
Guest:Thank God.
Guest:Miami, we're all, I'm on Miami Standard Time.
Marc:I just want to say that was a no Google poll.
Guest:Yes.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:But so when, okay, so you go back- By the way, I don't do Google.
Guest:I refuse.
Guest:When I have a moment like that, I'm like, I'm not- Yeah, I sometimes refuse, but then I'm like, fuck it.
Marc:What is it?
What?
Marc:I imagine it's contributed to memory loss.
Marc:I would think it has to.
Marc:So you go back to Florida, you're out of the game and you finish high school.
Guest:I finish.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:Well, I start my sophomore year in high school.
Guest:I start my first production company with my producing partners.
Guest:One guy.
Guest:Same guys.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:That I work with today.
Guest:One guy I've known so long.
Guest:Our mothers used to bathe us together.
Guest:We were sophomores in high school.
Guest:It was weird.
Guest:No, I literally, I know him since we're five or six years old from preschool, David Sipkin.
Guest:And then my other partner, Alfred Spellman, I met in TV production class in ninth grade in middle school in Highland Oaks Middle.
Guest:That's crazy.
Guest:Our teacher.
Guest:handed us the keys to the studio she said i you you two have something you work together and you produce the morning news that's how that happened sophomore in high school you start a production company yes our first production company what was the goal the goal was to make movies the goal was to tell stories and have fun and to and to kind of be a director like ron howard right well who was giving you the money that was that was the problem mark
Guest:So so we production by name only.
Guest:No, we came up with this shtick where we were going to do educational videos by kids for kids.
Guest:OK, like write scripts about you had an angle at that moment.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:They had just introduced an AIDS education curriculum into the public schools, but all the teachers were petrified.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:They didn't know what to do or how to teach it.
Guest:So we said, let's write.
Guest:I wrote a script.
Marc:Well, you're lucky.
Marc:And now in Florida, it's against the law.
Guest:So you wouldn't be able to teach it at all.
Guest:No.
Guest:Well, but but but fortunately now kids aren't having sex anymore.
Guest:Teenagers are not having sex.
Guest:They're not abstinence.
Guest:That solved the whole problem.
Guest:Finally worked.
Guest:Yeah, it finally took.
Marc:Yeah.
Guest:And so so we're on our way.
Guest:So do you make these videos?
Guest:Yeah, we did.
Guest:We made three of them.
Guest:And you got paid.
Guest:And we we didn't get paid.
Guest:We got money to make them.
Guest:They were like community service.
Guest:We didn't we didn't get paid like a grant.
Guest:Exactly.
Guest:They were grants.
Guest:That's exactly right.
Guest:And they were in kind people from the community donated equipment and stuff like that.
Guest:And so that's how we started.
Marc:Right.
Marc:And so you go to college, though?
Guest:Yeah, I went to the University of Miami.
Guest:And you're still doing the production company?
Marc:I'm a functioning literate.
Guest:Yeah, that's correct.
Guest:What did you study?
Guest:I studied political science, film writing, screenwriting.
Guest:So you widened your talents?
Guest:I guaranteed I'd be unemployable.
Marc:That's correct.
Marc:Yeah, no, but you're already in show business, so you knew at least when you went into college what you wanted to learn.
Marc:I mean, political science and film writing, that seems reasonable for a guy who knows what he wants to do.
Marc:You weren't just sort of like partying and I don't know what I want to do.
Guest:No, I was not a partier, but I was really interested in kind of a pre-law curriculum.
Guest:That's what poli-sci was for.
Guest:And then also with screenwriting is that I tell people like the best –
Guest:acting class I ever took was screenwriting.
Guest:The best directing class I ever took was screenwriting.
Guest:The best editing class I ever took was screenwriting.
Guest:The best cinema on and on.
Guest:As soon as you understand that craft and those rules, you are ready to break them and you're ready to have at it.
Guest:So are you making films in college?
Guest:Yeah, we did.
Guest:In fact, we took a leave of absence to work on a feature and then I took a second leave of absence.
Guest:A fictional feature?
Guest:Yeah, a scripted thing.
Guest:It didn't take.
Guest:And then there was something...
Guest:it was the dawn of the digital era.
Guest:We had gotten DSL in the apartment.
Guest:I'll never forget where we went from dial up to DSL.
Guest:A big day.
Guest:Big.
Guest:And like with Napster, I'm like, we could get a song in 90 minutes.
Guest:We can download a whole song.
Guest:Amazing.
Guest:This is, this is earth shattering.
Guest:Like this is, this is going to change everything.
Guest:And it was like fucking amazing.
Guest:And so, but the writing was on the wall.
Guest:Like I remember Alfred saying like,
Guest:Listen, the way this fucked the post office, you know, the way it's kind of fucked the, the written word, you know, and the news and business and like this business and this is going to, cause this technology is only going to get better and faster.
Guest:It is going to fuck the recorded music industry.
Guest:And eventually our, what we want to do will not be so far behind.
Marc:Right.
Guest:So let's kind of stay low overhead.
Guest:Let's stay agile and flexible.
Guest:And the digital video was just happening.
Marc:Remember like, but also like, it's going to fuck the, the, uh,
Marc:the, the paradigm that existed, but ultimately it helped you.
Guest:It was a democratization because first there was, there was like this democratization of production where digital video made shit smaller, cheaper, more accessible from a production standpoint, but then film, which was incredibly onerous and expensive.
Guest:And, um, and clearly what was going to happen is there would eventually be a democratization of, of distribution.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And that was the internet.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:via the internet.
Guest:And we were like, okay, let's stay sort of on the cutting edge of this.
Guest:And Alfred was like, let's do, we had just tried to do a film on fucking 16 millimeter.
Guest:And he's like, let's do something on digital video.
Guest:I mean, the guys out of Orlando, the Hacks and Films guys, did Blair Witch Project on a camcorder.
Guest:And it became this, yeah, we weren't looking to do that.
Guest:Because I remember seeing shit that was shot.
Guest:You know, Mike Figgis did super eight or eight millimeter.
Guest:He did like super eight.
Guest:He did like this.
Guest:This video thing, there was, what was it like, there was a thing at Sundance with us that was like a parody of a reality show.
Guest:But it was, everything that was shot on video, like Blair Witch, it incorporated the concept of video into the, it was inherent in the concept.
Guest:And everybody knew what that looked like.
Marc:Right.
Guest:And that's because, and even if you're a lay person, you're not a film person, you know the difference between watching a video and watching filming.
Marc:But they were using it as a tool.
Marc:Like they wanted it to look part of the story.
Guest:And so I said, Alfred, I'm like, maybe we should do nonfiction.
Guest:Like audiences are accustomed to seeing docs and news in video.
Guest:Why don't we make a documentary?
Guest:We had never made a documentary before.
Guest:Never took a documentary class.
Guest:I love documentaries.
Guest:I watch them.
Guest:I read about them.
Guest:And but we're like, OK, let's.
Guest:do that then.
Guest:And so it became this perfect storm of Alfred talking about the technology.
Guest:Me saying, well, I think the best use of it is this way.
Guest:And then we started hearing about this story coming out of Gainesville, your favorite place, Gainesville, Florida, the University of Florida.
Guest:And
Guest:The story was there was an exotic dancer who claimed that she had been raped at the Delta Chi fraternity house in the spring of 99 and that the entire night's events had been caught on videotape.
Guest:And that videotape had been released publicly as part of a case of filing a false police report against the woman.
Guest:These very kind of like open what we call sunshine laws, these public records laws.
Guest:So she did not get protected by rape shield laws because they claimed that she was raped.
Guest:the offender in this matter.
Guest:And what happened was I spoke to a couple guys from the shtetl.
Guest:I say that because a lot of people go to our flagship universities, FSU and University of Florida.
Guest:So two guys I grew up with, I say that we come from very similar backgrounds, educations, neighborhoods, socioeconomic status.
Guest:And one of them said,
Guest:hey, did you hear about this video?
Guest:They were calling it the rape tape in Gainesville.
Guest:And I'm like, and as people would get it through the public records on VHS, people would have like keggers to watch the thing like Rocky Horror style at their house or fraternity house, whatever.
Guest:It's pretty grotesque.
Guest:And one guy says to me,
Guest:Hey, do you see the video?
Guest:Like, it's disgusting.
Guest:I haven't been able to sleep.
Guest:It's haunting what these guys do.
Guest:This woman is terrible.
Guest:And then I spoke to another dude that I knew, that we all knew, who was like, this woman's a liar.
Guest:She tried to ruin these guys' life.
Guest:And I was like, how did these two guys watch the same...
Guest:interesting yeah that we expect to tell some objective truth about a crime yeah and they have completely different views about what they witnessed whether it was consensual sex act yeah and so that's when i was like well maybe we should this should be that first doc on video that right and one year later we were at the sundance film festival from the moment of like getting the idea in january of 2000 with rod deal a question of consent yeah
Guest:And it got a lot of heat.
Guest:Got a lot of heat.
Guest:It was on the front page of the New York Post.
Marc:Did it have any ripple effect legally?
Marc:You know, did she get justice?
Guest:Not really.
Guest:Well, I mean, people watch the doc and just like you're watching the video and disagree because we put it together like a court case.
Guest:And that's still how we put our docs together.
Guest:It's like we might be making a case, but the audience is the jury.
Guest:So it's like, here's the evidence.
Guest:Here's the testimony.
Guest:And you decide that.
Marc:That's like old school journalistic doc making in a way.
Guest:In a way.
Guest:Yeah.
Marc:I mean, you're not inserting yourself and your personality on screen.
Marc:You're not walking around doing a shtick.
Marc:Are you generally?
Marc:No.
Guest:In that one, I had to chase a state attorney around the block.
Guest:That's the only time you see me on camera because he wouldn't give us an interview.
Guest:But you don't make it about you, which is another form of doc.
Guest:I won't even like unless it's.
Guest:completely essential to understand an exchange or, or it's a laugh.
Guest:I was like, it's funnier.
Guest:If you hear me, my, my interplay with the subject, I don't even like putting my voice like from off camera in the doc, if I can avoid it.
Guest:Right.
Guest:So I, nobody wants to hear from me.
Marc:They want to, you know, the thing that's compelling to you is those docs where, you know, you are, you know, you've been given these sides and,
Marc:And then you faxed.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:And and you kind of you feel you decide even the new one is it's sort of like that.
Marc:And it's all left.
Marc:I mean, you know, you've got to you've got to weigh this guy's morality and then his contrition and then, you know, his his act of defiance.
Marc:But you still got this guy.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:And you either trust or you don't.
Guest:You believe you don't.
Guest:You can question his sincerity.
Guest:I'm cool with all of that.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:Well, there's no reason to trust him.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:From the get-go.
Guest:There's less than no reason.
Marc:You know, like, but by presenting Lev Parnas from both sides and how he was treated in the media and then, you know, what he decided to do and everything else.
Marc:Well, I mean, but, like, before we get to that, I mean, you did, you know, you've done, like, 20 fucking dots.
Marc:Well, this was the decision.
Marc:Is that true?
Marc:I don't know.
Marc:I just asked my partners the other day.
Marc:I'm like, what did we...
Marc:We did that one about the Peter Gation.
Marc:I love that.
Marc:That's it.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:It's an interesting guy.
Marc:Kind of a dark story.
Marc:But the cocaine cowboy thing that got you a lot of heat.
Marc:Yeah.
Guest:I mean, that was our first like people think it's our first doc, but it was the one we did right after because raw deal.
Guest:Everybody was like, hey, now you've been anointed the bells of the Sundance ball.
Guest:New York Post actually wrote that about.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:They're like, were you going to go move to New York or L.A.?
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And as obvious as it was to people that we would move to New York or L.A., it was just as obvious to us that we would go home to Miami because we didn't want to be three more schmucks peddling our wares in New York or L.A.
Marc:Yeah.
Guest:Why not be where it's all happening?
Guest:We wanted to be the Miami guy.
Guest:Like so people would know we'd have a calling card, which is why we made Cocaine Cowboys, because Raw Deal wasn't necessarily it was a Florida true crime calling card, but it wasn't the Miami calling card.
Guest:Right.
Guest:It wasn't about it wasn't a Florida story.
Guest:Right.
Guest:Right.
Guest:It wasn't where like city was character and people were going to be like, oh, those are the Miami storytellers in nonfiction.
Guest:But, you know, my favorite saying is that like L.A.
Guest:is where you go when you want to be somebody.
Guest:New York is where you go when you are somebody.
Guest:And Miami is where you go when you want to be somebody else.
Guest:Right.
Guest:It's all, you know.
Marc:I used to say it's for people at the end of their lives or at the end of their ropes.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:Right.
Marc:Yes.
Marc:Yes.
Marc:I don't know if it's still that anymore.
Guest:It's it's well, it's still a sunny place for shady people.
Guest:It always will be.
Guest:And it's still that place of like transformation of second chances.
Guest:It's not like in New England.
Guest:It's like, what's your name?
Guest:Who's your daddy?
Guest:There's legacy.
Guest:There's history.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:Miami is like one of the youngest cities in America.
Guest:And we are like America's perpetual belligerent teenager.
Guest:It's like the new shit, the new.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:Everybody's a Gatsby.
Guest:Everyone's nouveau riche.
Marc:But there's like a tremendous influx of Latino culture, too, that like is kind of defines it, doesn't it?
Marc:From everywhere.
Guest:Like now, like pandemic forward, like the influx accelerated.
Guest:All of the worst trends of Florida accelerated in a really violent way.
Guest:Like everything about, you know, the Miami of today is the America of tomorrow.
Guest:Just the the the the unaffordability, the crumbling infrastructure, the the toxic population.
Guest:Politics.
Guest:Rising tides.
Guest:Rising tides.
Guest:And like all of it, like Miami has every 21st century problem.
Guest:All of that.
Guest:And we're doing nothing to confront it.
Marc:I remember being at my mother's years ago, eight years ago, nine years ago.
Marc:And we were staying on the beach, me and an ex-girlfriend of mine.
Marc:And the water had risen into the fucking road, like into the one.
Marc:Like on a sunny day.
Marc:Well, no, it was at night.
Marc:The tide came up and I'm like, what the fuck is happening?
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:Did something break?
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:The world, the planet is broken.
Guest:It's very biblical.
Guest:It's very biblical down there.
Guest:We're constantly reminded of our, you know, it's funny because, like, you know, the legend is that Ponce de Leon discovered Florida on a search for the Fountain of Youth.
Guest:And, like, I'm constantly, we're constantly reminded of our mortality in Florida.
Guest:It's just.
Guest:It's crazy, man.
Guest:It's amazing.
Marc:But yeah, you did a lot of you did a lot of the sports stocks, dogfight.
Marc:No, I mean, cocaine cowboys.
Marc:But but like you've done you know what you're doing now.
Marc:And I imagine you have access to money from a few sources when you want to do something.
Guest:Well, there was a while like we've survived multiple iterations of this industry.
Guest:It started as indie film.
Guest:It was great indie film.
Guest:You know, doctors, dentists, friends with money who believe in you, not necessarily the project and want to see you succeed.
Guest:What's their ceiling usually?
Guest:Like 50 grand?
Guest:I mean, not barely.
Guest:Like you'd get five here, 25 here.
Guest:You know, like you just put it together.
Guest:And then you do the film festivals where there was like a tiny gaggle of gatekeepers of the so-called...
Guest:documentary distributors of which there was precious few at that in the Raw Deal and Cocaine Cowboys days.
Guest:And nobody got Cocaine Cowboys.
Guest:Nobody wanted to make it.
Guest:We could get meetings with everyone after Raw Deal after Sundance and we pitched Cocaine Cowboys to all the quote buyers at the time.
Guest:Nobody wanted to make it.
Guest:Nobody got it.
Guest:Nobody was interested.
Guest:Like, didn't we see this in like Miami Vice and Scarface?
Guest:We're like, well, first of all, no, you've never seen this in nonfiction, number one.
Guest:And number two, how many Italian mafia stories are you going to tell over and over and over again?
Guest:Elliot Ness and Al Capone, like, we're going to do this.
Guest:And nobody, dude, nobody, nobody wanted to make it.
Guest:So we had to scrape together for Cocaine Cowboys.
Guest:And then suddenly it was like a real it was this idea that like because we're still pitching in New York or L.A., which were like vacuums of creativity in the quote unquote industry.
Guest:Like how else to explain in our lifetimes, you know, two Truman Capote movies at the same time, two Volcano movies at the same time, two Asteroid Hurley, two Robin Hood.
Guest:But like every time they're, oh, hey.
Guest:Hey, someone just greenlit a volcano.
Guest:Don't we have a volcano script somewhere?
Guest:Let's dust that off.
Guest:And then like, let's make dueling volcanoes.
Guest:It's like, does anybody care?
Guest:Like volcanoes are hot.
Guest:It's like, just who, who cares about.
Guest:We've got to compete with the other volcano.
Guest:We're like, well, we think that this is like coming around like the 20 year nostalgia cycle of like Miami in the eighties.
Guest:Like we thought like this was the perfect time.
Guest:Grand Theft Auto Vice City was the biggest selling video game at that time of all time.
Guest:Scarface just had like its 20th anniversary.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And I think on DVD it outsold like Jurassic Park and E.T.
Guest:combined.
Guest:Well, they had a whole second life Scarface.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And as this hip hop legendary.
Marc:Well, that's what made the movie.
Marc:I just talked to Pacino.
Marc:I mean, when that movie came out, the critics were like, what is this garbage?
Marc:Yeah.
Guest:I thought it was a masterpiece because it's practically a documentary.
Guest:I mean, Oliver Stone, Oliver Stone did his research.
Guest:I will tell you he did his he did his he did his research in Miami when he wrote that script.
Guest:And it's it's it is a composite of like everything that was really happening in Miami at the time, even though it's considered this sort of like absurdist or operatic.
Guest:It was fucking spot on, dude.
Guest:And so we wanted to tell those those true stories and nobody really was down.
Guest:Well, so how has the business evolved in terms of getting things made?
Guest:Well, there was a time when, like I said, there's pure indie film.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And then there was a time when we were doing commissions.
Guest:That's how like 30 for 30, like ESPNs came.
Marc:Oh, that's right.
Marc:I talked to that guy who did that great OJ one.
Marc:Oh.
Guest:Ezra.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:The best fucking masterpiece.
Guest:Like that was like, I call it the first documentary to become an EGOT.
Guest:I don't know how it won the Tony, but it just won deservedly.
Guest:So every award under the sun, it was just, that to me was the, I call that the last 30 for 30.
Guest:That's like the mic drop.
Guest:How do you do, how do you keep doing anything?
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:Um, but we just like, uh, we wanted to do, we wanted to keep doing this pop doc thing because cooking cowboys.
Guest:Our take was, uh,
Guest:um that this isn't a documentary because like documentary had that stigma of like the teacher rolling in the film projector and you're like oh right yeah yeah and but we wanted to make like we wanted to make a gangster movie right we were like how would quentin tarantino or martin scorsese make a documentary like let's do that you know um a lot of gray a lot of colorful characters of of dubious at best morality and and you gotta go track him down talk to him track him went to prison and
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And found the people that we... Because that was the other thing, too.
Guest:Who does all that work?
Guest:We all do.
Guest:I mean, everybody's got to do their part.
Marc:You've got to take all the press on it and then break down who the prime players are and figure out how to put together the story in that way.
Guest:Dig into files, dig into depositions, and find out who... With the hitman, Ravi Ayala in Cooking Cowboys, he was in a unique position where in Miami-Dade County, he had a deal to confess to...
Guest:countless homicides in exchange for avoiding the death penalty.
Guest:So he could talk.
Guest:He couldn't talk about murders in New York or in Broward County, you know, another.
Guest:But he could talk chapter and verse about the homicides that he was aware of or participated in in Miami.
Guest:And it was dozens of them of men, women and children.
Guest:And so he was in a really unique position to to speak freely.
Guest:Good for you.
Guest:And I wanted to do first-person productions.
Guest:I didn't want to... For me, it was all about I and we, not they and she.
Guest:You can always find a lawyer or a cop or the next-door neighbor, someone who will talk about a person or an event.
Guest:But I wanted the people who did it.
Guest:Now, that calls into question memories, agendas, revisionist history.
Guest:But that, to me, is part of the fun and the challenge.
Guest:Like I said...
Guest:And then when you got a guy who won't shut up like Lev, then you can bring a lawyer in just to, you know, for a little color.
Guest:Dude, when when Rachel Maddow interviewed Lev, which is where we first discovered him as a character in January of 2020.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:Like he was there with his lawyer and Rachel thought like, well, I'm going to interview the lawyer basically.
Guest:And then Lev's going to chime in.
Guest:The lawyer said not three words the whole time.
Guest:And Lev was in jeopardy at that time.
Marc:Well, usually people go on with their lawyers just so the lawyer, if needed be, they can go like, no, no.
Marc:Right.
Marc:Shut up.
Marc:Shut the fuck up, dude.
Guest:Well, we – you know, Alfred always jokes that – or half jokes that in Florida when you get out of prison, your first call is to your mother and your second call is to us to make a documentary about you.
Guest:Lev was the rare case where we were making a documentary about a guy on his way.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:to federal prison.
Guest:Like our first interview with him, which is not in the doc.
Guest:It was like our, our development.
Marc:So you saw him on, on Rachel, but you don't get, you don't contact Rachel at that point.
Marc:Oh no, no.
Guest:We, so we have a, a running list, you know, like a Google doc of like, you know, we call our genre Florida fuckery.
Guest:So whenever Florida fuckery rears its head, which is,
Guest:Like there's always a Florida connection.
Guest:You know, I mean, 9-11, Watergate, OJ moved down, you know.
Guest:So like there's always that Florida connection.
Guest:And so things come on our radar and we're like, we're interested in that.
Guest:What's happening now, which is not great, is that documentaries are getting made too soon.
Guest:They're getting made too quick.
Guest:Like you need some perspective.
Marc:Oh yeah, because it's a Netflix thing.
Marc:They know they can pull eyes.
Marc:It's just, it's not good for preserving history.
Marc:Right, right, right.
Marc:It's good for for keep keep the sordid story going.
Guest:And whatever the agenda of the person you get access to without the perspective and without more people who may be willing to to offer that.
Guest:And so we so Lev was on our list in when he gets indicted in October of 2019.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:Well, no, no.
Guest:Southern District of New York.
Guest:But he was arrested on a plane at the airport in D.C.
Guest:His home in Florida got raided where his wife and his kids are.
Marc:Isn't there an indictment in Florida?
Marc:Wasn't the fraud indictment from Florida?
Guest:It was all out of the Southern District of New York.
Guest:Yeah, they took it over.
Guest:They took all Lev-related cases over.
Guest:But I call the Lev Parnas story is, it is Tom Clancy if Jack Ryan was played by Jackie Mason.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:That's like what this story, and it's one of our favorite Florida fuckery stories because it's about Florida men
Guest:Behaving badly with international implications, like the butterfly effect of just like a Florida man acting a fool.
Guest:And suddenly the course of history is.
Marc:So for people who don't really have a perspective, you know, he and Igor were kind of Igor.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:We're brought in as these Ukrainian emissaries.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:For the Trump administration through Rudy Giuliani to try to pressure Zelensky to open up a probe into Hunter Biden, ultimately, which led to the impeachable crime of Trump withholding aid to Ukraine unless Zelensky played ball with his Hunter Biden investigation.
Marc:It's so stupid.
Marc:But that's really what it ends up at.
Guest:And in fact, Lev and Igor attempted to shake down not just Zelensky, but his predecessor, Poroshenko.
Guest:So it was two successive Ukrainian presidents.
Guest:But that was their job.
Guest:That was their job.
Guest:Dig up dirt on Joe Biden and Hunter Biden and get the Ukrainians to announce an investigation into Hunter Biden.
Guest:and Joe Biden and alleged bribery and or money laundering through this corrupt energy company, Burisma, that Hunter Biden had what they called a no-show job on the board, a paid gig on the board.
Guest:But they couldn't even manufacture evidence.
Guest:They couldn't do.
Guest:These guys, so it was, it reminded me of, remember when George W. Bush nominated Harriet Myers to the Supreme Court, like that very short-lived, he's like, I need a lady.
Guest:Where's the nearest lady lawyer to my office?
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:Oh, her.
Guest:Make it her.
Guest:This is what Rudy's like.
Guest:Oh, I know some Ukrainians.
Guest:We have some Ukrainians.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And like and they're like they'll do anything.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:These guys.
Guest:And so he recruits them to be like like into espionage and into like a shadow diplomacy operation.
Marc:And these guys are probably the least quiet guys that you could recruit.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:They're hustlers.
Marc:They're con men.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:Well, I think that's what's great about the doc is you really kind of establish, you know, Lev's history of, you know, just being, you know, this hustling, grifting and, you know, like a organized crime adjacent or full in guy.
Marc:But he's like got this demeanor where, you know, like he's not one of these guys.
Marc:He's not like a made guy.
Marc:He's a guy that's going to like survive on his charm and facilitate things for whoever.
Marc:And then hopefully before it gets too ugly, get out without getting killed and with some sort of favor owed.
Guest:And he's not a political guy.
Guest:He wasn't even registered to vote in 2016 when he was supporting and helping to donate money.
Marc:But I like the whole original story that he comes over from Ukraine.
Marc:He ends up, you know, young and he got into some trouble in Ukraine with some heavies.
Marc:He ends up in Coney Island with the rest.
Marc:It's Jewish, right?
Marc:Brighton Beach.
Marc:Yes.
Marc:Seems very Jewish.
Marc:Very Jewish.
Marc:So he was part of that, you know, that Russian kind of purge of Jews, I guess, in a way.
Marc:I don't know how it worked in the Ukraine.
Marc:Because it was Soviet Ukraine at the time.
Marc:Right.
Marc:Right.
Marc:Absolutely.
Marc:A lot of anti-Semitism.
Marc:Right.
Marc:Well, there was a time where they're like, okay, you can get out now.
Marc:Yes.
Marc:And like thousands.
Marc:And you better get out.
Guest:Right.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And that's how his future's third wife and fourth baby mama Svetlana.
Guest:That's how she got out.
Guest:She seems very pleasant.
Guest:She is.
Guest:I mean, to me, she's the star of the movie.
Guest:I remember meeting her and I was like, well, I decided she was going to be in the movie about a year and a half or two before she decided she was going to be in the movie.
Guest:Because I was like, you know, like she helps Lev make sense a little bit more in a way.
Guest:And I feel like it's a bit of she loves the guy and he knows he's kind of half a clown.
Guest:Absolutely.
Guest:I mean, she's the one who says, like, OK, if this were a Hillary Clinton administration or Barack Obama administration or Joe Biden administration or even a George W. Bush administration, Lev Parnas doesn't get within 500 miles of the president of the United States, let alone be one of his plumbers like Nixon.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:You know, like like a Watergate burglar, you know, for for Giuliani in Ukraine.
Guest:Like, you know, and that's really what it was.
Guest:Giuliani was like the Howard Hunt in this metaphor here of like and the and Levin Igor were Trump's plumbers is exactly what they were.
Guest:And Svetlana is like, this guy's not qualified to do anything.
Guest:What the hell is he running around the country on behalf of the president for thinking is going to get a medal?
Guest:And she is the one who's trying to talk reason into him the whole time.
Guest:But he's slipping.
Guest:He's just slipping away.
Guest:And so this is a little bit away into Trump brains.
Guest:He refers to it as in a word he made up but doesn't know he made up.
Guest:He was cultinized is what he refers to.
Marc:I think what that really explores, though, in terms of what that cult means, I don't think people, you know, it's easy to say they got brainwashed or whatever.
Marc:But when you have proximity to the most powerful person on the fucking planet, I mean, it's very seductive.
Guest:Intoxicating.
Guest:He admits that.
Guest:And he admits that his initial motivations were purely financial.
Guest:He was looking.
Marc:But also, like, the funny thing about him is, like, you know, while you're talking to him post everything, like, as, you know, Lev now, you know, he still refers to, you know, without thinking to deep state is a real thing.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:Oh, yeah.
Guest:Because I wanted to understand his state of mind at the time.
Guest:And he was a true believer in all of this bullshit.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:Like a true believer.
Guest:And so and she, you know, and Svetlana watched him go from like, OK, deep state.
Guest:This is a hustle.
Guest:He's trying to like buy influence in the Republican Party, which I mean, in a in a in a legendary and historic way, put up a for sale sign like just in front of.
Guest:Sure, because he had his own money laundering operations and fronts to to make money.
Guest:Very hard at work doing in the laundry business.
Guest:Yeah, absolutely.
Guest:And he was occurring.
Guest:And so she thought Lev's just on the hustle and then comes to realize like, no, no, he's like way in over.
Marc:He doesn't even know how he doesn't even understand.
Marc:He doesn't know.
Marc:That's the thing about Trump in particular is like anybody who gets, you know, intoxicated and seduced by the power.
Marc:It's like, look at the look at what's what's come before you.
Marc:You're going to get thrown under the bus.
Marc:There's no way.
Guest:Yeah, there's a forest lawn, like, sized graveyard of, like, the people that he stepped on and used.
Guest:Yeah, loyalists.
Guest:Yeah, and fucking discarded, you know, absolutely.
Guest:And she, so I, and this is a little bit of a cheat, sort of how the, you know, how the sausage is made.
Guest:But, like, when I met her, I was like, okay.
Guest:And when we did the deal with MSNBC earlier this year, and I realized I was going to have, like, 89 minutes, you know, without commercials to tell the story.
Guest:I'm like, I need some shorthand here to make this work.
Marc:How did how did Rachel sign off on this?
Marc:Because that's a pretty that's an honor because she's like, you know, really one of the smartest journalists around.
Marc:And I, you know, I know her and it's like she's not you know, she to have her trust you with something like this.
Marc:That's a big deal.
Guest:Well, we had like I said, Lev was on our list, if you will, a Florida men list.
Guest:And in late 2019.
Guest:And it was January of 2020 when Rachel did the interview with him.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:Really against his own best interests.
Guest:He did that interview.
Guest:And he.
Guest:Was he trying to save his ass then?
Guest:Is that.
Guest:He was looking for redemption.
Guest:Right.
Guest:This was a guy without a country because he betrayed both of his countries.
Marc:Well, yeah.
Guest:It's like, you know.
Guest:He thought he was going to get killed.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And and he so this was a guy who was hated by the left for being a treason weasel.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And he was hated by the right because he did the worst thing in the world, which was turn on Trump.
Guest:That's the worst thing you can.
Marc:And that's where this the slander campaign came everywhere.
Marc:Like, you know, everyone saying they didn't know him.
Marc:Yeah.
Guest:He was an SP.
Marc:He was a suppressive person.
Marc:He was excommunicated.
Marc:But it's hilarious.
Marc:So like he's like on his phone, he's got a thousand pictures of him and everything.
Marc:And Trump's like, yeah, I might take a picture with him.
Marc:Every he had documented everything.
Marc:That stuff, that recording that I guess Igor did of Trump putting like a political hit out on the ambassador.
Marc:What was her name?
Marc:Maria Ivanovich.
Guest:You have to remember that.
Guest:That recording, I believe, documents the first time that Trump had ever heard about that woman.
Guest:Well, who that woman like he didn't know Marie Yovanovitch.
Guest:He didn't even know Ukraine had oil.
Guest:And what do you say?
Guest:She's out like get her.
Guest:This is this is the.
Guest:This is the reality show foreign policy of a reality show president.
Guest:It was literally the fucking boardroom at the end of The Apprentice.
Guest:He was like, get rid of her.
Guest:I want her out.
Guest:Get her out.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:It was it was mob shit.
Guest:It was it was TV shit.
Guest:It was just like it was make believe.
Guest:But but this was a professional.
Guest:So later, she's out.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And it took him that long because and this is this is the thing that that's, I think, so frightening about this moment.
Guest:You were saying earlier about how people think like.
Guest:Oh, we survived four years of this the first time.
Guest:It's just another presidency.
Guest:It's just another term.
Guest:Here's the thing.
Guest:Love him or hate him.
Guest:People like Jeff Sessions.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:Mike Pompeo.
Guest:Rex Tillerson.
Guest:You know, John Bolton.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:Believe it or not, there were adults or even maybe statesmen in that administration.
Guest:Right.
Guest:People, deep state people that they would call the deep state, but people who respected norms and I don't know, allies and NATO and things that kept peace in the world for, you know, for more than half a century.
Guest:And so there were people there were guardrails in place.
Guest:Those people.
Guest:are gone and lev says you know now he says like he goes who who's who's gonna be the attorney general now alina haba who's gonna be the nsa director uh cash patel yeah who's gonna be like who like who's gonna be this like what are we like who are the people that are gonna like steve bannon's gonna be the cia direct like what like like these are the president's men
Marc:But that's how autocracy works.
Marc:I mean, that's how like a dictatorship forms itself.
Marc:I mean, once you get rid of the norms and people are dumb enough not to know what they are.
Marc:But I think that's exactly how these guys want to do business.
Marc:You know, the way that Trump wants to run it and all these fascists, they just want, you know, like I'll call Putin.
Marc:Don't we don't need no.
Marc:Don't make any news about it.
Guest:I'll use diplomacy.
Guest:Yeah.
Marc:Right.
Marc:Because it's just this this voice network of autocrats that can, you know, operate at the behest of themselves, frighten the people or get them brain fucked.
Marc:And then just, you know, through their own self-interest, you know, run the global financial system.
Guest:I think there's some people who are in a cult.
Guest:I think there's some people who are too, you know, in Florida, obviously, there's a very large elderly population who find themselves the victims of con men.
Guest:And a lot of them are too prideful to complain or to report it because they don't want to admit that they've been had.
Guest:So I think there's some people in that position with Trump, too, because if they admit now that this whole thing has been a fraud or a lie, they're the fools who got duped.
Marc:But they're still hedging their bets for the next administration.
Marc:They don't need to admit anything.
Marc:I mean, some of them are doing that.
Marc:Probably, you know, preemptively, if he wins again, who are like, now's the time to finally go fuck Trump.
Marc:You know, but they're going to come groveling if he wins again.
Guest:Yeah.
Marc:But we don't have to go there.
Marc:So, Lev... No, we may have to.
Guest:We may have to go there in a month.
Marc:Let's enjoy the month.
Marc:All right.
Marc:So...
Marc:But like this 11 has come to Jesus moments and his contrition.
Marc:And, you know, but I think that in this documentary, I think you put it together, you know, through his personality, through the way that the Trump operation was structured, you know, through Giuliani doing this stuff.
Marc:And but then you mean our next attorney general?
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:Rudolph.
Marc:He Trump cut him loose a long time ago.
Marc:He just never, never goes away.
Marc:He never goes away.
Marc:But but there were some interesting things about about Giuliani in a brief moment in the doc.
Marc:You talk about how like he was the mob prosecutor.
Marc:He was getting rid of the mob in New York.
Marc:And now he's it turns out that he it was envy.
Marc:He loves a fucking mob and he wanted nothing more than to be part of it.
Marc:And he got his mob with with Trump.
Marc:But I think the way you sort of laid out the real crime against the country and the real reason why the impeachment made sense and should have stuck harder and the scariness of the fact that, you know, people don't really realize just how fucking awful a thing that he did by denying an ally aid to serve his, you know, political prospects in the future.
Marc:I mean, that's a big deal.
Marc:And I think people need to be reminded and needs to be explained to them.
Marc:There's one guy on the news says this is worse than Watergate.
Marc:And he kind of is.
Guest:I think the just the fire hose of fuckery that we in the shit we ate for four years and have really for the subsequent four years as well.
Guest:Since that administration left has just been so overwhelming that we memory hold scandals that would have otherwise sunk in.
Guest:any other political career campaign.
Guest:And they were catastrophic and arguably, I know the word gets thrown around a lot in context of Trump, but treasonous.
Guest:And in the case of Ukraine, you had a situation where Russia was going to roll over this country.
Guest:They had been occupying them since 2014.
Guest:And even though we just think of the war kind of heating up more recently, they've been there since 2014.
Guest:And
Guest:Trump just saying, you know, it would be a shame if something happened to your nice little country over there.
Guest:I know you need some help.
Guest:And Congress had already approved hundreds of millions of dollars in aid and weaponry and things.
Guest:And he's like, do us a little faith.
Guest:Sure.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:It's a little for the perfect phone call, as he called it.
Guest:And he only stepped in.
Guest:as mob bosses do when their underlings fuck up the job.
Guest:When he's like, I told you to go and take care of the thing, and now you fucked it up, and now I gotta fucking make the call.
Guest:That's what that call was, and it sent alarm bells all around the intelligence community.
Guest:Anybody who was on the call or who read the breakdown of the transcript of the call, people were like, we have a serious fucking problem.
Guest:And like and and and that problem is going to obviously metastasize.
Guest:I mean, you know, whenever Putin wants to leave Ukraine, the war's over.
Guest:He can just leave Ukraine.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:But like, that's not what he you know, that's not what he's holding out for.
Marc:Well, no, Trump had won, you know, in the second term, he would have let Putin take it.
Marc:Oh, yes.
Marc:He's a real estate guy, Mark.
Marc:It's a real estate deal.
Marc:It's a real estate deal.
Marc:But I like how you keep it on Lev.
Marc:You know, you move through all this stuff.
Marc:But then Lev, you know, has a come to Jesus moment.
Marc:He unfucks his brain.
Marc:Does he, though?
Marc:Well, that's a good question.
Marc:But after, because like those kind of guys, you know, they can turn on the waterworks.
Marc:They can cry a little bit.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:People forget that con is short for confidence.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:But there is like these moments where, you know, he all of a sudden becomes very kind of like,
Marc:you know, pro-democracy, you know, feels bad.
Marc:But ultimately, the human part of it is the thing he seems to feel the worst about is putting Hunter Biden into a position that he didn't deserve.
Guest:Starting the whole avalanche onto this, you know, this hopeless drug addict who... You know, the only thing I knew about Hunter Biden was from right-wing memes and from this show.
Guest:Because, like, it was the first time...
Guest:when I was like, where he felt like not this enigma or this boogeyman, but he humanized him.
Guest:And it was a, and it was a conversation that, that like, that I was like, oh, he's just a guy with a problem.
Marc:And like, we all are guys with problems.
Marc:The thing that people like that, my interview with him was to show like, you don't think this kid was a problem for his father.
Marc:The idea that he, his father would say like, yeah, go, go make some deals for me.
Marc:This out of control crackhead who was like, you know, just like he's gone.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:You know, like, you know, and that's never discussed.
Marc:And, you know, Joe won't discuss it.
Marc:And, you know, Hunter would discuss it.
Marc:But that guy had to have been a fucking nightmare for Joe Biden.
Guest:Nightmare.
Guest:So I talk about this with permission, but my brother is 17 years sober next month.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And so...
Guest:We've been through it.
Guest:My family has been.
Guest:Sure.
Guest:You know, the life savings to put him into rehab only to relapse and the whole.
Guest:We've been through the whole cycle.
Guest:And again, and then repeat.
Marc:Well, yeah, there's a point where you're like, well, we've done everything we could.
Marc:And now it's just like, you know, there's nothing we can do.
Marc:Dead or in prison.
Guest:But now my brother's a dad.
Guest:He's got two kids and a house.
Guest:Dude, it's a miracle.
Guest:It's beautiful.
Guest:It's a miracle.
Guest:And so I think anybody who's been through that, I think a lot of people have.
Guest:Of course.
Guest:Recognize in Joe Biden, like, well, probably the enabler.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:Certainly the empathy.
Guest:Right.
Guest:Like that relationship.
Guest:You want to help your kid?
Guest:That relationship really speaks to me.
Guest:And so it was kind of all these things.
Guest:But Lev was stuck in...
Guest:the right-wing meme machine of the boogeymanification of Hunter Biden.
Guest:And Lev.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:Eventually.
Guest:Eventually.
Guest:But, like, Lev was... Well, he got that machine rolling, and that's why he feels... He seemed to feel... Lev was like...
Guest:I said, Lev, you tried to destroy this guy's life.
Guest:And Lev said to me, I did.
Guest:I think I was successful.
Guest:He takes responsibility for the legal problems that Hunter Biden has to this day.
Guest:He's like, we got that.
Guest:We put the spotlight on this guy, he goes, who I thought of as a mark.
Guest:As a target.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:He said and didn't think of him as a son, a father, a brother.
Guest:Drug addict.
Guest:A husband.
Guest:Never thought of him as any.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:He thought of him as this degenerate crackhead who we're going to use to guarantee.
Guest:Hang his dad.
Guest:We are going to conspire or attempt to.
Guest:to collude with a foreign power in an effort to meddle in the 2020 United States presidential election.
Marc:And we're going to do it through this fucked up kid of a presidential candidate.
Guest:Who was not a presidential candidate yet, but Donald Trump was...
Guest:petrified of joe biden entering the 2020 race yeah and so he's like we have to stop that we have to head that off at the past that's what rudy giuliani was charged with and he they were going to do it by exploiting hunter biden's addiction yeah and really exploiting joe biden's love for this boy yeah i think as well like it was it was a pretty grotesque uh and and insidious plot
Marc:Well, what's interesting is like and I there's actually a spoiler to this thing if you haven't seen it.
Marc:So I don't want to please.
Marc:I don't want to.
Marc:It's fine.
Marc:I think that I think the cat's out of the bag.
Marc:It's all right.
Marc:It's pretty.
Marc:Oh, yeah.
Marc:Well, I mean, he ends up the big the big moment of the doc is that, you know, it's a it's a face to face with Hunter with a sort of a seemingly heartfelt apology.
Marc:MSNBC put it in the trailer.
Guest:It reminded me a lot of... They were using Hunter again.
Guest:He's being used again.
Guest:Do you remember the movie Ransom?
Guest:Yeah, with Mel Gibson.
Guest:With that Jew lover, Mel Gibson.
Guest:Yeah, so Mel Gibson, the big twist there was he turns the ransom around, and he's like, this isn't a ransom for my kid.
Guest:I'm putting it on your head.
Guest:He does that on TV, right?
Guest:And so that twist is in the trailer, and I'll never forget Brian Grazer, who I love, the producer.
Guest:They asked him, like, dude, why did you give away...
Guest:the big twist of the movie in the trailer.
Guest:And he goes, butts in seats.
Guest:Yeah, yeah.
Guest:Butts in seats.
Guest:So whatever, Mark, just tell him.
Guest:Now you have to see it.
Marc:But it's actually, it's really an addendum.
Marc:It's a postscript, totally.
Marc:You know, you can't, I mean, the thing could exist without it.
Marc:It did, in fact.
Guest:motherfucker up until July of this year.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:A month and a half before delivery.
Marc:You didn't need it.
Marc:You just, it was the final sort of piece to humanize the, the, the, the Jewish guy.
Guest:We had, you know, so we had been involved in this for like two and a half years.
Guest:Years by the time we brought it to Rachel because the doc market was shit, particularly the doc.
Guest:So you had a doc and you presented it to her.
Guest:We started working on this in three years ago in the summer of 21 because I reached out to Lev earlier that year.
Guest:We finally got him to sit down ahead of his trial and then after his conviction, but prior to sentencing.
Guest:And we got the first interviews in the can.
Guest:to develop this thing.
Guest:And not only did the dock market go to shit with the strike, not with the strike, or just happened to be at the same time, the conventional wisdom of the water balloon effect of scripted getting squeezed and nonfiction, unscripted blowing up, did not happen.
Guest:Everything just, the industry said, the studios were like, hey, you know what we could do?
Guest:We could just reboot this whole fucking operation and figure this out while we don't have to spend money and we don't have to work.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:Great opportunity to keep people unemployed.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:And it's worked.
Guest:It's stuck.
Guest:It took.
Guest:Sure.
Guest:And so the and particularly the political dock market was dead.
Guest:Nobody wanted to get involved in the 2024 cycle.
Guest:They were like, let's just steer clear.
Guest:So with the apprentice movie, like everybody just wanted to steer clear of Trump content and
Marc:And so that's because, like, you know, like and I say this a lot that like, you know, these these corporations like Netflix, this tech company, you know, they want to exist in a Trump presidency.
Marc:They don't give a fuck.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:They're not, you know.
Guest:Let me give you the we were talking about red flags of fascism just to keep it positive for, you know, for Yom Kippur for the new year.
Guest:The.
Guest:In Florida, the end of Florida will not be when the flood comes.
Guest:It will be when the insurance companies abandon Florida, when you can't get a 30-year mortgage because the banks are like, this is not a going concern.
Guest:And the insurance companies are like, we're not going to insure you because we're not going to go bankrupt on this godforsaken place that Mother Nature clearly wants to reclaim the wetlands from.
Guest:So that's going to be the death knell when it's only for people who can afford to build, rebuild, and self-insure.
Guest:And then it's over.
Guest:Yeah, it's kind of similar here with, you know, democracy and free speech.
Guest:We had a lot of trouble getting, you know, insurance for this doc, which is an essential deliverable for any doc.
Guest:You can't.
Guest:What is it?
Guest:You know, it's errors and emissions.
Guest:It's just the insurance policy in case you get sued.
Guest:If you get sued, it covers, you know, you know, there's deductibles, of course, but it it covers per incident, you know, or yada, yada, yada.
Guest:Every doc, it is like number one deliverable.
Guest:You can't hand them a doc until you get the policy bound, right?
Guest:And you get a price and you have to agree on there's going to be a premium and then there's going to be a deductible and everything.
Guest:And we couldn't get covered because Trump.
Guest:and trump world are so litigious in no small part because he's playing with donors money he's not even playing he can he can sue by the way he doesn't prevail he doesn't prevail in any of these cases he might even have to pay fees and anti-slap he doesn't care he doesn't give a shit it's not his money keep it in court yeah so but that to me was scary because it's like well if
Guest:if documentarians and journalists can't get covered, can't get insurance, then we can't do this.
Guest:We can't publish this anymore.
Guest:And that to me, just like Florida and the, it's like the insurance companies are really the death net.
Guest:That's the red flag.
Guest:That's the canary in the coal mine.
Guest:When the insurance companies take off, it's, it's, it's, it's the end.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:It's every, every man and woman for themselves and only the rich will prevail with protection.
Guest:Magatov.
Marc:Yeah.
Yeah.
Marc:That's funny.
Marc:It's not.
Marc:But so did you get that coverage through MSNBC?
Guest:We ultimately did, but it was a much higher premium and much higher deductible.
Guest:But the network didn't take the hit?
Guest:Well, hopefully, knock wood, there's no hit.
Guest:No, but I mean, but did they put the money forward?
Guest:It's in the budget.
Guest:It's budgeted for, but it's just like the struggle to even obtain it.
Guest:And then the price at which we ultimately did is a it's a red flag, dude.
Marc:And I hear you.
Marc:It's good information to know.
Marc:Scary, but it's good.
Marc:But so when Rachel got involved, you showed her a full cut.
Marc:No.
Marc:We showed her a sizzle and a deck.
Marc:We did not have a full cut.
Guest:And how much how much power did she have in the making of it?
Guest:So, well, she has a busy year like this.
Guest:This is this is this.
Guest:This cycle has been busy for her.
Guest:So she was as involved as she wanted to be.
Guest:She watched cuts.
Guest:She gave notes.
Guest:I would say she was she was our partner in journalism and she was our bodyguard.
Guest:Not that there was a lot of issues.
Guest:We had a really good experience.
Guest:But when you come in for the first, you know, we've done four or five projects with ESPN, a bunch with Netflix.
Guest:We've done five with Magnolia, with Mark Cuban's company.
Guest:And so we have a lot of experience working with some people.
Guest:And this was the first time we were ever working with MSNBC Films.
Guest:So we didn't know what to expect.
Guest:With a news operation.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And we didn't know what to, a legacy news operation at that.
Guest:So we didn't know how it was going to go.
Guest:It went very well.
Guest:But if all else failed, Rachel was our bodyguard.
Guest:there was a kindred spirit uh we had kindred spirits there like because her sense of humor comes through i think her you know sure with with her journalism and that's what we so she was like oh it's a comedy it's called from russia with lev he's like oh this is how this needs to she was like down for the cause and we sat shoulder to shoulder in a conference room at 30 rock across from her bosses pitching this this movie together in like january uh
Guest:Ish of this year.
Guest:And then it was like, let's do it.
Guest:And I didn't even have Svetlana's interview in the can because she hadn't even agreed to do an interview yet.
Guest:And then I was like, well, we're doing this with Rachel.
Guest:And Rachel was a big deal in their household because she was considered public enemy number one because Trump hated her.
Guest:And so Lev banned MSNBC in their house.
Guest:They could only watch on all the TVs was Fox News.
Guest:And so when he had an op, when he said, I'm going to go public and tell my story for the first time to a one on one interview.
Guest:He had an offer from Anderson Cooper and he had an offer from Rachel and he called.
Guest:He said he was in no headspace to make a decision.
Guest:He called Svetlana's wife and she goes, this isn't a decision.
Guest:She goes, you have to do it with Rachel because like you made our lives a living hell over this MSNBC ban.
Guest:And so and that's why I said to Svetlana.
Guest:And when I realized we were only going to have 89 minutes to do this movie on MSNBC with you, I was like, OK.
Guest:I need to, this is like a, that's why I said like, like screenwriting was my best class in editing or directing or anything.
Guest:I said, I need a shorthand here.
Guest:So I'm going to start the movie.
Guest:You spoiled the end.
Guest:I'll spoil the beginning.
Guest:I need a shorthand here where I think Lev Parnas is not going to be in this documentary for like the first three-ish minutes.
Guest:And we're just going to hear about their meet cute with Svetlana because she is smart and funny and beautiful.
Guest:And people are going to think when they meet this guy, well,
Guest:Whether I see it or not, there must be something to this guy because this woman sees something in him or loves something about him.
Guest:So it's almost a shorthand for like, okay, let's at least hear him out.
Guest:And you can decide later whether you believe him or not or trust him or love him or hate him.
Guest:But at least I need you on board for the start of the thing.
Marc:So she was really the shorthand for that as a character.
Marc:Yeah.
Marc:Well, it's a great piece of work, buddy.
Marc:And I think what we learn is that after all is said and done, Lev Parnas survives.
Marc:He is a survivor.
Marc:Aren't we all?
Guest:He moves on to the next thing.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And the next thing, as Hunter Biden says, and the next, you know, one day at a time.
Guest:How is Lev?
Guest:Do you text him?
Guest:He texts me and we, you know, he has a book.
Guest:And so like shadow diplomacy.
Guest:And so he's he's hawking the book.
Guest:And, you know, he's out there, I think, trying to make make things right.
Guest:And his relationship with Hunter Biden is, to me, fascinating.
Guest:They should do like a show together.
Guest:Well, they'll tour together.
Guest:I think that would be I would I'd watch that.
Marc:They'll do they'll do like, you know, several states, you know, multi state tour.
Guest:You know, when when when I woke up that morning in L.A.
Guest:and Hunter Biden had texted me, I never spoke to him before.
Guest:And he's like, please call me.
Guest:I thought, oh, well.
Guest:Like, this is going to be canceled.
Guest:I'm sitting here in a hotel room and it's going to be canceled.
Guest:I never thought it was going to happen because they committed to doing it.
Guest:And then Hunter got convicted.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And then his dad had the debate.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:Like June 27th.
Guest:Sure.
Guest:And I'm like, okay, history is intervening here.
Guest:This meeting is never going to happen.
Guest:You know, because Lev's like, oh, I want to meet this guy and apologize to him.
Guest:I'm like, sure, Lev, whatever you say.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:And Hunter Biden, we talked that morning, Sunday morning, July 7th.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:we just started talking about like logistics and then we started talking about addiction.
Marc:Yeah.
Guest:And I was like, this is a really interesting and complicated guy.
Guest:He was the guy from your podcast.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:I listened to three years ago.
Guest:And so I'm like, and, and I, my understanding with him was, cause I'm like, why the fuck is this guy?
Guest:Cause he's in jeopardy too.
Guest:He got convicted.
Guest:He's got, he had the tax case still coming up at that point.
Guest:Yeah.
Guest:He was convicted on the gun case.
Guest:Tax case was upcoming.
Guest:He hadn't.
Guest:It's ironic that he gets convicted for what?
Guest:One gun.
Guest:For something that nobody else has ever been really convicted for standalone.
Guest:It's just it's the two tier justice system is not always what people think.
Guest:It doesn't always work in the lopsided way.
Guest:People think that it that it did.
Guest:I learned that from Ben Brofman on the on the limelight project.
Guest:But but the.
Guest:The way Hunter kind of expressed it to me, and the best I can... I'm paraphrasing, but he should speak for himself.
Guest:But he just was like, I have had to go to my family and friends and loved ones and ask forgiveness for the worst things that I did or put them through.
Guest:And he's like, who am I to...
Guest:deprive this guy of his opportunity to make amends like he was he wasn't just working a program he was trying to live it and I thought I was just like I was like this is this is a really interesting guy because I didn't know I said he's like what do I do like when I see him do I'm like dude
Guest:Shake his hand, hug him, punch him in the face.
Guest:Like, I have no idea what you want to do to this guy.
Guest:I'm like, I want to fucking kill him.
Guest:Have the Secret Service pounce on him and tear him apart.
Guest:I don't know.
Guest:Like, you know, do you, you know?
Guest:And it was like just the empathy.
Guest:And honestly, it's his dad.
Guest:He not only looks like his dad, but like he, you can see there's like lessons there from father to son that are like really profound and really powerful.
Guest:It's a good scene.
Guest:Thank you.
Guest:Good job.
Guest:Nice talking to you.
Guest:Great talking to you.
Guest:Thank you for having me.
Guest:All right, buddy.
Marc:There you go.
Marc:Billy Corbin.
Marc:You can watch From Russia with Lev at docplus.com or on the free Documentary Plus app.
Marc:Hang out for a minute, will you folks?
Marc:Hey, gang, there's more of me and Tom Sharpling posted for Full Marin listeners.
Marc:We just put up the Mark and Tom show number two this week, which is another talk between me and Tom that we recorded back in 2012.
Guest:So you're going through this and they have all the different outfits he wore on stage.
Guest:And then you see...
Guest:This TV and it has this plaque on it.
Guest:It says for Elvis Presley from RCA for 50 million units sold.
Guest:So RCA, this corporation, this guy sells 50 million records.
Guest:Imagine that.
Guest:Probably at that time it was still more than $150 million.
Marc:Yeah.
Guest:So what do they send over as a thank you?
Guest:They send over a TV that they make.
Guest:Like an RCA TV.
Guest:There you go, buddy.
Guest:That's show business right there.
Guest:Even if you become Elvis...
Guest:you kind of like, they'll just be like, eh, what do we got laying around here?
Guest:Call Joe up in sales.
Marc:What's the hottest TV we got on the line right now?
Guest:It's TV that cost them $37.
Marc:And I think a sadder thing is that he was so proud of it as an award, he didn't even stick it in the wall to make a fourth TV.
Guest:It wasn't even that good a television.
Guest:No, this was like the commemorative television for 50 million records sold.
Guest:What a horrendous thing.
Marc:To get bonus episodes twice a week and every episode of WTF ad free, sign up for the full Marin.
Marc:Just go to the link in the episode description or go to WTF pod.com and click on WTF plus.
Marc:And a reminder before we go, this podcast is hosted by a cast.
Marc:I'll get back to not looping stuff, but I'm still playing with the looper.
Marc:And I know my leads are, you know, simple, but yeah, I enjoy it.
Thank you.
guitar solo
Guest:guitar solo
Marc:Boomer lives.
Marc:Monkey and LaFonda.
Marc:Cat angels everywhere.