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Green Room Interview: SNL Writer Mike O’Brien

July 29th, 2011 by Ben Collins Assistant Editor

This really shouldn’t be surprising—coming from a guy who came up with a sketch that has the line “Come have sex with the Iron Sheik” in it—but Mike O’Brien’s new talk show is brilliant.

Mike O’Brien’s new talk show is so brilliant, in fact, it makes you really want to know who the hell Mike O’Brien is.

So here you go: He’s a writer for Saturday Night Live. He writes the relentlessly funny “Kickspit Underground Rock Festival” sketches, along with all of the standard topical fare. And he’s also now the host of “Seven Minutes in Heaven” on Hulu, where he stands far too close to celebrities before trying to make out with them.

The concept sounds funny. It’s even funnier than that.

That’s why we tracked down O’Brien to talk about what it was like trying to neck with Elijah Wood, how to spend an SNL summer break, and why Patricia Clarkson has forced him to become a shut-in.

Hulu: I’ve got to say, I was really dreading watching this show to begin with because I thought I was getting ready to watch a new show from the CW. I was pretty excited to discover this show was actually really funny.

Mike O’Brien: Oh, that’s interesting. I never really thought of that. I can see that now, that you’d think this is the sequel to “7th Heaven” or something.

I guess I’ll start with the most pressing question: How did you ever get (future guest) Hoda Kotb to drink on camera?

It was really, really tricky. I don’t know how we did it. It’s funny—everyone that’s come in has been real loose with the drinking, which is weird because we shoot from noon until about 4 p.m. We’ve done four of them. We always do a few in a row then go and crash or something.

I think at first we thought it would be almost all SNL-related people: Jason Sudeikis, Kristen Wiig, Amy Poehler. I don’t think we anticipated that it would be that many people I’ve never met—at least not that soon.

Wait, so you didn’t know these people beforehand? How was this presented? “Here, celebrity: You’re going to go into a closet with a guy you don’t know and be silly with him for a few minutes?”

Basically, yes.

Considering the circumstances, isn’t it kind of a miracle you got people booked for the show?

I’m 100 percent with that. It’s a little bit of a mystery to me. They probably paint it like, “It’s fun and quirky and it’ll go on the Internet. It’ll take you 20 minutes or so. It’ll be fun.”

So, basically, you bribe them with booze.

Yep, booze—and then we just pour on a lot of thank-yous. The original idea was to do a couple of them and put ‘em up with Sudeikis and then have other people look at it and see if they wanted to do it. But we got some people who I never thought would be willing to do it in those first seven. We’ve been real lucky.

Have you considered next steps after this? Did you ever think, “Hey, if they’re up for being in a closet with a stranger for an extended period of time, we should call this something really dangerous and see if people still come on.”

Maybe it should have gotten more and more dangerous. “It’s water filled with snakes! Snakewater! Only on the CW.”

So how did you come up with the idea to base this on a teenage make-out game?

Well, Rob Klein is another writer on the show. He was looking to direct more. He had five to ten ideas of shorts. The thought behind this one was purely that it was an interview show, but (we wanted) to make it real easy. It comes from the fun dynamic of having the (SNL) hosts throughout the week. You form a bond. There’s always that weird moment (on SNL) where we end up talking to them with their shirt off (between sketches). We were trying to capture that. So we decided to use that junior high game Seven Minutes in Heaven to play off that awkwardness. One or two other ones—the more recent ones—they’re more like a narrative.

What do you think was the best episode so far?

I’ll give three people a nod. Kristen Wiig’s episode is great for straight-up laughs. She’s great at acting like a character almost on queue. Andy Cohen is great for seeing someone as themselves in an uncomfortable small closet. If you’re looking for something hot—like a sexy, hot video—I’d go with Patricia Clarkson. She’s just such a…

It sounds like you’re having a hard time even saying that name.

I stammer just thinking about the name ‘Patricia Clarkson’ now. I can’t even go near things that rhyme with Patricia Clarkson anymore.

You can’t even food shop anymore because of Patricia Clarkson.

Yeah, so many different products rhyme with ‘Patricia Clarkson.” It’s almost impossible to go anywhere.

Did you have any ambition to host a talk show growing up? You seem to have a natural ability to keep this thing moving, even though you’re surrounded by clothes.

I never consciously thought of that. I was a big fan of Conan and Letterman growing up. There’s such a skill to it, to interviewing, and I don’t think I’m there yet. We’re able to edit them, though. So I’m able to get away with it. If you watch Letterman, he’s able to (carry on conversation) almost innately.

Maybe the best moments on television right now are when Letterman has somebody on his show that he clearly hates. Like, say, Paris Hilton. You wait and wait for him to get a jab in on this person. It’s almost as much fun watching him restraining himself.

Yeah, he’ll do a little undercut and then, right away, he’ll take it to commercial. Sometimes (the guest) never even notices.

The way (Letterman) keeps it moving no matter what—there’s a lot of that in this show.

I’m glad that’s coming across. The construct is that there’s no cameramen in the closet, not even in earshot. They’re just in a booth down the hall. It may be the odd circumstance that makes people warm up to me immediately. It’s kind of a fight-or-flight type moment. They have to be overly nice to this guy they don’t know. They just shake my hand and they’re offered a drink. Then they stand on this tape marker on the floor that’s less than a foot from each others’ faces, which is closer to someone than you’d ever be naturally, even in that closet. There’s a tiny bit more elbow room in that closet that we don’t use.

They’ve all immediately been so friendly. But they probably walk out of there and go, “Wow, I really need to fire my publicist.”

Yeah, all of these people open right up. I was a little shocked when you said you didn’t really know some of these people before you did the show.

Well, these people have done so many interviews in their life. They enjoy their new twist on it, hopefully. Kristen and Elijah Wood, for example, are coming off a full-time job of promoting things for the last month—Elijah to promote “Wilfred,” Kristen for “Bridesmaids.” One goal, for me, was to try to not overlap with questions they’d usually get.

So where do you see this going? What’s the goal for this? A several-hour “Seven Minutes in Heaven” telethon?

Yes. A two-hour episode that’s commercial free is the goal.

We’re kind of taking it one step at a time. We’ll get these up to see the reaction. If it goes well, we’ll try to do another round before the SNL season starts. Rob and I will either move on to the next project, or if there’s some demand, we’ll do another round.

So what’s an SNL summer like? Are you stashing sketches? Or did you just fall into a stupor?

It’s a decent amount of stupor. It’s all either beach volleyball or crying alone in your apartment. I personally will jot down the ideas from the summer. But it’s just as important giving your brain a break like this. It says a lot that we’re not sick of each other when we finish 22 weeks of intense show work. Working at the show is so much fun that you forget how stressful it gets at times.

How many years have you been with the show?

I’m beginning my third year of writing. I’ve done two seasons after being with Second City in Chicago.

Are you still in the honeymoon period?

Yeah, the terror honeymoon is over, at least. It’s initially a horror movie honeymoon. I’m still worried about messing up and doing something wrong, though. A job like this never works if you’re ever cocky.

You write the Kickspit Underground Rock Festival sketches, right? I think that’s one of the most consistently funny recurring sketches on SNL. How did that come about? It seems like you’re just walking down the street, seeing two things, then combining them for maximum effect.

Yeah, I wrote it with Colin Jost when we saw the real thing on TV one night—the 14-minute-long Gathering of the Juggaloes infomercial. So Colin and I decided we were going to write a parody. We came back at 3 a.m. I sat at the keyboard and he would doze in and out of sleep. Every once in a while he’d say something. “Hot dog explosion. Cast of Growing Pains.” Then he’d go back to sleep. Then it would be both of us staring for a while. “Fart Monsters. Return of the Fart Monsters. Mrs. Potato Dick.” And that’s the first one where I really couldn’t stop laughing. So, yeah, it’s just mentally walking down the street, like you were saying, but with music and rap and TV.

So how would you recommend “Seven Minutes in Heaven” to someone who just watched the Kickspit Undergound Rock Festival sketch?

I would say that they need to first let go of the Underground Festival. I don’t know that you’d be loving “Seven Minutes in Heaven” if you expect it to be exactly like that. I would say that if you like your interview shows awkward and sexy—like most of my relationships—then you’ll probably learn to like this.

The Green Room: Friday Five

July 29th, 2011 by Rebecca Harper Editor

That’s right, it’s time for another Friday Five here on the Hulu Blog.

1) We Can’t Bear to Spell This One Out

As Stephen Colbert warned, “what you are about to see, you cannot un-see.”

2) 7 Minutes in Heaven

Between “SNL” and “Bridesmaids,” we’re well-aware that Kristen Wiig is a master of awkward comedy. But what would happen if you stuck her in an awkward place, like maybe a cramped closet with someone else? That’s what “SNL” writer Mike O’Brien does in this clip, part of his new series of shorts. Call it a summer project if you will, but make sure you stick around for the kicker.

3) “Tucker & Dale vs. Evil”

As our Digital Video Publisher Martin Moakler put it this morning, “it’s a good ‘Shawn of the Dead’-level twist of the genre.” I just called it awesome. He’s so much better at cinematic references.

4) Whites

We asked one of our Associate Campaign Managers, Jeff Hoke, what he’s been watching on Hulu this week. His pick: “Whites,” which is streaming exclusively on Hulu. (New episodes are posted each Wednesday.) Jeff’s a fan of cooking shows like “Hell’s Kitchen,” and this comedy from the U.K. captures that frenetic atmosphere. And it’s funny, too.

Want to learn more? Here’s our interview with the show’s creator, Matt King.

5) “So You Think You Can Dance:” Sasha and Twitch

This isn’t the performance that brought Lady Gaga to tears this week (this one is from last week’s episode), but Christopher Scott’s bluesy hip-hop choreography for contestant Sasha and her All-Star partner, Twitch, was remarkable. I downloaded “Misty Blue” as soon as the dance was over.

Hulu’s soundtrack this week brought to us by Turntable.

The Hilarious State of the Union at Hulu

July 28th, 2011 by Damon van Deusen Video Production

I grew up watching “The Tracey Ullman Show.” I laughed at the comedy sketches, the outrageous characters, and the early glimpses of animated bits that would later lead to the creation of “The Simpsons.” But back then, I was still too young to truly “get” Tracey’s humor. Well, I’m all grown up now, and as I’ve been watching “Tracey Ullman’s State of the Union“—which debuts exclusively on Hulu.com and the Hulu Plus subscription service today—boy, am I amazed at how much of her comedy I missed as a kid.

Tracey Ullman is a groundbreaking satirist. It takes some living to appreciate humor this smart.

Last week, I flew out to New York (accompanied by Yoshie, Hulu’s video editor extraordinaire, and Andrea, our research guru), to meet up with Tracey and talk to her about the launch of “Tracey Ullman’s State of the Union” on Hulu. New York was hot as hell and we had no sleep on the red-eye over, but Tracey was nothing but cool. She was a tall glass of sparkling water that refreshed us all. Having seen her in so many hairy, funky, crazy costumes over the years, I didn’t realize just how beautiful she was in person. She was an amazing, down-to-earth, quick-witted, talented lady with enough tricks up her sleeve to keep the crew laughing all morning.

While doing a series of impressions, she decided to assign members of the crew’s faces with centuries. I got the “20th century” label: a Steve McQueen crossed with a Denis Leary look (I took this as a cross between a compliment and an insult). But the best was our gaffer, Matt, who bent over to plug in a light and Tracey pegged him as a 15th century Caravaggio—a monkey on his shoulder reaching for a skull. Thank you, Tracey, for providing me with the perfect nickname for Matt for years to come. Amazing.

We talked politics, entertainment, technology, parenting, and reality TV. She drank espresso. We laughed our heads off. Here’s a snapshot of how it all went down.

Today you can watch all 19 episodes of “State of the Union” exclusively on Hulu.com and Hulu Plus. So grab a friend and watch Tracey do her thing. Laugh until you cry. She is brilliantly funny. And she has America pegged.

Last comment: about 8 hours ago 1 Comment

‘So You Think You Can Dance:’ The Top 10 Meet the All-Stars

July 27th, 2011 by Rebecca Harper Editor

Just when we were starting to get really attached to the couples on this eighth season of “So You Think You Can Dance,” the show threw us for a loop by splitting up the seemingly unbeatable duo of Marko and Melody. But it wasn’t all sad news: “SYTYCD” paired up the Top 10 dancers with some of our favorite All-Stars from seasons past, including Pasha, Twitch, and Comfort. Perhaps even better, the show treated us to two nights with Neil Patrick Harris (no stranger to Broadway, he’s also a fan of the show). Even though we eventually had to say goodbye to Mitchell and Clarice, several acts soared last week. Here’s a look back at some of our faves.

Sasha
In what was one of the week’s most highly praised dances, Sasha teamed up with All-Star Twitch (Season 4) for a hip-hop routine styled by Christopher Scott (a dancer himself on “The LXD” web series). But this wasn’t your traditional pop-and-lock number. The choreographer opted for some soul, instead, and it worked. Lead judge Nigel Lythgoe was left speechless at first, and noted that this was the first time he’d really seen chemistry between Sasha and her partner. We’d have to agree!

Marko
All season long, Marko and Melanie have been the two dancers to watch. Now that we’ve reached the top 10, though, we had to ask how well this charismatic duo would do once they were split up. We got to find out last Wednesday, though, when Marko paired up with “SYTYCD” all-star turned “Dancing With the Stars” pro Chelsie Hightower (Season 4) for a samba full of scissor kicks, fancy footwork, and of course, Latin rhythm. Rehearsals left Marko banged up and bruised, but he persevered and came out strong, leaving Chelsie breathless at the end of their routine. Neil Patrick Harris singled him out as the guy to beat this season, while his fellow judges were equally enthusiastic.

Melanie
Call it the night of Pasha, if you will: he paired up first with Caitlynn for the Argentinean tango, then returned to the stage for a sexy-sweet Viennese waltz with judges’ favorite Melanie. It was so fluid and natural, she looked like she’d been waltzing for years. The end result was a romantic confection that made us want seconds.

Tell us: which routine was your favorite this week?

Faking It … Errands, That Is

July 21st, 2011 by Jessica Kim Founder and CEO, BabbaCo

“Oh, I’ll watch the kids, if you’re in a bind …” Those words sometimes elicit a reaction similar to a kid hearing the music of an ice cream truck. Your eyes widen and you start thinking of all the things you can do with 30 minutes — 30 minutes! — to yourself. It’s hilarious that we can suddenly have a life/death errand to run when a friend offers to watch the kids. OK, maybe a life/death errand is being a little dramatic. However, I absolutely take that chance to do something and I admit that I may, on occasion, make my errand out to be a bigger deal than it is.

For Ellie on “Cougar Town,” it was the “allergy shot.” Without hesitation, she blurted out how helpful her friend could be because she needed to get her shot. (That’s a good one because it sounds medical and health-related.) She probably really just went to Starbucks with her hubby Andy or went shoe shopping. Does she even have allergies? That’s exactly my point.

For me, it’s the trip to UPS. “I’ve been meaning to pick up this big box, but it’s so hard to do it with the kids.” In reality though, I use that time to swing by the mall or the local DSW to check out a few things I’ve had my eye on.

As a mom, getting even 30 minutes to oneself can be really impossible. We love our kids and we love our time with them. But, if a friend offers to help out and watch them for a few, many of us would take that time and run. It’s almost a natural reaction. We actually believe that errand IS that crucial! It’s only after the fact when we realize it really wasn’t that important.

It’s okay to admit that sometimes we just need a helping hand and some time off. Have you done this before? What’s your go-to sudden “emergency” excuse? I’m sure there are some really creative ones out there, so please share! That way we’ll have some good ones in our back pocket the next time we hear the sweet tune of “Go ahead, I’ll watch the kids.”