tv News RT December 23, 2021 9:00pm-9:31pm EST
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grantee, we ended up with, for example, the national health service in the u. k. the and a chest was completely wiped out from a ransomware attack. if you were coming in to a clinic because you had a test or you had an operation, they can't find your records. they had to go back to pen and paper. with hey, you've heard about this cameo site right where people tape messages for people, birthday messages, phone messages, just to lowe's anniversaries. well, you know, who stands astride that world, who's the number one most requested guy, brian bombgardener from the office, and he put some time in to them and they're really sweet. and he also has a new book out now an oral history of the office. and it's right here for christmas . how many office fans do you have on your christmas list? brian bombgardener right after this san dennis millard plus one.
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hey folks. welcome to dennis miller plus one. happy to welcome brian bombgardener to the show course, best known as kevin malone on the critically acclaimed n b c comedy series. the office, which is a it's the classic hi. lo, it's the tigris and euphrates of droll and becomes completely inane. in the next breath, one of the funniest shows i've ever seen brian as a new book out called welcome to dunder, mifflin, the ultimate oral history of the office. reuniting the cast of the iconic show and sharing behind the scenes stories. it's currently available in bookstores and online. and this is our friend bryan bombgardener and hey bry. happy holiday is
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brother. happy holidays. dennis, how are you doing? i'm good man. and you know, as i see your backdrop here, i'm reminded that there, there's a whole different world of show business now. and some guys play it so well and are so in demand that you've got install something in the home that echoes back to like the mo, time studio. so the need goods than that because you're killing it on cameo. so congrats on the cool looking home studio brother. thank you. i can't unlike you, i can find somebody to, to, to pay rent for me somewhere else. so i just put it right here in my house. there you go, rather than they used to call that the, the, the rumpus room at home. now it's called the right off room because you get to, you get to measure that room and send it into your account and leave it on your property taxes. hey, now listen, welcome to the under missile and i can't wait to read it. the only thing that holds
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me right now, these oral histories are so great, the bowie one was unbelievable. and then there's a good one right now called take the gun, leave the canolli about the godfather oral history. and then there's a great one that i'm currently reading about the sopranos. as soon as i finish that, i'm jumping in a welcome to the under mifflin. but this seems to be sort of a dim song approach to writing depictions of a show that people like tidbits that they can read one of the time from different perspectives. it's a pretty cool approach isn't right? yeah, i mean look, yes and also for me dennis, i have to tell you like the reason this happened was because the office has just gone nuts. right? i mean, you know, the office was the number one scripted show on nbc for a large portion when it was on. but we weren't like, i say to people, we weren't like friends like we, we weren't, you know, in time square on billboards are on the cover of vogue every other week or whatever
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. but like, what's happened over the last couple of years with the show 1st it was anecdotal people, you know, talking sort of this research and walking through an airport or are going to dinner . and then when the numbers started coming out, that nielsen released about streaming 57100000000 minutes dreamed in 2020, like that number is a way bigger than i can even imagine. and so really this, this oral history truly was about me trying to discover why, like, what, how, what, what, how did we go from there to now, not filming anything in 8 years, and it being the most watch show and television. so for me, it truly what i'm not a reporter, but i was like, i wanted to try to uncover at least try to uncover some of the answers as to why people have, have gone so crazy for the show. the last few years. i would say highly binged bull,
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probably the most benjamin shell because it runs, it doesn't run hot nonstop. i tried to watch 2 episodes of the vikings one night back to back and i spawn tediously human combust that i can only watch so many people. this symbolic, my lad, the paler and everything harkins, everybody's whipping bows up. beholden. archer. i couldn't was, i could watch your 8 of these in a row and just get into it. and like, think of it as a day at the office when i used to have office jobs. it's well written, it's smart, the people kill me. i laugh lod, but it does run so hot, but it hurts my brain after 2 hours. yeah. you know, it's, it's weird something that greg daniels talked about who, who created to show that, that it was, it was not on purpose, right? because streaming, when we started, didn't exist. but there are, there are,
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there are a lot of story lines throughout the show to your point that are told in like 4 to 6 episode chunks. right, like interest alba comes on as the boss for like $4.00 to $6.00 episodes. you know, you know, john present sky or, you know, jim halpert leaves the office for like 4 to 6 episodes and so it can be, or what people have talked about is like, i can put it on. i can watch this little story and then you know, the next day, watch the next one or whatever, but it wasn't, wasn't on purpose. and also no laugh track, no audience track. i mean, you know, that being you begin to feel like a manipulative. when that happens, i can just watch this and go, that's great. that's right. i don't have to be coaxed into it by be up skinner or something. i don't, i'm trying to think when you, who i'm intrigued because i have a guest, nevada, who would be reticent and the low questions about this and who would be garrulous, but tell me who jumped on board. i had great stories, love the rec comp. you know,
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hear a true like i know this sounds like like a p r b s answer, but i think because 8 years had passed right. 7 to 8 years since we filmed anything . and because of this research and that i was talking about before, i was shocked at how incredibly generous people were with their time. i mean, steve caroll for example, was working on space for us at the time. and i was like trying to schedule him and he was very busy is a very busy man. he sat down with me for 3 and a half hours. yeah. and we talked and then left and i was like, oh i'll walk you to your car. we go to his car and we talk for another 30 minutes and i'm like, damn it. i wish i had my camera in my notes or whatever, but like people are, i think like me, genuinely curious about about what happened and going back kind of to the beginning
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and looking at decisions that were made that, you know, had that have made it where we are today, you know, i don't know, cornell, i've never met him. i'm a huge fan. but dana carvey worked with them way back when he, when he was in his embryonic state. and dana told me that he had so eager to please and such a pleasant cat with such great manners. he just speaks so highly of them. what a great guy to hell. michelle? it's funny when i watch career, all you forget how handsome he is and i always think of curls part on the shows like very debonair going listeners. complete clued clueless, but not in a goofy looking guy. sort of like a guy who would carry some says cache in an office. yeah. you know, jenna fisher actually, she had a really funny bet, which was that there is, there is an unspoken competition happening in hollywood who is the nicest guy. will ferrell or steve corral like they are both just so incredibly generous
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and really quite frankly, softspoken you know, the sort of the, the antithesis of, you know, say robin williams or whatever, who was sort of on all the time. always really funny. very soft spoken goes about his business, but when he's on, he's just, it doesn't get any funny or, well, i think carols moved into the the poll position there. since all i just read that will goes to that m a k. and the course of what conversation he just said, have a good life because mccayden call him to audition for a board and something. and i will, you don't get that i without having to steal the side. and he just in the course one phone conversation, we're talking to our friend brian bombgardener in the book is out. it's called and can you imagine if you who doesn't have an office fan and their family were in the sweet spot here, 2 weeks out. welcome to the under mifflin, the ultimate oral history of the off is get it for the holidays. so what would it silverman play? and i brothers,
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he just coming in with sharp elbow to me. i have met silverman over the years. i dig them, but he is the master of carving out turf. did he play any part? is it in a locket tour here to he just put his exec prod, brand on it? no, no, been, and i really served as partners. i mean, he, he's really the one who approached me about going through this, deciding how we wanted to tell the story. he felt like it was time and, and that's why for me, i was, this is such a cliche. but at the time when we started working on this, i had become a fan of true crime podcast. right. and so when i said to him was okay luck like we can go back and we can tell stories and there will be that like, will, will tell behind the scenes things that happen. but i was like, let's approach this book. let's approach this story like a true crime podcast, right? but it's not like who killed who, or where did is this missing person? it's really going in and trying to figure out what happened in terms of who was
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hired in terms of things you talked about before. no laugh track the moving camera . yes. you know what happened that is given this long journey and no silverman, very enter goal to, you know, i sat down and did the interviews specifically, but in terms of crafting the journey and for writing the book, he and i were total partners. why know daniel's when he was almost embryonic and comedy, he was sancho panza. conan over it. now it's a corner. you wouldn't say much because he's a well man. he was a sweet man. i always thought. and what he would talk occasionally you'd say something under his breath and burgess over the years building 1st got there i go. christ. that's for who is the guy he just drove he was a master of draw a car. but tell me, tell me about greg. he's a good guy, right. greg is, i mean, he's the best he truly is a genius and you know,
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he approach one of the things we talk a lot about in the book as you know, the 1st episode of the american office right was, was essentially the exact same as the british which people kind of filleted us for . but what he said was, look, i want to build a world, i want to create an environment and began creating characters. but specifically like really hot, you know, everybody who shoots a pilot and all feel shiny and new. and he's like, no, no, no, that guy, kevin malone has been sitting in the corner for 12 years. so we need to, we need to make it feel like he's been sitting in the corner for 12 years. and greg just had this sense. and just like he was dogmatic in his approach to, he would walk around like muttering like truth and beauty, truth and beauty, truth and beauty and would be like what he, why, what are you talking about? and he's like, everything has to be true. i like be funny, but everything has to be true. and through that,
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we're going to find little moments of, of beauty, either comedy, beauty, or, or realism, beauty, monday, inverse similitude is an absolutely full place for me to hang my hat, comedy wise, i, li, i could watch it all day. i mean the sinew and gary showed larry center, you know, there was the fireworks, you know, the day to day when they would nail the, the 9 to 5 of it. and i want everybody sitting on their rage, their joy, those little corners all match together. meg for a beautiful, a crossword for ira. dick saw a puzzle and the show the show was that i, i well i, i was biggest fan so there you go. right? got bombgardener is with us. i'm going to talk to him after the break about where he gets his upbringing and what leads him, tell a what leads him to the show. and also, my man is the he is the, the main guy over on cameo. you know that thing where people write in and there's
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a way to do it where you look pissy and i think they'll be off your sent in a day and has a way to do it, where you have fun with it and look like you want to do the best for the people and it's like an over driver getting all 5 stars eventually they're looking for you. and bry stands a top we cameo world like a latter day colossus approach. we'll pick apart that on the other side of the rake, brian bombgardener, dennis miller plus one ah, ah ah
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ah. what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have. it's crazy even foundation, let it be an arms race is on offense. very dramatic and development only personally and getting to disease. i don't see how that strategy will be successful, very critical time time to sit down and talk hey folks. welcome back to dennis miller plus one. we're joined by brian bob garden . you know course is kept malone on. the genius and b. c comedy series for the ages
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. now the office has a new book out called welcome to dunder, mifflin, the ultimate oral history of the office. reuniting the cast of the iconic show sharing behind the scenes stories currently available in bookstores and on lines. grab one for the holiday as well. the grab and was good. where we are born covers. what the, what and what got in your blood early to begin showbiz, atlanta, georgia. i came, i came from the deep south. i was an early for me, i was a sports guy early on and some, some things lead me to start doing theater to start participating and thinking it was just a hobby and went to northwestern university, northwestern university. had a program between junior and senior year of high school worked where sort of like intensive and i was like 6 weeks. i was like, i can go away and stay in
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a college dorm. before i graduated from high school, i am, i am in and really it was about fun and activity for me and. and i fell in love with it. there was like, oh there's, there's something deeper here. i mean, for me it was about being an actor. like it was about creating characters that was just what excited me. and so i ended up going to s m u there in dallas for college and studied theater and acting, and, and did theater for a number of years all around the country and eventually found my way to los angeles . i can't imagine how much fun it must be because northwestern. perfectly positive for your parents, stephen. say, yeah, go away. you're right up the road from chicago, one of the great old time towns, the only time that could rival the great varsity in atlanta for hot dog sales. you can go there, you can be there safe. and it must have been so exhilarating to, to be sure. were you able to go over and see any step and watch stuff on weekends
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or anything like that? yeah, i did. yes. and, and went to being a sports fan, went to old kamisky park. that was that color green. i never said it said maybe the dallas stars are close to green and white. they had the great brats, man, i love kamisky. yeah. it was, it was, it was awesome. and, and yeah, i went to steppenwolf and then a lot of the thing. i mean it huge vibrant theater. seeing that i ended up going back to years later when i graduated from college at some time there. but yeah, amazing. amazing city. i can imagine that. so getting in the blood there because you know, in between your junior year and your senior year in high school, the world's roister in your mind. yeah. it's only later in life, you find that some people are allergic to crustaceans, but at that moment the world is your oyster. you're right in the game. was the bit
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of beautiful, exciting. so amazing. and yeah, that's when i, i fell in love with that and decided that i was one of those kids early on. i knew what i wanted to do and, and, and everything from that point on was what was about becoming an actor. well, you ended up and as i said, for all time comedy, but the comedy is dry. it's not like, you know? yeah, yeah. in the world looks wonderful. but i'm wondering early on what is more drama or comedy and what comedians did you like? you know, it's a great, it's a great question that nobody ever asked me. i did much more drama early on in theater, and i think that actually we, we talk about this a little bit in the book that i think that part of greg daniel's genius that we talked about before. and probably the greatest comedy casting director in of all time, allison jones, what they did,
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whether they knew it or not. but the collection of people that they got to, to, to populate that office, not just as individuals, but their experience. right. so just to name a few like rain, wilson and myself really came from straight theater. then you got corral and angela kenzie. k. flannery who were improper people. craig robinson, i don't know if you've seen crag robinson do see. the funny is one of the funny is he puts on one of the funniest shows of all time b, j. novak did stand up. so i think all of that diversity of experience, both in acting and, and, and theater and comedy. really all of us together locked in that room with no fake walls and the camera moving around. and us being able to throw the ball back and forth to each other who had this, this variety of experience. i think that is part of what made the ensemble what it
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was. yeah. and the casting lady repeat her name because i'm on allison jones. allison jones, she killed those 2 leads. kazinsky, are you just look, i mean, he's the guy women. there's often the bad boy the women do fall in love with the cool. funny good. yeah. they should love with he and i but that space and she's like, i don't know. is it possible to find a sweeter sweetheart than her? they were so good together. yeah, unbelievable. well, how do you get from chicago or? i don't even know if you go there after northwestern. you say you went back to the theater? seeing the segue, do like leap frog to chicago and i tell or tell me it all. it happens. yes. so i grudge i graduated from s m u in dallas and then yeah, i started doing that regional theater circuit. right. so the got there. i spent a bunch of time in minneapolis, the ga 3 and i performed. it's amazing. hitler
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rating to be at the yes very. and everybody very close and intimate but huge. it's awesome. and berkeley wrap out in california a c p. and so, you know, i just started doing, i started doing that and i really thought that was my, my life was, was theater. i love doing it and, but it's, it's tough. i mean, as you know, it's, you know, 8 shows a week. monday is your day off and who has mondays off like it's, it's really tough. and eventually i decided to move to los angeles and, and that was just where kids happen for me about 34 months after i move to los angeles, i met greg daniels and ben, silver mine, and folks on the office. wow. you know what it is? the debilitating in a way used to visit already. sure when he was doing a little me and 8 shows that he literally was at the pump and back and he loved it
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. he was game for it, but it's debilitating in a way. but i'm reading a great book right now where a guy, interviews the 1st ladies and 1st gentlemen of broadway. i can't remember the guy's name, he's a great oral history sort of guy. yeah, i was reading donna mckechnie last night and she would talk about a course slide and she said she was able to grab herself right before she went on stage tickets like 10 bucks or something at the beginning. you know, it became a big thing, but you know, when they were working, doing the workshop. but she said, i would tell me that somebody's 10 bucks. i gotta go kill this and is as debilitating as can be. and i can see why eventually you'd want to get the l a and get into something a little more or less blood time, more war reward. but it much. it's exhilarating to it's such a it's like right stuff faster. not man. it's exhilarating the know you can play in that circle right. it is. and it's really interesting that that story. i should check out that book too because. yeah, there were time. and have you ever seen that movie a great movie, the dresser?
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sure. right. where is doing, you know, his 1000 performance of king lear and there was so now we're going deep dennis. there was a show that i ended up doing and not nearly for that long, but sort of often on for, for a couple of years where i played an old kabuki woman or an old woman in kabuki makeup. so white face with red and black in this traditional and of course they're in the theater. there is no makeup artists, right? like i'm doing it myself and i kept, i would think about that. the dresser as i'm just like putting on that make up for like the 800 time thinking can i do this? can i do this and i do this and then of course, you know, 5 minutes before you know you're just yeah, you perform because the people are there and there's nothing like that. parental experience. relevant. grace playing, roar the crowd. nobody had
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a gun to get into it. now you do it. i mean, i was always able to grab it somewhere and just shot up for god's sakes, your comedian. tell joe, get check. people people laugh just slap you on the back. more than people legitimately deserves lapse on the backs ever get. i used to think it was always great. you know, i know you that the offers know app re on visit really is gravy gravy. but man, i always thought about show business. i sense that you did to, i'm going to dig this ride. i'm not going to be neurotic about this 100 percent. yeah, absolutely. tell me about camera, and this is for the uninitiated audience, and probably everybody knows this. now this is like another stream of revenue people hook up with people who are famous and ask them to tape messages. well, you explain it better and me to and kevin is the number one guy on there. number one earner go ahead. poly walnut, my number one or tell me well, listen, i was very, very reticent and hesitant when it was approached me. i just,
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i didn't really understand it felt just nothing about it felt right. and i kept being told by a few people who were on like, you should really give it a try because i think it's different than, than what you think. and here's how i view it now. right? is that it's not, it's actually not about celebrity. it's not about me what it is, especially for me, i mean comedy. so people want to laugh and people have good feelings about the office. but to me, it is a father who watched this show, or was a fan of kevin malone with his daughter or a boyfriend and girlfriend, or a service member overseas sent by their spouse here at home. it is about them wanting to make a connection together for this special about, if not about me,
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it's about here, here is a way, here is a show. here is a person that makes us feel closer together. yes. so how i, how i go about it is literally that, that i am the conduit between 2 people making a connection. and they have fond memories of me or the show or whatever else that, that i might have done. but it's about that. and that keeps me excited about it and enthusiastic about it and feel actually lucky to be given the opportunity to be a part of so much as human connection. i know that sounds cheesy and when my son don't say a lot to me, it sounds the opposite of teasing. well, it's to me that is, that is what it's about. and i, you know, my joke now is, i think i should investigate this. i should now be in the guinness book of world
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records. i think that i have successfully proposed to more then anyone else on the planet now they weren't marrying me budge. i asked the question and got a yes. as a response. i think now i think i and i lead the world of all time or ever and ever you'd have to knock bob evans when he was the head of paramount slot. because i think he's held that what it was. and then let's, let's call it a post modern handwritten note, you can set hallmark cards in there printed in blog printing. or you can send this thing where it's at least choreographed a little. there's a request made. and like you said, it's to me, it's not quite quill pen, but it's certainly a handwritten notes or somebody hand written love letter. and like i said, our friend brian is the most sought after guy over on cameo, which is sweet brian bombgardener has been joining us last week. and it's nice to
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meet him. i'm always such a big fan. welcome to dundas mifflin, the ultimate oral history, the office available for the hall. sarah reunited the cast for the iconic show. they sure they're behind the scenes stories available bookstores, online. good to meet you, brother. thank you so much, dennis. happy holidays up b holiday is ah, oil and gas manufacturing, electricity, telecom transportation, all of them now have a t type of infrastructure connected to the internet when you clearly realizing this disruptive potential so that those countries can't ignore it because it threatens national security issue. but if we take the nato,
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you countries virtually all of them subscribe to certain doctrines and maintains selling but task forces. they are a cyber army on behalf of a country. that's their job. a came on the test bed for medical and then later recreational marijuana and it started with some things so innocent. i was wanting to socialize, everybody. does it? so why can i and then it just keeps going and going and going. i'm just going to do it was yeah, and then it's, oh i'm just going to try this was never do it again because they want my phone was in the morning. i'm right on inside. okay. and you surround yourself with people who are encouraging you to do it not to stop or it's all like my life was over, jumped office about the balcony and died. mm with.
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