
Adam kicks off the show with actor Seann William Scott, diving into his latest ABC sitcom, Shifting Gears. The conversation quickly turns nostalgic as they revisit the comedy classic Windy City Heat before Seann shares behind-the-scenes...
Loading summary
Adam Corolla
Skipping cold and flu season is plan.
Jake Steinfeld
A, but if you do get sick.
Adam Corolla
Be prepared for plan B with Kleenex lotion tissues.
Jake Steinfeld
Kleenex lotion tissues moisturize skin, helping prevent.
Adam Corolla
The added discomfort of red, irritated skin on top of your cold and flu symptoms. So this cold and flu season, grab Kleenex lotion tissues. Visit kleenex.com to learn more and buy now for whatever happens next. Grab Kleenex.
Sean Williams
Hey, in this episode, Seann Williams, Scott Stiffler and everything else. Really good guys in here. Jake Steinfeld body by Jakeson to tell his harrowing story about the fire because he lost his place in the Palisades. Interesting discussions and we'll do all that right after this. Betonline is the world's most trusted betting platform and your number one source for betting on all the madness. Whether you're a seasoned fan or a first time bettor, Bet Online is your ultimate game day companion. With the largest selection of odds on everything from college basketball to $200,000 bracket contests, BetOnline continues to be your number one sports betting source. From every Cinderella story to every hat trick, betonline has you covered with odds, stats and more for every game, every play and every win. And Remember, if the NBA, NHL, UFC or golf is your thing, BetOnline has them all. BetOnline is your number one sports betting source. Bet online. The game starts here.
Jake Steinfeld
Pluto TV is the place for movie fans like me and TV fans like me. They've got something for everyone and it's totally free.
Adam Corolla
You can binge laugh out loud sitcoms.
Jake Steinfeld
Like Frasier and rewatch cult classics like Higher Learning.
Adam Corolla
Whether you're in the mood to solve a little crime before bedtime with NCIS.
Jake Steinfeld
Or Tracker or curl up with a surefire hit like Forrest Gump.
Adam Corolla
Run Forrest. Pluto TV has thousands of movies and shows, all for free.
Jake Steinfeld
Pluto TV stream now pay never.
Sean Williams
Yeah, get it on. Got to get on a church, make a mandate. Get it on. And welcome the show. Glad to meet, we think Seann Williams Scott, who of course everyone knows from all the movies. And now shifting gears, which good friend, Kevin Hinch. Good friend of mine, Kevin Hench created along with Tim Allen. But good to see you, brother.
Jake Steinfeld
Good to see you too.
Sean Williams
Yeah. We were sitting around trying to figure out whether we'd met or not.
Jake Steinfeld
I don't think so.
Sean Williams
And the answer is we both don't think so. But it seems unlikely because our paths should have crossed at some point in this town.
Jake Steinfeld
That's what I thought I was like. I feel like we should have met, but we would have talked about Windy City Heat. Yes, because, yeah, it's a.
Sean Williams
So Johnny Knoxville talk turned you on to Windy City Heat?
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah, we were flying to Louisiana to do Dukes of Hazzard and he showed me the movie. And I just, ever since then, it was pretty life changing, I think. I've made so many friends, you know, just by going, you gotta watch this movie. And they're like, wow, thank you. It's just incredible.
Sean Williams
You know, it's a uniquely human experience, which is turning people on to stuff that's human that you know that other human will dig. Like, you wouldn't go bother your gardener with it, but once in a while. It's that way with restaurants, it's that way with movies. It can be that way with music where you go, oh, man, you're gonna dig this, right? And then it becomes rewarding and it's interesting, right, because there's really nothing in it for you other than turning someone on to something.
Jake Steinfeld
And it is that kind of movie where just unfortunately, so few people know.
Scott Stiffler
It, you know, I do not know it at all.
Sean Williams
Oh, you don't know.
Scott Stiffler
When they said he left out, guys.
Sean Williams
It'S not that good, huh? I guess we'll call it a cult classic or something. It was a movie that mostly Jimmy and the Big Three, which is Tony Barbieri and Don Barris all. So what happened was, is Jimmy and I, how do we meet? Okay. When we started doing the man show, we met some of these guys. Anyway, we stumbled into this long running ruse that these guys were doing with the guy named Scary Perry. And this was like, you know, sometimes they'll have. I don't know where they do this. I don't know if they still do it, but they do the living art installments where human beings pretend to be in the famous people and paintings and just stand there. That's what it was. It was like human art. Like they were just trolling this guy, but in real time and getting people involved in it. And Jimmy immediately was in love with it and immediately got involved with it. And then they would cast people in, but we didn't. It wasn't being filmed. It was just like, hey, we're going to Don's house Friday night. Well, it was Scary Perry's coming over there. He thinks he bought some really expensive sculpture. And then we're gonna break it. But anyway, you gotta show up and Jimmy's gonna be there. And then they'd go, well, who am I in this? We're casting this thing. And they'd go, oh, he knows you from mtv. So you're playing Adam Carolla. You're yourself. Other guys are playing other people, like art dealers and stuff like that, because he doesn't know them.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah.
Sean Williams
And so we would do this, and I don't even know why, but at some point, Jimmy went, you know, we got to make a movie out of this. And that was the movie.
Jake Steinfeld
Tell them what the movie is. It's the best. It's one of my favorite. I've seen it a thousand times.
Scott Stiffler
A deranged millionaire just, like, does some weird tricks with his friends.
Sean Williams
The movie is about a guy who's in a movie, but he's in a different movie than the one he's in. He thinks he's doing an action movie called Windy City Heat, playing Stone Fury, the sports detective or something. Chicago. Chicago's like, the refrigerator got his fridge stolen, and he's gonna get it back, like. And so it's an entire movie about a guy who thinks he's in an action movie, but he's really in this movie. And nobody. There's no script. There's just scenes. No one really knows how he's going to react in these scenes. And so everyone has sort of how they want it to go and how they hope it'll go, but they don't really know how it's going to go. And it came together very. That's real funny.
Jake Steinfeld
It's unbelievable. But they also put him through hell, so he has no idea that everybody is in on the joke.
Scott Stiffler
Yeah.
Jake Steinfeld
Like, so he thinks he's. He beat up Ben Affleck. He beat up, like, all these A list stars.
Scott Stiffler
Yeah.
Jake Steinfeld
And, you know, he's the lead. And so, you know, he does this whole movie totally oblivious to the fact that.
Sean Williams
Well. Yeah, the whole movie. Here's the whole movie. He, you know, gets thrown in a dumpster filled with raw garbage. Right. And then everyone around him goes, you got to get a stuntman. You got to demand a stuntman. You can't be thrown in that garbage can. And he goes, you know what? You're right. I'm gonna get a stuntman. And then he gets a stuntman. The guy's like, 350 pounds, and he's like, I'm not that. That's your stunt double. I don't look like that. Yeah, yeah. We got a guy looks like you. This is a big fat guy. And then. So the scene is he's. But now it's the lovemaking scene with the beautiful ingenue, and he's expressing Sorry. You wanted a stunt guy, and he's like, no, I'm doing the Lovemaker. No, no, the stunt guy does it. I don't know. I want to watch that scene. Because then later on, he's like, I don't want a stuntman. And then they throw him back in the trash can again. That's the whole movie, right? Yes, yes.
Adam Corolla
And then.
Sean Williams
Wait. All right, we'll show you. All right. Maybe we'll play the movie. That makes me laugh. That's Jiggly Wiggly. He's such a fine actor.
Adam Corolla
When she walked in, this doll was a double scoop of trouble.
Sean Williams
Looking for a cone?
Jake Steinfeld
Hello, Mr. Fury.
Sean Williams
I'm Jiggly. I ain't blind.
Adam Corolla
Jiggly Wriggly.
Sean Williams
I'm the heiress of a chewing gum fortune. I won't say which.
Adam Corolla
What's this got to do with me?
Sean Williams
I need your help.
Adam Corolla
Forget it.
Sean Williams
The Stoneman's out of the Sports PI game. But only you can stop Chicago's greatest sports treasures from being stolen. Like I said, Dal, I gave it up a long time ago. You don't sound so sure. Please, Stone, I'll do anything. Anything.
Jake Steinfeld
Anywhite.
Adam Corolla
He's dad.
Sean Williams
Yeah.
Jake Steinfeld
All right, folks.
Sean Williams
We're about to do a very graphic.
Adam Corolla
And very sensual love scene.
Sean Williams
So Bobcat Goldthwaite only talk through a bullhorn.
Jake Steinfeld
This is gonna be a very, very sensual scene.
Sean Williams
There's gonna be a lot. A lot of nudity. And with that, could we bring in stunts, please? Stunts.
Adam Corolla
Thank you.
Sean Williams
Now, Perry, you'll step out.
Adam Corolla
You go with. Who's taking Perry?
Jake Steinfeld
Why do I have to step out?
Sean Williams
I mean, I don't get to make love to.
Jake Steinfeld
No, this is a.
Adam Corolla
This is a stunt.
Jake Steinfeld
Once she's completely naked. The cheese pizza.
Sean Williams
Come on.
Adam Corolla
I gotta take a.
Jake Steinfeld
Make him eat the cheese pizza even.
Sean Williams
Though he's backed up. Some tolerance licking him.
Adam Corolla
Did you say licking?
Sean Williams
Yeah, I would like to watch.
Adam Corolla
I gotta take a real bad.
Scott Stiffler
Oh, my God.
Sean Williams
All right, we got skull.
Scott Stiffler
Point is, at the end of it.
Sean Williams
The whole point is the fat stunt guy makes love to her. And then he throws off the stuntman. And then the next scene, he gets thrown back in the dump.
Scott Stiffler
Seems like a classic.
Sean Williams
It's a classic. I don't know why. My favorite joke of the whole movie is Bobcat does everything through a bullhorn no matter who he's talking to or how close they are to him. And at some point, Perry says to Bob, you don't have to talk with the bullhorn. I'm standing right here. And Bob Goes, okay, let me turn it down. I don't know why that made me laugh so hard.
Jake Steinfeld
So many gems. But then it's also at the end, they, he's like, they had the big premiere and so he's like, he's so excited he's finally gonna see himself star in this big movie. But then everything happens. They, they, they make it so he's just like super late for the premiere. He's losing his mind.
Sean Williams
It's all, I don't know. You have to see it. I will tell you this about that movie. I watched it. We had a 20 year premiere party, I think a few months ago. I think we had a 20. 20 years. Yeah, we had a party and we rented out the whatever in Westwood. And I've seen that movie like two times with a full house. I've never heard as many laughs in a comedy. And I'm not saying it's better because there's lots of comedies I love, but laugh for laugh. You watch that movie with 300 people in the theater, you'll just hear nonstop laughter and.
Scott Stiffler
Plus a cult classic like this, right? Yeah, because I watched Pulp Fiction last night at the Academy theater and man, you know. Cause I always watch it on videotape or DVD or through the years and like you laugh at Samuel Jackson's lines, he does them real good. But in a huge audience, there's a different vibe.
Sean Williams
I agree. Yeah, I'm glad there's still theaters in this world. I mean, the VCRs came out 40 years ago and they said that's gonna be it. But. All right, sorry, shifting gears. That's a new sitcom doing real well. I think it was the number one sitcom. That's when. Yeah.
Jake Steinfeld
Thank you.
Sean Williams
Wednesdays, abc. I've been watching. I gotta say, Kevin Hench, the guy created it. I guess Hollywood's a weird place. This guy gets credit, that guy gets credit. But Hench is a guy I worked with for a long time and I met him at the man show. And then he came over to Kimmel's show and then he wanted to be a writer on Kimmel's show. And Kimmel made him like a segment producer. And he didn't want to be a segment producer, but he was really kind of an out of work writer. And so I just said to him, I got an idea for a movie. I think me and you should write it together. And we wrote it and it was a good movie. And we did a few movies and a few sitcom stuff. And then he just broke off and became like the king of the sitcom guys. Which is crazy, but it's awesome, right? Yeah. And. And Tim Allen kind of became his guy. And I think Tim, I would say Tim probably can be finicky about who he's working with, but once he's probably like Roseanne in a weird way. Like, once he likes you and trusts you, then that's the person you got to work with. And that's who Kevin Hench is.
Jake Steinfeld
He's great. Yeah. I mean, this is my first sitcom.
Sean Williams
That's right. Yeah. Never.
Jake Steinfeld
I never. I didn't know how much fun it was. Yeah, yeah, it was. I was actually working on another project and I wasn't sure I was like sitcom, I don't know, because I like to improvise and, you know, play around a little bit and, and my friends were like, you got to do it because I have, you know, four and a half year old daughter and they're like, you know, this is the best job to, you know, spend with your kid. And.
Sean Williams
Yeah, you don't have to go to Canada and be gone for four months and all that. Right.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah. Shoots in la. But it's been so fun.
Adam Corolla
And.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah, so the whole process too with, you know, just sitcom and just the writing and the rewrites and all of it is, you know, totally new for me, but I love it.
Sean Williams
What is the. Yeah, because everyone goes, best schedule. Like, like the thing about show business, their show business is great, but you gotta, you go, what's the schedule? And like the schedule could be go to, you know, go to Prague and shoot for six months or something, which, you know, isn't great if you got young kids or whatever. And then some could be, you gotta move to Atlanta. And some are like, you gotta go to New Mexico. Like, you know, Bryan Cranston, I drove him to the airport because he was going to New Mexico. Like, he lives in the Valley, you know, he's got to basically move to New Mexico to shoot Breaking Bad. But everyone goes, the sitcom schedule's the best because it's here. It's right here.
Jake Steinfeld
No, it's ridiculous.
Sean Williams
Well, what is it for? It's not the best. It's best for the writers. It's not as good for. Because you have to be there all the time. But what is the actor schedule on this sitcom?
Jake Steinfeld
I mean, it's so silly. I mean, so, you know, we shoot, we pre shoot stuff on Mondays. And you know, typically, I think in most TV shows and films, like a short day would be 12 hours.
Sean Williams
Right, right.
Jake Steinfeld
And like, and I done an hour TV show. And like, a lot of the days were like 16 hour days.
Sean Williams
Single camera.
Jake Steinfeld
Yes, yes, exactly.
Sean Williams
And that's just like shooting a movie.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah, yeah. And. But this, like, so the Monday, the long day is like 11 to 8. And then Tuesday, you know, we do the live show, which is so much fun. And that's maybe the same Wednesday we do the table ready to go in around 9:30, read a table read. Do the table read, eat some food, maybe do a little rehearsal. Like 9:30 to 1:30.
Sean Williams
Yeah.
Jake Steinfeld
And then Thursdays and Fridays, like 9:30 to like 1:32.
Sean Williams
Yeah.
Jake Steinfeld
So I can literally leave and go pick up my daughter.
Adam Corolla
Yeah.
Scott Stiffler
Yeah.
Sean Williams
So unbelievable. Like a job. It's show business. You don't have to get on an airplane. Yeah. It's great.
Jake Steinfeld
It's so fun. It really is. And everybody in the show is just so wonderful. But.
Sean Williams
And it's. Listen, it's good money, too. There used to be nutty money, now it's good money. But I just had Jon Cryer in here and I was like, Two and a Half Men. And I was like, what are you doing these days? I mean, do you have to work? And he's like, no, I don't have to work. I was like, wait a minute, you're younger than I am, you son of a bitch. Why don't you have to work? Cause then I have to work. Because you did eight seasons.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah.
Sean Williams
Of Two and a Half Men. And that. That'll be about it, if you want. I always. I'm always curious about Roseanne. I'm like, buku Bucks sitcom, you know, couple of marriages where the dudes turned the tables and got the money from the ladies on. I cheer for those guys. But I'm always curious, like, you know, I don't know where she's at. I'm sure she's. She's fine. But anyway, good money, good schedule and good.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah.
Sean Williams
And. And that is, if I don't know Kat Denning, you know, I know hench is good.
Jake Steinfeld
Amazing. Cat's like one of the coolest.
Sean Williams
The only thing that can ruin this is shitty cast mates who, for some reason, they do it like a band does it sometimes where it's like, sometimes you go, if this guy wasn't such a dick or this guy got along with that guy, these guys could be touring forever and making boot, but they won't be in the same room. And it's like, why I never get it. Like, they'll do it with sitcoms, too. It just takes one swipe and it's like, we could have had another season, but he wouldn't come back. And he hated the guy created the whatever. And it's like, why?
Jake Steinfeld
I know.
Sean Williams
Get it. It's true.
Jake Steinfeld
Thankfully, with this show, I can't see that happening. But. Yeah, and the other thing, too, about the show is that, you know, every other project you're, you know, you have to. It's like game time. Every day you're in front of a camera, you got to be ready. And with this, it's like you're really only shooting two days out of the week. So the other days, you walk in with your sweatpants, you walk around and do the blocking. You know, it's.
Sean Williams
It's really free food. Lots of free food. Craft service. You're really happy about that. I will.
Jake Steinfeld
You get transported, I think food to a craft service.
Adam Corolla
Yeah.
Sean Williams
Yeah.
Scott Stiffler
I just throw some ribs up there. He's ready to go.
Sean Williams
I will. I'm going to think. I think food is a lot like molestation in that whatever trauma you had, it stays with you. You know what I mean? Like, there's not enough therapy to get me through free food. You know, I come from where I come from, and I still get excited about free food. You know, like, it means something to me. I don't know. Where do you come from? Well, I'm not saying it's the same, but I'm saying it's trauma, and it sticks with you. And all the pretense and the money and the nice cars, it's still there. It's always there. It's just there.
Scott Stiffler
Give the man a biscuit.
Sean Williams
That's right. Do you come from a place where you appreciate free food as an adult?
Jake Steinfeld
I grew up in Minnesota. I mean, we.
Sean Williams
Yeah.
Jake Steinfeld
Honestly, the funny thing is, on shifting gears, when you have the live performance, their craft service room is ridiculous.
Sean Williams
Yeah.
Jake Steinfeld
So that was one of the first things I told my daughter. I'm like, wait till you see the free food. They got everything. They got spinach, artichoke dip.
Sean Williams
You know what's always weird? I always thought of this as a weird thing in Hollywood, that the two things that'll ruin a career is either getting fat or getting drunk.
Scott Stiffler
Yeah.
Sean Williams
And everything in Hollywood is food, and then every gift is a bottle of scotch. It's like, what kind of weird mixed message. Every gift is booze, and every room is filled with Twizzlers. And it's like, why are you doing this to people you don't want getting fat or drunk? Right. Yeah. It's a mixed message. Yeah. Oh, my God. So where are you shooting? Right in here, right?
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah, close. Burbank. Disney.
Sean Williams
Are you dealing with Hench? Is Hench. Kevin Hench?
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah.
Sean Williams
Punching stuff up or doing whatever he's doing? Yeah, it's good, dude.
Scott Stiffler
And you're, like, a really great improv performer, but is it mostly scripted? Like, you stick deep to the script on the show?
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah, I mean, I think. Thank you, by the way. But no, they're, you know, they're really collaborative. It's, you know, if you have an idea and if you have any sort of idea you think can improve on what they have, they. They're really open to playing around, shifting.
Scott Stiffler
It a little bit.
Sean Williams
Yeah.
Scott Stiffler
You know, every character you play has a little bit of your juice in there. You know, you, like, do this wacky little thing that, you know, you can't put it into words, really. Like, I remember I caught you on Always Sunny, right? Oh, yeah, that Country Mac. Oh, my God. It was, like, classic because it was you, but it was you in that universe, you know?
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah. Thank you.
Scott Stiffler
Yeah. Talk about, like, the script versus what you see.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah. I mean, in my experience, you know, kind of from the first American Pie, you know, I was just lucky in that. Just to get that film, but then to have ideas, and, I mean, I was just like, how do I get myself in as much of this movie as possible? So I just had all these ideas, and they were really open to hearing them and letting me try them out and keeping them and.
Scott Stiffler
What do you mean?
Jake Steinfeld
An American Pie and the First American Pie? So from that point on, you know, every. Every comedy that I would do, I was like, you know, I. I just thought, okay, I just have to trust myself and, you know, try to see. Just use whatever I. My imagination, whatever ideas I. You know, I think could, you know, be fun.
Scott Stiffler
And that comes from, like, your family. Like, what. What's going on? My family is funny people.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah.
Scott Stiffler
Different styles. You know, I can just imagine that came from the same way.
Jake Steinfeld
Definitely. My dad was really funny. He was like, a little bit of a Bill Murray, Chevy Chase vibe. And, you know, growing up in Minnesota, you have to have a sense of humor. I mean, he's cold, and all my friends were hilarious. So, you know, it's kind of drawing from. From them. And. And. But my family, you know, they. We like to laugh, and they're all very funny, most of them.
Sean Williams
Minnesota historically is known for comedy. I mean, look at Prince. That was super funny.
Jake Steinfeld
Hilarious.
Sean Williams
Hilarious. No, no. I mean, any place where there's ice fishing, there's gonna be comedy because ice fishing is just sitting and drinking. And that's all it is. It should be called ice drinking.
Scott Stiffler
You've done that before.
Jake Steinfeld
I have. It's hilarious. I did it one time, and I was like, this is it, huh?
Adam Corolla
I'm good.
Sean Williams
It's a weird thing to explain. I'm from North Hollywood, so it's like. I had a girlfriend from Minnesota, and she was like, you push the cabin, you get the auger bit. And I'm like, really? Really? Because I'm from North Hollywood. It seems like an insane activity. Also, it was funny. I do remember her name was Cynthia. She was a cheerleader for the Minnesota Vikings years ago. But I remember one time she said something like, I'm gonna go in and get some utter bomb. And I said, utter bomb. She goes, yeah, yeah. Hand cream. And I said, utter bomb. Yeah, yeah. It's called utter bomb. I go, nobody calls it utter bomb. Utter bomb. In here. In here. It was cream that you put on udders in Minnesota. I guess it gets pretty cold, you know? Utter bomb. And she goes, everyone knows what utter bomb is. I said, nobody knows. Nobody here knows what utter bomb is. She goes, are you kidding? Then we had to do that process. We have to stop people.
Scott Stiffler
Ask everyone, you know what?
Jake Steinfeld
I don't know. Utter bomb.
Sean Williams
You from Minnesota. You don't know what utter bomb is? Dawson, is utter bomb a generic thing?
Jake Steinfeld
I think she made it up.
Sean Williams
I think it's a brand name.
Scott Stiffler
Yeah.
Sean Williams
Is it a brand name? Oh, I don't know.
Scott Stiffler
I think.
Sean Williams
Sean, you can't. You can't be from Minnesota and not know what that is. It's for chapped hands. And you know what it. Dawson's from the Bay Area. He knows what it is. I.
Jake Steinfeld
You know.
Adam Corolla
Whoa.
Sean Williams
We got a controversy brewing now. So you're. Wait a minute. You're in Concord. You grew up Dawson. Concord. Concord. I mean, we don't do the O. No, there is no O in that Concord. Who'd you conquer?
Scott Stiffler
Yeah, exactly.
Sean Williams
So. So you grow up with utter bomb, Dawson? No, I only heard about it later in life. I was out of college. But you didn't hear about it through me complaining about my girlfriend. No. Okay. So just word on the street. I think I was working an event in northern Michigan, and it was outdoor.
Adam Corolla
And it was in.
Sean Williams
My hands were cracked, and someone said, try this other ball.
Jake Steinfeld
It's. It's extreme hand lotion.
Sean Williams
Yeah, well, Minnesota gets pretty, you know, when you're drinking on a frozen lake. Well, yeah, you can get some Chaps cold. Those cuticles can turn white. I think there's another one called Working Hands. It's essentially the same stuff, but Utter Bomb is a brand. Is that we're saying water bomb sums it.
Jake Steinfeld
Something you just don't want. Like, like an.
Sean Williams
Right. So, yeah. So you grow up in what part of Minnesota?
Jake Steinfeld
Cottage grove, south of St. Paul.
Sean Williams
And. And you grow up there and you go to college.
Jake Steinfeld
No, I, I. The beginning of my senior in high school is when I was. I was like, I'm going to be an actor.
Sean Williams
And you just decided.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah, I mean, yeah, it was theater.
Scott Stiffler
You went to theater, like, classes or anything or just. You were like, let's go for it.
Jake Steinfeld
I mean, I love.
Scott Stiffler
Get my handsome face out there and see what happens.
Jake Steinfeld
You know, I, you know, I'm the youngest of seven half siblings, and I have one brother who was the actor of the family, and I played sports and like.
Sean Williams
You have six half siblings?
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah, yeah. But most of the siblings were older and they moved out. And so it was really just.
Sean Williams
That's your dad or your mom's side.
Jake Steinfeld
Three on each of their previous. From their previous marriages. And then they got married and had me.
Sean Williams
Oh, wow.
Adam Corolla
Oh, yeah. Oh, wow.
Jake Steinfeld
So like Brady Bunch.
Sean Williams
Yeah, it was one plus. I mean, because they're six. Yeah. Yeah. So it's three and three and then you're the product of them.
Jake Steinfeld
Yep.
Sean Williams
Okay.
Adam Corolla
Yeah.
Sean Williams
That's unique. Yeah.
Jake Steinfeld
And. Yeah, but they were all like. Again, it was really just me and my one sibling. So a lot of them are older and kind of out of the house, but, yeah, just like most kids just loved movies. Of a brother who was a film theory major, and he introduced me to, you know, really interesting films when I was younger, and it was literally like, I want to do that. I had no idea, like, what I was doing, what the process was. When I moved to la. I didn't know you had to audition. I thought you got an agent. They just.
Sean Williams
When did you move here?
Jake Steinfeld
96.
Sean Williams
And you were what age at that point?
Jake Steinfeld
I was, I think, 18.
Sean Williams
18, yeah. So you at 18, just picked up and left Minnesota?
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah, but I, like, I said when I got an agent, I thought they just hooked you up with movies. I remember getting a call saying that we had an audition for you for Baywatch, and I was like, what do you mean? Like a tryout? Like, when am I gonna work with Tom Cruise and Jack Nicholson? What's going on here? I was like, plus, I. You know, it's like, Bay watches tv. I don't do tv.
Sean Williams
Oh, so you're one of these people that I'm most jealous of, which is the personal momentum person, where you feel. And I'll be careful on how I think anything.
Jake Steinfeld
Agree.
Sean Williams
I know a few of these guys, and they're, like, super successful, and part of it is their ability, and the other part is what I just call personal momentum. They just go, why not? And I go, well, you're not gonna be a movie star. You're from Shittsburg, Minnesota. They go, why wouldn't I be? You know what I mean? They just. Bill Simmons, the sports guy, is a personal momentum guy. And, like, I remember what. He'd go, come on, Ace, let's go do this. You know? And I go, no one's gonna let us do that. We're gonna get into trouble. Why not? And he'd just go, do it. And I realized, oh, and it works because people kind of respond like. Like. Like, I had a friend that was that way. Like, we didn't have any money to get in a movie theater. I was like, we got to sneak into this theater. And he goes, yeah, hold on. And he's looking through the glass near the exit, and some guy's, like, walking in the bathroom. He's like, on the glass. The guy's like, huh? He goes, come here. And the guy goes, what? And he goes, open the door. The guy goes, go to the door. And the guy goes, okay. And the guy just opens the door, and we just walk in. He goes, I told you. Come on. And I'm like, you can't do that. But he could, and he did, and we did. You know, and there's like, people are just kind of. And then there are other people. Like, we're gonna get into trouble. I drove from Vegas to LA at night with Bill Simmons, who doesn't like to wear the seatbelt on his car. He's like, I don't need this, Ace. And I go, okay, but. And then he's driving 95 miles an hour, and he goes, we're going to make it in three hours. I go, but, Bill, we're going to get pulled over. You're not wearing your seatbelt. We're going to get busted. It's the middle of the night. There's cops all over the place. Ah, don't worry about it. We just drove 90 miles and we pull in. It's like three. Three hours. I told you. I was like, okay, good. But now I see maybe you're a personal momentum guy. Like, I'm just. I'm going to laugh. I'M gonna star in a movie.
Jake Steinfeld
You know what? Maybe I am. I honestly, I think it's a good way to be. You know what, though? I think is that there's probably a lot of people that have that attitude, and. And I just got lucky to get American Pie.
Sean Williams
You gotta be able to back. You have to be able to back it up.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah.
Sean Williams
It's no different than the dude who wants to fight people in the street, like, okay, but you. You gotta know what you're doing. You gotta be good. Otherwise there's going to be trouble, you're going to get burned.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah, I think, for me, it was a lot of luck in terms of.
Sean Williams
When did you get American Pie? How long you been in la?
Jake Steinfeld
Years.
Sean Williams
You were in LA for three years? Yeah.
Jake Steinfeld
And I think, you know, for me, there are plenty of actors that, you know, should have had that chance, and if they've got the chance, they would done something better than I could have done. But I think that I had, like, you know, if anything, like, the focus to go, okay, how do I parlay this into more stuff? So I think I. I'm probably that kind of guy. But then I just got lucky to get.
Scott Stiffler
I don't know. Yeah, you could have been, you know, left in this iconic movie and that's it. But you, like, really branched your career out every door. I don't know if it's. The agent really looked alive suddenly or what, but. Or just. It looks like your hard work paid off because now you got this big show and I don't know, man, I'm impressed.
Sean Williams
You.
Scott Stiffler
You know, it's. You're one of those guys that everybody goes, hey, Stifler. But if, you know, you know, you ain't stepping.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah, thanks, man. Yeah, well, I think, well, a lot of luck, but also just. I just know. Yeah, I'm grateful, you know, I think I grew up with perspective and great family and, you know, when you get a chance to do something like. Like winning the lottery, then you go, all right, I. You know.
Sean Williams
What'd your dad do?
Jake Steinfeld
He was a factory worker. Yeah, he worked at 3M.
Sean Williams
I remember 3am 3am yeah.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah, I remember they had that, like, soda. Yep.
Sean Williams
Yeah. Yeah.
Jake Steinfeld
I. There was like, you know, the visit your dad at work day, and I was like, oh, this is great. And I remember we got in the elevator and then. Elevator went down, and then it kept going down. I'm like. And I was young, and I was like, well, does dad work in hell? The elevator doors open and it was like a furnace. And, like, My. So he was a hard working.
Scott Stiffler
He's just putting glue on the back of stickies.
Sean Williams
He's supposed to.
Scott Stiffler
I wish he did that.
Jake Steinfeld
Just in a corner, just like.
Sean Williams
Yeah.
Scott Stiffler
Just him around him with just one sticky note.
Sean Williams
He was very blue collar then.
Scott Stiffler
Yeah.
Sean Williams
And your mom, who's your. Oh, that is your mom. That's right. Everyone else's. Three other people's stepmoms. Yeah. What'd she do?
Jake Steinfeld
She cleaned homes for a living. She was like a. Oh, so you.
Sean Williams
Got everyone worked in like regular work stuff. Yeah. Which. A good base. It's a good base. The problem with. With that sometimes comes a lot of baggage or other stuff. You know, like the blue collar dads are good when they're good, but then when they're drinking, they're drinking or like whatever that thing is.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah.
Sean Williams
But you seem to have the good of the blue collar without whatever the baggage of the blue collar is. Sometimes I got lucky.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah. My parents are awesome, you know. Yeah, he. Yeah, I think. Yeah, they're just great. And so I think it's helped a lot with this type of job where it's so important to be grounded and grateful and to not lose perspective. Otherwise you're gonna lose it all.
Sean Williams
Well, it is, you know, it's a job that anybody. Sorry, not anybody. But there's always another option if they don't like you. Like, you don't have to be in a sitcom. You don't have to be.
Jake Steinfeld
Especially guys like me. You know, there's a lot everybody.
Sean Williams
There's. There's like three or four people who transcend that. And then everybody else, they can swap you out with anybody and they always do that story where they go, well, you know, Tom Selleck originally was going to be. Play this role and this. And that guy was the original because that's. And that's how it works. So if you're a douche, then they don't really.
Jake Steinfeld
They don't need you.
Sean Williams
They don't need you. They don't need you. Yeah. So it just would. This is for all jobs, but especially acting jobs.
Jake Steinfeld
Right.
Sean Williams
Just be there, be on time.
Jake Steinfeld
Right.
Sean Williams
Know your lines and be sort of halfway decent. And then they love you because all you have to do is be half sane. You don't have to be that good. You just have to not be a total head case and then you'll be embraced. Right. Right.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah. Don't ruin the show.
Sean Williams
Then.
Jake Steinfeld
Keep your job.
Scott Stiffler
Yeah.
Sean Williams
Indiana Jones. That's the guy I was gonna say. That's the guy I was trying to think of, yes. Yeah. So good. And why not? And I don't get why you shouldn't be as happy as compared not you. But I just mean when you get a job on a sitcom that's a lottery type job, you've hit the jackpot and everyone should skip onto set. But yet it doesn't happen that way.
Jake Steinfeld
So oftentimes this show, it seems like everybody's skipping.
Adam Corolla
But.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah, another thing, too about the show is, you know, once it aired a couple times and people became fans of it, you know, then when you're performing in front of an audience.
Sean Williams
Oh, yeah.
Jake Steinfeld
I mean, it is. I get a little bit of a sense of what it must be like to do stand up, you know, and you're giving it, delivering a joke, and they're going crazy. You know, you get that feeling like, man, this is amazing.
Sean Williams
You didn't. You never. You didn't do theater and stuff like that. So you kind of just went from high school where you weren't in the drama club, I guess.
Jake Steinfeld
Right, right.
Sean Williams
And then you just went here and you're doing roles, but, you know, there's nobody. No audience on set sort of thing. And features, obviously, and you did tons of features, so you didn't have that experience of the live audience.
Jake Steinfeld
The only time I've had that experience, I hosted Saturday Night Live once, and it was. And that was a long time ago, but that was when I really fel. I was like, oh, you just the energy. And also I was terrified. So it was just like, you know, I don't know how I even got through it, but I just remember that. Yeah, the energy and the feeling that when things are working and you're in, you know, kind of the zone. And then hosted the MTV Movie Awards with Timberlake. And it was similar kind of thing. We were up on stage and. But that was it. And that was a long time ago, so. And different than a sitcom, you know. But, yeah, it's. I can see why Tim loves it so much, you know, because it's when you get that feedback, it's. It makes it way more fun.
Sean Williams
Yeah, yeah, I concur. Live audiences is great. It's fun doing stand up. I don't know why. At stand up, sometimes getting that same thing that sitcom actors do where they go, I don't want to do a second show. I don't want to go here or go there. It's a blessing. You get to do what you want to do. You could be at the 3M factory with your dad down in the Hubs of hell. Stoking a furnace all day.
Jake Steinfeld
I'll never forget it, man.
Sean Williams
And then the sharp contrast of. Then ice fishing that weekend. You go from the hubs of hell to a winter wonderland.
Jake Steinfeld
You know, it reminds me of the. You're exactly right. But it just reminds me of going back to Dukes of Hazzard, which Knoxville liked to call the Dicks of Hazzard. I remember the premiere, and my dad came and, you know, Burt Reynolds, Willie Nelson and. Yeah, I remember my.
Adam Corolla
It was just.
Jake Steinfeld
I just remember my dad being like, this is cool. This is pretty cool.
Sean Williams
Yeah, I had fun with the movie. I love that movie. Cause they had a huge car jump. Oh, yes. There was nothing better than a huge car jump. And this was awesome. No CGI or anything.
Jake Steinfeld
No, that was. That was the real thing. That was awesome.
Sean Williams
You were. Obviously weren't in the car, but you were there to watch. I was not.
Jake Steinfeld
No, I didn't see it live, unfortunately.
Sean Williams
Oh, shit. You missed that day.
Jake Steinfeld
No, I know.
Sean Williams
Is that. I mean, were you there? No, I remember. I just. I liked stunts, you know, and you maybe like, windy, Shitty heat. I like Hooper. That was a Burt Reynolds movie where he played a stuntman, and everything was just totally analog, you know, like, they're doing. They're doing shit. Like, they did one scene at the end, the big climactic scene where they're blowing up a town or whatever, and they had one of those old smokestack chimney brick. It's like 300ft tall. One brick at a time. It's got to be a weird job, you know, like, here's your brick. How high are we going? 300ft. How thick is this brick? 4 inches. So get to get. And they, like, just go in a circle, just make a giant. And they're gonna blow it up. And they, like. They blow it. It's gotta fall down. But the guy's driving a. You know, he's driving a Firebird or something, and he's coming around the corner and he's. They gotta time it. Then he gets under it. But they don't want to get under it. By a lot. Yeah, just by a little. But the things like on dirt and it's raining and the guy spinning his tires and getting sideways and stuff. And I'm like, they're just doing that.
Scott Stiffler
Yeah, yeah.
Jake Steinfeld
No, it's. The car stuff in Dukes is legit. Like, it's awesome.
Sean Williams
And I think we have the jump, so I'm. So. I'm told. Which is. There is.
Jake Steinfeld
I also. I got to work with Bobby. Or this. This just precision driver for about a month. Look at that.
Sean Williams
That's crazy. Such a great shot.
Scott Stiffler
Oh, that's great.
Sean Williams
Good acting with the head slam.
Jake Steinfeld
I have a great Dukes of Hazzard story.
Sean Williams
Let's hear it.
Jake Steinfeld
So I'm trying to tell this without getting anybody in trouble.
Scott Stiffler
Yeah, yeah. That's always a concern around here.
Sean Williams
Yeah.
Jake Steinfeld
Okay, so. So when we were shooting that movie, they were just starting to cast Superman movie, and I think it was. I think this was, like, two Superman movies ago.
Sean Williams
So what year was this?
Jake Steinfeld
I want to say 2007.
Sean Williams
Okay. So.
Jake Steinfeld
And I was taking Dukes of Hazzard seriously. I was like, how do we make this show, this movie? Like Butch Cassidy? I was the only one thinking that I was the only one staying at home just, like, you know, trying to work on the script. Everybody else was partying their asses off.
Sean Williams
Mm.
Jake Steinfeld
So anyways, like, you know, three weeks in, I'm feeling pretty good about what I'm doing. And my agent calls me. He's like, listen, the heads of Warner Brothers, they want to do a video conference call with you on Monday. And I was like, they want me for Superman?
Sean Williams
Yeah.
Jake Steinfeld
I'm getting super. They like what I'm doing. I'm getting Superman. Holy shit. This is unbelievable. Bo Duke. Superman.
Scott Stiffler
Yeah.
Sean Williams
Yeah.
Jake Steinfeld
So as the. I'm getting more calls over the weekend, like a Saturday. Like, one of the big agents at my agency that I never really spoke to was like, you know, I'm getting, like, a kind of a serious vibe. I'm like, so they're serious. Like, serious about me doing Superman. And like, she's like, I don't know about that. Like, what do you mean? She's like, we're getting this information. I think Greg Silverman, you know, one of the heads, you know, Warner Brothers, is going to fly out to Louisiana to talk to you about this. I'm like, oh. Oh, this is great. Like, I'm really close to getting this part. So over the weekend, I'm just starting to think, like, huh, what's going on? And so then we're shooting.
Sean Williams
You're shooting in Louisiana.
Jake Steinfeld
In Louisiana, yeah. And the executive, you know, I'm getting at this point, I'm realizing, this isn't Superman. This is. Something's going on here. It doesn't seem good. Nobody's giving me any information, and now it's starting to feel serious. So I'm like, okay, no Superman for me. What's going on? I feel like I'm in trouble, and I was meant to go Back with this Warner Brothers executive back to Baton Rouge to do a video conference call with the head of legal at Warner Brothers and another executive there. And now I'm stressed. I'm like, what would I do? I'm the one at home, like, studying my lines, like, you know, showing up on time. And so Greg Silvermane shows up, and we're driving back. It's like an hour and a half drive to some.
Adam Corolla
Like.
Sean Williams
And sorry, when you say at home, you're home in Louisiana while you're filming the movie?
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah. So, yeah, we're in the country, and then we're driving to, like, downtown Baton Rouge and to do this video conference call. And I'm like, dude, what is going on? Is it Superman? He's like, it's not Superman. Like, could it have been Superman? He's like, no, it was never, ever gonna be Superman. Like, but, like, another one of the superheroes. He's like, no, never.
Adam Corolla
I'm.
Jake Steinfeld
Okay. So I'm like, can you tell me? He's like, I honestly legally cannot tell you what this is about. And I'm like, all right, this sucks. Like, I'm just thinking, what did I do? What did I do? By the time we get there, it clicks. I go, was it this? And he goes, I can't confirm or deny that. I'm like, this is ridiculous. So do the video conference call. One of the very important people at Warner Brothers was on it. And then the head of legal is there, and he goes, sean.
Sean Williams
He goes.
Jake Steinfeld
One of our editors noticed that you had said to Johnny Knoxville in one of your takes, have you tried the cocaine they're handing out? Because I did, and I'm totally fucking jacked right now. And I go, it was a joke. It's not even my joke. I go, I worked with a huge superstar on another movie.
Scott Stiffler
Can't say, oh, yeah.
Sean Williams
But he.
Jake Steinfeld
That was his joke, because he knew. He knew that we were mic'd, and he knew everybody was listening. And, like, we all laughed. And I'm like, I just did his joke. That's not even my joke. Obviously. We're not doing cocaine. We're not passing around cocaine. He's like, well, we just have to check, because you're doing a lot of the driving stunts. I'm like, oh. I'm like, yeah, but I'm the guy at home, like, studying my lines. You got the wrong guy.
Sean Williams
And then I go, and then the.
Jake Steinfeld
Other thing, too, is because I was doing all this stunt training, and I was in probably the best shape of my life, I remember I had to do, like, a huge physical. And when they were checking my heart rate, this is before we started shooting, you know, the doctor's like. He's like, my heart rate was so low. Cause I was actually in really good shape.
Sean Williams
Yeah.
Adam Corolla
Yeah.
Jake Steinfeld
And he goes, are you doing heroin? I go, yeah.
Sean Williams
What? I was like, really?
Jake Steinfeld
This is like. And I was like, no, bro. I'm in great shape. I had to do a whole separate test to prove to him. I'm like, it's because I'm running and all this stuff. So I go, you guys have my health records. Like, you know, clearly, I'm not doing blow all day.
Sean Williams
The doctor asked if you're doing heroin.
Jake Steinfeld
My mom was with me, and my mom.
Scott Stiffler
My mom was like, if you get super good shape and your heart rate falls, like, under 40, they're like, whoa, you're on drugs.
Jake Steinfeld
Exactly.
Scott Stiffler
But you can just be in really good shape. And. Yeah, heartbeat.
Jake Steinfeld
Exactly. And so I. So I had finally told these guys. I'm like, we're good, right? This was a joke. Not even my joke. And they're like, okay. Like, this sucks. So then when I told Knoxville, he was pissed. That's what I think. He goes, take out the wrong guy. He's like. And so I think he was. He was playing. I think. I can't remember the joke that he did, because now he knew that everybody was listening, you know? And I. He said something. Said something the next day about head counsel and some joke with.
Sean Williams
This is your fault. Because I. Because we all know people where. You know, we all have that dude. You know, you may be. This dude. Might be Mayhem, where you, like. You sit down and you go, God, that fucking bartender was such a douche. I stood there for a night. He goes, which one is he? And he go, just don't. Just. What the fuck? Which one? That is. That guy, the sweater vest guy. And they start getting up, and you go, just sit down. And you go. But it's your fault, because you should have never told them. There's men this way. There's women this way. Women. There's a lot of women this way. Where you go, oh, because I told Knoxville. Yeah, you told Knoxville and say Knoxville's gonna do something. That's what I'm saying. You should have buried that deep inside. It should have been your secret shame.
Jake Steinfeld
He had my back.
Sean Williams
I know, but.
Jake Steinfeld
I know, but the thing is, they never did shit once. Like, Knoxville, like, ripped him every single day. They were like, okay.
Sean Williams
Ha ha.
Scott Stiffler
They just chopped up the lines for you.
Jake Steinfeld
No, it was great.
Sean Williams
By the way, people drive better on coke.
Scott Stiffler
Yeah, yeah.
Sean Williams
You know the performance enhancer. Oh, yeah.
Jake Steinfeld
They do these big, huge jumps. Way better on Cody.
Sean Williams
Way better.
Jake Steinfeld
You know this. It's a true.
Sean Williams
I think we have that Hooper scene with the thing, which is they blow Hooper. Watch Hooper. He's basically playing Hal Needham. But they're like blowing up smokestacks.
Scott Stiffler
Damn.
Sean Williams
The cars are going on. But he. He does one where he just gets under. I think it's this one.
Scott Stiffler
That was serious stunt.
Sean Williams
That's analog, too.
Scott Stiffler
That was practical effects.
Sean Williams
Yeah. All right, we got it. You know, you could be the modern day Jan. Michael Vincent.
Jake Steinfeld
I was thinking, at the same time, you guys got.
Sean Williams
Got a lot of same looks department.
Jake Steinfeld
I think it's me.
Sean Williams
You cover some of the same territory. You know, he. He kind of played the heavy. He didn't have your sense. I could play the heavy. He didn't have your sense of humor. But it's also. It's another thing, you know, you do sometimes you talk to women and you go. You have this look. And because you have this look, it's usually good look. They don't think you have a sense of humor. You have a look like a lead and a heavy and a. In a dude. And it's a good. It's a good look. But it doesn't say comedy. It says something else. But then there's the compliment. Yeah, well. But maybe it. Maybe you don't get cast in certain things because of the look. Because comedy has a look, you know?
Jake Steinfeld
Well, now they're not even making comedies. Really.
Sean Williams
Well, I guess. I guess they're not. Right? What are they making, superhero movies?
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah.
Sean Williams
Or just stuff. That stuff. They made Part five of Part seven four or whatever.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah, I mean, I think that they're gonna. I mean, I. I think they're gonna try to start making studio comedies again. But. But yeah, I mean, for me, I was just doing variations of the same character at the beginning of my career because I was like, there was. I wasn't, like, getting a ton of roles sent my way. So I was like, oh, okay. It's like Stifler's cousin. I'm gonna make the best of this, you know, and maybe at some point I'll get, like, American Beauty. That never happened.
Sean Williams
American Pie is. You had to catch people by surprise a little bit because it's a good comedy. But, you know, take it from the guy who made Windy City Heat. Doesn't mean people are gonna see it or get in any rotation or find it or know it. It's. It's real low percentage that something is like, oh, yeah, everyone. You bring up the movie. Everyone knows it. You know, that's a very low percentage game, especially with comedies.
Jake Steinfeld
Well, when did you see the Heat Is a great example because it is a classic. It's a. It really is.
Sean Williams
I didn't bring it up for that. No, no.
Jake Steinfeld
Because I brought it up the first time I saw you. I mean, I've seen that movie 500 times. It's unbelievable. It's unbelievable. But I think what helped American Pie, I think, I think is that Dumb and Dumber had come out and then something about Mary. So that kind of gross out comedy. Yeah. Like, you know, the jizz in the hair, you know, so you can kind of start to get there, like, oh, people like this.
Scott Stiffler
Yeah. You know, like pre Internet, it, like hit the right spot. Yeah. Like my. My personal development. Like I was a kid that just when that came out, that was like. It spoke to me. It spoke to all of us. And they're in that era. So you caught that wave.
Sean Williams
Hold on a second. Ma'am, are you wearing my jacket? Is that my jacket?
Scott Stiffler
Well, the same jacket.
Sean Williams
You have the same jacket.
Scott Stiffler
Sick.
Sean Williams
So if I go back there, I'll see my jacket?
Scott Stiffler
Yeah, this is my jacket.
Jake Steinfeld
You just thought that I'm walked in.
Scott Stiffler
My house right now, I'm not wearing this jacket.
Jake Steinfeld
I just want to know, are you wearing my jacket?
Scott Stiffler
Wait, are we gonna have.
Sean Williams
We got the same jacket.
Scott Stiffler
Twinsies.
Sean Williams
Yours has a hood.
Scott Stiffler
Yeah, a hood. Yeah.
Sean Williams
I'm gonna look into this. I feel like that's my jacket. That's too good a jacket.
Scott Stiffler
I invested in this jacket.
Sean Williams
You didn't find that jacket, like, sitting out front, have you been so. No, I have. I'm a multiple jacket owner.
Jake Steinfeld
Oh, you're one of those guys.
Sean Williams
I'm one of those guys.
Scott Stiffler
But I also have two.
Sean Williams
Yeah, I've been displaced from Malibu.
Jake Steinfeld
Oh.
Scott Stiffler
Yeah.
Sean Williams
So I'm a little. It's a little unsure where the jackets are. You know what I mean? Because when you get displaced, you take out your clothes in lumps like trash bags, but it gets spread out. I got stuff here, I got stuff at the place I'm renting. There's stuff back in Malibu. So it's a little unclear how long.
Jake Steinfeld
You be away from your home for.
Sean Williams
Oh, my God. I mean, did you lose your home? No. That's the weird part. Everything around me burned. But not me, I should say for clarity. Everything in front of me burn. That's pch and half the stuff around me burned, like, every other house, crazily, but not everything. But there's no power still. Still? Yeah. So it's only been two months plus, so I don't know. And weirdly, there is no information or answers you can talk to anybody about when they're turning the power on. And all you get is a lot of different speculative answers. But no one goes, oh, there's a date. Go online. That's when you can go back in. They don't do that. And it's weird. They don't even have an interest in doing that, which is peculiar.
Jake Steinfeld
You know, I live in West Malibu and.
Sean Williams
Oh, you do?
Jake Steinfeld
Yes. I was obviously worried that it was gonna go there, but with the Weasley.
Sean Williams
Are you past Zuma?
Jake Steinfeld
Really? Near Zuma?
Sean Williams
Near Zuma.
Jake Steinfeld
I have a friend who. A contractor friend who was telling me that, like this. I probably shouldn't say this because, but, like, the.
Sean Williams
It.
Jake Steinfeld
They'll. It's a mess. It's like. It's a mess. Well, just like, you know that they're just. Just not organized. They're not. They weren't ready for it. And so the.
Adam Corolla
The.
Jake Steinfeld
All the things that need to happen in order to rebuild, it's their.
Sean Williams
Their right.
Scott Stiffler
It's a running theme on this show.
Jake Steinfeld
But what's that?
Scott Stiffler
It's a running theme. Yeah, we talk about all the time.
Sean Williams
Now. Look, they. They find. Look, now that they got that tree house down in Sherman Oaks, maybe they can move on the Palisades. They freed up some. Some workers, you know, who can head over there. Yeah, but. But, yeah, that. You know the thing. I cursed that tree house, by the way, in Sherman Oaks that they took down, the Simpson guy. That was all in the news the other week because I was looking to rent a house in Studio City. Sherman Oaks, same area and some back street, kind of side street you wouldn't drive on normally. And I drove on, I was looking at this house, and I turned around, I was driving back, and I look up and I see that tree house, and there it is. And I look at it, and it's funny. There's a naivete, I think, that people have who don't build or pull permits or deal with the city.
Jake Steinfeld
What's the story? I'm sorry. Behind this.
Sean Williams
The guy built this treehouse 20 years ago. He was a Simpson writer, and Simpson had the haunted treehouse stuff for Halloween every year. And so he and a friend, I guess, decided to just build a really cool tree house in the front of his home. In Studio City. And there it was for like 20 years. And the kids, neighbor, they gussied up for Halloween, and neighbors would come by and kids would climb up there and stuff. And then I cursed it because after 20 years, I was driving back from looking at this house, and I go, oh, look at that tree house. And then, because I was a contractor, my first head always goes, I can't believe the city let him build that tree house. And then normal people who aren't from here go, what business is it of their. And I go, what? What business? None. But still they're getting involved. And she goes, you want to build a treehouse in your own yard? And I go, okay, you're from Michigan. Trust me. Trust me. They don't let you build shit here without they gotta sign off on everything. And they're not signing off on that. And I kept mumbling and I said, I can't believe they let him build that. And then two days later, you turn on the news, the city is tearing down the treehouse of 22 years.
Jake Steinfeld
Did you talk about it on your show?
Sean Williams
Don't put that on me. Don't do that to me.
Jake Steinfeld
I did all those kids. I'm so excited for next Halloween. I can't wait to see the treehouse house. And it's gonna be gone.
Sean Williams
Corolla ran his soup cooler and the joy is gone. Next contractor. Yeah. Yeah. And I pulled tons of permits and got into million arguments with the city, and I was like, they're over officious jackasses who don't let you do anything. No. No way. Are you building a tree house in your front yard. Well, it's part. There's two parts. One is no way they would permit it, and then no way they would let you do it.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah.
Sean Williams
And you can do stuff. I've been busted way more than once. I mean, what they do is they literally. I've had guys walk into a house I was working on, and they just walk in and they go, where's permit? And you go, I don't got a permit. And they go, okay, get off the ladder. Get off the. Go home, you guys. Everyone's working here. Go home. You go get a permit. And you guys ain't coming back until he gets a permit. And then they just send everyone home. They'll come walking into your living room and just tell everyone to go home. Yeah, so I've had that happen a couple of times. It's never a good thing. But the problem is, if you go pull a permit, they're gonna Require so much and may not give it to you. So people try to bootleg it. Like, they try to hide it. But the inspector guys are driving around and they look for stuff like a dumpster. So if you park a dumpster, like if you're remodeling your bedroom in the back of the house, but you put a dumpster in the front of your house, they're gonna have questions. So don't put the dumpster in front of the house. That's the answer. Or you get dickhead neighbor.
Jake Steinfeld
There's a lot of those.
Sean Williams
There's a lot of dickhead neighbors.
Jake Steinfeld
So this was in the front of the house?
Sean Williams
Yeah.
Scott Stiffler
And what happened? A lot of people were starting to come around because they like, you know, treehouse of horror. And some neighbor gave a call and said. And it started off a legal battle that cost the guy 50 grand. He kept going to court about it, trying to get. Keep his treehouse because it was like an institution for 24 years, but no finally came down.
Sean Williams
That's the city. Well, listen, here's the deal with the city. They have endless resources and energy for this kind of stuff. They have no energy or resources for homeless encampments. They're being built across from the school or any of that. They don't have any energy for that. But they have treehouse. If this guy had a pothole in front of his house, he could call them for 100 years. They would never come fill the pothole. But treehouse, they have energy for. They have a lot of energy for enforcement of rules. But that's only for taxpayers. If you do not have a checking account, they're not interested in you because you can't pay them. Yeah, it's bad. So you're in Malibu, but you're in the park that didn't burn.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah, we got crushed at the Woosley fire. That. My neighborhood was really. I think it was one of the hardest hit neighborhoods.
Sean Williams
What year was that?
Jake Steinfeld
I think that was 19. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Sean Williams
But what about the fire that was like three weeks before this fire? Do you remember that? Yeah, that was closer to you.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah, that was. But, yeah, that was the Bluffs fire, and I think that was about 10 miles away.
Sean Williams
And.
Jake Steinfeld
But the fear is like, you know, any of these embers, like, it doesn't matter. I think that that was like, came over from the Valley, you know.
Sean Williams
So you made it. You made it one piece.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah.
Sean Williams
And you're able to get out by going through the canyon?
Jake Steinfeld
Yes, but I. So I've gone down PCH a couple Times.
Sean Williams
Oh you have.
Jake Steinfeld
And it's. Man, it's awful.
Sean Williams
It's awful.
Jake Steinfeld
It's awful, man. And you just think it's, it's even hard to talk about it because it's just so. Yeah. You can't put into words. It's just.
Sean Williams
Yeah.
Jake Steinfeld
Just, it's like a war zone.
Sean Williams
I'm a car guy and people always go talk about the kids, but what about the cars? There's so many good cars and so many garages that dusted. I've been looking at them, right. I'm like, oh yeah, it's Malibu. Everyone's driving a. Everyone's house is 15 million bucks along PCH.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah.
Sean Williams
What's in the garage? Lots of G wagons and Porsches and you know, they ain't driving yugos from the 90s, they're driving cool. And when you go down there, you just see all the torched cars.
Jake Steinfeld
The cars really stand out. There's one house with the spiral staircase. It's kind of like.
Sean Williams
Yeah. Just to nowhere. Yeah, yeah.
Jake Steinfeld
But yeah, the cars are. It's really haunting.
Sean Williams
It's been a big. Between all the nut jobs torching the Teslas and then the Malibu fire, it's been a real year for torching cars. Like high end cars. Normally it's the low end cars. Cause it's out in, you know, the, the riots in the bad neighborhood and the guys got the shitty cars and this year we went after the high end cars. It's never been more cars over 50 grand that have been dusted in like seriously in like a two month period. Historically you go back 500 years. Yeah. Hand of God you're not going to find it. More high end automotive automobiles have been lit on fire in the last 60 days than ever before in this nation's history.
Jake Steinfeld
Being a car guy, that must break your heart.
Sean Williams
Oh, it's tough, tough. I, I just went down PCH last week and, and for some reason the first time I was there, a lot of the garage doors were kind of in place. Lots of garage doors are glass and aluminum and whatever or what have you. But they, they made it that but nothing else. But they knocked down all the garage doors, they got rid of all the garage doors and now I'm just walking past them, looking in garages and seeing high end luxury vehicles because the people that fled. See that fire, that was three weeks earlier. I was asked to evacuate it 2:30 in the morning.
Jake Steinfeld
Oh, you're talking about the one, the.
Sean Williams
One that was like three and a half weeks. Yeah, the Pepperdine.
Jake Steinfeld
There Was one before that that was close to Pepperdine, the Bluffs one. But yeah, the one that was. Yeah. What was that neighborhood called? I can't remember.
Sean Williams
Like, either way, the moral of the story is three weeks earlier, the phone goes off at, you know, 2 in the morning. And it's like, you gotta evacuate. And then there's this guy and I'm like, I don't see any fire. I think we're good. They always want you to evacuate. I don't think we should evacuate.
Scott Stiffler
Yeah, he's super casual about it.
Sean Williams
I was in a hotel once where the fire alarm went off at two in the morning. And I was like, you're that guy. I'm not going. I'm not getting dressed. But I was on the second or third floor, but I was like, I'll throw a chair through the window and I'll break my ankles if the shit really goes down.
Jake Steinfeld
Did you think that after the phone call.
Sean Williams
I was like, at the hotel.
Jake Steinfeld
At the hotel when they called, you were like, if I need to, this is what I'm gonna do.
Sean Williams
If I was on the 27th floor, I would have done it.
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah.
Sean Williams
I was like, they had a prom. I saw prom kids walking around this hotel. When I went up to my room at midnight, I was like, one of those fucking prom kids got drunk, some douche dude, and he pulled the thing. So I'm not going. Everyone else down in the lobby, I saw him through my window spill out on the lawn. 2:30 in the morning. Everyone. I saw Dr. Drew. It's like, sucker. Sucker is how you said, yeah, just looking in my underwear, you know? But I did calculate that if I throw this chair through this window and I will jump onto that lawn and I will break my ankles, but I'm not going to burn up if there is a fire. But nothing happened. But that's where I was going. But my girlfriend said, no, we gotta get. And we evacuated at 2:30 in the morning and went to stupid Burbank and checked into Hotel 4 in the morning. And then three weeks later, when they told us to evacuate again, I was like, we really need to go. I don't know. And we left.
Scott Stiffler
But many you didn't leave until the flames were lit.
Sean Williams
I could see the flames. I could see flames. A lot of people just got into a car and left and said, we'll come back tomorrow. Because they just did it three weeks earlier. But they could never come back. And I think they left a lot of those cars in their garages going, we're just coming Back and a lot of them are like Porsches and stuff because they took the family truckster to evacuate to load up. The Porsche doesn't have any room in it.
Jake Steinfeld
So could you see, when you were walking on pch, you could see the ruins of some of the classic cars and stuff.
Sean Williams
Yeah, I've spotted so far I saw two or three Porsches in a G wagon. That's what I got so far. And then a couple up on the hill were just like melted to the ground and stuff. It's really, it's kind of crazy what heat does to a car, you know. Cause the tires drop and then the glass cracks and yeah, also the houses.
Jake Steinfeld
That didn't get touched, you know, there's that stretch of destruction and then completely unharmed. The homes are like, what the. How does this happen?
Sean Williams
I said it. So I'm doing a vlog so it's coming out or should be out part three. But in the vlog I was standing on pch. PCH in the middle of Malibu, like the real heart of it. Because Sean's sort of on one end of Malibu and I'm kind of middle, but other end I'm kind of down by Duke's. And then there's just sort of the middle where like, you know, Nobu is and the pier and anyway, I was in there and I was looking at houses I knew well, like triple lot, you know, $100 million house and that were pristine down to the ground, you know, rubble, nothing there. But I go across the street and there's a few of these 60s apartment shitbox. Untouched, completely untouched. There's some on the hillside part. Yeah, yeah, there's some raggedy. Sean, I'll tell you, there's a couple like raggedy apartments along pch. Yeah, there's more than one. And there's more than one. They're on the hillside where the fire came from. The fire started on the hill. Didn't start in the ocean, it came over the hill. And these are raggedy ass, 1962 crap ass apartment shit boxes. Yeah, pristine stucco. Completely untouched. Stucco saved the life. No, it's not. They're everything stucco.
Adam Corolla
I don't know, some of them look.
Jake Steinfeld
Like they're wood shops. Yeah.
Sean Williams
Yes. Yeah, just.
Scott Stiffler
Oh, really?
Jake Steinfeld
Yeah.
Sean Williams
Un. And then 1 mil, 100 million dollar home on the other side, all gone. Wow. Weird, right?
Jake Steinfeld
Weird. Yeah, I mean, yeah, it was just I. Yeah, like I said, I've driven that now a few times and it's just, it always just. It strikes me that like how do they like three or four of these old, the older homes just on their own and then all around them, you.
Sean Williams
Know, there's just total, listen, 100% luck of the draw. There is. I mean a little bit is materials, you know, roofing, you know, you have a cedar roof or something, you're fucked. But pretty much luck, just weird luck. Don't know. I mean, I don't know, you know, the bullet that hit Trump's earlobe, you know what I mean? Cuz he turned at the moment to look at the graph on a screen. I mean that's kind of what it comes down to in life. So consider yourself blessed if you can hear the sound of our voice because it could have found the back of your head. But it's never been a worse two month span for high end cars. I'm just gonna go on a limb and say that. And I don't think we'll ever be matched.
Scott Stiffler
But as a fire guy, I gotta.
Sean Williams
Say, as a guy who likes fires, it's salad days for you. Let me give you a plug. Sean, shifting gears. It's a good show and I watch it and I'm not even like a normally a network sitcom guy, but my buddy Hench created it. So I said, yeah, I'm gonna watch it and I got it taped and I, or whatever we call it, it's a really funny.
Jake Steinfeld
You and I are the taped guys. That's our tape.
Sean Williams
It's a really funny show. It's a really good show and it's on ABC and you can also watch it on Hulu as well. And it's Wednesdays, 8pm thank you, Sean. Don't be a stranger, man.
Jake Steinfeld
Thanks, man.
Sean Williams
Fun to talk to you.
Jake Steinfeld
This was awesome. I really appreciate it. Thank you.
Scott Stiffler
Great to have you.
Sean Williams
All right. Jake Steinfeld, who's bodied by Jake's, done a lot of as well and he lived in the Palisades. He was the mayor of the Palisades honorary and his place got burnt down. So maybe a little more of that talk coming up. We'll do that right after this. American giant. Well, it's that time of year where you need a good hoodie. It's essential. But it's tough to find one that's going to last through the season. American Giant classic, full zip Hoodie is made to last a lifetime. Slate magazine called it the greatest hoodie ever made. That's a lot because there have been hoodies around for a long time. And to be the greatest, well, it has to be the best. I was dubious until they sent me one and now I'm here to testify. It is the best hoodie ever made. Custom heavyweight fleece and side panels for mobility. Plus a double lined hood and reinforced elbow patches as well. Every American Giant piece is made in America and designed to last. No exceptions. It's American Giant. It's the best hoodie ever made. Right, Dawson? This season, snag the hoodie that will bring you comfort for life. The American giant classic full zip. And save 20% on your first order at american dashed giant.com when you use code Adam at checkout, that's 20% off your first order at american-giant.com code Adam. Homes.com knows that when it comes to home shopping, it's never just about the house or condo. It's about the home. And what makes a home is more than just a house or property. It's the location. It's the neighborhood. If you have kids, it's also schools, nearby, parks, transportation options, all the above. That's why homes.com goes above and beyond to bring home shoppers the in depth information they need to find the right home. And when I say in depth, I'm talking about deep. That's right. Each listing features comprehensive information about the neighborhood, complete with a video guide. They also have details about local schools with test scores, state rankings and student to teacher ratio. They even have an agent directory with the sales history of each agent. So when it comes to finding a home, not just a house, this is everything you need to know all in one place. Homes.com. homes.com. We've done your homework. It's time for Nicaraguan. Name that movie with Adam's buddy Oswaldo. See if you can guess which movie this famous line is from. We're going striki. If you said old school, we're going straight.
Jake Steinfeld
You're correct.
Sean Williams
Now back to the show. All right, well, that was our last guest and our new guest, Jake. Rick Steinfeld is fitness guru. Done a fair bit of acting. Seen him in lots of movies as well. Don't quit. That's his philosophy. And we'll get into that and fitness app and stuff like that. But first, yeah, update on fires because you're a Palisades guy. Palisades is next to Malibu. For people listening out of the state or the country or what have you, Altadena's deep sort of valley off. You know, Altadena is a good 25 miles away. That's one fire. Then there's the Palisades, which basically just bumps up against Malibu. And arguably Altadena may have got Hit the hardest. But the average home price in Altadena is probably 1.2 million bucks. And the average price in the palisades is probably 4.6. A little more real estate and a little more square footage to burn over there. And I drove all the way down Sunset, which, starting at UCLA and then, well, all the way down to pch, and it just turns into a war zone at a certain point, right down some of the most pristine highway and architecture in the world. So where are you fellas?
Adam Corolla
It's great to see you. It's great to see you. Chase, man, you know, I'm always. My life has always been the pump up guy, you know, And I did the show a long time ago, man. I sat right here. We were talking about. I remember what. But it was always awesome, awesome news. It was always great, positive news. And, yeah, you brought the fight. I was listening to the last guest and heard about you and Malibu and being this place. We. We unfortunately lost our home. And guys, it's the most surreal, surreal, surreal thing you could ever imagine.
Sean Williams
How long have you been there?
Adam Corolla
30 years.
Sean Williams
30 years.
Adam Corolla
I live in the house for 30 years. Gone. We have four kids. My wife Tracy and I raised four kids in that house. Daughter Morgan is 32. I have a son, Nick, who's 30. Zach is 25 and Luke is 23.
Sean Williams
So was everyone out of the house?
Adam Corolla
Everybody was. Let me. I'll set the story up Saturday. No. So it's January.
Sean Williams
So you're right in the middle of the.
Adam Corolla
Sorry, I'm in Huntington. I'm in the Huntington Palisades. I'm in the Flats where you could never imagine. And we, you know, Adam, I heard you say you got evacuated. We were supposed to be evacuated a few years back. And I packed the car up and I decided, you know what? And it was coming from the valley side, if you remember. And there's not a chance they're going to get us. And we were fine. You know, we were listening to the news and they said, you know, if you're in your house still, you're an idiot and get out of your house. And we said, I think we're gonna be fine. And we were.
Sean Williams
Well, there is an element that people need to understand because they think some who were reluctant to evacuate, like, are rolling the dice. But you go, as I've said to people, you know, whether it's an earthquake or fire, you know, they go, what about earthquakes or what about fires? The house was built in 1948. Yeah, well, it's still there, baby.
Adam Corolla
It's still there.
Sean Williams
So I don't know about the fire because the fire had 75 years to burn this place down. It hasn't burned it down, but that doesn't mean it ain't gonna burn down.
Adam Corolla
It ain't gonna burn down. So this was. I'm a big believer, fellas, in life is about moments, you know. And I'll just set up January 7th for you. Go about my day. Now, the night before, if you remember, the news talked about heavy winds. It's going to be heavy duty winds. There's a, you know, chance of fire. It's been dry as hell here. And I remember, man, you know, I got, I've been in this house for 30 years. I love it, man. I got a gym in my home that I've had, I've earned, you know. I was born in Brooklyn, New York. I was raised in Baldwin, Long Island. A great family came from, came from a middle class, you know, worked your way up everything. And when I met my wife, whose girlfriend that she had mentioned, she talked about a trust fund. And I said, yeah, that sounds great. I wonder, how do you get one of those things? And I even asked my mother, I said, ma, do I have a trust fund? And she laughed and said, get out of here, you know, and there was no trust fund. So everything I have I earned and I'm very proud of it. And, you know, it's this January 7th. In the morning I do my workout. I'm up in the. I get about four hours sleep a night. I'm in the gym at four in the morning and I do my workout and I'm kind of smiling to myself and go, whoo, these winds are crazy gorgeous. I mean, it was as calm as could be, fellas, as calm as could be. And. And I have breakfast with my wife as we've done. Our kids are grown. My daughter lives in London. I got two boys in New York. My third guy is making movies here in la. He lives in Brentwood. And we laughed a bit about the fact that it was a gorgeous morning. My daughter had flown in to surprise my wife. January 10th is her birthday. And so she was in town. It was really nice. And the girls are going to go out, do a little shopping, get their hair done, whatever it was going to be. I had a lunch at Toscana, which is my cafeteria, at 12:00, 12:30. And at about quarter to 12, my assistant Craig says, hey, you know, there's a fire up in the hills. And I went out and I looked and I Go, oh, man, that's pretty insane, you know, it's not gonna come close to us anyway. 12 o'clock comes, I get in the car, get the Sunset Boulevard. It's bumper to bumper, Adam. And I'm wondering, why is it bumper to bumper? And they're talking about evacuations. And I'm going, you know what? I can't even get to Amalfi. I'm gonna turn around, which is a street, you know, right off of Sunset Boulevard. I come back to the house and I'm working from there. And the winds start picking up, and the clouds, the smoke starts getting pretty crazy. And I go back outside and I see the fire is coming closer, but not close to where you would imagine anything could ever affect where we live. And for. As you mentioned, people who listen to you around the world have no concept of where Pacific Palisades is. But it's the flats. I'm not on the bluffs. I always tell people I'm an earthquake away from beachfront, you know, but we're very safe. Very safe. Two hours later, the smoke that. The wind changes, and now the smoke is coming over the house.
Sean Williams
Now it's two in the afternoon.
Adam Corolla
It's two o'clock in the afternoon, 2:30 in the afternoon. I say, you know what? I call my wife, I have a video of it, and I say, honey, I'm gonna pack some stuff. Call me, right? And about 45, 50 minutes later, things really like, the sky turns black.
Scott Stiffler
Damn it.
Adam Corolla
Turns black. And I'm picking things up. And if I pose the question to you fellas and everyone who listens to you, you have two hours. You have your home of 30 years or 10 years, whatever it is. What do you take? What do you take?
Sean Williams
Now?
Adam Corolla
You take your valuables. You take the stuff that's in a safe that your passports and things like that. And then, like you, Adam, I look at your studio. It's fucking insane. I love it. I get sad only because I lost.
Sean Williams
Oh, this is a bad place to show up when you lost all your.
Adam Corolla
All the memorabilia, all the memories, all of. All that stuff, right?
Sean Williams
You had a lot of stuff.
Adam Corolla
47 years of doing bodybuilding.
Sean Williams
It's interesting because my parents passed recently, were not what you call accomplished people. So if they had to.
Adam Corolla
I don't know if that's funny or not, but I don't know.
Scott Stiffler
I know all the punchlines. No, sorry.
Sean Williams
But here's what I'm saying.
Adam Corolla
Jason's laughing.
Scott Stiffler
Sorry, man.
Sean Williams
Yeah, come on. No, he. My dad. My dad lived in Altadena he passed just before the fire, but he. I don't know if his house burned. My dad was in Altadena, and theoretically would have need to pack up, same as you did, and leave.
Adam Corolla
Now.
Sean Williams
My dad's house just had books that other people wrote on the shelf, you.
Adam Corolla
Know what I mean?
Sean Williams
Not a lot of awards and plaques and trophies and pictures of him with President Ford and stuff like that, you know, There was none of that. So he. All he had to do is get some socks and underwear and hit the bridge. But you and his trumpet. I bought him the trumpet, so that's a good melt. But the point is, is you have a lifetime of achievements, and they're gonna be photographs and plaques and trophies.
Adam Corolla
But it's not only that. It isn't only that. I have four kids being a dad for all these years. And look, I'm one of those wacky dads who saved every little note, every little handprint, every. Every little card.
Sean Williams
So what did you go for?
Adam Corolla
I took the most important things in the safe and literally, the clothes on my back. I called my wife, Tracy, and she was with Morgan, my daughter. And I said, guys, I've got to grab this stuff now. We got to get out of here. They're going to come back and at least take a couple of the cars. You talk about cars. We'll talk about that in a minute. And I took what you would think you would take. I couldn't see. I just got all of my home videos, everything when the kids were little midgets and everything like that digitized. And there was a bag, thankfully, sitting right by my desk. Now, my desk, my office, like yours, I call Mission Control. That's where I did all my work, my business, my phone calls. And I had a poem that I was given when I was cut from my 8th grade basketball team called Don't Quit. You know, I was an overweight kid. I had a bad stutter. My dad bought me a set of weights at 13. It changed my life. And I went out for the basketball team in eighth grade. I got cut. Embarrassing. At that moment, this kid gives me this poem. I wasn't really a student. I was not a poet hardly. And for whatever the reason was, I didn't throw the poem away. It was on a perma plaque.
Sean Williams
Really? A kid gave it to you?
Adam Corolla
This kid gave me this poem. And the last two lines of the poem are, stick to the fight when your hardest hit. It's when things seem worst that you must not quit. I'll recite the rest of the Poem before I leave here today. But that plaque, that perma plaque had been with me since I'm 14.
Sean Williams
Wow.
Adam Corolla
It's on my desk and I literally have my duffel bag. I have enough clothes. I bring a change of underwear, figuring, you know what? Okay, I pick up the plaque.
Sean Williams
Do you think you're coming back at that point, right?
Adam Corolla
I pick up the plaque and I go, wait a second, I can't do this. I gotta put. If I take this plaque, if I take the don't quit poem, that means I'm quitting on my house and I'm quitting on coming back here. I'm gonna be back in the morning. And I put the poem back down. I put the poem back down because I knew I was coming back. An hour goes by, 45 minutes goes by. My wife and daughter come. It's mayhem now, right? We grab a couple of the cars that we have and we get in the car, not thinking that we're not coming back to the point of. I didn't. I do you mean the flames were coming? The flames were. They were not. The smoke was insane. Now, look, I've got. I have gates in front of my house, right? And I just thought that in case they're bad actors, let me keep the gate locked, right? I'm going to bring the. I never bring a key because there's a side entrance. And this is the only thing, right? This is the key that I have from the side gate, right? And I thought in the morning, I'll come back up there, go to the side gate. If the power's out, I could unlock the gate and pull the gate open and I could take out. I've been blessed. I have nice things. I have a 98, 550 Marinello. That 8,000 miles on it. Yeah. Pochi blue, six speed. Six speed. Magnificent.
Sean Williams
Oh. What's the interior color?
Adam Corolla
It's that camel. That beautiful camel with the.
Sean Williams
Blue's beautiful.
Adam Corolla
With the.
Sean Williams
With.
Adam Corolla
With the luggage. Still. Still.
Sean Williams
Custom luggage.
Adam Corolla
Custom luggage. You know the deal.
Sean Williams
550 Ferraris going up. Kind of the last. Well, not the last, but front end V12. But here's the real one. If it's paddle shift, worth half as.
Adam Corolla
Much on the floor, baby. If it's stick on the floor, if.
Sean Williams
It'S the six speed. So those cars are moving up fast.
Adam Corolla
I only tell you that to say I thought that. Okay, I'll come back in the morning and I'll be able to get the car. I can put some more stuff in just in case.
Sean Williams
Don't Tell me that car was left in there.
Adam Corolla
So we leave the car. We leave the car and everything else, fellas.
Sean Williams
Ferrari 5.
Adam Corolla
Because I'm coming back. So with insanity that's going on, I do listen, everyone.
Sean Williams
I've been asked to leave a few houses, but you always think you're coming back. Whether it's your girlfriend kicking you out or the fire marshal kicking out. You're always like, I'm gonna be like, MacArthur. I will return.
Adam Corolla
But that was my.
Sean Williams
You just think you're coming back. I thought I was coming back.
Adam Corolla
Here's the thing. It wasn't that I thought I knew I was coming back.
Sean Williams
You left the plaque.
Adam Corolla
I left the plaque. I left the plaque, guys.
Sean Williams
And the 550.
Adam Corolla
And the 550. And the torch that when I ran into 2012 Summer Games in London and the 2000 and the 2018 Stanley cup.
Sean Williams
Ring, ironically, the torch made it.
Adam Corolla
No, the torch didn't even make it. Listen, so here's the deal. We end up. I knew if I mentioned this will be the whole show in the blue.
Sean Williams
Because everyone gets the red with the tan, but they don't get the blue. The car looks the best in the blue Pozzi blue.
Adam Corolla
I got it. My friend John Luigi Boutoni. Who is the Jewish guy? A Jewish guy. We got bar mitzvah together. As a matter of fact, it's. Butoniewicz shortened it up.
Sean Williams
Well, let me ask you real quick.
Adam Corolla
Go ahead.
Sean Williams
Those 550s were. Were cheap a few years ago.
Adam Corolla
Yes, they were. They were.
Sean Williams
They weren't expensive. They just were not. And I would look at them all the time. I go, that's a V12 front engine. Ferrari. I don't know what the hell. It's 65 grand for 85 grand. But those. Those are cheap. Those are too cheap. They should be going. Every car I mentioned should be going up. Get back to me in eight or 10 years. They're going up. Those cars are a couple hundred grand now and six speed and whatever. But I don't know what the insurance company does, because they could. Yeah, there's a version where they go, well, I'll be 85 grand.
Adam Corolla
Let me say this. The only reason why I kept the car is because one of my sons loves cars. My son Zach loves. Has love cars his whole as he's a little kid. And he knows. He hears the. He hears the engines of cars. He knows, dad, that's a throw in a blank. And I just. I like the car at the moment. And then it got nuts to drive, and they Only drove it once every two years to get the car smogged, right? Because, you know, in this town you gotta smog the car, right? So. And I had to drive it 80 miles because. Or you fail a smog test, right? And you didn't get the sticker right? So that's why I had 8,000 miles on the car.
Sean Williams
But so, boys, what did the insurance say?
Adam Corolla
The insurance did great. I mean, at the end of the day, it did great. The way they pulled it out and it was melted, you know, it was not great. It was just felt like it was really not nice. It just wasn't nice. I could show you pictures of that too. But, boys, here's the deal. We check into a hotel, which is the old Lowe's in Santa Monica. It's called the Regent. Now, right?
Sean Williams
By the wife, the daughter. Got stuff out.
Adam Corolla
We got. We got not everything, but not even just our stuff. Just like birth certificates, things like that Ferrari behind. They're all that behind. And we check into the Regent Hotel. Now, interestingly enough, I open the curtains and we can, we can literally watch the Palisades burn. And we watch on the seventh floor of this place. And we were able to watch Santa Monica's.
Sean Williams
Santa Monica bumps up against the Palisades and the Palisades bump up against Malibu. That's kind of how it works. But in Santa Monica, America was in a little evacuation.
Adam Corolla
They were saying, what are you at that hotel for, Jake? You're gonna have to evacuate there. And we were, it was, it was. You were so sort of off balance. And now we're watching. I get four hours of sleep, guys. I try to get some sleep. I jump up at about 3 o'clock in the morning. I tell my wife, Tracy, I said, I gotta get to the house. I mean, I lost my mind a bit. I'm gonna be honest with you. I gotta go. I left the house. I mean, it's 30 years we're there and like, calm down. We'll go in the morning. 6:30 in the morning. We get up, police are everywhere, it looks like. I mean, there's ash everywhere. It's like it's snowing. And my daughter, who's a big hiker from. Goes around the world hiking on her own makes me nuts. I have only one daughter. We go up, sneak up behind Chautauqua street to get us to Chautauqua. And there is a Telemundo van. Van, right? And we have like a mask on, goggles on, and it's hard to breathe. And I knock on the window, and I take the mask down, you know. The guy said, could you take me to senior house? By the way? The guy goes, buddy by Jake.
Sean Williams
Really?
Adam Corolla
Yeah, it was. It was pretty nice. I said, could I want to see my house and could you take me? He says, yes. We go up the street because they.
Sean Williams
Have a news van.
Adam Corolla
Yes, they have a news van. We go up the street, make a left on this street called Borges. I'm seeing the houses.
Sean Williams
Okay.
Adam Corolla
I'm going, okay. This is okay. I make the right turn. One house is good, other house is good. We have a basketball court in our front yard. That. That. We bought this home. We didn't build this house in 1994.
Sean Williams
Huh?
Adam Corolla
And when the kids would wait for the bus, we'd all play some basketball in the front yard. And the basketball hoop was melted. And you drive up and my daughter's sitting in the back seat. And I'm not gonna get emotional. It. It was insane to see your house. Yeah, it's. It's. It's.
Sean Williams
So houses around your house, okay, they're up.
Adam Corolla
Opposite side, across the street, it's up.
Sean Williams
So literally, the neighbor in front of you is fine.
Adam Corolla
Side, left, side, right. Side, fine, Right, left in front.
Sean Williams
Those are your. They're three neighbors, all fine.
Adam Corolla
And I'm. And I'm not. I'm gone. Is. There's. The only thing that's up is the front gate. And I remember standing up outside and looking, and my daughter, come on behind me, says, daddy, it's going to be all right. And I called Tracy, my wife in the car, who's down on the bottom of Chautauqua, and she goes, what's up? I go, it's gone. It's just gone. And it's such a surreal feeling, fellas. You know, we see movies, television shows, news, woolsey fires, right? Katrina. All these horrific things that happen. And you sit there with your family or your wife, and you go, wow, that's terrible. So what are we having for dinner tonight? Right? And you get on to your life, and now you're the guy, or you're the victim, or you're the person that it's. They're talking about. And then you hear all this stuff about LA Strong and all, hey, this. And you're going, you're full of shit.
Sean Williams
By the way, I've lived in LA my whole life. I still. I don't know what LA Strong. You're not allowed to just put strong in front of lazy people who. You don't have a house.
Adam Corolla
Well, so. But I'm going to say this after a few hours. What happened was something that I didn't think would happen to me. I like, it was a rejuvenation. I felt light. I felt like this sense of energized. I'm an energized guy all the time anyway.
Scott Stiffler
Yeah.
Adam Corolla
But I went from like, what the fuck? To, okay, you got a choice. You could roll up in a ball and die in a corner, or you get up and you persevere.
Sean Williams
Yeah. Let me ask a philosophical question. They have near death experiences and then people say they changed. You know, they started hugging people more after they're near death kind of thing. And. And I think sometimes as humans, we may get weighed down by a lot of material things and collecting things and keeping things. And then it becomes a kind of a burden to do that. And maybe weirdly, it all turning to ash. In a weird way, you give me the chills. Could be liberating. In a weird way, you're giving me.
Adam Corolla
The chills when you say it. It. Because that's it, really. And I hate to look. And I hate him. I'm telling you. You know, sometimes you think you're defined by what you have.
Sean Williams
Right?
Adam Corolla
As opposed to who you are.
Sean Williams
Right.
Adam Corolla
And what really counts, what really matters. And until they strip it away, right? You have to sit with yourself and say, look in the mirror and say, hey, who are you? What are you about? What's important? Who's important? Look, life's about moments. Life's short, fellas. Right? The director yells cut, the show's over. And this is a moment where. What are you gonna do? So every single moment from January 7th, my cameras went off at 10:25pm The.
Sean Williams
Ring doorbell or whatever. Security, stop.
Adam Corolla
Security. That's when the power and the show was over. And it's been unbelievable. Every single day has been a bit of January 7th.
Sean Williams
Yeah.
Adam Corolla
Dealing with insurance and dealing with, you know, you mentioned, you know, talking before with your last guest, Scott, who I think is awesome, man.
Sean Williams
He's great.
Adam Corolla
What a great guy. Nice. Really nice guy. What a nice guy. About just. You listen to the news and you hear our mayor and the governor saying things are at light speed and we're moving. Let me take you.
Sean Williams
All right, hold on, hold on. I'm gonna.
Adam Corolla
I'm doing tours now, so. I'm doing tours. I'm doing the Hazmat tour. It's the, you know, come on with me.
Sean Williams
I will, I will, I will. We need to take a quick break. We'll set this up. Cause I wanna hear? So it's been two and a half months or two months in a week or whatever. For lack of a better whatever. Let's just call it two and a half. Since the fire, we had the funny one of Mayor Bass in there with Trump and Trump yelling, let people clear.
Adam Corolla
Their Let people clear.
Sean Williams
Let people clear. And then she was like, we're gonna do it right?
Adam Corolla
Should be a week right now.
Sean Williams
I also, and Byron has a video clip. I went down there and I found one of the only people that was physically clearing their property in Malibu. And I interviewed the guy who was in charge of the crew that was cleaning the property. And I said to him, how much? How long? What's with the permit? How many of these you doing? Because there was nothing going on. But there was one crew with one big backhoe and a couple of laborers. And I talked to that guy. So we can cue that up. And I want to hear Jake's story as well.
Adam Corolla
I got a good one. I got a good one.
Sean Williams
And we'll do it right after this. O'reilly oh, oh, oh. O'reilly Auto Parts, wow. Yeah. You know the jingle. Yeah. They're in the business of keeping your car on the road. O'Reilly Auto Parts offers friendly, helpful service and the parts and knowledge you need for maintenance and for repairs as well. I've always been a fan of O'Reilly. You know, I like the ranch, used to use the one over in North Hollywood, then it was the one up in La Canada La Crescenta when I used to live out there. I'm always working on my stuff and always using. O'reilly Whether you're a car aficionado or an auto novice, you're going to find the employees at O'Reilly Auto Parts to be knowledgeable, helpful, and best of all, they are friendly. So stop by O'Reilly Auto Parts, do it today. Or you can Visit us online. O'reillyauto.com Adam that's o'reillyauto.com Adam Select Quote there's so many things in life we just never get around to taking up that hobby, cleaning out the garage, you know. You know, you need to do that. You know, little things that don't really make huge differences in our lives yet there is one thing that most of us have probably been neglecting that can have a huge impact on our family's future. It's life insurance. And with select quote, getting covered with the right policy for you is easier and more affordable than you may think. If you have high blood pressure, no problem. If you have Diabetes, that's fine too. Even if you have heart disease. Selectquote partners with carriers that can cover those conditions and others. Head to selectquote.com and a licensed insurance agent will call you right away with the right policy for your life and your budget. It is select quote right, Dawson?
Scott Stiffler
Select quote.
Sean Williams
They shop, you save. Get the right life insurance quote for you for less@SelectQuote.com Corolla go to SelectQuote.com Corolla today to get started that SelectQuote.com Corolla and now Alcoa presents Definitely not a Jew on the Adam Corolla show Dateline Wildwood Flooring. A 29 year old man was charged with felony battery after a confrontation with his 62 year old stepfather over his.
Jake Steinfeld
Use of his PlayStation 5. The man hit his stepfather with a baloney sandwich. Definitely not a Jew.
Sean Williams
Yeah, I don't know why I invented that 15 years ago. 20 years ago.
Adam Corolla
That's insane. That dude. Definitely not a Jew.
Sean Williams
Jake Steinfeld here. So don't quit is his ethos. And you can shoot him a tweet at Body by Jake and also TikTok Instagram at official body by Jake as well. So you can tell us the story. Your place burned. My place didn't. Everywhere around my place burned. I don't know what the batting average was in your neighborhood when I was evacuated. And I watching the news and seeing little bits and pieces because it was like a jigsaw puzzle, like, oh, it's a shot. Oh, they got a, they got dukes in the back. Dukes is still there, but oh, but then that other place is gone. At one point a restaurant directly in front of my place burned down. And I was like, all right, well that's it. Now they don't take the camera and go up the hill to my place. They just go, the restaurant is burnt down. So I'm like, we're gonna. And I talked to my son at the time and I just went, you know, what's it look like over there? I said it's literally a coin toss. Toss. And I would take the coin toss right now. It's a flip of coin. I have no idea whether it's there or not. But I've been going. So most everything around me went. But I don't know about you.
Adam Corolla
Everything around everything with the exception of my street of the 600 block, right. I'm the only house that went down on my street. Everywhere in front of me going into the Rick Caruso village area is gone. It's Gaza, right? And I Don't, Jason. I'm not. I like to tell stories, man. We all embellish the little things. I wish that this was a story in. Where I'm in a dream still or a bad dream. Although not. I'm hanging. You guys.
Sean Williams
Where have you physically been for the last two and a half months?
Adam Corolla
Well, we were at the Regent Hotel in Santa Monica, which, by the way, I'm gonna give a plug. These people were so damn nice. And everybody. We were there for 31 days. We are presently in a high rise in Century City now, and. Which. You know what? It's strange. I. I went to three months of college and came out here to pursue bodybuilding in summer 1977. So I've been in. Last time I was in an apartment, I was 20 years old, right? You know, so it's a.
Sean Williams
That's the funniest thing. I was. I was driving to the Comedy Store two nights ago, and I was talking to my son again, who's in Oregon. He's 18. And I said, like, how's it going over there? And I said, rent a place in Burbank, you know? And he goes, how's that? I go, I've not lived this way since I had roommates and was poor. Like, I'm living like I'm swinging a hammer and driving a truck, and it's 1989. That's basically how I'm living. I got used to something different than this.
Adam Corolla
It's a different show, man.
Sean Williams
Different show.
Adam Corolla
It's a different show. But you know what?
Sean Williams
Seats aren't as good.
Adam Corolla
The seats are shitty. I just say it, man. But. But here's the thing, though. We, as humans, you acclimate. And. And it's like I tell my wife, you know, and I'm. And I listen. I've been very blessed. We married, Tracy and I, going on top of the 37.
Sean Williams
Wow.
Adam Corolla
Oh, wow. H1 wife in this town, you know, which is very rare. Very rare. And. And we get along. And. And if we didn't, it would be. I mean, we like to joke around about a lot of things, but if you don't get along with your significant other, especially during times like this, and you talk about it, it's nuts. But, Adam, I know you have something you might want to show, but instead of showing your story, I think if I could tell you the story, we could do both. Okay? Because. So when your house burns down, psychologically, it is. It destroys you. And we were going up to the property. Now, I can say property. I can't say My house, Right. Every day, right. Because we didn't know. No one knew what was going on. We were getting information about phase ones and phase twos. And, you know, the EPA is going to come and look at your property and then give you a check mark. And once you have a check mark, you can opt in to the Army Engineer Corps Corps for them to come to your house to scrape your land. Right. Scrape your property for free. If you don't have insurance. But if you have insurance, they will max out your insurance. But they don't take certain things. They won't take a pool. They won't take driveways. They won't take concrete. They only take a certain amount of inches of the soil, which you need a certain amount more in order to get to next phases. So who is that on? Then it comes out of your personal pocketbook. You can opt in to the Army Corps of Engineers. And eventually, if you'd like to opt out, you can. But if you opt out at first, you can't opt back in. So this is day two. My wife does this. We opt in. We're waiting to get the EPA to come up to give you the phase one check. Remember, I locked my gate only because now there's police, National Guard, but there are still bad actors coming up, and they're robbing homes. And I'm thinking, not gonna rob my home. I get nothing there. But I kept the gate locked just because, well, the Army Corps, the EPA comes and they give you an incomplete if they can't get in your property. It's like in school. Which reminds me back in fifth grade, because, you know, I used to bring the flag home a lot when I had an F, I called the flag. So, you know, I bring the flag home with my mother. I tried to change an F to a B once. I was really stupid, and it didn't work out. And my mother did the routine. Well, let's call. Let's call Mr. Crespi. And I said, go ahead, Matt. You know, and she started to dial. I go, man, I know it's me. I dialed the vote. And she wasn't even calling Mr. Crest because of my job. She knew it's a number, so I have an incomplete. And I said, okay, tomorrow morning, I'm gonna come back up to the house, which was February 3rd. I have my moments, right? February 3rd in the morning. I come to the house now, still. It's dark, it's bad. Everything around it is just. I mean, the Palisades in Malibu, man, are some beautiful places. This is Looks like. It looks like the worst you've ever seen anywhere a war zone. I come up there, I find the EPA crew. And there was, thankfully, it was a foreman named Vince. I convinced him to come to my house. And they literally come in the hazmat. It looks like a movie, guys. They come out, they lay a white sheet out in front of your house and they look around and they literally found a half of a paint can they put down. And they said, you get the green check mark. And I said, fantastic. And they said, oh, by the way, can we take a picture with you? I said, no problem. Thank God I did that. I took a picture with the boys. And we're on to phase two, which was, now we decide we want to opt out. I don't want the Army Engineer Corps because I don't want to wait because psychologically myself, my wife, my kids, I don't want to stare at this because it really is painful.
Sean Williams
Were you able to go through the wreckage and salvage anything?
Adam Corolla
Nothing. We found one thing and I could show you a picture of it. We found a picture. We found a plate, a little like, almost like an ashtray. It wasn't an ashtray. And it was a Winston Churchill saying, when you're going through hell, keep going, keep going.
Sean Williams
Wow.
Adam Corolla
I'm going to find this when we're in the middle of talking and I will show it to you. Not in a second second, but you'll lose your. That's the only.
Sean Williams
That's crazy.
Adam Corolla
That's the only of a nice home. Beautiful. That's it.
Sean Williams
That's it.
Adam Corolla
It's the only thing. It's the only thing that we found. And I will tell you that when you're so flipped out over all this stuff, you just want to get rid of that bent steel. Bent metal, that wreckage, right? So I, I connect with a demolition company. You know, you interview these people and a couple of them show up in Gucci loafers and you're going, so, yeah, Larry, you're not the guy that's going to be.
Sean Williams
Actually, I gotta tell all you people, you contractors, I've had guys, guys pull up in Hummers with 22 inch triple chrome rims on it, canary yellow smoked windows, like, okay, this guy's charging way too much, Way too much, way too much. On the other hand, you don't want to pull up In a beater, 25 year old F150 with two different color fenders on it because you go, that guy, she doesn't know what he's doing. There's A sweet spot. Like. Like it's a. It's a. It's a truck that's like seven years old. Not top of the line 350, you know, lariat Evel Knievel edition or Harley Davidson. It's like. It's like a. It's like a Ford 250, not dually lumber rack bed box with seven years on it. But the guy takes care of it. And that's the guy you hire.
Adam Corolla
And no Gucci loafers.
Sean Williams
No Gucci loafers. First. Here it is. If you're going through hell, keep going. It. It ostensibly looks like a smallish medium ashtray.
Adam Corolla
Exactly. So, Jake, look at that, man. Right? So. So. So I. I hire this guy, Georgie, JG Demolition, right? This big dude, man. He's a really honest guy. And the first thing you have to do is you have to get once again your soil tested. So you do. Now, you call around for that. I won't bore you with the story. I end up with this nice group. They come up, they take 33 samples. I don't want to. I don't want to do anything underhanded. I don't want to do anything that's not right. I have neighbors. I want to clear this as fast as possible, psychologically for the family, but for my neighbors as well. And thumbs up on that. Now we can get forward to do the demo. I got Georgie and his team two and a half, three Mondays ago, ready to go. He calls me, says, you got an incomplete on your. No, no, no, we don't. I go up there and there's an incomplete, and there's the army. There's a little thing in the ground. It's from the Army Corps. And I said, hang on. And I get on the phone and I get to a nice supervisor, the epa. Her name was Mary. And I said, mayor, listen, I had a check mark and now it says incomplete. Yes, we understand. There's, you know, all this backup. Give us a couple of weeks. And I said, mary, here's what's gonna happen. That's your problem, it isn't mine. I said, this has been devastating enough and I gotta get rid of this stuff and I'm gonna do it. So if there's a problem, I gave her my address and I said, call the police and I'll have a news crew here, and let's just talk about this in a public forum. I said, I can send a picture with me and Vince, who's the foreman of the EPA group. I can show you these pictures here if you like fellas with the thumbs up and 12 guys. She says, you know what? You go take care of your business. And then I spoke to the Army Corps. Now, by the way, when you call the Army Corps, very nice folk, they've all been very sweet. Unfortunately, they just don't have information. They don't know what to do.
Sean Williams
They don't know what to do, so.
Adam Corolla
They just keep passing you around. So what happens is you opt out. Out. You send an email, they say, we are in receipt of you opting out, but we'll let you know when you're able to be opted out. And I said, no, this is not Nazi Germany.
Sean Williams
Right.
Adam Corolla
And I called up another nice person and I said, hey, my name is Jake Steinfeld and we're at this address in the Palisades. My home is burned. I'm going to go through my own private demolition company, not using you folks. There's plenty of the people that want to. If you have a problem, call the army, have them come up to this address and let's. We'll have a news crew and let's talk about it.
Sean Williams
How big is your lot? How many square feet do you know?
Adam Corolla
29,000 square feet.
Sean Williams
29,000 big. Almost three quarters of an acre. Yes.
Adam Corolla
Yeah.
Sean Williams
So that's a big lot.
Adam Corolla
Yes. And it's a disaster area.
Sean Williams
And people don't really know what an acre is, but a half acre is a big lot. That's a double lot. Three quarters of an acre is a good chunk of land. Swimming pool.
Adam Corolla
Yes.
Sean Williams
All right, so they got to deal with that.
Adam Corolla
Yes.
Sean Williams
What do they quote you to clear that lot?
Adam Corolla
That's a lot of money. It is a six figure.
Sean Williams
Six figures.
Adam Corolla
It's six figures. But you know what, though? I had the first two fellows come up now, by the way, guys, everything that we're dealing with now, this wasn't planned. We didn't plan for the house to burn down. We didn't plan to have to deal with insurance. We'll talk about that in a second. But I just want to alert all of your list is like, this is something. If you get anything out of this, a couple of laughs and, and, and understanding that, you know, life's about moments. We all deal with shit. We have to deal with things. But when it comes to insurance, make sure you read your policies, make sure you understand what you have, what you don't have, what you need, contents and all that good stuff.
Sean Williams
Yeah. How are you doing on insurance?
Adam Corolla
So we're very fortunate. We're with a, with a very Good company. And so far so good. If it turns, I'll come back on the show, we'll tell you.
Sean Williams
So they now I will. I'll tell you what, I'll show you a minute 50 second of me talking to Glenn. The guy's cleaning up PCH because I think it's informative for the audience. And you guys can go look at it.
Adam Corolla
The blog.
Sean Williams
The blog is out. He's a private guy.
Adam Corolla
Okay.
Sean Williams
So I want to. He passes a lot of information in a minute and a half and I want you to absorb that and then we'll get back. So this is me on PCA and I stopped and a guy came up to me who was working on a crew. What's your name?
Scott Stiffler
My name is Glenn Bell. I work for American Wrecking.
Sean Williams
Uh huh. So you guys have been subbed out to do this stuff direct by the homeowner. What does it cost to completely strip one of these lots? And I know you're going to say it's going to vary from lot to lot depending on size. Now pause it there for a second. It's a lot smaller than Jake's lot. Jake's 3/4 of an acre. This is 8th of an acre smaller. These are small beachfront places, so.
Adam Corolla
Right. But it's on the water.
Sean Williams
It's on the water.
Adam Corolla
There's coastal commission problems and all those challenges.
Sean Williams
Well, we'll keep playing it. I'll do it. To completely strip one of these lots and I know you're going to say it's going to vary, vary from lot to lot depending on size and access. There's pretty decent access here. So we can bring in the bigger equipment. And the big trucks, they're averaging from 40,000 and up to 90,000 depending on the size, volume, dump these and time.
Scott Stiffler
Is what makes it off, go up or down.
Sean Williams
Also the scrap metal. I sell the scrap metal. Discount that back.
Adam Corolla
Oh.
Sean Williams
So if I have $100,000 job and.
Scott Stiffler
There'S 50,000 in scrap scrap, I'm gonna.
Sean Williams
Do it for 50. The scrap gaves me the. I did not know that the steel was reusable.
Scott Stiffler
Well, no, it's going for scrap metal.
Sean Williams
They're gonna. Oh, they're gonna melt it down. Likely end up in China. How many days to go from this?
Adam Corolla
Four to six.
Sean Williams
We declared this finished and clean. Four days. Four days. There you go. So you start. All right, you can pause it there. By the way. That's the wrong cut. But anyway, it's not the cut with that drip got released. It's a different cut. That's all right. It's the same guy. Just.
Adam Corolla
It's a brand new show you're doing.
Sean Williams
No, you got sent a former cut. That's why I was looking. I was going, I thought we cut that stuff out. But Anyway, so said 40 to 90 grand, about four days. But he's got access and that's a much smaller lot than your lot and mine.
Adam Corolla
Now, just to give you and the.
Sean Williams
Owner, he went on, if we had the other cut, I would show it to you. But he went on to explain that you could go with the Army Corps of Engineers or you could sub us out. And that's what the homeowner in this case, because I drove all the way up and down pch, that was the only action that was going on. So that homeowner wanted it done.
Adam Corolla
He wanted it done. And that's what most people want it done. Because psychologically, once again, mental health is such a huge. Is such a huge. You know, like when we were growing up, you know, if you're having a bad day, your parents get outside, go play some ball, go with your friends, you know, shake it off. It is a very real thing today.
Scott Stiffler
I'm like amazed at your resilience, bud. Like I did not your bubbly personality and happy face.
Adam Corolla
Yeah.
Scott Stiffler
I did not expect you to tell me your house just burned down.
Adam Corolla
Well, yeah. Thank you, brother.
Scott Stiffler
Testament to man's raising up.
Adam Corolla
Well, it's about don't quit. Honestly, it's. It's those two words that go through.
Sean Williams
Sorry. I want to continue on your journey.
Adam Corolla
Yes.
Sean Williams
With Army Corps of Engineers and clean up guys.
Adam Corolla
So when you see four days, right. The first two fellas who came to my, to my place and quoted me four to six days. Right. And then the guy I ended up with, George from JG Demolition, said it's going to be 14 days. This is going to be 14 to 15 days, Jake. Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. Now, once again, fellas, I don't do this. It's not like the last time I did it, you know, the other guys told me four to six days. Here's what's going to happen. They'll get the four to six days and then they'll start charging you per load, you know, per dump truck. Per truck that comes load. Right. Okay, now, interesting. About the scrap metal, I didn't know about that. So I'm going to ask my guy just about the scrap metal. That's a, That's a very good.
Sean Williams
Olympic torches will get some good cash.
Adam Corolla
A couple of bucks, three or four extra dollars. It'll be a zillion and one in 13.
Sean Williams
Yeah, these guys were pulling all kinds of steel and copper because the plumbing's copper, too, is pulling it all out.
Adam Corolla
And that's the thing. So. So we've got it scraped. And what has happened, though, now is now I want. Because our mayor here has said they're going to expedite all the different things when it comes to. When you bring on an architect and a contractor and build it. And you were talking about that with Scott, right? About permits. And you could probably give me a little schooling on that, because this is brand new. I've never built the house. We did an extension once on the house that we had. But this is brand new. A brand new world. But we're being told. We're being told. And you get alerts. Do you get the same alerts that I do about. Karen Bass is going to do a virtual news thing and you got to tune into one. I mean, here's the thing. These are not. They're all nice people. Unfortunately, she's not. She doesn't have the equipment to be able to do.
Sean Williams
Mental equipment.
Adam Corolla
The mental.
Sean Williams
First off, go ahead. These are process people. They want to sit around and talk about stuff, and that's what they do. And they talk about the children and they talk about no one being left behind. And then they talk about no one's illegal. And these migrants come here and they work harder than we do and they look for a better life and stuff. The homeless, by the way, not homeless. They're unhoused neighbors. They're process people who want to talk about stuff. They're good at it. And it fools. It fools women and dumb dudes. They love this talk. They love this talk. But the reality is, is when this shit goes down, these people are worthless.
Adam Corolla
They're out of town.
Sean Williams
So they're fine. They're fine for the ribbon cutting and the ceremonial dances and the garb and the pictures and the opening of the daycare centers. But when shit goes down, they're completely useless.
Adam Corolla
These guys have never built anything.
Sean Williams
They've never done anything. They've never had a business. They don't do anything. They're process people. Their whole thing is talk to us and then we'll have a meeting, and then we'll get a subcommittee, and then we'll get back to you. And then we'll have another meeting with another subcommittee again. So they don't know how to do so.
Adam Corolla
And then we'll do a town hall.
Sean Williams
And what you saw when Trump showed up Trump's a commercial builder. Rick Caruso is a commercial builder. I used to be a builder. Builders are in a hurry. They're like, let's go, let's go. What's going on? What's going on? And so what you saw is the contrast between the process person and Karen Bass.
Adam Corolla
And let's go.
Sean Williams
So Trump's like, let's do it now. And she's like, safely. Got to make it safe. Safe. When you hear safe, just hear slow and never right. Safe means stay home. Safe means shut the schools for two years. Safe means shut the business. Safe means don't leave your house. Safe means eat Thanksgiving dinner out in your yard. That's what safe means. Safe's the death. When process people, process people hide behind safety. Process people can't go, I'm fucking lazy and incompetent. So we're not doing anything. They go, safety, but safely. But safe. So she's in the meeting going, but safely. Because she's in. She's incompetent, and she's worked in government her whole life, and her fucking brain is cheese. And then you got the commercial builder go, let's go, let's go. And she's safety, safe. They've learned if they say safety, we won't call them incompetent. And at certain point, they can call you racist or elitist or rich or white or something. They really want to slow you down.
Adam Corolla
That's all done now. I really do. I think the pendulum is swinging back.
Sean Williams
In the next five minutes. Can you build? Are you going to rebuild this property?
Adam Corolla
I'm going to rebuild, and I give the challenge to a guy who is a builder, right? I want to rebuild. I'm going to rebuild, and I'm going to take our elected officials at the word that they're going to say, and I want to test it. And Adam, I'll come back and I'm going to report in. I'm going to do the same thing in the company.
Sean Williams
I'll be our fire buddy.
Adam Corolla
I could be a. I could be the fire buddy.
Sean Williams
You got to put the outfit on.
Adam Corolla
Which one? The Hazmat outfit.
Sean Williams
Oh, the fireman outfit. I'm not going to make a fool of you.
Adam Corolla
Wait, the fireman outfit?
Sean Williams
The fireman outfit.
Adam Corolla
Like a nice outfit?
Sean Williams
Shake our fire buddy.
Adam Corolla
Is it a nice. Is it. Does it taper? Is it taper the way.
Sean Williams
Do like what the newscaster did down there on PCH where he took his fire jacket and he tailored it.
Adam Corolla
He tailored it up. He looked.
Sean Williams
Yeah, he tailored it Up. You got a V. Show it off.
Adam Corolla
And he stood. He stood right there. Just. Well, maybe we do. With no sleeves.
Sean Williams
No sleeves. Show off the guns.
Adam Corolla
No sleeves.
Sean Williams
No sleeves. I'll do.
Adam Corolla
Taper it up. I like that. Hey, listen, you got to make fucking lemonade out of lemons, man. And that's what you got to do.
Sean Williams
So are you working with an architect now?
Adam Corolla
We're narrowing down. You know, we learned it's like a marriage with an architect. So we think we found somebody. I'm pretty confident we have a contractor slash builder, really. And we're. And I'm going to move. I'm going to move quick because I don't believe. Leave. It's going to take me three years. I hope that it's going to take a whole lot shorter than that. But look, you make it a.
Scott Stiffler
We're all about permits.
Adam Corolla
Maybe I. But. But here's the thing. I'm going to push them with this permit because I've spoken to friends from around the country and they go, permit. You get a permit a day in Colorado. You get a permanent a day in this state.
Sean Williams
Texas.
Adam Corolla
In Texas and these places.
Sean Williams
No, in Texas, they go, why are you even asking for a permit? It's your property. Go build whatever you want. Well, why are you telling us?
Adam Corolla
And I. And I believe. Look, there's a. There's a. There's been a big push and I'm gonna. Look, we have a lot of fun things to do, right? A lot of fun things that I've got going on. And the positive side with music and, you know, Universal Music, we have this great new label. It was called Body by Jake Music. And we're launching Don't Quit Radio and Don't Quit Records. Positive motivation. Inspirational. But a lot of people have been asking me on a lot of these shows, you know, you're. You're focused on building. Did you ever think about running for office? Now, you know, I've been putting fitness centers in elementary and middle schools around the country. The last 13 years, I've stood next to 48 of 50 governors around this country. I have completed the mission this past October. And, you know, I would have never have thought in my wildest dreams that I would have any interest in public office. Because the only thing that I know how to do is to build things and to make things. And you learn after a bunch of years, you know, as an entrepreneur, you know what you know and you know what you don't know. And the stuff you don't know, you get the right people around you and I look at an opportunity here that if it is the moment that people have said, would you be interested in running for governor? And I. I'm not saying no, but I. I'm really thinking hard about it.
Sean Williams
Good.
Adam Corolla
And I'm putting a lot of people around me and I feel that if I do run, I run as a Republican. But it's not really. It's a moderate because I'm not about red and I'm not about blue. I'm about the red, white and blue. And I've always been that way.
Sean Williams
Goes on the button.
Adam Corolla
That's. Would you make it.
Sean Williams
I'll endorse.
Scott Stiffler
I'll stand.
Sean Williams
First off, I'll endorse anybody.
Adam Corolla
I'm just saying that we need change, but you have to do it in a way as you would run a business and you get the right people to do it. Because like I said, I know what I know, I know what I don't know, and I'm far away from even saying anything, but you got my blood popping here.
Sean Williams
Listen, here's the thing about running for governor or mayor. It's a lot like an invention where people go, somebody should make a fill in the blank. And then you go, I couldn't find one, so I had to make one myself. You know what I mean? Which is fine, but I wish I could just find one. I just go on Amazon and get one. You know what I mean? And I feel that way with the governor. It's like, I don't want to run for anything, but if you're going to be insanely incompetent for a prolonged period of time, then, yeah, then maybe I will. But I don't want to. It's just you're so incompetent.
Adam Corolla
But when it hits you, when it hits you between the eyes and you listen to the news every single day and I'm talking about the folks and I'm saying, he's not an. Not Karen Benson is not.
Sean Williams
A nice house had to burn down. Do you think that was preventable? If they had had resources and people.
Adam Corolla
Guys, I only know once again, what I've heard, and you said it in the last show with Scott about there was a fire on January 1st. Right. I heard. Right. Kids were playing with fireworks. Whatever it was the fire was supposedly put out, there was still. There was still smoke. That. Now, by the way, I don't know if this is fact, and that's what I. Once again, you hear a lot of things. The fire wasn't out 100%. Oh, right. That's something that I heard. Don't know if it's 100%. Then you hear that we. Now I watch it. I can show video of this fire far away from the Huntington Palisades that I don't understand even though it was windy, that they could not put that fire out right or at least contain that fire. Now once again, I'm not a fireman. I will be now coming on the show. Great outfit. And I don't know the real particulars about how, how a thousand guys were not. Were told to go home. We ran out of water. Right buddy? So, so there's not. So it. Was it preventable? Man, it's 20, 25.
Sean Williams
I know. Let's. I'll put it to you this way as we wrap up up. They make a big deal out of January 6th, right. And it was a big deal. But Trump and others said you should get 10,000 National Guards guys there before the rally. And they didn't. And then the shit went down. So you can go whose fault is that? And I'd say, well, I don't know but if there's 10,000 National Guards guys, there's. It probably would have helped and I don't know if it would have happened anyway. But if you'd listen and got the 10,000 National Guardsmen there, it could have been a different outcome. And I would say the same about the fire. Hold on. They should have had people stationed and out. They knew the winds were coming, they knew what was going on. Does that 100% guarantee? Don't know. Nobody knows. But if you had done could have been a high likelihood of not this. And it's the same thing with January 6th. Like no, no, we don't have a crystal ball. But if you had done what you should have done then and now you're blaming whoever Trump supporters or the wind or whatever. But if you had put in place what you should have put in place, cuz you knew it was coming, you knew the winds were coming, you knew the Trump supporters were coming. If you had done it the day before, it could have been a better outcome.
Adam Corolla
I'm just gonna say this. We can't look backwards. Cuz you look backwards, you can't fix. Doesn't get fixed back there. But what we look at right now. Good question, great conversation. How do you, how do you move forward so this doesn't happen for real? Because the next catastrophe is gonna happen like what happened with us in the Palisades in Altadena right after that plane crash that happened in Washington D.C. the Palisades and Altadena fire was off the front page. It was out of the news. And the assumption was no different than Lahaina in Hawaii. And I was there in October with the governor, Josh Green. I put fitness centers in the state of Hawaii. I went to Lahaina.
Sean Williams
Are you coming around trying to buy your property?
Adam Corolla
No.
Sean Williams
Haven't got any offers.
Adam Corolla
No. Because I made it very clear, hey, I'm not selling.
Sean Williams
No.
Adam Corolla
I've heard a lot of conversation about it, but we've got to be able to as we sit here right now and look, I want to come back, have some fun, tell some funny stories, because we've got a lot of great stories. But this is important, man. I mean, we live in a great state. The sunshine is normally the best. And I love it here, man. There's nowhere else I want to be.
Sean Williams
Yeah.
Adam Corolla
And we got to fix it. I mean, it's as broken as can be, Governor. That's what we're going to talk about in the fire outfit.
Sean Williams
All right, Governor by Jake. Let me give some plugs for Jake. And I know we were going to do news. We're going to get everything. But this is compelling and it's interesting. And I, I was fascinated by it. Don't quit. That's the motto. The website bodybyjake.com and find everything there.
Adam Corolla
Yeah. With that, you know what? But the best thing to do, man, is on Instagram is official. Body by Jake TikTok. I'm not really a social media guy, but we have this great new. This great new music, man, which is really fun on Spotify and it really streaming everywhere. We. We have a great cut called Don't Quit. And it's. It's popping, man. And we're gonna launch this radio channel for motivation and inspiration, get you pumped up, get you feeling good, whether you're working out or walking or your house burns down and you want to smile again, man.
Sean Williams
Mark Wahlberg do mornings on that radio station. That guy's inspirational. All right, I'm gonna be in San Diego coming up. April 11th and 12th. Go to IMCO for all the live shows. Until next time, how much are tickets, man? You know, I'll comp you. All right, but you got to put the outfit on. You got to get the fire marshal. Marshall Jake, Sean Williams, Scott, Jake Steinfeld and Mayhem. The Sam Krola saying, Mahala, pick up your phone and leave us a voicemail at 8. At 863-41744. And they get tickets to see the Ace, man. You can get them@adamcorola.com Foreign.
Jake Steinfeld
Pluto TV is the place for movie fans like.
Adam Corolla
Me and TV fans like me.
Jake Steinfeld
They've got something for everyone, and it's totally free.
Adam Corolla
You can binge laugh out loud sitcoms.
Jake Steinfeld
Like Frasier and re watch cult classics like Higher Learning.
Adam Corolla
Whether you're in the mood to solve a little crime before bedtime with NCIS.
Jake Steinfeld
Or Tracking, or curl up with a surefire hit like Forrest Gump Run Forest.
Adam Corolla
Pluto TV has thousands of movies and shows, all for free.
Jake Steinfeld
Pluto TV stream now pay Never.
Podcast Summary: The Adam Carolla Show
Episode Title: Actor Seann William Scott + Body by Jake Jake Steinfeld + Adam Discusses Fires in Depth
Release Date: March 17, 2025
In this compelling episode of The Adam Carolla Show, Adam Carson hosts a dynamic conversation with special guests Seann William Scott and Jake Steinfeld of Body by Jake. The episode delves deep into their cinematic experiences, particularly focusing on the cult classic "Windy City Heat," and transitions into a heartfelt discussion about recent devastating fires in Malibu's Palisades neighborhood. Listeners are taken on a journey through personal loss, community resilience, and the challenges of rebuilding amidst bureaucratic hurdles.
The episode opens with Seann William Scott and Scott Stiffler reminiscing about their collaboration on the film "Windy City Heat." They discuss the unique concept of the movie, where the protagonist believes he's starring in an action film but is unknowingly part of a larger, improvised narrative.
Notable Quote:
Seann emphasizes the film's improvisational nature and its status as a cult classic despite its unconventional approach.
Notable Quote:
Transitioning from film, Jake Steinfeld shares his personal story of loss during the recent fires that ravaged Malibu's Palisades. As an honorary mayor and long-time resident, Jake recounts how his home was engulfed in flames, leaving him and his family displaced.
Notable Quote:
Jake describes the surreal experience of witnessing his neighborhood transform into a war zone, battling both the flames and the emotional toll of losing a cherished home.
Notable Quote:
Both guests discuss the intricate and often frustrating process of rebuilding after such disasters. Jake details his struggles with obtaining permits and dealing with the Army Corps of Engineers, highlighting the inefficiencies and lack of support during emergencies.
Notable Quote:
Jake recounts his decision to bypass bureaucratic delays by hiring a private demolition company, emphasizing the urgent need to restore normalcy for his family's mental well-being.
Notable Quote:
Adam Carson facilitates a discussion on resilience and the importance of not letting material losses define one's identity. Both Seann and Jake share insights into maintaining perspective and pushing forward despite setbacks.
Notable Quote:
The conversation underscores the ethos of "Don't Quit," encouraging listeners to persevere through personal and communal challenges.
Notable Quote:
As the episode progresses, Jake outlines his plans for rebuilding his home and restoring the Palisades community. Discussions touch upon the importance of efficient permit processing, community support, and the role of local government in disaster recovery.
Notable Quote:
Adam emphasizes the need for proactive measures and effective leadership to prevent future catastrophes and facilitate swift recovery.
Notable Quote:
The episode wraps up with reflections on the emotional and psychological impacts of losing one's home and the broader implications for the Malibu community. The guests highlight the importance of resilience, community support, and the relentless spirit of "Don't Quit" in overcoming adversity.
Notable Quote:
Listeners are left with an inspiring message about the human capacity to rebuild and thrive in the face of overwhelming challenges.
Resilience in the Face of Adversity: Both Jake and Seann demonstrate the importance of maintaining a positive outlook and pushing forward despite significant losses.
Challenges of Rebuilding: Navigating the complexities of permits and dealing with bureaucratic inefficiencies can impede the recovery process after disasters.
Community and Support: Strong community bonds and support systems are crucial in overcoming collective hardships.
Personal Growth: Experiences of loss and rebuilding can lead to personal growth, emphasizing the value of perseverance and adaptability.
Sean Williams [04:01]: "The movie is about a guy who's in a movie, but he's in a different movie than the one he's in. He thinks he's doing an action movie called Windy City Heat, playing Stone Fury, the sports detective or something."
Scott Stiffler [06:00]: "A deranged millionaire just, like, does some weird tricks with his friends."
Jake Steinfeld [75:03]: "We've got four kids. My wife Tracy and I raised four kids in that house. Daughter Morgan is 32. I have a son, Nick, who's 30. Zach is 25 and Luke is 23."
Adam Corolla [93:17]: "But I've been very blessed. We married, Tracy and I, going on top of the 37."
Sean Williams [94:25]: "Sometimes you have to do what you want to do. You could be at the 3M factory with your dad down in the Hubs of hell."
Adam Corolla [124:12]: "We can't look backwards. Cuz you look backwards, you can't fix. Doesn't get fixed back there. But what we look at right now. Good question, great conversation."
This episode of The Adam Carolla Show masterfully blends humor with profound discussions on loss, resilience, and the human spirit's capacity to rebuild. Through candid conversations and personal anecdotes, listeners gain valuable insights into overcoming adversity and the importance of never giving up.