
This week's Bonus Bang is the second installment in our "I Love Lily" series and was originally titled "Better Call Bed Bath & Beyond" and features Lily Sullivan as Francesca Bolognese! Professional actor Bob Odenkirk joins Scott once again to talk about how Better Call Saul will end, his exercise regimen for the action movie Nobody, and his upcoming book “Comedy Comedy Comedy Drama.” Then, social media expert Francesca Bolognese returns to talk about her new position. Plus, disruptor Skints McGlinty returns to make a major cryptocurrency announcement. (Originally released as episode #705 on 5/9/2025)
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Scott Aukerman
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Scott Aukerman
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Scott Aukerman
Hey everyone, Scott Aukerman here and welcome to another bonus bang where we are re releasing great episodes of Comedy Bang Bang from Behind the Paywall. This is your host, Scott Aukerman. I mentioned that already, but hearing it twice is twice as nice. And this week we are releasing another episode in our I Love Lily series featuring Lily Sullivan who has made 81 appearances to date on the podcast. And this week we're featuring her 18th appearance on the podcast this. This is an episode entitled Better Call Bed Bath and Beyond. This was originally released as episode 705 on May 9, 2021. God, what a great year. And it features Bob Odenkirk as our A Block guest, Lily Sullivan as her character Francesca Bolognese. She's a Bed Bath and Beyond employee that has interesting feedback for customers and it also features Griffin Newman of the fabled and storied Blank Chest. Blank Blank Chest. Now that would be an interesting podcast, Blank Chest. But instead he hosts the Blank Check podcast. He's playing Skince McGlinty, a prospector. You'll hear all about what he prospects. Now if you enjoy this and you want to hear other great episodes of Comedy Bang Bang, become a subscriber@cbbworld.com we have all of the past episodes from the archives. Every single live show we've ever done. Add free new episodes and original shows like CBB Presents Scott hasn't seen. We're going to be back Monday with a new episode of Comedy Bang Bang. But until then, enjoy this bonus ban. Hello neighbor, hello friend. Come hither and hear about my grisly end. Welcome to Comedy Bang Bang. Ooh boy. Chilling. And that was a little early for something so morbid and Macabre. But thank you to side of mcg for that wonderful catchphrase submission. And unfortunately, I don't believe it's going to stick. I don't believe that will be our permanent one. But we are ever on the hunt for that permanent catchphrase. And welcome to the show. This is Comedy Bang Bang for another week. We are mid May. We are. We're definitely not in hump week of May. That'll be next week. But we are certainly in the throes of May, and we have a wonderful show. By the way, my name is Scott Aukerman, if you're confused about that point. And we have a wonderful show. We have a social media expert coming up a little later, and we also have a disruptor. Whoa. I hope this show doesn't get disrupted. Boy, I want it to go smoothly, but apparently someone is gonna try to make it all go off the rails like a retired train. I hope not. Wow. That'll be interesting. We also have an actor coming up right about now. Why don't we get to it?
Bob Odenkirk
Is that what I am now?
Scott Aukerman
Yeah, I believe so. You used to be more of a writer and a boss and a mentor to me, but now you're an actor, and he has all of that. And a bag of chips. He's munching on a bag of chips. If you heard the rustling during the theme song. He's my old boss from the Mr. Show days. But you probably don't know him that way. You probably know him more as the star of Ical Sal. And he was in Breaking Little Women.
Bob Odenkirk
Little Women.
Skins McGlinty
Loved it.
Scott Aukerman
I let out such a huge laugh when you walked in in Little Women. Not because of your performance, but I'd forgotten you were in it. And I was like, ha, ha. It's Bob. I was happy to see you. But he is the aforementioned Bob. Please welcome back to the show Bob Odenkirk. Hello.
Bob Odenkirk
Hi, Scott. Hi, you guys.
Scott Aukerman
So now, Bob, you're in New York. For what reason?
Bob Odenkirk
Oh, I have a break from shooting Better call Saul Season 6, our final and amazing, powerful season. It's gonna take a long time to shoot, and we had a little break, and I took it to come to New York and see.
Scott Aukerman
You wanted to see Saturday Night Live, right?
Bob Odenkirk
Yes, I wanted to finally see the show that everyone's been talking about for 35, 40 years.
Scott Aukerman
45 years, 46 years.
Bob Odenkirk
So long that people have been talking about it, and I've never seen it. I don't know what they do there. I have no idea. You know, how it works. You know, I don't watch a show until I know how it works first.
Scott Aukerman
Sure.
Bob Odenkirk
Now that's. You're the same way, right? I mean, you're the same way, right?
Scott Aukerman
No, I was.
Bob Odenkirk
You don't just, you don't just willy nilly put the TV on.
Scott Aukerman
No, I was watching Bridgerton the other day because I figured out exactly all of the camera angles and I learned all of the names of the grips and I was like, okay, now I feel comfortable ground up.
Bob Odenkirk
Ground up, yeah, sure, of course. I mean these people who just put the TV on and you know, what are they doing? I don't get it. Well, they don't know what they're watching. They have no idea what they're watching.
Scott Aukerman
It's like, it's like trying to show an iPhone to a caveman. They just, they can't understand it. Right, right.
Bob Odenkirk
I guess they're distracted by it, but they, they can't begin to understand actually thinking about it.
Scott Aukerman
I think if you showed an iPhone to a caveman, like they would pick it up in five minutes. You know what I mean? Like, hey, you know what I mean? They'd be like, oh, so this communicates with the other person and then the. Oh, okay. And if I press this button. Okay, yeah, I got it. Bob, are you all right? Are you choking?
Bob Odenkirk
I'm choking myself.
Scott Aukerman
Oh yeah, that. You're a big auto erotic asphyxiationist, aren't you?
Bob Odenkirk
Not for erotic reasons, no.
Scott Aukerman
You're a non erotic asphyxiationist.
Bob Odenkirk
It's actually good exercise. It's the new wave. I don't know if you know, it hasn't gotten to your part of LA yet, obviously, Scott, but self asphyxiation exercise is the best way to go because your muscles are deprived of oxygen and therefore they have to work triple harder. So in five minutes you can get the workout done that you would have gotten in 25 minutes. And all you have to do is.
Scott Aukerman
Just choke yourself and let yourself technically die for about 120 seconds and it makes perfect sense.
Bob Odenkirk
And then you go to the cryogenic machine and get yourself frozen next to Walt Disney. You feel like a million bucks. You feel like.
Scott Aukerman
Although with inflation boy, a million dollars doesn't go quite as far as it used to, if you know what I mean.
Bob Odenkirk
That's why you need to do more exercise than you did before.
Scott Aukerman
That's right. You need to feel like $10 million just to feel like $1 million these days.
Bob Odenkirk
That's right, Bob.
Scott Aukerman
Speaking of. Look, you mentioned two things that I want to follow up on. You mentioned Better Call Saul, which is for those of you who don't know, it's a television show appearing on the AMC networks, which used to sporadically. Yeah, sure. No, if you turn on amc, it's not just going to be there. You have to turn on. On the right times.
Bob Odenkirk
And we do new seasons every two years, so.
Scott Aukerman
Sure. Yeah. And it is a prequel, and you're trying to end up looking younger than when you first started Breaking Bad.
Bob Odenkirk
Which first thing I said to Vince and Peter when they said, we're thinking about making the show, and they meant it. I said, you know, I'm 50 years old and keep that in mind. And they just totally blew that off.
Scott Aukerman
Yeah. They don't listen.
Bob Odenkirk
They ignore it. They don't care. You know what I think they assume the audience doesn't really care. And I think it's true. I think the audience. There are obviously people who point it out, but most people are like, I don't care. You're telling me a story. Just tell me the story.
Scott Aukerman
Tell me the story. I'm not gonna look at your old face while you tell me the story.
Bob Odenkirk
It's like people don't. They don't do the homework on their TV shows. They don't find out how they're made, where they're made.
Scott Aukerman
Look up the ages of every single actor.
Bob Odenkirk
Where was it shot? I will watch it first. I'm gonna visit all the locations where you shot it.
Scott Aukerman
Sure. So that I know every single place. So I have the geography in my head. Well, I get very confused whenever they switch to a different angle. I'm like, oh, what is this? I was just looking at this guy. Now I'm looking at this guy.
Bob Odenkirk
Don't switch angles.
Scott Aukerman
Don't do it.
Bob Odenkirk
The directors want to do that. It's a flashy thing that they've got.
Scott Aukerman
I mean, I'm a purist when it comes to cinema. I like the train coming right at me, and I get scared and I run out of the theater and I scream that we're all going to die. That's what I like when I go to the movies.
Bob Odenkirk
Yeah. And I like the original movies. You know, there's a great short. I think it's probably the most evocative and dramatic. It's a man leaving a factory, and it's about three minutes long. And he really. All of life is in there. And, you know, where you think at.
Scott Aukerman
Some point he's gonna go back into the factory, and he never does the men.
Bob Odenkirk
It's a bunch of men leaving a factory. But yes, not a one of them turns back and goes in unless you.
Scott Aukerman
Rewind it backwards, which you do not want to do.
Bob Odenkirk
Everything went downhill after that.
Scott Aukerman
Yeah, it really does. But Better Call Saul, being within that downhill trend with cinema and television, when you were on the show before Bob, you did us a big favor and you gave away the end to Breaking Bad.
Bob Odenkirk
Right.
Scott Aukerman
I'm gonna ask you to do it again. Can you just tell us what happens in the final episode of Better Call Saul?
Bob Odenkirk
The character has evolved and he's gained a new maturity and self awareness. And in the final scene, I'll be making a perfect Cinnabon and I'll win an award from Cinnabon.
Scott Aukerman
Whoa. From the actual company. They know how to make them.
Bob Odenkirk
Yeah. I mean, in the end, the show, as you know, is about Cinnabons and how they're made and the people who make them.
Scott Aukerman
Yeah, that's the first scene. You have to bookend everything so that.
Bob Odenkirk
And then we'll end with that. And he'll make that perfect Cinnabon and his life will come back into color and he'll get that award from the main office. He will not get. He's a manager already, and he will remain a manager.
Scott Aukerman
Does he become a district manager or.
Bob Odenkirk
No. The pride that he gets from making that Cinnabon with just the right amount of sugar and margarine is. I think it just completes. Everything about Breaking Bad led to this. You know what I mean?
Scott Aukerman
Sure.
Bob Odenkirk
Of course, Breaking Bad was really about this one character's desire. And I don't think a Cinnabon is a Cinnabon. It's a metaphor.
Scott Aukerman
But it is a Cinnabon as well.
Bob Odenkirk
I was gonna say it's a metaphor for a cinnamon roll.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, I see. Okay, now, are Vince and Peter gonna go back into the early Breaking Bad episodes of Cinnabon, how it started, and insert a Cinnabon into your hand digitally in one of these episodes? Just so it really makes all the sense.
Bob Odenkirk
Yes. And I don't know how you got that leaked. I don't know how that leaked out.
Scott Aukerman
But I saw that.
Bob Odenkirk
Now you know. Now everybody knows.
Scott Aukerman
And then I. I also read the last page of the script of the last episode, and right after you make that Cinnabon, suddenly Walter White comes in.
Bob Odenkirk
Yeah.
Scott Aukerman
He. You hug, of course. And it's a long hug. It's like a five minute hug, which I thought was really weird.
Bob Odenkirk
Yeah.
Scott Aukerman
But you hug for a long time and then he shakes your hand and he says Well, I guess I'd. And then he looks in the camera and says, better call Saul. And then it just goes right to the end.
Bob Odenkirk
Well, then that song plays at the end of Merry Melodies and the circle gets smaller around our heads.
Scott Aukerman
Right.
Bob Odenkirk
This is the dream ending of the show. And if you'll all write in to Vincent, Peter, and Sony Pictures and asked them to please do the ending that Scott and Bob came up with right.
Scott Aukerman
Into the Sony Pictures lady. The lady holding up the. She's holding up a torch, isn't she? Or something. Or is that Columbia?
Bob Odenkirk
That would be Columbia, but I don't. There's no Sony Pictures lady.
Scott Aukerman
There's got to be a Sony Pictures lady. And this is what we're holding auditions for, the Sony Pictures lady. If you want to become the Sony Pictures lady, hit up me and Bob, you know that we're roommates since back in the day. Come buy our apartment at some point.
Bob Odenkirk
And we have a lot of pull over at Sony.
Scott Aukerman
We certainly do.
Bob Odenkirk
Really important.
Scott Aukerman
Well, Bob, the other thing I wanted to follow up on is you mentioned eating and exercising. And this comes into play because I saw a little movie by the name of Nobody and you are in it.
Bob Odenkirk
You didn't see the whole movie?
Scott Aukerman
I saw a little bit of the movie. I only saw up until the credits. And then I didn't want to read everyone's name because I had already memorized them.
Bob Odenkirk
Right, right.
Scott Aukerman
But you are.
Bob Odenkirk
What can I tell you about it?
Scott Aukerman
Oh, my God. Look, I want to know. I want to know your exercise regimen. That's basically what I want to know. And this is a question usually reserved for women on the red carpet, but I want to hit you up with it.
Bob Odenkirk
Well, I did. I did a version of it on this men's health video that you could see on YouTube. But are you sure that was actually.
Scott Aukerman
A men's health video that wasn't just a strange porn video that. That they had taken from your phone that they stole from you?
Bob Odenkirk
No, the porn video that I made in my other career is my full workout. This is just partial.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, okay.
Bob Odenkirk
This doesn't include the. And the sucking and the blowing.
Scott Aukerman
This is all the. The weightlifting, which is part of that other video.
Bob Odenkirk
Right, right.
Scott Aukerman
But how did you get into this? Did you get cast in the movie and said, oh, I better exercise, or had you been doing.
Bob Odenkirk
I made this movie happen, Scott. It was my idea to try to pull off an action film.
Scott Aukerman
So you exercised before the deal came out?
Bob Odenkirk
Long before. Two and a half years before we shot anything. I started Training with Daniel Bernhardt at a place called 8711, which is a facility in LA that is all stunt people training for films. And that was. Cause the producers who liked the notion said, yeah, get started, you know, whatever. If you're willing to practice, go ahead. And I was, because I wanted to do my own fighting. Scott. Like a real Jackie Chan man. Yes, I really did. You know, I love Police Story. And when we were writing Mr. Show, we used to watch cool old movies.
Scott Aukerman
And we rode a big stunt action scene into the Run Ronnie Run, the ill fated Mr. Show movie, which none of us got to be in. And it reminded me of that when I saw you on the. There's a scene on a bus where you're beating the shit out of a bunch of people and you pull it off. You genuinely looked more intimidating.
Bob Odenkirk
I really learned to do that kind of screen fighting. I spent so much time at the gym, but I knew I had to. Scott. And your point, I think, that you're trying to make is that the idea of working out and training for a movie when it isn't, you know, set up, that hasn't been. It's, you know, the chances of any movie getting made are always so slim. You know, you're really going way out on a limb.
Scott Aukerman
And then you would have wasted all that.
Bob Odenkirk
But I wouldn't have. I would have gotten in good shape, you know, I'm 58 years old. Huh?
Scott Aukerman
Who cares? We're all gonna die. So, like, you know, how much time.
Bob Odenkirk
Oh, no, I'm not. Me.
Scott Aukerman
Wasted it all in that gym. You're not gonna die.
Bob Odenkirk
No, this is a big.
Scott Aukerman
This is big news.
Bob Odenkirk
I'm gonna keep working out and drinking juice and, you know, getting my. As we talked about getting myself asphyxiated.
Scott Aukerman
Sure, of course. What do you eat? Because I read an interview with you where you essentially are just eating avocados. You ate a sandwich right in front of me and that bag of chips, you know. But how guilty do you feel about it?
Bob Odenkirk
I don't feel guilty at all. I would feel guilty about. I think I've got a better ability to stop eating something like that, like, to eat half of it, like I just did, than I ever had in my life. And I still eat chocolate and ice cream and everything. I just don't eat a lot of these things, but I have them every day. And I mostly eat. You know, I have a sense of what's healthy, and I kind of juggle around a sandwich or something, a lot of healthy stuff. And I work out Every day.
Scott Aukerman
Right. So how many hours are you in the gym every day?
Bob Odenkirk
About an hour and 10 minutes.
Scott Aukerman
Hour and 10 minutes. Okay. Now if you were about to make a sequel to the film, which we'll talk about the sequel to the film.
Bob Odenkirk
Oh, then it go to three or four hours a day.
Scott Aukerman
Three or four hours a day?
Bob Odenkirk
Yeah. But you're training, choreography and stuff. You're not like just doing weights and stuff. You do that stuff for maybe an hour and then you.
Scott Aukerman
Could I go into the gym and lift a five pound dumbbell for four hours and look like you? Is it just the time you're there?
Bob Odenkirk
It takes time. Yeah, you gotta. Your body doesn't change in the day.
Scott Aukerman
But it's just the time. Right? You can do as little as you want. As long as you're there.
Bob Odenkirk
Four hours. As long as you're standing near a thing called a gym, your body will shed the weight. You know what, Scott? I really. It was a weird thought that I could do this and I can't believe I.
Scott Aukerman
No, I read an interview and look, I don't just sit around reading interviews that you do, Bob, don't get that impression. You know, like I could have just called you myself and asked you all these questions.
Bob Odenkirk
But you have other interviews to read.
Scott Aukerman
Sure, of course. But I did read an interview about how this film got made. You took a look at how well the TV show was doing in foreign markets. Is that what it was?
Bob Odenkirk
Yeah, yeah.
Scott Aukerman
And you said, hey, what if I made a movie that did well in foreign markets as well, which are mainly action films, because they, they translate well. And you just got it together and you did it.
Bob Odenkirk
Yeah. I mean, it took a long time. Took years. And I think I was more surprised by the fact that when I first suggested it, no, people didn't say you're crazy or that could never happen. They. Most everybody who heard it, the pitch, which was basically that, you know, you know me from Mr. Show and all this comedy that I did. But around the world, like, nobody's seen any of that. They've only seen Breaking Bad, Better Call Saul, the Post, these kinds of movies. And I play it in, especially in Better Call Saul. I play like an Ernest guy who's like, kind of devious and he's an.
Scott Aukerman
Ernest, almost like Ernest goes to lawyer school.
Bob Odenkirk
Well, we wanted to call it Ernest is Nobody, but there's some legal thing where you can't just use the earnest name the lawyer.
Scott Aukerman
And you're a lawyer on that show. Couldn't you have, like, figured it out?
Bob Odenkirk
Actually, to become a lawyer in real life, I have to do, like 10 more episodes.
Scott Aukerman
Okay.
Bob Odenkirk
And then that will make me an official, real lawyer. You have to do. You either have to go to law school and pass the bar, or you have to do 60 episodes of a TV show that is based in the legal system in some manner. All the people on Night Court are all lawyers and judges now.
Scott Aukerman
John Larroquette represented me when I had a misdemeanor. Misdemeanor.
Bob Odenkirk
Missy Misdemeanor.
Scott Aukerman
Yeah.
Bob Odenkirk
By the way, she's a lawyer.
Scott Aukerman
She's a lawyer, weirdly enough.
Bob Odenkirk
Misdemeanor.
Scott Aukerman
Yeah. It's crazy.
Bob Odenkirk
And they just said, you know what a misdemeanor is? Clearly, that's your name. You, you clearly have a basis for legal thinking and thought and the structures and strictures of legal law, and we want you to please be a lawyer. And Missy Misdemeanor Elliot said, please. Thank you. I would love that. That's very honored to be me. And I appreciate you.
Scott Aukerman
And together they came to an agreement.
Bob Odenkirk
Where they came to an agreement. And that's why at the Supreme Court right now, there's only one justice. Missy Misdemeanor Elliot.
Scott Aukerman
That's right. She decides on everything. Oh, my gosh. Well, nobody is a. It's a really great film. It's out right now on video. I like to call it video upon request because I'm not, you know, pushy like that, demanding videos be shown to me, but you better. But. And people can also. You show me this motherfucking film.
Bob Odenkirk
Right. You don't have to demand it.
Scott Aukerman
No, but people can go to theaters and demand that the ticket taker sell them a ticket.
Bob Odenkirk
Surely.
Scott Aukerman
And it's out right now. And people, I would suggest seeing it. And it's the writer of John Wick, isn't that correct? He wrote it.
Bob Odenkirk
Yes. Derek Holstad. Yeah. Great guy. Really fun guy. And he's the one who, more than anybody got it, I think, made it a reality because he has such good credibility in that area. And he loved the idea of the dad who's, you know, hiding for years and, and then he kind of cuts loose and. Yeah. And also our director, Ilya Nyshuler, is a really cool dude who those two guys. I think the spirit of the movie is from them. And that's what people seem to love. I mean, I, I, I'm very thankful that I pulled it off, you know, the to fighting.
Scott Aukerman
But are you accepting an award right now? What's going on?
Bob Odenkirk
I have accepted two awards in the last half hour. You haven't been paying attention.
Skins McGlinty
I'm sorry.
Scott Aukerman
I just. I hear it and they refuse to.
Bob Odenkirk
Play the walk off music. But.
Scott Aukerman
You guys are great.
Bob Odenkirk
I love you.
Scott Aukerman
No, it's really good. I. You sent me a copy of the film before it came out in Cool up. And I watched it and Cool up was. I didn't tell you this, but Cool up was like leaping to her feet and pumping her fist in the air.
Bob Odenkirk
Really?
Scott Aukerman
And it reminded me of when we went to see the Raid Redemption where we were all like dancing in the aisles during the fight scenes. It's really cathartic and it's really a good time in the movies. So if people can request it or go into a theater, I would suggest it. If people can request it, I would suggest it.
Bob Odenkirk
Are you gonna stick with that rhyme?
Scott Aukerman
I think so. I may be the next misdemeanor. Elliot.
Bob Odenkirk
Well, listen, man, thanks for the compliments. You know what movies are like. It's very hard to get them right or have them come out the way you dreamed they might.
Scott Aukerman
Well, this will. This crossover with the. The John Wickaverse will the Tick Tock man. And you like.
Bob Odenkirk
I would love to see that because one of them is Universal and one of them is Sony, but they're two different companies who don't.
Scott Aukerman
Michael Keaton could play the same character in both Jackie Brown and the other one, out of sight was it.
Bob Odenkirk
You might be right.
Scott Aukerman
I mean, I would love it because, you know, Jason Manzoukas plays the TikTok man in the John Wickaverse. To see the two of you, it's like a Godzilla versus Kong thing or Aliens versus Predator thing where it's nobody versus the TikTok man. That is like a license to print money, which if you can get one of those right, they don't give those out licenses to print money all that often.
Bob Odenkirk
Why, why don't more people just try to get that instead of trying to.
Scott Aukerman
Earn money next time you're at the dmv?
Bob Odenkirk
Earning money is a fool's errand. It's a waste of energy. Just go apply so that you can print money and then you can spend.
Scott Aukerman
Those three, four hours at the gym.
Bob Odenkirk
Don't counterfeit money. Get the license.
Scott Aukerman
Get the license and then you can put anyone's face on it.
Bob Odenkirk
It takes like a three day weekend seminar. You have to sit there and this is where George Washington's face is and this is where the strip is the golden strip, and don't forget this and blah blah, blah. Just sit there, pretend to Take notes and you'll get your license. And then it's legal.
Scott Aukerman
It's legal. As long as you don't print more than $500, it's legal.
Bob Odenkirk
Right. And get Minton, Scott. This is our one step process.
Skins McGlinty
Process.
Scott Aukerman
Get Minton is the only step. Well, nobody is out there right now. And Better Call Saul is out there. I did want to just ask you about your book. Cause I know that you're about to write it.
Bob Odenkirk
No, I wrote it.
Scott Aukerman
You already wrote it. How many times am I mentioned?
Bob Odenkirk
Forever.
Scott Aukerman
How many times am I mentioned? How many?
Bob Odenkirk
Twice. Maybe four times.
Scott Aukerman
Hmm.
Bob Odenkirk
Yeah, Scott Aukerman's in there for sure. And yeah, it took me forever to write it. It was really unpleasant to write it because I was so bad at writing.
Scott Aukerman
Also, anytime you were doing pushups and you had a 30 second break in between reps, you would write.
Skins McGlinty
Yeah.
Scott Aukerman
And you had to really. I mean, you had to really choose your word carefully.
Bob Odenkirk
That's right.
Scott Aukerman
Because you could never repeat it.
Bob Odenkirk
I could never erase it. I could never strike it out. I had to stick with it and live with it.
Scott Aukerman
And I had read that you had used the word the really early on in the process. And then you. Fuck.
Bob Odenkirk
Why did I use it so early even once? It's gonna come out in January of next year.
Scott Aukerman
Wow.
Bob Odenkirk
But I finished writing it months.
Scott Aukerman
Have you seen the galleys? Have you seen the COVID No, I've.
Bob Odenkirk
Seen the COVID The COVID is on Twitter. You can see it on my. I tweeted it out. It's all about Mr. Show mostly. I mean, really, truly, it is about starting out and trying to make my way until I got to the greatest show ever.
Scott Aukerman
I'm sure it covers. Of course, I'm sure it covers the motivational speaker with Chris Farley. You.
Bob Odenkirk
Yeah, there's a lot of. Yeah, there's a lot of nonsense about Saturday Night Live because it's such a stressful and unpleasant challenge for me. And like a lot of people, it takes up way too much space in my head. And so I did write a lot about that. And then I wrote a lot about Mr. Show, but I also wrote about all the shows that nobody saw me do and try for that, you know, never made it to the screen. Because I feel like, you know, I want people who are starting out to have some sense of what a career looks like, which is mostly shit.
Scott Aukerman
It's. Yeah. I mean, yes, there's the impression that you're the golden boy. You went immediately from Chicago to Saturday Night Live to get a life to the Ben stiller show to Mr. Show. And then we're just handed this part on America's Greatest Trauma, which then you spun off into your own show. And yes, all of that is true.
Bob Odenkirk
Right.
Scott Aukerman
But there also were various scripts that you and I tried to write that never went anywhere.
Bob Odenkirk
Lots of them. Tons of them. Literally tons.
Scott Aukerman
Literally 2,000 pounds worth.
Bob Odenkirk
It would weigh more than one 2,000 pound increment. Yeah, I think it's important to share that stuff, right, don't you? Of course.
Scott Aukerman
And if anyone were interested in a book that I were writing, I of course would do it. But no one cares about my adventures in the screen trade. You know, meeting Barack Obama. Who wants to hear about that? Twice?
Bob Odenkirk
Of course, your adventures in the pod trade.
Scott Aukerman
Yeah. Oh boy, that's even less. People are interested in that.
Bob Odenkirk
Well, you're a revolutionary in the podcasting world.
Scott Aukerman
I'm a lot like the Paul Revere of podcasting. Just look out, look out. These are going to be popular. No, no. Brian will have one of these one day.
Bob Odenkirk
Podcasts are coming. Get out of the way. Run. Burn down your.
Scott Aukerman
But please burn down your houses.
Bob Odenkirk
Asphyxiate yourself.
Scott Aukerman
I cannot wait for the book. I cannot wait to see this tell all book and what you have to say about me.
Bob Odenkirk
It tells very little, but thank you.
Scott Aukerman
Well, we have to take a break. Nobody is in theaters on video on demand right now. Bob, you can stick around, right? We have some other guests to get to. When we come back, we are going to have a social media expert and a disruptor will be with us. We will be right back with more Bob Odenkirk after this. The Bad Guys are back in badness for Dreamworks Animation's new movie the Bad Guys 2. A high octane action comedy packed with attitude, swagger and laugh out loud humor that will appeal to everyone. Thanks to an all star voice cast of hilarious actors and comedians. The incredibly cool and visually dynamic animation style levels up the action for insane cinematic sequences like you've never seen in animated movies before. This is a movie made, made for the big screen experience. Get your tickets now for the baddest comedy of the summer. The Bad Guys 2 is in theaters August 1st. This episode of Comedy Bang Bang is brought to you by Squarespace. Squarespace gives you everything you need to offer services and get paid all in one place. Here's what it is. You create a stunning online presence with Squarespace where you can easily showcase your services whether it's, I don't know, consultations, maybe events, experiences, all on a fully customizable website. Just enjoy yourself customizing this thing. You're going to love it. It attracts clients and it helps grow your business. Squarespace's cutting edge design tools make it simple for anyone to build a bespoke website that aligns perfectly with their brand. Here's how you start. You start with blueprint AI their AI AI AI AI powered website. Build and create a fully personalized site in just a few steps. Oh, this sounds so futuristic and exciting. Squarespace also helps streamline your entire workflow with built in tools for appointment scheduling, email marketing and professional invoicing. Plus, get paid on time with branded invoices and seamless online payments. Head to squarespace.com Bang Bang for a free trial and when you're ready to launch, use the offer code Bang bang to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain. Summer's here and the time is nigh for dancing in this. Did they say nigh in that song? That seems impossible, right? Anyway, summer is here and I mean there's so much to do. Dancing in the street. Everything else. God, oh my God. So much to do outdoors in the summer. The last thing you want to be stuck in is indoors where the street isn't where people don't dance. No, you don't want to be stuck inside cooking all day. Well, this is where Factor comes in. Factor's chef crafted dietitian approved meals arrive fresh and ready to eat, taking the hassle out of eating well. With 45 weekly menu options. You can pick gourmet meals that fit your summer gains and goals. Choose from options like Calorie Smart, Protein plus, keto and more. I like Factor. I get it all the time. I've talked about it here. We liked it so much they spot. They sent it to me free for a week and then I just kept it. I kept it going. It's great, it's easy and you can do it. To get started@factor meals.com Bang Bang 50 off and use code Bang Bang 50 off to get 50% off. That's where the 50 off comes in, of course. Plus free shipping on your first box. That's code Bang Bang 50 off@factormeals.com Bang Bang 50 off FactorMeals.com Bang Bang 50 off for 50% off plus free shipping. FactorMeals.com Bang Bang50 off just rolls off the tongue comedy Bang Bang. We're back. Bob Odenkirk of the Naperville Odenkirks Odenkirk's is here with us. He of course, Ben Stiller Played Abraham Lincoln, I would imagine, in a sketch many times.
Bob Odenkirk
I've played Abraham Lincoln many times. Let's see if we can go down my list of credits. Miller Beer commercial.
Scott Aukerman
Whoa.
Skins McGlinty
Oh, that's right.
Scott Aukerman
I do remember that.
Bob Odenkirk
Yeah, yeah. Miller Beer commercial. What else? The Tom Show. Tom Arnold. The Tom Show.
Scott Aukerman
That's right. We knew him just as Tom at the time, and then he added the Arnold afterwards, and that was because Gary Coleman passed away and he finally relinquished the rights to Arnold, which he played on different strokes.
Bob Odenkirk
You know, I. You.
Scott Aukerman
Yes.
Bob Odenkirk
You know what should mic you. You shouldn't be miked.
Scott Aukerman
I know. How much better would this podcast be if my mic were turned off and you just had to guess at what I was saying? People could insert themselves asking their own questions. It's like a choose your own adventure.
Bob Odenkirk
Book, which is the last thing everybody wants to do. Yeah, I pick up a book because I want you to tell me a story. I don't want to have to tell myself a story.
Scott Aukerman
It's like suddenly I'm doing your work for you. Like, pay me for the book. And this is the other thing, Bob, a lot of people are paying to see your movie, but they're taking time out of their day. Shouldn't you be paying them to see the movie?
Bob Odenkirk
Scott, we've had it wrong since the beginning of time, and you are the only one who figured it out.
Scott Aukerman
It's like two hours of their day. Like, pay the minimum wage, you know, pay them 30 bucks when they come out.
Bob Odenkirk
Absolutely. Okay, let's do that. Starting now.
Scott Aukerman
We will get that done. But we do have to get to our next guest, if that's okay.
Bob Odenkirk
Yeah, I want to meet these people.
Scott Aukerman
You want to meet these people. Let's just. Let's bring her on. She's been on the show before. She is a social media expert. And, Bob, I think you could use some tips on this because you. You tweet very sporadically.
Bob Odenkirk
Yes.
Scott Aukerman
So she's a social media expert. Please welcome back to the show Francesca Bolognese.
Francesca Bolognese
Hi. No, Scott, I'm not a social media expert. You always get it wrong with your team. I don't know who at your team say the wrong thing, but I am not a social media expert.
Scott Aukerman
I beg your par. I don't have a team necessarily as much as your big team of people.
Francesca Bolognese
That you work with. They get it wrong every.
Scott Aukerman
I know that I have 20 people standing behind me right now, but they don't work on the show. They're just watching.
Francesca Bolognese
So I am not a social media Expert. And I know last time I come on, I work for bitband beyond in Best Buy Beyond. I don't work for them anymore, Scott. I get a new job.
Scott Aukerman
You have, as Rudy north said, you have a new job.
Francesca Bolognese
I have a new job, yes.
Scott Aukerman
This is incredible. Bob, I don't know if you have ever listened to the show before. I'm doubting that you ever have. But Francesca here, what would you do? You were working for Bed, Bath and Beyond and you would go on to Instagram posts that they would post and argue with the clients. Is that essentially what it was?
Francesca Bolognese
Let's say somebody comment on a picture on like, I don't know, Twitter of Bed, Bath and Beyond product, and they say, oh, I went to Bed, Bath and Beyond and I buy myself a vcr. And inside the VCR I find a lot of little haters. Well, that for me. Then I commented, no, you a piece of shit. Why you not take your vcr, go sink to the bottom of a pit of mud and die? But. So I get fired for that?
Scott Aukerman
Wait, you got fired? I thought you got hired for that. I thought that's what they wanted you to do.
Francesca Bolognese
No, they didn't know that I was doing what I was doing.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, no. And you confessed it on this podcast?
Francesca Bolognese
Well, yes, but mostly because I comment on the Bath and Body Work, Beth and Body Work post and I say, why you not take your body wash, cucumber scented body wash, shove it up your stupid butt in a drown with a body wash in your body till you die?
Scott Aukerman
No. So you're not only responding to complaint posts that people do for your own company, Bed Bath and Beyond, but you're out there trying to snipe other companies and tear them down?
Francesca Bolognese
Yes. And so then Beth and Bodywork, they sue Bed, Bath and Beyond, and then they fire me. And I said, what do you want me to do? Where am I supposed to go?
Bob Odenkirk
Yeah, yeah. When people are fired, you should be given, like, where you should go, a different job. Yeah, yeah, you should be. You're fired from here. But now walk down the street, it's.
Scott Aukerman
Like, take a penny, leave a penny. Like, you know, get fired, you know, but also you get hired here.
Francesca Bolognese
Yeah.
Bob Odenkirk
And that didn't happen. And that didn't happen?
Francesca Bolognese
No, that didn't happen. I have a son. I have a son in the.
Bob Odenkirk
When did you have this son before?
Scott Aukerman
You never talked about this.
Bob Odenkirk
Is this new? Did you just have a baby?
Francesca Bolognese
No, no, no. He is. He's 17 years old. I had him for a long time.
Bob Odenkirk
You just had a 17.
Scott Aukerman
How long have you had him? About 17 years.
Francesca Bolognese
I got him. I got him about. Yeah, I don't know, 15 years ago. I got him.
Scott Aukerman
Okay. Yeah. Somewhere in that range.
Bob Odenkirk
Yeah.
Francesca Bolognese
But he. So I said to Bat and Beyond, the CEO named Richard. I said, richard, what do you want me to do with my son? Where do you want me to go? And my husband, Ryan. Ryan.
Scott Aukerman
You have a husband too? This is.
Bob Odenkirk
Does he work? Does your husband work?
Francesca Bolognese
My husband, he work. He make the blades for razors.
Scott Aukerman
He makes those like. He works at the factory.
Francesca Bolognese
Yeah. I see.
Scott Aukerman
Or he does them one at a time.
Francesca Bolognese
He work at the factory, but he make each blade by hand for Gillette.
Scott Aukerman
Wow. Handmade artisan.
Bob Odenkirk
Has he ever cut himself? Everyone asks.
Scott Aukerman
That's gotta be the question.
Francesca Bolognese
He's constantly on medical leave, which is why I need to work for both of us.
Bob Odenkirk
So I. I bet in that plant they have one of those, you know, days since the last time accident. But it says hours or even minutes.
Scott Aukerman
Seconds maybe, or.
Francesca Bolognese
Yeah, it's moments. So I say anyway.
Scott Aukerman
Yes.
Bob Odenkirk
I say, I'm sorry to take you down this side road. I know you express something important.
Scott Aukerman
No, obviously. But, Francesca, you've never mentioned your family. I've. I've never even brought it up. I apologize.
Bob Odenkirk
I was fired because you willfully and on your own offered critiques of some of the commentary on social media of other own company. You were trying to defend your company, and then you started making snipey comments about.
Scott Aukerman
You are almost a lawyer, Bob.
Bob Odenkirk
Well, I think the word, the term snipey comments gives it away. Of course, I've obviously studied for the bar.
Scott Aukerman
What would Sal say about this?
Bob Odenkirk
I can settle it for you. Give me a lot of money and I'll lie.
Scott Aukerman
Yeah, that sounds about right. That guy, that.
Bob Odenkirk
That character.
Francesca Bolognese
Wow.
Bob Odenkirk
Now listen, what are you gonna do?
Scott Aukerman
What are you gonna do?
Bob Odenkirk
You have a son, you have a husband. These. Neither of them.
Francesca Bolognese
This is what. Yeah.
Scott Aukerman
So what are you gonna do? No, that's us asking you, what are you gonna do? You can't just say. Yeah. So I said, you can't just agree with it.
Francesca Bolognese
CEO, I say, what do you want me to do? He says. He says, you know what? Bed, Bath and Beyond open high school in Chicago. Why not go work for the high school?
Skins McGlinty
What?
Scott Aukerman
Wait, Bed, Bath and Beyond opened a high school?
Francesca Bolognese
Yes.
Scott Aukerman
So it's like. It's like branded. A branded high school.
Francesca Bolognese
Yes, Everything. Bed, Bat and Beyond.
Scott Aukerman
Really? This is incredible. I mean, I wonder. I've always wondered, Bob. And I'm sure you have. Why don't more companies open high schools? You know what I mean? Like Subway. Okay, it's a sandwich shop. But why don't they open a high school?
Bob Odenkirk
This. I don't know, Scott. People just have a. Well, there's a dearth of imagination in some of our boardrooms.
Scott Aukerman
So they opened a high school in Chicago and they said, why don't you just go work there? Is everything in the high school Bed, Bath and Beyond, like, you can find it in the actual Bed, Bath and Beyond stores?
Francesca Bolognese
Yes. Every product is there. The mascot is one bath and one bed.
Bob Odenkirk
The school mascot. School mascot.
Francesca Bolognese
The school mascot. Yes.
Scott Aukerman
One bed and one bath.
Francesca Bolognese
Yes. Yes.
Scott Aukerman
Okay. Wow.
Francesca Bolognese
So I had to move to Chicago.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, no.
Bob Odenkirk
The worst.
Francesca Bolognese
So I go to Chicago. I'm like, what the fuck is this place? Everything. So everybody so drunk all the time. Everybody tell me that I should know where the lake is, because that's how I know where I am in the city.
Scott Aukerman
That's all they care about there.
Francesca Bolognese
Everybody tell me I need to eat a pizza. I go to a stupid restaurant.
Scott Aukerman
Yes.
Francesca Bolognese
I wait eight hours. Nine hours.
Scott Aukerman
Nine hours. I can fit in three gym sessions.
Francesca Bolognese
Out comes a lasagna and pie crust.
Scott Aukerman
So wait a minute. Are you just doing your stand up chunk about Chicago right now, or is that what you're working on?
Francesca Bolognese
Yes. So that's another thing. I get into comedy.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, yeah. Everyone in Chicago is into comedy.
Francesca Bolognese
I mean, in improv, I take a second class.
Scott Aukerman
Yeah, everyone is there. Yeah. It's like a. It's mandatory when you move to Chicago.
Bob Odenkirk
So it's just been really a lot of trauma and trouble for you, the two TRs since you were fired. But you do have a job at the Bed, Bath and Beyond High school.
Scott Aukerman
Yeah.
Bob Odenkirk
What do you actually do or junior high?
Francesca Bolognese
It's a high school. I work as a guidance counselor for the kids to get into college.
Bob Odenkirk
You're a very critical thinker, and I think that's kind of good for a guidance counselor. You can analyze things.
Scott Aukerman
Yeah.
Francesca Bolognese
Thank you.
Bob Odenkirk
So have you. Yeah. So have you. Do you feel. Is it working out? Is it a good job? Because you sound like you're very unhappy with Chicago. All the things that you have to do there. Eat at Greek Town, go to the Cubs games, go to Sluggers.
Scott Aukerman
Every Cub game you have to go to.
Francesca Bolognese
I had to go to every Cub game. I had to go to the Cubby Bear bar. Afterward, I had to go to sluggers and hit a ball with a bat.
Scott Aukerman
No. Every day.
Bob Odenkirk
Every day, Scott, you've never been to Chicago, Alex.
Scott Aukerman
I've never been. I will never go.
Francesca Bolognese
Every day they want me eat mozzarella steak at 1am oh, it's a burden. It is.
Bob Odenkirk
But you've done. You seem. You sound great. I'm just gonna say that you truly sound amazing.
Scott Aukerman
You sound like you have a wind beneath your wings, a fresh pep in your step. You were saying your son is at the high school?
Francesca Bolognese
Yes, my son, Richard Edu. He go to the.
Scott Aukerman
Wait, what was that? Richard. E2.
Francesca Bolognese
Richard. Edu.
Scott Aukerman
Richard Edu.
Francesca Bolognese
Yes. Richard Eduardo.
Scott Aukerman
Could you spell that, please? Richard Edu.
Francesca Bolognese
R, I, C, H, A.
Scott Aukerman
A little faster, though. Could you do it maybe even a little? Just even 10% faster. Richard Didoux.
Francesca Bolognese
Richard Didou.
Scott Aukerman
Okay, all right. I still am not getting it, but go ahead. So your son, Richard Didoux?
Francesca Bolognese
Yeah. So he go to the high school with me. He said, mom, can you please stop being guidance counselor? You hurt everybody's feelings. Everybody so sad, right? I say, this is my job. This is what I have to do. So I tell the kids when they come in, they say, I want to go to Yale.
Bob Odenkirk
I want to go to complaints, Harvard.
Francesca Bolognese
Become an investment banker.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, these little whiners.
Francesca Bolognese
I say to them, listen to me.
Bob Odenkirk
Go to hell.
Francesca Bolognese
No, go to hell. But why, you know, do something else. Why? You know, go work for my cousin. Why, you know, go work.
Scott Aukerman
You have a cousin? This is another late breaking announcement.
Francesca Bolognese
Why, you know, go work for my. My cousin? His name Ricotta. Ricotta Bolognese. He work in. He make, like, toys for the pool.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, pool toys. Not for the poor. For the pool?
Francesca Bolognese
Yeah, for the pool. Why you not go work for Ricotta? And they say, no, no, because my daddy want me to go to Yale. I say to them, your daddy want to go to Yale? Because he a piece of shit, stupid idiot man with a lot of money in a Range Rover. Why he no go drown to the bottom of the pool where ricotta make the toys?
Scott Aukerman
Ricotta makes the toys at the bottom of the pool.
Bob Odenkirk
And let me ask you something. This is. So you're giving the kids, generally, you're giving them the advice that they're. They should go work for your cousin.
Scott Aukerman
Does your cousin Ricotta need more employees? This sounds like a one man operation there at the bottom of the pool.
Francesca Bolognese
He needs somebody blow up the toys.
Scott Aukerman
Oh.
Francesca Bolognese
He needs somebody make them blow up.
Bob Odenkirk
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Scott Aukerman
So. And you haven't. You haven't found a. A single kid who's willing to do this?
Francesca Bolognese
No, I have. I sent the kid to go Work for ricotta. But I have a lot of cousins, so my cousins, they get all these free labor from these high school kids.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, it's free. They're not even getting paid.
Francesca Bolognese
No, it's a year abroad.
Scott Aukerman
Oh. Oh. How do you justify that? Like, how is the abroad part of it working? Oh, because they're in. Where are you from again?
Francesca Bolognese
I'm from Italy. I'm from Matorino.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, that's. That accent. That's.
Bob Odenkirk
Yeah, now I recognize it.
Scott Aukerman
I guess I'd never thought that people in Italy would need pool toys. Cause when you think of Italy, you don't. That's not the first thing that comes to mind. You know, like Stanley Tucci in his big documentary that he makes. You know, you never see him playing with any pool toys, but they must have a lot of pool toys there.
Francesca Bolognese
Well, see, this is why you have such a small American brain, Scott, because you only think, oh, my. America is the only place that has a pools place. We swim.
Bob Odenkirk
Yes. No, they have. They have pools in Italy and they need toys for them. Yeah.
Scott Aukerman
I'm sorry. It's my small.
Bob Odenkirk
Stanley Tucci doesn't show you all of Italy.
Scott Aukerman
Well, that's the thing. If Stanley Tucci is going to do a documentary about Italy, I want him to cover every square inch of Italy.
Bob Odenkirk
And he's focusing on food. He hasn't had a single good meal there. I've watched, like four episodes. It's just the worst.
Scott Aukerman
And not only that, what happens after you eat? You go take a dump. Right. You never see him taking a dump immediately after.
Bob Odenkirk
Well, you have to go online, and they have the extras, and they have them, you know, dump.
Scott Aukerman
Well, Francesca, this sounds like. This sounds horrible. I mean.
Bob Odenkirk
I mean, is it so horrible? She's getting work for her cousin. She's getting workers for her cousin. She's getting an opportunity to complain and critique people.
Scott Aukerman
That's the thing you love the most.
Bob Odenkirk
She's invited to do it. She's very good at it.
Francesca Bolognese
Yes. Thank you, Bob. Thank you.
Bob Odenkirk
And probably she's gonna get fired. That's not good.
Francesca Bolognese
Yeah, no, I'm not gonna get fired.
Bob Odenkirk
The parents aren't gonna like that. You're so negative.
Scott Aukerman
Yeah. I can't believe you haven't been fired yet.
Francesca Bolognese
No, the parents, they come to me, they say, where is Mackenzie? I need her to come home. I say, mackenzie is with my cousin Gnocchi, and she is making handmade towels with Gnocchi in Torino.
Scott Aukerman
Handmade towels. Wow. Those sound. Are they fluffy? Are they comfortable? Or are they Thin.
Francesca Bolognese
They're very thin, Scott. But they don't dry easily. They sop up the water, but they don't dry.
Scott Aukerman
Wow. You have such an extended family. We've never discussed on this show. I mean, it really begs to be talked about in a further episode, but unfortunately we don't have time to do it.
Bob Odenkirk
Well, I'm sorry that I just would say it's nice to hear a working person on the show. You know, we don't always hear the stories of people who are just doing regular jobs.
Scott Aukerman
No, I mean, like earlier on in the show, I was talking to some rich guy who had four hours a day to spend at the gym and.
Bob Odenkirk
Right.
Scott Aukerman
You know, so it's like this is.
Bob Odenkirk
Important to hear from people, real people doing real jobs. In this case, guidance counselor in a Bed Bath and Beyond High school.
Scott Aukerman
What was the. Right. Who's the rival high school, by the way, that you guys are always. There's a big rivalry with the rival.
Francesca Bolognese
High school is Best Buy High School down the road.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, God.
Francesca Bolognese
Their mascot is a big. A big iPhone case.
Scott Aukerman
Just the case. Not the iPhone, just the case.
Francesca Bolognese
And no phone.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, God. Boy, I hate those guys.
Francesca Bolognese
It's so stupid. I said, at this point, I'm like, well, you know what? If I can change one kid's life, that would be a success. But at this point, you know, I send a 30 kid, 40 kid to my cousins, and everybody's life has changed now.
Bob Odenkirk
Wow.
Scott Aukerman
So, wow. Yeah. 40 kids over there in Italy with your cousins not getting paid. Yeah. You've altered the course of their history forever.
Francesca Bolognese
And the principal, he come to me asking me, why where the kid go? I say, you listen to me. Why you not take your stupid principal ace, go fly into a fire in the middle of a volcano full of shit, and then you explode and you hit a wall and you fall down a cliff.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, no. God. Oh, geez.
Bob Odenkirk
What did he say to that? There's nothing to say to that except. Yes.
Scott Aukerman
Do you just sit there and take it?
Francesca Bolognese
He took it. Yeah, he take it. He's a weak man.
Scott Aukerman
That's like most men, they're weak.
Francesca Bolognese
Yeah, most men are so stupid. My husband Ryan, he's a chichuzo. I tell you what, he a big time chichu idiot.
Scott Aukerman
Okay, we don't need to curse on that. I'm assuming jijuzo. It's a curse. I don't know.
Francesca Bolognese
Jiu juso mean like a douchebag.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, okay. Well, that. Yeah. I don't even like you saying douchebag. I don't like you.
Francesca Bolognese
Oh, no, no.
Scott Aukerman
I mean, those things go up into a very private part on a woman's body.
Francesca Bolognese
Yes, I know. I have one.
Scott Aukerman
You're wearing one right now.
Francesca Bolognese
I wear them every day.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, God. Is that what they make you do in Chicago as well?
Francesca Bolognese
Oh, yes, they make me wear some. So many douchebags, you get off the.
Scott Aukerman
Train, they hand you some mozzarella sticks and a douchebag.
Francesca Bolognese
The L. I get off of the.
Scott Aukerman
L. Oh, the L. Yeah, they love to call it the L. Geez. Well, look, Francesca, we're running out of time for this segment, but can you stick around because we have a disruptor coming on the show.
Francesca Bolognese
Oh, yes. I love to see this.
Scott Aukerman
Okay, please don't give him any of your sass. Any of your patented sass.
Francesca Bolognese
We'll see what I can do.
Scott Aukerman
All right, well, we're going to take a break. Bob Odenkirk is with us. We also have Francesca Bolognese. We'll be right back with more comedy. Bang, bang. This is an ad by BetterHelp. Boy, workplace stress, huh? I'm having it right now. Well, you know what? This summer, I think it's time for us all to focus on our wellness, right? With small steps, right? We can just manage these workday challenges together. Workplace stress is one of the top causes of declining mental health. With 61% of the global workforce experiencing high, high, high, high, high stress, most of us can't wave goodbye to work, but we can start small with a focus on wellness. Therapy can help you navigate whatever challenges the workday or look any day might bring. With over 30,000 therapists, BetterHelp is the world's largest online therapy platform, having served over 5 million people globally. And hey, it works. With an App store rating of 4.9 out of 5 based on over 1.7 million client reviews. That's some good reviews, if you know what I mean. It's convenient. You can join a session with the click of a button, helping you fit therapy into your busy life. Not my busy life. Plus, you can switch therapists at any time. As the largest online therapy provider in the world, BetterHelp can provide access to mental health professionals with a diverse variety of expertise. And our listeners get 10% off your first month@betterhelp.com Bang Bang. That is betterhelp.com Bang Bang. Oh, my God. So much of my day just gets hijacked by tedious tasks. You know? Tts, you can relate to this, right? Are you in meetings all day? That could have been emails. Do quick errands turn into all day sagas. Well, if your business requires a lot of mailing or shipping, there's some good news. You don't have time to be a postage expert or stand in line to drop off letters and packages. Well, stamps.com gives you the chance to focus your time on what you do best. Access all the mailing and shipping services you need to run your business right from your computer or phone, anytime, day or night or whatever is in between. Those two things I don't know. With stamps.com print stamps, shipping labels or certified mail forms in seconds. No lines, no traffic, no waiting. We've been using stamps.com at the old podcast studios for over a decade. At this point they're the best. They're flexible. All in one mailing. Oh gorgeous. Don't waste time worrying about being a postage expert or standing in line to drop off letters and packages. Let stamps.com do what they do best so you can do what you do better than what stamps.com does. Can you imagine? Go to stamps.com and use code Bang Bang to sign up for a special offer. No contract. Cancel anytime that is stamps.com and use the code Bang Bang. Introducing Family freedom from T Mobile. We'll pay off four phones up to 3, 200 and give you four free phones all on America's largest 5G network. Visit t mobile.com familyfreedom up to 800 per line via virtual prepaid card typically takes 15 days. Free phone via 24 monthly bill credits with finance agreement. Example Apple iPhone 16128 gigs 829.99 Eligible trade in example iPhone 1111 Pro for well qualified credits end and balance due if you pay off early or cancel Contact Us Comedy Bang Bang. We're back here. Bob Odenkirk is here. Nobody in stores now and go to any store. They'll have it. And then when does. When does Better Call Saul actually premiere? Can you break some news?
Bob Odenkirk
I do not know.
Scott Aukerman
Come on, you know you just can't say, right?
Bob Odenkirk
I genuinely don't know. I don't think they know. They haven't figured it out yet. Really not a long time. And that's because it takes so long to shoot it and so long to cut it together. So if you love Better Call Saul, I promise you it's going to be great. I also promise you it will take way too long to be.
Scott Aukerman
Would you feel bad if there's a Better Call Saul fan out there who loves the show, who dies before the last season?
Bob Odenkirk
Terrible. Terrible.
Scott Aukerman
Would you feel bad if Anyone dies before Better Call Saul comes out, everyone stopped dying.
Bob Odenkirk
Okay? It's too much.
Scott Aukerman
It's too much responsibility for you. Oh, it's tearing you apart, I can tell. We also have Francesca Bolognese here who is currently in Chicago, and she's a social media expert. And.
Francesca Bolognese
No, I'm not a social media expert.
Scott Aukerman
I'm sorry. No, I keep forgetting you're not a social media expert, but you're good at it. Do you have any tips for Bob here?
Francesca Bolognese
No tips. My tip is get off a line, become a human being, like a normal person. Not some stupid idiot online, a little troll, little psychopath. I have an opinion.
Scott Aukerman
Sounds like you are a social media expert.
Francesca Bolognese
I have opinion about your show that you're on. Let me tweet at you.
Scott Aukerman
Yeah, I mean, but sometimes people tweet good ideas for Better Call Saul. I would imagine you use them, right on the show.
Bob Odenkirk
Everything that we do is, as you pointed out earlier, a choose your own adventure type scenario.
Scott Aukerman
They're crowdsourced ideas.
Bob Odenkirk
The ideas are crowdsourced, as are the lines. Yeah. Everything is written by the fans.
Scott Aukerman
By the fans, for the fans. That's how you like to do it.
Bob Odenkirk
As you see it.
Francesca Bolognese
That is the way the best art is made.
Bob Odenkirk
Yep.
Scott Aukerman
Well, speaking of how things are made and doing things a little bit differently, we have a disruptor here on the show. He's been on the show before.
Skins McGlinty
Clank.
Scott Aukerman
Yes. That is, of course, his catchphrase, which I believe he came up with on the previous episode.
Skins McGlinty
Returning guest.
Scott Aukerman
He is a disruptor. Please welcome back to the show Skins McGlinty.
Skins McGlinty
Hello. Has Skins. Skins McGlanty, my friend.
Scott Aukerman
I'm so sorry. I thought it was Skins, but now I'm realizing it's Skins. Mainly because you corrected me.
Skins McGlinty
Yes. No, no, I. I am not. In fact, a British searing teen drama that has launched many careers. The name ain't skins. It's skins McGlintine. Don't you forget it.
Scott Aukerman
Clickety clank, clickety clank. Of course, your catchphrase. Welcome back to the show. This is Bob Odenkirk of I don't.
Bob Odenkirk
Know if you watched skins.
Scott Aukerman
Please.
Skins McGlinty
Skince McGlinty. Bob. Big fan of Monkeybone. Honored to meet you.
Bob Odenkirk
Oh, thank you so much. It's all been downhill since then, but I'm glad that there's people like you who paid attention to the quality when it came out.
Skins McGlinty
Yeah. I would always see these movies where there's a head surgeon, and I said, but could this guy catch.
Bob Odenkirk
That's right.
Skins McGlinty
I know. He's good in the operating room, but let's see what happens if he gets on a football field and then I see you chasing Chris Kattan trying to catch sorts of internal organs. I said, this guy's good.
Scott Aukerman
Big monkeybone fan over here. Wow.
Bob Odenkirk
Thank you. Thank you.
Scott Aukerman
And this is Francesca Bolognese. I don't know if you're similarly a fan of what she does.
Skins McGlinty
A huge fan. Huge fan.
Francesca Bolognese
Yeah. Really?
Skins McGlinty
Yes. I love watching arguments play out online in real time.
Francesca Bolognese
You're a troll guy. I get it, okay. You guys are my biggest fans.
Skins McGlinty
I'm like a troll hunter.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, wow. Okay.
Skins McGlinty
I. I ain't a troll myself, but I like viewing him from a distance. Clinkety clank.
Scott Aukerman
Clickety clank. Clickety clank. Well, Skins, last time you were on the show, you were essentially. You are. You're a disruptor.
Bob Odenkirk
But.
Scott Aukerman
But more specifically, you are.
Skins McGlinty
Look, last time, my career was a little more narrow. Let's say I. I was exclusively a New Timey prospector. Of course. I came out to California to follow that rush, that gold rush, and start mining for bitcoins.
Scott Aukerman
You're a crypto guy, essentially.
Skins McGlinty
Well, but now I've changed, Scott. I mean, first of all, I need to thank you.
Scott Aukerman
You need to thank me. This is unprecedented. I don't think anyone has ever thanked me on this show. And I defy anyone to come up with any tape where anyone has thanked me.
Skins McGlinty
I certainly never have before. I don't think I thanked you once in my past appearance.
Francesca Bolognese
I never thank you, Scott. I'll never thank you.
Scott Aukerman
Yeah. And, Bob, I mean, you've never thanked me in your life. Not even I. I got you a glass of water once. I remember when we were working together.
Bob Odenkirk
When we met, I told you, you can rely on me for a couple things. One of them, I. I can help you figure out your sketches, where they go.
Scott Aukerman
You. You definitely did that. Where they go. You didn't help me with the writing of them. Just no use. And weirdly enough, you were always like, oh, put that on, Mr. Show number.
Bob Odenkirk
Two, I will always share your sandwich.
Scott Aukerman
Yep.
Bob Odenkirk
Whatever you're eating.
Scott Aukerman
That's the other thing you were bragging about. Only having half a sandwich. Now, you always took half of my sandwich back in the day, so this is not a new thing.
Bob Odenkirk
And then thirdly, I will never thank you.
Scott Aukerman
Yeah, and that's.
Bob Odenkirk
You know, I've come through on all those promises.
Scott Aukerman
26 years of never being thanked.
Skins McGlinty
Well, I guess you can call me Bizarro Bob Odenkirk. Cause, Scott, I'm whipping up a big thank you.
Scott Aukerman
Wow. This is crazy. All right, hit me with it. Hit me with it, Scott.
Skins McGlinty
Living proof for the CBB bump. I don't know if you notice. I don't know if you read the news. October 2019. I appear on the show talking about mining for bitcoin, and since then, bitcoin has gotten very big. CBP bump.
Scott Aukerman
It's not a bump for you specifically. It's just for the actual concept of bitcoin.
Skins McGlinty
Well, I don't know.
Scott Aukerman
The value is improving.
Skins McGlinty
I have a lot of bitcoin.
Scott Aukerman
How many bitcoin do you have?
Skins McGlinty
2.
Scott Aukerman
I mean, it's more than I have, so. Hey.
Skins McGlinty
But, Scott, I've used that capital, and I've decided I'm out of the bitcoin mining. I'm ready to use that capital to disrupt. I want to disrupt. Multiple industries, Scott.
Scott Aukerman
Multiple industries.
Skins McGlinty
Yeah. Cryptocurrency is a thing of the past, Scott. I'm.
Scott Aukerman
No, don't say that. My whole identity is based on it.
Skins McGlinty
This is the opposite of a CBB bump. It's a CBB punch down. I'm knocking bitcoin out of circulation.
Scott Aukerman
No, Bob, how many bitcoin do you have? This is bad news for you because you're a big.
Bob Odenkirk
I have 30.
Scott Aukerman
You're a big crypto guy. I know, bob.
Bob Odenkirk
I have 30 bitcoins.
Scott Aukerman
Oh.
Skins McGlinty
Crypto is the past, Bob. Take note. Take out a notepad, Bob.
Scott Aukerman
Take out your notepad, Bob. I know you have several around you right now.
Skins McGlinty
Future, Bob. The future is unencrypto.
Scott Aukerman
Unencrypto. Unencrypted things.
Skins McGlinty
Unencrypted currency. I am here to announce the creation of skintcoin. This is a radical new development in the world of digital currency.
Scott Aukerman
Okay. I mean, as I understand it, cryptocurrency is basically the whole. The thing that attracts people to it is the fact that you. It has a unique code that has to be constantly mined and uses a lot of energy and is constantly solving algorithms.
Skins McGlinty
That's what people like. They like that it uses that much energy.
Scott Aukerman
Right. But they. But, but. But what they like about it is that the code is not cracked and it is unique to them. And in fact, I think. I didn't. I read an article about a guy who couldn't remember his password, and he had $10 million worth, and he was. He only had two password tries left, and he's bummed because he can't figure it out. Yeah.
Bob Odenkirk
My friend.
Skins McGlinty
My friend Jack. Yeah.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, that's Jack. Okay. Wait, is that the Jack from Twitter?
Skins McGlinty
Yeah.
Scott Aukerman
Okay. Wow.
Skins McGlinty
He's friends with Tom.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, so am I though. Yeah. So he's a mutual friend. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Skins is acting out. Tom looking over his shoulder right now.
Francesca Bolognese
If you want to remember a password. And this is not a social media tip, by the way.
Scott Aukerman
No, no, no, of course not.
Francesca Bolognese
But if you want to remember a password, you take a three people that you sleep with that you slept with, one person that you did just a hand stuff with, you cut all their name in half, put it together in a. Put an exclamation mark and then your favorite number.
Scott Aukerman
Okay, so what is your password?
Francesca Bolognese
So my password is. Right. I. My John.
Bob Odenkirk
13.
Francesca Bolognese
Exclamation point. No, exclamation point. 13.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, okay, so Ry must be Ryan.
Francesca Bolognese
Yes.
Scott Aukerman
Ty was the next one.
Francesca Bolognese
Ty is Tyler.
Scott Aukerman
Tyler. Okay. And then Mai would be.
Francesca Bolognese
Maya.
Scott Aukerman
Maya. Oh, okay, so a woman. So you swing both ways.
Francesca Bolognese
Okay, and then John. I did a hand stuff with John.
Scott Aukerman
Okay, but is that short for Jonathan?
Francesca Bolognese
No, he says it's short for Johnny.
Scott Aukerman
Johnny. Okay, great. And then your favorite number is 13. Interesting.
Francesca Bolognese
Yes, it is my unlucky lucky number.
Scott Aukerman
Okay, great.
Francesca Bolognese
See that?
Skins McGlinty
This was Jack's problem. This is only slept with two people and he abhors hand stuff.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, no.
Skins McGlinty
Mouth only with that guy.
Scott Aukerman
Back to my original point. Yes. If you. If the algorithm is crackable and it's unencrypted, anyone can steal this cryptocurrency, can't they?
Skins McGlinty
Scott, there's a reason that I'm a disruptor. You're not. Okay, because I'm thinking eight dimensionally. What you're saying, of course, is how, if the code is unencrypted, are you going to keep the currency safe? And I said, wait a second, let's take it off the computer. Okay, so this is the radical invention of skin coin. Skitcoin is physical cryptocurrency. Yes. I make coins.
Bob Odenkirk
Yep.
Scott Aukerman
Okay, what do they look like?
Skins McGlinty
They are small. Circular.
Scott Aukerman
Circular. That's the best kind of coin.
Skins McGlinty
Yup. They got me on them like this. I'm. I'm doing the Tom.
Scott Aukerman
Doing the tom, currently. You ever think about hexagons or octagons, like a stop sign?
Skins McGlinty
Never, never, never. That's. No. There's no market for that skin coin. The entire point is you put the skin coins in your pocket, no passwords, nothing to forget, no hand stuff, but.
Francesca Bolognese
Your pocket get heavy with the skin coin.
Scott Aukerman
Yeah, that's a good point.
Skins McGlinty
Well. Well, I thought about that. Okay, so this is what I said.
Scott Aukerman
Have you invented lighter pants, people?
Skins McGlinty
No, no. I'll leave that one to you. Let's see. How far do you get with that?
Scott Aukerman
Okay, well, I've. I've been trying for several years to. To have, like, pants that defy gravity. So if you have heavy coins, it sort of evens out, but I've gotten nowhere with it.
Skins McGlinty
People were telling me the coins were too heavy because they were made of solid gold. Right.
Bob Odenkirk
Okay, okay.
Skins McGlinty
Because I was like, they gotta have the value inherent to the actual physical.
Scott Aukerman
Object and weight is heft.
Skins McGlinty
They said, too heavy. So I said, here's what I'll do. I'll print out pieces of paper and then I'll write on the piece of paper a number and then I'll tell you. Look, I have a gold reserve somewhere. This piece of paper is like a contract. It's a promise that this paper is worth this amount based on the gold I have sitting some. Just trust me.
Scott Aukerman
It's a note that has some sort of promise. A promissory note, one might say.
Skins McGlinty
It's a promissory note. Yeah.
Scott Aukerman
Okay.
Skins McGlinty
This is a good idea.
Scott Aukerman
This is.
Skins McGlinty
Yeah.
Scott Aukerman
You truly are disrupting it. And so people would just like, carry these pieces of paper with them. Like they're. What is it? A book. They're carrying a book with them in their pocket.
Skins McGlinty
No individual slips. Maybe you put them in a bi fold.
Scott Aukerman
Okay. Is it like the E tickets that Disneyland used to have? The A tickets, the B tickets?
Skins McGlinty
Yes.
Scott Aukerman
Where they have different values and stuff?
Skins McGlinty
Yes, exactly. And you can use them to buy goods and services. Like, for example. I don't know if you know about this. NFTs are.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, yeah. NFTs are very big right now, Bob. You're an NFT, aren't you?
Bob Odenkirk
Big time.
Scott Aukerman
Yeah. Yeah.
Skins McGlinty
Non fungible tokens. I said that sounds restrictive. I'm here to announce fungible tokens.
Scott Aukerman
Just fts you can funge them.
Skins McGlinty
I got fungeum all over the place.
Scott Aukerman
Well, obviously, Skins, this is a good idea, but I mean, I see one major problem with it, wouldn't I? I have so many slips of paper in my pockets at all time.
Francesca Bolognese
Just cocky of you to say.
Scott Aukerman
Yeah, I mean, I mean, not your slips, certainly, but, you know, just random slips of paper everywhere and I would worry I would get them all mixed up and I would, you know, be handing people some of my other slips, which I hold very dear to me when I'm trying to use your slips, you know, I mean, this just. It doesn't sound like it would work.
Skins McGlinty
Out so what you would prefer is something like a virtual skin coin.
Scott Aukerman
Yeah. Maybe like a plastic card or something like that where, you know, I could walk into a place and say, like, hey, this card. If I show you this card, I don't have to give you the slips of the money. I can just show you.
Skins McGlinty
That's interesting. So you're saying instead of individual pieces of paper with different numbers written on them, I give you one piece of plastic.
Scott Aukerman
Yes.
Skins McGlinty
And you essentially bring it around to people and go, like, skins is good for it.
Scott Aukerman
Just trust me. And we can call it a trust me card if you want.
Skins McGlinty
Or no, I think we'll probably call it a skint card.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, okay. All right. Sure. If you want your own branding on it.
Skins McGlinty
That's what I'm saying. Like these fungible tokens. You put your money somewhere safe where the value can only grow.
Scott Aukerman
Okay. And do they have your picture on them?
Skins McGlinty
No, I mean, they're all sorts of different. Fungible token. Like, I, you know, I thought, oh, here's a fun thing. Because they're sort of like. I'd say maybe like small pieces of paper. The fungible tokens.
Scott Aukerman
Okay, sure.
Skins McGlinty
So I said, like, what should I put on these so people know they're not money? And I was like, let me put some athletes on them.
Scott Aukerman
Really?
Bob Odenkirk
Like who?
Scott Aukerman
LeBron King James.
Skins McGlinty
Yeah, sure, King James. Jose Cansecogner.
Scott Aukerman
Well, you know, three athletes.
Skins McGlinty
Yeah.
Scott Aukerman
Find another one to do some hand stuff with and you got something.
Skins McGlinty
Well, hey, now, here's some other things. Look. Cause I'm trying to build an entire empire here. Right, sure. Email. Who needs it?
Francesca Bolognese
Yeah.
Bob Odenkirk
Amanda, no. Enough with it.
Scott Aukerman
Get it out of it. Enough with it.
Skins McGlinty
Thank you, Bob. Enough with it.
Bob Odenkirk
Enough.
Skins McGlinty
Too many. I'm getting too many and I can't keep track. Where did I put them?
Bob Odenkirk
So what is your solution? You still want to communicate with people?
Skins McGlinty
I do, but I want to add back a little human touch. So I'm introducing S mail.
Scott Aukerman
Let me guess. The S stands for skints?
Skins McGlinty
Clickety click. Yes, it does.
Scott Aukerman
Okay.
Skins McGlinty
S mail is artisanal, handcrafted email.
Scott Aukerman
Okay, so what do I do? I go to my computer, I type out an email, and I send it to you, and you write it out.
Skins McGlinty
No. Nope. No, sir. Clink and a click. You get a piece of paper. Would you believe it? It all starts once again with a piece of paper.
Scott Aukerman
Okay, but like, papyrus, essentially.
Skins McGlinty
Sure.
Scott Aukerman
Like what the ancient Egyptians used. They would, you know, cut, like a little stuff off of trees.
Skins McGlinty
Yeah. I'm with James Cameron. Used for the Avatar poster.
Scott Aukerman
Right. Well, gosh, this. Skins, I don't. I mean, this sounds great. Where can we invest? I mean, obviously Bob has a lot of money and Francesca seems poor to me, but. And I'm somewhere in. I'm in between.
Francesca Bolognese
I am poor, but I'm going to be rich soon when my cousins send me back the money that they make from the little kids.
Scott Aukerman
It sounds like you're. You're involved in, like, child slavery.
Francesca Bolognese
No, Scott, they're 18.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, this is good then for me.
Francesca Bolognese
You know, everybody was always waiting for me to turn 18. When I turn 18, everybody's so happy.
Skins McGlinty
Okay, why you don't.
Francesca Bolognese
Why. Why you don't want to talk about it?
Scott Aukerman
I don't want to get into your sordid past.
Francesca Bolognese
So many cool guys in my community waiting for me to turn it.
Scott Aukerman
Yeah, I don't know about that. Well, look, Skins, this sounds like a great idea. We would all love to invest. Clickety clank. Of course, I'm not sure why you're not calling it Clickety Clank money or you have a famous catchphrase. I'm not sure why you're branding it with your name instead of your catchphrase.
Bob Odenkirk
Clickety clank.
Skins McGlinty
Thank you, Bob. That's gonna up the value of that catchphrase right there.
Bob Odenkirk
Clickety coin. Clickety clank Coin.
Scott Aukerman
It's like if Bob. If Bob were to, you know, make some sort of money like this, he'd call him God damn it Coin because that's his catchphrase.
Skins McGlinty
That's what I was gonna say. By your logic, the show would be called Mr. Show with God damn it and David. There's a difference between your name and your catchphrase.
Bob Odenkirk
That's right.
Scott Aukerman
I don't know.
Skins McGlinty
The points say clinkety clank on them.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, good. Okay, good. That's.
Bob Odenkirk
Then.
Scott Aukerman
Then. Then I have no further reservations.
Skins McGlinty
Right. Right under the Illuminati signal. Yes. What's your question?
Francesca Bolognese
My question is, when I walk with all my coin in my pocket, do they go clink clank, clinkity clank?
Skins McGlinty
Yeah, they do like a bunch of pots and pans.
Francesca Bolognese
So everybody sees me when I'm walking around. Okay.
Skins McGlinty
Yeah, yeah. They go, that's a. That's a. That's a splinter.
Francesca Bolognese
I got the idea for you. You make a car go short with a branding for glee Clank.
Scott Aukerman
I've been working on this. A lighter cargo short.
Francesca Bolognese
All the most hottest guy were cargo short.
Skins McGlinty
Yes.
Francesca Bolognese
You put the full. You stub a full. The pocket with the coin and make it look really heavy and droopy. Everybody like, wow, he a cool guy. I want to hang out with him.
Scott Aukerman
He's cool and rich and he loud.
Francesca Bolognese
He's so loud.
Scott Aukerman
He's so loud. He's like deafening.
Francesca Bolognese
Yes.
Scott Aukerman
Wow. These are great ideas. Well, Skintz, you've done it. You've cracked the code. Literally. Literally. Yeah, but we're running out of time here. We only have time for one final feature on the show, and that's a little something called plugs.
Francesca Bolognese
Hey, mister, wait up, would ya? I'm a little baby plug boy. I could vlog all night. I don't have a mom and dad. I. I'm covered in dirt and sad. I'm a broken leg. Excuse me, chum, can you spare a plug? I don't have any family love. That was just a tap dance I've done. Thank you for the plug.
Skins McGlinty
Wow.
Scott Aukerman
Amazing. That was Little Baby Plug Boy by Christina Orlando. Thank you so much, Christina. That was. I love the dancing. That was incredible. Well, that really. That puts a smile on my face. And what better time to plug things when you're smiling? Bob, you have anything to plug?
Bob Odenkirk
No, but if you haven't seen nobody yet, go see the movie. Nobody. And what else? Wait, wait. I'm plugging the idea of waiting for Better Call Saul.
Scott Aukerman
Okay. And weight in general, things. Weighing amounts of things according to the.
Bob Odenkirk
System or keyless meanings of the word wait with time and let time go by.
Scott Aukerman
Of course.
Bob Odenkirk
Leave it alone. It'll go by just fine without your help.
Scott Aukerman
Yeah, you don't need to push it or anything like that.
Bob Odenkirk
And then, and then also weight. Lift weights.
Scott Aukerman
Lift weights, gain weights, lose weights. Wonderful. And Francesco, what are you plugging?
Francesca Bolognese
Okay, so obviously I'm not a social media expert, but I find a great account, I think Jason Menzouka's account on the Twitter. So many funny joke about the bean in Chicago being so stupid. It's I L Y I L Y.
Scott Aukerman
So it's a palindrome. Essentially it's Lilly and then Lily backwards.
Francesca Bolognese
No, because the. No, it's not. So I don't need to explain to you why, but it's not.
Scott Aukerman
It's Lil. It's L L Y L L I Y.
Francesca Bolognese
It's not confusing. Scotty, you take a pen and paper, you write it down right now. L I L Y Y I L Y.
Scott Aukerman
Maybe Skins could put it on his money. Would you mind putting that on your money?
Skins McGlinty
No, I'll Esmail it to you. I'll put a scamp on there and I'LL esc. Mail it to you.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, wait, these need stamps. I'm out.
Skins McGlinty
No, no, they don't. They need scamps. They're little stickers. Scamps retain value. They got Rosa Parks on them. Oh, okay.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, God. I'm back in then. Definitely. Great woman. I saw her on a Doctor who episode, Skins. What are you plugging here?
Skins McGlinty
Well, I'm hosting a mad TV this weekend.
Scott Aukerman
Okay, so Elon Musk, by the way, he just hosted SNL last weekend, and so you're trying to one up. It's.
Skins McGlinty
Well, no, I just. I actually have a background in comedy. I mean, how many times has Elon Musk been on Comedy? Bang Bang? I feel like I've earned my right to appearances.
Scott Aukerman
And you have a background in comedy.
Skins McGlinty
Yeah, but. So look forward to that. Of course. You're doing a sketch. Stuart Bozas, Camp Clinkett Clank. Well, what else?
Scott Aukerman
By the way, you can't just say clickety clank to save a bad joke.
Skins McGlinty
I think I can clink it and clank. And. You know, there's a. There's a movie podcast I like.
Scott Aukerman
Really?
Skins McGlinty
It's worth in way. It's weight in gold. Clinkety Clank.
Scott Aukerman
Okay.
Skins McGlinty
It's called Blank Check with Griffin and David. And it's David Sims, who's a critic for the Atlantic and some dumb comedian, I think. Talk about movies and directors, and they go through entire filmographies and it's a real fun time.
Scott Aukerman
Is he one of the Sims that I was playing with?
Skins McGlinty
He is. He's the tallest of the Sims.
Scott Aukerman
Okay. Right. He's.
Skins McGlinty
If you move the height all the way up and you're like, that's. It feels like it's an attack on other people who have to stand next to him.
Scott Aukerman
Well, I want to plug. Let's see. Threedom is my other podcast that comes out on Thursdays. That's with Paul F. Tompkins and Lauren Lapkis. It's just the three of us, and it's just us sitting around as ourselves shooting the shit and playing games and stuff that comes out on Thursdays. So subscribe to that wherever you can get podcasts. All right, let's close up the old plug bag.
Skins McGlinty
When you see something open, get a rope up and start to twist. Then you find that you're getting a little. I missed you think you're crying and you know what to do.
Scott Aukerman
Get up in there and do what you do. You gotta open up the puppet. Open it up, open up the puppet.
Skins McGlinty
Make sure it's not closed.
Scott Aukerman
Make sure you got oxygen and don't mess around with it make sure you don't mess around don't mess around you.
Bob Odenkirk
Make sure you don't mess around don't.
Scott Aukerman
Mess around don't mess, don't mess around.
Bob Odenkirk
Don'T mess.
Scott Aukerman
Around don't mess around at.
Bob Odenkirk
The door.
Scott Aukerman
Open that shit. Wow.
Francesca Bolognese
Wow.
Scott Aukerman
Yeah. Francesca literally said wow and echoed me in the remix. That was Mac and Carol made the closing up 2021 remix. Incredible. Thank you so much for your remixes. I don't think we've repeated one this entire year. You guys have been doing great with the remixes. But speaking of doing great with things, Bob, I want to thank you so much for being on the show. I know there are a lot of podcasts you can be on and thank you for choosing ours.
Bob Odenkirk
You're welcome. Scott, good to see you.
Scott Aukerman
It's great to see you. And Francesca, it's great to see you again. Good luck being out there in Chicago, being poor and I hope sorry it's such a drag.
Francesca Bolognese
Yeah, it's so stupid. But I have a whole stand up special that I release.
Scott Aukerman
How long is it? Did you come up with a whole hour or is it even more?
Francesca Bolognese
It's a two hour, two hours and a half.
Skins McGlinty
And a half.
Scott Aukerman
Oh my God. That's almost an Irishman.
Francesca Bolognese
It's so funny, Scott. My whole improv class gave me note. It's so funny. Everybody punch up the.
Scott Aukerman
I can only imagine. You're so hilarious anytime you're on the show. I know you don't mean to be, but you just.
Francesca Bolognese
No, I mean to be.
Scott Aukerman
Oh, now you mean to be funny now. I don't think you're that funny.
Francesca Bolognese
No, no, I'm not. I'm not.
Scott Aukerman
Okay. And skins, great to see you. Good luck with Clickety Clank. Thank you. Clickety Clank, of course. And I wish I had a catchphrase you thank that I could end the show on, but all I can really say is we'll see you next time. Thanks.
Bob Odenkirk
Bye.
Francesca Bolognese
What's poppin, listeners? I'm Lacey Mosley, host of the podcast Scam Goddess.
Bob Odenkirk
The show that's an ode to fraud.
Francesca Bolognese
And all those who practice it. Each week I talk with very special guests about the scammiest scammers of all time. Wanna know about the fake errors? We got em. What about a career con man? We've got them too. Guys that will wine and dine you and then steal all your coins. Oh, you know, they are represented because representation matters. I'm joined by guests like Nicole Byer.
Bob Odenkirk
Ira Madison iii, Conan o' Brien, and more.
Scott Aukerman
Join the congregation and listen to Scam.
Francesca Bolognese
Goddess wherever you get your podcasts.
Skins McGlinty
I've never felt like this before.
Bob Odenkirk
It's like you just get me.
Skins McGlinty
I feel like my true self with you.
Francesca Bolognese
Does that sound crazy?
Scott Aukerman
And it doesn't hurt that you're gorgeous. Okay, that's it.
Francesca Bolognese
I'm taking you home with me. I mean, you can't find shoes this good just anywhere.
Scott Aukerman
Find a shoe for every you from.
Francesca Bolognese
Brands you love, like Birkenstock, Nike, Adidas.
Skins McGlinty
And more at your DSW store or dsw dot com.
Episode Title: Bonus Bang: Bob Odenkirk, Lily Sullivan, Griffin Newman (I Love Lily)
Release Date: July 17, 2025
Guests:
Scott Aukerman kicks off the episode by re-releasing a beloved episode from their "I Love Lily" series, originally aired on May 9, 2021. This bonus episode features Bob Odenkirk, Lily Sullivan, and Griffin Newman, setting the stage for an evening of comedic interviews and quirky character interactions.
Bob Odenkirk joins the show to talk about his current projects, including the final season of Better Call Saul and his role in the action movie Nobody.
Better Call Saul Insights:
Workout and Diet Regimen:
Bob delves into his forthcoming book, sharing anecdotes from his career’s rough patches and the creation of Mr. Show.
Writing Challenges:
Behind-the-Scenes Stories:
Lily Sullivan reprises her role as Francesca Bolognese, a disgruntled Bed Bath & Beyond social media employee turned guidance counselor at the company’s fictional high school in Chicago.
Firing Anecdotes:
Chicago Struggles:
Griffin Newman enters as Skins McGlinty, the host of the "Blank Check" podcast, introducing a series of satirical innovations aimed at disrupting the cryptocurrency market.
Skintcoin Creation:
Disruptive Ideas:
The episode culminates in a series of comedic exchanges among Bob, Francesca, and Skins, highlighting their chemistry and improvisational skills.
Password Tips Gone Awry:
Final Plug Segments:
Scott Aukerman wraps up the episode by thanking Bob and Francesca for their participation, while Skins McGlinty continues his whimsical pitches until the final humorous exchanges.
Bob Odenkirk:
Scott Aukerman:
Francesca Bolognese:
Skins McGlinty:
Behind-the-Scenes Insights: Bob Odenkirk provides a humorous yet insightful look into his roles in Better Call Saul, Breaking Bad, and Nobody, blending real-world experiences with fabricated comedic elements.
Character Comedy: Lily Sullivan’s portrayal of Francesca Bolognese offers a satirical take on corporate social media practices, highlighting the absurdity of overly aggressive online interactions.
Satirical Innovation: Griffin Newman's Skins McGlinty introduces a series of mock innovations aimed at disrupting digital currency, showcasing the podcast’s unique blend of improvisational and character-driven humor.
Engaging Interactions: The interplay between guests fosters a lively and entertaining atmosphere, making the episode engaging even for those unfamiliar with previous shows or characters.
This Bonus Bang episode of Comedy Bang Bang masterfully combines star power with character-driven humor, offering listeners a blend of insightful interviews, satirical skits, and improvisational comedy. Through Bob Odenkirk's candid discussions and the quirky antics of Francesca Bolognese and Skins McGlinty, the episode delivers a rich and entertaining experience that captures the essence of the long-running podcast.