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Seth Meyers
Hey, Bashi.
Josh Meyers
Hey, Zuvi.
Seth Meyers
We went to Amsterdam.
Josh Meyers
We sure did.
Seth Meyers
We did it. We took a family trip.
Josh Meyers
Yeah. As we're recording this, I got back late last night. I'm pretty tired. That was a lot.
Seth Meyers
It was a lot. You sort of were on both mom and dad duty, and then you also had mackenzie, and you had mackenzie's mom. So you were sort of running with the real adult adults.
Josh Meyers
Yeah, I had the older set. And I gotta say, like, I give it up to them because they went hard.
Seth Meyers
They went hard. They went late. There was a lot of walking.
Josh Meyers
Lots of walking. We went to an amusement park.
Seth Meyers
We were.
Josh Meyers
We were at our sort of favorite amusement park in the world, the Efteling. And we were waiting in a line, and I asked Linda, my mother, Outlaw, as she prefers to be called. I was like, when's the last time were at an amusement park? And she's like, I think when I took MacKenzie to Disney. And I was like, wasn't she like eight when that happened? And she said, yes, it would have been a long time for Linda.
Seth Meyers
I mean, when was the last time mom and dad went to an amusement park? Probably around the same.
Josh Meyers
Yeah. Yeah, probably.
Seth Meyers
I mean, there's, you know, there's a way, easily defined reason for why you stopped going to an amusement park.
Josh Meyers
Yeah.
Seth Meyers
And you even morning of. Because you looked at the weather and you saw it was gonna be a scorcher.
Josh Meyers
Yeah.
Seth Meyers
You sort of ran it by Mom. Maybe this would not be a day for her to go to amusement park.
Josh Meyers
Yeah. Well, initially my read was that it was gonna be 98, but that was gonna be the following day, so it was 90, which is not nothing. And mom very often when she goes out and, like, if she plays golf in the heat, she will get what she calls the flux. And what no doctor has really a term for.
Seth Meyers
Right.
Josh Meyers
But it rocks her in a way that she then needs to go lay in a dark room for 13 hours.
Seth Meyers
Which she also does sans flux, like twice a week.
Josh Meyers
Right.
Seth Meyers
Just because she's tired, jumping around a little bit. Mom and dad showed up to their hotel. We're very upset because they were on the second floor facing the street. Were very concerned about how loud it was going to be. Went down to the front desk, politely asked if they could have their room switched. They were told they could switch it the next day, also politely. This was all, no, nobody handled this poorly. And then mom and dad, their first night, slept 13 hours and didn't hear a sound.
Josh Meyers
Thirteen and a half.
Seth Meyers
Yeah, 13 and a half. And so then to their credit, they went down to the front desk and said, hey, I think we might have overreacted. Yeah, I think you can keep us where we are.
Josh Meyers
I had to go do a wellness check because they weren't answering their phones. And I was like, this is impossible that they're still sleeping.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Josh Meyers
And had the front desk call up and that was their alarm clock that day.
Seth Meyers
And what does she call it when she goes more than 12 hours?
Josh Meyers
The cycle.
Seth Meyers
She slept for the cycle.
Josh Meyers
She slept for the cycle. She's like, that's more than the cycle.
Seth Meyers
More than the cycle. Ash and I, we rolled in 7:30 in the morning. We, we touched down and Ash had only slept about three hours on the plane. Part of that was we boarded at 6:30. That's way before his bedtime. And he was all hyped up. You know he's excited about taking this trip.
Josh Meyers
Sure.
Seth Meyers
Pretty thrilled at the idea of watching Thor Ragnarok.
Josh Meyers
Yeah.
Ty Burrell
Wow.
Josh Meyers
Yeah, who wouldn't be?
Seth Meyers
You know that's. That movie ends with some hot ass Zeppelin song. That. That's not going to put anybody. That's nobody's white noise machine. Yeah. And so by the time he actually fell asleep, it was three hours and then woke up and then we got to our Airbnb and we were lucky enough to check in early and that was. I know it's dangerous to do, but we just had to go to sleep. I couldn't keep him up.
Josh Meyers
Yeah.
Seth Meyers
On a three hour sleep. And so then we slept for another four hours. And it's the waking him up was like, I don't know, pulling a sword from a stone. And, and then, and then Megan the Stone. Wake up.
Josh Meyers
Now you mentioned Thor Ragnarok and, and Zeppelin, which is a pretty charged up song. You would think after like eight hours at the amusement park. People are probably pretty cooked on a 90 day.
Seth Meyers
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Josh Meyers
There were some, there were some issues with the van or the bus that we had to get back. It wasn't there to get us when we got to the parking lot in the blazing sun to get in, get back. So we had to wait maybe another half hour.
Seth Meyers
This is the thrilling thing about northern Europe in the summer. We left the amusement park, we took a bus with a lot of people, friends and colleagues from Boom Chicago, took a 90 minute bus ride, got there, left the amusement park at 7:30 at night. The sun was dead above us.
Josh Meyers
Yeah, seven is the hottest.
Seth Meyers
It is, it was all day, it was 90 degrees and we were, it literally walked to a parking lot where we expected to see a bus, there was no bus, there was no shade. Dad basically said, if we have to walk a hundred yards to the bus, I'd rather just die here.
Josh Meyers
Yeah. He sat in the shade. He's like, well, if you guys want to go any. There wasn't a lot of shade where he sat, but he took a good shade spot and he's like, this is where I'll be. You come get me. Y But so people are pretty beat up after a day out at the park. And so we get on this, you know, bus eventually. And also you had left some stuff on the bus as plenty as we were all told we could do. And then that stuff wasn't there because it was a different bus. There was some mix up snafu and we were going to get it sort of dropped off halfway home. But on that bus ride when people are pretty beat up, it's very quiet, everyone's a bit tired. But you and Ash were. Were watching the Thor Ragnarok trailer.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Josh Meyers
At what seemed like double volume of any given phone.
Seth Meyers
Yeah. I think I'd reached the point as a solo parent on day four of the trip, I was thinking not of anybody else and I do want to. Oh, you weren't. Now just. It's Immigrant Song is the song. So just imagine trying to take a nap and it's like. It's very kind for you to say that that was the only one we watched because we basically were going in order through the Marvel catalog watching.
Josh Meyers
Oh my God.
Seth Meyers
Yeah, yeah. Now, by the way, though, this is the thing. And again, we have so much to talk about with this trip.
Josh Meyers
We really do. This might.
Seth Meyers
And the fact that we're settling down on the bus is a huge. Yeah, I think we'd stretch it out over a couple intros.
Josh Meyers
Yeah.
Seth Meyers
So, you know, the Dutch are wonderful people. They also, when it comes to just customer service, there's not a lot of apologizing when things go terribly wrong.
Josh Meyers
Right.
Seth Meyers
So you know, you rent a bus, it's no small thing. And the bus isn't there. Then the bus is an hour late. And then they show up and they say, this is actually a different bus now. And we say we left stuff in the. The hold of the first bus. They told us it would be there and they're like, yeah, it's a different bus now. So one of the reasons we were watching trailers to the Marvel movies is that Ash did not have his book because on the ride out, he very quietly sat and read a Percy Jackson book.
Josh Meyers
Yeah, yeah. I was impressed a lot of the children. Like, there were a lot of sort of adult things that were going on. Our friend Jill Benjamin, her kids were there, Jackson and Josie May. And we were on a boat at this, like, party that was from, I don't know, like 10 to 1, 10pm.
Seth Meyers
To 10pm to 1 in the morning. Yeah.
Josh Meyers
And Josie Mae Henson, which I think she's like 14. I think she turned 14 on this trip. She was just, like, sitting on the boat reading her book. She had a Kindle, and it was like, well, yeah. Cause she's not super into this adult party. And I was so impressed with all the kids who were, like, just going to go read my book.
Seth Meyers
It was very funny. The mix it was between. I love to read. And also, you guys are all so boring to us. Yeah. But that was so. Again, we went back and, you know, you're going to hear a lot about this because we recorded a live episode and one of my favorite episodes we've ever done. A lot of our old friends from. From Boom Chicago, who are very funny, came up and told stories. Hillary and Larry, our parents, the Poncas, were there. So it was great. And it was all because Andrew and Saskia, who started Boom Chicago, had their 25th wedding anniversary. I guess they renewed their vows. Ash yelled at me today. Ash, again. You sometimes think your kids aren't paying attention at all. And I told people we went back for an anniversary. And he literally said it was a vow renewal. Geez.
Josh Meyers
It was a vow renewal.
Seth Meyers
It was a vow renewal. And so there were a lot of adult things. You know, we, you know, we did our podcast. Ash sat through that. We did an improv show. Ash went to his first improv show. We went to a vowel renewal and an after party, and we were supposed to go home on Monday and then decided to stay an extra day and go to this amusement park. And I'm so glad we did it, because Ash really did deserve a day that was just for kids.
Josh Meyers
Yeah. And it was, you know, Mackenzie was so happy that we went. And she was like, yeah, as well as you could have described it. It was better than. Than what she expected. And she was so glad she got to do it. And like, it's. There's something. Even though we're older now, there is something special about doing rides with your parents. Like, I was with, you know, our parents all day. And there is that sort of, like, little level of magic. And then there's that thing of, like, I don't know if dad can, like, will want to do a roller coaster anymore. And he's like, I want to do that one again.
Seth Meyers
Yeah, he did do one. Any bird rock. And it's a great roller coaster. The roller coasters at this park are very unique. And this one, basically the entirety of the roller coaster Takes place indoors, Pretty much in the dark. So you sort of feel like you are. It's you. You have a sense that you're flying downwards.
Josh Meyers
Obviously, it's a little space mountain, certainly.
Seth Meyers
Little space mountainy, maybe. And when it was over, he was like, that was great. But that mom told me he said he was unsettled, but it was. Yeah, it was really fun. The kids only blanched at one roller coaster. That was sort of a dead drop where they saw it. Oh, yeah. But otherwise, they did everything. And there's a real mix of sort of fairy rides and roller coasters.
Josh Meyers
Yeah.
Seth Meyers
And ash decided that he was a roller coaster dude. And I was really happy about that because we didn't have unlimited time there. I think we maybe did 10 rides.
Josh Meyers
Yeah. Which is. Which is a great day there.
Seth Meyers
Great day. Yeah.
Josh Meyers
But then it, you know, keeps coming back. I feel like there's a lot of stuff that mackenzie didn't see that I'll be eager to take her back, do it again.
Seth Meyers
Also, I should say that it was the first time I went to that amusement park without.
Josh Meyers
Substances, without assistance.
Seth Meyers
Yeah, yeah. I'm not gonna say what substances, but one is a comm wash for denim in the 80s, and another can sometimes be a topping on a pizza. But I will. I'm happy to say that you do not need either of those. You know, it was a little bit like dumbo's feather posh. You know, I could fly without it. Right. Yeah. Yeah. I also said to ash, there was, you know, feeding kids is such an important part of them having a good day.
Ty Burrell
Yeah.
Seth Meyers
But we were running around so much. We rented bikes. Ash and I were biking around amsterdam, which I had so much anxiety about, and he crushed it. And I said to him, you just have to tell me when you're hungry. And we were just walking in that amusement park, and all of a sudden, at one point, he literally just turned. He was like, I need to eat now. So the second to last ride I skipped. You guys went. And I just got him a burger. And I've never seen you eat a burger faster than that burger.
Josh Meyers
It was funny because we were sort of at that point, we were walking, we were leaving the park, or maybe we were going to do one more ride. So we were walking to the last ride and you would, like, sort of take a bite of the burger and then you would turn and just sort of hold it and he would bite it like it was just floating in the air. Yeah. And like, he is nine. What would happen if he was just holding a burger and walking? It's just too much going on.
Seth Meyers
Neither of my boys can do a second thing. Could Ash stand there and eat a burger? Yes. Could Ash walk to the next ride? Yes. Could Ash walk to the next ride while eating a burger? No. It's like, I think I told you during the. The school recital this year, Axel, like, oh, yeah, we have a video of him. Like, he can sing like Here Comes the Sun, but if he. When he does the hand motion of the sun coming up, like, you just watch his whole face go slack. Yeah.
Josh Meyers
Like, the. The notion of either of them one day playing piano and singing at the.
Seth Meyers
Same time is speaking of Ash. Sorry, Axel. Camp. He's at camp today and he's got a. He's the prince in. In the Princess and the Pea. So I look forward to reporting back as to whether or not he nails his lines.
Josh Meyers
Yeah. Oh, I'm excited. I wish I could see that.
Seth Meyers
We. Again. I think you're right. We should just continue. This was the most family trip you and I have been on since we've started this podcast. Family trips. Yeah, it was three generations. Three generations of Myers, so it was great.
Josh Meyers
There's a lot more to tell. And then there's a lot of stuff that we go through sort of in the live show, but we did the live show semi early in the trip, so there's plenty of things still to touch on.
Seth Meyers
We are very, very lucky. We have a very lucky group of friends out there.
Josh Meyers
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Seth Meyers
All right, well, we have a wonderful conversation with our friend Ty Burrell as well.
Josh Meyers
And this dude's. I like this dude a lot.
Seth Meyers
Also. I. You know, we're going to say. I know. We just keep saying we'll talk about it more. We had a really lovely moment. You know, we did this live family trips, and we did one, obviously, in Brooklyn for a podcast festival, which was great, but this is the first time we actually sat in front of people that we felt like had listened to the podcast. And it was such a cool experience doing it in front of fans. So just in general, everybody out there who listens to the podcast, thanks so much. It's a very cool thing to have, you know, to have a very personal podcast like this and to share it with people, then realize that they know your friends and your parents and your kids. It's cool.
Josh Meyers
Yeah, agreed.
Seth Meyers
All right, take it away, Jeff.
Ty Burrell
Brothers family. Chips with the mindless brothers. Here we go.
Josh Meyers
Hey, what's up, Ty guy?
Seth Meyers
How are you?
Josh Meyers
We're great.
Seth Meyers
How are you?
Ty Burrell
I'm good, I'm good. It's been forever. I've been wanting ever.
Seth Meyers
I feel like I first met you when you were doing a play that one of the Weitz brothers wrote. Is that correct?
Ty Burrell
Am I making that up? Yeah, that's right. You were old pals with Judy, right?
Seth Meyers
Yes. It was you and Judy Greer. There you go. Also a guest on this podcast. So I'm sorry you weren't the first person from that play.
Ty Burrell
I'm sorry I wasn't the first person on the podcast.
Seth Meyers
How are you, Ty?
Ty Burrell
Really good. Yeah, really good up here in very mellow Utah.
Josh Meyers
Oh, nice. I was going to say you're an Oregon boy, but sort of your vibe right there is giving off some Oregon vibes. But I feel like Utah, that works for Utah as well.
Ty Burrell
Yeah. I gave up on the wet of the Pacific Northwest. I love it so much. I still love it so much. But there's a real sunny optimism to Utah and to the mountains and I just love it. I actually talked my wife into moving back. She's from here.
Seth Meyers
And you had to convince her.
Ty Burrell
I had to convince her to move back.
Josh Meyers
Are you close geographically to her people? Does she still have people there?
Ty Burrell
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Very much. Very much. Tons of people. Tons of people, yeah. Very close to many people.
Josh Meyers
Utah's known for many people.
Ty Burrell
Yeah, it is. And she was raised in the LDS church and that community is very tight. Sure. And, but. But since then my family has moved here as well. We, I guess, ironically. I don't know if it's not really. It's not really ironically, but we have some bars here in Salt Lake City and my brother moved down to help run them. Actually, he runs not help, he runs them.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Ty Burrell
He's going to love hearing this.
Seth Meyers
Yeah, yeah. It's not ironic if you're like, he moved to run a bar.
Ty Burrell
Yeah, it's pretty literal. It's pretty straightforward.
Seth Meyers
That's. So wait, are you out of LA completely?
Ty Burrell
Yeah.
Seth Meyers
Good for you. I mean, sorry, Posh. But you know, it's all right. How many years now we've been since.
Ty Burrell
The show wrapped, essentially.
Seth Meyers
Great.
Ty Burrell
Weeks before the pandemic.
Seth Meyers
Oh, wow.
Josh Meyers
Good move.
Ty Burrell
It was a crazy fit of timing. We're very, we're very self righteous about having not moved because of the Pandemic. We always. We lead. We very much lead with that.
Seth Meyers
And I'm assuming because Modern Family never took off, you guys are renting.
Ty Burrell
Yeah, I had an Airstream very close to Fox.
Seth Meyers
Yeah, right, right.
Ty Burrell
Move it. Every other day.
Seth Meyers
First you have teenage. Are they daughters? Do you have two daughters?
Ty Burrell
Yeah.
Seth Meyers
How do they. So I'm guessing they might. Do they have any memories of la, or do they just feel like they.
Ty Burrell
They feel betrayed? I think there's a real betrayal there that they. We took them up to the mountains. There's nothing for them here, really. They. We. I've kind of. I was kind of convinced that I would, you know, make them outdoorsy, but.
Seth Meyers
Too late. It was too late, too late, it was too late.
Josh Meyers
They just want to go to Erewhon and get that Hailey Bieber shake.
Ty Burrell
How long have you been in LA, Josh?
Josh Meyers
20 years? 20, 22, 23. Yeah. Yeah. Big bunch.
Ty Burrell
Yeah. I still. I have great affection for LA in many ways. It feels like the, like the greatest location shoot of my life.
Josh Meyers
Yeah.
Ty Burrell
You know, like, it was just such a lovely place to be day and day out.
Josh Meyers
Also with Utah, I mean, you're. It's pretty easy to get down here if you need to get down to good old la.
Ty Burrell
Not according to my daughters, but.
Josh Meyers
Not easy enough.
Ty Burrell
No.
Josh Meyers
You need to buy him. Buy him a Waymo and just say, yeah, just get in this car and it'll.
Ty Burrell
I took. I took Awaymo last time I was down there. I just absolutely enjoyed it. I hope that's not a betrayal to humanity, but.
Josh Meyers
No, I mean, I. I really want to take one. I live a half a block north of where a Waymo will pick you up, so.
Ty Burrell
Oh, I didn't know there was a range like that.
Josh Meyers
Yeah, there's a range.
Seth Meyers
And you just feel like that defeats the purpose if you have to walk to your Waymo. Yeah, I mean, that's the whole point of robot cars is you don't have to walk to your wayo.
Ty Burrell
Right.
Josh Meyers
Thank you.
Seth Meyers
Yeah. I would not get in a wayo.
Ty Burrell
I'll just say it.
Seth Meyers
No.
Ty Burrell
Why?
Seth Meyers
I just feel like. I feel like it'll just steal my data.
Ty Burrell
Yeah, it probably is. It probably is.
Seth Meyers
I feel like I have like all these, like, notes in my phone about, like, standup bits, and I feel like the next. If I ride in a Waymo, the car is going to be up there just doing them. They have access to everything you got.
Ty Burrell
How does he know about my. My stuff? About all the shampoos my wife has.
Seth Meyers
I know. Very specific and Then the Waymo's like, my wife is the same. I'm like, all right. Did you. So, I mean, I feel very romantic about the Pacific Northwest for no reason that I really like the rain.
Ty Burrell
Mm.
Seth Meyers
I do, too. I do know it gets a little oppressive. Like, it's one thing to be there for, you know, a weekend, but you did love growing up there. You stuck around. You went to college up there, correct?
Ty Burrell
Yeah. Yeah. And my brother and family, you know, are still up there. And another brother and I love it. I loved it. It's one thing. It's a little like the. It's a little like winter in New York, right. Where I always loved winter in New York through the second week of February. And then there's the last six to seven weeks. The doldrums becomes a real head game. And the Pacific Northwest can be that way, at least for me, too, which is, like. It's incredibly romantic. Until it's July, right?
Seth Meyers
Yeah. It's like the long tail of New York winter. You're so right. When it's just kind of like slush. When the slush is spilling out.
Ty Burrell
Dirty, dirty slush.
Seth Meyers
And, you know, spring is coming, but the slush is like, yeah, we're gonna hang out a little bit longer.
Ty Burrell
Yeah, there's definitely. I have some incredible memories of, like, sticking around at college to have fun for parts of the summer, and. And all of us still sort of, like, not really going out because it was just. There was. There was no. Like, there's no real beach volleyball. It was just sort of over overcast all the time.
Seth Meyers
Did your parents grow up there as well, or did they. Do people find their way to Oregon or they just went to Oregon?
Ty Burrell
Well, yeah, I don't know if it's my. My mom has a crazy childhood. She lived in. She went to, I think, 24 different schools before she graduated high school. Her dad was a Pentecostal minister.
Seth Meyers
It'd be so great if instead the opposite would be, like, she was just the worst behaved.
Josh Meyers
She got thrown out.
Seth Meyers
You know how bad you've got. Literally never more than two weeks before they were like, you're out of here.
Ty Burrell
All bare knuckle stuff.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Ty Burrell
All like, really gritty. Really? Like, really.
Seth Meyers
And they're always like, you know, the crazy thing. Her dad's a minister. Yeah.
Ty Burrell
Yeah.
Seth Meyers
Sometimes they revolt.
Ty Burrell
I do think that there was some bad behavior on my grandfather's part, so I think that that is part of how so many homes happen. But she had lived in. In Oregon, in several towns in Oregon, and my Dad's family moved up from Southern California to start a dairy farm in. In Southern Oregon. And so when my mom and dad, you know, were trying to decide where to settle, they. They chose Southern Oregon.
Seth Meyers
Gotcha. And you have, you have. So you have two brothers?
Ty Burrell
I have two brothers and a sister.
Seth Meyers
Gotcha.
Ty Burrell
One. One brother who is here with me in Utah and then a brother and sister in Oregon. So. Yeah.
Seth Meyers
All right. I hope they're not all listening, but is the brother who's with you now, was that always the one you were closest with?
Ty Burrell
Yeah.
Seth Meyers
Yeah. Okay.
Ty Burrell
Yes. Yeah. I mean, I think we all know it.
Seth Meyers
Yeah, that's true. At this point, there's no.
Ty Burrell
There's no.
Seth Meyers
I mean, do you know how close you have to be to somebody to go work at a bar in ut?
Josh Meyers
Well, there's a need. There was a need.
Seth Meyers
There was a. That's true. There's a need. There was an untapped market. There was an AI market.
Josh Meyers
Hey, we're going to take a quick break and hear from some of our sponsors.
Seth Meyers
Support for family trips comes from Visit Baltimore. Hey, Baji.
Josh Meyers
Yeah, Sufi.
Seth Meyers
You know, it's been so exciting to have a city be a sponsor of family trips, and we couldn't have found a better city to be a partner.
Josh Meyers
On this podcast like Charm City.
Seth Meyers
Charm City Baltimore. You've heard about it forever, but what you don't know is it's a rising star in the US which means it's often overlooked, but it definitely belongs on your vacation radar. Sometimes cities can get so big that get lost in the crowd. A couple of neighbors on the street. We grew up, they used to live in the Canes house. Posh. Mm. They came to New York and it was her first time. And I said, how has it been? And she was like, I'm overwhelmed. I think Baltimore might be a better fit. Yeah. It seamlessly combines sports, history, art, food and culture in a one of a kind experience. Pashi, is there a music scene in Baltimore?
Josh Meyers
There is a huge music scene. It's alive, it's electric, and it's bursting with sound from every corner of the city.
Seth Meyers
They got Jazz at Keystone Corner. World renowned jazz legends take the stage in a refined setting matched by cuisine from a Michelin starred chef.
Josh Meyers
Nearby. Andy Music Live offers an intimate historic space where jazz, classical and global sounds come alive in a deeply personal listening experience.
Seth Meyers
But Pashi, I like rock music. Where can I go?
Josh Meyers
Go to Otto Bar, which will deliver gritty, high energy shows in a venue where the stage is low and the.
Seth Meyers
Music hits hard Whatever your style, jazz, rock, soul, classical, Baltimore brings the beat. Come here what the city sounds like. Start planning a music adventure@baltimore.org Baltimore is closer than you think. Just a quick drive or train ride from New York, Philly and D.C. plan your visit today at baltimore.org that's baltimore.org go to baltimore.org Baltimore slogan is you won't get it till you get here.
Josh Meyers
Go to tellempushy baltimore.org to plan your vacation or get away. Today.
Seth Meyers
Support comes from Deleteme. Right now, the headlines are chock full of data breaches and regulatory rollbacks, making us all vulnerable. But you can do something about it. Deleteme is here to make it easy, quick, and safe to remove your personal data online. Hi, Posh.
Josh Meyers
Hi, Sufi.
Seth Meyers
Do you want an easier way to deal with data breaches?
Josh Meyers
Yeah.
Seth Meyers
You do, right?
Josh Meyers
Yeah.
Seth Meyers
Git delete me. What's wrong with you?
Josh Meyers
Yeah, well, I mean, nothing's wrong with me because I did git delete me. And, you know, I get these, like, quarterly reports and they're so satisfying, you know, the total time saved searching on my last report, 45 and a half hours. My total time saved removing my data from these websites, about 25 and a half hours. That's time that I do not want to spend going to websites like Florida resident who apparently had my information. And you know what? I've never been suf a Florida resident. Yeah. But apparently that's. My stuff's on there.
Seth Meyers
I've always said something, and I feel like you should start saying it too. The only thing I want to see breached are whales communicating with other whales.
Josh Meyers
Yeah.
Seth Meyers
Your hands off my data. Keep your breaches, your breaches off my data. Keep your breaches are for whales. Yeah. Then another thing I feel like people should start saying is don't get too big for your breaches. Yeah. So take control of your data and keep your private life private by signing up for delete me now at a special discount for our listeners. Get 20% off your delete me plan when you go to JoinDeleteMe.com trips or and use promo code trips at checkout. The only way to get 20% off is to go to JoinDeleteMe.com trips and enter code trips at checkout. That's JoinDeleteMe.com trips code trips.
Ty Burrell
Here we go.
Josh Meyers
Are you the oldest of the siblings?
Ty Burrell
No, I'm second to youngest. My brother is youngest and we. My sister was above us. And then we have an older brother who's, you know, like seven, eight years older. Than me and even older, as you might imagine, based on how time works, than my younger brother. But, yeah, my younger brother and I became very, very close. We were out in the woods of Oregon during our formative years where we were truly on our own. I mean, our sister was there, but she was also just trying to have some semblance of a, you know, a female life out in the woods.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Ty Burrell
So she was like, reading books and stuff. But my brother and I spent, you know, all of our time together running around in the woods and. And doing bits. Like, we would just do bits for hours on end.
Seth Meyers
I mean, it's very funny to think of somebody like, going to the wood to do bits.
Josh Meyers
I mean, that's what Lewis and Clark did.
Ty Burrell
Status games. Lewis and Clark, they love to trade off. Like, who's in power?
Seth Meyers
Was your town? Were you in a very sort of rural area?
Ty Burrell
Yeah, we were in very much a rural area. We were in a town of 200 people.
Seth Meyers
Wow.
Ty Burrell
Called Applegate, Oregon. And I think it's Roxanne C. Martin's line is, you know, we don't get much irony out here. And it was like that we were very much, you know, just. We had no business being out there. We really didn't. My dad was, you know, very much a beta male. Like, he was just. He was like the only beta male they'd ever seen. It was like. It was like. It was like a really rarefied thing to have this guy who was behind the register who would sort of like, was deferential and would ask them questions. My dad worked in the foster care system before that, and that's partly why we moved out there, is it kind of broke him in some ways, even though he ended up going back to it later. But. But he ended up becoming a family therapist after this. So it was a fascinating time in our lives where these. It was a logging community at the time, so truly it was. There were. Now it's all wine country. It's all very, very, very different. But it was all just like, you know, very traditional rural Oregon life. And there was this guy behind the counter who got the New York Times and LA Times delivered to this country store.
Seth Meyers
Have you ever read the book Sometimes a Great Notion by Ken Kesey?
Ty Burrell
I have read It's Been so Long. He's a Eugene guy.
Seth Meyers
Yeah, it's one of my favorite books, but it's about this logging community and it's about two brothers, one super alpha and one beta. And.
Ty Burrell
Oh, I'm forgetting that.
Seth Meyers
Yeah, it's really good. I'M forgetting that. But it's so. And then your mom was a teacher.
Ty Burrell
Yeah, yeah, that's right. She was a teacher at a one room schoolhouse out there in the woods. It's all very, like, weird and.
Seth Meyers
Yeah. It's so fun that. I don't know, I guess there's still plenty of one room schoolhouses. I don't know why I'm looking down my nose. Adam feels like, yeah, no, you could get it done.
Josh Meyers
I think it'd be a great time. I did. I pulled up Applegate on Google Maps and it does. You are in that sort of valley, but you're just surrounded by mountains on every side, it seems like.
Ty Burrell
Yeah. And my understanding, I'm not an expert, but I believe that it's described as Neo Appalachian or Appalachian because all the people from the Appalachians moved there because it was so similar. And all these families lived up those hollers so each hauler would have its own family. You know, the Deckers lived up there, the Offenbachers lived up that hall or. And it came with all the stuff of Appalachia.
Seth Meyers
It's really funny, I didn't realize people would leave Appalachia to just look for a place that was similar.
Ty Burrell
I gotta get out of here.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Ty Burrell
Yeah. I gotta get out of here.
Seth Meyers
There's gotta be. There's gotta be a different holler.
Ty Burrell
Let's go find a holler. So far away from here.
Josh Meyers
How did your father come by the country store?
Seth Meyers
Did you.
Josh Meyers
Did you work there as well?
Ty Burrell
I did. I mean, work is, you know, that's putting it loosely. I shuffled around and ate candy bar.
Josh Meyers
Our grandfather had a liquor store and we kind of would work kind of when we'd go visit.
Ty Burrell
He had a liquor store.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Josh Meyers
In Marblehead, Massachusetts.
Ty Burrell
Wow. How did that work?
Seth Meyers
It was great. People would buy it and then drink it. And then they would get a little. They'd have fun for a while and then they'd get mean.
Josh Meyers
But then they'd like, they'd need to come back for more and then their.
Ty Burrell
Lives would fall apart. And then they'd stop drinking it.
Seth Meyers
Yeah. Yeah.
Ty Burrell
And then new people would buy it.
Seth Meyers
By the way, like before people were trying Utah. There was a lot of money in selling liquor in New England.
Ty Burrell
But I mean, as kids working at a liquor store, was there any legal.
Seth Meyers
No, we were mostly. We would do a lot of like recycled. People would return cans for the bottle deposit.
Ty Burrell
Okay.
Seth Meyers
We would just. We would put them in sort of cartons. Right. Bosch. Am I remembering?
Josh Meyers
Yeah, we would do that. We would Bag. Ice.
Seth Meyers
Yeah, we did a lot of ice.
Josh Meyers
Bagging and then we would. They'd give us like a price. Gun. And they'd be like, just go. Gun. Like all these bottles of wine or whatever. And then we'd get paid and we'd get paid in scratch tickets. So I think that's amazing.
Seth Meyers
I do remember it was like hot. But where we worked was like by the ice machine. And it was kind of a nice, cool. Although albeit a very dark cool place to work in the summer. But I didn't hate it.
Josh Meyers
Yeah, yeah.
Ty Burrell
Was it. I don't mean this about your grandpa, I mean about the customers. Was there any sort of like melancholy to working at a liquor store or was it actually pretty.
Seth Meyers
It was pretty good. It was pretty brightly lit. And Marblehead was sort of a nice. Sort of. It's kind of a classic looking New England town. And there was a bit of a. Certainly in the beginning, there was also a bit of a gourmet grocery store element to it. Like I feel like that's it.
Josh Meyers
Yeah, they had like a butcher cracker at some point.
Ty Burrell
Oh, wow. Okay.
Josh Meyers
And then they pared it down and eventually it was just a liquor store. But there were like the regulars that would come in that had nicknames. I remember there was a guy named Fly Catcher, cuz his mouth was always wide open. Yeah, there was a. Some like twitchy would come in, but. So can I.
Ty Burrell
Can I guess a Twitchy? Yeah, Big. Big mouth. Big mouth.
Seth Meyers
Turns out almost like by the fact that you're a regular at a liquor store, it means you're not going to have a complimentary nickname. There was Romeo. Everybody loved Romeo.
Ty Burrell
Oh, there was Rosacea. He was. He was a great guy.
Seth Meyers
Yeah. Oh, cuz he drank Ros. No, no. He drank bourbon out of a plastic bag out of a.
Ty Burrell
We. We had a town drunk in applegate. Of those 200 people, it was all very like cartoonish in that way. We had a guy who once every month would be passed out under the bridge and you know.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Ty Burrell
Didn't have a family, thank God. So it didn't have that kind of sadness even at the time. Had a little bit of like Ah, the town drunk.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Josh Meyers
Yeah.
Seth Meyers
Do you think the town. Do you think ever a town drunk was upset when another drunk moved to town and they were like, oh, I think so. Maybe that's why they're like, I gotta find a different holler.
Ty Burrell
Well, well honey, bad news here are over.
Josh Meyers
Get your own bridge to sleep under.
Ty Burrell
Here's your own bridge, here's your Own bridge, motherfucker.
Seth Meyers
Hey, lovely Toby, we're here. So what did you. Did you guys go on trips?
Ty Burrell
Yeah, every summer. My dad. We went on the same trip every summer, which was my dad. I don't know why my dad got to choose. I hope my mom also liked this trip. I need to ask her. She's still with us. But he took his two weeks. He loved going to the beach. So we took our two weeks. And he would get up, not get up. He would get off work at like 5 from Children's Services in Oregon. And he would immediately come home, vacuum out the car, pack it, and we would drive to Newport Beach, California, which we did not have money or a beach house or anything. We had an aunt who had truly a shack near the beach. And he would drive all night. We would drive overnight. And he would get there and he would take his chair out onto the beach and plop it on the beach. And he liked to paint and he would bring his paints. And in the early days he would bring a vat of screwdrivers and a book. And then two weeks later we'd leave. That was his thing. Except for one summer when my brother got out of the Navy and had gotten his first wife pregnant and took my dad's two weeks, his only two weeks to. He got out of the Navy and needed an apartment. And we were holding his stuff and he called my dad. And this is after telling the family that he gotten this woman pregnant. And we were about to get married and saying, hey, we need an apartment in San Diego. Can you bring the stuff down? And my dad was already frustrated then he's giving up his only vacation. So we got in the van, just my dad and his best friend Mike Broomfield, and our friend Charlie Broomfield, and my brother, who the aforementioned guy who kind of helps out at the bar. And we got in the van on top of all of my brother's furniture. It's an old Ford van with the before, you know, no air conditioning in the back. It had one of those old like 70s vents on top, you know what I mean? Like you would have on the hood of a car, but it was on top. So essentially to stay alive. But I mean, it was all an adventure. We laid underneath the vent on top of all the furniture, all the way to San Diego, which is where my brother got out of the military and my brother when we got there. And in my brother's defense, he was a total fuck up. He had done nothing when we got there. And he'd been there for a Week. And my dad was out of his mind, furious. He and his best friend went. The first stop was the. I believe it was the liquor store for themselves. And then they started driving around with, you know, this furniture, looking for places for my brother and, you know, sent him out and he sheepishly was out looking. But that trip ended with, you know, just a lot of fights and whatever. But the best part about that trip was that on the way home after all of that and just, you know, my dad with, you know, his head down, essentially after missing his vacation. On our way home. I don't remember. I think maybe it's around Sacramento on I5. There's an off ramp for Reno, Nevada. And my dad just went and turned and we went to Reno. And we went to Reno for like three nights. And even his friend was like, we can't do this. Like, this is like he had work to do. And it was. I don't know if it was a different time or just really bad fathering, but they literally let us out for three days. We had no parenting for three days. And the only thing in Reno, they only had the honeymoon suite. So we were sleeping with mirrors above our beds. All these three boys. Great for masturbating, by the way.
Seth Meyers
Yeah, of course. Well, it's like a bit of a tutorial because you never get to see it. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Ty Burrell
You get so close with yourself. But we just rode escalators and, you know, rode elevators and roamed around Reno for three days.
Josh Meyers
And were you just like running through casino floors?
Seth Meyers
Yeah, we were.
Ty Burrell
We were up and we were out. The three of us were out until like three or four in the morning. I'm. I'm not kidding. And this is my dad. Eventually, I will say sometimes eventually the drinking wasn't fun. But this was a very fun weekend.
Seth Meyers
Nothing says we grew up in a rural town more than you being like, we did escalators, we did elevators.
Ty Burrell
By the way, this is a true story. And my dad cut this out and kept it. And he loved it so much. The first escalator that came to southern Oregon, they printed a tutorial in the newspaper.
Josh Meyers
Wow.
Seth Meyers
How to use it.
Ty Burrell
It's about how to use it. And it was really very detailed about, like, don't freak out. Like, it's gonna. You're gonna put a foot out and then you're just gonna, like, trust it. Have faith, but be ready at the end.
Seth Meyers
I mean, by the way, they only do that. Cause like, the previous five towns had just been a disaster with just a pile up.
Ty Burrell
So Many deaths. So many people died.
Seth Meyers
I get a ma. But you know, I think it's important to say at some point the drinking did become fun. But a vat of screwdrivers is a. I mean, as a beach, I'm both like, oh, that doesn't sound healthy. And also I'm like, man, I'd like a nice ice cold screwdriver on the beach.
Ty Burrell
That sounds kind of, you know, honestly, those memories, I know I'm supposed to say that those were traumatic memories. They just were not. They were like he and his brother, which is really like how my brother. We had no like performers in our family. My, my brother and I learned about doing bits from he and his brother.
Seth Meyers
Right.
Ty Burrell
His brother is sort of a, at least local legend of a con artist. And. But they, they did just. He always, they, his brother and their family were almost always with us on this trip. I should clarify.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Ty Burrell
And they would sit out there and, and drink those screwdrivers and just.
Seth Meyers
That's a good detail because now, now it's not just a dude alone. No pound screwdriver.
Josh Meyers
Yeah.
Ty Burrell
Lots and lots of laughs.
Josh Meyers
It's been so long since I've had or ordered a screwdriver that I was going to circle back and be like, what were the screwdrivers for? Thinking that he had paints, chair, actual bunch of screwdrivers. The tools.
Ty Burrell
He's adjudicating. He's adjudicating screwdrivers.
Josh Meyers
Do you have any of his paintings?
Ty Burrell
I have many.
Seth Meyers
Do I have three here?
Ty Burrell
Yeah.
Seth Meyers
So does that. And is that out of affection for him or do you think he actually had skill?
Ty Burrell
Oh, I think he was really good.
Seth Meyers
That's great.
Ty Burrell
I think he was really, really good. He honestly, like, you know, that's how I ended up getting into performing. Was that when he was. He died when he was pretty young. That's a really selfish way to say that. He died when I was young.
Seth Meyers
Oh, I think a lot of people say it that way.
Ty Burrell
My dad died when I was young. I don't know how old he was. I don't know. No, he, he died when he was young. He was in his 40s.
Seth Meyers
Oh, wow.
Ty Burrell
Sober, by the way. Sober for like eight years. But he really regretted not having taken the leap. His career really beat him up. It was a tough. After selling the story went back to social work and he really regretted not having taken the leap of trying to just be an artist and make a living as an artist. So I, I had that rare, really rare experience of having, when he was sick, him saying, I You know, out of nowhere, I had hosted a talent show in high school, and my dad said, I think you should try being an actor.
Seth Meyers
Oh, wow.
Ty Burrell
And I mean, the opposite of what dads are supposed to say when they're leaving this earth is like, you should get a good job. You should really find some work and take care of your mom.
Seth Meyers
Right.
Ty Burrell
But he was like, I really think you should try being an actor. And I think he really wanted me to take that leap. And I was like, it was super cool. And I had no idea what that even meant. I mean, literally, we had lived out in the woods, and nobody in my family had done anything like that. So I just was like, I winged it. I went into a college Shakespeare class and sort of, like, stumbled around for a long time, but really, it came from that. From him. And by the way, that was a long way of saying he was really good. Yeah, he was really good.
Josh Meyers
Did he just paint Newport beach in the ocean or was he painting from his mind's eye?
Ty Burrell
He did both. And he started as an illustrator and he sent illustrations. I'm gonna step real quick here and grab one. He sent stuff from the woods of Oregon to the New Yorker regularly. Cartoons. And got just a steady stream of rejection, but he sent cartoons all the time. This is. I don't. This was the beginning of a cartoon.
Seth Meyers
Oh, yeah.
Ty Burrell
But.
Seth Meyers
Oh, it looks very.
Josh Meyers
Looks very New Yorker esque.
Ty Burrell
Yeah, Right.
Seth Meyers
So real skills.
Ty Burrell
Yeah, he was really, really good. And I actually loved his cartoons. He was a very funny guy. Intentionally funny guy. I guess nowadays he would be unintentionally at his age, but he was a really funny guy. And so he started as an illustrator. He worked for McDonnell Douglas in Los Angeles, you know, when they would draw how to put a plane together.
Seth Meyers
Oh, wow.
Ty Burrell
And. And I remember him always saying, like, saying to my mom. My mom telling me now, but her saying that, like, he loved when he got to draw a hand, putting on a bolt or something.
Seth Meyers
Oh, wow.
Ty Burrell
You know, but hands are hard. Hands are hard hands.
Seth Meyers
Are you, like. If you like drawing hands. I remember taking, like, cartooning classes. That was. Yeah, okay. I mean, I never. It is, you know, it's a craft.
Ty Burrell
Yeah.
Seth Meyers
And, like, so, I mean, I think you have to have talent, but you have to treat it like a craft. And I did. I did not quite love it enough to put that time in.
Ty Burrell
Do you ever do the attempt, the contest at the end of the New Yorker of, like, try to get, you know, come up with the best line for the.
Josh Meyers
Our father does.
Seth Meyers
Oh, yeah. Yeah, regularly.
Josh Meyers
Yeah, he. And he's, like, so angry that he hasn't gotten one yet. And I'm like, I'm sure there's tons of people doing it, but he's. But I think he does it every week.
Ty Burrell
To your point, Seth, I have found it incredibly difficult. It's a real craft. Like, I thought I was kind of going to roll in.
Seth Meyers
And we did. We used to do this thing on our show called Live New Yorker Cartoons where David Remnick would come out and we would. Our cast would dress like the tableau and then deliver one line. And it. You know, it's so funny because, like, putting a big show on it is like, the opposite of what you should do to those. But I remember when David. Remember, I'm like, I bet I could draw a cartoon. And I drew a cartoon, like, guy on desert island. I feel like they pick one of those every week. And then I showed it to him, and he's like, eh. Okay.
Ty Burrell
Did you. Was it something you actually, like, considered for a moment?
Seth Meyers
I did. I put time into it, and I love. I was like. I thought there was going to be this great TV moment where he was. Was like, you got it, kid. And instead he was like, we see a lot of desert islands.
Ty Burrell
We see a lot of desert island guys.
Seth Meyers
You mentioned that you took a Shakespeare class. You. I did not realize, but I was looking over your credits today. You were on Broadway in Macbeth.
Ty Burrell
Brief, brief, brief moment.
Seth Meyers
I did not. I looked it up. Cause I was like, I wonder who the cast was. And I mean, if it's not too traumatic to talk about. You were on a very short. A short run in Macbeth.
Ty Burrell
Famously short. I mean, honestly, there's the. Is. It's not Sardis. It's the. Whatever the opposite of Sardis is. Yeah, Flardies. I think it's Flardies.
Josh Meyers
Well, it's not a great play to begin with.
Seth Meyers
Yeah, yeah.
Ty Burrell
It's hard. But there is the restaurant in New York that I'm forgetting that has all the flops.
Seth Meyers
Oh, got it. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I know what you're talking about. Is it not Sardis? Maybe it's Joe Allen. I think it's Sardis.
Josh Meyers
Yeah, well, Sardis has all the caricatures.
Ty Burrell
Okay, so it's Sardis. Yeah, Sardis. And we're on that wall. We're on that wall. It was Kelsey Kelsey Grammer playing Beth, bless his soul. He. We got terrible reviews in Boston. Like, we should never have gone to New York.
Seth Meyers
So for those who don't know, you sort of do your previews. In a city like Boston, which still has a theater crowd, but it's a good bellwether, bad reviews in Boston probably isn't a good sign.
Ty Burrell
Don't go. Don't go. Don't do it. Don't do it. But he really wanted to get there, and to his credit, he gave us all a Broadway credit. He paid for that trip himself.
Seth Meyers
Wow.
Ty Burrell
It sounds like a field trip, but it was actually a full Broadway production.
Josh Meyers
Yeah, he's probably still paying for it.
Seth Meyers
Yeah. I was gonna say not to.
Ty Burrell
It was not great. It was not great. It was. I mean, it's so long now that I can't be offending anyone. The director had great success with this production in London. Guy named Terry Hands, and he tried to recreate it to the moment, which is great for art. You always want to try to recreate every great moment you've had in your past. I think you guys both started doing improv.
Josh Meyers
Yeah. It's like Seth trying to draw a desert island. It's like.
Seth Meyers
You know, it's always. When you say that, I always think of the second time an an where Woody Allen's trying to chase the lobster around with, like, a different woman. Yeah. You know, I like.
Ty Burrell
Yeah, it's the snowball fight in Groundhog Day.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Ty Burrell
Right, right. It's. Yeah. We figured out pretty quickly that, like, the notes were so specific.
Seth Meyers
Oh, yeah.
Ty Burrell
That it was like, oh, this other actor who was far more talented than me, clearly, like, raised his hand and waved and turned to the right.
Seth Meyers
Oh, so you were like. It was like choreography as well.
Ty Burrell
It was choreography. That was a disaster. So you got a bunch of mannequins on Broadway, but we got to be on Broadway for two weeks, so it was really fun. Had a great time.
Seth Meyers
That is a. I mean, you know, it's a good reminder that, like, sometimes, you know, the joy of doing a show on Broadway, they can't take that away from you.
Ty Burrell
Even though. No, they can't. They can't. It was awesome. And they tried.
Seth Meyers
It should be noted. They tried.
Ty Burrell
They gave us every opportunity.
Seth Meyers
Hey, we're gonna take a quick break and hear from some of our sponsors. Support comes from Seoul. What's up, Paschi?
Josh Meyers
Well, you know, sometimes you just need a little something.
Seth Meyers
Tell me more.
Josh Meyers
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Seth Meyers
Posh though I have a, I don't want to jump in and harsh your mellow. Mellow your vibe or whatever you say. You're, you're a vegan. Posh. Won't that be a problem?
Josh Meyers
Not here. Man. These things are totally vegan. Yeah.
Seth Meyers
Wow.
Josh Meyers
A lot of, a lot of gummies, it's, it's gross to think about, but a lot of gummies have lots of animal stuff in them.
Seth Meyers
But not souls like their dreams? No.
Josh Meyers
Well, maybe. Depends on your perspective.
Ty Burrell
But.
Josh Meyers
But yeah, bring on the good vibes.
Seth Meyers
And treat yourself to Seoul today. Right now, Seoul is offering our audience 30% off your entire order. Go to GetSoul.com and use code TRIPS. That's GetSoul.com promo code TRIPS for 30% off.
Josh Meyers
Hey everybody, Pashi here. Those bells you hear are from Vesterkerk, the famous west church in Amsterdam where Sufi and I just recorded a live episode of Family Trips. We had so many much fun with it. We had a lot of our old alumni from our comedy theater in Amsterdam that we used to work for. Some of our favorite people in the world joining us on stage in front of a live audience to tell stories of when their parents visited them in Amsterdam and just other great European stories. It has been such a joy to be here. Seth stayed in a wonderful Airbnb and loved getting up in the morning, making breakfast for his son and then just being able to sort of hang out and be cozy before they went out into the city. And then me and my parents did an Airbnb experience where we learned about the history of Amsterdam through a beer glass, which is great history and great beer and really a nice time. Something different that I never would have done in Amsterdam otherwise. Thank you again to everyone who came out to the show. That was a blast. That show is coming out on July 17th, so please check it out and just listen to these bells.
Seth Meyers
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Ty Burrell
Absolutely, absolutely. Were you guys road trip people? Like, were you car trips and you guys are from New Hampshire?
Seth Meyers
Yeah, but we were. We used to live in Michigan and we would drive to where my mom.
Josh Meyers
Grew up in Massachusetts, and then we would take. We would take trips.
Seth Meyers
We would.
Josh Meyers
A lot of times I feel like we'd fly to the east coast and then we'd drive through New Hampshire and take sort of more outdoorsy trips. Before we lived in New Hampshire. Our parents, right, live in New Hampshire now. We moved there when we were little boys.
Ty Burrell
It's such a West coast thing, that kind of like long road trip thing. But I'm sure it's just an American thing. But yeah, we loved it. We got so excited to drive all night. And when we went down for the Olympics, he had bought the cassette of all the. Essentially the soundtrack to the music. This is 84. And it was like Mannheim, whatever, Seymour, whatever, had done the national anthem and a variety of, you know, it was terrible. That's really bad.
Seth Meyers
I don't think modern kids appreciate. I mean, again, I know. Cause I've got them. And my kids have been around during an Olympics and were never like, let's just sit down and watch eight hours of sports. We never watch. But that 84 Olympics was. I mean, I was so excited in the lead up, I was so excited.
Josh Meyers
And we had a poster, we had a framed poster in our basement of the 84 Olympics that was like in this weird little sort of perfect spot for a poster.
Ty Burrell
And is a poster for the Olympics? Like, is it a variety of sports or is it just the ring?
Seth Meyers
It was.
Josh Meyers
I will tell you, it was a woman's legs and they were running and it was like waist down. So as A child and pretty short shorts.
Seth Meyers
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. That's why Josh, to this day, is only into waist down, waist down stuff.
Ty Burrell
I don't really want to do upper body stuff.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Josh Meyers
I don't know what goes on.
Seth Meyers
When he got married, he made his wife wear a full hat, a veil that went all the way down to her belt.
Ty Burrell
He liked to pretend that it doesn't exist.
Seth Meyers
Did you go to events when you went to the Olympics?
Ty Burrell
We did. As I mentioned before, we didn't have a lot of money, so we bought the most affordable tickets you could get. So we went to two events. One was team handball, which we didn't know was a sport.
Seth Meyers
I think some of the teams didn't know. They were just hitting the ball around and they were like, oh, you guys are keeping score.
Ty Burrell
All right.
Josh Meyers
And you're with me.
Seth Meyers
Okay.
Josh Meyers
We're together.
Ty Burrell
Okay. And then what about with our feet? Can I run? Yeah, definitely. That was hilarious. That was the event that I got to go to because they had to split up. We had four tickets total. So two of the kids got to go to that. Two went to the first day of track and field, which is like all the preliminary stuff, which sounded cool.
Seth Meyers
I said this before Alexi and I went to, you know, via NBC. We went to the Vancouver Winter Olympics. And by the way, it was great. But you go. When you go to ice skating, like figure skating. Sorry, pairs figure skating, you know.
Ty Burrell
Right.
Seth Meyers
The first. You don't realize that the people going first are never gonna medal because they're not doing hard enough tricks. I know they're not called tricks, but. So you're watching them, they finish and you're like, that's the best. They're the gold, baby.
Ty Burrell
There you go. And we were here for it.
Seth Meyers
Yeah. You know, they didn't say. They didn't say the Peruvians could win the gold in figure skating, but those two. And then as it goes on, you just realize there's a lot. At the preliminary level, there's a lot of people who are just basically very happy to be there, just skating. They're kind of like you. They're kind of like you on Broadway. They're like, we're not going to.
Josh Meyers
Look.
Seth Meyers
This isn't going to go great. Yeah, yeah.
Ty Burrell
I'm not sure even where to stand, but. Oh, that's awesome.
Seth Meyers
But that's cool. It seems like you're, you know, they seem like your parents wanted to give you guys experiences.
Ty Burrell
Yeah, they did. They did. My dad. My dad and my mom were. Were very adventurous and and honestly, my mom now has. She, she goes everywhere, she travels. She's. She's a real inspiration. She's 87.
Seth Meyers
Oh my goodness.
Ty Burrell
She's headed to Eastern Europe for the holidays and my brother and I were, you know, trying to figure out if we could go with her. She's still getting around pretty well.
Josh Meyers
Does she travel solo or does she travel Christmas?
Seth Meyers
Oh, yeah. I was like, it does seem weird. I mean, I know what the holidays are, but that's so far away.
Ty Burrell
Yeah. But she was planning on going on her own.
Seth Meyers
Wow, great. Oh, so fully on her own. She's not going with like a tour group.
Ty Burrell
She is now going with a friend, one of her best friends who was in her 40s, actually, but she was planning on going on her own. So. Yeah, I was like, okay, I hope that's the case when I'm 87.
Seth Meyers
Do you think that she always had this spirit of adventure and is just taking advantage of it now?
Ty Burrell
Yeah, yeah, I do. I think she's. I genuinely believe that her FOMO is what is prolonging her life.
Josh Meyers
Right.
Ty Burrell
She, it's the upside of fomo. She, she spent her youth. Her, her father was a real, real asshole and not a physically violent asshole, but just a real dick. And he didn't really let her do anything. Her brothers, because they were men, boys, could go out and do whatever they wanted. And so when she got the opportunity, she has really taken advantage of it and she stays in great shape to do as much as she can, while she can.
Josh Meyers
That's awesome.
Ty Burrell
It's great. It's really great.
Seth Meyers
If you ever decide to write a book, a self help book, or even just do a short TED Talk. I think the upside of FOMO is a really good title when you think about it. You're like, yeah, FOMO has a bad reputation. But there's also, like, because I feel like so much of our life is like when we, you know, if we're, if we become too immune to fomo, we will just like not do stuff.
Ty Burrell
Yeah, I think so. I mean, really. She genuinely, like, we're trying to build this little cabin up on some property in the woods. And she's like, when are you guys going to build this thing? And we're like, well, we're trying, we're getting permitting and we're trying to do this thing. And she's like, all right, well, I gotta hang on. Then she's like, I'm not going to miss out on the cabin. And I'm like, well, maybe I'll just never Build the cabin. But the, you know, the downside is, of course, when Dunk. My brother and I are like. She's like, what'd you guys do yesterday? We're like, oh, we went and watched the game down at the bar. And she's like, oh. Oh, great.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Ty Burrell
That's the downside of fomo, which is not a very good TED Talk.
Seth Meyers
I know.
Ty Burrell
How old are your parents?
Seth Meyers
There's 70. Dad's what, eight?
Josh Meyers
77.
Seth Meyers
Dad's 78. Mom's 21. No, no, new mom. New moms. But she's very picky. Very picky about it.
Ty Burrell
Real Hollywood dad.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Josh Meyers
They were both born in 48.
Seth Meyers
Yeah. So 77.
Ty Burrell
Okay. And are they travelers?
Seth Meyers
They are. And really, you know, we also, you know, we had these years where right after college, Josh and I lived in Amsterdam.
Ty Burrell
And were you part of. You were. Boom.
Seth Meyers
Yeah, we were. And they just sort of leapt it, which is no surprise. I think they would have followed us anywhere, as in so far as they wanted to hang out with us. But they would take trips to Amsterdam and to the place where they got to be as good a friends as we were with our Amsterdam friends. And so we're going in a couple of weeks, and our parents are coming as well. And really, I'm bringing my son, but they are great. And they do a lot of these trips now, sort of organized through Northwestern University, where all of us went. And they. They're great. They're out on the road all the time. It's amazing how often, like, my kids are like, we should FaceTime them. And like, they're like, nah, they don't. They're not gonna pick up. They got shit going on.
Ty Burrell
How old is your son?
Seth Meyers
I've got a nine and a seven and a three. And I'm bringing the nine.
Ty Burrell
Is your nine year old. Do you have kids, Josh?
Josh Meyers
I don't.
Ty Burrell
Okay. Is your nine year old, like, interested in comedy? It's sort of a weird question, but, like, is he.
Seth Meyers
I think he's. He really likes what I show him. Like, okay. So I, you know, I've started showing him, you know, Lonely island videos, and he's, you know, he's met friends of mine like Will Forte and Kristen Wiig and Andy Sandberg. And then you say, you know, you want to see them and stuff. And I think he's always surprised they were less funny than, you know, when he sees their work, he's like, oh, they weren't that funny when I met them. Like, what? You know.
Ty Burrell
Right.
Seth Meyers
But, yeah, so I don't know. Yeah. I mean, they're aware certainly of what I do, but.
Ty Burrell
Right. I'm curious because I took my daughter. We did for the first time. We split up on spring break and each of us took one of our kids and I took my daughter to Chicago and she was 13. She just turned 13, which I guess is the age you can go to a show and took her to Second City. There I kind of think that she's interested in it.
Seth Meyers
Did she enjoy the show?
Ty Burrell
She really did. And she's still quoting. Everybody was great. It was sketch night and there was a little bit of short form stuff, but all just really fun. Really fun. And really sparked her in a way.
Josh Meyers
Well, I feel like also Second City in Chicago or any great sort of comedy theater, it's so small and intimate and just that sort of cabaret tables set around and it's. You're part of it. And I think for, you know, a young teenager to be sort of where clearly, like it's an adult place, you're allowed to be there. It's cool. It's happening right in front of you. The laughter is all around you. It's not manufactured. Yep.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Ty Burrell
And no censorship. Like, they're really like. It was awesome that her laughs were extra hard at the stuff that she knew she was just 13 enough to be in the room for.
Seth Meyers
We're gonna do. Josh and I are gonna do an improv show when we're back in Amsterdam. And I'm gonna bring Ash. And I'm more nervous about doing comedy in front of my son.
Ty Burrell
Sure.
Seth Meyers
My old comedy partner and our friend Jill Benjamin. She's like, which bits should we do? And literally all I'm think will score with a nine year old. Yeah.
Ty Burrell
By the way, that's all. My shtick at home is like, it's all the lowest hanging fruit. Like.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Ty Burrell
I don't do anything that's legit at all funny around my house.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Ty Burrell
It's all fart jokes and.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Ty Burrell
You know, tripping and falling over.
Seth Meyers
Yeah. Sometimes.
Ty Burrell
By the way, I genuinely love. So let me just say that.
Josh Meyers
I mean, that stuff plays pretty well.
Ty Burrell
It's pretty great.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Josh Meyers
It's evergreen.
Seth Meyers
Yeah. Sometimes in my audience, they'll. I'll do a Q and A and they'll be like, do your kids think you're funny? And I'm like, yes. But what I do to make them think I'm funny, you wouldn't think it's funny?
Ty Burrell
No, no, it's. I'm not proud of myself. I'm not proud of Myself. Yeah.
Seth Meyers
Do you. How was this split up? Was it. Was it awesome?
Ty Burrell
It was. It really was actually. It was really great. It was a little bit weird off the. Right off the bat. Like, it was. We hadn't really, like, you know, the, the. The awkwardness you go through with, like a good friend when you travel or your wife or whatever of like, okay, now we have to figure out what we're gonna do and have long downbeats. But yeah, by. By the end, it was really. It was great. It was well worth it.
Josh Meyers
Where did the other pair go?
Ty Burrell
New York.
Josh Meyers
Okay.
Seth Meyers
Right. And what did they do? What was the draw?
Ty Burrell
They. They went to a couple of plays. We're big Mets fans, so they were. They were trying to. We. They actually didn't get to a Mets game because they were on a road trip. But. But they were. They. The initial plan was to go to a Mets game.
Josh Meyers
Yeah, well, they don't print those schedules in advance, so.
Seth Meyers
Yeah, there's no way knowing. Yeah, it's. You know, I'm upset about it. Like, you know, when you go all the way out to Citi Field, it's the only way to find out.
Ty Burrell
Yeah, we're here.
Josh Meyers
Oh, not today, guys. Bad news. Not today.
Seth Meyers
When you're driving out, you're like, oh, not today. No traffic.
Ty Burrell
Why don't you try back tomorrow? We'll see if they're here.
Seth Meyers
Are you. I have a question. How did you end up being Mets fans?
Ty Burrell
We lived in Queens for 12 years.
Seth Meyers
Oh, when did that happen?
Ty Burrell
I moved there in 99. 98. Sorry. Gotcha. And then my wife and I got together in 99 and we lived in Astoria, Queens.
Seth Meyers
So that was the whole beginning of your sort of actor's life was Astoria, Queens. Wow.
Ty Burrell
Yeah, I was there for 12 years and did like the really old fashioned version of that life, which is like regional theater. Regional theater. You know, Off Off Broadway, then Off Broadway and then two weeks of Broadway.
Seth Meyers
Seth and Josh, I read your 13 days, so I guess we'll let you round up. So I remember I saw it with Josh in la. It's one of my favorite. When I think about, like, movies, I really enjoyed the experience. Dawn of the Dead, which is just fantastic. Zombie film. Yeah, Sarah. Polly, right?
Ty Burrell
Yeah, Sarah in it, not directing. Zack Snyder directing.
Seth Meyers
Great.
Ty Burrell
And she was awesome.
Seth Meyers
But I guess that's a movie where. I mean, I think it's the first time I, you know, as your later work, as you became more prominent, I always remembered you from that, but I guess that's a movie you just Go out and do that movie, and then you're just right back to, you know, Astoria and your family.
Ty Burrell
Right back in Astoria. And just my wife and I. And my wife carried us for years. She worked in real estate finance, Credit Suisse in New York, and paid the bills for five years. And it really was. It was that classic thing of, like, go out, you know, not really regional stuff at that point, but I would do, like, an episode of West Wing or something and then come back and just be. Be unemployed for a long stretch and just grind, grind, grind. I mean, in retrospect, they were great.
Seth Meyers
Times, but of course, when you know the ending, it's great.
Josh Meyers
Yeah.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Josh Meyers
But doing one episode of a show, I always find that, like, walking back to your car once you've wrapped is one of the weirdest, loneliest things, because.
Ty Burrell
You'Re sort of like.
Josh Meyers
You wave and they. They might clap you out on set, and then you just go get your stuff, and then you're walking away, and sort of. Then there's no one. Then you're just.
Ty Burrell
And you can hear them clapping somebody else off right. As you're on your way to the car.
Josh Meyers
Yeah.
Seth Meyers
Did you. So when you met your wife, obviously, I mean, so she's in a whole different world than you. Was she.
Ty Burrell
No, she was an actor.
Seth Meyers
Okay, gotcha.
Ty Burrell
She was an actor.
Josh Meyers
She was smart.
Ty Burrell
We met. She was smart. She was one of those actors with more than one skill set. We met doing theater in D.C. oh, great. Excuse me. At the Shakespeare theater in Washington, D.C. and at many junctures in my failings as an actor, we've sat down and tried to put together a list of other things that I could do, and luckily, there's been nothing. I literally have no other skill sets. And she agrees. We've got. We've been like, well, what if you, like, tried to, you know, woodworking or something? And she'd be like, no, no, you wouldn't be great at that.
Josh Meyers
Yeah. Lose a couple digits.
Ty Burrell
Yeah. But no, she. She. She was climbing that ladder very quickly and jumped out right before 2008 when everything kind of fell apart. But, wow. She carried us, I guess.
Seth Meyers
When. When did. When did Modern Family premiere? What year?
Ty Burrell
That was 2009. So I was kind of. The trajectory was sort of like lots of guest spots and then a movie here and there and a play here and there. And then I got onto a couple of TV shows that made it about a season.
Seth Meyers
Right.
Ty Burrell
You know, and it's just so. It's so hard to communicate to, like, occasionally somebody will Ask, you know, to you to talk to, like, young actors. And it's such a hard thing to communicate about just getting lucky. Like, get lucky, like. Cause the other shows, nothing happened.
Seth Meyers
Right.
Josh Meyers
And they had people who wrote them and created them who wanted big things for them and thought they were gonna work, and.
Ty Burrell
And they were great. And honestly, I genuinely think that the shows were good.
Seth Meyers
Yeah, well, that's the thing. You just realize, you know, everybody works just as hard on the ones that don't work.
Ty Burrell
Yeah.
Seth Meyers
Except for. Except for, you know, when you mailed it in for Macbeth.
Ty Burrell
Yeah, I. I deserve that. I deserve.
Seth Meyers
I will say, man, do you sometimes think, like. I mean, you know, again, both luck and. I feel like you also had the good fortune of it went in the order that by the time Modern Family rolled around, you must. Your level of appreciation must.
Ty Burrell
For sure. I was in my 40s. I was in my 40s. I also don't think it would have gone well, just in general, if that. Something like that had happened. When I was in my 20s, I was.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Ty Burrell
You know, just a dipshit. I'm still the dipshit, but I always.
Seth Meyers
Yeah, I always. I started, you know, SNL when I was 27, and I often think, like, if it had been 21, I think it would not have been a good thing. You know, I think a little maturity was helpful.
Ty Burrell
Were you guys. Were you guys always doing improv, like, from.
Seth Meyers
Yeah, from college.
Ty Burrell
Yeah, college. Okay.
Josh Meyers
Yeah.
Ty Burrell
And were you both at Second City?
Josh Meyers
No, neither of us. We both were Boom Chicago. So we started in Meow, the Northwestern improv troupe. And then Boom Chicago was sort of modeled after Meow.
Ty Burrell
Okay.
Josh Meyers
And so we both moved there, and then.
Ty Burrell
Oh. I always thought, Boom Chicago was connected to Second City, but now it was more swaps.
Josh Meyers
Yeah, they did swaps, I feel like, after we were there, but it was.
Seth Meyers
More that they were Chicago guys who appreciated that the right city could support an improv theater. And even though the Dutch government had their doubts, they have. You know, they're 30 years into it, which is pretty amazing.
Ty Burrell
Yeah, that's. It's crazy. So many people have come through there. It's the best. I have so much admiration for improv. I've always tried to get as Stolen Valor. I like to get as close to. All of my best friends in LA are at ucb, and I just love being around them. And then I was like, I don't want to get out there. No, I'm terrified.
Seth Meyers
It is. So I was in Austin and a friend of ours in Boom Chicago. Dave Buchman has a improv theater in Austin called Cold Town Theater. And I was there for this TV festival, and he said, hey, would you come by the theater? And I was like, of course. He goes, do you want to improvise with us or just do monologues? And I was like, oh, buddy, I can't improvise anymore. Like, you know what? I'm just like, I don't got those skills. But I'm happy to tell some monologues, but it was a lovely night. It's a fun community to be around without the burden of having to actually do.
Ty Burrell
It's so great. And they're all.
Josh Meyers
Josh, do you still improvise here and there?
Ty Burrell
Yeah. Well, there's, like. It feels like there's a fitness to it, right?
Josh Meyers
Yes.
Ty Burrell
My friends are still in shape, and they don't seem to be traumatized by it, but, like, the couple of times that I've improvised with them, I don't think I slept the night before. You know, Like, I. Yeah, it really. It cost me that much. Like.
Josh Meyers
Yeah. I would say my kingdom for a weekly slot at a theater would be great because.
Seth Meyers
Right, yeah.
Josh Meyers
Because then you do work that muscle out and, you know, when we do this show in Amsterdam in a couple weeks, I'm nervous for that already. Right, so.
Ty Burrell
Right.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Ty Burrell
Yeah. I know UCB has gone through a lot of changes, but I. Are my. My good friends there are now at once a month, and I think it already is. Is been, you know, tougher than. Than once a week.
Seth Meyers
But yeah, this has been absolutely wonderful before.
Ty Burrell
What a pleasure, guys.
Seth Meyers
You guys, you have to go through the. The speed round. Okay. Also, we shout out that you're. You're in the podcast biz now. Scripted. Scripted.
Ty Burrell
Podcast scripted.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Josh Meyers
The good life. Loosely based on your real life story.
Ty Burrell
I want to say loosely based on that.
Josh Meyers
Yeah. Colton Dunn. Boom. Chicago alum.
Seth Meyers
Yeah.
Ty Burrell
He's awesome.
Josh Meyers
And Jennifer Gardner. Also, some people who have been on this podcast who are in yours. Gillian Bell.
Ty Burrell
Yeah.
Josh Meyers
Paula Pell. Amber Ruffin.
Ty Burrell
Yep. Ego Eggo.
Seth Meyers
Bobby Moynihan.
Ty Burrell
Bobby Moynihan. A bunch of super funny people who just made it way better. Way better.
Seth Meyers
That debuts on July 3rd.
Ty Burrell
Thanks.
Seth Meyers
Check that out.
Ty Burrell
Excited about it.
Josh Meyers
And here we go. The speed round. You can only pick one of these. Is your ideal vacation. Relaxing, adventurous, or educational.
Ty Burrell
Adventurous. But not. Oh, no, that's more than one word. Go ahead.
Josh Meyers
What's your favorite means of transportation?
Ty Burrell
Feet.
Josh Meyers
If you could take a vacation with any family, alive or dead, real or fictional, other than Your own family. What family? Would you like to take a vacation with?
Ty Burrell
The Riley Wilbournes, our dear friends who we travel with every year.
Seth Meyers
Excellent. Excellent.
Ty Burrell
Jason Wilbourne's a writer on Paradise.
Josh Meyers
I don't know if you guys know Paradise.
Seth Meyers
Well done.
Josh Meyers
If you had to be stranded on a desert island with one member of your family, who would it be?
Ty Burrell
Oh, my God. My. My bride. My lovely bride.
Josh Meyers
Good guy.
Ty Burrell
Good holly barrel. I did that right, right?
Seth Meyers
Yep.
Josh Meyers
Yeah, you did that right.
Seth Meyers
Yeah. Especially since she carried your ass for five years.
Josh Meyers
You are from Applegate, Oregon. Would you recommend Applegate, Oregon as a vacation destination?
Ty Burrell
Yes. For sure. Yes. It's amazing. It's now very bougie though, just before.
Seth Meyers
Okay. Yeah.
Josh Meyers
Okay.
Seth Meyers
Well, some people, they now take vacation.
Josh Meyers
And then Seth has our final questions.
Seth Meyers
Have you, Ty Burell, been to the Grand Canyon?
Ty Burrell
Yes.
Seth Meyers
Was it worth it?
Ty Burrell
It was. We rafted the upper section of the Grand Canyon, which was all told about two weeks. What the significant part of that trip is that I really talked my wife into going on that trip. And by the end of it, I was so traumatized by the rapids that I wanted to find a way out of the canyon. And my wife, it actually changed my wife. It changed her life. She fell in love with it and is now super outdoorsy. All right. Because of that trip. It was important. Wild, wild thing. And I really was like, we need to get out. We have kids. We need to get out of here.
Josh Meyers
Does she continue to do stuff that scares you?
Ty Burrell
No, not. She's not really like an adrenaline junkie, but she likes. She really, really, really pursues being outdoors now.
Josh Meyers
That's great.
Ty Burrell
Which happened like only like seven or eight years ago.
Seth Meyers
Yeah. Anytime somebody can find a new thing later in life. Because we know she wouldn't do woodworking. So this has absolutely been a delight. Ty, it's so lovely.
Ty Burrell
Thank you guys.
Josh Meyers
Thank you.
Ty Burrell
Thanks. It's been a real pleasure.
Josh Meyers
Enjoy the rest of the wonderful Utah day you've got coming up.
Ty Burrell
I will. You too. Out in Utah. Don't come to Utah.
Josh Meyers
San Diego, not Newport. To his dad's dismay. Guess the paint and screwdrivers would wait another day cuz his up bro meant they had to go. Pretty sure his daddy cuss. San Diego, not Newport. San Diego. What? A bus. They found those two an apartment. The time just came and went. The trip home without furniture. They weren't pressed against the vent. Maybe dad went insane when an exit came and he pulled off the highway. Took the off ramp to Reno for an unscheduled three night stay and it was Reno by escalator Reno that I love Weird to tug on your wiener with mirrors up above and you don't get bored on casino floors Elevators up and down Reno by escalator that's the way to do that town Reno by escalator that's the way to do that town.
Seth Meyers
Sam.
Family Trips with the Meyers Brothers: Episode Summary
Episode: TY BURRELL River Rafted the Grand Canyon!
Release Date: July 8, 2025
Guests: Ty Burrell
In this episode, Seth Meyers and Josh Meyers recount their adventurous family trip to Amsterdam. The brothers navigate the challenges of traveling with parents and their child, Mackenzie, while balancing responsibilities and ensuring everyone has a memorable experience.
Notable Quote:
Upon arrival, Seth and Josh encounter an unexpected issue with their parents' hotel room being situated on the noisy second floor. Concerned about the disturbance, they politely request a room change but are informed it can only be accommodated the following day.
Notable Quote:
Despite their worries, Seth and Josh find relief when their parents decide to keep their original room after a restful sleep, illustrating the parents' adaptability and the brothers' initial anxieties.
A highlight of the trip is their visit to Efteling, their favorite amusement park. The Meyers brothers share amusing anecdotes about the day, including intense walking schedules and memorable rides.
Notable Quotes:
The brothers discuss the unique roller coasters and the blend of fairy-tale attractions with thrilling rides, emphasizing the special bond created through shared experiences with family.
The team faces a heatwave with temperatures soaring to 90 degrees, prompting concerns for their mother's well-being. Additionally, logistical hiccups with their bus transportation lead to unexpected delays and possessions being misplaced.
Notable Quote:
These challenges highlight the unpredictability of travel and the importance of flexibility and teamwork in overcoming obstacles.
The episode features a lively segment with Ty Burrell, a cherished friend and guest. Recorded live in Amsterdam, the show includes stories from Boom Chicago alumni and experiences shared by their parents, fostering a sense of community and shared history.
Notable Quote:
Ty's participation adds depth to the conversation, bringing unique perspectives and humor to the family's travel tales.
Ty Burrell delves into his upbringing in Applegate, Oregon, sharing heartfelt and humorous stories about his family's summer trips, his father's artistic aspirations, and the impact of these experiences on his own career in comedy and acting.
Notable Quotes:
These narratives provide listeners with an intimate look into Ty's life, highlighting the intertwined nature of family dynamics and personal growth.
Towards the end of the episode, Seth and Josh engage Ty in a speedy Q&A session, revealing fun facts and preferences that add a playful dimension to the conversation.
Notable Highlight:
This segment offers a light-hearted break, showcasing the camaraderie and spontaneous humor among the guests.
As the episode wraps up, Seth and Josh reflect on the significance of family trips in strengthening bonds and creating lasting memories. They express gratitude towards their friends and family who make such journeys meaningful.
Notable Quote:
The episode concludes on a warm note, emphasizing the joys of shared adventures and the importance of cherishing time spent with loved ones.
Insight and Conclusion: This episode of Family Trips with the Meyers Brothers offers a heartfelt exploration of family dynamics during travel, the unpredictability of adventures, and the enduring bonds formed through shared experiences. With engaging storytelling, relatable challenges, and the delightful addition of guest Ty Burrell, listeners are treated to an authentic and entertaining narrative that underscores the magic and chaos of family vacations.
Engaging Takeaway: The Meyers brothers adeptly balance humor and sincerity, providing listeners with both laughter and moments of genuine reflection. Whether dealing with hotel hiccups, navigating amusement parks, or sharing personal stories, the episode captures the essence of what makes family trips unforgettable.
Highlighted Quotes with Timestamps:
This comprehensive summary encapsulates the key discussions, insights, and memorable moments from the episode, providing a seamless narrative for those who haven't tuned in.