May 13, 2020
"If you're lucky, you get to see a lot of life. The fact that I can listen to an album like this and connect with a person to a person I was for a good deal of my life, came out of the hardest things in my childhood, and a kind of anger and sadness that motivated me to try to be who I've become and pushed me, kept me from settling. The fact that I can connect to that so directly with an album like this, to the person I was so long ago, it's like a time warp." - Bob Odenkirk.
This week, the legendary Bob Odenkirk (Mr Show,
Better Call Saul, Breaking Bad) joins me to talk about The
Replacements classic debut album 'Sorry Ma, Forgot to Take
Out the Trash'. Bob talks about whether the album qualifies as punk
rock, his shared midwestern roots, the wit and cynicism of the
lyrics, how the album helps him access the harsher emotions of his
younger self, Bob Mehr's Replacements biography Trouble Boys, the
recently released Replacements live record and more.
Plus, Bob talks about the challenges of portraying Jimmy McGill
on Better Call Saul,
from playing someone fifteen years younger than him, how the
character's evolving self-awareness has changed his performance and
filming the brutal 'Bagman' episode of the most recent season.