The Blunder YearsWatch your back, Fred Savage! The Daily Show's Rob Corddry is coming of age
JONNY'S KIDS Corddry with fellow Daily Show alums Ed Helms and Stephen Colbert With Stephen Colbert at the forefront of political satire and Steve Carell having reached A-list status in Hollywood, The Daily Show seems to have achieved peer status with Saturday Night Live as a finishing school for the nation's leading comic talents. So why is Rob Corddry's first post-correspondent project a lowbrow sitcom (The Winner —about a 32-year-old loser who lives with his parents—premiering Sunday, March 4 on Fox)? The answer has a lot to do with a distaste for Jon Stewart's audience, reverence for Kevin Arnold's fervent pursuit of Winnie Cooper's rosebud, and a desire to do something that just doesn't matter. RADAR: What made you go from The Daily Show to doing a sitcom? "'The Daily Show' audience used to drive me fucking crazy, because they would just applaud at every reference to some right-wing guest being taken down. It's a knee-jerk audience"But that show has huge credibility, to the point that 20- and 30-year-olds trust it more than they do their senators. So why do you want to do something that doesn't matter? I thought it was really interesting that with The Winner, you drew the main character, Glen Abbott, from the mold of the great peripheral sitcom characters. He's a Skippy Handleman, a Vinny Delpino, a Boner Stabone. The one sitcom it reminds me of is Chris Elliott's Get a Life.
MAN-BOYS Corddry is picking up where Get a Life's Chris Elliott left off One scene I thought was interesting was where, as Glen Abbott, you're sitting on a couch with your best friend, who's in junior high school, and you say to him, "I really want to get in good with your mother." And then, in this almost Godard-like moment, you say: "So she'll let me touch her vagina." In that line alone, you understand the character. That he really is a 14-year-old kid. He's a seventh grader. And that's his frame of reference. That's what he thinks about, and at the same time, he knows that it's completely unattainable. Touching anyone's vagina? You don't do that until you're in your 20s or 30s! It's like Big in a sense. Now, to get back to vaginas— The Wonder Years really was about Winnie Cooper's vagina, wasn't it? If you could have any great sitcom flame from the annals of American TV, which would you pick? Well, I just did. Blair Warner? The girls of Eastland? What about a Tootie Ramsey-Natalie Green sex-sandwich? < BACK TO Features |
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