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FX's "JUSTIFIED" STAR WILLIAM RAGSDALE & MICHAEL O'LEARY!

William Ragsdale, Gary Hawkins on FX's new series, "Justified," will be making an appearance on BuzzWorthy Radio!

After attending Hendrix College where he appeared in plays with Sling Blade actress and fellow Arkansan Natalie Canerday, he gained attention as the young hero of Fright Night and Fright Night II, a series of humorous vampire films co-starring Roddy McDowall. He also performed in theatre productions of Neil Simon plays Biloxi Blues[3] and Brighton Beach Memoirs.

Ragsdale has had a sporadic career on prime-time television. He starred for three years in the Fox Network sitcom Herman's Head. He had a brief recurring role in Judging Amy as the obnoxious son of Richard Crenna's character. He played a TV producer on Grosse Pointe, which lasted one season. He was cast in the pilot for Charmed, but turned down the series to star in the short-lived sitcom Brother's Keeper. He appeared on Ellen as a boyfriend of the character Ellen Morgan (Ellen DeGeneres), before Morgan (and DeGeneres herself) came out of "the closet" as a lesbian. He played bit roles in numerous movies and television series, including a four-episode stint on Less Than Perfect.

Oddly enough, he lost movie roles in both Glory and Biloxi Blues to Matthew Broderick, but did work with Broderick in the 2009 film Wonderful World.
Duration:
1h 15m
Broadcast on:
27 Mar 2010
Audio Format:
other

we're going to take a look at the videos. I'm going to get you live in this buzzworthy radio where you can get the latest buzz on all your favorite shows inside buzzworthy stars now. Hey everybody, this is John Driscoll from Young and the Restless, the new Phillip Chancellor of the Fourth. You are listening to Buzzworthy Radio right now with Navell, stay tuned for what's coming up, what's happening, what's going on, and what will be coming up, what drama to be expected on your favorite shows. Listen in. Good evening everybody, welcome to a new episode of Buzzworthy Radio here on BlawtalkRadio.com. I'm your host Navell, Gene Lee. It's Friday. That's right. It's Friday, March 26, 2010, 8 p.m. Eastern, 5 p.m. Pacific Time right here on your Internet. We are going to be joined by William Ragsdale who plays the role of Gary Hawkins on Essex new series Justified. Also in this hour, we're also going to be playing our Michael O'Leary interview that we did a few weeks ago. I think towards the beginning of the month actually, he was on the guiding light as Dr. Rick Bower before it went up the air, but he can now be seen on the new web series, Steamboat. So, I had the chance to talk to him while he was on his way to the So Long Springfield event in Connecticut. So, it's going to be a very interesting conversation because you're going to hear a lot of people in the background having a nice little party. So, you can kind of say I was partying along with them, maybe? I don't know. You'll get the idea once you hear the interview when we did it. So, it's a wild ride. Let's put it that way. It's a wild ride. We have a lot of today's interview about some upcoming shows within the next couple of weeks. I can't wait to tell you guys about that. But, let's get right on to it. William Ragdale from Essex new series Justified. All right. Can you hear me? Yes, I can hear you. Loud and clear. Loud and clear, absolutely. All right. Hey, everybody. Sorry for the delay in last there, but I hope you've grit and bared with me. I'm here right now with the multi-tasking William Ragdale who just got in his house from fighting traffic in LA. That's right. I even had time to change a diaper in between coming in from the garage and answering the phone. Did you really? Yes, I did. I was changing a diaper even if the phone was ringing. So, there you have it. There you are. You were like a real life Superman living the dream. Yes, right. There you go. So, how are you? Thanks for stopping by here. It's great to actually get the chance to talk to you. Yeah, my pleasure. My pleasure. Absolutely. Don't like to be here. Thank you. Absolutely. So, let's get right into it. Let's talk about this series Justified. That's on Let's give a rundown for everybody who has not seen this show yet. We haven't taken a look at this yet. Who do you play on this show? And what is this show about? Well, the show is about a guy named Rayland who is a U.S. Marshall. And he's sort of a bit of a loner, effective, but sort of does things his own way and that, you know, understandably gets him in trouble every now and then. And he tends to, you know, shoot people sometimes. So, the show sort of begins, the pilot begins where he has sort of been given a leave of absence because of, well, an investigation is ongoing about him shooting that he was involved with. And as part of the sort of discipline and sort of, you know, professional timeout they give him, they send him back to his home turf of Kentucky to sort of work there. Which he doesn't like at all. But anyway, so he gets involved in the Marshall service there. And in a very short order he's looking for bad guys there too. And I play the current husband of his ex-wife. Oh, there's a little bit of tension. Yeah, a little bit of a tension there. But because I'm, I have the exciting life of a real estate agent basically, and developer. And he's, so I'm a little threatened by his machismo I think. And I think he's in some way threatened by my stability. So that's where it is right now. You know, threatened by his ex-wife's appreciation of my stability. I guess it shouldn't. Okay. Yeah, so I like that. That's the basic setup. And it's, you know, things happen. Things happen. As they do on TV, yeah. Yeah. That's how it rolls on television. Right. So how did you, this roll obviously by how you're describing it. I have to ask, I always love asking. Do you see yourself in Gary Hawkins or do you see Gary Hawkins in you, like vice versa at all? Yeah, I think, yeah, I see the part of me that strives for, you know, sort of stability and success. And, you know, fulfilling your dreams and all of that stuff, which, you know, it was different from different people. It was different from a real estate agent than it is for an actor. But yeah, and as it happens in the course of, you know, this particular show, you know, more bad things happen to him than didn't do to me. But I think overall it's a basic sort of character, you know, equation that that would probably be a, you know, I'm a normal guy. You know, I want good things to happen and I like to have a nice family life and, you know, and good friends and all that stuff. Well, it's the best for everybody, basically. That's it. Oh, yeah. It's all good. It's all good until, you know, until you as Marshall start showing up and killing people. And start shooting people. Yeah, and neo-nazi show up and, you know, and they do their thing and then it's all messed up after that, you know. Oh, absolutely. Before I get into my next question, I actually just got an email just now coming in. I wanted to go ahead and go ahead and pay my respects. Robert Colt passed away today. Does anybody remember him from I Spy? That's who he was acting opposite of Bill Cosby. He died at the age of 79, so I wanted to send my condolences out there as well. So, yeah. Yeah. Quite a loss, he's a great guy, a great actor. Oh, absolutely. Yeah, he definitely was. Matt, that's a shame getting that in the middle of it, you know. You know. Like doing their own. Like, so upbeat and then you get something like this and it just like brings it down and it's like, oh. Yeah. Yeah, thanks. That's great. Yeah. But, yeah, that happens. We lose them all the time, you know? Yeah. I always think that, you know, it's so typical that, you know, that people say all the time. You know, that people say all these wonderful things about actors and stuff. When they die, you know. When they die, you know. Before they die. Before they die, you know, it's like they, you know, it's still very hard for them. Even, you know, even these veterans and stuff, so. Yeah. So, absolutely. Oh, okay. Feeling okay. Yeah. Yeah. Pull it together. Pull it together. Pull it together. Pull it together. That's it. There's a little trivia that I found out about you, actually. You had tried out for Gloria and Biloxi Blue that you lost them to that. You brought her in. Is that right? Well, yeah. I did the play. I did the, I did the play in New York and on Broadway and the tour and stuff like that. And then they got to the point of making the movie. And I, you know, I don't know that I actually lost it out to him. I think that he was, I'm sure, first in their, foremost in their minds the whole time. But, because he had done it before me on Broadway and he was kind of the signature character for, a signature person for that character in the trilogy. But, but yeah, at that point in our careers, we were both sort of vying for a lot of, I mean, I tested for Ferris Bueller and, and I think I was up for a thing called Project X that he ended up doing. So it was, you know, sort of neck and neck, I guess, briefly in those days at that point. But yeah, he did, he ended up shooting that, I guess, instead of me. But I ended up doing the national tour, so. You ended up working with him anyway, didn't you? Yeah. And worked with him years and years later. Later down the road. Yeah, in wonderful world. So, but we patched it up, you know. I don't think it's in our feelings. No, he was very nice. We know a lot of the same people. And so it was nice to kind of finally connect him that way. Absolutely. Absolutely. So how did you, how did you get into the acting role? Was it something that you always wanted to do with your, with your time? Or was it something that you, the little town I grew up in the south and a little town? And it happened to be one of the, you know, 0.03% of little southern towns that had a community theatre. And, and it was very active and very well patronized and all that stuff. And they put on plays all the time. So I started doing it there, you know, when I was 10 years old. And, you know, and just kind of connected with it and, and kept doing it for, you know, the duration. Yeah. So, yeah, I just, I was very fortunate to have that, that art facility in my town. And, you know, and of course I grew up watching movies and TV and all that stuff. So it's, I could, I could imagine myself doing being anyone other than myself. So that, that came in handy, I guess. Now I actually, I actually did not know that I, well, I didn't even see this, but I actually had like a friend of mine when they heard that I was giving them a chance to talk to you. They actually said "Frightnight" to me after I said your name. And I was like, okay, you're like the second person to take "Frightnight" to me. What, what was, what was "Frightnight"? Seriously, I must not have seen this growing up. What, what was it? Didn't say "Frightnight"? No! Why are we even having this conversation? I did. I, I was like, okay, I never heard of this. I must be so oblivious. Well, you must, you must not watch TV at Halloween time because it's on the... I must not. The guitar channel. Yeah, now it's a, you know, it's a, it's a little vampire movie that I did 20 something years ago. And I was just fresh out of school and playing a boy next door. And, and it was a, you know, it was a little movie that became a little bigger and a little bigger. And now it's sort of a cult classic, I guess. Everybody seems to know "Frightnight". Like, okay. Me, I'm not everyone. Well, you know, I, I can't answer that. I don't, I don't know what's going on there. Maybe, uh, I don't know. Maybe they changed the title for something else. I don't know. I think, I, I think that's going to be my new homework assignment is that I'm going to now have to go out and find "Frightnight" somewhere at a pop bus or on Netflix and just watch this movie because I seriously was like dumbfounded when they said this to me. I was like, "Frightnight", Charlie Grooster. I'm like, "What?" Who are you talking about? Wow. Wow. Well, that's, uh, yeah, that's definitely, that's easy homework to do. It's a good movie. It's a, it's a lot of fun, actually. So we got a real kind of dark, but comedic vibe to it. So, and, and, and we saw it the whole cast got together about a year ago and saw a new print they had done of it. And it really, it really holds up just story-wise and all that stuff. So, so it should be fun. Okay. On the redo. I think that they're actually, and DreamWorks is actually now remaking it, so. Uh-oh. You can wait for that new version, but I won't be in it. I don't, you won't be in it. And who's to say that the remake is going to be as interesting as the original? No. I don't think so. I don't think so. Yeah. There's no way. No way. There's a little bit better than the original. I, I say that a lot of movies now. Cause that just seems like Hollywood, that's all they do is right now remaking movies. And they remake, they're remaking Gilligan Dyron. They're, they're going to be remaking that. Yeah. Yeah. I don't think, I don't think it's going to, I don't think it's going to work out, but. Hey. How to you? I, I, I wish they would remake movies that weren't very good to begin with. You know, and leave the ones that, that were good to, to, you know. Cause that would ruin the image when they tell. Don't you think? Like if they remaked something that was good in the past and they're going to remake it now, that would just ruin the image for you or when you first saw it. Cause then you're probably like, I thought this was good. And now I'm watching this and like, will it really that mediocre kind of thing? Yeah. Yeah. But that's, I guess that's, that's what they do. You know, that's their job. It's sort of an instant appeal, I guess, if you do something that has a famous title to, you know, you, you're guaranteed to get people at least curious in what you've, you've done. I have no idea that we're going to remake that. And yeah. But not that I know, I'm like, I better watch the original and see what I think of it first. And then I'll probably critique the new one. There you go. It's, it's not going to be like the original one. It is no way. That's, that's pretty much what I have to do. That's what I'm going to do. Now I'm going to write that down. I'm writing that down on my notes now, by the way, folks. I'm writing it down. I'll get, write, Knight one and two in that order. In that order. So you played, you've done a lot of, you've done a lot of TV shows. And one of the things I do remember watching you and was on Ellen back in the, back in the early 90s. I do remember watching that. That was one of my favorite shows back in the 90s. And he was her last boyfriend. And he was, you were the last one before his last one. That's right. I, I, whatever. I, I, well, the phenomenon was, what's that? Well, the phenomenon that was though. Yeah. Yeah. It seems like a lifetime ago now. And now it's so, because it was such a raised, you know, such a ruckus when she, when she finally came out that, you know, you would think that, oh God, the whole network system is going to collapse now. So, so inconsequential now. Yeah. So, but I had a, yeah, I played, I played, I did like four or five episodes. And, and after she came out, they came back for the next season. And so they brought me back as kind of a, you know, as a bit of a dad fly, I guess, to see, you know, to put me back in her life after she had come out. And, and we ended up having another kiss after that. And there was, I guess there was a, you know, a fairly substantial following of supporters, lesbian supporters in the audience who had this collective grown when we kissed. They go, "Oh, no, you can just hear them over." She was like, "Oh, okay. This is going to, going to, I hope this goes well." But she ended up not, not coming back. So, I think it's happy. That's funny. Oh, man, I love it. I miss the 90s, but I do, I do, I miss the 90s. I miss not having responsibilities, but it's true. But let's, let's, let's, let's put this out there. I don't know how much you can say, but what can we expect more, and justify with your character, as well as just all the thoughts? I, you know, I don't know. I mean, I get, my character, I know, gets into some sort of deep water, about four or five shows in. We get sort of into a bad situation with some, some money people, and there's bloodshed. And broken hearts, and violence, and all that stuff. So, that's fun. But I'm not really sure what they're going to do for next year. I, I would, I'm interested to see myself. I think that the, not animosity, but the sort of tension between Timothy's character and mine is going to continue. And, and I, I think that it's, I think my character begins to get threatened that I'm going to lose my, you're going to lose your life? Yeah, I think that that may be part of it, and I'm not sure where that leads my character, but, but hopefully it'll, you know. I think that creates a strong dynamic, though, between the two characters. So, if you have to face that kind of animosity, that gives you a lot of stuff to play off of. Yeah, it really does. It gives you a lot of directions to go. So, I'm looking forward to that, and, you know, hopefully, hopefully she won't leave me. Yeah, hopefully she won't leave me. I like that, how you whimpered. Hopefully she won't leave me. Hopefully she won't leave me. He won't shoot me. [Laughs] Would you, I thought this was kind of clever. Someone said that you can describe this show of the cross between Sons of Anarchy and Dexter. Yeah, I guess so. It's got a real, it's got sort of a humorous, in, in parts, a humorous, you know, a tint to it, I suppose. And, and it's, they try to show a world that doesn't get a lot of light shown on it, I think, on TV. You know, it's eastern Kentucky, and it's, you know, there are some kind of country people that are, you know, living in a very different life than what you see usually on television. And, and, the first episode, I know, you know, we're all around some, some kind of neo-Nazi stuff, and, you know, it's, it's interesting. It's, it doesn't get a lot of light shown on it, I think, normally, so. And the topography is very nice, too, at least in the pilot, you know, it's really good. Yeah. They actually use the eastern, eastern mountains there, so. But yeah, well, we'll see. Hopefully, it'll, it'll continue to grow and expand. And it's great. It's kind of interesting, because they use on the show, we've used a lot of southern actors. And, and, and, and having them congregate all together is kind of fun. It's like a little bit of a, you know, sort of a southern oasis or something out here in the North California. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Very, very good then. Let's give, let's give the show, let's give the show a blog, tell everybody where they can see you, where they can see the show, what time, what station, all that stuff. The floor is yours, let them know. Yeah, they're, we're gonna, we're on FX and we're on Tuesday nights, and depending on where you are, it's nine or ten, I believe, but they, they show it a couple of times. So it's, yeah, and it's FX really show us throughout the week as well. There's other chances to take to, to see. Right. But yeah, it's a great time slot and the ratings have been really strong so far and I think it's just going to grow. I hope it's, I hope it stays with us for the, not just for the first season, I hope it comes back for another one. Well, thank you. Absolutely. Sir, Mr. William Magdale, thank you so much. Gary Hawkins, on to the five on FX Tuesday nights. Check your local listings. If you missed it the first time, it's on right after the first airing. So you'll have like two chances to see it in one night, like two back to back showing. Thank you so much. Again, pleasure. All mine. All mine. Thanks so much. Thanks so much. You take care now, okay? You too. Bye-bye. Bye-bye. Awesome awesome guy, William Magdale, everybody. Check out the show justified on FX. I can't believe that I was about to play my audio for the Michael O'Leary podcast that we did and it actually crashed my computer. I was like, are you kidding me? It crashed. So we're trying to get that back up and running again, so I can go ahead and get this playing for you guys tonight. And before I get into that, I did want to give you some programming updates. Monday at 8PM Eastern, 5PM Pacific, we are going to be graced with the presence of Victoria Ralph, yet again, she'll be coming back for a second visit on Monday. So we're going to have a pleasure in talking to her. I love talking with her the last time and it's going to be a pleasure to talk with her again for the second time. And I believe she's going to be coming back for a third time once the book drops in May. So we will be talking to her then as well. So Monday, this coming Monday at 8PM Eastern time, that's when we're going to be chatting with Victoria Ralph. Wednesday, Wednesday, March 31, I'm saying nay already. I'm getting on my head myself. I really wanted to be May. Never say never. But March 31 at 8PM Eastern, James Scott, dudes were alive. So he's rolling E.J. Demera on the show. We're going to have a chance to speak with him. Make sure you guys tune in for that as well. I'm looking forward to that as much as the next guy. That is amazing. I think I may be the only one who feels like he's intimidating to me. I really do. I think he's intimidating in a good way. But I don't know. I don't know if I should say that he is as intimidating as Eric Braden. Can I say that though? Well, he could be intimidating as Eric Braden. He could be intimidating as him. Or he could go down that ballpark. But I'm looking forward to this interview. It's something I've definitely been wanting to do for three years now. I'm still working on getting this uploaded or everything. I don't know why. It's not coming up. It's very weird that this isn't working. Maybe it's just on a delay. We're still working on getting this uploaded. Sorry about the technical difficulties on that side. But we are getting this uploaded for you because we aren't going to play this for you tonight. And also, when we do air that James got interviewed, we're going to re-air an interview that we did last month in February. That I don't know if many people still know that we did. But we did an interview with Maurice Bernard, who plays Sonny Corrento on General Hospital. Now, we're going to re-air that interview as well. I have the idea to re-air this because it was said to me, which I think maybe this is possibly true, that we probably, a lot of people who listened to the show do not know that he was on our program. Which I kind of agree with. So I think I'm going to look through at least some of those that I think a lot of people may have realized that we had a chance to talk to. And we're going to re-air those again, this being warm up. I know that it was promoted after he aired. But I think we need to definitely get this out there again as well, especially with the storyline that's going on right now on the show. I know a lot of people are talking about this as far as with the character Christina's concern, where she was brutally attacked and everything. And I think, you know, as well, besides that storyline, as well as the storyline of where he did shoot it somewhere, which by far I thought was some good theme that he did portray. I think it definitely is something that we should play again even if a lot of people did hear this during that time when we first did this interview. Just to bring it out there, just to bring it, it had a pressure in everybody's mind. I think that's really how it should work. So, yeah, we're definitely going to re-air that again. There's a couple of interviews I'm going to be re-airing as well. I want to re-air. It's got Evan the Brick Seville interview. Another time, I know I've re-aired it already once before. But I think I want to re-air it again simply because of the support that the Kish relationship has shown in the public eye. So, I definitely want to air that again simply for that fact. If anybody is listening to this show tonight, can anybody please tell me? Did that rally outside of Good Morning America happen today? Because I thought it did, but people are telling me that did not take a fact. So, if anybody can just email me at Natalie@buzzworthyradio.net or just send me a message on Twitter @buzzworthyradio. I would love to know what went down. If this did happen, if it did, did any of you attend, and what happened when you were there? I would love to know about it. So, I didn't even know this was supposed to take place today until I actually saw it on Good Morning America's Twitter. It sounds like it did, but I'm still unsure. So, I definitely would love to hear some feedback to find out for sure if this happened or if this took place. Or if it's going to take place or anything of the sort. So, yeah, please draw me a line. Let me know. I would love to hear about it. But I don't know. And also, I'm actually getting an I.M. from somebody where he said that there's still stuff about Drew Garrett's firing from the show. And he was replaced by somebody else. And I thought they found a really good actor to play this part. Now, I was a Drew Garrett fan, and I did retweet on Twitter that they have a teen Drew Garrett support Twitter on the site. And I was, by far, a fan of this character. And, you know, of course, internet rumors are bound right now that he was basically pooling a Lindsay Lohan on set, whatever that's supposed to mean. And, pretty much, I take a lot of stuff with a grain of salt. I do. As far as rumors being bound on their nets concerned, unless, of course, you know, it's done by a publication. And they actually say what seriously went down behind the scene. I'm not going to take with a grain of salt that he was acting like a Lindsay Lohan on set. I am going to take it with a grain of salt, excuse me. I am taking it with a grain of salt that he was like that. How do you know? What proof do you have? Do you have proof that that's how he was acting? No, you don't. So, seriously, everybody that starts stuff online, you really got to look at it and go like, "Hey, do you got to be sent a little end go? Does this really happen? Is this something that they're actually making up? Is this something that we can actually rely on?" Or because this is just another poster. You don't know for sure what the real deal is, and you won't know what the real deal is. You can even say that you won't know the real deal, even one of the interviews come out in the magazine. You don't. Everybody is entitled to their own opinion. Everybody is entitled to how they feel about it. But in spite of that, I wish Drew Garrett well. I liked it in this part. But I'm very upset that they had decided on recasting the role of Michael Correntos. But we'll see exactly where this takes him. Hopefully, he will land in wonderful places outside of the daytime arena. It's not another set in the daytime arena. It's not bigger and better and better things. You know what I'm saying? So, I really hope that he gets that foot in the door. I really do. I really do. I never wish anybody out of a job. I never wish anyone to be out of a job, especially right now in this economy. I don't want anybody to be out of a job. Be glad that you have a job. Be thankful and grateful that you have a job. And I'm sorry to see him out of one. But I do hope that he lands on his feet. And I know that he has a lot of support from a lot of people from an hospital like Ingo and Nancy DeGron, Deep Burton, and her sheet wood showing the support that he will land places. And I really hope that he does as well. I really do. Another thing I do want to mention, since we were talking about the Kish phenomenon from what I like to live. I actually wanted to bring that back up again, because I was on the phone talking earlier with a colleague of mine, who host Stardish Radio here on the same network. We were actually talking about this earlier. What happened was, as I mentioned, there was supposed to be a rally outside of Good Morning America today. And again, I have no idea if this went down or not. But a lot of people are in a severe uproar that these characters are now leaving the show. And I have to admit, I am a fan of Kish. I am -- I'm not going to deny that, and I really am a fan of Kish. They did a really good storyline, especially for daytime, especially for daytime, in order for two of the same sex to have a love scene that broke the mold for any time television. It really did. And I was very happy to see that it went the mark, that it went the mark. And now -- and now their characters are -- they ran out of course. I'm trying to find a word here, because it doesn't make sense to me. The characters have run their course, seriously? How is that possible? How do the characters run their course? You could have more of a potential storyline for them, especially with the baby, especially with the baby. There could have been a lot of material that they could have worked on. And of course, they're saying that, you know, they're still going to be in town. So there is the possibility of them recurring, and we could still see them from time to time, but seriously. Do you honestly think -- any of the fans out of this thing around -- do you guys honestly think that after how this went down when those characters were released, that they want to come back? Case in point. Scott Evans had to find out on Twitter that they were releasing these characters, and these actors. He had to find out on Twitter? Twitter? No. See, that's terrible to find out from complete and total strangers meeting about it on Twitter, then from his own colleagues that he works with. Are you kidding me? That had to hurt. That had to be somewhere a low about somewhere, because I seriously would not have been able to keep a good straight face if I had to find out on Twitter instead of people who I worked with. You know what I mean? I just wouldn't have been able to handle that. Maybe that's just me, but I honestly don't think that I would have been able to muster that up. I couldn't do it. I couldn't do it. They have a lot of more clout and a lot of more stamina than I do in order to deal with that, because I'm definitely not the one. And also, what if they were to bring them back and they weren't set on returning? They decided to just give the brush off. I don't want to come back here. That's how you treated me. Then there goes the issues of them wanting to recast, and that's just going to make the fan even angrier. It's just, you know, it is stressful on all fronts. I understand exactly where the fans are coming from. It's definitely trying time. I don't know what's going on on one like to live at this point, because I'm hearing so much stuff about this show behind the scenes. It's unreal. I feel so bad of what's going on. Of course, with the rumors of Florentia, Lozano, even though I'm hearing that she's been put on contracts, she's not going anywhere. But still, what does that mean? Just because you've been put on contracts, that doesn't mean anything. People are put on contracts all the time, and then all of a sudden they're released. No one is safe anywhere on any daytime drama anywhere. So really, you can't rely on a contract that they're staying foot. But I really don't know, and I know a lot of people are already asking, "What is the deal that's going on behind the scenes?" Hearing about Scott Clifton getting fired, I was upset that he was released too. Great guy. I had a chance to talk to him on the show a few months ago, and I know he's going to be making an appearance on Joanne's show "Stardish" in a few weeks to talk about that. So I don't know exactly when I was going to take place, but once I find out, I will let you know. I will tweet it on my Twitter. But wasn't that something? That just blew my mind that he was released from the show. Of course, he wasn't supposed to say anything, but of course the rag leaked it on Twitter. That's the power to Twitter everybody. He gets leaked out there before, and it's really supposed to, in like a matter of minutes, but I feel really, really bad for all these actors that he can release. Hopefully, he lands back at General Hospital. I would love that to see him back on there with the Dylan. Or wherever else he may land up. He's a great actor, very, very much liked by a lot of the fans. And I am sure he is still going on Rock the Soap, which is in two weeks. Two weeks from today, Rock the Soap. I believe he is still going on that. Show your support for all those that are going. Show your support for Scott Clifton. Show your support. But we finally got our Michael O'Leary podcast uploaded now. We're going to play this for you. Mind you, when we were doing this, he was in the limo, getting ready to go to the Guying Night event in Connecticut for the So Long Spring Field event. We had a nice little party, so to speak. And the first thing you'll hear him say is how he got the booze. He already got the booze for the car. It was very, it was very fun. Let's go that way. I wasn't there, but I pretty much enjoy the ride with them. And I think you will too. So here it is. Here's an interview that we did with Michael O'Leary back in the beginning of this month, right now. Take a listen. So look at the store and picked up enough booze to take care of the United States Army on furlough. You know, you're going to get wasted. Well, you know what? There's nothing like having a fresh margarita with sea lime juice and the prawn trombone mixed vigorously with a glass rinsed with salt. And do it one of, wait, it's been an afternoon. You realize that after we get done this interview, I'm going to have to go to the liquor store and get some of that stuff now. Now that you just think... Well, listen, it's all about word of mouth and spreading the word. You've got to drink. It's Friday. It's time to still get, I don't know, personally, what's missing here is the fresh table guacamole that's made at your table, which is not to be able to do it. And then you have carol. You know what? Let me sit down here and get comfortable. So I'm glad I planted that thing. Yes. Remember that, though? Remember that, folks? If you ever, if you ever carry in the mood for any kind of liquor, just get whatever it was my chololary said. I'm just going to go ahead and stick with my margarita mix. But you go. Yes. That's exactly it. And pretty much what you're doing right now is not far off of your character on Steam, though, because all I do is see him eat. I mean, he's a man after my own heart. All he does is get... It's all about the brownie diet. And don't forget, ladies and gentlemen, it's all about the brownie bars, the power bars. The six power bars are, it's very important, it's all part of the diet, and you've got to spread the power bars every hour. And every hour, you cannot... For the power bars, you have the breakfast brownie, the lunch brownie, and the dinner brownie, and then you have six power bars. And part of the success of this diet, as you can see from the show, is you cannot drink any liquor before 930 in the morning. OK. I've got to remember this, so it's brownie bars, morning, lunch, and dinner, and in between those is power bars. You've got power bars. You have to have the power bars one hour between every hour on the hour. You cannot drink on this diet before 930 in the morning. You can't drink any liquor after 930 in the morning. It's kind of a hybrid wine-heart liquor diet. So after 4 o'clock, tequila, vodka, rum, all of that is fine. It actually helps the brownie diet better. Now you've seen the show, and obviously, what you're seeing there is, again, it's water weight. It's not fat. [ Laughter ] And I may look like I'm my fifth trimester to get birth, but it's all water weight. OK. Because I simply watched episode 3, and all I saw was your shirt, a little bit like peeking out, a little bit of blood open, like after you just ate Thanksgiving turkey. And it's just like, just busting out of the shirt. I said, "Ew!" [ Laughter ] It's not an oo there, I'm not accomplishing my golf. All I saw, that's all I related it to was just, you just basically ate a big factory, and it's just, we're going to make a road trip. This is the way to make a road trip. A road trip is in the naval area of a man after that gut thing, and that's all here. Uncle Charlie is visiting from Iowa City, and just went through the line, like, several times, and he's sitting there on the couch, waiting for his blueberry cobber. And with that gut hanging out on the couch, I just kind of want to recreate it at home moment. Oh, my goodness. And I don't know how you're able to come up with all these lines, and everybody speaking, especially with Michael Park, I feel so sorry for you. [ Laughter ] My heart goes out to you, especially with his eyes, where he's basically just saying, "I want to hear it." Is that a good idea? No, God, Michael Park and I are having a ball, man. So, you know, I'm part of what I would be excited about is writing a, you know, creative buddy piece, angle, two middle-aged guys on the sofa. Child recapture their youth. Exactly. Yeah, exactly. You know, he says, you know, I'm 41, but I look like I'm 37. Yeah. Bear, are you excited to watch that, John? Yeah, funny. Are you going to wind up having your characters try to wear leather pants and try to get, like, porches and stuff? Yeah, I mean, it's a little bit of a hybrid of entourage, but it's just these two middle-aged guys who are in a business that find them disposable. And I don't know what happened in this episode three today, but I'm jerking, and Michael are on the shop and block to get fired, but luckily something wonderful happens in the next episode, that's a sentence I'm getting fired. Oh, yeah. And there's some gunshots, so... There's some gunshots. Yeah. Somebody ends up getting shot. Uh-oh. Uh-oh. That's intense. That's okay. That's okay. That's okay. I came up with the concept of the show. Was it all you or was it an collaboration between you and Scott Bryce or was it? Uh, I came up with it. Um, about two or three years ago, I just really would have, um, a movie and changed it to 30 minutes that come. Um, about five months. I'm a little passionate. Almost a year ago. And I just thought, you know, this would be really funny. It's never sort of a best-in-show light wind version of a sofa opera. This idea of this camera press calling. So, from behind the scenes, it's like the office. And, um, but I just, I just know, if anybody, when you have a creative idea and when you have a sketch, they say, "Oh, we'll click and actually get this done." Oh, why does it get done? Or just calling favors. And then I thought of Scott Bryce. Scott, you know, working there for the current. He understands the sofa opera thing. Also, you know, for 25 years. And then he's also simultaneously been up in, um, palace, the palace producing this documentary and movies. And so, uh, those are all liquor bottles you're hearing in the background. Work, we're in the limousine. I heard it. I heard it. I know my liquor, man. Yeah. Yeah. That was the tequila bottle bumping into the vodka bottle. So, anyway. You're going to be wasted before this trip is over for you in that limo. I mean, you're pretty much going to be gone. Well, again, it's part of the diet and I cannot drink until after $2.50. Oh, that's true. What time is it? Uh, right now it's $2.09. Okay. I have six minutes to detox. And then we will, uh, we'll pick up with the brand. Actually, it's the power of our time. I had my brownie about an hour ago. But I sat down with Scott and pitched him the idea. And he loved it. And so he just was here, done. Um, and it called all the actors. The actress also, yes. Um, and then we just, we just did it. Who else would you like to see? On, on, on Steam, though, because I know everybody's asking for grant now to come on. Yeah. You know, I mean, would you, I mean, who else would you want to incorporate in this, um, besides, besides grant? Um, well, you know what? The things that has, well, turns it down like they're funny actors. You can go right through the whole cast, the whole cast. And there's just a lot of funny people that have very good capabilities. Um, I, I would love to have the rent. Um, I'd love to have one. The rains come in and play out of the play partner. Kind of like to watch that music director. Um, that, um, you know, uh, directs a, a director in Michael and his, his new musical called "Free Men and a Boat." And so, um, March to say, as, as Dirk's mother, comes in and he's got a crush on Michael. Sorry. You know, so, yeah. Well, they have a great cast right now. And so I, I think our short term goal, obviously, is just to get somebody to keep this, this, this go to float if they say, uh, sponsor us. Yeah. That's kind of what we're looking at right now. Um, these things are times, they're just trying to find, uh, sponsors, people in the cable. And, um, so we're actually trying to shout the show around and, and, uh, and feel like right now, based on the response, people really like you. And that's a little laugh. That's the laugh. What I'm hearing about the web series is like, you know, they're trying to shout for sponsors and everything, like that, trying to find, uh, many, many different outlets that you can, uh, I mean, you know, I love, I love Crystal Suppel to Death and, uh, you know, what she's doing with Venice and all that other stuff. I mean, of course, you know, they had, uh, with, uh, everybody paying. And, you know, you, you know, you, it's really difficult all around for that. I did not hear that. So, you know, we want to keep it. We don't want people to pay. We want to keep it free. Oh, yeah. How old are you? I was talking to, um, have somebody else come in and help keep this thing going. And I hear that we're like the nine or number eight on the country for most downloaded comedy. I did hear that. Yeah, I heard that. And that's the two weeks ago. We're hoping that, you know, based on the formula, people want to laugh and have a good time. And we have where, you know, the whole Latin girl thing is really, you know, the people really like that idea. Uh, this kind of airhead girl that comes in and pushes the Latin product and it's everywhere you look. So, we make that kind of part of the story. So, you know, what's exciting about it, you know, whether or not it is all comes to fruition or happens. We like this. I've always taken a product, making it part of the story. Um, we have so many people blogging and repeating the Latin line. It's not. Okay. It's milky. And it's silly. It's thinking that people have, you know, in the last minute. Yeah. Anybody say is Latin a real product yet? Have you? No. No. That's a product. Um, but we try to get into good. Um, the part and then they said anybody. But, um, you got three minutes, you got three minutes before you can go ahead and do your liquid diet thing. You got three minutes. Three minutes for what? I think you got three minutes before you can go ahead and start drinking liquor. Yeah. Yeah. I know. It's very, uh, I got it. No. I got it. I got it. I got to get the vodka cranberry juice ready. What do you want, vodka cranberry? Vodka cranberry juice. Thank you. That is right before you eat one of my rolls. Oh, that's settled. I do have to go to the licksh. There's like no way I'm going to survive without going to the liquor store now. It's, it's, it's inevitable. Well, enjoy when you live. I'm in Jersey. I am in Jersey. Yeah. We're about from Jersey. Oh, I'm in south of Jersey. Okay. I'm going to put myself out there. But please don't find me. I know. I'll let you were going to pick me up in the limo and I'll just drink with you. That's different. But, uh, yes, yes, yes. But that's where I am born and raised. And, uh, that's the history. That's the history. And, um, I got to, I got to ask the question. Uh, I know you might, you might chuckle a little bit in your head. But was there, uh, with steamboat? This comment was posed to me. And I said, you know what? That's a good question to ask. Okay. Um, did, uh, was there any influences of, of, uh, of a certain show that you were on that kind of helped fuel steamboat a little bit? I saw it. I did, uh, behind the scenes kind of stuff that you have seen within the last two years. Well, one of the things being an Irish guy, people will tell you, is I take a story. I take an, an, uh, eternal of something and then exaggerate it ten times. So I tell stories. It's always, well, carnal truth. And then I exaggerate it and have fun with it. So, you know, what you're seeing, I don't think there's anybody on this show. We're going through the characters here. Um, like, you know, nobody eats this like Tabula. He's a bipolar crazy woman who be separating men. Um, yeah. There's nobody like, um, uh, Daniel St. John who is peddling his facial products. Um, and then I know, um, with Kim's, and with character, um, you know, with plenty of females, she has to produce her shoes and, uh, resemble, you know, anybody. Uh, Otto, um, is a mix of a couple people that actually existed. Um, and then, and then Dirk, um, Dirk is a mix of two different people. Um, but the actual circumstances themselves, you know, um, I, I think the, the, uh, the product integration when you can see this black team kind of is a little bit, uh, there's a kernel of truth to patch that. You know, as we, you know, we have to deal with a product in the middle of the scene. I had to deal with an alligator that talked to me during the scene. Well, some kids dying in my apartment room, which happened a lot, by the way. A lot of my alligator. Yeah. So, uh, from the tell, so I had an alligator left, you know, his eyes moving and I've talked in the little chimney that he's got three, three weeks to live in this alligator talking to me. So that kind of drove me nuts. Um, so, um, where am I going? Oh, wait. Um, yeah, I did an alligator or, uh, how another world ended with the gorilla. Uh, so I can think about an alligator. Yeah. Right. No, but there's an alligator, or it's tied, or, you know, some, some of the other ones, or whatever it is. You know, we had everything on the show. There, toward the end. Uh, yeah. And, uh, I think it was a way of trying to keep the show and monetize things as much as you can. And, uh, so, um, if I lose you, my phone is starting to be on me. So, if I just go bye-bye is because my, my battery is dying on me. Oh, okay. Okay. Uh, that's good you told me because I was like, oh my God, did you just, did you just, hang up? No. Yeah. If I just disappear, my phone. Where? Where am I going? Twenty-three. Twenty-three. Um, okay. Where's the, uh, repeat again? Where is this event that you're going to, uh, what is it? This is a Mohican, Mohican son. It's a little long Springfield event. That's a Mohican son. We, we get up tonight. Um, Sunday. Um, Sunday is the all day event with a fan. Oh, this is just, okay. That's a long Springfield. A long Springfield. Right. Okay. Yeah. And the, in the morning, right? Yeah. Right. I'll stand out, Sandra. That's Chamberlain, Kim Zimmer. Marci Ryan. Um, Robert Newman. Um. Uh, and yes, you said Marci Ryan. Congratulations by the way, Marci. Of your role on Young and Restless. I just shotting that out there. I broke out that actually this morning that, um, she will be, um, on the Young and Restless as Abby Carlton. Now, so I just wanted to make sure I put that out there. Um, now that you had mentioned that. So, yes, I think that's amazing. And I'm looking, as we speak, I'm looking at Marci in this special meeting where I was her beautiful, uh, 13 week old little boy. Oh. And, uh, Matt, Marci was fabulous. Um, she's, um, and got a chance to sit here, but she's very excited. Oh, yeah. I'm looking forward to seeing her back on, on dates on the, um, pop, um, proud of her. So, um, absolutely. And that, that definitely wanted to, uh, bring that out there. How many more episodes of, uh, Steamboat do we have? Um, we have, um, this one, um, I didn't see the one that aired today. Um, we have one, we have two more episodes left. Um, and, so, the clock is 15 more. As we say, we're trying to get as many boots on the ground. We're trying to do everything we can to sell it. Um, we have a very, um, big meeting next week. Um, of which I can't discuss. But, uh, there are people, there are people in the industry watching, and so many communities can see it. And so we're, we're, you know, pursuing that, uh, we're pursuing that right now. And, uh, so we've had game queries. People aren't, people are cruising YouTube. They're all watching for content, and they, they're looking for stuff. And then I think as a new producer, the education for me is, you know, where do you go? And who do you talk to? And that's, you know, challenge. I mean, even with all of the possibilities of the internet looking for content, um, you would think that a show like Steamboat would be a perfect fit. Um, but I think, um, I can share with your audience here is that I heard from somebody from a brand manager for, I can't mention with corporations, but they essentially asserted that you need 1.5 million clicks per day for them to, um, put money behind a webinar. 1.5 million clicks a day. And I am thinking, well, that, hold on a second. Um, I'm thinking, what, that supersedes even the network audience. What is it? Are you kidding me? Are you going to be able to get, like, that kind of, uh, a day? I'm going to absorb 1.5 million. 1.5 million before you get, you know, some advertising. Thank you. Thank you. So anyway, that was just somebody who works with one of these, um, large corporations that got back to me yesterday and said, "No, it's a deal." So, um, but we're, we're continuing to, yeah, I brought it, I brought it. Uh, we think campaign would be a perfect, uh, you know, since we're, you know, it's a lacking girl. Like, you know, people, you know, when are really responding to this whole, we're lacking things. And, um, they really are, they want to be the new lacking girl. And, um, so there's all kinds of marketing, um, ideas that we have. And so, like, anything else with Crystal Chipelle and Martha Byrne, and we're all out there trying to tell this thing, it's really, it's really, you know, that, um, you're optimist, but you're also pragmatic, and since you know that you have a certain amount of time to get the word out there and, you know, make it go viral and let it make people, you know, about it as possible. Um, I, I don't think 1.5 million is, is the, I, I think that if you can get, you know, fifty hundred thousand eyeballs on it, I, I think that you can go to somebody. And I guess, um, maybe a Chevrolet or somebody to, to, um, you know, to look at it in a new way. This is a new way of advertising. We, we really think we have something here with this product integration. And, and, and, and people through the next two episodes, um, I think people, I think the, the guy, the people from, uh, audience, medical care and guiding light have really responded to what people wanted to see call along. They wanted to see their actors, um, yeah, it's funny. And, and, and this is a funny, funny group of people. And I think the thing that's interesting from day time is, you know, you have, you have romance, you have no drama, you have all of that, but people also want to laugh. Especially when today's economy is going on. There are people who want to laugh. It doesn't have to be hot, hot, funny, classic, funny, but, you know, you integrate a story line that has some humor. And make, and make as far to the entertainment side. You're like, uh, you all want, uh, you all want day time to survive and keep going on. And, um, and get through this difficult period. Yeah, we all want that, so, um, everybody's trying to think of how, you know, what's the best way of keeping this thing going. And I think the day time has right now, you know, there's very few scripted programs now and everything's reality and game shows that somehow shows like young arrests and days are alive and all my children and one likes to live. If they can get through the next couple of years and still be viable, then maybe they could, you know, it's really a survival contest. How can we get through this next two years and keep the marketing dollars and hold on to this? Yeah. So, and I, and in my point being, in a roundabout way, I think comedy and humor is a way of adding that as part of the entertainment side. And, and, and, because I think that's what people are, you know, they want to laugh. There's so much bad news out there right now, I think people want to just have something for a whole lot of fun, like, rainbow. We actually, I was actually talking to somebody about this last night, you know, with everything that has been happening. And I'm not just in the day and time took it everywhere around the world with any disaster, a chilly disaster. All this suicide has been happening. You're pretty much, all you're doing is you're pretty much, you're pretty much tired of the time. You're like, I mean, look at that stuff. I, I stopped reading the newspaper. I used to be an information just, you know, read the newspapers every day. I stopped doing that because I think for the audience that's early, I think there's only so much bad news you can take, you know. Yeah. When I see these, these young, these children hating who are now, you know, without homes and we don't have families and this thing, and chilly, you know, you, you seem, are you inundated with this bad news? And I've always felt, I, I couldn't my day, every day, I watched her mute views again. I want, I, I want my day with a laugh and, and that's because I don't watch any news. I, I don't watch anything. I turn on creepy enthusiasm. I hear the laugh and stuff. Um, I can guess why, you know, to look at the posts and people are listening to both. They find it hilarious, but I think it's, it's nice to, to, to version, to see all these people that they watch over the years and give a chance to watch and be fun and have fun. And it's not, we're not talking about rocket scientists here. I mean, I, I have heavy chains and types of sensibilities. I like broad humor and, and, um, silly humor. And so, you know, that's what we're trying to do with this. And it is a lot of stories we've told. We just know that, you know, we've got some work ahead of us here. We're looking to get, um, this, this soul and, and so forth. But we are meeting people in the industry, you know, who are responding to it and we're just hoping that, you know, in the next two weeks that something happens. I think that's a, that's my, it's definitely the right direction, especially if people are in the industry are looking into one of the major, major comments. Like you just said, that everybody's been saying, like, they had no idea that the actors could do comedy. And once they see that, then it's, they relate to them a whole new level now. And especially for me, because, you know, I had, I mean, you and Michael Parker, I mean, I've seen you guys, um, have a comedic side, but I've never seen that with anybody else. Like with Kim or Beth, and it's just, it's a different, it's fresh. It's a different face. So I think, I think that's why a lot of people respond to the whole comedy thing on it now. Right. And Michael Parker is, Michael Parker is freaking his miracle. And, um, you know, our last episode, I guarantee the last thing that we have is off the charts funny. And, um, and so one of the wonderful surprises never acted. I've never acted with Michael Parker before. Um, you know, like a couple people, you know, said, you know, put him to his part or said, no to it. And then I thought of Michael Parker because Michael read his part three years ago. He's funny. Oh, I'll have him. And so once we got on the set, I go, holy crap. You know, we've had great chemistry. That kind of chemistry I had with Grant. And, um, he's just a funny, funny guy. But that kind of experience that we had when we shot this and having so much fun is what it's like making me really, I can't wait to write the next one. We've already got the stories ready to go. Now we just got to find a way out paper. Thank you, everybody. Everybody did this for a project and that thing. Yeah, I don't know. Right. Yeah. How is it hard to keep your composer when you're doing your scene? Is it Michael Parker's all the time or? He's doing something. I'm not trying to say he's doing something. How is it difficult to keep your composer when you're doing the scenes with Michael Parker? Yeah. I mean, if people watch the last scene that we did, they cut off really early because Michael laughed at me and I laughed at him. So it's hard for us to keep a straight face. Um, so it's very hard because we had to do stuff over and over again because Michael looked at me and started laughing. And, um, so, yeah, that's a challenge. Michael and I keep a straight face. Um, our last scene together, the whole show is built around this barbecue idea that, you know, we're just gonna ask. We're trying to give people some of our barbecue. It never ends up going to Daniel St. John's barbecue for months because he's gonna have fun, Jobe, and he's got all these things. Um, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Um, I'm wondering if I should get the majority of the way or not. You know, I won't give a straight away, but you can't give too much away. Don't give too much away. Don't give it away. Yeah. What's that? If you can't give anything away or too much away, don't give it away. Okay. Yeah, I can't give the story away, but Michael makes a decision about what he wants to do. And, um, we had to do it over three or four times. And, uh, so I got to tell you, I'm so excited about this show and so hard about the past. I had this whole money and nothing to make me happier to have this experience. This guy didn't, like, continue an immediate form. Yeah, and that's what we're all hoping for. I mean, I would love after some actual turns to come on board because there's, there's, there are a ton of actors on the show that are terrible. And, you know, they don't want to see, they don't want to see it go away in any kind of capacity, you know, when the news broke out about as well as we'll turn below and go to my game camp. So they don't want to see this go away and see one of their favorite actors. Right. And, and, and I, I would say this too. I, I would say that we don't want, uh, actors in general don't want to make the networks that operate out of our employment. You know, we want to look at the internet table as these new ways of getting our ideas out there. And, um, if you're relying on the network to, you know, green light something, you're going to wake the whole pieces over. So, I wouldn't want this project to be on the network. I'd rather be on cable with the internet because I, I don't think it would, it would last for a long time. And I think it'd give a chance to, to have, to give it some legs. And that's the advantage of the internet is if you can find banner advertising or somebody just to give it some legs, then we can develop our stories and we can get a bigger following. And that's why we decided to go to YouTube Facebook route, is that we knew it would give us the opportunity to, to, uh, develop our ideas and get it out there. I think it like, if it were on the network, you wouldn't have too much of the free reign that you have with it now. I think like, if you did it, did it on the network, you would pretty much have to cut lots of things out of the show that you want to do that now you can't do it. I think if you did it on the internet or on cable, you would still be able to. I don't know if they would have kept the team with Michael Park, been over a, uh, meeting that over a chair with the hand cuts on. I mean, they're only up to school. You know, that, uh, or Michael Park cancer, uh, are doing cries that put it in his box of torts. Right. And again, when I listen to you, which I will probably neck five minutes, my battery died, so I just wanted to give you a heads up. Absolutely. No, but we're all having a good time and, um, you know, it's, it's, it's been, you know, uh, overwhelming to get the response that we have. And I was driving around, um, doing some stuff for Steamboat, and I got a phone call about a hospital. A nice opportunity for the show. And, and so, you know, all you can hope when you're on your creative end with a little bit of hope to keep it going. And that's what we're giving it. And so we're just trying to keep that positive going right now. I think you do it. I think you're doing a fantastic job. The fan has been great. Everybody has joined it. I'm enjoying it. And, you know, I, I hope we get to see it for a second season. Yeah, we do too. We do too. We, um, we're all, all I can tell you is every day when we wake up, where we, and then we have a tremendous amount of people who have stepped up, you know, with something like this, you need a lot of boots on the ground. And we've had a lot of fans who've come up and said, "What can I do to help?" And we deeply appreciate those people. And we have been the fans who have helped us go viral by attending the, the, the website address around, and that's the other thing that we, you know, we deeply appreciate. So everybody, you know, our audience right now wants us to succeed, so letting all their friends know it. And then this is the other unexpected thing I think, as I said before, probably, I'm repeating myself, but the kids love the show. So, you know, I, I showed this to my daughters. I felt comfortable with my daughters seeing it. Everything is hysterical, so we look at somebody like, say, Nickelodeon or something like that, and we hope that, um, that we can have the perfect legs for economic central Nickelodeon, um, something like that. Um, so, if anybody listens to this, um, has children pass it on to their, pass it on to their kids, or your kids watch it, and have their kids, you know, send out the information to their, to their friends. Okay. Are you very? I've never really, I've never really considered it, you know, and, uh, kids would enjoy the show, like, no, no, we didn't, but what we realized is that all the actors and the editors, the people, the kids watch it over and over, and my daughter had a sleepover with a kid, and they'll watch it over and over and over, and they'll laugh, they'll laugh, they'll laugh, they'll laugh. Well, what is it? You know, it's maybe like a, uh, sort of a, I don't know. I don't know, these are, you know, well, you know, maybe these folks watching adults can really eat themselves. Wait, that's it. That could be it. I never really know, we only have one, you know, we have, uh, Candy Loosen, or, you know, early 20s, but the rest of it, you know, it's just, like, folks making the tools themselves, um, and they can't, they really love that. They love us. They love the opening credits. They love Otto, who they love, Michael Park, and they like, um, uh, Candy, and they love the goofiness of it too. Yeah, so I made this, by the way, actually, I tried to make it as, as, as pretty much possible, um, because I do think, um, I thought it was a couple things in it. I do think you could make, I just, you could make satire in, in humor and not, not be really overly provocative and nasty and, um, um, um, inappropriate. And everybody else, as long as you got into this and do that, you get, you know, people who watch it. So I, I kind of made this, not with the idea of young people watching, but I thought, you know, my, my goal was to try to make it as fun as possible as making it not as, as dirty or skankier. You know, that's right. So, uh, as a result of that, unexpectedly, kids are, like, flipping out over the show, and so we're trying to channel that, um, that audience, and, you know, into the, to the website. You can watch. All right, that was our interview with Michael O'Leary as you heard that he self-funded, cut out, uh, during, during the interview. So we were able to fade it out a little bit that way. We gave you a little taste, and hopefully he will be back on the show. I have no doubts about that. So we will be getting him for a return visit to the show. Again, let's do a little couple of updates of who's going to be coming on the show next. I did forget one, so I'm going to make sure I get this in before I sign off. Monday. This coming Monday. March 29th. I had to make sure I got my dates right. March 29th. At 8 p.m. Eastern, 5 p.m. Pacific. We're going to be joined by Victoria Rau. She played the role of just, uh, just, uh, she's still a Barbara Winters. Hello. Hi. How are you doing? She's still a Barbara Winters. I'll see if you stay time to be young, and the rest list. She has a new book coming out called Secrets of a Soap Viva. I believe it's supposed to hit the stores in May. So we will be talking to her this coming Monday night. I'm looking forward to seeing all you guys tuning for that one. Also on Wednesday, James Scott who plays the role of E.J. DiMera on NBC's Days of Our Lives. We'll be joining us for the very first time on our show. 8 p.m. Eastern, 5 p.m. Pacific on Wednesday. Then on April 8th, April 8th, at 11.30 a.m. Eastern, 8.30 a.m. Pacific. We're going to be joined by Tiffany, 80's pop star Tiffany. When we're in a song, I think we're alone now. That's who I'm talking about, that Tiffany, right there. She'll be spending as she's going to talk about her movie that she just did. That's supposed to air on sci-fi, the original movie, Mega Pirana. We're going to be talking to her about that as well as her getting back into the music scene I recently found out. So we'll be talking shop with her. But for now, we're signing off. I want to thank you guys for tuning in. I want to thank Michael O'Leary and William Ragsdale. Check out William Ragsdale on FX, justified, as well as Michael O'Leary on the original web series theme boat. For now, I'm Nicole J. Lee, signing off, making sure you guys get them his bugs with Buzzworthy Radio. We'll see you guys next week. Take care. Can't get enough of Buzzworthy Radio. Knock on now to www.buzzworthyradio.net. To get the latest news, I'm upcoming guest, past shows and videos of all your favorite stars. Keep getting the latest Buzz with Buzzworthy. [MUSIC PLAYING]
William Ragsdale, Gary Hawkins on FX's new series, "Justified," will be making an appearance on BuzzWorthy Radio!

After attending Hendrix College where he appeared in plays with Sling Blade actress and fellow Arkansan Natalie Canerday, he gained attention as the young hero of Fright Night and Fright Night II, a series of humorous vampire films co-starring Roddy McDowall. He also performed in theatre productions of Neil Simon plays Biloxi Blues[3] and Brighton Beach Memoirs.

Ragsdale has had a sporadic career on prime-time television. He starred for three years in the Fox Network sitcom Herman's Head. He had a brief recurring role in Judging Amy as the obnoxious son of Richard Crenna's character. He played a TV producer on Grosse Pointe, which lasted one season. He was cast in the pilot for Charmed, but turned down the series to star in the short-lived sitcom Brother's Keeper. He appeared on Ellen as a boyfriend of the character Ellen Morgan (Ellen DeGeneres), before Morgan (and DeGeneres herself) came out of "the closet" as a lesbian. He played bit roles in numerous movies and television series, including a four-episode stint on Less Than Perfect.

Oddly enough, he lost movie roles in both Glory and Biloxi Blues to Matthew Broderick, but did work with Broderick in the 2009 film Wonderful World.