Bill Lawrence has been around long enough to hear the comedy, the multicam sitcom â everything, really â declared dead. And for just as long, heâs kept his head down, making shows like âSpin City,â âScrubsâ and âCougar Town.â
Over three decades and various Hollywood business models, heâs experienced good times and bad.
But these days, Lawrence is very squarely in an upturn.
âI didnât expect to have a career renaissance at 55,â he says at his office on the Warner Bros. lot in Burbank.
Just summarizing his full plate leaves little doubt. Thereâs âShrinking,â starring Jason Segel as a grieving widower and therapist who takes an unconventional approach with his client and those in his orbit, including his grumpy mentor, Paul, played by Harrison Ford. The Apple TV+ series, which Lawrence co-created with Segel and Brett Goldstein, concludes its second season Wednesday and has been renewed for a third. Thereâs also âBad Monkey,â an adaptation of Carl Hiaasenâs novel starring Vince Vaughn that launched on Apple TV+ earlier this year and was recently renewed for a second season, and a forthcoming campus-set HBO comedy starring Steve Carell, which revolves around an authorâs complicated relationship with his daughter.
Then there are the shows many thought were over for good. After years of being asked about a reboot of âScrubs,â his NBC medical comedy starring Zach Braff and Donald Faison that ran from 2001 to 2010, one is finally in development, with Lawrence attached as an executive producer. And a year after âTed Lasso,â the feel-good comedy about a British soccer team and their wholesome coach, aired what appeared to be its series finale, it was announced that the series â co-created by Lawrence, Jason Sudeikis, Brendan Hunt and Joe Kelly â will actually return for a fourth season.
Taking a break from the writers room of the Carell-led series, Lawrence sat down with The Times to discuss âShrinkingâsâ season finale, what finally got him to revive âScrubs,â and whether television can get back to its days of making stars.
Season 1 ended with a cliffhanger, literally. This seasonâs finale feels like an emotional cliffhanger, with the start of some closure for Jimmy with Louis, the person responsible for his wifeâs death.
We wanted to use the ending of the first season to set people up to think that something very bad was going to happen at the end of the second season. Thatâs why we had bad things happen to Brett Goldsteinâs character, Louis â had him at the train station with Alice [Lukita Maxwell] talking about how heâd had bad thoughts being there before.
In a season about forgiveness, we wanted the finale to be a connection between how forgiveness can wipe away so many bad things. We knew from the start of the season that thatâs how we were going to end the season. I saw the traffic on the internet of people getting worried about Louis, and itâs what we want them to feel. Itâs emotionally resolved in the way that I hope people feel good, but also wonât be surprised if they see Brett again â because we have the advantage of Brett being one of the creators of the show.
So, this opens the door for more Louis?
I think the audience would feel cheated if that were not the case. Obviously, Brettâs got tons of sâ heâs working on, but he is so good in the show this year, so the idea of getting to show how he [Louis] moves forward interests us. Donât forget, we pitched this show where the first year is about grief, second year is about forgiveness, [the] third year is about moving forward. It would be weird to not include his character as part of that.
Are you still thinking in terms of three seasons? Can you see the show going beyond that?
Yes and no. I think that this story is over in three seasons because if we started the fourth season with Jason Segel going, âIâm still so sad about my wife dying and I really messed up with my daughter,â people would be like [contorts face into a look of agony]. One of the fun things that weâve done, because weâre in the writers room already for Season 3, is weâre putting Easter eggs in it as to what the new story that starts Season 4 is about. One of the cool things about streaming, what you can do now, is do a three-season story that has a beginning, middle and end. If people love those characters, thereâs plenty stories to tell.
The actor reflects on living in L.A., her love of ceramics and her starring role in Apple TV+âs âShrinking,â now in its second season â while battling traffic.
To expand more on Louis â so many people in similar situations have to achieve the closure without getting to know the person responsible for their loved oneâs death. What led to the decision to incorporate his character into that process for Jimmy and Alice?
Not to divulge too many peopleâs personal stories and connections, but it was loosely connected to a true story of a family that had embraced a young person who was their Louis, [a person who had] gotten drunk and made a mistake. So knowing that existed in real life and how amazing it was to see somebody not only have to face that, but as storytellers, try and make them achieve forgiveness for something that on its surface seems impossible to do, I thought was a super cool challenge as writers. Even when people on the internet go, âI could never forgive.â Well, keep watching.
Letâs talk about Paul. Another emotional moment from the finale is the speech he gives at Thanksgiving. Itâs so powerful and tender. We know his Parkinsonâs disease will continue to progress. And I know that characterâs story is a personal one for you.
The third season is going to be about how it continues. But moving forward doesnât have to be death. It could also mean, âWhatâs the rest of your life gonna look like? Are you able to persevere?â My dad has Lewy body [dementia] and Parkinsonâs, Brettâs dad has Parkinsonâs. I was just randomly talking to [actor Michael J. Fox] the other day, because heâs one of my first major mentors. It does not have a great end, as a disease, but that doesnât mean itâs not gonna be an inspiring, uplifting take on the story. And I donât want people to go in thinking that Harrison Fordâs character has to die because that might be too sad.
Has Michael seen the show? Has he given any feedback?
Mikey reached out to me because â he was so kind â we were just shooting the sâ. We connected over the summer and he reached out because he had caught up on the show. He nicely said we had gotten a lot of the things right. He is way too young and is still such a rock star with that disease.
Have you thought about finding a way to have him in the show?
I would kill to. Just know that I have and will continue to ask to work with Mike â he was cool enough to do âScrubs.â I would kill to find a way to get him into this world. Heâs the busiest person I know and I can never tell you what heâs up for. Thereâs an open invite.
Might Cobie Smulders, Jasonâs former âHow I Met Your Motherâ co-star who guest starred this season, make a return next season? Is there interest in exploring that dynamic for Jimmy for the season focused on moving forward?
Good idea.
What is Jimmy to you? What are you working through in Jimmy?
Iâm trying to say this without divulging too much about the third season. But Jimmy has built a found family around himself. I have a real family around me. My last kid is 18 and about to split. My other two kids are gone. My wife is taking it in stride. I am not. So, a component of this storytelling, and what moving forward means, is I would imagine that a character like Jimmyâs nightmare would be to end up alone. We very intentionally set up a daughter thatâs going off to college. And he currently has somebody living in his pool house that probably shouldnât be and so I think thatâs what Iâm wrestling through. How do you hold on to the things that make you feel safe and comfortable?
Jason Segel co-created and stars as a grief-stricken therapist in an Apple TV+ comedy, co-starring Harrison Ford and Jessica Williams.
You also launched âBad Monkeyâ this year. The tone was a departure for you. How did it push you, writing-wise?
I was inspired by Harrison Ford, who just did a Marvel movie. I asked him when he took the job, âWhy are you doing it?â He said, âI want to do sâ I havenât done before and weâll see how it goes.â Iâm trying to look for stuff that makes me scared the way I used to be scared. Carl Hiassen was my favorite writer since I was 14 years old. And going to your favorite writer and essentially saying, âI want to take one of your books and add eight chapters in the middle, and then change some stuff,â is bananas. That challenge of trying to capture someone elseâs voice and meld it with my own was super, super fun.
You made headlines with the news about the revival of âScrubs.â The question of bringing it back has followed you for years. So what was it that finally got you on board with the idea?
Itâs so interesting because you canât give an answer that makes everybody happy. Iâll start with, if I thought it was a bad idea, I wouldnât do it. Iâm not chasing commerce and without being self-aggrandizing, I donât need to. Creatively, if somebody said, âDo you want to pick âScrubsâ up right back in the same hospital with the same people on a normal day, everythingâs back to normal?â No, that would be disingenuous to the story. Am I curious and can I think of a bunch of stories about where some of these characters are years later, not being kid interns anymore, and having new young people around them, with the way the medical world has changed â yeah, without a shadow of a doubt. That creative answer was easy. The complicated thing, and why I was always hesitant, was I donât work for Disney anymore. I work here [Warner Bros.], and itâs not really, business-wise, a show I was allowed to go do. Itâs not jerky for Warner Brothers to say, âWeâre not employing you to go do a Disney show.â
The thing that changed is the cast are all tight in real life and as a lot of us do, at this point in our lives, covet that experience. So [thereâs] the amount of friends that [say], âMan, it would be fun to have that experience again because we all really loved each other.â And you connect that directly to a time in Hollywood that not only are we not making a ton of stuff, but people that I really care about and love, both in front of and behind the camera, theyâre scrambling, hustling to find work. The best thing for the show is a sad state of affairs, which there are amazing writers that are available. Itâs not going to be a mailed-in cash grab. There will be a bunch of the original âScrubsâ writers on the show; there will also be a bunch of new writers. Someone was like, âI hope this doesnât happen.â That made me incredulous. Like, why the fâ would you care if it happened? Heâs like, âI just love the show so much, it would tarnish it.â I donât think thatâs true. Shows that I care about have had reboots. This is my attitude: If itâs a show I love, Iâm gonna watch it. If itâs great, Iâm gonna be super happy. If itâs good, whatever, at least it didnât offend me. And if it sucks, Iâm gonna be super happy to badmouth how much it sucks to my friends. Not on the internet. But thatâs how I watch TV. To me, thatâs a no-lose. Whatâs the big deal?
Not to get way too deep on you, Iâve got my own stuff to work through. You hinted at it before and I would probably, without telling anybody the reasons, just say: Iâm doing this just because itâs something thatâs important to me for my own stuff. Iâll live with the consequences.
I know youâre not going to be the showrunner, but when do things start up in the writers room?
In the new year. I canât say who they are because the showrunner deal is being made as we speak, but as soon as thatâs done, weâll start. Weâve already been shooting the sâ because weâre old friends, but weâll start coming up with the idea of where the world starts and whoâs doing what. Theyâve said itâs been so weird going back and watching every episode. My ultimate goal on the whole thing is just to get the music restored to the old episodes.
Another show thatâs returning is âTed Lasso,â which youâre an executive producer on. Throughout its third season the question loomed about whether it was a series finale or a season finale. Jason Sudeikis had conceived it as a three-season show, but things changed. What happened?
Iâm always very careful to make sure it never comes out on my mouth like itâs my show, because Iâm so proud to be part of it. But Jasonâs the guy driving the wheel on that. But the one thing that he was always very clear about, without divulging anything, is that the story that we came up with for the first three seasons was âTed Lassoâ had a beginning, middle and end; without a doubt it had an end, you saw him jumping around and go home. It helped cement my thoughts and I donât want to speak for him, but itâd be interesting to see that thereâs always another story to tell with characters that people like, but itâs a different story. Itâs almost a self-reboot. I think that he [Jason] always had in his head another story he wanted to tell.
As I was looking back at our previous coverage of you, there was a quote from 2013 that stood out to me that I want to read to you. Iâm curious how you would amend this quote: âThere are two ways to survive in television now, and one is really hard, and I havenât cracked it yet, which is to grab hold of this giant zeitgeist hit like âModern Family,â where everyone in the world wants to see it, and you just write your own ticket. The other way is to appeal to a very specific, very loyal group of people, and if you make that contract, you can keep a show like âScrubsâ alive for nine years.â
The only thing thatâs been added to that is a âvery specific show that appeals to a very specific streaming siteâs brand.â Because theyâre all different.
Iâll add one other thing. Nowadays, it seems that a lot of the shows are âWhatâs the biggest, most talented movie stars you can get?â â and itâs such a gift to get to work with these people. A career highlight for me, no matter what, is to be involved in this stage of Harrison Fordâs career.
Iâm behind the curtain and get to see how expensive these shows are, and they better be a hit or successful or else you donât get to make them. I think thereâs going to be a third way of going, âCan you find a way in â to go back to the past, in this sense â of doing a show that creates stars instead of the other way around and that you can get the burden of massive financial success off of it because itâs so inexpensive to do and make?â Iâm trying to find my way to those things now. Thereâs tons of positive results of the strike, but one of the positives is, understandably, a lot of places going, âI wonder if thatâs the thing you can do?â The second anybody nails it, the better.
The co-creator of the Apple TV+ series discusses the Season 1 finale and Harrison Fordâs comedic timing (and his love of Fun Dip).
Speaking of working with big Hollywood stars, youâve got Steve Carell starring in your next comedy series, which will be for HBO.
He is the nicest human being Iâve ever met. Heâs one of those people that at first youâre like, âThis canât be real.â Because Iâm a cynic. But heâs so kind and so great at setting culture. Iâm a massive fan when actors and actresses that can do huge, big comedic swings and still make you give a sâ. People watch âThe Officeâ for a reason. It was so funny, but I cannot believe that that specific character, as broad and insanely backwards as his thinking was, could still turn a knob and pull on my heart. Thereâs nobody better at this.
I love the experience [of working with a big star] at this point in my career more than I did [during âSpin Cityâ] with [Fox] because I have the 10,000 hours [of practice]. And I think with people this skilled, they have to know and believe that youâre as good at this or at least as much of a veteran as they are. It took me a second for a Harrison to be like, âoh, you know how to do this?â
You directed the Season 2 finale of âShrinking.â How was it to direct Harrison Ford?
It was a gift. It was so fun being collaborative with Harrison because some of the beats in the finale, we made up on the fly. One of them was, I remember saying, âI need something to end on. And I think what would be funny, to imply that everybodyâs leaving, is to see Alice (Lukita Maxwell) wearing your hat.â
I love the peck on the cheek that he gives her.
You see! Thatâs him. I said, âAnd you come back and get your hat, youâre annoyed at her.â And he was like, âI love that, but Iâd have to give her a smooch.â Thatâs the best reason to do it because not only did he take my pitch, but he made it better. Heâs an absolute gamer. At one point, he didnât want to do this joke with the phrase âraw doggingâ in it. Because he didnât really know what it was about. Then we told him. And heâs like, âOh, thatâs pretty funny.â And he went for it. It was the funniest thing in the world. I remember sitting behind the monitors going, âI love that Harrison Ford is saying this so much. Itâs bringing me joy.â
Now, Iâm just imagining the process of you explaining to him what it is.
No, no, not me. Someone else had to tell him.
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