Ike Barinholtz Jokes He's 'Lucky to Be Alive' After Driving With ‘The Studio' Costar Seth Rogen
Here, the actor delves into his preparation for The Studio, known for its long takes, and how Running Point, based on the life story of Lakers president Jeanie Buss, had its own unique challenges.
More from The Hollywood Reporter
How 'Survival of the Thickest,' 'Mo' and 'Shrinking' Are Helping Destigmatize Therapy for Men of Color
Ted Sarandos' 'Studio' Appearance Is a Wink - And a Flex
The Hollywood Reporter Sets Tonys Preshow
Your work on andoverlapped a bit, right? What was that experience like?
Yes, Running Point started maybe six weeks beforehand, but there was definitely an overlap. I'd never done that to that extent, for an extended period of time. I'm so lucky to have the partners that I have in Dave Stassen and Mindy Kaling and to have to work for guys like Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg, who just make it easy, and they make it so when you roll into one place, you know exactly what's going on. It was intense, but hey, that's what I signed up for.
In terms of , Seth Rogen wrote Sal Saperstein for you. What were those early conversations with him like?
He called me many years ago, and he was like, 'I love The Larry Sanders Show. Evan Goldberg and I are doing a show about showbiz, and we're writing a part for you. Would you do it?' And it was a very easy yes. The Larry Sanders Show is one of my favorite shows of all time, and I've never really gotten a chance to do anything that really puts an eye on this business. But things happen where someone will say something to you, and then the show never materializes, or they end up making it with someone else, so I just said, 'I'm in.' Every six months or so, he would call me and be like, 'You're in, right?' And I was like, 'It's your show, dude!' But then at some point, Dave [Stassen, showrunner] and I were approached by Mindy [Kaling] to come on Running Point. And then a year later, we were rolling [on Running Point].
How did your career in Hollywood prepare you for the role, given that you've had experience with studio executives?
The key to making it in Hollywood is being OK with endless rejection, disappointment, moments of great joy and excitement surrounded by nightmarish anxiety. I have been very lucky to be a writer and a producer, and I have dealt with a lot of executives on the other side of it, and the vast majority are smart and nice people who really just want the movie to be as good as possible while keeping their job. I had a lot to tap into when it came to putting Sal together. I came into this business in the 2000s, which was a crazy time, where you had the excess and bad behavior left over from the '90s, but you also had incredible yield. You had incredible comedy. I had seen a lot of executives come and go, and I tried to find someone who made their bones in that era and is still around, so they got to experience the excess and bad behavior of the 2000s but then have made it through the 'awakenings' of the 2010s and '20s. Sal's just a guy who's partied and done it all and been in multiple threesomes at Sundance over the years, but now in 2025 he understands there are certain things you have to change, otherwise you won't last.
What is Sal's day like when he's not working?
I think every other weekend he spends with his daughters. I definitely believe that after work, he is a martini guy. I think he could do an espresso martini if he would find himself at a brunch, but he's an old-school, normal, Vesper-ish martini guy. I could see Sal five nights a week going to Dan Tana's or Spago or Sushi Park. I could see him spending a lot of time throwing down the silver Amex. If I had to go out five nights a week, I would just die. He also probably joined some weird private gym where he just sits and reads The New York Times.
What would've been Sal's bar mitzvah theme?
Sal's bar mitzvah was in 1990 and would have had a theme of a film from that year, so maybe Home Alone? Possible chance his dad got Daniel Stern [who played Marv the burglar] to come.
The show has some extraordinary continuous takes — what was that like for you being in front of the camera?
Seth driving is just … I'm just lucky to be alive. I'm just praying in multiple different languages and religious tomes to make it through that scene. He's a very good driver, but he's a very fast driver, and we're driving cars that were built in, like, 1959. You think affable, sweet, Jewish Canadian stoner. But no, he wants to go fast. He should be in a Fast & Furious movie. As Seth Rogen. At some point, Vin [Diesel]'s character, Dom Toretto, is like, 'There's only one guy we could call, and it's Seth Rogen. He's mishpocha,' which is Yiddish for family. But no, to prepare to do this was unlike anything I'd done in my life.
What was your most challenging scene?
One of the first scenes I shot was [with] Chase Sui Wonders, which was a very big, emotional one. I'm going from screaming to crying to being grateful. Also, I didn't know Chase, we had just literally met, and she's such a sweet young lady, and she's like, 'Nice to meet you. I'm a big fan.' And then an hour later, I'm just in her face, like, 'You loser!' I would say the stuff in Vegas toward the end was rough. We shot for basically two weeks, every day, long hours, and we're shooting on a live casino floor late at night and dragging nude Bryan [Cranston] through the lobby of The Venetian.
Were people in the casino trying to approach you all?
We had a great crew that had a lot of spotters, but I mean, you're going through a packed casino floor with Seth Rogen, Bryan Cranston, Catherine O'Hara and Kathryn Hahn. Everyone likes at least one of them, if not all of them. I like to gamble a bit, and when we'd do hair and makeup, you'd have 20 minutes until you have to be on set, and I would just kind of walk past a blackjack table. I was playing, and Cranston walks past, and he's like, 'What are you up? What are you down?' And the dealer froze. He's like, 'Was that Bryan Cranston?' And I was like, 'Yeah,' and he goes, 'Your Honor is the greatest show I've ever seen.' And I was like, 'Yeah, it's amazing. And Breaking Bad!' He goes, 'Never seen it.' There is a guy out there who's like, 'My favorite actor, Bryan Cranston, Your Honor.'
The show has amazing guest stars — was there a standout for you? Other than your dad.
Obviously, my dad! It's impossible to pick just one. Martin Scorsese is a very important person in my life, and I never thought I would get to work with him, let alone act with him, so that was surreal. … Every day there was a new person where you're like, 'I can't believe I'm sitting in a sprinter van with Ron Howard.' It'll be interesting, for season two, who do you get? How do you top it? You've got to get Tom Hanks or something.
After a day of intense filming, what was your way to decompress?
When you're acting, especially all day in every scene, it is nice to come home and, at least I try, to watch like a half hour of either a TV show or a basketball game or something. But for this show, I would come home and have to instantly go into my office and work on my lines for the next day, so when I show up, I'm prepared. But it is a bit of a must that if I get home before 10 o'clock, a basketball game is really nice. Vegas was interesting because in L.A., you wrap at 8:30 pm. People are like, 'bye, see you guys tomorrow.' In Vegas, you wrap and you're standing in front of a martini bar and Catherine O'Hara is like, 'does anyone want a martini?' We did get to unwind a little bit after shooting some of those long days in Vegas with a drink or two, or in some cases, seven.
In terms of , I know there was a different creative team involved first and you joined later.
Initially, Mindy came to Dave and I with the idea, and we, at the time, were knee deep doing History of the World Part II with Mel Brooks. And we were bummed, because we for years were like, we got to figure out a thing to do with Mindy again, just because we love her so much. She's so funny. We just kind of missed each other, which happens. And then by the time we had finished History, she came back, and she was like, 'Hey, we're trying something new.' We sat down and talked about what we thought the show could be and then we pitched it and I think Warners and Netflix saw the path we wanted to go. Before you know, we were back in Mindy's office ordering humongous Italian sub sandwiches just like the old days.
How did you collaborate with Jeanie Buss and Linda Rambis, given that the show is based on Jeanie's story?
I've been lucky enough to know them for a few years, and they really are two of the nicest people I've ever met. They gave us unprecedented access, where they would let us come to the training center in El Segundo. Walking around the locker room, Austin Reaves came out in a towel and was like, 'Oh, shucks y'all, nice to meet you.' … We knew the tone we wanted, and we knew a little bit of how we wanted Isla [played by Kate Hudson] to be, but hanging with Jeanie and seeing how her employees react to her, and how they interact with each other, really informed a lot, because they love her and she loves them. That informed the writing, because we wanted the characters to be flawed. We love Succession, and we love how they just constantly shit on each other, but we really wanted to make sure there was a big undercurrent of love, and seeing that firsthand really helped us. … I'll never forget, the first day we did our camera test, and Kate walks out. She's got the hair with the little bangs, and she's got the skirt with the blouse tucked, and the lanyard. And I was like, 'It's Jeanie.'
Kate and Jeanie have known each other since Kate was little. Did their relationship aid the storytelling?
I think when I hear both those names, Kate Hudson and Jeanie Buss, I think of Southern California. I think they just kind of emerged from the Pacific Ocean and walked onto the beach, whether it's Manhattan Beach or the Palisades or wherever. I didn't know [they knew each other], I was just like, that makes the binding ties stronger. … It's amazing when you think about the lives both these women have led, and the fact that now one is kind of playing a version inspired by the other is just delicious.
What challenges did you face?
Shooting basketball is hard and very expensive. We knew this was a comedy about a family that owns a basketball team, and not about players. At first, I was like, 'How are we going to shoot basketball? We're not able to fill an arena, and we don't have the budget that, say, a Winning Time has.' But Dave Stassen brilliantly made the choice to make it feel almost like a Nike commercial from the mid-'90s. … TV budgets are just not what they used to be, so envisioning a show that was supposed to be very big, and still making it look beautiful and cool, but not having all the tools to have it, is something that was challenging at times, but I think we did it.
This story first appeared in a May stand-alone issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. To receive the magazine, click here to subscribe.
Best of The Hollywood Reporter
'The Studio': 30 Famous Faces Who Play (a Version of) Themselves in the Hollywood-Based Series
22 of the Most Shocking Character Deaths in Television History
A 'Star Wars' Timeline: All the Movies and TV Shows in the Franchise
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


UPI
2 hours ago
- UPI
Watch: 'Invasion' stars face 'more powerful' aliens in Season 3
Apple TV+ released another trailer for "Invasion" ahead of the Season 3 premiere Aug. 22. Photo courtesy of Apple TV+ Aug. 5 (UPI) -- Season 3 of "Invasion" follows cast members as they face off against "new, more powerful" aliens. Apple TV+ released a new preview Tuesday that shows the characters being recruited "to cross through the dead zone" and deal with the formidable creatures. "The ultimate apex aliens have finally emerged, rapidly spreading their deadly tendrils across our planet," an official synopsis reads. "It will take all our heroes working together, using all their experience and expertise, to save our species." Golshifteh Farahani, Shioli Kutsuna, Shamier Anderson, India Brown, Shane Zaza, Enver Gjokaj and Erika Alexander star. Season 3 arrives on the streamer Aug. 22.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Black Sabbath's Geezer Butler Reflects on Band's Final Rehearsals, Concert Before Ozzy Osbourne's Death: He Was So 'Frail'
Black Sabbath co-founder Geezer Butler recalls being surprised at how 'frail' Ozzy Osbourne was in the weeks leading up to the band's last concert on July 5. In a post on The Sunday Times, bassist Butler recounted the rehearsals for the show in Villa Park, located in Birmingham, England, not far from where he and Osbourne grew up. Butler and fellow Black Sabbath co-founders Tony Iommi and Bill Ward had started rehearsing about a month for their final show. More from The Hollywood Reporter Jennifer Lopez Laughs Off Wardrobe Malfunction During Concert: "I'm Glad I Had Underwear On" British Comic Nish Kumar on How YouTube Helped Him Achieve Success Outside of the U.K. Tom Lehrer, Musical Satirist Whose Influence Peaked in the '50s and '60s, Dies at 97 'Of course, not having played together for 20 years, it took a couple of days to get rid of the rust,' Butler wrote. 'Then it was time for Ozzy to join us. I knew he wasn't in good health, but I wasn't prepared to see how frail he was. He was helped into the rehearsal room by two helpers and a nurse and was using a cane — being Ozzy, the cane was black and studded with gold and precious stones. He didn't really say much beyond the usual greetings and when he sang, he sat in a chair. We ran through the songs but we could see it was exhausting him after six or seven songs. We had a bit of a chat, but he was really quiet compared with the Ozzy of old. After a couple more weeks we were ready for the show.' The show did go on, with a slew of celebrities making appearances during the 10-hour concert, titled 'Back to the Beginning.' 'Fans lucky to be there surely had an immersive stadium show experience they'll never forget,' wrote Lina Lecaro in a recap for The Hollywood Reporter. But, for Butler, 'the strangest part of that show was the end,' he wrote. 'Normally, we would all hug each other and take a bow to the audience. But Ozzy was on his throne and we hadn't thought that out. What do we do? Tony shook his hand, I presented him with a cake, but it was such a strange feeling to end our story like that. I wish I'd had more time backstage with Ozzy, but wishes are redundant now. As Ozzy used to say: 'Wish in one hand and shit in the other and see which comes first.' 'Nobody knew he'd be gone from us little more than two weeks after the final show,' Butler continued. But I am so grateful we got to play one last time together in front of his beloved fans.' Osbourne died July 22 at age 76. He revealed his Parkinson's disease diagnosis in 2020. In his post, Butler also wrote about how he met Osbourne and the band's early years. He remembered another side of Osbourne, who earned the nickname 'The Prince of Darkness.' 'To me, Ozzy wasn't the Prince of Darkness — if anything he was the Prince of Laughter,' Butler wrote. 'He'd do anything for a laugh, a born entertainer.' But he was also a good friend, Butler recalled. 'We became inseparable brothers in arms, always looking out for each other,' he wrote. 'People always thought Ozzy was a feral wild man, but he had a heart of pure gold. Most of his infamous antics — the bat saga, biting the head off a dove, pissing on the Alamo, snorting lines of ants and the rest — came in his solo years, away from the restraints of the Sabbath crew. But if you were a friend in need, Ozzy was always there for you. When my son was born with a heart defect, Ozzy called me every day to see how I was coping, even though we hadn't spoken for a year.' Butler also showed appreciation for the fans who showed up at the last concert to celebrate Osbourne. 'The love from the fans and all the bands, musicians, singers and solo artists that night was incredible,' he wrote. 'Everyone had come to pay homage to the Prince. I am so privileged to have spent most of my life with him. Of course there are millions of things I will think of that I should have written, but how can I sum up 57 incredible years of friendship in a few paragraphs? God bless, Oz, it has been one hell of a ride! Love you!' Butler, Iommi and Ward also paid tribute — along with other stars — to Osbourne on social media last week. Best of The Hollywood Reporter From 'Party in the U.S.A.' to 'Born in the U.S.A.': 20 of America's Most Patriotic (and Un-Patriotic) Musical Offerings Most Anticipated Concert Tours of 2025: Beyoncé, Billie Eilish, Kendrick Lamar & SZA, Sabrina Carpenter and More Hollywood's Most Notable Deaths of 2025
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Ozzy Osbourne's Family Mourns With Fans as Thousands Flock to Birmingham for Funeral
Tens of thousands of people have poured out onto the streets of Birmingham, England, for the funeral of heavy metal rockstar Ozzy Osbourne. Wife Sharon and daughter Kelly — who starred alongside the musician in the genre-defining reality show The Osbournes — were in tears as they lay flowers at the Black Sabbath Bridge in Osbourne's hometown. More from The Hollywood Reporter Sally Tiven, Blues and Soul Guitarist and Songwriter, Dies at 68 Moby's Film and TV Banner Signs With Verve (Exclusive) What's Behind Universal Music Group's U.S. Stock Listing Plan? Last week, on Tuesday, the news broke that Osbourne had died at the age of 76. 'It is with more sadness than mere words can convey that we have to report that our beloved Ozzy Osbourne has passed away this morning,' Osbourne's family confirmed in statement at the time. 'He was with his family and surrounded by love. We ask everyone to respect our family privacy at this time.' A funeral procession through Birmingham was privately funded by the Osbourne family, according to the BBC, as the singer's manager-turned-spouse Sharon leant on her children Kelly and Jack for support. She was seen breaking down in tears numerous times across the day. Floods of people came to pay tribute on Tuesday as murals of Osbourne popped up across the city of Birmingham. Fans donned spikes, flames, tour merchandise and patches in celebration of the late artist's legacy. As the funeral cars passed by on the blocked street, flowers were thrown onto them. The Osbourne family turned to the crowd on Birmingham's Broad Street, visibly emotional as they put their arms in the air and returned peace signs. Signage flanking the road showed Osbourne in his heyday with the messaging: 'Ozzy forever Birmingham will always love you,' and cries of 'Ozzy, Ozzy, Ozzy, oi oi oi!' rang through the crowd. Osbourne died following years of health issues, just weeks after he played his final show in Birmingham, where he reunited with Black Sabbath. The original vocalist of the iconic English rock band, Osbourne had a sprawling music career with the group that led to his own successful solo career with other 100 million records sold worldwide. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of Black Sabbath in 2006, then again for a second time as a solo artist in 2024. News of his death shocked the music industry, who paid tribute through the day. Best of The Hollywood Reporter From 'Party in the U.S.A.' to 'Born in the U.S.A.': 20 of America's Most Patriotic (and Un-Patriotic) Musical Offerings Most Anticipated Concert Tours of 2025: Beyoncé, Billie Eilish, Kendrick Lamar & SZA, Sabrina Carpenter and More Hollywood's Most Notable Deaths of 2025