![]() So this one is like five vignettes in different styles of storytelling. “We started talking about it in the room and figuring out, ‘Is there a way to tell a story involving Planned Parenthood with our cast and the kind of stories that we tell?’ As we thought about it, we realized maybe we could take a step out from what we normally do and tell a story that is different from the rest of our episodes. “She basically said, ‘Obviously donations are great, but we at Planned Parenthood really want people to tell stories involving Planned Parenthood,’” said Kroll. I think the joke is that the Trump administration had created National Pantsing Day to toughen kids up while keeping things sexy.” ![]() “Because it was a big thing in middle school, where kids are pulling down each other’s pants. “We have a joke in one of the episodes that it’s National Pantsing Day,” Kroll explained to In the Limelight co-host Josh Duboff on this week’s episode of the Vanity Fair podcast (the interview with Kroll begins at 20:26 in the episode). It would take about five months for a team in Korea to turn the season’s illustrations around, and given the breakneck pace of the political news cycle, the writers felt it best to avoid references to Donald Trump that could potentially feel stale down the line.īut there were a select few Trump jokes that felt evergreen enough to keep, since they weren’t tied to specific events or policies. When Nick Kroll and the writers of Netflix’s animated comedy Big Mouth sat down to write Season 2, they made a decision to mostly not include jokes that directly referenced current events. ![]()
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January 2023
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