Chott: I did the announcer voiceover for that. And, actually, when I was recording that with Robert—I don’t know, but maybe he plans in some way to bring the show back.

**Smigel: **After we did it there was talk of, "Well, let’s see now if anyone wants to do it as a movie," but I’m not counting any chickens there. ****

**Hamm: **Obviously, it all depends. Robert wrote a brief treatment of the project with Stephen. They wrote what was kind of what we shot, only 50 pages longer. ****

Fallon: I mean, yeah. Of course! It’s so fun to do. I mean, Smigel comes up with these really great jokes; it’s a very well-written piece. I’m sure if Smigel is involved it’s going to be super-hilarious. So, yeah, I’d be honored, of course.

**Hamm: **You’re looking at a dude in a skintight suit calling someone by a nickname totally earnestly—it’s a little bit hilarious. I’m a huge comic book geek as well. I collected comic books throughout my teenage years, but when you have people called Storm and Magneto and Thor... Thor’s a dude that throws a hammer at people. I mean, without the mutual agreement between audience and creator of, "OK, we’re going with this," it’s a dude throwing a hammer at somebody. Which is a really ineffective way to fight crime or defeat bad people. So it is kind of funny when taken completely earnestly. That’s the spirit that Robert and Stephen and all of the people who originally started this mined to really good comedy effect. There is something sort of gay and hilarious about two really close pals who choose to work out together in tight clothes and fight crime. ****

**Smigel: **Jon Hamm is a godsend to comedians because he’s so funny. We are all huge fans of him and expect him to be appropriately aloof, and it turns out he’s one of the biggest comedy nerds in the country. ****

**Fallon: **He’s got that thing of being good-looking but also being very funny and getting the joke. Alec Baldwin is probably the only other guy who has that. It’s a weird combination. It’s rare. ****

What’s the legacy of The Dana Carvey Show? It’s hard to say. Considering the talented cast, is it a sad case of what could have been a long-living television project sideswiped by a couple of key decisions? Or was this a show that was, as they say, too far ahead of its time?

**Carvey: **When you put Steve Carell, Smigel, Colbert, Louis C.K., and Charlie Kaufman together and doing what we wanted—it does make sense that it was just in the wrong spot. But I’m still really proud of it. ****

Colbert: It was fantastic. I loved it. No complaints. It was wonderful. Dana and Robert and Louis could not have been nicer to me.

**Carlock: **The way my perspective has changed the most is, we averaged 17 million viewers or something over the seven episodes that we did air—which now would be the biggest comedy on television by far. ****

**Hamm: **Had that show come on now? There’s Cartoon Network and Comedy Central and FX and a million better venues for it to be viewed and appreciated. But back then? It’s going to roll in from Home Improvement? No way. It was way, way, way ahead of its time. And you just look at the talent that came of it, of course, and that’s the true test.

**Feresten: **When a show is cancelled that you’re on, you kind of park it in a part of your brain and try to forget about it. ****