So what's the biggest fight you guys have had in the Robot Chicken offices?
[To Matt] Can you think of the biggest blowup that we had? Like we fight every once in awhile. No, you and I never really fight. [Matt laughs] We just had an argument downstairs about Scrappy-Doo. [Laughs] Comedy, especially in this format, is really all about timing. We're doing a movie trailer parody that uses Scrappy-Doo, and it was just the way that the joke was storyboarded, the way that it was timed, there's an action beat that happens within in a line, and it just wasn't working for me. And I argued about it. Which is always dumb to do. I'm glad that nobody sees these conversations that we have. [To Matt] Have we gotten into s--- in the writers' room? [To EW.com] It really does get ugly. You start criticizing each other's upbringing and things like that. If somebody doesn't like a joke, they'll start trying to dissect and explain it, and we've gotten to a point, after three seasons, where we're like, ''You just don't think it's funny.'' ''I don't think it's funny. You're right.'' ''You don't need to give me some kind of intellectual dissection of humor, just say you don't like it.''

Anything you can tell us about Family Guy this season?
I think I work at a convenience store at one point. The best thing about Family Guy is because of the way we record it, I don't have to read the entire script, I'm able to watch the show as a fan. But unfortunately, it leaves me with very little knowledge of what's happening to me.

[Hearing heavy breathing] Have you been walking around the whole time we've been talking?
I was signing checks and formatting a document, and then I had to prepare something for pickup, and now Matt and I are in the car on our way to a meeting with financiers about an animated movie we're developing. [Laughs]

What's your secret to multitasking?
I don't have a secret. I just react as best I can. I think I've gotten really good at compartmentalizing things and handling multiple things at the same time. But Matt is way better at it than I am. He's aware of everything that I'm doing, plus what he's doing, and keeps me on track.

Anything else you wanna tell me about? Otherwise, I can let you get back to your day.
Um, I'm in a really great mood. I've been makin' a cool movie in New York [2008's Old Dogs] with a hero of mine, Robin Williams. So I'm in my favorite city in the world and getting to play around with somebody who I've been fascinated by since I was a kid. Robin Williams has been successful and famous for 30 years. He's constantly had highs and lows, and he's remained relevant throughout. And he's just brilliantly talented as both a comedian and dramatic actor. And I'm very excited to just get to hang out with him on set.

Will he be guesting on Robot Chicken this season?
[Man-squeal] I don't know! The first words out of his mouth when I got on set were, ''Robot Chicken is awesome.'' And I had to take a minute to digest that. And then I just loaded him up with swag. [Laughs] I was like, ''Here, wear our stuff.''

Did you ask him for any advice?
One of the best things that I've learned about working with people who I admire or super-successful celebrities is that my role is not to crack the code so much as it is to participate. If in the course of conversation I'm able to broach the subject, I will, but usually I just want to play. I just wanna give them my best and get their best in return.

There is a Robin Williams backlash going on to some degree. What's your position on that?
There's always the guys at the American Idiot Green Day stadium show that bitch about how they were awesome when they were playing at Berkeley. The truth is that you are the only person who can manage your career, and there's always gonna be somebody who says you're making the wrong choice, but you make the best decisions that you can in the moment and you're the one who has to live with them. Robin's like Christopher Walken or Harvey Keitel: They can do a good movie and a bad movie, and they're still allowed to do a good movie even if they do a bad movie because they're that good. You get a guy like Robert Downey Jr. who can make a movie that nobody likes and then make a movie that everybody likes, and he'll be great in both of them.

Do you worry about that at all in your career? A possible backlash?
I tend to fly really below the radar, even though people seem to know me. I don't think I have a target on my back. [Laughs] Listen, someday people are gonna hate me. I'm sure I'll get tomatoes thrown at me in some public event, but until that happens, I'm not gonna be anticipating it.


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