
224 episodes

The Three Questions with Andy Richter Team Coco
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- Comedy
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4.5 • 3.3K Ratings
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Host Andy Richter asks the same three questions to each guest: Where do you come from? Where are you going? What have you learned? These three simple questions, when answered honestly and thoughtfully, are enough to provide a pretty complete picture of who a person is. The answers are what Andy always wants to know about people. This will not be a one-sided process, as Andy won’t shy away from getting personal himself.
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Edi Patterson
Edi Patterson (HBO’s The Righteous Gemstones) joins Andy Richter to discuss improv comedy, growing up in Texas, the great Danny McBride, and much more.
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Josh Gad
Josh Gad joins Andy Richter to discuss his new Broadway show, "Gutenburg! The Musical!," fatherhood, the next phase of his career, anxiety, and much more.
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Jonathan Van Ness
Jonathan Van Ness joins Andy Richter to discuss his path to Queer Eye, their shared Illinois heritage, sustainable haircare, TV stars vs. movie stars, and much more.
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Steve Albini
Legendary punk musician, producer, and engineer Steve Albini joins Andy Richter to discuss his love for the city of Chicago, the differences between comedy and music, sticking to your principles, wildfire research, and much more.
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Tommy Blacha
Tommy Blacha (Adult Swim, Late Night) joins Andy Richter to discuss his time as Andy's roommate in Chicago, working in the Late Night writer’s room, watching Andy get fake-murdered by John Wayne Gacy on television, and much more.
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D'Arcy Carden
D’Arcy Carden joins Andy Richter to discuss falling in love with comedy, their support of the ongoing SAG strike, the secret to good scrambled eggs, actors at the picket line, and more.
Customer Reviews
Tommy Blacha episode ruled
Andy is great, but I’ll get all my friends to rate 5 stars if you bring Tommy Blacha back as a regular. Chef’s kiss!
This
You & Jonathan . I’m a nice funny person, but not like this,, my fave ever. Salude! I am Annie in Creeds CO, a) queer I request, or just HANG!
Inadvertently great interviewer
I don’t think Andy ever set out to be a great interviewer, but he ultimately is because he’s able to show vulnerability and discuss his own shortcomings in a practical way that moves the conversation forward. And he somehow gets a a hugely wide range of people to open up and do the same. Inject Andy’s trademark humor and occasionally negative self talk and it becomes a really honest conversation.