The Comedy Besties Dive Into Drums, Conflict Styles & Pure Armisen Chaos

Fred Armisen drops in on longtime friend Amy Poehler for a brand‑new episode of her hit podcast Good Hang, and the reunion is as warm, weird, and wonderfully specific as you’d expect from two comedy lifers who know each other’s rhythms by heart.
The double‑trouble duo covers everything from his early days drumming for the Blue Man Group to his now‑classic bit about being paid “$1 million a week” at Saturday Night Live — a joke Amy gleefully plays along with as they revisit their shared SNL history.
But the real magic comes from the deep‑cut personal stories that only these two can unlock.
Fresh Highlights You Won’t Hear Anywhere Else

• Fred and Amy bond over hating physical risk Right at the top, Amy teases that they’ll be talking about “how we don’t like taking physical risks” — a tiny but telling detail about their shared temperament .
• Their conflict styles are hilariously opposite Amy promises a chat about their “different conflict styles,” and the episode delivers — Fred’s gentle, avoidant approach vs. Amy’s direct, map‑the‑terrain energy .
• Carrie Brownstein drops in to praise Fred behind his back Carrie calls Fred “magnanimous,” “not cynical,” and someone who “wears both his heart and his fandom on his sleeve” — recalling the night he met her while wearing a button with her face on it .
• Fred’s impressions are so kind they never offend Amy reveals he’s one of the only people who can do an impression to someone’s face without hurting their feelings. Fred even demonstrates her “trudge” walk — something she didn’t know she did until he lovingly pointed it out .
• His multicultural upbringing is wilder than fans realize Fred shares that his given name is Faridan, chosen by a Persian man his grandmother was dating — despite Fred having no Persian heritage. His father is German and Korean; his mother is Venezuelan. He grew up speaking Spanish at home and spent part of childhood in Brazil, where he was “homesick the whole time” .
• He admits he went to art school… not for art Fred confesses he wasn’t passionate about film the way his classmates were — he just wanted to be around artists so he could start a band. “We’re supposed to get good grades, but we’re not supposed to talk about this all day,” he recalls thinking as classmates debated editing theory .
• Amy calls him a comedic genius — and he deflects beautifully When Amy says everyone they know considers Fred the funniest person alive, he immediately downplays it, insisting comedy with his heroes like Martin Short feels “mutual” and rooted in playfulness rather than performance .
Press play on all the hilarity below — it’s Fred and Amy at their most unfiltered, affectionate, and deeply themselves.
Watch Fred Armisen on “Good Hang with Amy Poehler”
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Comment below: What’s your favorite Fred Armisen era — drummer, character chameleon, or pure chaos gremlin?







