But since day one, we’ve always been kinda up against it. So at the end, it’s not surprising that we were kind of led along for so many months and didn’t know what the fate of the show was gonna be. It was… in a weird way, just kind of that was the way it’s always been.
Meaning of the quote
This quote suggests that the actor and the show he was involved with faced many challenges from the very beginning. Even though they didn't know what would happen to the show for a long time, this was just how things had always been for them. The actor seems to be saying that the uncertainty and difficulty they experienced were normal and expected, almost like it was just the way things had always been for their show.
About Will Arnett
Will Arnett is a Canadian-American actor and comedian best known for his roles in the TV shows Arrested Development and BoJack Horseman. He has received multiple Emmy nominations and has lent his distinctive deep voice to numerous animated films and series.
More quotes from Will Arnett
But since day one, we’ve always been kinda up against it. So at the end, it’s not surprising that we were kind of led along for so many months and didn’t know what the fate of the show was gonna be. It was… in a weird way, just kind of that was the way it’s always been.
Canadian and American actor and comedian (born 1970)
Well, yeah. At a certain point, you’ve got to be really honest with yourself. Like, ‘Why am I doing this? What are my motivations?’ Like, if you get into it because you want to be famous? Then you’ve got a long row to hoe. But if you really feel like it’s a labour of love and it’s something you’re actually legitimately good at, then it’s not that hard to keep plugging away.
Canadian and American actor and comedian (born 1970)
I mean, I gotta say one of the greatest victories on that show was when we got picked up for the back nine of the first season, and they made it a full order.
Canadian and American actor and comedian (born 1970)
When it sort of finally sets in that you’re not going to be doing that anymore… it’s disappointing.
Canadian and American actor and comedian (born 1970)
Look, I get it; you come home, you work hard, and you turn on your TV… You kind of want to escape a little bit and be taken away by something. Our show required you to pay attention, and if that’s not what you wanted to do, then it wasn’t going to be for you, and that’s OK.
Canadian and American actor and comedian (born 1970)
And I think that at a certain point, after all the time and all the conjecture and everything that had kind of gone on surrounding this show, I think that Mitch just felt like it was time to let it go. It was best for the show.
Canadian and American actor and comedian (born 1970)
Well, no, I didn’t because I didn’t even know the nominations were coming out. I gotta say, it wasn’t even on my radar. I hadn’t… I hadn’t even thought about it.
Canadian and American actor and comedian (born 1970)
Most shows, you really have to force it. And everybody’s nervous, and the network is nervous, and they’ve all got their notepads out, and they’re all going to give notes on what they think is funny, and everybody’s trying to spin their jokes, and this was so – the script was so good that we didn’t have to really do anything, and it made it so easy for us to do well.
Canadian and American actor and comedian (born 1970)
But as a result of that, there was, once the show ended, there was this talk for sort of four, five months about what was going to happen, and if we were going to move to Showtime, and if we were going to be bought by ABC or whatever.
Canadian and American actor and comedian (born 1970)
This pilot, by far, was the best I ever read – and I hope that insults every other pilot I worked on.
Canadian and American actor and comedian (born 1970)
Because I think a lot of people felt like, ultimately – and this isn’t the first time I’ve said this, so I’ll bore you again with it – but ultimately it was… I think it felt like homework a bit for people.
Canadian and American actor and comedian (born 1970)
My first movie was this independent that I did on the Erie Canal in 1995, called Erie, that I don’t know if you could even get, actually with Felicity Huffman. And then from that I did this film that was eventually called The Broken Giant later that fall. And then I kind of started getting into doing pilots.
Canadian and American actor and comedian (born 1970)
No, Arrested Development was such an amazing experience in every way, and you know it was very unique in that it was a show that received a lot of critical acclaim, and yet we didn’t ever achieve the ratings that we wanted.
Canadian and American actor and comedian (born 1970)
Yeah, you know, within the context of TV families, these are pretty unsavory characters.
Canadian and American actor and comedian (born 1970)
And we… right from moment one, we were always kinda up against the wall a little bit when it came to the future of the show. There were always rumors.
Canadian and American actor and comedian (born 1970)
Well, we were never coming back to Fox… that was clear.
Canadian and American actor and comedian (born 1970)
The show had run its course on the Fox network.
Canadian and American actor and comedian (born 1970)
It doesn’t look great if you cancel the reigning Best Comedy Program, you know, you’re gonna take a hit from a… from sort of a public relations standpoint.
Canadian and American actor and comedian (born 1970)
Arrested Development opened a lot of doors for me.
Canadian and American actor and comedian (born 1970)
And then we’ve got Blades of Glory, and we’ve got Brothers Solomon, and I’ve got a script in development with this guy Chuck Martin who used to write on Arrested, and, you know, we have a few things in various stages of development.
Canadian and American actor and comedian (born 1970)
There’s a lot of lying and these are people who are incredibly flawed, and not in very sort of empathetic ways, either. Some of the things they do are pretty awful and some of the things they do to each other are pretty awful.
Canadian and American actor and comedian (born 1970)