Three days ago I posted the first half of my interview with actor Federico Dordei, which largely concerned how his character ended up departing 2 Broke Girls. In the second we talked about how the regular cast handles criticism, the future of multicamera sitcoms, and how in the end absolutely everything is up to Michael Patrick King.
Just like last time, my questions and comments are in bold, with his responses as regular text.
So in a lot of my reviews I often hold the writers’ room accountable for any jokes that I feel go a little bit too far-
Michael Patrick King has the final say. There’s even a picture of him on set that says “Godfather”! [laughs]
Really?
There’s a pyramid on the wall of photos and his at the very top and says “Godfather” on it.
Every episode one writer comes up with an idea. So one writer goes to the writers’ room with the thing he wrote and then all together the writers pitch in to make it something that Michael Patrick King will like. He also supervises the whole thing saying I don’t like this or I don’t like that. So the completed work is a mix between what the writers wants and what he wants.
For every multicam show the creator has the ultimate say, and he’s a writer, too.
I do know that he’ll be credited for writing full episodes from time to time, like last week’s season finale.
One episode that he wrote I wasn’t very happy with. I remember someone in the audience told me “Great job!” and I said “What do you mean? I had no funny lines!”
Maybe that also did not ring well with him… [laughs]
But when it comes to the writers for the most part they’re great. I once told one of them they wrote a great episode and he said “No, no, no. It’s not just me.” They give credit to everyone, never taking credit for the whole thing.
A little earlier I sort of mentioned that the writing doesn’t always land for me, but people really seem to love it-
People love the show in different parts of America. But just a few here [Los Angeles] watch the show, the same in Miami, New York, Chicago, the big cities. Middle America, the majority of America, they love the show. Big towns don’t like it, but small towns love it. In Italy they love the show but it’s the same thing, not much in the big cities.
That’s just my personal opinion, though. The style is over the top and everything. People are a bit more modern in big towns, need to be satisfied by something newer instead of something that’s a bit old fashioned. Now people like Louis, The Comedians, Happyish – reality shows, slower shows that have a different kind of style that’s fashionable now.
I remember Jonathan [Kite] once said “I’ve been on this show for two seasons and it’s only when I travel through towns for work that people recognize me. But in China and some European countries we’re huge!”
At the very least 2 Broke Girls has been popular enough to be renewed for a fifth season.
Reports say that both 2 Broke Girlsand Mike and Molly have been benched until mid-season.CBS is going to start the week, primetime, without a comedy for the first time in decades. Now they’re going in a different direction. There’s a new show with Calista Flockhart, Supergirl. That’s going to take their place in the Monday night timeslot.
I mean, Supergirl is a comic book property which really appears to be the latest trend.
They’re really changing their direction. Although some nights they have eight, nine million viewers, comedies do much worse than dramas now. Dramas have up to ten million viewers. That’s the direction they’re going in, there aren’t that many comedy pilots being picked up anymore-
Personally I’ve noticed less and less new sitcom pilots with each passing fall.
Exactly. It’s a little worrying, because that’s my specialty.
But with 2 Broke Girls it’s benched until mid-season, so it’s probably returning in January. CBS will most likely pick it up for 6 seasons being that the show was sold for syndication to TBS. I believe that at least 6 seasons are needed for a syndication deal.
Michael Patrick King sold it for syndication in the second season.
To go back to your experience on the show, what was it like starring in a three camera sitcom in front of a live audience?
I had done Parks and Rec, Raising Hope, etc., all single camera shows. My multicam experience at first was a combination of watching them and auditioning for them, and then 2 Broke Girls.
Personally I’m not into multicam. Whenever I get an audition I’m not that excited for it. You have to get a bit character-y, and the blocking is very stiff. It’s not really my thing, I don’t even watch them often. Except Friends and Seinfield … Legends!
And they’re bowing out. The era is over, when there was no Hulu or Netflix. Now when kids want to laugh they’ll go on YouTube, they don’t sit down and watch shows on TV. And they’re the most desired audience for the networks, 16-22. Sadly these shows are a dying breed.
I have very limited experience acting in school productions, but I remember the best part being performing in front of a live audience. What was that like for you?
Fucking amazing. It’s great to do a multicam in front of an audience. Michael Patrick King would make you feel anxious and yell at you, but it was like a party filming the actual show. You felt right away if the audience laughed or didn’t laugh.
On 2 Broke Girls I was always so stressed, though. After the third episode aired I was embarrassed to even come out; I was not as confident. After the second or third they weren’t as excited about me and I could feel it. When an actor feels it that’s bad news because it affects their performance.
Thank God after that I got five amazing episodes with funny shit and I got the audience back. Even though Michael Patrick King ended up cutting Luis out of all of them…
There’s definitely something to be said about instant feedback, especially when it comes to comedies-
When the audience doesn’t laugh, that actually happens all the time. The writers get in front of the audience for 2-3 minutes and Michael Patrick King tells the actors their new lines just once-
I remember he came to me and told me my lines. I have English as a second language, I’m not American and it’s not my first language. He comes to me and said it once. I asked if I could get a pen and paper to write it down and he said “What!?” Kat and Beth heard the lines, thank God, and they told me what they were.
They change dialogue all the time and Kat is like a computer. They give her a whole fucking speech one time and the girl knows it all. She’s straight edge, super focused like a computer and just a good person. She helped me out a lot, but I got better, I got used to it.
With lines I would be rehearsing the whole night before, and that was tough on me.
Running over lines is obviously pretty important, but were there any ways you and others would prep before filming?
Jonathan’s preparation was talking! [laughs]
Matthew likes to be in his room with the lights off in total blackness to meditate for a bit. Don Scardino, one of the directors, he’s the best man on earth, so cool and an angel of a man. He takes time to meditate before the show as well.
Beth takes a B12 shot drink. Kat doesn’t need shit she’s straight edge, and with nerves of iron.
Me, the couple of hours before showtime I’m in Jennifer’s room gossiping and smoking cigarettes, it works for us. [laughs]
I just want to address a few last things before our time is up, with one of them being the amount of criticism the show has received, in particular due to racist jokes and writing surrounding Matthew Moy’s character.
There was an Asian group that did not like it at all. Many people hated my character and that was like getting a heart attack before the show. He told me “Who gives a fuck, you don’t know these people, there are always gonna be haters.” By the third season he had already made peace with it. Jennifer Coolidge doesn’t even read the comments, doesn’t even watch the show.
Kat and Beth they read stuff .They’ll retweet what their fans are saying about the show and that sort of thing. Nobody bashes Kat.
Speaking of artists being bashed Max’s latest love interest last season, Nashit, received a lot of flak for having a terrible Irish accent.

A 2 Broke Girls table read.
If they didn’t like him chances are he’ll disappear very soon [and he did. –Evan]. If there are a lot of critics on a guest star from the get-go then he’s not gonna be back for sure. At a table read if a guest star doesn’t do well it’s bad news. They fire people on every episode, you have to give the performance of a lifetime.
The first day’s in front of producers, second in front of the studio, the third the studio network, the fourth to set up blocking, and the fifth for the final shot.
To end with, I know you appeared in some of the same episodes that Eric Andre did. Did you get a chance to interact with him at all, and what’s he like in person?
He actually became one of my very good friends. We hang out at every party he does. He’s a work friend, but a work friend that I see outside of work. He’s another guy that likes having fun like me. And same as me likes to have a friendly family style time on set.
He always had fun with it, made shooting like a party. Michael Patrick King was always going on about focus, that things needed to be serious. He sucks the FUN out of FUN! [laughs]
One of the search terms people use to find my blog is “what happened to Max and Deke [the character Andre played]”. People really loved him on the show-
Of course, but they’re not gonna bring him back. Michael Patrick King asked him to stay but he was producing his own show on Adult Swim, he went to go do his own thing.
As far as my personal experience on 2 Broke Girls I was actually told from the very beginning what this would all be like. The casting director told me, “Just so you know, it’s a very special set. It’s kind of intense.” If only I had known. [laughs]
I couldn’t and can’t thank Federico Dordei enough for the opportunity to talk to him about 2 Broke Girls, and it’s an amazing way to end another season of the show. He was able to answer a lot of the questions I had about how the show is written in particular and it’s going to be an entirely different experience reviewing future episodes with that knowledge in mind.
Fed [again, I can call him that] hasn’t been sitting back since exiting the show, either, so stay tuned to his iMDB page to see what upcoming projects he has on the horizon!
