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SNL Alum Back on TV on TBS Series

Tim Meadows was born in Highland Park, Michigan on February
5, 1961, the son of Mardell, a nurse's assistant, and Lathon, a
janitor. After graduating from Wayne State University, Tim began
his assault on show business in Chicago as a member of The
Second City comedy troupe alongside Jon Favrerau and the late
Chris Farley.
In 1991, he was invited to join the ensemble cast of Saturday
Night Live (SNL), a position he would enjoy for ten seasons, the
longest tenure ever of anyone on the show, a record which was
only eclipsed by Darrell Hammond in 2005. Tim proved to be quite
a talented impersonator, doing dozens of celebs over the years,
including
Will
Smith, Tiger Woods, Busta Rhymes, Dennis Rodman, Ru Paul,
Snoop Dogg, Don King, Seal, Montel, Diddy, O.J., and Michael
Jackson, to name a few.
He is perhaps best known for The Ladies Man, a sketch character
he played on SNL. The skit proved popular enough to be spun off
into its own movie in 2000. Since then, Tim has appeared in
films like Mean Girls, Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story, The
Benchwarmers, The Even Stevens Movie, and most recently,
Semi-Pro.
He's continued to work in television, too, on such series as The
Michael Richards Show, The Colbert Report, One on One, Leap of
Faith, The Office, Curb Your Enthusiasm and According to Jim. He
is currently enjoying a recurring role as Paul on The Bill
Engvall Show, a sitcom starting its second season on TBS this
month.
As for his personal life, Tim is divorced, and shares custody of
his two sons with his ex-wife, Michelle.
KW: Hey, Tim, thanks a lot for the interview.
TM: No problem, thank you.
KW: I watched the second season's premiere of The Bill Engvall
Show, but you were only in it briefly, on the phone for about
ten seconds.
TM: I'm not in the first episode. I'm in the second one.

The Bill Engvall Show: Steve Hytner, Bill Engvall, Tim Meadows
KW: I know your character, Paul, is Bill's best friend.
And he's also a hair replacement specialist who is unlucky at
love. Tell me a little bit more about him.
TM: Well, he's recently divorced. And he's trying to
figure out how to meet girls, because he's been out of the
dating scene for awhile. Meeting girls online is something new
for him, and he's just trying to pick up his game again. And I
can relate to that because I went through the same thing a few
years ago
KW: I'm sorry to hear that.
TM: No, it was for the better, trust me. But I can relate
to Paul, because I've been dating and all that stuff.
KW: How is it to start dating again after all those years?
TM: It's as awkward and as horrible as I remember it. I
feel like, ’Why would anybody want to be single?’ If you can
meet somebody nice and good, then you should do it.
KW: Do you see yourself in real life as being more
uncomfortable like Paul or more suave like The Ladies Man?
TM: I think I'm somewhere between the two. Occasionally,
I do well, and I can be myself and relax. And I might get lucky,
too. But then sometimes I can be nerdy, dumb, and say the wrong
things. I'm not as good as I used to be at it.
KW: How do you like being a regular on a sitcom?
TM: I love it. It's so much different from SNL and most
other things I've done. The schedule is a little bit easier. You
work more during the day. You have one long day of taping, but I
look forward to going to work. I love working with Bill and the
rest of the cast. They’re all great. Maybe in a few years we
might get jaded and angry with each other, but right now it's
good.
KW: Did you get jaded after ten years on SNL?
TM: No, but I did get a little burnt out, because I was
shooting Ladies Man and doing the show at the same time. So, it
was a lot of work, and I kinda felt at the end of that run that
it was just time to leave and give somebody else a chance. Tracy
Morgan was there with me then. We had a couple of seasons
together. It was only fair that he had a chance to be the only
African-American on the show, and therefore have more parts
written for him.
KW: Did you find that the African-American cast members were
limited to playing black characters on SNL? Did you feel
constrained?
TM: No, not at all. The show represents society. So,
there are going to be rare occasions where a white actor is
going to play a black character, and even rarer situations where
a black character is going to be asked to play a white
character. That's why the cast is so diversified. You want to
sort of represent America, basically. Sometimes, I had to be O.J.
Simpson, but other times I just had to be a generic teacher who
wasn't necessarily black. I don't play the race card in my
comedy. That's never been my thing. Even with The Ladies Man, it
wasn't a racial thing. He was just a guy who was sexually-active
who the ladies loved.
KW: Reggie Hudlin, who directed you in The Ladies Man, is now
the head of programming over at BET. Have you asked him to give
you one of those zany reality shows now that he's running that
network?
TM: No, but he wanted to do Ladies Man as a late-night
show on BET.
KW: What happened?
TM: I don't know. We talked about it, and we were waiting
for offers, but nothing ever came.
KW: You've done tons of impressions. Are you working on
Barack Obama?
TM: Yeah, I've been working on Barack Obama a little bit.
I'm waiting for him to win. I'm not going to waste my time if
he's going to lose.
KW: Are you supporting him?
TM: I'll support him if he wins. I won’t support him if
he loses. [Laughs] No, I don't support anybody. It's not my
thing. And if I did, I wouldn’t say who it was publicly. I'll
give you a hint who I'm voting for in November. It rhymes with
Seder.
KW: Oh, Ralph Nader. You don't worry about possibly wasting
your vote?
TM: No, I sort of disagree with people who blame him for
taking votes away from Gore in 2000. Gore still won the popular
vote. Nader wasn't the reason why he lost the election. The
Supreme Court cost him the election. Plus, you don't know that
all those people who voted for Nader would've gone for Gore.
I've met Ralph Nader and I like him. And I've met John McCain,
and he's a great guy, too. I haven't met Barack, but I have met
Oprah Winfrey. I would love to see some change, and whatever the
country decides, I'm behind it.
KW: The
Tasha Smith question: Are you ever afraid?
TM: No, I'm never afraid. I have had some scary moments
where things have been out of my control, like on a flight that
was too bumpy, or when I almost got robbed. But for the most
part, day-to-day, I don't have much fear.
KW: Are you happy? That question I got from
Columbus Short.
TM: Am I happy? No, I'm not happy.
KW: Gee, I'm sorry to hear that. you're the very first person to
give me that answer. Do you want to say why?
TM: No, let's just leave it at that.
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KW: The bookworm
Troy Johnson question: What was the last book you read?
TM: I'm in the middle of The Lord of the Rings. The
last book I completed was Eric Clapton's autobiography.
KW: ’Realtor to the Stars' Jimmy Bayan's question: Where
in L.A. do you live?
TM: I live in Venice Beach.
KW: Is there a question that nobody ever asks you that you wish
somebody would?
TM: Yeah, does it make you angry that people you've
worked with have been more successful than you?
KW: Okay, does it make you angry that people you've worked with
have been more successful than you?
TM: No, it doesn't make me angry, because they’re my
friends, and I love my friends. There's enough of the pie to go
around for everybody. And I love to see my friends being
successful, just like they wish the same thing for me. I don't
have any deep-seated resentment or anger. I want my friends who
are more successful than me to know that I'm rooting for them.
KW: How do you want to be remembered?
TM: As a good father, as an excellent father. As an
excellent lover, and as a friend of all animals. And I plan to
have ’I knew this would happen’ engraved on my tombstone.
[Laughs] I heard Dustin Hoffman say that in an interview on 60
minutes and thought that would make the perfect tombstone.
KW: How old are your sons?
TM: Five and seven.
KW: Great ages. Hey, thanks again for the time. Enjoy the boys
and good luck with the show.
TM: Thanks man, it was nice talking to you.
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