Los Angeles Home > Profiles > UD Profile
Published April 20, 2007
Sometimes it's OK to keep things simple. That's the lesson you gain from a conversation with
Michael Rapaport, the lovable New York transplant who, rather incredibly, has appeared in
some 70 productions since bursting onto the scene in 1992's Zebrahead. Here, the Larchmont resident
talks women, casual dining and the comedy of LA life.
UD: You've been living in LA on and off since 1990. Where in town do you like to
eat?
MR: I have a lot of favorites with my kids. We like to go to Swingers on Beverly. We like to go
to Toast on Third Street. I love a restaurant called Cha Cha Cha in
Silverlake. There's a place in Santa Monica called Babalu that I really, really, really like. My kids, they
like to go to Lucky
Strike bowling. And Larchmont is a big part of my life.
UD: Any LA bars you like?
MR: No, I'm not a bar guy. I go out every
now and then to the little spots, but I don't drink and I never have, so I'm not really into bars.
UD: Do you have any hidden gems?
MR: I don't think there's anything
hidden in Los Angeles. Except for like Silverlake and places like that, but I don't really know those
areas.
UD: What do you find funny about LA?
MR: Well, the people are
hilarious. Los Angeles is the only place where you can be in a restaurant and there will only be people from
one business—meaning show business. Like you can guarantee. Not just the
patrons, but the people who work there are aspiring, you know, whatevers. And the fact that you can run into
this actress or this pop singer in the supermarket. The fact that you see that on a daily basis is
definitely fascinating.
UD: Have you seen someone lately that has surprised even you?
MR:
Oh, everybody. Britney Spears the other night, with her wig on and her fake contact lenses. I don't remember
what club, but I was like, Oh, sh*t, there's Britney Spears.
UD: What do you like about LA women?
MR: Obviously beautiful women
come to this city from all over the planet. They're not as rough around the edges as the girls from New
York, and I'm saying that in a complimentary way about the girls in New York. If you're out here and you're
mildly attractive to very attractive, it's 99.9 percent that you're in show business. And that seems to chip
away at people's personalities.
UD: If LA were a woman, who would she be?
MR: Holy sh*t. If LA were
a woman, she'd be a mix of Marilyn Manson, Marilyn Monroe, Gisele, frickin' Naomi Campbell, whoever the
bisexual hipster of the week is...and you gotta throw a little Paris Hilton in there.
UD: Any places in LA where you like to shop?
MR: Nah. I'm not really
into buying clothes. It's not really my thing. Honestly, I steal my clothes from my shows.
UD: Which city is better for dating—New York or LA?
MR: The only
thing about Los Angeles that's better than New York is Runyon Canyon. So I go with New York.
UD: Lakers or Knicks?
MR: I mean, Kobe's incredible. I love watching
him. The Lakers have somehow gotten themselves into an underdog thing, which is interesting. And the
Clippers are a fun team. But I'm definitely Knicks. That's like loyalty to a fault.
UD: Should we expect any cliffhangers in the season finale of The War at
Home?
MR: Yeah, we definitely have an interesting cliffhanger. I say that
I'm going to get a vasectomy, my wife says she's going to get her tubes tied, and then we have sex. And
comedy ensues because things didn't really go down the way we said they would.
UD: You have a great cameo in the Popcopy sketch on Chappelle's Show. How did that come
about?
MR: I ran into Dave on the street in New York. We were with our kids
outside that cheesy place in midtown, the Brooklyn Diner. He was like, "I'm doing this pilot, and I don't
think anything's going to happen with it, but we're actually doing this skit, would you want to do
something?" And I said, "Sure, man, I would love to." And you know, I came down, it was real quick, and the
rest is history for him. I get a lot of comments about that thing, and obviously it's something I'm proud
of.
UD: Some of your characters have been less than bright. Does it take a smart man to play a dumb
guy?
MR: I have to say yes. Because people actually think I'm dumb. I think it's
something about the way my face is shaped.
UD: We still think you should have ended up with Phoebe on
Friends.
MR: Me, too, man.