Insecure Writer Jason Lew On The Really Raw Lawrence-Condola Fight
Sundayâs episode of HBOâs âInsecureâ ended with an explosive argument between Lawrence (Jay Ellis) and Condola (Christina Elmore) over co-parenting their new baby while living in different cities. Throughout the episode â" appropriately titled âPressure, Okay?!â â" they have massive communication issues, and Lawrence seems to think he deserves a medal just for showing up.
The story came from a âvery rawâ place, according to âInsecureâ writer Jason Lew, who wrote the episode. (He also appears briefly as the babyâs pediatrician, which happened after he read the part at the table read and âit became an inside joke,â he said.)
AdvertisementSeveral of the showâs writers, including Lew himself, recently became parents, so âthere was a lot of anxiety and a lot of rawness around parenting in the room,â he said. Fittingly, as HuffPost spoke to Lew on Monday, his daughter could be heard in the background at several points.
Lew remembers that in initial versions of the script, the big argument was âa bit softerâ and sometimes âskewedâ toward one character or the other.
âUltimately, I think we got to âLetâs just take the guardrails off and just have this be a really raw fight where you say shit that you really wish you didnât,â you know? Which is very real,â Lew said. âEach person brings their shit and their baggage to the table around parenting, and it all comes out, and thereâs no way to really prepare for it. Even the most prepared couple that goes to, like, daily couples therapy, it all changes when it goes from hypothetical to real. So I think we did a good job of showing the space between your expectation and reality.â
"Insecure" writer Jason Lew in 2016, at the Deauville US Film Festival premiere of "The Free World," which he wrote and directed.CHARLY TRIBALLEAU via Getty ImagesFor instance, Lew included the scene where Derek (Wade Allain-Marcus) explains to Lawrence that having a baby can alter the balance of any relationship, even when itâs mostly strong and stable, like Derekâs own marriage to Tiffany (Amanda Seales).
AdvertisementLew also wanted to show how Lawrence is âstill holding on to this idea of his old self that can have this job and not live in the same place and can still date,â he said. âI think itâs hard when youâre a new parent to come to terms with the fact that everything changes holistically, and you canât just kind of à la carte it.â
Like âInsecureâ fans, the showâs writers have lots of opinions and varying allegiances toward characters, according to Lew. But they try not to let any character off the hook. That comes from creator Issa Rae and showrunner Prentice Penny encouraging the writers to âlean into all the things that made us feel uncomfortable or feel like we were failing to protect our character, which is what they always push us to do, and I think thatâs right,â he said. âItâs about giving the audience what they need, not necessarily what they want.â
âThey created this environment that really just felt like a celebration.â
- "Insecure" writer Jason Lew on the show's creator, Issa Rae, and showrunner Prentice PennyLew joined the âInsecureâ writersâ room at the start of the fourth season, after several seasons as a writer for HBOâs âBallers.â He started his career as an actor, graduating from New York University and working in New York before moving to Los Angeles and writing and directing a couple of feature films.
HBO connected him with Rae and Penny after several âInsecureâ writers had moved on after the first three seasons. (âI think they had lost all their men,â Lew said with a laugh. âThey lost all their dudes.â) He credits Rae and Penny with making the writersâ room âa joyful, safe space where everybody felt respected.â
AdvertisementâIt was just a very, very beautiful and sadly rare space, even in todayâs industry that is making a lot of strides,â he said. âI miss being in a room thatâs just so many people of color, and thereâs just very little translating that needs to be done when talking around the issues that we face. Nobody felt tokenized. I mean, I was the only Asian American in the room, but I never felt that. In other rooms, I felt that. I felt it. It was like, âooh, OK, Iâm The One here.ââ
In Season 4, Lew wrote the episode âLowkey Trippinâ,â in which Andrew (Alexander Hodge) and Molly (Yvonne Orji) get into an argument that touches on tensions between Black and Asian American communities. For Lew, working on that episode exemplified the trust among the writers and how they could dig into hard conversations.
âThere wasnât like this, like, weird tiptoeing around issues,â Lew said. âWe could just speak about them, and I never felt tokenized or marginalized or fetishized or anything, which is what happens when a room is just organically diverse, and full of people who are used to being empathetic to other peopleâs experiences.â
The episode also illustrated one of the showâs many strengths: how it explores big issues without being didactic, and how it doesnât ignore the charactersâ racial identities â" but also doesnât make them the sole focus.
âLike the way Andrew was used, it wasnât like, âOh, every episode is gonna talk about him being Asian Bae.â My episode was the one time where we really dug into it, and even then, the show kind of likes to âplay it, not say it,ââ Lew said. âLetâs just have this dude be a human being, just like any other character in the show. It doesnât have to be that his race features heavily in every scene.â
Andrew (Alexander Hodge) and Molly (Yvonne Orji) in the fourth season of HBO's "Insecure."Merie W. Wallace/HBOSimilarly, Andrew and Molly happened to be an interracial couple; they werenât defined by that. âLetâs actually just see them have a relationship,â Lew said. âItâs just much more valuable culturally, and just better to watch.â
As âInsecureâ wraps up its final season, Lew has a few new projects in development, including a TV series with A24 and a fiction podcast. For a while, he has been trying to develop his next movie â âa Chinese Western, as a corrective for our exclusion in the genre,â he said.
Whatever he does next, he hopes to approach it with the same âsense of joy and respect and curiosityâ that Rae and Penny instilled in the âInsecureâ writersâ room.
âPrentice, especially, kind of came up in a different world that was significantly less diverse. Thereâs this eye toward, like, OK, letâs really nurture each other and take care of each other when youâre a person of color in this industry. And if youâre a person of color in this industry, and you are at all successful, you have shoveled so much shit. You have put up with so much bullshit,â Lew said. âThey created this environment that really just felt like a celebration.â
Related...'Insecure' Star Jay Ellis Breaks Down Lawrence's Big Blowup With CondolaHow Christina Elmoreâs âWeirdest Audition Everâ Led To One Of The Most Talked-About Characters On 'Insecure'We Were Rooting For âAsian Baeâ On âInsecure.' Now, Alexander Hodge Wants To Make His Younger Self Proud.
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