Conan Went To College With The Real Andy Bernard (Feat. Ed Helms) | Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend

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Published on December 26, 2022

Conan talks about his connection to the real life Andy Bernard, who is the total opposite of the character Ed portrayed on “The Office.” Hear more from this episode @ https://listen.teamcoco.com/therealandybernard

ABOUT CONAN O’BRIEN NEEDS A FRIEND
Deeper, unboundedly playful, and free from FCC regulations, Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend is a weekly opportunity for Conan to hang out with the people he enjoys most and perhaps find some real friendship along the way. Watch highlights of Conan, Sona Movsesian and Matt Gourley chatting with celebrities and meeting fans, along with special segments like “Review the Reviewers” and “Big Dick History.”

ABOUT TEAM COCO
Team Coco is the YouTube home for all things Conan O’Brien and the Team Coco Podcast Network. Team Coco features over 25 years of comedy sketches, celebrity interviews and stand-up comedy sets from CONAN on TBS and Late Night with Conan O’Brien, as well as exclusive videos from podcasts like Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend,
Literally! with Rob Lowe, Why Won’t You Date Me? with Nicole Byer, The Three Questions with Andy Richter, May I Elaborate? with JB Smoove and Scam Goddess with Laci Mosley.

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18 comments

  • Varun Sawant 1 year ago

    seeing conan talk about typewriters, ChatGPT would just blow his hair out of the stratosphere

    Reply
  • nattsurfaren 1 year ago

    Who is the fake Andy Bernard?

    Reply
  • Undevelopment Team 1 year ago

    I had a black and white tv until ’93

    Reply
  • dimitreze 1 year ago

    Conan often talks much more than the guests.

    Reply
  • Chris Erickson 1 year ago

    My first computer experience was with windows 98 when I barely existed

    Reply
  • bipolartrippodcast 1 year ago

    Steno pool????

    Reply
  • mcfc 1 year ago

    The nard dog!!

    Reply
  • Peter Sedesse 1 year ago

    I had a commodre 128, and it had no hard drive, so I bought like an $80 word processor program, and in order to save your writing, you had to change floppy disks, which were the big 5 inch ones and then when the save was done, you put back in the program disk. Playing games were even worse because there were multiple play disks, so at random points in the game, it wold tell you ‘ insert disk 3’ .. and then the same thing, if you wanted to save your game you had to insert a save game disk.

    Reply
  • Amarpreet 1 year ago

    Who else desperately want to see the real Andrew Bernard?

    Reply
  • AaronJoseph19 1 year ago

    I love when Conan says “anyone just tuning in. “

    Reply
  • Captain Stone 1 year ago

    That bit at the end reminds me of my grandpa Zabinski who originally came up with the law about “anything that can go wrong will go wrong,” but his classmate plagiarized him, and they went in alphabetical order, and well, as Murphy’s law would have it…

    Reply
  • Cal Essel 1 year ago

    LOL- our family was actually much worse. We didn’t get a color TV until 1981 because my dad was too cheap to spring for a new one until the old BW burnt out. What’s even more insane, he was a chief electronics engineer at McDonnell Douglas aircraft company!

    Reply
  • Kevin Watts 1 year ago

    I had a thwapper. But I wanted the ball (IBM Selectric) so badly.

    Reply
  • Frans Schreuders 1 year ago

    I made this comment with a cave and a rock.

    Reply
  • QuantumBraced 1 year ago

    SNL didn’t have computers nor typewriters in 1988… That just blows my mind. That must have been Lorne’s decision, you can’t tell me NBC couldn’t afford to get the SNL writers some computers, I’m sure they had them for production stuff.

    Reply
  • QuantumBraced 1 year ago

    We had internet in 1994 before almost everyone else, it was awesome, though you couldn’t do much. I was a child, but I remember the idea of sending an email blew my mind.

    Reply
  • digiprez77 1 year ago

    When I was a little kid there were 6 channels, Pong, and we had an electric typewriter set up in the den. I can remember my mom clacking away on it regularly. My sister and I were not allowed near it. My dad is a nerd so we got a Commodore 64 in 1983. The dot-matrix printer was even louder than the typewriter. I specifically remember my mom spending hours typing up some kind of report on the computer for the first time before she lost the whole thing when it crashed. She hadn’t saved anything. She was so mad, she went and got the typewriter from the basement.

    Reply
  • QuantumBraced 1 year ago

    My grandparents didn’t get a color TV until the early 90s LOL.

    Reply

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