New Photo - Vin Diesel reveals why he wanted to do The Fast and the Furious, and then why he almost didn't

Vin Diesel reveals why he wanted to do The Fast and the Furious, and then why he almost didn't By Derek Lawrence :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/derek160e1b72b3389c74b8ca03743731e346949.jpg) Derek Lawrence is a former associate editor at . He left EW in 2022. EW's editorial guidelines April 30, 2021 6:00 a.m. ET Nine movies in (and counting), it's hard to imagine the world of Fast & Furious without Vin Diesel. But the man now forever known as Dominic Toretto came very close to deciding never to don that famous necklace.

Vin Diesel reveals why he wanted to do The Fast and the Furious, and then why he almost didn't

By Derek Lawrence

Derek Lawrence

Derek Lawrence is a former associate editor at **. He left EW in 2022.

EW's editorial guidelines

April 30, 2021 6:00 a.m. ET

Nine movies in (and counting), it's hard to imagine the world of *Fast & Furious* without Vin Diesel. But the man now forever known as Dominic Toretto came very close to deciding never to don that famous necklace.

Appearing on the debut episode of *EW's BINGE: The Fast Saga*, which can be viewed above, Diesel sat down for an extensive conversation about 2001's *The Fast and the Furious*, a.k.a. the film that started it all. While producer Neal H. Mortiz previously said Timothy Olyphant was who the studio originally wanted as Dom, Diesel reveals that when the project finally came his way he quickly went from all-in to maybe all-out.

"No one would ever think that," he tells hosts Derek Lawrence and Chanelle Berlin johnson. "Universal ended up being involved in the release of *Pitch Black*, the only other movie I had done of that size, and so they said, 'We got this movie that's about illegal street car racing, and we want you to play this character, who's a tough guy, outlaw, with a heart and a code.' Then they describe that scene you see in the first movie, where the camera goes through my eye and down my arm and into the engine, and that's the only thing they described. And I said, 'Yes, I'm in!' The next day I'm supposed to go the premiere in Australia for *Pitch Black*, and I read the script and I go…" He pauses and sighs. "I'm conflicted here, because this script is not what I thought it would be."

The Fast and The Furious

Everett Collection

Thankfully, Universal had an ace up their sleeve in David Ayer, a young screenwriter who also wrote another 2001 gritty street drama, *Training Day*, for which Denzel Washington would win an Oscar for his portrayal of crooked LAPD detective Alonzo Harris. Before he started on his rewrite, Ayer met with Diesel to get his insight on the characters and script.

"The irony is, I felt like I had gotten what the character wanted to be in the first script, but I felt there were things conflicting with this truth — and that's where David came in," shares Diesel. "I remember him saying, 'The Dom character is so complex, I've never seen anything like it since Alonzo.' I appreciated that he was able to see the complexities of the character... And some other characters needed some fine-tuning as well, like the Letty character. I'm just so lucky they were open to it all and that they really wanted me to feel great and confident about it. That's not the normal Hollywood story — but my Hollywood story has never been the normal Hollywood story."

In the *BINGE* conversation, Diesel also discussed everything from why he's grateful for the franchise's more "humble" beginnings to passing on *2 Fast 2 Furious* to the immediate bond he felt with late costar Paul Walker.

"We went to Mexico for *MTV Spring Break*, and on our way home, we just wanted to go back commercial, Paul and I," Diesel recalls of promoting *The Fast and the Furious*. "And I'll never forget this: We're sitting on the floor of this airport, bags to the side, legs stretched out, thousands of people walking by, walking over us. Now he had already had some films out, so he was a little more familiar with what was to come, and he said, 'Vin, take all of this in. Take in the fact that all these people are just walking by us.' I said, 'Why,' and he said, 'Because when this movie comes out, our anonymity will be gone.' It was so telling, and it was so surreal, how he knew."

The Fast and The Furious

Bob Marshak/Universal Pictures

And with *F9* set for release June 25, Diesel can't help but to think back to his post-premiere routine with Walker. "It would just be me and him, everybody would always give us our moment, and he'd always say, 'Vin, the best one's still in the can," shares Diesel with a laugh "I'd be like, 'You didn't hear them, Paul?! They're going crazy! What do you mean the best one's still in the can?!'"

Listen below, watch the full interview above, or subscribe to *EW's BINGE: The Fast Saga* via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can also subscribe to EW's YouTube page to catch all the video interviews, and stay tuned to EW.com for even more *Fast *coverage — including next Friday's chat with Ludacris about *2 Fast 2 Furious*.

***FULL EPISODE TRANSCRIPT***

**VIN DIESEL:** We're sitting on the floor of this airport. Bags inside, legs stretched out. Thousands of people walking by, walking over us, walking over our legs. Now, he'd already had some films out. He was a little more familiar with what was to come. And he said, "You know Vin, take all this in. Take in the fact that all these people are just walking by us." And I said, "Why?" And he said, "Because when this movie comes out, our anonymity will be gone."

**DEREK LAWRENCE:** Ask any podcaster, any real podcaster. It doesn't matter if you record in person, or over video chat, podcasting is podcasting. Welcome to EW's BINGE: The Fast Saga. Full transcripts of which are available on ew.com. I'm Derek Lawrence AKA the guy who went as Dominic Toretto for two straight Halloweens. And as that icon once said, "The most important thing in life will always be the people in this Zoom, right here, right now." And for me, that's the Dom to my Brian, the Letty to my Mia, the Roman to my Tej, the Gisele to my Han, Chanelle Berlin Johnson. Chanel, are you ready to relive Fast and Furious, one film at a time?

**CHANELLE BERLIN JOHNSON: **Oh, I'm so ready. I feel like, for both of us probably, we've been waiting our whole lives for an excuse to do something like this. And now it's here and I'm ready to dive in and talk about each movie in-depth with all the players.

**LAWRENCE:** This is like a dream come true. I feel like people can tell we're just beaming with excitement to finally start this. Now, people might be asking, "Why are we doing this? What's the occasion?" Well, first off, you must not know us very well if you asked that question because I said-

**JOHNSON:** Any day.

**LAWRENCE:** Yes, absolutely. If we were still in the office, we'd be having these conversations every day. We're having them over Slack. So this is just two friends getting to talk Fast, with the Fast Family. Now I mean, you mentioned this is like we've been waiting a long time, maybe our whole lives. But definitely, like me, I first came up with this idea for hopefully that EW could do this like four years ago. And we were finally ready to roll last March. We were literally one day away from recording our first interview, in the office. These were going to be in person, I was so hyped. And then well, I think you could figure out why that didn't happen. But we are obsessed with these movies as we probably just display now, and we'll be on full display throughout this whole series. But more importantly, we're celebrating 20 years of Fast and Furious this June as well as the release of the highly anticipated and space-bound, F9. It's happening, that means a lot of things are happening. F9's happening, we've been waiting. We were still in the office when that trailer dropped, that first trailer. And I still remember my reaction to it. They had a big premiere for it at the Super Bowl in Miami when we could still go to events and I was watching the live stream. I had my headphones in. I'm seeing there, first John Cena. They reveal John Cena as playing Jakob Toretto, Dom's brother. I think I laughed. I literally laughed so hard. I was just like, "Oh my god, did they really do that? It's awesome." And then they did the big jump like the Indiana Jones style, like Island to Island, whatever we want to call that. And I think I jumped out of my seat a little bit. And I was like, "Oh man, that was a roller coaster. They could just give us four minutes. Wow." And then-

**JOHNSON:** You realized, "Oh my god."

**LAWRENCE: **Han's alive. And I literally, I think I screamed out loud. And I said, "I don't really know I'm just locked in on this." So that finally ends, I put down my headphones. I look around, the whole office is staring at me. They don't know what was just going on. And I see Ella justice for Han around the office. Look, I mean, unfortunately, in the office we didn't sit next to each other. So you were probably doing the same thing way on the other side, right?

**JOHNSON:** Yes, absolutely. It's just surprise after surprise. And that first trailer, which is amazing that they can still do that for us. Even this deep into it, who could have anticipated Han coming back the way he did? I'm so excited.

**LAWRENCE:** Yeah. And so we've teased it a little bit here, but it goes without saying that we don't have friends, Chanelle. We have family. We have the actual *Fast & Furious* family. Starting with this debut episode we'll be going through each Fast film with one of its stars. Or a behind the scenes star, in the case of director Justin Lin. And when I say stars, I mean these stars. The competition is going to be so furious with how stacked this lineup is. We've got Michelle Rodriguez, Sung Kang, Ludacris, Jordana Brewster, Tyrese, Lucas Black, Nathalie Emmanuel, Jakob Toretto AKA John Cena. But today to talk about the one that started it all, it's Toretto, Chanelle. It's always been Toretto. Yes, Vin Diesel is here to go deep on 2001's the Fast and the Furious. Still a classic no matter how different it is from what we've come to know Fast to be now. But before we dive into our chat with Vin, who was great. He gave us a lot of time, a lot of incredible information that I had never heard before. But what should people know about that first movie?

**JOHNSON:** Yeah, well, hopefully, everybody listening to this has watched all of the movies or are just as obsessed as us. But if you need a little refresher because you haven't seen it in a while, of course, you'll see the gang come together sort of the origin story for all of it now. Well, we have Brian, of course, new to town undercover cop. Well, not new to town. Undercover cop. And he's trying to investigate what's going on with this crew, these steps, and gets caught up in the fast world and falls in love with them essentially. It's truly a love story. Obviously, there's the main with Mia, but it's about the whole crew and everything they do together. He just dives right in, and of course, as you know at the end even sort of forsakes his life as a cop, because he is all about the family now. Just like us, that's how we all feel at the end of the movie. I can't wait to get into it and talk about it with Vin and see or revisit all of the stuff that we loved about it and learn things we didn't know before.

**LAWRENCE: **Yeah, you're really right about that first film, Brian really was, he was the audience Avatar. As he was entering this world, we were entering this world that we didn't know anything about. I mean, he also felt like my personal Avatar. I remember, this go on to speaks to how obsessed I am with his movies. When EW bunch of our coworkers moved out from New York to LA a couple of years ago. And as a bonding thing. I found out a lot of them had never seen a Fast and Furious film, which was like a personal upfront to me. And so I invited a bunch of people over, we were like, "All right, we're going to binge these." We did the first one, and I remember realizing that Paul Walker's character he was going by the name Brian Spilner. And his fake ID says he's from Tucson, Arizona. And I was like, "Wait, I'm from Tucson, Arizona. I used to live in Tucson, Arizona." And then I was like, "I have blue eyes. Brian has blue eyes." I was like, "Am I Brian?" That's how deep I got sucked into it. But enough about me and my comparison of myself to Brian. Do make sure though to stay tuned after we're done with Vin because Chanelle and I will be hopping back on to have a bit more fun with Fast One and hand out some awards. I mean, we all know Fast deserves some award's love. We're here to do that. But I've learned it's not how you talk about your interview, it's how you conduct your interview. Let's get into it. Here's Fast's patriarch, Vin Diesel.

*PIZZA GUY: "What the hell's going on around here?" *

*LEON: "Street's closed pizza boy, find another way home." *

*PIZZA GUY: "Goddamn street racers."*

**LAWRENCE:** As any podcaster, any real podcaster, it doesn't matter if you talk to Vin Diesel for a minute or an hour, winning's winning. And we're the true victors today because we're joined by Dominic Toretto himself, the one and only Vin Diesel. Vin, welcome to binge of fast and Furious.

**DIESEL:** Pleasure to be here. Pleasure to be here.

**LAWRENCE:** We had to start with you for the first film. I mean, this is truly a classic 20 years of *Fast*, I can't believe that, so we're really excited to start with you on this first film.

**DIESEL:** I got 20 years ago from the very weekend that the first Fast and Furious opened. So many wonderful, wonderful, wonderful memories surrounding that time. That time in my life when this movie was finally coming out. I remember it was supposed to come out in March and I had gotten a call saying that they wanted to move it to June. And I was like, "I've been waiting for this movie to come out in March." And they said, "No Vin, that's a good thing that they're moving into the summer." Of course, that was it.

**LAWRENCE:** I love the symmetry now. Like you said, obviously, we would love to see *F9* last year, but the fact that it's going to essentially be 20 years on the dot, that feels meant to be.

**DIESEL:** It does feel meant to be. And not only feels meant to be, again, similar situation last year, I thought it was going to come out in May, I was excited, I told all the fans, and we had to push it a year. But who would have thought. Last year it would have been a blockbuster release because it's F9. This year, it's a call back to that theatrical experience. The theatrical experience we have all missed, and we don't realize how much we've missed. We've been entertained and watching movies on our couch. And we forgot that explosive electric feeling of being in a theater as an audience, as one, as a community engaged in this spectacle. You never know how much you miss something until it's gone. And so, I'm really proud that Universal is willing to be that Blockbuster that comes in and says, "Let's get back to the movies together."

**LAWRENCE:** We need it. We need it.

**DIESEL:** We need it, we really do.

**LAWRENCE:** On of all these interviews, we start by quoting a great man's words, "I live my life a quarter mile at a time, nothing else matters." For those 10 seconds or less, I'm free. This is a challenge, but how would you sum up this first Fast film in 10 seconds.

**DIESEL:** I live my life a quarter mile at a time.

**LAWRENCE: **That is truly perfect. I can't think of a better way to do it.

**DIESEL:** I remember actually, the studio had I think a few years back, commented on that scene and said, "If that scene was a tricky scene then." And he said some actors might not have been able to pull that off. And if it didn't work, the whole franchise never would have worked. It was that moment that cemented the Fast and Furious into pop culture and then making it the world's up.

**JOHNSON: **Yeah, it's like the moment where you get the heart not for the first time, but where it really sinks in. And it's perfect.

**DIESEL:** It's so true. And what's so exciting about F9, is we revisit that moment from a different perspective.

**JOHNSON: **Oh, that's exciting.

**LAWRENCE: **That's a tease, that's A-plus tease right there. Oh my gosh. I mean, I don't want to jump in, but that scene I had written down to ask you about that scene. Because I'll admit it, so I had a fast watch party a couple years ago. A few people that I knew hadn't seen them. I'm like, "We're changing this, we're watching Fast one and going through them all. And that scene came on, and first obviously, Paul's incredible kicking it off with his, "I almost had you." And then you walk around the car. I literally said to everyone, I was like, "This is movie star stuff right here" I was like, "This right here." When you see a scene like that on paper, are you just salivating, is like knowing the potential of what you can do with something like that?

**DIESEL:** I was. I was so excited by that scene. And it was in some ways the biggest scene that we had in the movie because there were the most people around. And the people that were in the scene were real, illegal, streetcar racers. And they were feeding with such authentic energy, that it made so much easier for Paul and I to delve into the scene and really rip it apart. We were lucky. We were lucky. We had started before production, prepping for that scene. One of the things that we did as actors in preparation for that scene was, we did go to illegal street car races.

Now I grew up in New York City. And in New York City in Manhattan, you won't see a lot of helicopters. And you definitely won't see helicopters disperse anything, like any kind of illegal street car racing. That's not going to happen. But Paul grew up in LA and was accustomed to helicopter breaking up illegal street car races. And I wasn't. I remember when the helicopters came, I'm like, "Well, which way do you run?" And I had to start a joke of Paul and I running over this bridge. Now we haven't even filmed the movie yet, so we're really putting ourselves out there. One of the illegal street car racers, all great people that ended up performing this legal form of these races saying, "Get in, get in." And very similar to the scene of Brian saying, "Get in," to Dom when he's running in East LA. Yeah, all those memories. The memories of going into Cuba to better prepare for the character because he owned a Cuban bodega. That was the time when I had all the time in the world, to prepare like crazy for every single role. But yeah, that all will always stay with me. So that scene that you mentioned, where I go, "You almost had me," there was a lot that led up to that. And again, it was the crowd there that was so electric, so appropriately authentic, that added to that.

*DOM:* *"What are you smiling about?" *

*BRIAN: "Dude, I almost had you." *

*DOM: "You almost had me? You never had me. You never had your car. Granny shiftin' not double clutchin' like you should. You're lucky that hundred shot of NOS didn't blow the welds on the intake! Almost had me? Now me and the mad scientist got to rip apart the block and replace the piston rings you fried. Ask any racer, any real racer, it don't matter if you win by an inch or a mile. Winning's winning."*

**LAWRENCE: **Take us back to Fast coming into your life and your initial reaction. I know it took a little bit of convincing. You were like, all in. And then you were like, "uh-uh, I don't know about this." Take me back through that process.

**DIESEL: **Yeah, no one would ever think that. You have to understand, if I've come into this industry, if I'm acting since I'm seven-years-old and I can't get a role and I can't break. And I then go to independent film and become a director, and a writer, and a producer, and do a short film. And then do a feature film and go to Khan, with the short and then sun dance with the future. I'm very precious about trying to do the best work possible at all costs. When I was given the script, because Universal, I know this sounds crazy, but Universal ended up releasing or being involved in the release of Pitch Black, and that was the only other movie I had done of that size.

And so they said, "We got this movie, that's about illegal street car racing, and we want you to play this character, Dom, who's a tough guy, outlawed with a heart and a code. Okay." And then they describe that scene that you see in the first movie, where the camera go through my eyes down my arm and into the engine. And that's the only thing they described. And I said, "Yes, I'm in." And then the next day I'm supposed to go to the premiere in Australia I believe, for Pitch Black. And I read the script, and I go, "Hmm, Shhh."

**JOHNSON:** Maybe not.

**DIESEL: **And my father, who is such an important person in my life is such a purist about art, that I got that from him. And so, we grew up in an artist's house in New York City, where if you made more than $10,000 a year you were kicked out of the building. We were like, "We're real artists." And so I'm conflicted here, because this is not what I thought it would be. They hired David Ayer. That day, they asked him to come in, and we do a page-by-page critique/rewrite. And David Ayer goes off and writes this great script, and the rest is history.

**JOHNSON: **When do you feel like you really got Dom? Was it during that process of going through the rewrites with David Ayer, or was it later? When do you feel like you really were like, "Okay, this is it."

**DIESEL: **Great question. Great, great question. I felt like I had gotten what the character wanted to be in the first script. But I felt that there were things conflicting with his truth. And that's where David Ayer came in. I remember him saying, "The Dom character is so complex, I've never seen anything like it since Alfonzo." When Denzel played Alfonzo before that. I appreciated that he was able to see the complexities of the character and to start… I'm sure he didn't imagine we'd be 12 years later releasing Fast Nine and exploring more of this Dom character. I'm sure he didn't. But yeah, so I got the world, and what the world was about, but the character just needed some fine tuning. And some other characters needed some fine tuning as well like the lady character, across the board.

I'm just so lucky that they were open to it all. And that they really wanted me to feel great about it and confident about it. And that's not the normal Hollywood story. But my Hollywood story has never been the normal Hollywood Story. Being an actor in the '80s and the '90s, as a multicultural actor, there weren't a whole lot of opportunities, which is why I ended up doing my own films like Multi-Facial. I don't know if you've ever seen Multi-Facial, but the idea that I went down that road, and then this industry that I had been begging to be a part of for two decades, more than two decades, finally comes and says, "We're not going to ask you to audition. We're going to write a role for you in Saving Private Ryan." Nothing about my journey was typical, I guess. And I'm grateful for that because it's allowed me to be that much more invested in the films that I've been lucky enough to be a part of.

**LAWRENCE:** Yeah, I mean, it just really shows from the beginning, and you guys have always been great about everyone's listening to everyone, right? And any concerns, you're hearing it out, and shows that can lead to success.

**DIESEL:** That's my mantra. We had done an interview yesterday, and that they asked, "Do you still take notes from the studio?" And I take notes from my stand-in, I take notes from the driver, I take notes from the nurse, I take notes from any human that will spend a second to think about this massive issue of driving. I take notes from my five-year-old kid. I'll take notes from anybody. I'm not precious.

**LAWRENCE:** I'll sync up later with you for my ideas for wrapping up the series. We'll talk later. So you're fully on board and Paul was already signed on, he had worked with Neal and Rob on The Skulls. That mean, this movie doesn't work if that dynamic isn't right, it just doesn't.

**DIESEL:** So true.

**LAWRENCE: **So what was it like? Was that chemistry just instant there with Paul? Obviously, you guys are off going to street races. So clearly, you got along pretty good from the beginning.

**DIESEL:** We got along clearly, from the beginning. I first met him at Dodger Stadium, we were testing out our cars. Part of the process of Fast is we've always auditioned our cars. The cars have really been such a significant part and representation of our characters, that there is a process of casting, right? Of casting the exact vehicle for the state of mind that the character is in, or the journey that the character is going through. Like when you go back to that time, we're just coming out of the East Coast, West Coast beef. If you can remember where you were 1999, this is not common for a New Yorker and a West Coast to find common ground. Which in some ways lends itself to each character journey in the relationship, and the objective of finding that brotherhood.

No one would ever associate that. But it was still popular that there was a divide. We were still getting over the deaths of Tupac and Biggie. And it was still very much present in our lives. When I came on it was me and my New York crew and him in his West Coast crew. And to see that brotherhood form added something special to the movie.

**JOHNSON: **Had you been familiar with Paul's work before this movie at all? Had you seen him in other stuff? Or the first time you met him was the first time you saw him?

**DIESEL:** No, I saw him in *Skulls* and I thought it was incredible. I had seen his work. But when I met him, that was a whole other level, because I saw an authenticity that was just right for the movie industry, just prime for something like this. He through the years has always been the one that's helped. While I'm off thinking about the story or why I'm often thinking about stunts in passing and dynamics and how to realize the impossible, he would often cover us by owning automotive shops, doing races, actually becoming a racer, a streetcar racer, and then actually running on the track. And he would do that to contribute to the legitimacy of… That's what's in some ways, so hard about when he left us, because in some ways, and I know this interview is not supposed to go that way. But he was doing a fundraiser at a garage where he was collecting cars, and yeah, bless him.

**LAWRENCE:** Yeah, no, absolutely. I mean, I would do that on oral history, anybody I talked to, I didn't even have to bring up Paul. They would say nothing but beautiful things. So we miss him. And as important, as we talked about that relationship, obviously you and Michelle portraying a very different relationship with Dom and Letty. And that has just kept on going and become one of the most recognized couples in film history, I dare to say. But talking to her, she said, it was funny early on because you talked about it. You come from this professional actor realm. And she literally said to me, "I'm just this crazy girl from Jersey City on their second movie." So what was it like early on, you guys working out obviously, this now legendary chemistry between you two?

**DIESEL: **One of the things I was working with David Ayer was her character as well. Because she was from East Coast as well, and she represented where we were from. And as a minority, that wasn't common in cinema. If you imagine 20 years ago in the '90s that Michelle Rodriguez would be this iconic figure that represents a love in cinema like we have never seen before. You would say, "Well…" You would pick a million other actors, but there is no actor in Hollywood that could boast of a love like Michelle Rodriguez. No one has that. No one's garnered billions of people and audiences around the world that want to ride or die in the way that that unleaded character does. That's an iconic.

And something we didn't realize, but when I think about it, and I go back to the first movie, maybe subconsciously, there was that dream that that would be our world's love story, this kind of love. Non-typical Hollywood types would be the ones. And it was a contrast, deliberate contrast, between the Brian and Mia relationship. The Brian and Mia relationship was more conventional. And the relationship between Dom and Letty was not conventional. And they weren't perfect and somehow, right in the turn of the millennium, the audience started to lean into that as a representation of what relationships might be in the new millennium.

**JOHNSON:** That is definitely something that stuck out to me. I remember I was 14, I think, when the first movie came out. And so that blew my mind just to see both Michelle and Jordana in those roles as these leading women. And even rewatching it, it's still cool to me that yeah, ladies involved in the heists and everything like that too. As you evolved that relationship, like Michelle says that she leaves the romantic arc to you to help guide her, and then she's just down the ride. But what are those conversations like, as you're figuring out those beats for Dom and Letty?

**DIESEL:** I didn't read a lot of reviews, but I heard all the reviews were good. From the first one. And then someone said I forgot, where was it? New York Times or something. Someone said the only crime of Fast and Furious is we didn't get to explore enough of Dom and Letty. And maybe I've kept that in the back of my head. But after the fourth one, when her character was written out of the movie, I mean, I can remember I was already saying, "She will have to be in the movie, Letty will have to be in this mythology, in order for us, or me, or all of us to construct the next trilogy. You will need this archetype. This archetype will be needed for this mythology to progress."

And if you really think about it, you go through four, avenging Letty. That brings Dom back, right? And then when you go to five, Elsa Pataky's character is trying to fill in for Letty. And then you realize how much he misses his true soulmate. Then at the end of five, Eva Mendes comes in and goes, "Do you believe in ghosts?"

**JOHNSON:** Best moment.

**LAWRENCE: **Which I mean, if we're taking notes, I'll take Eva Mendes back. If we're just like throwing in little notes in.

**DIESEL:** We'll just wait for 10. Let's just say, the fact that you guys know that the studio is saying, "we can't cover all this ground that needs to be covered in just one movie." You can only imagine what is to come.

**LAWRENCE:** Oh, man. You get me excited just talking to you about it. Obviously, filming on a Fast One is so different from filming on an F9. Apart from the budgets or the stakes on-screen just, you guys were so under the radar on that first one. So what was it like thinking back on that, we're talking summer 2000. You guys are just running around LA, going to street races, having a good time. What was that like?

**DIESEL: **Amazing. I often tell this story, because after we made the movie, we went to, I don't know if you remember MTV spring break? We went to Mexico for MTV spring break. I remember, we had to like circle around, we couldn't go to the airport, the plane was about to, whatever, anyway. But on our way home, we just wanted to go back commercial because we didn't feel too comfortable, Paul and I, right?

Paul and I, I'll never forget this. We're sitting on the floor of this airport. Bags inside, legs stretched out. Thousands of people walking by, walking over us, walking over our legs. Now he'd already had some films out. He was a little more familiar with what was to come. And he said, "You know Vin, take all this in. Take in the fact that all these people are just walking by us." And I said, "Why?" And he said, "Because when this movie comes out, our anonymity will be gone." And it was so telling. And it was surreal.

**JOHNSON:** He knew.

**DIESEL:** He knew something, and I was always in the making and that's where my mind was. I'd just come from directing movies and writing movies. But he had this ability to see. Every time we'd come out of a movie, every time we'd come out of a premiere, he'd always say, it would just be me and him for whatever movie it was. Studio would be away from us. The cast and the crew and everybody would always give us our moment. And he'd always say, "Vin, the best one's still in the can." Oh, man, you didn't hear them, Paul? They're going crazy. What do you mean the best one's still in the can?!"

**LAWRENCE: **I can't imagine walking out of Fast Five and thinking like, "Oh man-

**JOHNSON: **There's more.

**LAWRENCE:** Man, the confidence that that takes, I love it. I love that.

**DIESEL: **Oh my God. It was just so funny. I'd clockwork every time. Oh, man.

**LAWRENCE: **Is it wild to think back, obviously, in recent movies we have everything from flying cars to a nuclear submarine? Is it wild when you sit there and think back like, "This started with hijackings of DVD players?" What's like such a 2001 thing. That's quite the origin story of DVD players.

**DIESEL: **It totally started in a different place and it started very humble. I guess that's something that I'm grateful for. That we were able to start from humble beginnings so that you could really connect with these characters without all the spectacle. The spectacle came as the movies needed to start one-upping themselves. And as the audience started to expect the unexpected. And they would want to, you go to see Fast and you see that in a theater for good reason. Because you know, you're going to go "Ooh." Something they don't teach in film school. They teach in every scriptwriting class, they teach you all kinds of how to draw emotion, how to create different archetypes. But nobody teaches you how to create the "Ooh" feeling. And that feeling is what Fast is.

**JOHNSON: **Did that first script have that moment for you? Where you were like, "Oh, my God, this is insane"?

**DIESEL: **That first script did have that moment. That first script when the car goes flips over, that was done practical. You can only imagine how, I mean, if it was done practical, it meant that it had to be done practical. There was no digital option. There was no CGI option. You can only imagine when I saw that I was like, "Oh my Gosh."

**LAWRENCE:** We're obviously, now nine films in, two more to go. Which is like all that I mean, that's wild to think just regardless of anything. But the fact is like who would have guessed that when you obviously, opted not to return originally. And this is something we talked about. When bloodshot was coming out, we talked about your mindset of world-building. You've done it with so many different franchises, Riddick, Fast, XXX. But what was the thought process there going back? I know you originally said you asked Universal not to make a sequel, because you thought it would ruin the ability for that first one to be a classic. Which I'm thankful that it was not the case. We could report that it's still a classic nine movies later. So what was that thought process just for you originally back then after the success of the first one?

**DIESEL:** Well, I was a fan of classics, so Rebel Without a Cause, On the Waterfront, like older movies that were classics. And I had seen more movies get sequalized. And quite often studios would just brand the movie, so they would slap the title, and they weren't trying to Francis Ford Coppola the movie. They weren't trying to go that extra level to make sure that you were building off of the existing story and the existing characters and having those characters evolve. You just simply call it whatever the brand thing is and not evolve the story in an episodic fashion. So that's why I said, "Guys, if you do another one, you're going to jeopardize this first one being a classic."

And of course, script is always something very important to me. If I didn't feel comfortable with the script, I was crazy enough to turn down offers that… I remember turning down the offer Too Fast Too Furious. And my father who I just said, this incredible, altruistic pure artists. "You sure you want to do that, son?" I thought he was going to say, "Oh, you can't give up, I love that. It's amazing" He flipped obviously and said, "You surely want to…?" But by doing that, you send a message with your actions that you have to continue with integrity. So if I didn't opt-out of being in the second one, I never would have been able to be in a position to become the producer and to have such an incredible role in the thinking.

I remember when I did the fourth woman, the roles now had reversed. I was saying, "You know what? I see so far into this mythology, you could save a lot of money if you just film four and five together." And they almost kicked me off the Universal lot.

**LAWRENCE:** Like, "Calm down, man. Calm down."

**DIESEL: **"Get out of here. You are not getting us to get rid of Fast 4." I'm sorry.

**LAWRENCE: **Very important question. How many films do you think we would have gotten if the original title of Redline had stuck? Like 2 Red 2 Line doesn't really have the same ring to it. I don't know. What do you think? We'd be sitting here with Redline?

**DIESEL: **Yeah, that's another thing that's around that. It was called Redline. And I wanted to keep Redline because I'd been thinking Redline. And it was Neal Moritz, who called me and said, "I got the title, I got the title." And this was right before we were about to open the movie. So around that time, when I when I shared with you that they were moving the date to the summer. And I didn't understand what that meant. And I thought, "Will this movie ever come out?" Please come out. I was like, I didn't know anything about dating movies. And so at that time, there was another call from Neal Moritz where he said, "I got the title, I think it should be the Fast and the Furious." And then it just grew on me.

**LAWRENCE: **Yeah, at first, you're like, "Wait, so you want to push my movie a couple of months and change the title? What is going on here?"

**DIESEL: **Yeah, I had the big dreams when I went to Sundance. When I went to Sundance a couple of years earlier, we had heard all this about films going to Sundance and selling for all this money. And getting picked up and getting distributed, and mine didn't get distributed. There was always that fear, like, "If you push it, are you going to shelve this movie. Is anyone ever going to see it?" So that coupled with named James, you could see how you could be…

**JOHNSON:** Some worries there.

**LAWRENCE:** Vin, we'll wrap up with what we're calling the Finish Line and kind of rapid-fire questions about the film and the franchise. This idea came from me because of you being in Tokyo Drift. Like you getting dropped in, especially after they'd already filmed the movie, and then they dropped you in. So say we have a time machine and we can go back and add someone to this first Fast movie. We're not replacing anybody, but we're adding. Maybe it's someone who came in a Fast film later, or just an actor you think would have been a great fit. Who are we going in the Time Machine and putting in Fast One?

**DIESEL:** That has never been in the franchise? Or has been?

**LAWRENCE: **Either one. Whatever feels right.

**DIESEL:** I guess if I were to think, where we're going with the next chapter, Michael Caine? I might have found a way. You're saying if I could have redesigned the mythology or added little elements to the mythology, I could have done something with Helen Mirren and Michael Caine's character played something. I could have introduced something in the future.

**JOHNSON: **That would have been amazing.

**LAWRENCE: **Well, we're not giving up on that. We still got a few films to make that happen. Then each episode we have what we're calling Derek's Embarrassing Story of the Week. Where maybe they're not embarrassing, but it really shows my fandom. And usually, we just have one, but I have a few for this one. I'm going to let you pick which is the most embarrassing Derek story of the week here. So we'll start. Number one, I went as Dom for two straight Halloweens, not just one, two straight Halloweens, maybe, we'll see maybe they'll add in the photo and post, then people will get to see that.

**DIESEL:** That's amazing. That's the best.

**LAWRENCE: **I don't know, I don't know. Hold on, hold on.

**DIESEL: **All right. All right.

**LAWRENCE: **So last March, it was like the 30th day where the world shut down, we're in quarantine. I decided to take a drive over to the Toretto house. I had always wanted to go. I went over and I walked I checked out the Toretto house, and then I walked down the street to the Toretto shop, which I did not realize was right down the street. I did not realize that, and I walked in and bought a Corona, of course, I mean, I had to do it.

**DIESEL: **That's so awesome.

**LAWRENCE:** We got two more covered so we might still top these.

**DIESEL:** Okay, that was awesome.

**LAWRENCE: **Number three, my parents came to visit a few years ago. We're driving down the PCH, we drive past Neptune's net and I'm like, "That looks familiar." And then I immediately was like Fast One, Dom, Brian, meal there. Let's go eat.

**DIESEL: **So many memories.

**LAWRENCE:** Not only do we go eat, my stepmom happily recreates the shot of you and Paul sitting there leaning over the table. And that is one of my most prized possessions.

**DIESEL:** That's so awesome.

**LAWRENCE:** And then lastly, I'm wearing a Toretto shirt. So that's number four. What's the story there? Whether it's most embarrassing, whatever is your favorite of those four.

**DIESEL:** The most embarrassing is two Halloweens.

**LAWRENCE: **Who repeats a costume? That's fair, that's fair. At least space it out, I know, I deserve that.

**DIESEL: **That's awesome. By the way, Derek, they're all wonderful stories. And that's why I always enjoy talking to you about this franchise because you appreciate it. And that makes all the efforts, all the hard work, all the perilous stunts and action sequences that myself and my amazing stunt team always do. It makes it all count. And I appreciate that.

**LAWRENCE:** I appreciate you for allowing me to have a costume to dress up in two times in a year.

**DIESEL: **Why didn't I think of that?! You know how many I've gone not knowing what to wear, not knowing what to be? What was I thinking? It's right there. It's staring at me right in the mirror!

**LAWRENCE: **Wrapping up, we've talked around F9 a little bit. But what would be your maybe tease when we're finally back in theaters? Might be the most anticipated movie of all time, at least for me. I'm biased, but yes. What would be your F9 tease for all the fans out there that have been patiently waiting?

**DIESEL:** Ah, I've so much good stuff. I would say that the whole world has this excitement about this movie coming out. But for those that have been with a franchise, it's even more special. Because if you can remember the first movie, you are going to go before the first movie and understand the first movie even more. I'm saying that's cool stuff. I'm a D&D heads-up. That's like origin stuff. To see family members you never thought you would have seen is going to blow your mind. Do you see the point? We've been wanting to know, where was Dom before he became Dom. Who was his influences? That's going to be really rich with story and a lot of fun to see.

**LAWRENCE: **The first thing that came to my mind was that Fast Five scene with you and Paul on the balcony talking about your dads. No, I'd love to hear that. Maybe we'll get a little peek going back.

**JOHNSON: **Yeah, I was also thinking too, that there's so many callbacks and other movies. One of the things I wanted to ask you was, "What's something that you'd love to be able to bring back?" But it sounds like the best is yet to come though.

**DIESEL: **The best is yet to come. As Paul would say…

**LAWRENCE: **That's what I was going to say, "The best one's still in the can," always. You are going to do the last one, you're still going to be thinking that in the back of your head. You'll be like but Paul said, "The best one is still in the can."

**DIESEL:** I will always think that. There will always be. And bless him for that, bless him for adding that momentum, that motivation to always reach higher and making it something that has reverence, and significance, and reminding us all to never rest on our roles but to earn every part of it.

**LAWRENCE:** Yeah, no, absolutely. And I know that the second trailer will be out by the time people's hear this and I know there's a little Paul nod we get in that. So I think we're all excited to see that bit of it too. Vin, I'm glad we didn't just almost have you, we actually had you, so hopefully with all due respect, thanks for becoming a part of the bench family. We always love to talk to you.

**DIESEL: **Always. Thank you, guys, so much for having me. I really appreciate it. Love guys, love.

*DOM: "I live my life a quarter-mile at a time. Nothing else matters. Not the mortgage, not the store, not my team and all their bullshit. For those 10 seconds or less, I'm free."*

**LAWRENCE: **All right, thank you so much to Vin Diesel for letting us climb in the ring with Ali. But we love these movies so much that we couldn't go without talking more about them. Considering the snobs at the Oscars and Golden Globes refuse, refuse to recognize Fast's greatness, we're bringing some justice and handing out a few awards.

**JOHNSON:** As Brian said in Fast one, "If I win, I take the money and the respect." To some people, that's more important. Well, he eventually won Dom's respect, we have to decide now, who won our respect? What do you say for this one, Derek?

**LAWRENCE: **I mean, as we've talked about these awards, I feel like there's a lot of different ways you can go. You can pick a character, could it be Brian? He earned Dom's respect, did he earn our respect? Could it be an actor in it? I think that's the direction I wanted to go in, which was Paul Walker. And we'll talk a lot about Paul Walker throughout this whole binge series. But he is so good in this first movie, him and Vin are both incredible, and we'll get further into Vin as well. But like he said at the top, he's the Avatar into this and if we're not invested in him, we're not invested in any of this.

And Paul Walker we should say, Paul Walker was definitely someone that was known. He wasn't a star, I would say, but he had definitely, he had been working a long time. But I don't know that we knew he had this in him. He had been on a soap opera, he had done movies as such as Varsity Blues, She's All That, he did The Skulls right before this, which the origin story of Fast because he was working on The Skulls with director Rob Cohen and producer Neal Moritz, and they all ended up doing Fast together. But I think this really changed the direction of his career.

Talking to everyone and spoiler alert for our interviews to come. Everyone has such incredible things to say about him, but mostly just as a person. And he wasn't really locked in on the industry. He had so many more interests outside of it. But I just feel like we had to say how incredible Paul is throughout these movies, but especially in this Fast One. We have an award coming up later that won't go to him, but easily could have. I felt like he earned that respect here. And rest in peace, obviously, we can't wait to keep talking about him throughout this series.

**JOHNSON:** I totally agree with that. Two things about it. One, it's a new role for him, he'd been a side character and other things and like I knew his face, but this is in a way his first real leading man kind of role. And if we don't believe him, the movie falls apart, because he has to be both charming enough to make the audience want him to be accepted by the crew. But at the same time also, apart from them enough, that we believe the depth of that betrayal and stuff as well. And he pulls off both. I want him to go on the run with Vin Diesel by the end of this movie.

**LAWRENCE: **Yeah, speaking to producer Neal Moritz, he said, he's like, "Paul just had this thing." He's like, "Women wanted to be with him, guys wanted to be him." And obviously, that's the thing that's he didn't make up that phrase. That's definitely been out there, you can say that about a lot of people. But I think when I heard him say that about Paul, that spot on like, he really… I remember talking to Gabrielle Union a few years ago about her experience with Paul on She's All That, and she just was like he was the most fun guy and the nicest guy and obviously a great actor as well. So, all the respect to Paul, winner of this category.

Next up, we've got, hey, this guy is in the movie. We're going to talk so much about Paul Walker, Vin Diesel, Michelle Rodriguez, Jordana Brewster, but we'd like to shout out maybe the one or the supporting players, the maybe someone hadn't really achieved star status and you look back and like, "Oh my god, they were in this?" For this one, it was Ted Levine. It was always Ted Levine, Buffalo Bill himself. And I just can't, I can't believe that he's in this movie. And it's always fun to go back and realize that he was.

**JOHNSON:** Yeah, absolutely. The energy is so different in this movie that, I think especially because when this movie came out the first time I saw it, I'm not thinking about it like that. It's like subsequent viewings of the movie later. It's like, "Oh, right, that is Buffalo Bill. So wild.

**LAWRENCE:** Definitely, on the opposite end of the spectrum of his performance in Silence of the Lambs, which is good. I don't know that that would have fit in this one.

**JOHNSON:** It's also kind of funny. I just realized he's not around for, but there's the line when Dom looks at the ID for Brian, and he says, "Brian Earl Spilner. You sound like a serial killer." Like it's kind of a nugget in there that's really funny considering who else is in the boat.

**LAWRENCE: **Wait, are you saying that Buffalo Bill somehow infiltrated the LAPD, and he was like, "You know what, this is going to be my little tip of the hat. I'm going to give this young undercover cop a serial killer name. This is how I'm going to still have that ability in the world"? I like that theory.

*DOM:* *"Brian Earl Spilner. It sounds like a serial killer name. Is that what you are?" *

*BRIAN:* *"No, man."*

**LAWRENCE:** Next up, Quote of the Movie. And there's so many options on this one. Here's a few nominees and then Chanelle, I'll let you pick a winner. We have Ja Rule. Shout out to Ja Rule. There's going to be some maybe non shout-outs to Ja Rule coming up. But in his brief appearance in this movie, he is fun. You got to remember Ja Rule's kind of really starting to blow up with his rap career at this time. He's got a great quote, "It's not how you stand by your car. It's how you race your car." You better learn that.

**JOHNSON:** And it's early in the movie, too.

**LAWRENCE: **Yeah, it's at that first race. And it's a good scene. It's a Paul Walker, Ja Rule, it's a fun one. So there you go Ja, there's your shout-out.

*EDWN:* *"It's yours?" *

*BRIAN: "Yeah, I'm standing next to it." *

*EDWIN:* *"That's funny. You know, Edwin happens to know a few things, and one of the things Edwin knows is: It's not how you stand by your car, it's how you race your car. You've got to learn that."*

**LAWRENCE:** We have a classic. "I live my life a quarter-mile at a time." Dom, what else has to be said about that one? And then our final nominee would be both Dom and Vince. "Vince, there was a time when I didn't know you." "That was in the third grade!" It gets me every time. It gets me every time. And Vince gets a bad rap, deservedly so, I'll say it. we don't have to defend everybody in the Fast and Furious, and there's a fun little back and forth.

**JOHNSON: **I mean, I love the exchange between Vince and Dom, but you can't beat it, "I live my life a quarter-mile at a time." It's iconic immediately you think of the franchise and everything they've gone through. And also looking back, especially in the scene that it comes up in, it's such an origin for the Dom character. And I feel like he's actually evolved from that line. But still, it's so important to who he is.

**LAWRENCE:** You couldn't go any other way than that one. All right, but where are they now? This is less than reward and more of us trying to speculate on the life currently being lived by maybe a character we haven't seen in a long time. And I feel like there's an obvious one here, and it's not just some self-promotion on my part. But a few years ago, I tracked down Johnny Strong, who plays Leon in Fast One. And you may be asking, "Who is Leon? I don't remember a Leon." Well, Leon is the member of Dom's crew who loves to wear generic basketball jerseys and yell at pizza delivery guys. Sadly, Jesse dies in this movie. Thankfully, we thought Letty died, but she's back.

**JOHNSON: **Yeah, same with Han. So Jesse and Gisele, the only people who are still definitely dead that we know of.

**LAWRENCE: **Also, Vince, he returned in Fast Five to get his little moment, and then he dies as well. But Leon's the only original member of Dom's crew that we don't know what his whereabouts are. So I said, I talked to Johnny Strong a few years ago. You can go find that article in the archives on ew.com. And he was a trip to talk to, he has a lot of theories. He says they have that big final scene right before the truck jacking that goes bad. There's a little moment where Leon's like, there's a lot of hesitation. He's like, "Are you sure we should be doing this?" Like it doesn't feel right to do it without Jesse. And so in his mind, in Johnny Strong's mind, he's like, "Oh, Leon had that doubt." So once the heat became too risky, he didn't want anything more to do with the gang. I will say, speaking of Heat, my favorite part of the interview is he compared Leon to Val Kilmer in Heat, which coincidentally is quite the heat check by Johnny Strong, right?

**JOHNSON:** Right?

**LAWRENCE: **Val Kilmer is iconic in Heat. Everything is iconic in Heat. I just love that he was this Leon character that a lot of people don't remember his name, he was comparative to Val Kilmer in Heat. But yeah, what do you think? He had his own thoughts maybe on what Leon would be up to? Well, I don't know what do we think? Did he pass away at some point? Is he still kicking around out there?

**JOHNSON: **I like to think he's still out there. But the thing that I can't decide is, if he's out, I don't think he wouldn't betray them either. I think it'd be cool if at some point in the films they had to go to Leon for something. Like he just has this one key thing, that friend from way back, who has this one resource, and they need to go back to him. I just think he's out there doing his thing probably living a legit life. Maybe if he was like, all right, actually stealing things. It's too hot for me.

**LAWRENCE:** Have you been speaking to Johnny Strong because I feel like that's what he wants. He basically was planting the seeds. He's like, "Oh, but he told me he'd only come back for the right situation." First off, he said that he would want maybe Leon to be the big bad that Dom has to go against. again, and I'm like, I don't know. man, they've been bringing in Jason Statham, The Rock, Charlize Theron, and John Cena. Sorry. I don't know if you quite got the wattage for that.

**JOHNSON: **What I could see though, is it seems like from the trailer for Fast 9, or for F9, sorry, that Cipher is basically the one who taps Jakob. I could see Cipher going after one after another person and be like, "Actually, I'm going to just turn all of the people you know against you."

**LAWRENCE:** Maybe Jakob went down and tried to Leon. I don't know. All right, well, stay tuned for F9. I can't wait to get that answer. All right, so I said at the top, no award love has ever been given to Fast. They have not even been nominated for an Oscar. These films deserve some love. I mean, I won't say that they should be winning Oscars. I mean, I will say that. Save that for that Furious Seven episode, because See You Again, that should have been the lock of all locks for Best Original Song. But each episode, we're going to decide what Oscar nomination that specific film should have had. And I feel like we're on the same page here. What do we think here for Fast One?

**JOHNSON**: You have to give the Best Actor nomination to Vin Diesel. You have to do it. And I think it becomes actually more apparent in retrospect because that scene where he wants to show Brian something. And it's the car that eventually becomes for everybody, the iconic car. But the thing that you can forget until you go back to watch it, I think might be the only time that Dom admits to being scared of something. And he's scared of this car and what happened to his dad.

And that scene is so emotional and sets up so much of who Dom really is. We see the way he interacts with the crew, we see how Brian earns his respect but we don't actually get to what his heart is until he lays it all out in that scene. And he does such a good job. And if that scene doesn't work, the character doesn't work, the franchise can't continue because then you don't really believe in his code, what really matters to him. But he sells it and it's perfect. And it's still golden 20 years later. So got to be Vin Diesel.

**LAWRENCE: **Vin just so good in this first movie. Obviously, his portrayal is just iconic throughout. But this one, and this is the way you said it, it's so different than any of the other ones. I would say obviously, it's not usually even this kind of movie. If it's lower stakes than what's to come. It's not traditionally an Oscar-type movie, I understand that. But 2002 Oscars, Denzel Washington wins Best Actor for Training Day. You can't tell me that Training Day is that much better a movie or that much different a movie than the Fast and the Furious One. Written by David Ayer, both of these.

**JOHNSON: **Good point. Yeah, absolutely.

**LAWRENCE:** So the DNA is there, the shared DNA. I mean, obviously, I'm not going to say that Denzel shouldn't have won the Oscar that year. I mean, he was incredible on Training Day. That performance still holds up. It's insane that it even took that long for him to get recognized as Best Actor. But the precedent was set that that kind of movie could get you in. And I mean, I got the nominees pulled up, so Denzel Washington Training Day, Russell Crowe nominee for A Beautiful Mind. Will Smith nominated for Olly. I mean, anybody knows I'm equally obsessed Will Smith as I am Fast and Furious, so stay tuned for the binge Will Smith podcast coming soon. We have Tom Wilkinson, In The Bedroom I'll just admit never seen it. This is the one that I take out: Sean Penn, I Am Sam. That aged terribly from the minute it happened. So I think we just retroactively slot Vim in that Sean Penn slot, and justice is served.

**JOHNSON: **I think so too. I completely agree. And you make a good point about them being similar types of movies. You could sneak one in there and give him his due. Because he does a great job. And I feel like in general, Vin Diesel doesn't get enough credit for his acting. And this is a movie, especially out of any in the franchise, that I think he really deserves that recognition.

**LAWRENCE:** Absolutely. Which plot line went by too fast? Chanelle, what do you think?

**JOHNSON: **For me, it's got to be the Johnny Tran stuff, especially in retrospect. It makes a lot of sense in the context of the movie, but it also ends up being with the exception of everything that happens with Jesse and stuff at the end, a little bit of a red herring. Because it's not really about the rivalry with Johnny Tran. It's not really about anything going on with that character. So that means we don't get to know a lot about him. The only time we see the people in his life that he does care about outside of just being sort of an antagonist in the movie is in a montage where nobody speaks. I would love to dig into that a little more. Unfortunately, from the movie it seems like Johnny Tran is dead so there's no opportunity to go back and see what he's doing now. But that is a person I would be curious to learn more about.

**LAWRENCE:** Do we ever get definitive on that? I feel like again, it was a situation where Brian's like, "Call an ambulance." And then runs off.

**JOHNSON: **Exactly it's a little ambiguous.

**LAWRENCE: **No, you're totally right because it almost is set up like Dom's actually more the big bad of that first movie. Fortunately, that's slides Johnny Tran, over a bit. But yeah, I feel like that there was a lot of potential. Rick Yune, a really good actor whose done some good things. I feel like he could have further developed that character if given the opportunity here in the film. So not that we could do about that now, but I definitely think there was more to be done with the Johnny Tran character. Totally agree.

The We Hungry award, a little tip of the hat to Roman Pearce and Tyrese there, I just always love, we'll get into that on our too fast episode, but the way he said, "We hungry," every time gets me. I feel like there could have been a few options, I don't know if it technically counts as being hungry. But when Dom and Brian come back to the house after the race gets busted up and Dom takes Vince's beer and gives it to Brian and Brian just uses a shirt to wipe it all. It's so good. It's just the look, Vince and Brian just looking at each other. It's perfect. I mean, the tuna sandwich, right? I mean, we've got to give a shout-out to the tuna sandwich.

We haven't talked much about Jordana Brewster and the character of Mia who, obviously, as the movies go, she gets more to do in some, and less to do in other films. But she was really winning in this film I think, you get the appeal and you get why Brian will be drawn to her. And I mean, still 20 years later, as Dom asked, "What did Mia put in that sandwich?" I mean, we know it wasn't actually that good. Apparently, we've been told that. I don't know, but I wouldn't mind. I drove over during quarantine to the Toretto shop. And I was definitely bummed that there was no tuna sandwiches or anything like that.

**JOHNSON:** They have to.

**LAWRENCE: **Yeah, I bought a Corona, but there was no tuna. I would have loved to have that Corona with a tuna sandwich.

**JOHNSON: **But it doesn't even have to be good. According to the movie.

**LAWRENCE: **Exactly. We gave a shout-out to Ja Rule earlier. Ja Rule if you're listening. I mean, come on if you are, please. I mean, we'll do a special episode with you. But, the Ja Rule mistake of the week. Now for context, we have Ja Rule here in this first movie, and we'll get into this more in Too Fast. Ja Rule, I said he was popping really at this time. He had the opportunity to come back for a bigger role and Too Fast, turned it down, hence the word The Ja Rule mistake of the week. And this again, this goes back to earlier we said it could be a plot mistake or a character mistake or anything like that. But I think we both landed on Vince basically sending Mia into Brian's arms right?

**JOHNSON: **Yeah, absolutely. And that was the thing that he was so pressed about. And he ends up being the reason it happens, in a way.

**LAWRENCE:** Yeah for the context with everyone I mean obviously you've seen the film I'm sure, but for your memory, it has been a while. Mia's resistant even though you can tell she's definitely into Brian.

**JOHNSON: **There's some attraction there.

**LAWRENCE: **Yeah, but she's like, "I don't date my brother's friends," whatever. But then after the barbecue, Brian's helping Mia with the dishes as the rest of the crew is watching a movie. And Vince comes in, to microwave some popcorn. And he busts Brian's chops about helping with the dishes. I would say bust chops is more of a friendly thing. It's not even that he's just outwardly trying to make fun of him. But then that completely backfires. And Mia's like, "Oh, Vince, what was that place you wanted to go on a date to?" And then he gets all excited. And says, "I think it's cha cha cha," or something like that. And she's like, "All right, Brian, so you'll take me there?" And then Vince charges out.

So it's like, "Man, maybe you want to kept your mouth shut, played the long game." I mean, I'm sorry, Vince. I don't think you're ever getting Mia, but maybe Brian wouldn't have gotten Mia either. So just bad move. Even though we should point out, Vince was right in the end. He was right about Brian, he was right to be suspicious. So lose a point gain a point for Vince.

**JOHNSON: **Right, I think it's like one of those things like right, but also losing the long game. But he at least also gets to say that later on, when he comes back. He's like, "I was right, and you didn't trust me then." A little bit of justice for him as well.

**LAWRENCE: **Yeah, we're all about justice in this franchise, thankfully. Wrapping up lastly, as we know, Winning's winning. So Chanelle, who was the ultimate winner of Fast One?

**JOHNSON: **I mean, we just said that Vin Diesel had to be nominated for an Oscar. I think you can't really go with anybody else but him in this movie, both because of what it means for the franchise as a whole. And, how it kick starts this amazing legacy now for the character and for Vin Diesel as a performer. But also, just because in the movie, he's so cool and so interesting. And he alongside Mia and just the Torreto family is the reason that Brian decides to basically change his entire life. So how could it be anybody else but Vin Diesel?

**LAWRENCE: **I mean, it's ironic, right? He doesn't return obviously, for 2 Fast, which we'll get more into next week. But, I mean nobody has been a bigger winner out of the whole franchise, then Vin Diesel. But no, you're totally right here. I mean, if we say a guy should be nominated for an Oscar, he probably won the film. And I mean, he won our interview too. I thought he was so great to talk to. He had some incredible stories. Such a fun interview. Thank you to Vin. Thank you, listeners. That's it for this episode. And like Brian O'Connor, we hope you're we earned your respect. In the meantime, please subscribe and listen along every week, wherever you get your podcasts.

**JOHNSON: **Rate us, share the show with your friends. Tell us what you think. You can find us on Twitter @DerekJLawrence or me @ChanelleBerlin.

**LAWRENCE: **Also head to EW.com for complete coverage of The Fast Saga and full episode transcripts.

**JOHNSON: **This episode was hosted and produced by Derek Lawrence and Chanelle Berlin Johnson produced edited and mixed by Samee Junio, and executive produced by Carly Usdin and Shana Naomi Krochmal.

**LAWRENCE: **Thanks for listening. And until next time, salud mi podcast familia.

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Published: November 03, 2025 at 03:19PM on Source: NITO MAG

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Vin Diesel reveals why he wanted to do The Fast and the Furious, and then why he almost didn't

Vin Diesel reveals why he wanted to do The Fast and the Furious, and then why he almost didn't By Derek Lawrence :m...
New Photo - 5 NBA rookies besides Cooper Flagg you should be collecting

5 NBA rookies besides Cooper Flagg you should be collecting Susan LulgjurajNovember 3, 2025 at 9:00 PM 0 VJ Edgecombe set a 76ers record in his NBA debut. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum) () The NBA season just tipped off, but collectors already have their eyes on this year's rookie class. While Cooper Flagg headlines the conversation, several firstyear players are getting attention both on the court and in the hobby. Here are five rookies other than Flagg to watch this season — and whose cards you might want to collect. VJ Edgecombe The Philadelphia guard made a lot of noise on opening night.

- - 5 NBA rookies besides Cooper Flagg you should be collecting

Susan LulgjurajNovember 3, 2025 at 9:00 PM

0

VJ Edgecombe set a 76ers record in his NBA debut. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum) ()

The NBA season just tipped off, but collectors already have their eyes on this year's rookie class. While Cooper Flagg headlines the conversation, several first-year players are getting attention both on the court and in the hobby.

Here are five rookies other than Flagg to watch this season — and whose cards you might want to collect.

VJ Edgecombe

The Philadelphia guard made a lot of noise on opening night. He dropped 34 points, a Sixers rookie debut record, passing Allen Iverson and marking the third-best debut all time. While there's just one NBA card product on the market at the moment, the sales of his cards are hot. Low-numbered parallels are selling for thousands, and a 2025 Panini Instant NBA Draft Night autograph recently sold for $6,000.

Cedric Coward

Anyone wearing a No. 23 jersey has to get a little attention. Teams aren't handing that number out to just anyone. The Grizzlies rookie is off to a strong start, averaging 16 points a game. His cards have sold at good prices but still have a lot of room to grow in value.

Dylan Harper

The San Antonio Spurs drafted Victor Wembanyama, Stephon Castle and Dylan Harper in back-to-back-to-back years. The Spurs are going to be good. Harper, the son of former NBA star Ron Harper, is averaging 14.8 points, 5.3 rebounds and 4.8 assists through the first five games of the season. His cards are one of the hottest on the market right now.

Kon Knueppel

Some of Knueppel's biggest card sales have featured his former college teammate, Flagg. He isn't getting the same love as Flagg, but the fourth overall draft pick is having a solid start. Knueppel has a penchant for hitting 3-pointers, and if he can stay consistent, his card values could rise.

Tre Johnson

Washington Wizards fans shouldn't be disappointed by Tre Johnson. The rookie is averaging 14.8 points through his first four games and has made himself a presence on the floor. When it comes to cards, he's probably one of the most undervalued top rookies right now. His first rookie cards just hit the market with the release of 2025-26 Topps Basketball, and many of his low-numbered and rare cards are still affordable.

As the NBA season unfolds and more card products come out, expect this list — and card values — to evolve quickly. Keep an eye on these rookies as their performances continue to shape the 2025-26 hobby landscape.

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL Sports"

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Source: Sports

Published: November 03, 2025 at 03:27PM on Source: NITO MAG

#ShowBiz#Sports#Celebrities#Lifestyle

5 NBA rookies besides Cooper Flagg you should be collecting

5 NBA rookies besides Cooper Flagg you should be collecting Susan LulgjurajNovember 3, 2025 at 9:00 PM 0 VJ Edgecombe se...
New Photo - The 10 college basketball players to watch as teams start chase for NCAA Tournament

The 10 college basketball players to watch as teams start chase for NCAA Tournament Eddie Timanus and Erick Smith, USA TODAYNovember 3, 2025 at 9:01 PM 0 With the calendar turned to November, the sounds of bouncing balls, squeaking sneakers and referees' whistles are echoing in campus gyms throughout the land. Yes, college basketball is back, and it's time to look at who might play a starring role in the coming months on the way to March Madness. Two weeks ago, we unveiled the preseason USA TODAY Sports men's basketball poll with Purdue at No. 1.

- - The 10 college basketball players to watch as teams start chase for NCAA Tournament

Eddie Timanus and Erick Smith, USA TODAYNovember 3, 2025 at 9:01 PM

0

With the calendar turned to November, the sounds of bouncing balls, squeaking sneakers and referees' whistles are echoing in campus gyms throughout the land. Yes, college basketball is back, and it's time to look at who might play a starring role in the coming months on the way to March Madness.

Two weeks ago, we unveiled the preseason USA TODAY Sports men's basketball poll with Purdue at No. 1. Last week it was 10 players on our preseason All-America team. But there are a lot more guys who could have a major impact once teams and conference races start to take shape. In no particular order, here's a look at a number of other players to watch in 2025-26.

Trey Kaufman-Renn, F, Purdue

Braden Smith is Purdue's engine, of course, but Kaufman-Renn is often the finisher. He averaged 20.1 points and 6.5 rebounds last season, and he might be even more productive in his final season with a couple of true centers allowing him to return to his natural power-forward position.

Milos Uzan, G, Houston

The Cougars will again be greater than the sum of their parts, but Uzan is the glue that holds it all together. He can score himself (11.4 ppg) and shot 42.8% from the three-point arc, but he's even more valuable as a distributor (4.3 apg). With some key pieces departing and talented newcomers arriving, Uzan's leadership will be more critical this season.

Houston guard Milos Uzan (7) dribbles the ball Duke guard Tyrese Proctor (5) during the national semifinals of the 2025 NCAA men's tournament at the Alamodome.Nate Bittle, C, Oregon

The seven-footer with three-point range averaged 14.2 points, 7.6 rebounds and 2.1 blocks for the Ducks. He's expected to add more to those total this season. With high-scoring guard Jackson Shelstad also back in Eugene, Oregon could be a dark horse in the loaded Big Ten with Bittle manning the middle.

Mikel Brown Jr., G, Louisville

One of the nation's top recruits and a standout on the U.S. under-19 team this past summer, Brown will step in immediately to run the point for the Cardinals as a freshman. Brown has the ability to shoot from deep and penetrate to the basket that should fit well in Pat Kelsey's system.

1 / 25Which NCAA men's basketball teams are coaches' preseason favorites? See who made the list.No. 1 Purdue Boilermakers (2024-25 record: 24-12)Tamin Lipsey, G, Iowa State

Though an injury limited his work in the preseason, the experienced floor leader shouldn't miss a beat when he retakes the court for the Cyclones. He averaged 10.6 points, 3.1 assists and 2.0 steals as a junior last year and should again be among the Big 12's most efficient ball handlers.

Graham Ike, C, Gonzaga

Ike will give away an inch or two to opposing post players at times, but he makes up for it with footwork and positioning. He'll likely be asked to add to his 17.3-point, 7.3-rebound averages for a rebuilt squad with new pieces in the backcourt as the Bulldogs hope to restart their streak of Sweet 16 appearances that ended last season.

Donovan Dent, G, UCLA

Dent arrives in Westwood after putting up 20.4 points and 6.4 assists a game at New Mexico last year. He's a high-speed, high-motor guy at both ends of the floor, which should make him a quick study in Mick Cronin's system. If he its the ground running, the Bruins should be in the thick of the Big Ten race.

Bennett Stirtz, G, Iowa

The reigning Missouri Valley Conference player of the year followed coach Ben McCollum to Iowa City from Drake. Stiritz rarely left the floor last season, averaging 39.4 minutes per game. During that time, he put up 19.2 points and 5.7 assists for the Bulldogs, so it will be interesting to see if his skills translate to the rigors of the Big Ten.

Richie Saunders, G, Brigham Young

Much of the attention given to the Cougars will center on prized recruit AJ Dybantsa, but it might by the play of Saunders that is most critical to helping the team reach the Final Four. The senior sharpshooter averaged a team-high 16.5 points per game and made 43.2% of this 3-point shots last season. His ability to play a foil to Dybantsa and hit open shots when the defense is draw away from the freshman could be a lethal combination.

Tomislav Ivisic, C, Illinois

Kasparas Jakucionis was the freshman that was had the biggest impact for the Illini last season, but quietly Ivisic had a standout first campaign, leading the team with 7.7 rebounds and finishing second with 13.0 points per game. Jakucionis is now in the NBA which opens the door for Ivisic to be one of the breakout players this season. He has size at 7-1 to be an interior force, while bringing a deceptive shooting touch that can stretch defenses and pull big defenders away from basket.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: College basketball players to watch as NCAA tournament race begins

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Published: November 03, 2025 at 03:27PM on Source: NITO MAG

#ShowBiz#Sports#Celebrities#Lifestyle

The 10 college basketball players to watch as teams start chase for NCAA Tournament

The 10 college basketball players to watch as teams start chase for NCAA Tournament Eddie Timanus and Erick Smith, US...
New Photo - Lucas Black on appreciating the 'unique' legacy of Tokyo Drift, reuniting with Fast family for F9

Lucas Black on appreciating the 'unique' legacy of Tokyo Drift, reuniting with Fast family for F9 By Derek Lawrence :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/derek160e1b72b3389c74b8ca03743731e346949.jpg) Derek Lawrence is a former associate editor at . He left EW in 2022. EW's editorial guidelines May 14, 2021 6:00 a.m. ET Fifteen years later, The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift is still a "dream come true" for star Lucas Black.

Lucas Black on appreciating the 'unique' legacy of Tokyo Drift, reuniting with Fast family for F9

By Derek Lawrence

Derek Lawrence

Derek Lawrence is a former associate editor at **. He left EW in 2022.

EW's editorial guidelines

May 14, 2021 6:00 a.m. ET

Fifteen years later, *The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift *is still a "dream come true" for star Lucas Black.

The actor joined hosts Derek Lawrence and Chanelle Berlin Johnson on the latest episode of *EW's BINGE: The Fast Saga*, in which the stars of the franchise look back on all eight films in the lead-up to *F9*. Upon being cast as high schooler Sean Boswell in *Tokyo Drift*—the third *Fast* film and first for Black, costar Sung Kang, and director Justin Lin—the *Friday Night* *Lights* movie alum was already a fan, revealing he and his friends often quoted Tyrese Gibson's iconic *2 Fast 2 Furious* line, "We hungry."

"I read the script and was excited about it, and really intrigued that it was something different than the other two," Black shares. "They taught us how to drift two weeks before we started shooting. We would go to Irwindale Speedway, and we had the best teachers in the world, all the drift champions. Rhys Millen was my stunt double, but he was a drift champion back in the early 2000s, so he taught me. It was like a dream come true, for a 25-year-old to be able to go out and learn how to drift, just burn the tires down to the tread and the highest octane fuel. I mean, it was like jet fuel we were putting in these cars. And then at the end of the week I got a paycheck to do it! It was awesome."

THE FAST AND THE FURIOUS TOKYO DRIFT

John Johnson / Universal

Even after all that learning, Black says he struggled during filming to actually be allowed behind the wheel, with Lin instead relying on the stunt drivers. But, just like Sean did with Neela (Nathalie Kelley), Black eventually wore his director down.

"I'm like, 'Justin, you got to let me drift,'" he recalls. "He's like, 'No, no, you can't do it.' One day we're filming in Downtown L.A., where Han's garage was, and I take Justin, there was a spot where they parked 18-wheeler tractor-trailers, and I said, 'We're going drifting.' So I took him to that spot and drifted to show him—because he's in the passenger seat—that I knew how to drift. And he's like, 'Alright, Lucas. Whenever there's a time, I'll let you know.' And so the scene where we're putting the Skyline engine in the Shelby Mustang, and we're going down that mountain, practicing for the big race at the end, they had a crane car, but it was a fast car. So it's not like your normal, regular setup on a movie. This was like a BMW with a crane and a camera on it, and I was following that camera. Justin comes up to me and says, 'Hey, now's your time.' That's all he said. And I was like, 'Yes! You got it!'"

THE FAST AND THE FURIOUS TOKYO DRIFT

Everett Collection

The end of *Tokyo Drift* would see the return of Vin Diesel as Dominic Toretto, linking the film to its predecessors, while also sending the franchise on a different path, with the next installment* *reuniting the original stars and serving as the beginning of new life to the now billion-dollar franchise.

"Just being a part of *Fast & Furious* is incredible and a huge success for me," Black says. "It was blessing to see that it was one of those films that stood out from the franchise. That's what's so unique about *Tokyo Drif*t, it kind of has its own following. And I know the movie and the story, the saga has changed throughout the years, and that's been a good thing. But *Tokyo Drift *stands out different, and I'm proud of that."

While Lin and Kang continued with *Fast* in the fourth, fifth, and sixth films, Black didn't return until a cameo in *Furious 7*. But now the whole *Tokyo Drift* crew is back together in the upcoming *F9*, and Black is looking forward to fans' reaction to the family united—and whatever road Sean might go down next.

"There was always talk of bringing my character back," he says. "And so when they called me for *7*, you just want to know what that entails. It was a small role, more of like connecting the dots with Han, which I think was good and I was willing to do. But, for me, I just want to know the plan for Sean Boswell, and not really just to be stuck in there. I think the producers and writers and studio realized that the fans really wanted to see the *Fast* family and everyone that was involved, the hero characters, united in the same movie. So I know everyone's been super excited about *F9*, and we get to reunite with everyone in the other movies, and contribute in a big way to the success at the end. And so they made it happen for *F9*, and we'll see what happens from there."

**To listen, subscribe to *EW's BINGE: The Fast Saga* feed via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can also subscribe to EW's YouTube page to catch all the video interviews and stay tuned to EW.com for even more *Fast *coverage, including next Friday's chat with Justin Lin about *Fast & Furious.***

FULL EPISODE TRANSCRIPT

**Lucas Black:**

That scene after the wreck, and we're all at the police station, Justin comes up to us, and he goes, "Is anyone willing to put a piece of tissue in your nose?" And I said, "That's me. That's me. That's me, Justin." Because he wanted somebody to have a bloody nose with a tissue in it. I was smiling at the lady, smiling at the girl, and I've got blood in my teeth, with the tissue in it, and that's Sean Boswell, right there. And that's my favorite scene of *Tokyo Drift*.

**Derek Lawrence:**

Ask any podcaster, any real podcaster, it doesn't matter if you record in person or over video chat, podcasting is podcasting. Welcome back to EWs BINGE of *The Fast Saga*, full transcripts of which are available on ew.com. I'm Derek Lawrence, aka, the guy who went as Dominic Toretto for two straight Halloweens. And as that icon once said, "The most important thing in life will always be the people in this Zoom right here, right now." And for me, that's the Dom to my Letty, the Brian to my Mia, the Roman to my Tej, the Gisele to my Han, Chanelle Berlin Johnson. Chanelle are you ready to drift into an episode all about *The Fast and The Furious: Tokyo Drift*?

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

I am, and this is a movie that, really I'll be honest, it kind of grew on me. I've always loved all the Fast movies. The other ones I loved out of the gate, and this one, of course, had to really find the love for it, because it was so different from the ones before it, when it came out. But it's got so many gems now, and it's become so important to the franchise, that I'm excited to dive into it.

**Derek Lawrence:**

Yeah. I hate the word cult, because I feel like... I could go on a rant that I will save listeners from hearing, but about how everything now has a cult following allegedly. But *Tokyo Drift* really felt like that, and it was the slow momentum for the film. And eventually, as you said, I think it might end up now being the most important film in this whole franchise for so many reasons, that we'll get into on this episode.

But as a refresher for new listeners, in case Bow Wow decided he wanted to tune in to this one for no particular reason, ahead of the June 25th release of F9, it's finally coming, we're bingeing all of the Fast movies with the family themselves. We've already chatted with Vin Diesel and Ludacris, so you can go back and check those out. But today it's the new DK himself, and no, that doesn't stand for Donkey Kong. We've got Lucas Black aka Sean Boswell on the show to talk about the third film. Which as we said, has had quite the journey since its release in 2006. But before we get into our chat with Lucas, who returns with the whole *Tokyo Drift* crew in *F9*, Chanelle, what do people need to know about this film, which kind of served as the Fast debut for so many people we love, including Lucas and director, Justin Lin, and Han himself, Sung Kang.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

Yeah. So I'll describe it as it was supposed to be at the time. So it's all about the next generation, that's how they had envisioned it. We meet these new characters. Of course, the main one being Sean Boswell. He's sort of like our guide into what was going to be sort of the next phase of the franchise then. He is kind of a teenage amalgamation of Dom and Brian, in that he's obsessed with cars and racing and is getting in trouble, and him and his mom have to move around a lot. They never actually say he's from Alabama, I don't think, in the movie, but clearly that's where Lucas is from, and there is like that one shot of the Bama Boy screen name, so we'll take that, but they bounced around everywhere.

And when the movie starts, he's in a new high school, he gets in trouble pretty much immediately. And then he shipped off to Tokyo to live with his dad, where he finds even more trouble, because that's what he loves to do. He loves cars and racing so much. But the key part of that is he's been introduced to drifting, and so is the audience in a lot of ways. He meets a Twinkie, who of course is Bow Wow, Neela, we are introduced to Han, Sung Kang. Amazing, amazing, amazing time for us, and every time you revisit it, it's awesome. And he's so cool. And then, that all culminates in big race down a mountain, which is insane. And we see the introduction to Justin Lin's style of directing and the action, which is important going forward too.

**Derek Lawrence:**

Yeah. Like I said, it's quite the Fast debut for Justin and for Sung and for Lucas. And we're really excited that they're all back together for F9. So once our conversation with Lucas is done, though, do stay tuned, because Chanelle and I will hop back on and talk more *Tokyo Drift* and hand out a few awards. But as Han would say, "Who you choose to be around, lets you know who you are." And so we're thrilled to be around Lucas Black. So let's go to that chat now.

**Derek Lawrence:**

This ain't no 10 second race, but we've got nothing but time to talk to Lucas Black aka Sean Boswell. Lucas, welcome to our binge of *Fast and Furious*.

Oh man, it's good to be here. Appreciate you guys having me.

**Derek Lawrence:**

Absolutely. We're super excited to talk *Tokyo Drift*. I mean already a great film, but I think the legend has even grown over the years. But before we dive into it, what we've been having everyone do at the top of these, because Dominic Toretto once said, "Nothing else matters for those 10 seconds or less," he's free. So how would you in 10 seconds summarize *Tokyo Drift*.

**Lucas Black:**

Oh man. Exhilarating and burning lots of rubber.

**Derek Lawrence:**

I love that. I love that. It's perfect.

**Lucas Black:**

That's right. Come on.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

Well, when you think back on the movie now, like someone mentions *Tokyo Drift* to you, what's the first thing that comes to mind? Is it a scene? Is it, I don't know, a day on set? What do you think of?

**Lucas Black:**

Well, a line that gets said to me a lot is, what does DK stand for? And Sean Boswell replies, "Donkey Kong." So that's one of the first things I think of, and that's pretty cool to hear when I go out in town or on social media, a lot of texts and people replying that line.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

That's a good one.

**Derek Lawrence:**

I love that so much. You should have gotten like a unofficial sponsorship with Donkey Kong or something.

**Lucas Black:**

I know, something.

**Derek Lawrence:**

Maybe there's still an opportunity there.

**Lucas Black: **

Exactly. Exactly.

**Derek Lawrence:**

We're going to dive all the way into *Tokyo Drift*, but I mean, what was your relationship with the Fast films or those first two original ones like before *Tokyo Drift*? Were you a fan already? Or did you not really... Obviously, they were came out not too long before *Tokyo Drift* did—

**Lucas Black: **

**Derek Lawrence:**

...so did you have any relationship with them before?

**Lucas Black:**

Yeah, absolutely. I've watched them both and enjoyed them. I was 24 when I did *Tokyo Drift* and so they came out in my early 20s. And, yeah, they were films that were fun to watch. And then, I know Tyrese has a line that my buddies and I would say a lot, and he was like... It was toward the end, I think, he was looking at that mansion. And he says, "You got any food up in there? Because we hungry bro."

**Derek Lawrence:**

I love that line. The way he says hungry is perfection.

**Lucas Black:**

WE hungry bro. And so that was a line that we used a lot. A lot my friends when being out all day working out and we would say that in the evenings, hey, you got any food? because we hungry bro.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson: **

That's perfect.

**Lucas Black:**

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

So how did *Tokyo Drift*... How were you first told about it? How did that come into your life? You must've been excited too, being a fan of the other two movies.

**Lucas Black:**

Yeah, absolutely. Well, my representation brought it to me, and then, read the script and was excited about it. And was really intrigued that it was something different than the other two, a different style of racing. And then, after talking to Justin Lin, and just his vision for the film, it was exciting. I mean, I didn't think about it as an actor, being in a car movie, in a race car movie, but after getting the role and learning how to drift, going through the classes, they taught us how to drift. Like two weeks before we started shooting, we would go to Irwindale Speedway and we had the best teachers in the world.

All the drift champions, Rhys Millen was my stunt double, but he was a drift champion back in the early 2000s, so he taught me how to drift. It was like a dream come true pretty much for a 25-year-old male to be able to go out and learn how to drift, just burn the tires down to the tread and burn the highest octane fuel. I mean, it was like jet fuel we were putting in these cars, and then at the end of the week I got a paycheck to do it. It was awesome. It was awesome.

**Derek Lawrence:**

Can you still drift? Do you still have it? It's been 15 years.

**Lucas Black:**

Oh, man, we did a scene actually in the television show I was recently involved in, and they had a drift scene, they wrote one in for my character, where I'm chasing this suspect down and I'm drifting through and an old parking garage, just like where I first learned how to drift in *Tokyo Drift*. And so I was like, yes, because my normal life, my home life, basically, I own a truck, that's what's in the driveway, because the temptation is too strong not to try to drift out on the street, do something illegal, get caught up by the cops. So I try to stay away from it in my private life.

But I was so excited when they wrote that scene for me. And it took me a while to get the feel back, but once you get the feel back, get used to the car, the weight of the car and how it wants to spin and operate. I still got a little bit in me. I'm ready. I'm ready to drift. Hey, we need to go. We need to go.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

Yeah, I think you even have... The scene at the end of it, you get to say like, "Oh, still got it," which is perfect.

**Lucas Black:**

That's right. That's right. That wasn't written in the script. I added that. I was like, "Hey, still got it. Still got it."

**Derek Lawrence:**

I love that. What a great nod.

**Lucas Black:**

**Derek Lawrence:**

I talked to Chris Morgan a couple of years ago, the writer, this was his first Fast film. And, obviously, he went to write on all of them up until nine. He talked about a lot of different forms that this project took. He said, his original pitch was actually, Vin coming back and Dom going to Tokyo to avenge a friend's death, which kind of ends up down the road happening. And then there was talk, maybe this was straight to DVD at one point. But then, obviously, it becomes a big release in theaters and does really well. I mean, what do you remember of maybe what the expectations for the film was and how big you guys thought it was going to be?

**Lucas Black:**

Well, I wasn't in any of those conversations, but I had high expectations as an actor. I guess, I was pretty confident, still am. So while we were filming, it felt like a big-budget project and a blockbuster hit to me. But I pretty much just stay focused on what I'm supposed to do and what the director wants out of me. And then whatever happens, whatever results happens after that, that's not up to me, so that's pretty much where I stand on that. I go in with high enthusiasm and try to do the best I can do and see what happens from there.

**Lucas Black:**

And so, it was a blessing to see and good to see that it was one of those films that stood out, from the franchise. That's what's so unique about *Tokyo Drift*, and I know the movie and the stories of the saga has kind of changed throughout the years, and that's been a good thing. But *Tokyo Drift* of stands out different, the fans remember that one particular movie different than all the others. And so I was proud of that.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

So we talked to Sung already, and he was talking about how, originally, his character wasn't in it at all. So when you saw the script and everything, was Han in there? Did you get to talk to him at all, before things were finalized? How did that exactly work? What was the timeline there?

**Lucas Black:**

Well, I don't really remember. His character was in there, when I first got the script, but I didn't know who was playing the character? And then when Sung, when we met on set and he had that cool vibe, and so I was like, "This is going to go well." So it was fun, man. We had fun with it. It was such a relaxed feel on *Tokyo Drift*. And I think that was from the leadership of Justin Lin. He has a very calming, demeanor and way about him and how he directs, and makes, well, I want to say everyone, but it made all of us on *Tokyo Drift* feel comfortable.

And I know Sung Kang thinks the same way, because we talk about it. And that was fun to be able to reunite on this last project, *Fast 9*, because it was kind of like a reunion for all of us that was involved in *Tokyo Drift*. And so we got to reminisce about the good old days of *Tokyo Drift*, and talk about where we are now as in our adult lives. So it was a good time.

**Derek Lawrence:**

What was it like a filming in Tokyo? It was obviously a culture shock for Sean. Was it a bit of the same for you?

**Lucas Black:**

Oh, yeah, absolutely. I grew up in a small, rural Alabama, pretty much, small town and so never been to Japan, but it was awesome. The first two weeks, I love food, and so I was eating all of the authentic Japanese food, and I don't mind sushi. So I'm like, all of these sushi places we're going to, they have conveyor belts, with different color plates and you just stack the plates up as you're eating, and they charge you by the color of the plates. And so, I ate tons and tons and tons of sushi, till I got tired of it. But after about two weeks, I was craving the American food. Where can I find some Western culture food. But yeah, it was a shell shock, culture shock, definitely. You stand out when you go to Japan.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

I saw some old behind-the-scenes footage of you and Bow Wow, Shad Moss around like the different areas that you guys filmed in. What was it like just hanging out and getting to know each other as well, while you're both kind of experiencing a place that's probably pretty newer to both you, I assume?

**Lucas Black:**

Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. It was just, you're soaking it all in. Like when I went to Japan and Tokyo, you're just kind of taking it all in. And the reason we were there was to shoot all of the exterior scenes, all the outside shots that they wanted to capture, Tokyo, the real city, that you really can't duplicate over here in the States. So it was kind of we got to do a lot of our sightseeing while we were filming, but we did some on our own too. We went to Mount Fuji. But Bow Wow, I remember that he was, I think, 19 at the time. And so we played a lot of Madden football, during our downtime in our trailer, we had the PlayStation rolling with Madden NFL football. And so I remember that, vividly, we had some battles in the trailer.

**Derek Lawrence:**

What was it like filming the... Doing some research, it seemed like, maybe you weren't subject to this, but at least on Justin's end, it seemed like it was kind of crazy having to set up some of these driving and chase sequences through Tokyo. Especially like Shibuya Crossing is a big famous part of just Tokyo, but also, in the movie and the chase. So what was it like doing some of those long driving sequences through the crowded streets of Tokyo?

**Lucas Black:**

Yes. Yes. Well, unfortunately, I didn't get to do those personally, but it was crazy just to see how many people that cross that intersection daily. We filmed a scene that was up on the roof, that soccer scene, where we're playing soccer and we're looking out, Han and Sean's looking out, and it's kind of a life lesson moment for Sean.

**Lucas Black:**

Why'd you let me race with your car? You knew I was going to wreck it.

**Sung Kang: **

**Lucas Black:**

Because this is a lot of money.

I have money. It's trust and character I need around me. Who choose to be around you, let's you know who you are. One car in exchange for knowing what a man's made of, that's a price I can live with.

Look at all those people down there. They follow the rules for what? They're letting fear lead them.

**Lucas Black:**

What happens if they don't?

Life's simple, you make choices, and you don't look back.

**Lucas Black:**

I will say this. So they taught me how to drift, so I wanted to do it, while we were filming. I'm like, "Justin, you got to let me drift. Man, I know how to drift." I would go up to him, be like, "Justin. Justin. Let me drift. Let me drift." He's like, "No, no, you can't do it. You can't do it on this scene." And I'm like, "All right. All right. All right." So one day, we were filming in downtown LA, I remember. And it was Han's garage, was in downtown LA. And so I take Justin, and I'm like, "Justin come with me." He's like, "Where are we going?" So I get him in the car. And there was a spot where they parked 18 Wheeler trailers, tractor trailers, and I said, "Let's go, we're going drifting."

So I took him to that spot and drifted to show him, because he hadn't... He was in the car, he's in the passenger seat, to show him, I knew how to drift. And he's like, "All right, Lucas, whenever there's a time, I'll let you know. I'll let you know when you can drift." And so, the scene where we're putting the Skyline engine in the Mustang, in the Shelby Mustang, and we're practicing. We're tuning it. We're practicing for the big race at the end. We're going down that mountain, practicing. Justin comes up to me. They had one of the cars, but they had a camera on the crane, but it was a fast car, so it's not like your normal, a regular set up on a movie.

This was like a BMW with a crane and a camera on it. And I was following that camera, he comes up to me and says, "Hey, now's your time." And that's all he said. That was all he said. And I was like, "Yes. Yes. You got it. You got it." So I got to do some drifting in that scene, and that was awesome. I was super excited about it, because most of it was done with the second unit, with the stunt coordinators and the stunt directors. But I got to do some, so I was super pumped that Justin gave me the okay. And I got to drift a little.

**Derek Lawrence:**

You talk about Shibuya Crossing, and this will tell you a lot about my Fast fandom. I went to Tokyo about two years ago, and, literally, my first stop on my tour around, I went to Shibuya Crossing, because I knew it from *Tokyo Drift*. And I stood in the middle when they did the cross, I took a picture. I was like, Sean drew drove through here.

**Lucas Black:**

That's right. Come on.

**Derek Lawrence:**

It felt like history. It felt like history.

**Lucas Black:**

Yes. Yes. That was awesome.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

I definitely did something similar. My brother lived in Tokyo for a while working there, and that was the only place I knew I had to go was like, "We got to go to Shibuya, and then you could show me whatever you want."

**Derek Lawrence:**

Do you have a favorite scene, thinking back on *Tokyo Drift*? Obviously, I'm sure there's so many great ones, but is there one that sticks out to you as a person favorite?

**Lucas Black:**

Yeah, absolutely. It's at the very beginning of the movie, when I have the car race with the '68 Monte Carlo, which that car was a beast, by the way, it had a 500 big block engine with slicks—

**Derek Lawrence:**

**Lucas Black:**

... on the back and a slapstick a gearshift. Literally, I could spin the tires in third gear going 60 miles an hour.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson: **

**Lucas Black:**

So that scene after the wreck, and we're all at the police station, Justin comes up to us, and he goes, "Is anyone willing to put a piece of tissue in your nose?" And I said, "That's me. That's me. That's me Justin." Because he wanted somebody to have a bloody nose with a tissue in it. So got the tissue in and I was smiling at the lady, smiling at the girl at the police station. And I've got blood in my teeth with the tissue in it, and that's Sean Boswell right there. And that's my favorite scene of *Tokyo Drift*, favorite moment right there.

**Derek Lawrence:**

I love that that was where you went, because literally in my notes, I wrote down, ask about the bloody smile. Because I love it, every time it-

**Lucas Black:**

Yep. Come on. Come on.

**Derek Lawrence:**

.... comes up, the camera goes on you, and you've got the nosebleed going, and then you just do the smile at her. It gets me every time.

**Lucas Black:**

**Derek Lawrence:**

I love hearing that that was kind of an on-the-moment spot. That's too perfect.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

Yeah. It's such a great character note too. Like you said, it just encompasses who Sean is. About that first race, though, at the construction site, we know that, of course, there's a lot of, like you said, the second unit has to go in, but that one seems to be shot pretty, practically, throughout for the most part. Did you get to be a little more involved in that one, even if you're not obviously not drifting yet, because you hadn't learned as a character?

**Lucas Black:**

Yeah, absolutely. So when they're filming, in-between the studs, the rough framing of the new houses being built, we had like two parallel roads. Well, I was on one side, and so going through it, it's one of those things where you don't have to go extremely fast to look like you're going fast. But it was a narrow window, and so even if I'm going like 45 miles an hour, from zero to 45 is still pretty fast in that, in that 500 big block engine. So yeah, I got to do some of that while we were filming, but most of my driving was done when we weren't filming, when I wasn't supposed to.

Because I remember, I would take the filter off the carburetor of that car, that '68 Monte Carlo and just open it up and it would just vibrate. I mean, that subdivision was all under construction, all new houses being built, and it just rattled all of that wood, all of those studs, you can just hear, that's how loud... it was a race car. Literally, like a NASCAR, over 500 horsepower. I mean, this thing was a beast, loud and it would just blow the doors off of things. And so I did that, off camera.

**Derek Lawrence:**

I remember sitting in the theater for *Tokyo Drift*, which I will say, I remember it came out when I was in high school, and as kids do, me and a bunch of friends go to the mall and then go to the movies. And we split up, half of us went to see *Tokyo Drift*, half of us, weirdly, went to see the movie Cars, the animated. I like to say I'm on the right side of history, I want to see *Tokyo Drift*.

And I remember sitting in the theater, and at the end, when Dom shows up at the garage to race Sean, I was like, "Holy shit." I couldn't believe it. I couldn't believe it. Everyone was excited. So what's your reaction? You're a fan of those original movies. I know that wasn't originally how you guys were going to end it, but it was like a cool thing that you guys were able to add on before release. So when you hear, "Oh, we're bringing Vin back. You're filming a scene with him to go at the end." What was your reaction?

**Lucas Black:**

Oh man. I was excited. And I remember, when we were shooting that scene, we had fun with it, and talked about it. And then, he's got his left arm on the steering wheel, he pulls up to my left, and we shoot the scene. We do it a couple of takes. And he comes up to me, and he may not want me telling you guys this, but he's like, he goes, "Man," he said, "I got to go back to the trailer and stretch out my bicep, it's cramping up on me." Because he was gripping it tight for the camera to look cut up and flexed. And so I was laughing, man. I was dying, laughing. I was like, thank goodness, he can at least make fun of himself a little bit. So that was cool. That was cool to see.

But, yeah, it was exciting. It brought excitement to think about the next project. The next movie or what was going to happen after that race. We weren't involved in four... or I wasn't. I wasn't involved in four or five and six. They ended up you using those as prequels to *Tokyo Drift*. But, yeah, man, it was awesome. It was awesome to have him there and see him. And that was an exciting moment, I think, for the fans as well.

**Lucas Black:**

You know this ain't no 10-second race.

**Vin Diesel:**

I got nothing but time.

**Derek Lawrence:**

We've got to take a break, but we'll be right back. Now let's get back to the interview.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

So what was it like then when you do get the call, like, oh, in seven, we need to have this connective tissue, happening for this story, and then you come back for that. Did you already know also that they might want to bring Sean back again? You're come back in nine, which is incredible.

**Lucas Black:**

Yeah. I appreciate it. Well, there was always talk of bringing my character back. And so, when they called me for seven, you just kind of want to know what that entails. So it was a small role, it was more of like connecting the dots with Han, which I think was good and willing to do. But for me, I just want to know the plan for Sean Boswell, and not really just to be stuck in there. You know what I mean? And so, I think the producers and writers and studio realized that the fans, and I feel like the fans really wanted to see the Fast family, and everyone that was involved, the hero characters, united, or in the same picture, in the same movie.

So I know everyone's been super excited about *Fast 9* and we get to reunite with everyone in the other movies, the Fast family, and contribute in a big way to the success at the end. I don't want to give it away, but that's... And so that's cool. And I think that's what everybody wanted and the fans wanted to see. And so, they made it happen for *Fast 9*, and we'll see what happens from there.

**Derek Lawrence:**

I love... You're almost like an Easter egg in the *Fast 9* trailer. I remember watching it when it debuted, and I was like losing my mind over so many things-

**Lucas Black: **

**Derek Lawrence:**

... I was like, oh my God, wait... It's like, oh my God, John Cena is playing Dom's brother. Wait what? And then Han comes back at the end, and you're like, holy crap, what is going on here? And then like it, I think someone mentioned to me to like, "Did you see like Lucas Black? Sean's back. Did you see..." I was like, "Wait, what?" So I went back and I was like, "Oh my God. There he is." So it was actually a super fun surprise after the fact that I... Like I said, a little Easter egg. So I know everyone's excited to see more of that.

We mentioned kind of connecting, the films and like now *Tokyo Drift*, I almost would say is like the most important film in the whole franchise, just because of what it started, and kind of what it meant for the characters. So what's it been like for you? I'm sure you get a lot of people talking to you about *Tokyo Drift*. It's kind of hit with a certain group, where I think a lot of people it's actually their favorite.

**Lucas Black:**

Yeah. Yeah. Well, yeah, appreciate it, man. That means a lot. Just being a part of the Fast and Furious franchise is incredible, and a huge success for me. Like I said earlier to have *Tokyo Drift* kind of be a standalone or different than all the other films, makes it unique. And I think the fans liked it, that it was a different style of racing, and it was about racing. It was about a skill set. And it's not just an action or it's not all about just the action film, it's a racing movie. And so there was a lot of appreciation for that, and so that's cool. I appreciate that and thankful for that.

And like you say, it kind of has its own following. I think a lot of the fans, they talk about that one a lot, because it does stand out to them, and it was filmed in Tokyo. And so, people were kind of intrigued by that, and that city and Japan. And so it had that element to it as well. A fish out of water, a Southern boy that likes American muscle cars learning how to drift, and going to Tokyo, I think a lot of people here in America, were just intrigued by that and liked seeing that dynamic.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

Yeah. Kind of in the same vein, you talked about it being unique, one way that always stands out to me is it's really the only movie in the whole franchise, that's a coming-of-age story. So now coming back into the character, is it like sort of catching up again or slipping back into it? Or because Sean's older now, when 9 happens, did you have to sort of rethink how you approach the character a little bit at all?

**Lucas Black:**

Yeah, absolutely, great question. It was definitely something that was on my mind, because, yeah, like you said, Sean Boswell is a lot older now. So there was that level of maturity that Justin Lin and I talked about. Some of the life lessons that Han taught him, I wanted to play those in my character, so that the audience could see it. Oh, but also still have that young spirit, that excitement and vibrance of being able to create a race car, because Sean always was a mechanic and he liked to build his cars. And so, *Fast 9*, that's what I'm doing. And so, I wanted to keep that childlike spirit, when it pertained to the cars, building the cars and racing, but have a little bit more wisdom about life and friendship. And so, I hope that comes across in *Fast 9* and we'll see. We'll see.

**Derek Lawrence:**

Yeah, absolutely. We can. Kind of getting toward the end here, we always like to end with what we call the final lap, just kind of a round of speed questions, about the Fast universe. So let's say we could go back in *Tokyo Drift* and you could add one other Fast character into *Tokyo Drift*, that's not in it currently, who would you want? Is there an actor or a character you would have loved to have Sean come across in *Tokyo Drift*?

**Lucas Black:**

Oh man, tough one. I guess, Tej and Roman are so funny to me, so I guess Tyrese's character, you know?

**Derek Lawrence:**

Yeah. You could say the hungry line at him.

**Lucas Black:**

He makes me laugh, man. He makes me laugh. We've worked together before, so I guess, his character. Yep.

**Derek Lawrence:**

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

We like to think, too, about, staying on the characters, what some of the people who we saw, what they're doing now? Have you thought about like what someone like Neela could be doing in the future? If you could envision anything for her, where would she be?

**Lucas Black:**

Yeah. Yeah, absolutely. I think a lot of the fans ask about her character too, but her character was kind of detail oriented... Or well, actually she was the field driver. So you could see her just enjoying going out drifting and being on her own, just enjoying drifting down a mountain, somewhere in a private setting. So that's kind of where I see Neela. But yeah, that's kind of cool to think about where all the characters are and where would they be?

**Derek Lawrence:**

A couple years ago, I took on the task of deciding who in Fast and Furious is the fastest and furiousest, if that's even a word, I would think I might've made it up.

**Lucas Black:**

**Derek Lawrence:**

I did the top 10, I put Sean at seven, because I felt like he was right in the middle. He was fast, but obviously, he slowed down with drifting. So that kind of docked his Fast rating a little. Furious, he was pretty furious. I gave him a high score there. So what do you think, like Sean could use a reevaluation there? Do I need to move him up? Do you think he's faster and furiouser then I have him?

**Lucas Black:**

You're definitely going to reevaluate after you watch *Fast 9*.

**Derek Lawrence: **

**Lucas Black: **

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

**Derek Lawrence:**

**Lucas Black:**

That's right. I think he's going to move up on the fastest scale, because of the type of car he builds.

**Derek Lawrence:**

Oh, that's what they call a tease in the business. I love that.

**Lucas Black:**

Come on. It's funny. It's funny, because when I think about Sean Boswell and *Tokyo Drift*, there's really two different characters there that you see, the character in America and the character in Japan. There's a little bit of shift. He's into the American muscle, fast, he's furious, doesn't care about anything but himself. He gets attached, has an attraction and affection for Neela, that love interest there. And then he learns the feel of drifting, more of a technique and feeling, and so it's like, looking like your out of control, but in control. And that takes a little bit of an emotional control. And so that is unique about Sean's character in *Tokyo Drift*.

And so his American character, you would have to evaluate that a little different, because he's up there on the fast and the furious scale. So that's what's cool about this character. And I thought about *Tokyo Drift*, you kind of saw a shift in his perspective when he went to Japan, but yeah, you might have to reevaluate after *Fast 9*. I'm curious as how Sean's going to change from a seven.

**Derek Lawrence:**

I think I might have to do that, because Sung said the same thing about his ranking. I think I had Han nine, just because Han doesn't seem very furious on the surface, but Sung disagreed a little bit. So he thinks there might need to be a redo on nine, too.

**Lucas Black:**

**Derek Lawrence:**

What, not specific to Fast and Furious, but in preparing for this, I had to think, I was like, is Lucas Black, a Sports Movie Hall of Famer? I started thinking, because not only do we have *Tokyo Drift*, which I think racing, drifting, I think we're calling that a sport.

**Lucas Black: **

**Derek Lawrence:**

I mean, Mike Winchell, *Friday Night Lights* and Pee Wee Reese 42, so what do you think? I mean, do you qualify? I think you do. I think you might need to be put in that Sports Movie Hall of Fame.

**Lucas Black:**

Yep. And I played a professional golfer, in a golf movie *Seven Days in Utopia*, too, with Robert Duvall. That's right, I got the football—

Derek Lawrence:

I mean, that seals the deal. That seals the deal.

**Lucas Black:**

Come on. Come on. We've got the baseball, racing, golf movie. What is that? That's four, yeah, that's four. But yeah, I've been blessed, man. I've been blessed. I grew up in Alabama playing sports and I grew up outside, playing outside, wasn't indoors, and played baseball, basketball, football, and then I played golf my last two years of high school. Grew up hunting and fishing, and it amazed me, in my career, the skills that I learned as a child, I used every one of them. Somebody asked me, they're like, "Man, what do you think I should do to improve my skills as an actor?" Or, "How can I become a better actor." And I said, "Man, really, just go and learn new skills, because you never know when you're going to use them."

I mean, I learned how to drive boats, being on the water. We lived next to the Tennessee River and a lake, and we'd go hunting and fishing and camping there. And man, I've driven boats in movies, and even in current, by the way, and had to pull it up on the bank in current, but—

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson: **

**Lucas Black:**

... driven cars. So listen to this, so *Tokyo Drift*, I picked up drifting quick, granted I did have the best teacher in the world, so that's one of the reasons. But I grew up, my dad got me a go-kart, and we had about an acre and a half, two acres of land, so I had a dirt track. We built a dirt track, basically, it was grass, it was lawn, but I had went in an oval so many times it became dirt. So really, I learned how to drift before I was a teenager, right? When I was 10 years old, I learned how to drift a go-kart in the back woods of Alabama. And so, hey, all these skills I learned as a child, I was able to use in making these films and movies. It blows me away when I look back on it.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

That's incredible.

**Derek Lawrence:**

Lucas. I mean, thank you so much for joining us and becoming a part of the BINGE family, and taking us through *Tokyo Drift*. We really appreciate it.

**Lucas Black:**

Yeah. Thank you guys for having me, man. I enjoyed it. I enjoyed talking to you guys about it. It's always fun to talk about *Tokyo Drift* and the fans love it too, man. So that's awesome. Appreciate you guys.

There's no wax on wax off to drifting. You learn by doing it. The first drifters invented drifting out here in the mountains, by feeling it. So feel it!

**Derek Lawrence:**

Thank you, again, to Lucas, who I think had as much fun as we did. And I don't know about you Chanelle, but I'm ready to go back to Tokyo after all this reminiscing.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

Yes, please. It's become such an important place in *The Fast Saga*, the lore, the history of it. So, yeah, I need to go back to Tokyo as much as possible, actually, narratively, and also in person.

**Derek Lawrence:**

A 100%. I'm right there with you. So we covered a lot with Lucas, but there's so much more to discuss, and we're going to do that by handing out some awards. We've talked about it in the past episodes, Fast, deserve some simple awards love, so we're here to give that justice. Chanelle, what's our first category today.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

We're starting, once again, with the one that's inspired by Brian, as he says in the first *Fast and Furious* movie, "If I win, I take the money and the respect, to some people that's more important." Well, of course Dom's respect, so we get to decide who wins our respect. I think we're probably agreed on this. After that, it just has to be Lucas Black, right?

**Derek Lawrence:**

Yeah. I mean props to him. Like I said, he was a really fun interview and was really into it. And I still... his, we hungry impersonation if Tyrese is iconic. And non-Lucas Black winners, I think we have to go with whoever had the idea to bring Vin back at the end as Dom.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

**Derek Lawrence:**

Because we should add that was done after the movie was completed. They were test screening it. They were ready to release the sucker in the world. And then someone, I hope we eventually get that information, maybe when we talked to Justin Lin for Fast 4, he'll have all the scoop there. But they decide, all right, let's do a reshoot, let's see if we can get Vin back for this little tag at the end.

And this is where Vin, I mean, Vin's had our respect. I mean, who could have more respect than Dominic Toretto himself, but respect to Vin because he not only springs this cameo into the powerhouse that Fast has become now, nine movies in and all that's done for him. But instead of a paycheck on *Tokyo Drift*, he negotiated for the ownership rights to Riddick, which he then goes and makes another Riddick movie. So, I mean, that's, literally, living up to Jay Z's famous words, "I'm not a business man. I'm a business, man." That's the definition right there of what Vin did. So, respect to Vin, but most respect to whoever was like, "We got to give Vin a call. We got to get him of here at the end of *Tokyo Drift*, because it's also such a great scene as well. And I'm glad, Lucas seemed to really enjoy getting to mix those worlds together when that opportunity came to him.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

Yeah. I love that we basically have to remember to thank *Chronicles of Riddick* in some way for *Fast* continuing. Thanks.

**Derek Lawrence:**

Yeah. I mean, no comment on Riddick, but I'm glad it got us to here. Next up. We've got the, hey, this guy's in the movie. We love to shout out the people that aren't the main stars of these films, but who we look back and we're like, "Oh wow. They were in this?" Whether that's, maybe they were famous in their own right at the time, like Ted Levine in the first one, or they grew in popularity after that. And I think that's the direction we're going on this one. And I mean, the title is, hey, this guy's in the movie, but hey, this woman is in the movie, and that's Amber Stevens West, right?

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

Yes, yes. And it's probably of all of the cameos, maybe the smallest that we'll mention going through each of these movies, because she doesn't really even have a conversation with anybody. She plays cheerleader number one, so it's like very early in her career. And she's the person who starts the race at the beginning of the movie, when the Shangri-La Estates, that's like being half-built, where Sean first gets in trouble, and she takes off her bra to throw it up. She doesn't have a flag or anything. It's like a wild cameo.

And, of course, she's gone on to be in the TV show *Greek*, which I love. She had a recurring role in *Criminal Minds* where a few seasons, and, of course, was in *22 Jump Street*. So that's like someone, at the time, that nobody was checking for, and that you could miss, if you watch this movie. When you go back, I was like, "Oh right, I know her."

**Derek Lawrence:**

I'm going to be honest, I love *22 Jump Street*. I love *Greek*. And I've seen *Tokyo Drift* a million times and I still... You were the one who notified me of this. I never once was sitting through *Tokyo Drift*, and was like, "Hey, Amber Stevens West." So I'm glad that next time when I do that, I will be able to scream that at my television, so thank you for that Chanelle.

Moving on, the quote of the movie, there's a lot of options on this one. So I'm going to throw a few nominees your way Chanelle, and then, you can decide. I'll give you that power to decide the winner here.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

**Derek Lawrence:**

So we have a lot of Han gems here, so we have, "Come on, this ain't the Boy Scouts, this is what we do."

Come on, this ain't the Boy Scouts, this what we do.

**Derek Lawrence:**

Another Han one here, "I have money, it's trust and character I need around me. Who you choose to be around you, let you know who you are. One car in exchange for knowing what a man's made of. That's a price I can live with." I mean, I used that as the throw to the Lucas interview. So you know I'd like that one.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson: **

Yeah. That's a good one.

**Derek Lawrence:**

Again, we have a Sean and Han back and forth. "What's the point of a race." "To see if I'm better than the other." "Just proves you're faster, that's all." I mean, that's just wise words from Han.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

Gosh. Han's so wise in this movie.

**Derek Lawrence:**

We got two more. We got, of course, and this was a favorite of Lucas's, "You know what DK stand for?" "Donkey Kong."

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

**Derek Lawrence:**

I mean, he's not wrong. He's not wrong. And then lastly, we talked about Vin coming back at the end, and we have Sean, saying, "You know this ain't no 10-second race." And Dom responding, "I ain't got nothing but time." So, where do you land Chanelle?

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

I mean, the last one is pretty iconic, because, of course, we talked about how important the cameo is, but you got to give it to, "You know what DK stands for?" "Donkey Kong." Lucas loves that one. It's just a great line.

**Derek Lawrence:**

Yeah, it is great delivery too. I think, a lot of these are really dependent on the delivery. We talked about the we hungry line from Tyrese. It's like, if you just say we're hungry, we hungry, that doesn't really do it. It's how you deliver it. And Lucas kind of really nails that. So I'm right there with you. What do we have up next?

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

All right. So, of course, now we're going to which Oscar Fast to been nominated for, or really any award, but we'll talk about the Oscars. So I feel like it's another one that's like pretty obvious. You can't really give it to anyone else, but Sung Kang, he comes in, he's so good, so cool, so smooth, so wise, as we've talked about, and then we sort of get the background to that wisdom later. But even at first, I just trust him, and I feel like that should have gotten way more recognition.

**Derek Lawrence:**

Justice for Sung, that's what I have to say. So yes, I totally agree. Even that first viewing, where maybe I'll admit, I wasn't in love... When I saw *Tokyo Drift* in the theater, I don't think I walked out, and was like, "Man, that was a classic." I'm just being upfront, but you do walk out being like, man, there was something about that guy. I've never seen him before. I definitely hadn't seen Better Luck Tomorrow at that point. And there was just some... This magnetism, and like you said, he was just so cool that you couldn't help him stick with you. So, yeah, I agree. Sung Kang best-supporting actor, just to take a quick look at the nominees to see maybe, how we could've snuck him in.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

Where it'd stack up.

**Derek Lawrence:**

This was a little bit of a controversial year. Eddie Murphy thought he was a lock for *Dreamgirls*, storms out, when he loses to Alan Arkin for *Little Miss Sunshine*. I think both of those should stay. We have Mark Wahlberg in *The Departed*, wild that the one person from *The Departed* nominated is Mark Wahlberg, but, well, that might have been Mark Wahlberg's best performance of his career, maybe, outside of *Boogie Nights*. So I mean—

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

**Derek Lawrence:**

... I won't take that from him. There are two where I think maybe some Sung could have snuck in. Jackie Earle Haley, *Little Children*, I'm just going to be upfront, never heard of it. So I'm just deciding—

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

**Derek Lawrence:**

... right there that Sung's sneaking in. I don't know, maybe that's some incredible loss performance that I just threw out the window like it was nothing, but I think that's the one. Or it's still wild that Blood Diamond got two nominate acting nominations. Djimon Hounsou, future *Fast* star and Leo both get nominated. Djimon is good in *Blood Diamond*, but that was kind of a weird film to get to two nominations. Of course, people will be like *Tokyo Drift* is a weird film to get what Oscar nomination, so fair point. But I just say it, I think there's a world we could have got that campaign going. So Sung for an Oscar for *Fast 9* coming up in 2022, let's start that campaign now.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

Please. I think that would be so great. Yeah. I think the Blood Diamond one is especially surprising to me as much as I Djimon Hounsou, and Jackie Earle Haley was really like big at the time, but I agree that the movie Little children probably is not sticking in people's minds in the same way.

**Derek Lawrence:**

Yeah, totally. I mean, we've mentioned it a few times just quick, but the we hungry award has to go to Lucas Black. I mean, you guys heard him do his impersonation of Tyrese's iconic line delivery in the interview, so he's got to win it. I mean, honorable mention, probably to Bow Wow for, literally, being named Twinkie.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

Twinkie. Yeah. Yeah. And we don't get it really an explanation for it. So maybe he does just love Twinkies. I don't know.

**Derek Lawrence:**

I mean, that's one of those things I kind of love that they didn't explain, you know what I mean?

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

**Derek Lawrence:**

Somethings we don't need the backstory, just his name's Twinkie, and I like not knowing.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

And now it's sort of like with the Ramsey of like, what is the real name there? I would love to know.

**Derek Lawrence:**

Yeah. That one I could use the answer on, Twinkie, not as much. So I won't classify us not knowing that as the Ja Rule mistake of the week.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

**Derek Lawrence:**

Instead, the Ja Rule mistake of the week goes to all of us, right?

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

Mm-hmm (affirmative).

**Derek Lawrence:**

I think I just mentioned it. I walked out theater. I wasn't calling up my friends on my landline and telling them they had to go see a *Fast and Furious: Tokyo Drift*. I'll admit, I don't think I had a cell phone in 2006, so, sorry if you guys did. But yeah, this is a movie that it's taken awhile for everyone to kind of come around on this. Even I, a former colleague of ours, Molly Smith, a couple of years ago, for one of the *Tokyo Drift* anniversary, she literally wrote an in defense of *Tokyo Drift*. We were at the point where she felt the need to defend *Tokyo Drift*. Meanwhile, we're spending an hour plus just throwing praise on, praise on it, so that's just kind of shows you that evolution. So, I mean, do you think that's fair that we... I mean, I hate to give ourselves an award, but I mean, it's kind of negative, so I'll take it.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

Our like version of the Razzie for ourselves. Yeah. I absolutely agree. I definitely... It was a movie that I didn't hate. It's part of Fast. I really appreciated it. But at the same time, every time I would push my friends to watch the franchise, I'd be like, but skip *Tokyo Drift*, at least for now, maybe come back to it later. Just because, A, I wanted everybody to fall in love with the core of the Fast and Furious people. But then, also just like in comparison, at the time, it just didn't hold as much weight in my heart and stuff like that. Now, it's become so important that I can look back on it with much more appreciation for it as a whole.

**Derek Lawrence:**

Yeah. I mean, we've now seen, there's literally... The Han death scene in *Tokyo Drift*, we've seen like five times in other movies. So it's like *Tokyo Drift* might have the longest runtime somehow at the end of the day too.

Wrapping up, we always end with this award, because we know that winning's winning. So we have to pick the ultimate winner of *Tokyo Drift*. Chanelle, where's your heart driving you to?

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

I think we got to do a co-winner one on this one, because you can't, you can't really pull them apart. The Han character is tied to Justin Lin, the director. So I want to say him and Sung Kang together. Sung Kang for the performance, obviously, and making Han, so dear to us in the Fast franchise. And then Justin Lin for bringing him into the franchise, and taking this character from his other movie, and starting him on this journey that probably has now gone beyond either of their imaginations.

**Derek Lawrence:**

Yeah. I can't imagine they were sitting there and filming Han's death in *Tokyo Drift*, and being like, yep, so we're going to actually come back to this in *Fast 6*, and then, in *Fast 9*, it'll be revealed that you're actually still alive. Yeah. I can't imagine they imagined that, considering this was a movie that, the expectations, I don't think were super high, even for the people making it. This is almost a direct-to-DVD at one point. So, no, you're totally right. The co-winner Sung Kang and Justin Lin.

I mean, Justin Lin now has become one of the best action in film. Coming into this, he had done Better Luck Tomorrow, which was definitely an indie darling, and had a lot of fans. Annapolis was kind of like, wasn't a huge movie, and Annapolis had its fair share of fans, but you walk into *Tokyo Drift* and the expectations are super high, just because of what those first two films were. And then you just kind of end up taking the franchise to new Heights, both literally and figuratively. So, yeah, I'm totally with you on Justin and Sung being our ultimate winners here.

Like Anthony Hopkins though at the Oscar, Sung and Justin are not here to accept their award. So we'll just wrap up the show there. Thanks again to Lucas for joining us, like Brian O'Connor, we hope we earned your respect, and that you'll keep listening to EWs BINGE of The *Fast Saga*, when next week we're welcoming, the aforementioned, Justin Lin to talk Fast and Furious, the fourth film, not the whole franchise. Which is a very confusing thing that we'll make sure to grill him on, because we need to figure out what happened there. Why did we do that?

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson: **

**Derek Lawrence:**

I feel like there was a better name for the fourth film that wouldn't have just been as confusing to explain to people for the last 10-plus years.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson:**

I feel like he's got a little justification now, though, or a little vindication, because of *The Suicide Squad*, *Suicide Squad* movie thing that's happening.

**Derek Lawrence:**

That's fair. I wonder if this is the part of the reason they're pivoting to saga. They're calling it *The Fast Saga* instead of just *Fast and Furious*, to really differentiate that fourth film. So, hopefully, we'll get answers from him on the next episode. In the meantime, please subscribe and listen along every week, wherever you get your podcasts, rate us, tell us what you think, share it with your friends and family.

**Chanelle Berlin Johnson: **

You can find us on Twitter at @derekjlawrence or me @chanelleberlin.com.

**Derek Lawrence:**

Also head to ew.com for complete coverage of *The Fast Saga* and full episode transcripts.

This episode was hosted and produced by Derek Lawrence and Chanelle Berlin Johnson. Produced, edited, and mixed by Samee Junio, and executive produced by Carly Usdin and Shana Naomi Krochmal.

Thanks for listening, and until next time salud, mi podcast familia.

**Related content:**

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- Vin Diesel reveals why he wanted to do *The Fast and the Furious*, and then why he almost didn't

- 'F---, let's go do it': An oral history of *The Fast and the Furious*

- EW's Binge Podcast Episodes

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Source: EW

Published: November 03, 2025 at 03:19PM on Source: NITO MAG

#ShowBiz#Sports#Celebrities#Lifestyle

Lucas Black on appreciating the 'unique' legacy of Tokyo Drift, reuniting with Fast family for F9

Lucas Black on appreciating the 'unique' legacy of Tokyo Drift, reuniting with Fast family for F9 By Derek La...

 

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