It's Saturday night and I find myself pressed into a stream of people, pouring through the doors of Sydney's Aware Super Theatre Stadium, overlooking the pulsating crowds in Darling Harbour.
The sell-out event has drawn a 9,000-strong audience and it seems as though everybody I know – everybody I've ever met – has been drawn to this, the largest event ever held by Vivid, the city's annual festival of lights and culture.
It's baffling that this many people would pay this much money ($60 a ticket – at least, in my section up the back of the stadium) to watch a talk. But really, this just speaks to the wild popularity of tonight's interviewees: Mike White, writer and creator of the global TV phenomenon The White Lotus, and Jennifer Coolidge, the comedic actor named one of Time's 100 Most Influential People of 2023 – and whose performance became the beating, hilarious, and meme-able heart of the show (at least until her character's untimely death at the end of season two).
The talk is chaired by the wildly talented presenter and writer Benjamin Law, who manages to corral these two close friends, both of whom are easily distractible and have a tendency to wander off sideways into the unmapped streets of the interview, into an engaging conversation.
Mike White – otherwise known as the creator of early 2000s sensation School of Rock (he also played Ned Schneebly, the extremely put-upon housemate of Jack Black's main character) – speaks with a disarming level of frankness about his life as a screenwriter. He talks about how a project just before White Lotus was soundly rejected before he'd even made it to his car after a meeting, his general rejection of actors, and the sheer isolation that's required of screenwriters.