The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Alec Baldwin vows to break the talk show model by going deep

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NEW YORK >> When his new talk show premieres Sunday night, don’t expect Alec Baldwin to get overly political. The 60-year old actor plans to leave that on the set of “Saturday Night Live” with his occasional impersonat­ions of President Donald Trump.

“The Trump thing is just silly. Nothing we do on ‘SNL’ about Trump is going to change anybody’s mind about anything,” Baldwin said. “There are people in Washington going, ‘That Alec Baldwin, I hate him’... and there are others that say, ‘Thank you, for helping us process this.’”

That’s why he doesn’t see an upside to being overly political on the new “The Alec Baldwin Show” on ABC at 10 p.m. The show features candid oneon-one conversati­ons with celebritie­s and cultural icons.

“If you have a very muscular political opinion, it has its consequenc­es. I’m not afraid of that, and thankfully I have other venues to exercise that. But this is not about that at all,” Baldwin said.

His guests are another story. The talk show debuts with the politicall­y outspoken Robert De Niro this Sunday. The hour show will feature two interviews, with Taraji P. Henson as the other guest.

Baldwin plans to pick up where “Here’s the Thing” — his podcast for WNYC — left off, employing his unfiltered, provocativ­e interview style. Baldwin said the long-form interview format allows him to take a “deep dive” into the issues with each subject. Plus, staying in one place works great for his family life.

“It became harder and harder as I got older and traveling, I’ve got little kids and I don’t want to travel,” Baldwin said.

He also wanted to bring a fresh perspectiv­e to the talk-show format after being on the other side of couch for so long. While promoting different projects along the way, Baldwin recalled the limitation­s of being interviewe­d at junkets and talk-show spots. It’s something he calls short and “very choreograp­hed.”

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