There's an old saying ''don't meet your heroes'' but for TV creator, showrunner Bill Lawrence, it was a dream come true. Lawrence's new series ''Bad Monkey'' for Apple TV+, premiering Wednesday, is based on a novel by Carl Hiaasen, one of his favorite authors.
''I started reading Carl Hiaasen books when I was 15-years-old. There's a direct line from Carl's surreal satires and wildly insane character pieces to, like, ‘Scrubs,'" explained Lawrence, who also created that long-running Zach Braff sitcom. ''The guy helped me to be a storyteller. He turned out to be as cool as I hoped and such a good dude."
''Bad Monkey'' stars Vince Vaughn, whose observational humor and quick one-liners make him a good fit for the writing styles of both Hiaasen and Lawrence.
Vaughn plays Andrew Yancy, a former Miami police detective now living in the Florida Keys and working as a restaurant inspector. (A scene where we see Yancy on the job leads to a running joke about how he's lost his appetite for the foreseeable future and is Vaughn at his reactionary finest.)
A friend asks Yancy for a favor: deliver a human arm that washed up on the beach to a medical examiner (played by Natalie Martinez). When he later meets Eve (Meredith Hagner), the widow of the man whom the arm belonged to, Yancy finds himself unable to shake the case. The story unfolds, touching on themes of greed and power.
''He can't let himself leave something where he knows there's some wrongdoing there,'' Vaughn said about Yancy, who he describes as ''like the Energizer Bunny.'' ''He can't help himself. And then no matter how many times he falls, gets hit in the face, or things don't go his way, he's going to just keep marching forward. That's just such an inspirational quality to have.''
Vaughn goes back more than 25 years with Lawrence — they played poker together. ''He used to make me laugh. Just to watch his career do so well from afar, it was easy for me," Vaughn said about agreeing to the role.
For Lawrence, he said Vaughn's 1996 indie movie ''Swingers" ''helped shape a generation of writers. "When he burst onto the screen saying, ‘You're so money you don't even know it,' everyone wanted to write that type of dialogue."