“Parks and Rec” Star Reveals Adam Scott’s Unusual Flub Ritual
We all know character Ben Wyatt on “Parks and Rec” as the highly neurotic, calzone-loving, claymation-making accountant who stole Leslie Knope’s heart. But apparently, the man behind the character, Adam Scott, was just as intense about his craft as Ben was about “The Cones of Dunshire.”
Adam Scott in “Parks and Rec”
While “Parks and Recreation” is famous for its loose, improvisational feel and the authentic camaraderie among the cast, it turns out that not every moment on set was pure, unadulterated goofing off. In fact, according to one recurring guest star, Scott had a specific, physical punishment for himself whenever he dropped the ball.
Jay Jackson, the real-life news anchor who played the delightfully literal Perd Hapley (“The story of this sentence is… that it has ended”), recently spilled the tea on what it was really like working with the core cast. And it completely paints a picture of Adam Scott that is equal parts impressive and exhausting.
Adam Scott and the Push-Up Punishment
During a recent chat with Entertainment Weekly, Jackson recalled a specific scene he filmed with Scott and Aziz Ansari (Tom Haverford). The scene involved Ansari asking if there was a bird in the room, a line that apparently destroyed everyone’s composure. But while Jackson and Ansari were busy cracking up, Scott was busy getting intense.
According to Jackson, whenever Scott would flub a line or break character, he wouldn’t just laugh it off and reset. No, he would drop to the floor and crank out 25 to 30 push-ups. Right there. In the middle of the scene. Jackson said, speculating:
“I guess it was to get his mind focused? Or I don’t know if it was punishment or something like that…But then he’d come back and do the scene to get his mind right.”
For Jackson, who was a broadcast journalist by trade and still getting his footing in the acting world, this was a wake-up call. He realized that while “Parks and Rec” was a comedy, the people making it were deadly serious about their performance. It wasn’t just play-acting; it was a job, and Scott was treating it with the discipline of a soldier – or perhaps a very stressed-out campaign manager.
Aziz Ansari Was Not Impressed
Here is where the story gets hilarious. While Jackson looked on with a mix of confusion and respect, Aziz Ansari had a very different reaction. You can practically hear Tom Haverford’s voice in Ansari’s response to Scott’s sudden fitness bursts.
Jackson noted that while Ansari wouldn’t say anything out loud, his body language spoke volumes. “Whenever it would happen, Aziz would go, ‘Oh boy, here come the push-ups,'” Jackson recalled, noting the accompanying eye roll. It’s a perfect dynamic: Scott trying to punish himself into perfection, and Ansari just wanting to get to the next joke without watching his co-star get swole in the middle of a take. Hah!
It’s a true testament to their chemistry that they could have such different approaches – Scott’s intense, “no-nonsense” method versus Ansari’s looser, comedic vibe – and still create magic on screen.
Why This Makes Ben Wyatt Even Better
Hearing this story adds a whole new layer to rewatching “Parks and Rec.” When you see Ben Wyatt freaking out about a mild scandal or staring directly into the camera with that classic “I can’t believe this is happening” face, knowing that Adam Scott was potentially doing push-ups between takes to stay locked in makes it even funnier.
It also explains why Scott has been so successful in dramatic roles since leaving Pawnee, specifically in “Severance.” That kind of intensity and rigorous self-discipline translates perfectly to the terrifying corporate hellscape of Lumon Industries. But on the set of a warm, fuzzy sitcom? It’s a little chaotic, and we love it.
Scott has admitted in other interviews that he actually has a hard time watching “Parks and Rec” now, not because of the push-ups, but because he misses the cast and the “joyful” experience of filming. It’s clear that despite the push-ups and the eye rolls, there was a lot of love there. But, yikes – if we had to do 30 push-ups every time we made a mistake at work, we’d probably be a lot more buff – and a lot more tired.
