Scott Patterson Admits He 'Was Not Interested' in Watching“ Gilmore Girls ”While Making It
Scott Patterson Admits He 'Was Not Interested' in Watching“ Gilmore Girls ”While Making It
Meredith WilshereSun, May 3, 2026 at 6:58 PM UTC
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Scott Patterson in 'Gilmore Girls'Credit: Netflix/Courtesy Everett Collection -
Scott Patterson says he never watched Gilmore Girls while filming due to long workdays and a lack of interest
He began watching the show for his podcast, I Am All In, and says he now understands its fan appeal
Patterson praises the show's creators and Lauren Graham's comedic talent, calling the series funny, sweet and unique
Scott Patterson didn't watch Gilmore Girls until over 20 years after the show first premiered.
During a recent interview with Mike Jerrick on FOX 29's late-night program, MIKE, the 67-year-old actor opened up about his time on the show and why he chose not to watch it while it was airing.
“Because I made the sausage for 14 hours a day, I didn't want to eat it," Patterson explained. "I just was not interested in consuming it after I did it for so long. When you're on a TV series, you barely have time to eat, sleep or take a shower.”
Patterson played a diner owner named Luke, the on-and-off love interest of Lauren Graham's Lorelai Gilmore, in the fictional Stars Hollow. Gilmore Girls ran for seven seasons, from 2000 to 2007.
Lauren Graham, Scott Patterson for 'Gilmore Girls'Credit: Everett
However, in 2021, the Sullivan's Crossing alum launched his podcast, I Am All In with Scott Patterson, in which he watched the series for the first time and shared his commentary and off-camera moments with listeners.
“I called iHeart, made a deal and that was my pitch. I had never seen the episodes. They said ‘Really?' They felt sorry for me, so they gave me a show because they felt bad for me," he told Jerrick.
When he ultimately did watch the show for the podcast, though, he “loved it.”
“I understood what the fans were talking about. It's funny, it's endearing, it's sweet, it's unusual, it's abstract, it's experimental,” Patterson said.
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“Amy Sherman-Palladino and her husband Daniel — they are two very unique creative minds and you know, they're once in a generation people," he added. "They created it, and their unique background, it comes out of their backgrounds and how they grew up, and it's just so rife with comedy."
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Patterson compared Graham's character to “a Borscht Belt comedian” who is “going through her life in small town Stars Hollow, and we're all the beneficiaries of that.”
Scott Patterson, Lauren Graham in 'Gilmore Girls'Credit: Everett Collection
“I was just sort of an anchor for the show, and to be a straight man to her jokes," Patterson said. "But she's delivering 50 jokes an episode and people understand half of them and the other half they look up and have to rewatch and now they know what the joke is."
One of the most enduring things about the show, according to Patterson, is that the audience “sees it from a different point of view now and they relate to other characters as they get older.”
“That's another reason why people continue to rewatch and discover it. They watch it at 16, they relate to certain characters, they watch it at 30, it's a completely different experience for them, they watch it at 50, it's a completely different experience,” Patterson said.
Along with Patterson and Graham, Gilmore Girls featured Alexis Bledel, Jared Padalecki, Milo Ventimiglia, Matt Czuchry, Melissa McCarthy, Kelly Bishop and Edward Herrmann, to name a few.
on People
Source: “AOL Entertainment”