"Why Superbad Worked Superbad worked because Seth and Evan wrote about exactly what they were experiencing at the time. Evan explains, "At the time, all we knew was that we really wanted to get laid, we weren't getting laid, and we weren't supercool." It pays to write what you know. Seth started doing standup when he was 13 years old. He adds: "That's something that came from standup comedy. There's a comic named Darryl Lenox who still performs, who is great. I remember he saw me perform. . . . I would try to mimic other comedians like Steven Wright or Seinfeld, like, 'What's the deal with Krazy Glue?' and he said: 'Dude, you're the only person here who could talk about trying to get a hand job for the first time. . . . Talk about that!'" Lessons from Judd Apatow EVAN: "I would say the biggest thing we learned from [Judd] is 'Don't keep stuff to yourself.' You're surrounded by smart people. Bring them in. Get other people's opinions. Share it with them. And most importantly, emotion is what matters. It's an emotional journey. . . ." SETH: ". . . I remember one time we were filming a scene in Knocked Up and improvising, or maybe it was even 40-Year-Old Virgin, and the direction he screamed at us--because he screams direction from another room a lot, which is hilarious--was, 'Less semen, more emotion!' I think that is actually a good note to apply across the board." TIM: "You also mentioned that every character has to have a wound of some kind." EVAN: "That's a big Judd-ism." TF: Judd recommended they read The Art of Dramatic Writing by Lajos Egri (Evan: "If you're a writer, 60% of it is useless and 40% of it is gold."), which Judd said was Woody Allen's favorite writing book."