James Roday, the star of USA’s Psych, says his show is the perfect hybrid of traditional TV crime-solving and off-the-wall goofball comedy.
He’s not satisfied, though, because there’s still one thing missing: He desperately wants David Bowie to do an episode.
“That’s my stock answer to every question regarding who I’d like to have come on the show, who I’d like to have sing our theme song, who I’d like to meet for coffee in a completely unrelated, non-Psych atmosphere,” Roday says, his tongue only partly in cheek.
“I would want it to be Bowie so I could hang out with Bowie. And I would actually request that he would come as his character from Labyrinth.”
Psych — in which Roday plays a phony psychic detective, a wisecracking slacker whose actual gift is extraordinary observational skills taught by his policeman father — returns from a winter break at 9 p.m. Wednesday, the show’s new home after three and a half seasons on Fridays.
Alas, no Bowie yet. But Roday, a 30-year-old San Antonio native, did hang out with World Wrestling Entertainment star John Cena while filming the return episode. Given that he’s a lifelong wrestling fan, it was almost as good.
We chatted with Roday last week.
With Monk no longer in production, Psych is the network’s longest-running original show. How does that make you feel?
I feel older. And my knees feel older. It’s a testament, I think, to the sort of little-engine-that-could mentality that we’ve had from the very beginning with this show. That we’ve sort of stuck around long enough to be anybody’s flagship show feels good for us.
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