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interview | jack innanen

full look. SHWETAMBARI

Your twenties aren’t so much a straight path as they are a comedy of errors – equal parts existential crisis and chaotic group chat. For Jack Innanen, that winding journey has taken him from the fluorescent haze of university science labs to the punchlines of TikTok and the ensemble cast of ‘Adults’, a sharp, hilarious, and painfully relatable series about trying (and failing) to get it right in early adulthood.

Jack’s switch from physics and astronomy to comedy was a leap of faith, born out of a gut feeling that he was meant to tell stories. Whether he’s playing Paul Baker, the guy who’s charming enough to get away with not having it all together, or living out his own uncertainties, Jack speaks for a generation trying to be good people… despite not quite knowing what that means yet.

In conversation with Schön!, Jack Innanen opens up about late-night golf swings, frozen peas, comedic timing, creative self-belief, and why your twenties are best survived with a sense of humour — and maybe a spare pair of underwear.

full look. PRIVATE POLICY
shoes. Dsquared2
socks. Nike
opposite
blazer. Acne Studios
underwear. Calvin Klein

So, physics and astronomy to comedy is slightly unheard of. Tell us about the switch.

Yeah, that was a big 180 for me. I always loved both, but honestly, I don’t think I really believed in myself in the creative field, or even the legitimacy of a career in it. I thought science was the ‘safe’ or ‘correct’ route and loved doing it, but it wasn’t until those excruciating winter days at Robarts Library at the University of Toronto doing problem sets for 12 hours a day that really made me reevaluate how I wanted to spend my future. They’re also more similar than I think people give them credit for – comedy and science are both just challenges of finding the best result from a set of information. Science is comical, and comedy is scientific. Bang. Print that.

Was there a specific sketch that made you think, “Okay, this is working – people are actually watching this”?

I remember the first sketch that I loved doing and also performed well was some stupid video about a real experience I had with my apartment building complex’s management. It actually set the tone for most of my videos going forward, where I would experience some mild frustration and then “spicy edit it”, as my mom would call it, which is basically to lie and exaggerate the story to make it much more entertaining or absurd.

The video was about how I went to park in my parking spot in the building, but someone else had parked there, and when I told management, they told me just to go ahead and park there anyway. I explained I couldn’t, because there was a car in my spot. They asked if the spot was mine. I said yes. They said, “then just park there”. This guy just couldn’t understand that I couldn’t park in my spot because a car was already parked there, and I remember that concept making me laugh so hard and made a video of that interaction, and in retrospect, I guess that kinda birthed my two-man concept!

blazer. Acne Studios
opposite
full look. Kenzo
shoes. Dsquared2
socks. Nike

I feel like you’re full of surprises. Is there anything else people would be surprised to learn about you?

I have 5 nipples total. I don’t, but how surprising would that have been?

Now playing Paul Baker in ‘Adults’, tell us a bit about your character and how you got involved in the series.

Paul Baker, a firsty-lasty, a chill, charming, sweet Canadian guy who has definitely been bouncing around Brooklyn from hookup to hookup but has found his place within the main gang through his girlfriend, Issa. I was first presented with the script in January 2024 and was blown away by how A) funny and B) how real the script and characters were. I remember laughing out loud at the sides and also walking down through the East Village after and being able to pick out these characters from the street, like, “Okay, that’s a Billie, that’s an Anton.” I was also immediately hell bent on getting the part because Paul was simply me at 22, with a few differences, sure, but I felt so seen by this character it was therapeutic, almost, by getting to play him.

“Trying to be good people, despite being neither good nor people yet” – that tagline is too real. How close is this series to your own experience navigating your 20’s?

Spot on. I think the beauty of your 20s and what the show displays so beautifully is that you aren’t always your best. Your 20s are filled to the brim with stumbles, it’s the period of ‘who am I, to me, and who am I to the world?’ The biggest thing is that we are all trying, whether we stick the landing or not. But most importantly, we are there to support our friends if, or more certainly when, they don’t nail that landing.

Do you have any memories from your own ‘roast chicken phase of life’ that you look back at differently now?

Unfortunately. I remember cooking a meal for a girl I was trying to impress back in university, and it was the driest, most overcooked, and unseasoned chicken breast with rice and frozen peas that were still completely frozen. She initially said she was starving, but after I served it, she remembered that she actually had just eaten before arriving.

Being a show about codependent housemates, have you had any chaotic shared-living experiences in your life?

My buddy I lived with in university was something else. Shoutout Bendy – at 2 am, he used to drag his mattress into the living room. Mind you, this is a horrifically small Toronto student apartment. He would place a tee in a cardboard box on the ground, set up a golf ball, and drive balls into his mattress at full speed. Just full-on swings of golf balls bouncing off the mattress at all hours of the night. Meanwhile, he would have 3 screens going at all times; football on the TV, hockey on his phone, basketball on his laptop, and then Travis Scott on the JBL. He also ate either cake made in muffin tins, called his “morning muffins”, or smoked salmon and caper bagels for breakfast. There was no in between. I love the guy to this day.

full look. Dior
opposite
full look. HUGO

And being a cast of 20-something year olds, what was the set like? Any scenes where it was hard to keep a straight face?

Too many to count. The cast is just hilarious. Kroll or the creators would sometimes come in and feed lines to us to get real reactions from the others for some takes, and those were the hardest because you never knew what was coming. The scene in Episode 5 when the teenage girls show up was the hardest for me not to break because they kept being fed the most heinous insults to throw at Malik – all of our reactions were real.

Did making the show make you feel more like an adult, or the opposite?

Weirdly both? Cop out? But true? It made me feel responsible for my part in this major production that I had never experienced before, which definitely made me stand up straighter most days and really focus on being my most competent self – but it also introduced me to my favourite people who at the core are just kids goofing off getting to be silly on camera all day. Amita always says that she just wants to get on set and “play,” and I love that term. I really felt like I just got to “play” for the first time since I was a kid.

If you could go back and give 18-year-old Jack one piece of advice, what would it be?

Bring extra underwear, man. Just do it, you never know. And also, go for it. Advocate for yourself, no one else is coming to do it for you. You got this.

What excites you the most right now – more TV? A return to sketches? Something unexpected?

Get those nipples removed. I’m joking. I’m dying to get back on set with everyone and run ‘Adults’ back for as many seasons as I can until they kill me off. Also, movies — I really wanna make some movies. Honestly, I just love getting to goof around on camera, so any way I can continue to do that, I’m in.

blazer. PRIVATE POLICY
skirt. A. Potts
shoes. Dsquared2
socks. Nike
opposite
full look. SHWETAMBARI

‘Adults’ is out now.

photography. Stephanie Pistel @ Tempomedia
fashion. Nicolas Eftaxias @ FPA artists
talent. Jack Innanen @ align Public Relations
grooming. Maria Ortega @ The South James Agency using Saie Beauty & Balmain Hair
production. Frankie Production
post production. Stephan Lesger
photography assistant. Nick Stokes
studio. Shio Studio NY
interview. Rhea Lobo