It was time for us to come up with a new series, and Peter Roth, whom we work for at Paramount, really liked the story of our (personal) dynamic. Everything pretty much that goes on with us speaks to our history, and we thought this would really be a great place to write from, because we would just have an endless supply of stories to tell.

We are like college students. You don't really get the final version of the paper until the night before.

I think we have a responsibility to send them out on a good note. I don't know - happy? I think everyone will feel satisfied.

We love the idea of a live episode because we get to show the audience of 'Will & Grace' what we've known from day one -- we work with the best cast in network television.

We're thinking that the last episode's just going to be what we've always wanted it to be. Where Karen bites everyone on the neck and they die - and then she folds her arms over her chest, falls out the window, turns into a bat and flies away.

David (Kohan) said, `There's your series,'.