When the world shut its doors and the newsroom emptied, the idea of sitting across from a subject at a table seemed as distant as a pre-pandemic memory. In that liminal space, the notion of a long lunch with Catherine O'Hara and Eugene Levy for a feature on a beloved sitcom transformed from a routine assignment into a quiet act of defiance. The conversation unfolded over plates of comfort food, the actors trading anecdotes about the show's unlikely rise while the journalist, aware that the chance to share physical proximity might never return, listened with an intensity sharpened by the era's constraints. The interview did more than fill a page; it became a microcosm of the cultural shift that had forced journalists to adapt to screens and microphones. The ease with which the duo moved between humor and heartfelt recollection highlighted how in-person dialogue can capture nuances that virtual exchanges often miss-a sigh, a glance, the subtle rhythm of laughter that spills over a shared meal. That nuance, the journalist noted, was precisely what the industry feared losing. Yet the encounter also underscored a broader resilience. By embracing the impossibility of traditional fieldwork, the piece demonstrated that depth of storytelling can survive, even flourish, when the format is reimagined. The lunch served as both a farewell to a familiar rhythm and a reminder that the core of journalism-curiosity, connection, and the willingness to sit down and listen-remains unchanged, regardless of the circumstances that dictate where the table is set.