“One part rum, two parts ice.

You are so nice.”

“When I first met you, you were not a daiquiri.

Jorma Taccone, Andy Samberg, and Akiva Schaffer are the Lonely Island

Jorma Taccone, Andy Samberg, and Akiva Schaffer are the Lonely Island.Charles Sykes/Bravo/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty

Then you went and had a scientific discovery.

One part rum, two parts ice.

You are so nice,” he sang.

Meyers said that “Daiquiri Girl” could “be slang for a thing that happens atSNL.”

“You guys were now a thing that [creatorLorne Michaels] was excited to have in the show.

He depended on you, and everybody when they started the show wants to be that.

But then every now and then, you have that situation where, like, we need one.

And this is what it looks like when you got nothing,” Meyers said.

“So ‘Daiquiri Girl’ could just, like, be a stand-in for any like…. “And they were roommates with Andy, et cetera, et cetera.

But even that one, I will admit, I was so-so on.

But it was one of those ones where it’s like, all right.

We gotta write something.

We wrote it.”

He said it would have been “a solid B.”

“Like, there is automatic little automated beat in there, you know, little samba or whatever.

And then I just sang exactly what you’re seeing.”

He admitted it was “freestyle” and “terrible.”

Meyers admitted that, in his memory, it had never made it to screens.

Watch the full “Daiquiri Girl” episode ofThe Lonely Island and Seth Meyers Podcastabove.