Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - Cher

Episode Date: January 5, 2026

Cher (Cher: The Memoir, Moonstruck, Believe) is a multi-platinum recording artist, Academy Award winning actor, TV personality, author, and icon. Cher joins the Armchair Expert to discuss ear...lier versions of trying to write her memoir and why this one worked, accidentally falling into her first acting job with Robert Altman, and memories from the Burlesque set with Kristen Bell. Dax and Cher talk about identifying not as an icon but as a woman who has always worked, the best piece of advice her mom gave her, and growing up with strangers as a young child. Cher explains how her music career began with singing background in Phil Spector’s studio, rediscovering how powerful she was in a controlling relationship, and why she believes that a not insignificant part of her success has to do with luck.Follow Armchair Expert on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Watch new content on YouTube or listen to Armchair Expert early and ad-free by joining Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify. Start your free trial by visiting wondery.com/links/armchair-expert-with-dax-shepard/ now.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Wondry Plus subscribers can listen to Armchair Expert early and ad free right now. Join Wondry Plus in the Wondry app or on Apple Podcasts. Or you can listen for free wherever you get your podcasts. Welcome, welcome, welcome to armchair expert. I'm Dan Shepard. I'm joined by Monica Padman and Best Friend Air Weekly. Hi. Happy New Year, Armcherry.
Starting point is 00:00:22 Happy New Year. Another year together. Another year together. Let's go really hard in 2026. It's just to remind everyone it's an even number. That's a good star. We like it. And we're starting the year with an enormous bang.
Starting point is 00:00:35 Share. Share. One of the first an original single named... That's true. Share is a singer, an actor, an activist, a philanthropist, and an icon. She's an icon, whether she wants to believe it or not. She doesn't want to believe it, but she is. Her albums, Believe, Heart of Stone, Closer to the Truth, Moonstruck, burlask, ding, ding, ding.
Starting point is 00:00:57 and she has and I'm on record over this last year so you know I'm not fluffing any pillows I read this book last year and I absolutely loved it and recommended it to everybody her book which we're here to talk about share the memoir part one is a fucking action-packed thrill ride I recommend it so much please enjoy share I hope you have back. I hope you have backups. That's not enough Dr. Pepper for anybody. Yes, it is.
Starting point is 00:01:42 That's a joke, that amount of Dr. Pepper. Please, Mama, join us. Yes, come here. No, right. There. I like your outfit. Thanks. We're going to see Wicked today.
Starting point is 00:01:52 Oh, cool. So I'm eventizing it. Do you have Wicked fever like Kristen does? I'm really interested. I didn't see the first one. Did you see the Broadway play? No. I've just seen The Lion King because we have a six-year-old. And he's really precocious. I mean, he and I were chasing his dad. No, his dad ended up chasing us. And I had a guard there. And he goes up to the guard and he takes his face and he goes, my dad's a psychopath.
Starting point is 00:02:18 Oh, wow. So, yeah, he's very precocious. Okay. You know when they say like, when someone tells you who they are on a date, listen, you've heard this. term? You could probably say their children, too. If their children declare them a psychopath, maybe we look into it. He's not. Do you like being around a little person? Yes. Before I met him, I walked around my house saying I want a man and a toddler. You declared it to the universe. I want a man and a toddler. Yes. I wasn't expecting them maybe together, but that's what I wanted. You wanted both of those things. And if they came as a pair, it was expecting them separately. But not in the same
Starting point is 00:02:56 person. Oh, great question. You don't want your man to behave like a child. No, right? Except sometimes they do. In the bedroom. No, no, no. But he's funny. He's really funny. Now, I want to tell you that you were going to come in when the book was coming out a while ago. And so what I do when we have a guest and if they have a book, I start reading it. But if they cancel, I stop reading the book because I no longer need to read the book and I've got to read other books. But you canceled. And I go, fuck, I'm going to finish this thing. Like, I love your book. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:03:30 Yeah, I kept just motoring through. I have the other one too. Part two. Yes. But you have no idea how hard it is to write a book. I mean, it was written a couple of times. And then when I read it, I thought this is not going to happen. It's incredibly honest.
Starting point is 00:03:44 Yeah. What were the parts of the first versions that you had to throw away? Were you like, oh, it's not honest enough? I talked to a lady who was English, not happening. It wasn't her fault. Then I tried with a girl that was really sweet and I loved her, but it wasn't happening. And then my friend Eric Roth, I called him and was like, Eric, I am so screwed. I need somebody and he said, well, I have somebody.
Starting point is 00:04:09 And he sent her over. And then we started and it just started to work. And I would say everything. It just kind of started to fall in place. So was it that she was not intimidated by you or she wasn't afraid to corral you? What did she do that was a good fit? She let me speak the way I speak because the other ones, it just didn't sound like me. And it was like, why?
Starting point is 00:04:31 What is this? Yeah. So I never read it. Did you not do the audio version? No. No. Because I'm just like saying, I started each chapter. I know this because I actually did consume a lot of it over audio and I'm now remembering that.
Starting point is 00:04:47 Yeah, you said I would love to read this to you, but I just am not a good reader. So I'll fuck up this good story. I went for my first job, so fucked up, but it was for Robert Allman, and I only got it because my mom and Robert were friends, and my mom woke him up, didn't know it was him because she had my number in New York and his number right underneath each other. And so she said his share there, woke him up, he was furious. He's kind of a big bear. Well, he's dead now, but anyway, he was a big bear. And he said, what the fuck would Cher be doing here? She said, she wants to be an actress and she was doing an audition. for Joe Papp. And then he called me. No kidding. Yeah. And I thought it was a joke. And he said, I'm going to send a script over. I'm not offering you anything. I read it and I knew who he wanted me to be. And he called me and I went, I can't find this person. I can't do it. He said,
Starting point is 00:05:38 have you got a job? And I said, no. And he said, well, then I don't know what you're talking about. Be here tomorrow. And then I said, okay, I can act or I can read, but I can't do both at the same time. And he said, be here tomorrow. Oh, what a blessing. Sandy Dennis said it was the worst reading she's ever heard. And she had heard a lot. Yeah. How did you, over time, get good at reading scripts and being able to memorize them? I can read.
Starting point is 00:06:03 I can't read and speak the lines. If you could have seen me trying to read the beginning of the book, how horrible was it, Jen? Out of ten, Jen. Three, two. Wow, you guys work together. So that's probably a one. Yeah, we've worked together for a million years. She probably bumped it up one.
Starting point is 00:06:23 Okay, we're joined by a lovely lady, my bride, Kristen. And for anyone who wouldn't remember, you guys are ex-co-stars. And what is your memory, hon, of finding out, was Cher in the cast before you or after? We're talking about burlesque. Before, certainly. She was first in. Careful there. Certainly, I was not attached before Cher was attached.
Starting point is 00:06:44 I was cast in a movie that Cher was starring in called Burlesk. And I was very excited. because it was Cher, Christina Aguilera. Also, it could have been a really good, fun movie, except for you know who, except for both of them. Okay. Kristen and Cher being the first one. And Cher being a cast members.
Starting point is 00:07:06 I was not cast members. It was a hard shoot. Oh, I was present. I was present. Can we reveal anything today or no? What I can say is that not being involved with it was there was a romantic relationship happening for people that were very high above. Yes.
Starting point is 00:07:22 And that was playing out on set quite frequently and dramatically and uniquely to anyone that's been in show business. But there was another thing that I cannot mention. Look at me really hard in the eyes and convey it to me. Oh, no. Okay. So what if we only got it? Then the song that I did in the movie,
Starting point is 00:07:42 he said I'm cutting that song out because I don't want share to ruin my movie. What? Okay. Okay. I don't know that. Yeah. But you remember how? I remember a lot of drama, but I also remember the way... How funny I am?
Starting point is 00:07:57 Yes. The way you get, or at least the way I get through dramatic or chaotic situations, is to find someone to hold hands with in the corner and just laugh at everything. That's how I get through it. I was either doing that with you or with Stanley. I love Stanley. Every woman loves Stanley. Don't you think it's universal?
Starting point is 00:08:15 It's very likable. Yeah, universal appeal. You can not love him. What do you remember about young Kristen Bell? Did you go, oh, yeah, this girl will definitely be all that she's proven to be. We got along so well. We were very sympathical, and I respected her a lot. I didn't know who she was, but she was good.
Starting point is 00:08:34 How much are you aware of the persona you bring into something? Like that project, people are very excited that shares there, and you have to take that on and deletka. deliver to some degree? Like how much are you aware of the persona of Cher? When you're just someone who wants to enter this job like anyone else and act and do a good job, but you have to be aware of this other presence that's around, which is share the icon. It just doesn't mean anything. It's just I'm a woman who's always worked and that's who I am. And I'm successful. But I don't buy that other stuff. You can't connect to it. But you can observe the impact though it's having on people.
Starting point is 00:09:15 Yeah. I am who I am. And I've worked. worked hard to be who I am, but I don't see the, I don't know. Putting you on that type of pedestal. If I see people and they're like going crazy, I don't go up to them. Give them a hug and go, it's okay. And do they freak out though? I feel like sometimes you see those moments and people just can't handle it. I've seen the funniest pictures, people behind me realizing it, but somebody else is taking
Starting point is 00:09:42 a picture of me and they get this other person behind me. You must be seeing your life from above in those circumstances. I think I see it from sideways. Shirley, you had people that you looked at as if they were share. Yes. Like, who were yours? Audrey Hepburn. The Hepburn girls.
Starting point is 00:10:00 I bumped into her with my Academy Award in my hand. Backstage at the Oscars? Yeah, but you know, there's the black curtain when you're going off? Yeah. She was in the black curtain. I didn't see her, and I bumped right into her. And she said, I'm so glad you won. I was wishing you would.
Starting point is 00:10:15 win. Were you able to feel calm and present or were you a little bit revved up that it was her? I was revved up. From my perspective, you think it's like a waste of time. Let's cut through all of that. Yeah. I want to get to the, I'm the human. Let's talk. I'm not an icon. What the fuck is an icon? Audrey. Kate. Share. I'm not Audrey. I'm not Audrey or Kate. I hate to tell you this. If you're a one-nameer, you're an icon. If you've sold 100 million albums over the course of seven decades. If you've won Academy, you know, listen, you checked all the boxes. Sadly, it just adds up to icons. Whether you want to accept it or not. But that was one of the reasons that I gravitated towards you, because I definitely, when I first booked that movie, had that
Starting point is 00:10:58 you had with the Hepburn Girls because I was like, oh my gosh, I'm going to be in this movie with Sharon. She's an icon. But your vibe in real life is so grounded. Well, I'm not grounded. No, no, no. I'm completely crazy and I'm completely grounded. Yes, both. And also, I mean, I'm Taurus and a Gemini, I'm three people. I don't know what any of that means, but when you talk to you, it does feel like you're going, let's just cut through all the waste of time of like, oh, I'm this, I'm that, you feel this way, let's just talk like human beings. No, we just had fun.
Starting point is 00:11:27 We just talk. What do you do? You just talk to somebody. Connect as people. You're fun to shoot the shit with, and I will tell you, I'm not going to untrude on the rest of your interview, so I'll leave you with this. No, no, don't go. Why?
Starting point is 00:11:37 Because I want you here. I'll stay for a couple more minutes. Then I'm going to let you get to your thing. We haven't been getting to it. We've been getting it. We're doing it. We're starting about a half hour. No, he's joking.
Starting point is 00:11:50 Seven p.m. But listen, people ask me a lot, what's the best piece of advice you've ever gotten? And I say it's from you because you said to me, honey, if it doesn't matter in five years, it doesn't matter. That's my mom. So if it doesn't matter in five years, it doesn't matter. That's great. And I've used it my whole life. And it's still relevant.
Starting point is 00:12:10 It's always. My mom was super cool. And my mom was like a different version of me, a blonde version of me, or I was a dark version of her. You were the Armenian version of her. My dad's Armenian, but I feel more like my mom because I didn't really know my dad. And then my mom said one day, would you like to meet your dad? And I always knew there was somebody that everybody didn't talk about.
Starting point is 00:12:33 He was like the dark figure that no one talked about because I loved my sister's dad as my dad. Both named John conveniently. Right. So I met him. How old were you? 11. I was so happy that I finally knew why I did certain things. It explained a lot. Yeah. And also my mother and my sister have huge tempers and I don't have one unless, and you got to push me way far. I mean, you can push me for a long time and then stop or you're going to get killed. Well, what I like the most about, about your book and what is unique about it for a current book is it reminds me of listening to someone sharing AA. Never done drugs.
Starting point is 00:13:16 I don't drink. It's crazy you didn't do drugs given that your biological dad was a junkie. And both my husbands. Both husbands, junkies. So that's crazy. But when you see AA scenes and movies, they're always sad and saccharin. And someone's like, and then my wife came in and she found me. That's not our vibe.
Starting point is 00:13:35 our vibe is laughing at everything we fucked up we own it but there's not a ton of shame or embarrassment and your story is told in this very unique non-victomy way that i love because you could have the childhood's fucking crazy it's one for the ages the marriages were pretty weird too your mom did seven or eight marriages along the way six i don't know she married my dad twice for some reason so we don't know how to count that but suffice to say there was a new dude every couple years, and she got married to those dudes, and you moved all over the place for these dudes. Well, I think because in those days, my mom used to say, you kind of got to marry someone. That's just how it is. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:14:15 Originally, when you first arrive, you go straight to an orphanage. Yes. It didn't even take me a long time. I just went straight to it. He went straight to it. Yeah. And you were there for how long? This was like in Pennsylvania, some Catholic? Yeah, my dad took my mom to Pennsylvania and said, I'm going to New York. I'll be right back. My mom had to make a living, so my dad took me to a Catholic home, and my mom came to visit me every week. And then my mom got sick, and she missed three weeks, and she came back and they went, that's it for you. They wouldn't let her see me. No.
Starting point is 00:14:49 They cut her off. Yep. Do you know how long you were in there? When I was in there, I was crawling. When I left, I was walking. You don't have memories of that, or do you? I really don't, but I have memories from pretty far back. Have you ever heard of Gabor Mante?
Starting point is 00:15:03 No. He's incredible. He's a psychologist, and he's kind of like a world famous one. And yeah, he was a little boy in Nazi Germany. And he had the moment where his mom went into a camp and had to hand him to a stranger. And he lived with a stranger for, I don't know what it was, a year or something, then was reunited. I lived with two families that were strangers. You found out later in life, right? Yeah, I had no idea. My grandmother brought this woman and I knew the names of the women, Edith and Mackey, but I thought they were. were babysitters. I never knew that I lived with them. And the woman comes in with my high chair, who had Bambi on the back of it. That she had saved. That's pretty sweet. I'm looking at my grandmother and I'm thinking, what is this? Why have I been led to believe this? But then I've had some terrible, terrible things happened to me. Some things I couldn't put in the book, but I don't want to write around. I've got places I want to go. So much of your story is
Starting point is 00:16:03 So specific to what era it happened in. And I think it's kind of telling of your lack of shame or embarrassment about it, which I love in your non-victiminess. But life was way different in the 70s if you were a kid. Well, we started in the 60s. Yeah, you were born in 47? Six. When I was about four years old, my mom was in drama class. All of our friends were artists, singers, dancers.
Starting point is 00:16:31 And I didn't even know there were ugly people in the world. I was going to say, they were all inordinately gorgeous, right? Everyone was super stylish and sexy and living that lifestyle. Right, but I mean, also kind of crazy and neurotic. I used to sit in the seats, in the audience, and watch everybody rehearsing. I was the only child, too, so everyone wanted to pick me up and kiss me. Yeah, you were at the center of attention, I'm sure. Hello.
Starting point is 00:16:55 It's addictive. But dad leaves right away, John number one. John number two is husband number two or three, two. And he's special. You fall in love with him. You're with him zero to nine. But between dad and John, who becomes your stepdad, there was also mom was engaged for a minute to a casino owner. Prim? Yes. And I was curious, is that Prim Nevada? Is that the same person? Yeah. It is. Well, I don't know, but it makes sense. It makes sense, right? Who has named Prim? I'm like, this guy. Prim's a whole town in Nevada. It's a gambling town. But I'm imagining her mom's boyfriend went on to create this town. Oh, my goodness. You don't have any memories of that. You're too little probably. No, and also he didn't like me.
Starting point is 00:17:38 He didn't want a kid around. Mm-mm. So then your mom meets Johnny in an acting class, and you love him. Yes. I loved my dad because my dad was funny and handsome and did all kinds of things with me. And when my sister was born, nobody cared about me. Nobody was even looking. I just became a non-entity.
Starting point is 00:17:59 And he one day came in my room and said, you know, I don't know. I don't see what's so great about that, baby. Let's go get some ice cream. Uh-huh. You know? Yeah. Everybody else was like, go, go, go. He had a drinking problem.
Starting point is 00:18:10 Oh, yes. And he got violent. Everybody in the family besides me had a huge temper, huge, huge, huge. And there was corporal punishment because that's what happened in those days. Right. Maybe that's why you don't have one. Maybe it's in reaction to being around so much of it that you've taken another route. It's not that you're born with it.
Starting point is 00:18:31 My mom and my son. this turn. Short fuses. Fly off the handle. No fuse. How were you making peace with the fact that there was this man who was so loving and kind to you and saw you and no one else was seeing you that he had this Dr. Jekyll's side or I guess Mr. Hydezai. It was very scary because you were like constantly vigilant. Yeah, that it makes you hypervigilant. Like how do we prevent him from turning into a werewolf? Because I love this version. How do we head off any problem? Okay. This is what you get to be. You get to be able to read the rules. him really well. And I knew the drink where I had to be out by. Right. Oh, that's going to tip on this one.
Starting point is 00:19:08 So you get really savvy. But do you also think it opens up for you a tolerance that people are really fucked up and they're really nice? Do you think it might have lowered your expectations in a way that later materialized was Sunny? Sunny wasn't like that for such a long time. Sunny was fabulous and he would do stupid things. We would do water paints and we would go to the park and this guy played the saxophone and we would laugh. We had a lot of fun and he was special in a way and then it became very treacherous. Yeah, you got insanely controlling as we'll get to. But do you think you were a little bit like, yeah, this is how men act. Now there's this new side of him and it's a pain in the ass and I got to deal with it. But also this is how men are. It was so both and look, I was so
Starting point is 00:19:59 so young. I was 16 when I met him. If you wrote about him today, people would be like, well, this is the most traumatic thing I've ever read. But standard for the day was you were super attractive. You're 16. You almost get hit by Warren Beatty. I lied to him. You lied to Warren Beatty. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:15 You lied to everybody, right? You were dating a ton older guys. You can't be 16. And, yeah. I mean, in those days, it wasn't so bad. I'm trying to make peace with it while I read it because I just get it was standard. You were never thinking like, oh, it was weird. I'm 16. This guy's 30.
Starting point is 00:20:28 You invited me over. But I knew you couldn't tell people. Yeah. So it was still a thing enough that you knew you had to at least say 18. It sounds like it was all pageantry, though. Sure. I'm 18. Well, no, because people wouldn't go out with you if you told him you were 16.
Starting point is 00:20:41 Well, sure. Which I think is probably good of them. There was the emotional line for guys. But how old was Warren when he almost hit your car and invited you over? I don't know. I was 16. I don't know how old Warren is. He was older, but he wasn't old.
Starting point is 00:20:56 In his 20s, probably. Probably. This could have. happen in L.A. You could just be driving the next thing you know you're friends with Warren Bady. Right. And I just left a guy that I was dating a tennis player. And then I'm going down the street, down sunset. And some asshole comes up and almost sideswipes me. I have to go into Schwab's parking lot. Duck into Schwab's real quick. Yeah. And then he came up and he had glasses on so I didn't know who he was. But I didn't really care much about who he was. I just knew my mother and my
Starting point is 00:21:27 friend Penny would be really impressed. And they were. Very. Nowadays, if your 16-year-old is hanging out with the mid-20s movie star, you'd be like, this is not for you. But they were like, oh, tell us more. No, but he talked to my mom, and she went from, you're never going out of the house again to, oh, it's okay, honey.
Starting point is 00:21:44 Yeah. He was so charming. So different. And later, like a couple of years later. No, not a couple of years later, like eight months later. So he calls me and said, let's go to dinner. I went, I have a boyfriend. He said, well, okay, let's go to lunch. Yeah. Okay, so I'll just fast forward through, but we're not putting a fine enough point
Starting point is 00:22:07 on the fact that you were in Fresno. You were in New York. There was a husband who was financially set in New York. You all moved to New York. Your mom hates it. You moved back to L.A. You're just bouncing all around. Yes, but I was used to it. We were a gypsy kind of people. By the time you're 16, you move out. Yes. I'm finished. What I thought was, I've learned as much as I can learn from these people I'm leaving. So at 16, you move in with a girlfriend. Yes. Well, she worked for my mom for a while.
Starting point is 00:22:36 And then when my mom knew I was going, they said, you have to live with her. Like she was somebody that was going to really keep a rain on me. We moved into this apartment. And when my parents lived, we smoked a cigarette in every room. We just put in ashtrays everywhere and smoked a cigarette in every room. Yeah, pretty exciting to be in Hollywood living on your own at 16. and you're hot. We were in Beverly Hills.
Starting point is 00:22:59 Yeah, so you're living with her and then you meet Sunny. Yes, but he likes my girlfriend. My girlfriend's gay. Again, not an issue in the 70s because you also date Geffen for quite a while. Yeah, but that's a different thing. Because he never had been in love with anybody.
Starting point is 00:23:14 So I was the first person that he had real feelings for. So we had a special arrangement. When we met, how did we meet? I don't know where you met. And I should. Okay. Well, so should I.
Starting point is 00:23:30 But let's walk up to that point. So you meet Sunny. Sonny likes your girlfriend. Yes. She's gay. She's gay. It's a mess. Runs off with her boyfriend.
Starting point is 00:23:38 Frail leaves. You need a roommate. You're just this dumb kid that hangs around a bit with Sunny. It's very innocuous at the beginning. He and I got to be friends. And I would do stupid things with him. I'm like the girls his age would never do. I was happy to just do nothing.
Starting point is 00:23:53 He wanted to be silly with somebody. Yes, he did. And so then. I got kicked out. So I went next door to tell him because I was very forlorn and we were best friends by that time. Well, not best, but we were good. He said, well, you can move in with me.
Starting point is 00:24:07 And I was like, okay, good. Okay, what? And then he said, I have single beds. To tell you the truth, I don't find you particularly attractive. Wow. He said that. He was also 27 and she was 16. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 00:24:20 So he didn't know that. He thought you were what? 18. 18 was my number. Did you feel safer? in quotes, knowing that he didn't find you attractive. Like, oh, yeah, we're just friends, and it can be easy. I don't know if I felt safer, but I felt safe with him because that's the way he was.
Starting point is 00:24:38 You know, he was very protective, but not just of me. Like, he was a good friend, all these guys. And it says in the book, the night that I was in this club, I had my back to the door. And when he walked in, I noticed it. Everyone was going, son, hey, Sonny, come and sit with us. Hey, Sonny, come and sit with us. son son come sit with us and i'm thinking who in god's name is behind me yeah and i turn around it was maria and oh tony and maria yeah tony right right thank you see i knew you should be here
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Starting point is 00:27:12 I would say, Mom, if you're going to come over, just call me before I want to make sure the house is clean. And then I lost most of his clothes because when she was coming over, I threw them in my girlfriends. She left her window open. I just threw them through the window. Okay. And Sunny came down. He said, Cher, my shorts, my underwear is all over the bushes over there. What are you doing?
Starting point is 00:27:31 And he was working for Phil Spector. And for people who are not aware of Phil Spector, a lot of people won't be. He was a titan in the 60s music. He invented this wall of sound recording technique. He was a god. He just produced so many hit records. He made the record. Yes.
Starting point is 00:27:49 And so Sonny was working for him. And you start kind of stopping by the recording studio. That's not exactly true. I had met Philip before with his best friend, and I walked in and sat down. And he asked me in French, would I go to bed with him? Sure. And so I knew the answer, and I said, for money. Oh, nice.
Starting point is 00:28:10 And then when I had to be here with Sonny, I had to kind of say, Sunny. I met him. I know him. He doesn't like me. So anyway, but finally he said to Sunny, I'll bring her. So he brought me, and Philip and I had a really weird relationship. Can I just tell people also, in addition to him being a pioneer in sound, he also got convicted for murdering someone. Yes.
Starting point is 00:28:31 For people don't know the end of the Phil Spector story. That was way, way later. Yeah, yeah, that was in the 90s or maybe. But did you get a creepy vibe from him or no? He was an eccentric man, but could you see that it was weirder than that? No, he was really eccentric. He could be funny. He could be kind of.
Starting point is 00:28:44 Scary? No, never that. I was never going to take shit from him. And suddenly used to say, Cher, he's my boss. Please stop. And I went, yeah, well, I don't give a shit. Right, right, right. So you had a weird relationship with him.
Starting point is 00:28:57 Yeah, I don't know where I got this foot spa because I should have been nervous and frightened because everybody else was. But he probably liked that, that you were the only person not doing that. Well, it's also because you've been trained on like 65 different stepdad. You had to adjust all these different people with big personalities. He tried. If someone says that as their first sentence to you and you say the sentence back, which he was shocked, then you can't really take being frightened serious.
Starting point is 00:29:24 But you end up singing background on some songs that become hits. Because Sonny had told him, you know, share sings. If someone tells you someone sings, it's like, oh, God. Yeah, yeah, yeah, okay, fine. Darling and I were talking about this and I'll undergo. So, Darlene, her car broke down and Philip said, Sonny said, you sing, go in there. I wanted to tell him what my credentials were, but I didn't have any.
Starting point is 00:29:50 And so I went in and I started that was being my baby. I kept going until after the Christmas album. Wow. Yeah, a huge hit song. Having not planned on that and that happening, were you so tickled by that turn of events? Were you, like, excited when you'd hear your song come on the radio? Well, the first one I did was that, and the last one is you've lost that love and feeling, and I was the last girl. That's the one I'm thinking of.
Starting point is 00:30:14 I was the only girl. Was it so exciting? Great song. Yeah, we were all sitting in the booth, and when Bill finished it, nobody could kind of breathe. It was like, ah. So then you and Sunny record some songs. Yeah, nothing. Crickets.
Starting point is 00:30:33 How do you end up meeting the Rolling Stones and how do they tell you? You know what you guys should do is you should go to England, you and Sunny. Sunny and Jack Nichi met them and they didn't like being here so much because of the way that the older people, the heads of the studios, they didn't understand it. bobcat vest and big elephant bell bottoms and people were wearing suits and dresses, you know, little short dresses, but above the knee, not short. This whole bohemian kind of style wasn't accepted. No. So you go to England and you guys become quite famous.
Starting point is 00:31:10 Overnight. Because you arrive and you get thrown out of the hotel as you arrive and it's all captured in the media and that makes you guys an overnight sensation. Why'd you get thrown to hell? They're closed, right? close, the way we looked. Wow. It's so funny because you see them now and you're like,
Starting point is 00:31:27 oh, yeah, that looks exactly like it's supposed to. Yeah. But the notion that you guys were getting thrown out for how you looked is pretty. Because you were renegades. Because nobody looked as strange as we did. We left as nobody's and came back to America. I think 5,000 people were at the airport. Because I got you, Babe, had come out by that point.
Starting point is 00:31:45 I got you, babe, came out in Europe, in England. Yeah. In 65. By the time we got back home, it was a huge hit. Wow. And so then why did it sour? Because you get your first kind of valley between 65 and 71. There's this six years where you have this pretty big success.
Starting point is 00:32:02 And then you got to go back to the drawing board. It had passed us by at that time. We didn't really grow with the people. And everybody was doing drugs. Everybody was talking about doing drugs. And we didn't do, well, I didn't do drugs. Sonny was a little ify. The counterculture was taking over.
Starting point is 00:32:16 Yeah, yeah, yeah. So at that point, Sunny basically redesigns you guys. Yes. Are you thinking, well, the ride's over? Were you quick to give up or did you have the same optimism that Sonny did? I did not have the same optimism. What I had was faith because he said, give me two years and would be more famous than we were ever before. Which is crazy.
Starting point is 00:32:36 And you guys developed more of a lounge act in the wake of this, right? It was an accident. We went just to sing, but the people didn't like us and were so disrespectful that I just started making jokes for the band. And through that, you discovered, oh. No, Sonny discovered. You're quite funny. Yeah. Sunny knew what the pulse was and he knew what to bet on.
Starting point is 00:32:58 So he encouraged it. Not at home, not any place else, just on stage. Yeah, and there's this other weird dynamic people might not know about is that Sunny never wanted to perform, really. He wanted you to be a star and he wanted to produce your music. Yeah. And you very much had stage fright and wanted him present. So you'd feel confident.
Starting point is 00:33:15 I still get it. Yeah, you have it here. That's my Kristen's sitting right there. Yeah, yeah. She's acting as Sunny. Yeah. Sunny Bell. So once you do the Sunny and Cher show, which again comes out of this lounge routine you're doing,
Starting point is 00:33:29 and Sunny goes back to the drawing board and he does. He cracks it. I think this will blow people's mind that Sunny and Cher was getting 30 million viewers a week. That's insane. There's not a show on TV that even is one-tenth of that anymore. And you guys were together at this point, right? Oh, yeah. Okay.
Starting point is 00:33:44 And you were like very deeply connected. Well, this is when, I guess it's been happening before, but this is when, when now this kind of new side of Sunny comes out, which is like incredibly controlling. You have this huge success. There's a lot of money. You're not allowed to leave the house. You're allowed to go shopping. That's pretty much all you're allowed to do, right?
Starting point is 00:34:06 And he's cutting you off from friendships you have. This side of him, was it happening slowly? Was it more like you woke up one day and we're like, oh, I don't have a life or while it was happening where you like, what's going on? Was it something that occurred to you late? It took a little while. I couldn't do anything. Joe D. was our friend and our manager and also in the mafia.
Starting point is 00:34:28 But I wanted to do something. And I just said, I'll learn how to play a tennis. So I was going there and I was having the best time. Joe D went with me to pick out my clothes. And then I'm going with this lady every couple of days. And then one day I'm leaving, but she's having a huge party. So there are people coming in. And so Dennis, my friend, told Sonny that I was there, but lots of people were there and lots of men were there.
Starting point is 00:34:56 And he burned my clothes. In the fireplace or in the yard? In the yard. Was he giving excuses at first for why you should stay in the house? Was it a slow burn of you should stay in because you're too famous now? What was he saying? I think it came on kind of slowly because also when we started Sonny and Cher's show, I was free on the show. And he was funny and we got along.
Starting point is 00:35:19 It's such a strange dichotomy because we would be laughing and we'd be having the best time. And then when we were at home, it was kind of more cut and dried. Yeah, he had lots of other girlfriends. I didn't know, except the one. Middle of the night, you go to get a glass of water and there's a young woman putting her boots on in the house. Yes. Were you thinking of how to get out of it? No.
Starting point is 00:35:42 Were you underwhelmed with like, wow, I have a hit show and we're making tons of money and I'm not very happy. Were you having like, where's the joy? It wasn't that because I was so happy with the show and he was so nice on their show. And so at the show, we would be having the best time and we were more working than we were at home. So had you not had the show, you might have started questioning the whole relationship,
Starting point is 00:36:05 but it works so well there that you're like, well, it works. Do you think this was an old-fashioned, masculine, Italian macho ownership over you? When he took my money, I said, why did you do this? And he said, because I always knew you were going to go. He started smoking cigars and I knew it was over. Yeah, you said that. Why is that?
Starting point is 00:36:27 What is that indicative of? Because like businessmen smoke cigars. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Because I'm wondering, there's this pretty well-worn track with y'all, which is men are attracted to your sparkliness, and then they're with you, and then they're super threatened by your sparkly. So that's what's a mystery to me is like he didn't have any interest in you, but yet he was
Starting point is 00:36:51 very jealous and didn't want anyone else to have you. Do you think he was protecting his financial interests or his heart interest? No, not his heart interest by that time. So it's just more like you were his whole business and he wanted to keep you just doing that business. And also he couldn't do it without me. Clearly. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You did it without him as it turned out. But also we had fun. It was such a polar opposites because on stage we had a blast. He let me have all the freedom that I wanted to. And then we came home. The show kept us together a lot longer than we would have been anyway because we had such a good time. He was so fun and he was so funny and we worked so well together. And he played a bit of a beta role on the show. But then in real life,
Starting point is 00:37:38 he wanted to be very alpha. Yeah. Yeah. Maybe he felt emasculated in the show and So he had to compensate at home. When he found his place, when he found what he was good at, he was really funny. And actually, the people liked him more than me. I don't know about that. I get it. You were the more powerful of the group. No, I was a bitch.
Starting point is 00:37:59 He's more of like an underdoggy. On the monologues, I just cut him to ribbons. But then he found this kind of nebish, funny guy. Yeah. And everyone loved him. And they were drawn to me. You're touring like crazy when you're not doing the show. The marriage, it's not great.
Starting point is 00:38:17 And at some point, you become friends with David Geffen. He enters your life. Oh, no, no. I met him at Lou Adder's Christmas party. Yay, we found it. We got it. Good job. Matt I met him at the Christmas party.
Starting point is 00:38:28 And at some point, he says, can I read your contract? Bill was way before David. Bill is the guitarist and the band, yes. The guts from I don't even know where because everyone was terrified of Sunday. You're in Vegas doing shows. You have to do a bunch of shows, and you finally had. Enough. You're done. And you've not confided to anybody what you're going through. My friend Paulette knew, but everybody was really frightened of Sunny. And I was thinking about
Starting point is 00:38:55 jumping off the balcony. And you confided in the guitarist of the band. One night I just went to the band's room after the show. Which Sonny did not want you doing that. Are you kidding? He didn't want me to do anything. He didn't want me to do anything. Like go into a room and just shut down until the next performance. No, he had a kidney stone and I got to go to the movies with my friends. And you were so excited. Yes, I was so excited. Did you ever think, what, what's happened to me?
Starting point is 00:39:20 No. I mean, if you're 16 and someone's 27 and you don't know what you are doing, and then all of a sudden you're singing with Philip and Sonny was nice then. Sunny was nice for a really long time and then not so nice. So you confide in this bandmate and then, yeah, you just use him a little bit as like, okay, I'm going to wiggle out. He said, everyone wants to know, why do you live this way? Did that feel like reality just shattered?
Starting point is 00:39:49 I mean, I knew it was obvious to Palette, but I wasn't allowed to talk to the band, so I didn't realize that they knew. Yeah, and now you're saying I'm leaving this residency. Like, I'm not going to perform. That became your Trump card. That night, it was crazy. Sonny said, are you crazy? Do you know what you're doing?
Starting point is 00:40:09 He said, you need to come back to the room. And I said, you know what, Bill wants to come with me. It was just crazy. But also, I hadn't eaten in days. I wasn't even 98 pounds. Because he wouldn't let you eat? No, no, I couldn't. Oh, you were just so.
Starting point is 00:40:22 You know, I was just like crazy. Bill comes up, and he was 22. I was 25. And then the second time, he said, why do you live this way? And I said, I don't know. I mean, I can't do it anymore. I don't know what I'm going to do. so Sonny said come back up to this room now and I said I'm going to bring Bill I went from
Starting point is 00:40:47 one kind of person just flipped over that night yeah did a 180 but he was so business minded Sonny that he knew best to salvage the business like once he recognized oh you might be deserting this business he came to the table in a way that was like okay I'm going to going to let you move to Malibu. The concession started. Also, I didn't know how powerful I was at all. Right. Right, right, right. So the ball has started rolling, but it's not until Geffen looks at this contract and says to you, do you realize 100% of this money goes to a company called Share, Inc, that is owned 95% by Sonny and 5% by his lawyer? Oh, 0% for share?
Starting point is 00:41:36 0%. Oh, my. And it's been genuine. It was like born yesterday because they would bring me a bunch of share enterprises contracts to sign. And it was always when I was getting ready to go on stage. Yeah, what are you going to read 20 pages of legalese? And I'm not going to read anyway. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And then the next day, he said, you got to get out of this. So I went to Sunny and I said, I'll stay if we're partners.
Starting point is 00:42:00 And he said, no. So stupid. What a dumbass on top of everything else. Yeah, but he wasn't used to it. And he hated David. I mean, he hated him with a vengeance. I'm sure. None of the others, but David.
Starting point is 00:42:13 You had Stockholm syndrome to some degree. You know, you were living with kind of a captor. I guess so. He was push and pull kind of. I mean, he never hit me. He never did anything like that. And he would be really nice and we were working most of the time. He'd buy you things and seemingly spoil you.
Starting point is 00:42:30 Yes, all kinds of shit. And you were moving to nicer and nicer houses, so it was working. But that is the cycle of abuse we know now is love bombing mixed. with hyper control. He used to buy me really expensive presence, but it wasn't for me so much. It was to show people that he was. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:42:49 Yeah, that was a big, big shot. Yeah. Okay, so you guys get divorced. I also think it's really interesting. You did reach out to Lucy Arnaz. I love Lucy. And for people don't know that history, she too was in business with her husband on a show.
Starting point is 00:43:05 And my mom was on that show. Oh, she was. She acted on it. Yeah. What did Lucy say? And she had had a similar situation with Desi. He was controlling and he had screwed her out of a bunch of money. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:17 And what'd she say to you? Fuck him. Get to get him. Nice. No, she said, fuck him. You're the talented one. Oh. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:24 Were you, like, able to take that in when she said, you're the talented one? Were you able to really be like, actually, I am. To own that? Gave me a lot of courage. And David was there. I couldn't have done it without David. You then go on to record in 71, Gypsy's Tramps and Thieves. half-breed, Dark Lady, the music career is starting to now work without Sunny.
Starting point is 00:43:43 And then how do we get into Silkwood? Was it calculated or did it kind of come about? No, I've never calculated anything. I've just been lucky. I went to Mike Nichols once for an audition. And he said, share, there are two kinds of women. And you're not the one I want for this. And I said to him, you know, I'm talented.
Starting point is 00:44:02 And one day you're going to be really upset. You're going to be sorry. So I'm doing, come back to the Five and Dime. So he came to the matinee and then he came backstage and he said, you're right, you're talented and I'm really sorry. Really? And he said, how would you like to make a movie with Meryl Street? And I said, okay, that sounds good. That sounds right.
Starting point is 00:44:25 I fall in love with you for Mask. I think Mask is such a special movie. It was. And I had such a horrible time with Peter. It was terrible, the worst experience I ever had. Bagdanovich. He was directing. I don't even think I knew that.
Starting point is 00:44:41 Why? Because he has a thing with his actresses. He didn't like me from the get-go. I don't know how I got hired. But I guess he saw that I would be good at it, but he didn't like me. He didn't really like the characters. He was an ascot kind of guy. Yes, and this is about a biker family.
Starting point is 00:44:59 He knew enough to pick the script, but he didn't like the people. And he didn't like me at all. Really? And how would that present itself? Will you make you do millions of takes? No, no, no. I'll give you one story. We're doing a big scene in the kitchen.
Starting point is 00:45:16 So he said, where do you think it would be good to do this tomorrow? And I said, we'll be in the kitchen all day. Maybe we should go into the little dining room thing. He said, okay. And then the next morning he comes into me. He was eating an egg sandwich. That's the thing I can. Focal point of me.
Starting point is 00:45:33 It's the grounding of that experience. And he just started, you know, I don't know who you think you are. You're not going to tell me where to. It was crazy. Then we're doing the scene. And Peter comes up to give me a direction and he puts his hand on the back of my shoulder. And I said, take it off. Don't ever touch me again.
Starting point is 00:45:51 Good for you. It was over. Yeah. You're phenomenal in that movie. You're so good. The other movie I wanted to ask you about because I'm so obsessed with him. but what was happening on Moonstruck with you and Nicholas Cage? That feels like the pairing of a lifetime.
Starting point is 00:46:06 Well, you know, they don't want him in the beginning. Because? They wanted Peter Gallagher, who I love, but he wasn't right. And I had seen Nikki in Peggy Sue got married. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And I knew he was the only one to play it. And then they said no. And I quit.
Starting point is 00:46:25 Oh, wow. So you were the one pushing for Nick Cage. Yeah. Did you know him prior to making it? I didn't know him. I just knew that only he could do it. I mean, can you see anybody else saying, Chrissy, give me the big knife?
Starting point is 00:46:40 No, but I'm his number one fan, so he does no wrong in my opinion. I think he's the most exciting actor to watch Alive. He had to have had a crush on you, yeah, in real life? I don't know. I think so. I don't remember. I don't think so.
Starting point is 00:46:52 No, I don't know. I have a boyfriend. It doesn't stop people from having crushes. Yeah, I know. While you were in this big chunk, you're having tremendous success as an actor. Do you want to resume singing or are you like, fuck, this is great. I like doing this. I like doing movies.
Starting point is 00:47:12 It's less exhaustive. I'm not on the road. I didn't really have any cachet as a singer so much. Also, the songs, they were so formulaic, you know, gypsies and whatever. So people didn't want to know me truthfully. What gets you back in the ring as a singer? Because in 87, which is the same year as Moonstruck, you really share. So you're back at it.
Starting point is 00:47:33 What prompted that? I don't know. You work. Well, if you go, who cares? No, I mean, I was signed to the company. Okay. So you were under contract? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:47:46 When you have now an explosion of success with your music career in the late 80s, is that come as a surprise to you? Things in my life just stop. It's like you're this and then you're new and improved. You've reinvented yourself. So I went on the road. I went to the Elephant's Graveyard. I went to Las Vegas and had a residency.
Starting point is 00:48:08 So you liked the residencies? Yes, but I felt bad because people were making fun of me. They were? Everybody. Not me. I came to see you in your residency. Shares in the Elephant's Graveyard because that's where you went. But also, I had to make money.
Starting point is 00:48:22 Well, you made a ton of money. It turns out sunny, you know. Was an idiot. Yeah, he didn't make a lot of money, but you went on to make a lot of money. But he had my $11 million. Aye, aye, aye. Did that drive you nuts? I just couldn't believe it.
Starting point is 00:48:36 Yeah, it said that at the time you guys were trying to divide up $24 million in assets, which today is $175 million. Like, you guys have fucking made some money. And you didn't walk with half of that is what you're saying. I didn't walk with any of it. None of it. So he won that. Yeah. But then you got the last laugh, 100 million albums.
Starting point is 00:48:54 your tour that you went on in 2002 to 2005 was the highest grossing tour of any female singer of all time. Now just Taylor's taking the baton. I was about to say. I never got to that. I mean, people didn't get to that. Well, your tour made $250 million 20 years ago, so that's pretty fucking massive.
Starting point is 00:49:14 Yeah, it's pretty crazy. Also, I have never had luck with men and money. It seems like I'm a target, and there's so many ways to... Do that with record companies. So you feel like you've gotten screwed more than once? Yeah. And what do you think that's about?
Starting point is 00:49:32 I think it was a big thing with women in those days. I mean, look, a lot of men were getting screwed. Black men, black reformers, especially. Oh, yeah. There's some horrendous Motown stories. That's another thing. You come from nothing. They rightly assess, oh, they'll be fine with this.
Starting point is 00:49:47 Yeah. My managers at that point were taking so much. And my business manager, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Okay. So when you had this massive success round two as a singer, how do you decide what you're going to do next? How did you decide do I do movies or do I continue with this music? What am I supposed to be focusing on? How are you deciding that? Things come up. They just present themselves and you say yes or no. But you were never kind of thinking, well, I haven't been in a movie in a while. I need to duck back in and just make sure. No strategy. No, just things come your way. I've been lucky. I've been accompanying. but more lucky than not. I honestly believe this.
Starting point is 00:50:29 There are people so much more talented than me, but I'm lucky too. You have to have a certain amount of luck in this business. Yeah. Okay. My last question is... Oh, I didn't think of whatever in. I know.
Starting point is 00:50:41 I know. I know it's grueling. And we appreciate you. We do. Other than Geffen, have you ever had a man that you deserved? I had two. Okay, good.
Starting point is 00:50:52 That's good. I would be sad if you didn't feel. If it was zero. Several of these you did not deserve. Well, Bill, yes. Gregory is a double-edged sword because he was a kind, fun, talented man that was a drug addict. When we had great times, he was very human and exceptional. And when he was doing drugs, he left.
Starting point is 00:51:19 I mean, he would go away and then he'd come back. Is that the hardest way to end a relationship where it's like the thing that's going to keep you guys apart, isn't even an issue between you. It's an issue between him and something else. That's got to be the hardest to swallow. It took me a long time. And Robert was a wonderful person. He still is. We still talk to each other. And Alexander is a wonderful person. That's your current boyfriend. Yeah. With the six-year-old. We're including him in the two, I hope. In the two you deserve. Yeah, we are. We are. And David was wonderful, too. Did you guys keep a friendship over the years?
Starting point is 00:51:54 Because it feels like a special you and Guffin. Yeah. And Robert. You're friendly with everyone, huh? Even Sonny. Kind of. Yeah. Well, you know, yeah.
Starting point is 00:52:02 Not with his wife. That didn't go well. No, because she's trying to take on my money. Sure. She already got more than she should have to begin with. Yeah. Well, Sierra. It's been fascinating.
Starting point is 00:52:13 I think you're such an attractive badass. Sparkly person. We're lucky to have you. I like the comments. I like the combo of tough and fragile. Yeah. It's very appealing. You have to deal with it.
Starting point is 00:52:27 Sometimes it's not so much fun. Have you ever joined a marriage? You tried that yet? Were you join an existing marriage? He's offering you to join their marriage. Yeah, I swing through. This will be your emotional support marriage. So moving with you, she just wants me to get the fuck out of the picture, I think.
Starting point is 00:52:49 Kristen would be a third you deserve. No. Not even. Not even. Well, Sierra again, I'm incredibly grateful that you came all the way out here to see us. I love your book and I proselytize about it. I think it's phenomenal. I think it'll blow people's mind. It's so honest. I have a question. What's the most thing that you like about it? You're not going to be destroyed or dominated by unfortunate events. There's no self-pity in your story even though you're entitled to a lot of it. I like that. And I actually think that's a pretty good message for younger people to be reading currently. True. But it's like I have to work at this all the time because I'm fragile as my mom. I'm fragile as people in my family. So I am always trying to remember who I am, innately. But sometimes it's a struggle. You say things like this in the book. I almost got my ass kicked for being a pussy. I love it. Yeah, I wrote down. I don't know where I got the balls. There's no thrills.
Starting point is 00:53:52 Strange shooter. I almost got my ass kick for being a pussy. It sounds like my mom. That's just not what you're going to read from like a brand new movie star right now. But that definitely sounds like the way you chat. Yeah. It's authentic. That's what's so attractive.
Starting point is 00:54:06 There's a pressure on people to have dealt with their own trauma in a very accepted way. And I like when people don't deal with their trauma that way. Mine was active like yours was. There was violence. There was addiction. Couldn't be more grateful. Ultimately, I'm in this house with this woman and these two kids. I wouldn't change a thing.
Starting point is 00:54:21 Right. It's golden. She's definitely the better half. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I don't know about that. I also think it's really helpful for people to know you as Cher and who's so strong and, sorry, iconic, and also know that you were controlled, that you were in positions that you shouldn't have bitten in. It's helpful for people because I think they think, oh, she's so strong and she just whatever.
Starting point is 00:54:46 It's good to hear there was hard stuff along the way. I think that's helpful. This is how I think of myself. I thought of myself as a bumper car and you hit the wall and you either hit the wall and stay there or you hit the wall and come back and you go that way. Who would you like to see Kristen with? If you got to pick from every available bachelor, oh, they don't even have to be available. They can be some taken ones if you want. Who would be your dream partner for her?
Starting point is 00:55:12 Because I know you think she could be better. And I don't disagree. Who would be your pick? I don't know. Brett Pitt, maybe. self-deprecating right now. I just want to know who she thinks your dream catch would be.
Starting point is 00:55:24 There's some people I have that I think are good. You've never thought about that. No. She just, I just like her. She's not sold yet on me. She's not sold yet. Well, you don't have the relationship that we have.
Starting point is 00:55:34 I don't have the talent of either of you guys. So, I mean, that part is. No, but the truth is, I trust her. So you must have something that I don't see. Yeah, there you go. We're pulling that clip, by the way. That's incredible. Yeah, that's incredible.
Starting point is 00:55:47 But Reese Witherspoon said that, too. She said there's something about a smart, strong, awesome, funny woman. If they're with a man, you're like, there must be something to that man. Absolutely. There is, there's a lot to this man. Right. He's tall. No, I'll tell you the thing that you should like about me.
Starting point is 00:56:05 Okay. I'm not threatened by her shining. That's true. The shinier she gets the better. Alexander is that way too. The more I shine, the more he has one. That's beautiful. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:56:15 So that's my offering, I would say. Guys who polish you so you shine more. sometimes tease me. You know what I do is I have my burlesque wigs still on a head and I have got one of those sticky things in the closet and sometimes I go in there because it's a very expensive wig. I brush it and Dax goes, you playing with your dog? Did Renata make it? Yeah, of course. Don't be silly. It's a very expensive wig. Yeah. And I always say she's playing with her dollars. $5,000. Wow. Yeah, I say five to seven for sure. Wow. Lace front, fitted. She was the best one that ever lived. That's awesome. And you got a comment. You got a one
Starting point is 00:56:49 You have to check in with those weeks. You got to go in there and spend some time combing. Yeah, play with your doll. Well, Sherer, I adore you, and I understand nobody's good enough for her, and I expect that to be. Trust me, he's a slow burn, but you're going to learn enough for your time. Yes, almost too good for me. And you seem like a good dad. He's the best dad there ever was.
Starting point is 00:57:09 That's not a show. That was the first hug I had given my daughter in two years. That's not true. Just because you were here. I wanted to impress you. You haven't even seen me with my shirt off yet, which you'll see you on the way out. That's pretty premium as well. Yeah. All right. I enjoy you. Thanks for making the time.
Starting point is 00:57:23 Okay. Thank you. I'll get you on the next one. Stay tuned for more armchair expert if you dare. I sir hope there weren't any mistakes in that episode, but we'll find out when my mom, Mrs. Monica, comes in and tells us what was wrong. You know what's really funny about this studio? What? It's almost the exact same size.
Starting point is 00:57:51 Yeah. But we are about 18 inches further apart than we are in L.A. Oh. Can you feel that or no? Weirdly. Like you're dista. Really? Can you even see me?
Starting point is 00:58:02 I can't. That's what I was. Let me put my glass on. They're reading glasses. So they're the opposite. Don't put your glasses on because, you know, I feel like I look better when I'm a little fuzzy. Better from a far. I look best from afar.
Starting point is 00:58:15 Happy birthday. Oh, thank you. It's my friends. It is. It's not a very fun age. No, it's a good age. Well, just there's a landmark 50. Yeah, I know. Which we had. Yeah. That's over. No more 50s. That's right. And then 51 is just like, okay. But I was talking to, I don't remember who about this, but they were saying that there's kind of a mental trick where you feel, you should feel kind of young when you're at the early. stage of the decade. So like 51, 52, you're young. Okay. When you're... Fifty-four is when we got to start sounding the alarm, probably? No, like 57. Okay. Okay. But it works in all decades. So like right now,
Starting point is 00:59:04 I'm 38, so I'm like feeling old. Yes. But I'm about to feel young again. You're about to be a young 40-year-old. Exactly. Boom. Yeah. Optimism. What are your thoughts about turning 40? Yeah, it's weird because a lot of my friends from home, from Georgia, who I, you know, is of my class, are turning 40 this year. Not me, though. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Were you a year younger than everyone? Well, I was born in August and I started kindergarten when I was four. Oh, my goodness. A little baby. Wonderkin. Yeah, you are a wonderkin. But you turn 39 in August. I do. Okay. So you got a year in eight months. Yes. I have time. But I feel. From my perspective, 40 feels great. Yeah, I feel good about it. 40 sounds wonderful.
Starting point is 00:59:49 The only thing, of course, that is a little scary is kids. I just saw on Instagram, this woman's pregnant. She's 45. 71. She's the right age. She's in early 70s. Early. So she's young.
Starting point is 01:00:08 I was just telling the girls on our vacation, we were kind of, well, A, Delty was saying how she can't wait to have a baby. Yeah. Which, yeah. Of course. She's going to really, really do it well. Yeah. For people who don't know, our life is a traveling circus of Delty stuffies. That's right.
Starting point is 01:00:27 The bulk of our luggage as a family is her stuffies. And now there's other. I've already forgotten the names of them. Liberti. No, I know Laberti's name. There's a new class of toys that are these 3D printed things. Oh, I know. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:00:41 And somehow she needs a lot of those. They're cute, though. Sure. But they're tiny and they get lost a lot. Their trinkets. At least Groot we had like when we were trying to find Groot at the monster jam. Oh, shit. You're like, okay, he's a foot and a half tall.
Starting point is 01:00:55 And you can get an APB on the guy. Yeah, that's right. All points bulletin. Guys about two feet tall. Yeah. But this, these are microscopic. Anyways, there's that. And then do you know about fuggles?
Starting point is 01:01:06 Well, I learned about fugglers because I took Delta on her shopping spree. Mm-hmm. That's our tradition for her birthday. and she wanted fugglers. Yeah, a fuckload of fugglers. I cannot with these young, the young generation loves ugly. But we, I did too.
Starting point is 01:01:30 Really? You didn't have that? Well, we had garbage pelt kids and they were the most collectible thing of my whole youth. And they were ugly. Yeah, it was like, Fatsy Nancy.
Starting point is 01:01:40 You know, these are bad. These are outdated. They're old. They're old. Gay Mike. No, that wasn't one. Oh, God, but it could have been. Black Sarah.
Starting point is 01:01:48 Oh, my God. You don't know it was the 80s. Oh, no. No, they were terrible. Do you not know? Do you know? I only know, like, maybe you've talked about them, but I don't, I didn't collect them or I don't really know about them. That's probably the only thing I got obsessed with as a kid where it was like there was first edition.
Starting point is 01:02:05 But by the time I got into them, they were already on second or third edition. So you really wanted these first edition ones. My cousin Jamie had all of them. He was pretty good to give me doubles. Anyways. Oh, that's nice. The point of all that is, is like, I look at these fugglers. And for people don't know what fugglers are, they're these little stuffed animals and they have like human teeth in them.
Starting point is 01:02:21 Yes. They're ugly. They are. But they're cute. I mean, literally they're ugly that stands for fucking ugly. Oh, is that what fuggly? Oh, you're right. Fugglers.
Starting point is 01:02:31 Fugly is from the movie mean girls. Oh. Yeah. Nasty. But fucking ugly. But, yeah. But, but fucking ugly? I guess.
Starting point is 01:02:40 I'm going to go a competing brand called buffuglies. And what are they going to have? Well, this is a. The butt fucking ugly. So is the butt human flesh? Yeah. You'll harvest. We'll harvest some human flesh.
Starting point is 01:02:52 Well, I guess the original fuggler was a woman who made this little creature and put real teeth in it. Real human teeth. Yes. Why? I wonder where she got those. Where does one get? So I'm giving her the benefit of the doubt that she wanted to preserve her children's baby
Starting point is 01:03:10 teeth. Oh. I've decided this. So she made this little. creature to put the teeth in there, but then people loved it, loved it, I guess. So now fugglers that you buy, they're not human teeth, but they look like human teeth. This is probably one of these overnight. This person's probably a billionaire. I know. Because we had to have all the fugglers and we got fugglers for everybody. Yeah. This episode was brought to you by fugglers.
Starting point is 01:03:34 Please sponsor us fugglers. Yes. Anyway, so she's saying she wants to have a baby. And I said, when do you think you'll have your first child when you turn 18? Oh, okay. And she, I want to be supportive of whatever. Sure, of course. Yeah, yeah, yeah. No, I'm playing any seeds that I'd be judgmental or whatever. And she said, no, 18, what do you think I really? And I said, my guess is between 35 and 45 is when I think you'll have kids.
Starting point is 01:04:01 I said, and I think, well, if you want to, we'll freeze your eggs when you're 18. You know, like, I'll pay, I'll pay for you to get your eggs frozen. So you don't have to think about that. Yeah, that's lovely. Because your issue is just when you started freezing eggs, right? Like, had you started at 14. Well, I think you might have to be a certain age before you even had your period. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:04:27 No, I don't know because I've never, like, looked. We didn't look into it. Yeah, I didn't look into it. So maybe I always had a low count. I do think the earlier, the better, yes. And I thinking, look, acknowledging all lucky privilege, obviously this is an option for most people. But I think given where it's the trajectory, it would make the most, like, I think they're going to be wrestling with the same thing. Every woman is like, you're going to want to do your career or whatever the hell.
Starting point is 01:04:57 So anyway, all to say, she was like, no, that's great. That's too old. Again, she's 11. So that probably seems like 80. Yeah, but who, yeah. Ouch. She's thinking mid-20s. Okay.
Starting point is 01:05:11 That's fine. Whatever. I think whatever she does is going to be great. Yeah, me too. But I do think she's underestimating what mid-20s feels like. Yep, I think she is. And how much fun, particularly she'll be having. It's just so fun.
Starting point is 01:05:26 It won't be time for her to be in the house every night with a child. I was thinking about that sim like eight minutes ago because I just arrived. While we were recording? Okay, 80 minutes ago. Because I just arrived in Nashville. and came from the airport. And I don't know why I was thinking this, but I moved to L.A. when I was 22.
Starting point is 01:05:50 Oh, really? Yeah. And I, I've never thought about that. I always think, like, oh, I've been there 15 years, or I've been there 16 years or whatever. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And then I was like, oh, my God, that was a big move. That's a big deal.
Starting point is 01:06:06 22s are babies, yeah. Yeah. If I know a 22-year-old now and they say, I'm going to move across the country, I'd probably say, whoa, that's a big deal. Yes. So I was proud of myself. You should be. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:06:18 I know. Similarly, hi, Schneekly. Come on. You can sit here? Hi, Aaron's here. Jeff, can you turn that other mic on? Hi, Jeff. That's Jeff.
Starting point is 01:06:26 So, disappointingly about Jeff, he's from New Orleans, but he doesn't have a Cajun accent. Jeff. Jeff. And I was on the verge of boring him with the story. Do you remember Aaron and you and I, we went to, Aaron and I went over Chris. This is probably senior year to, we just wanted warmth. We pulled out the Rand McNally map because there was no internet.
Starting point is 01:06:50 Right. And at the back of the Rand McNally map, it had a chart with monthly average temperatures for cities around the country. I remember this now, yeah. And we just looked in the warmest place in the entire graph in the contiguous U.S. was Corpus Christi, Texas. Yes. Yeah. So we're like, let's go there. It'll be warm.
Starting point is 01:07:13 Oh, boy. We drove to Corpus Christi, Texas. We got there and we're like, what is this weird place? It was like pavement. Have you ever been there? I don't think I've been. Okay, mind you, this was also 92 or three, 92. So no restaurants, no coffee, nothing.
Starting point is 01:07:30 But was it warm? It was like a banking disd. It was warm, wasn't it? So we were in that city for a toll and out of an hour. It's just cement and no businesses. I can remember sitting. on the cement in front of the bank building going like, what are we doing here?
Starting point is 01:07:44 Like, we just drove for two days to get to this cement. But you still had fun because you guys are friends. Well, then we got out the Rand McNally, Monica. Oh, okay. Well, like, what are we by? Uh-huh. And we were by Padre Islands right across
Starting point is 01:07:55 South Padre. The bridge from Corpus Christi. But I think we were in North Padre. South Padre. And we ended up on this section. There was federal beach for like five miles and like state beach for 10 miles. And you could drive on the beach and we drove the car there.
Starting point is 01:08:13 And this is where we had our, we brought Speedos with us, microbrief underwear. Sure. You've seen the pictures. Yeah. Have I seen picks? Of us at the beach and our micro briefs with our, we also have winter gloves on. Sure. I think you've seen it.
Starting point is 01:08:27 Aaron's posted. We can post it for this episode. Yeah. And Zach was hitchhiking with a winter glove and a bikini bottom. A little blue bikini bottom. I don't even know why we needed to do that stuff because there was really no one. there. I know, but that's how you guys have been operating your whole lives. It's just for each other. It's very pure. Okay, all to say, we then were there for a few days. We met the weirdest cast of characters who live on these beaches. And they go from the federal beach to the state beach back and forth. And they live there all year long. But you can only be there for 10 and five days respectively. So they move back and forth. Okay. Volkswagen buses and whatnot. Yeah, drinking beer, all that kind of stuff. A jellyfish all over the beach that popped when we drove. Yes. That was memorable. Like when you're driving in a public.
Starting point is 01:09:10 It's wall-to-wall jelly feet. Ew, an infestation. It's like the packaging bubbles you're driving. They're like that inflated. Ew. I kind of want I'm doing. Do that blood? Not that we saw.
Starting point is 01:09:23 It's clear blood. Their blood's jelly. It's clear Pepsi. Ooh. Then we were like, let's go to Norlands. The best. We had never been. So we cross alligator alley.
Starting point is 01:09:36 We're getting kind of close-ish. Again, no, no internet, no phone. Yeah. Go over to a gas station, ask a guy how to get to Bourbon Street. Yeah. And I was in there for like 12 minutes. And I came out and I got back in the car and Aaron goes, did you tell you where to go? And I go, no idea what he said.
Starting point is 01:09:53 Sure. Oh, you can understand it. 12 minutes. Kind of bad past the right thing? Uh-uh. And yeah, I just came out. I'm like, we got to go to another gas station. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:10:04 Yeah. Yeah. It's such a unique place. I love it there. You love it? Oh, yeah. You do. We went in college. It was so fun. I'm going. When? To do the Isaacson's Tulane, remember. He asked me to come to his Tulane Book Festival. Tulane Book Festival. Yeah. And I'm going. When is it? I think in March. I want to go. Go to the book festival. I love books. You love to start books. Yeah, I do. I finished a book, though, over the break. You did, which one? It's called Heart the Lover. It's a very popular book right now. I bet Ruthie's read it.
Starting point is 01:10:40 Did you read it with your eyes or your ears? My eyes. Yes. That's how Ruthie reads. I can't read with my ears. I'm deficient in that. But I finished it. It was really sad.
Starting point is 01:10:51 It was. And it made me feel melancholy. For the holidays? Yeah. Well, okay. Great. Just for. Just what you want.
Starting point is 01:11:00 Yeah. I did think when I finished, because last time I was home, I finished a book tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow, which is my favorite book I've read in the past decade. and that also made me feel so melancholy. It did. And then when I finished Heart the Lover, I thought, I shouldn't read. Well, you should read a different genre, for sure. But reading has a way.
Starting point is 01:11:24 Like maybe a Jack Reacher book or Tom Clancy. I'm not that interesting. Harbin Corlin? Wait, Harlan Corbyn. Oh, Reese Witherspoon's partner. Partner. What? Yeah, they wrote her book together.
Starting point is 01:11:37 But no, I think books are. are the medium that cuts the deepest. Yeah. Yeah. You can, you can, like, form your identity around a book, not a movie. Yes, exactly. Well, I did form my identity around a TV show and a movie, to be fair. That's true.
Starting point is 01:11:56 You were susceptible, though. I guess. I get it. I'm just sensitive to art. Was it you that was telling me, like, most of your music you discover from TV shows? Yes. Yeah, yeah. I do have to say one funny thing about my birthday before.
Starting point is 01:12:10 we move on. Yes. We don't have to move on. Well, let's move on. It's already been indulgent. No. Kristen had written me a birthday card that was on my sink when I woke up, which was lovely, or after I meditated. And it said like, happy 52nd birthday. And I thought, oh, that's kind of a funny bit. Just be off by one year. It was definitely a bit. And then I got into the interior of the card what was written. And then we went back to being 52. And I was like, she definitely thinks I'm 52. Did she tell you that? We've since talked because I read the whole thing.
Starting point is 01:12:45 Then I got busy talking to a neighbor. Then I came back into the bathroom and she was in there at the time fixing the car. Changing it. And I go, honey, you got my birthday? You got my age wrong? And she's like, well, I did the math from 74. Oh, it's like, that's the wrong year. And I'm like, that's the problem.
Starting point is 01:13:03 Yeah, I was born in 70. your neighbors came over and I came over and met them and we were sitting there and they're like, oh, it's his birthday today. And I go 51, baby. And Kristen goes, no, 52. But by the way, I'm going to drag her a little bit. I mean, you would remember last year was my 50. That's mine.
Starting point is 01:13:26 That's more my. If you can't keep 57, 56 straight, duh. I probably won't be able to either. But just last year was 50. I thought she was doing a bit with me, too. I will say this. I, for some reason, that birthday party, like your roller skating party, feels like a really long time ago. Does it?
Starting point is 01:13:46 Yeah. I don't know why, because this year went by very fast, I think. Yeah. But a lot, I think a lot happened this year. I do, too. And I'm having a lot of what you're explaining right now. There are many events, the award show season is the one right now where I'm like, we were just, just at these award shows with Kristen.
Starting point is 01:14:06 Sure, sure. Because I guess probably Emmys is the latest one. Yeah. And then what is that? That's in the fall. That was sort of recently. Is that in the fall? I think it's in like September.
Starting point is 01:14:16 Okay, so probably I'm getting a little confused by that. So yeah, there's all these different things where it's like, well, that feels like that was two months ago. Yet then there's an event that was on the day before that does feel like two years ago. Yeah, I know. Time is very. Yeah, it's very topsy-turvy that way. Can I tell you guys, now that we're on the subject of the awards? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:14:40 Okay, so this will be out on Monday. Happy New Year, everyone. Yeah. Happy 2026. Even year, it's going to be a good one. It's going to be a good year, I feel it. So we're going to the Golden Globe. So exciting.
Starting point is 01:14:50 Yeah, next Sunday. Yeah, yeah. This Sunday. This, uh, tomorrow. Yeah. And I've been on a real ride over this break. So I have, I've been really humbled. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 01:15:04 But humble to the point where I just, like, I felt worthless. Okay. Okay. So it's a real hot. The ultimate hunger. It's a real. The game you're playing. It is a roller coaster because, of course, it's so, it's so incredible that we are
Starting point is 01:15:20 nominated that we're getting to go. It's already. It's already. It's already incredible first year podcasting. It's so. It really is so special. I'm so proud of this. So I'm trying to get a stylist. Okay. And I cannot get one. It's a busy night for the life of me. And I really started like, I was like, oh my God. I am so worth, I'm ugly. You're bottom of the barrel. Oh, you went ugly? Of course. I'm like, I'm so ugly. No one even will like get.
Starting point is 01:15:58 near me. What if that's how stylists did it? They like, they like, oh, no. They looked at pictures of the people. Do you think? I think they might. Do you think they'd rather sit home without a job? That was my point.
Starting point is 01:16:12 I'm like, don't these people like money? I don't understand. This is a job. But I think there is a lot of politics and there is a lot of like who you're. I know, it's busy. It's busy. And they already have clients and they're already working with clients. And it's like, it's last.
Starting point is 01:16:28 minute and I that's what I'm being told yeah okay but in my heart but for me on the outside I'm like girl this is your whole this is like me hiring someone and tell me how to what motorcycle the ride to the globes what no I got that covered I know so that's okay but that's also if there were anything you couldn't get help with this would be my pick for you that's right yes but I I I did think like but you know it just got so big in my head I was like I have to look so good because I do care. I care about fashion and I want people to say like, oh my God, she looks great. And a stylist does do some things I can't do, like tailor perfect.
Starting point is 01:17:13 Like, they know things like that. The finishing touches. Exactly. The accoutrema, the accessories, the jewelrys. At one point, I was like, I have a dress. I do. I have this vintage dress that I love and I think will be great. I just had this incredible image of you.
Starting point is 01:17:29 And do you remember when she dresses up E.T. in that grandma outfit? There's just like so much stuff. I just pictured you on the red carpet with like seven necklaces, three purses, a bunch of pearls, huge earrings, a crazy hat. I should do that. I should just throw in the guy. You should look up the picture and dress exactly like E.T.
Starting point is 01:17:54 The grandma. I really should. At least that would be funny. Like, anyway. And I'll come as the little boy in the like puffer jacket he wore the whole movie. Oh, yeah. That would be cute. That would be so cute.
Starting point is 01:18:07 I'll carry you in a milk crate. Like on the front of the bicycle. We rolled up on the fucking right carpet on bicycles and you were in a milk crate. Dress as that great. Oh, my God. That would be so great. Anyway, so now I'm going on my own, but not really. So luckily, and this is truly a miracle.
Starting point is 01:18:30 Okay. But it makes sense. So there's a designer that I love, an amazing designer, Brandon Maxwell. He is an arm cherry. Oh, thank God. Thank God for Brandon. Perfect. Thank God.
Starting point is 01:18:45 Yeah. So he had DM'd me like years ago and said, you know, he loved the show and I could not believe it because he's amazing. And then he popped in my head, of course, when all this was going on. I was like, should I just reach out directly? You're not always supposed to do that. Like these stylists go to the designers and then they, you know, it's a whole thing. Sure, sure.
Starting point is 01:19:05 And I was like, I, well, I guess I have to. I got to hack the system. That's what I do in my life. Yes. You got to just, do you just got to keep plowing forward. Exactly. So then I DMed him and he said, I heard on the podcast, congratulations. That's amazing.
Starting point is 01:19:21 I was going to reach out to you. I'd be so honored. No. Yes. Oh, yeah. And so he is going to provide me an incredible dress. It was just really, it was very, I felt like I really needed that little boost. Send him E.T. as an inspiration photo.
Starting point is 01:19:37 I will. No, it makes sense, though, that it would, of course, be an arm cherry that came through. Yes, of course. Of course. Like, how, like, that's what gave me all of this. Yeah. But I really went on a real ego ride. What days were these?
Starting point is 01:19:53 Were these before? This was before Christmas or post Christmas? Oh, the whole time. The whole Christmas. When did you hear from Brandon? This morning? Like three days ago. Three days.
Starting point is 01:20:02 So you've had a good three days. You're back. Yeah, I'm back. Okay. How was, let's quickly go through a little bit of Christmas morning. Okay. In Georgia, how was it? It was really nice.
Starting point is 01:20:12 My brother and his girlfriend. You met your brother's girlfriend. I did, and she's lovely. What's her name? Her name's Emily. Shout out Emily. She's so good for my brother. Uh-huh.
Starting point is 01:20:23 You know, she's like, she's very cute. She's kind of, she's easy. Anyway, so yeah, Christmas was lovely. What about you? Aaron, did you get anything nice? Yeah. Yeah, I got a t-shirt that said, really great station. Oh, ho!
Starting point is 01:20:44 Ruthie got him merch, official merch. Yeah, and I was like, wow, this is actually the nicest t-shirt I think I've ever. Isn't it right? I agree. That one in particular. I put it on. I'm like, okay, now this is like next level. The quality is so good.
Starting point is 01:21:00 I know. And the color and the whole, you know, having had living in Georgia during that time. Like I was like, wow, this is like. Full circle. The best. It is. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:21:15 Yeah. I love that shirt. And as Murphy's Law would have it, I have two of them. And both of them I've done where you get one of those weird oily stains. Yeah, you did it already. Up to both of them. I'm positive. You're going to do it.
Starting point is 01:21:28 I think that was my first worry when I put it on was, I'm going to do something to this. And I even, when I was just grabbing two shirts to come here for two days, I didn't grab it. Yes. Because I was thinking of all the eating we might be doing. Yes, that's smart. But instead I'm wearing a white shirt. Like, I don't care about that. We can throw that in the trap.
Starting point is 01:21:50 Right. I mean, that is true. But, like, I'm always, when I put it on, I'm trying to evaluate, do I care when people have a little oil stain on there? Like, I'm just, I can't decide if it's even a thing or not. I think it's fine. Because I love that shirt. You have to keep wearing it. I guess this is going to be impossible not to get an oil thing.
Starting point is 01:22:07 In these games we play, you're nailing something so on the head that I play these weird games like, I could get, I presume, unlimited numbers of those shirts. There are merch, but I'm not. I'm dealing with the two that are stained that I've had for two months now. Instead of pulling anyone out. And then I definitely wouldn't bring it, like you. Really? A new shirt I love. I better not bring it.
Starting point is 01:22:28 Wow. Anything I like, I try not to use. That is so funny. I do. Anything I like I don't want to use. Yeah. I've like ruined my Ted Seeger's hat from sweating so horribly in it, playing pickle ball, washing it the way I shouldn't have. And instead of grabbing another one out of the box, because it's our merch, because you're a thousand.
Starting point is 01:22:49 I fucking hate it. hate it and I put it on my head once in a while and it's not right anymore but I
Starting point is 01:22:56 still won't grab another what is that doesn't have found familiar to you does it I think it's the shared child
Starting point is 01:23:04 it's yeah it probably is a scarcity mentality slash like ugh I messed up
Starting point is 01:23:11 so I don't deserve another one or something there's probably about something about deserving her guilty
Starting point is 01:23:16 conscience yeah exactly and we don't You do deserve, you deserve the merch of the brands you invented. Yes, I'm not sure about that. I do want to say one thing about time. Yeah. My dad retired.
Starting point is 01:23:37 Already or coming up next week? He retired on New Year's Eve. On New Year's Eve. It was his last day. He had to do his exit interview. And today's the second. He's probably in the deepest depression he's been in his whole life. I'm trying to.
Starting point is 01:23:48 I think Monday will be. a little harder. What's he going to do Monday morning? So, okay, well, this is, of course, my dad. He is going to do some contract work. Yeah, he's going to go back to work. So he's basically doing part-time work. Sure, that starts a new job Monday.
Starting point is 01:24:01 Yeah. Well, at the same company, at the same company, too. He's basically just like staying. Yeah. But it is a big deal. I mean, he's about to turn 72. He's been working his whole life. He's so spry. In my mind, he's like 60.
Starting point is 01:24:16 I know. I agree. I know. He kept saying I'm 72, and I was like, I don't. don't want to hear that. Stop that. Stop saying it. And then it was so funny on New Year's Eve, right when the ball dropped, he was like, I have Medicare. He was so excited that he now has Medicare. For him, it's a way, he's been, he's been working the system his whole life, right? It's like he's been saving for retirement his whole life. His plan is coming. It's here. To fruition.
Starting point is 01:24:49 To me, that's what's dangerous about life. Continue. Yeah, because to me, I would, if I did that, if it was like, oh, my God, and I'm saving for a medic here and then it's here, I would be very depressed. It's like I, not only did I work and my work identities over, it's like I work towards a thing and now that's here now. And this is the thing. Yeah. This is what it's like to have all your ducks in a row and you have done it perfectly. How does it feel? And then you're like, oh, it's fine.
Starting point is 01:25:18 Exactly. It's just another day. Yeah, it's all a mental trick. I know. But because he's retired, I want the world to know that he has a little more time to spend on the Sim. Oh, so things could really... It's going to be a big year for my family, so he and need to make some time. Stay tuned for more armchair expert, if you dare.
Starting point is 01:25:49 Okay, so now we have a new fun thing for Mondays, which is we get to do the fact check seamlessly. That's right. That's right. We're so excited about this. So this is for Cher. My mom, it was funny because I guess my mom loved Share. Oh, okay. Growing up.
Starting point is 01:26:07 That makes sense. Yeah. You know, she said, I saw you were editing Share. And she was like, how was that? I told her, I was like, you know, Sonny took all her money. And she was so shocked. Oh, yeah. And then she, you know, she was like, yeah, from the outside, when they got divorced, it was so sad.
Starting point is 01:26:23 Yeah. And she's like, you just never know what's really going on. And it's so cool. They continue to do their show after they were divorced. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, they did. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:26:32 And was she like real young? Yes. Oh, yeah. When that started. She moved in with Sunny when she was 16. Different times. Yeah. That was a lot of the episodes.
Starting point is 01:26:41 Well, she's got a story about like fucking Warren Beatty when she was 16 and he's like a 30-year-old man. I don't know the age. Oh, that's a fact. Oh, it is. Yep. Okay, we can do it now. So, Cher was born in 46. You can do fast math on your birthday.
Starting point is 01:26:55 Okay, 46, for 80. She's 79. She was born in May of 46. Oh, yeah. Guess I was born yesterday. And Warren was born in March of 37. Whoa. What was her year of birth?
Starting point is 01:27:10 46. They're not as part of it. So he was maybe 27 or 26 and she was. It's not. as much as I was expected. That's not too bad. That's all right. We can certainly live with that in the 60s and 70s.
Starting point is 01:27:24 Yeah, I know. Really different time. Yeah. But what was funny is she said, she was like, it was a different time, but I did have to lie and say I was 18. So it was like they still,
Starting point is 01:27:34 she still knew, but she was kind of saying you had to lie because the men wouldn't. Fuck you. Fuck you. Fuck you unless you were 18. Yeah. Or have you around.
Starting point is 01:27:42 Because they thought you were like babyish. Or just it was illegal. Depending on what state you maybe. Yeah. I even grew up in an area. where it was like okay check well a okay a okay and then be like how old is she check her license like that awareness of like is she really right that stuff was going on even in the yeah 90s um we were watching last night beverly hills cop too with the whole crew and all the little kids and lincoln
Starting point is 01:28:10 goes in the middle of the movie just was every guy in the 80s a huge perver and i go i go well we still are we just are much quieter about it now. But the movie you forget, it's kind of like when I watched Chips with them the other day. And I'm like, oh, I'm so perverted. I didn't think I was as perverted, but now that they're watching with me, I realize that. But like, yeah, there's just these random scenes like, yeah, let's find the pussy. Let your dicks do the walk in. Wake up, dick.
Starting point is 01:28:36 They're like, let your dick point the way. Point the way. It's just like a big blockbuster summer movie. Yeah. And that's how we were. How long does it take you to shave those legs? Yeah. You need me to be a groomer?
Starting point is 01:28:50 I'm offering my grooming services. He just met her. Hot. But let's... Get a lot of cashmere that way. Yeah. Speaking of your movie, your movie situation at this house, last time you were doing Tom's, Tom Cruise's Cruises. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:29:08 And I was going to text you that my family did Tom's Cruises, cruises. but it was short-lived because the movie we started was eyes wide shut. No, that's not a family movie. Why did you guys pick that one? Because when I was flying home, I was listening to a podcast and someone said it was their favorite Christmas movie. And I was like, oh, and I was like, I've never seen it. I know it's sexual, but I've never seen it. And if it's Christmas-y, like, we're going to watch it.
Starting point is 01:29:42 So that night, me and my mom and my dad, turned on eyes wide shut and I it's a porn it was a literal porn orgies everyone's so naked and I'm sitting there with my mom and my dad how's that feel and it's like this was a horrible mistake and I was like I am old because I'm not that uncomfortable oh good yeah like I don't like this this isn't recommended. But it's tolerable. But I can. Because at 18,
Starting point is 01:30:19 you would have died, right? Oh, my God. Yeah, your dad would have died. Well, actually. My dad probably would have left. He might have left, yeah. I will say no, now that I'm a dad and I'm older, the stuff I thought, my parents thought, they didn't think.
Starting point is 01:30:32 Yeah. Like, I'm not uncomfortable. Really? No. Yeah. Maybe he wasn't. They're like these, your kids are these, like, they're a whole different category of humans.
Starting point is 01:30:44 Yeah, I get that. I don't know how to explain it. It's just like all that stuff I thought, maybe my parents were uncomfortable at the same time. They weren't. You're just your dumb little kids and then they grow up, but there's still your dumb little kids. But not the other way. Your kids are mortified. Yeah, you're like, I don't want my dad to be watching this.
Starting point is 01:31:03 Exactly. Sexuality. And what's he thinking? Yes, acknowledging, I guess that's my point. That's how I could simply say it. Acknowledging your parents are sexual is deeply creepy. Yes. acknowledging your children are sexual is not right it's not a thing it's like oh yeah they're the little human creatures and they're going to be sexual and they're going to have boyfriends and that's all exciting for them yeah it's not creepy yeah but your parents are like oh god yeah did you ever hear your mother making love yeah oh yeah oh yeah and Aaron's mom's so fucking sweet too she might be the sweetest lady I've ever met my god my mom said um
Starting point is 01:31:44 She listened to mom's car, or watched it on YouTube, and she, I talked to her, you know, and we don't talk often. And she said, she started crying, and she said, I am so sorry that I didn't, for childhood, pretty much. And I was like, where does that come from? and she goes, I listened to your episode. And I was like, this is why they're not allowed to listen. And I was like, I don't even know what we said. But then I was asking Ruth, she goes, I think it was that you guys were like talking about budge and throw.
Starting point is 01:32:26 And I was like, oh, for fuck's sake. My mom would you ever guess she would be listening to that? Yeah, I know. But yeah, I would never guess she listened to it. And then, duh, she listened to it. If my kids are on a podcast, when I'm older, I'm going to listen. Yeah. But they shouldn't listen.
Starting point is 01:32:45 I deal with this with my mom, but I'm in a really lucky situation, which is like I often, in fact, the only person I'm reading my memoir to is my daughters and my mom. That's nice. And she is going through a lot of that stuff.
Starting point is 01:33:03 And I'm just constantly going, mom, like, I'm fucking, I hit the lottery. Whatever the recipe is, I'm so happy. Like, I literally, I don't say any of this with regrets or sadness. It's just like, well, here are the facts.
Starting point is 01:33:17 But we've had, we've been going through that a lot for like two years as I'll, like, write certain events and then I'll read them to her. It's kind of, I think, kind of good because then we have a good hour chatting about it all. And her reaction, I wonder what your mom's is. My mom's is just like mostly, yeah, wow, all that happened. And it feels like 10 lives ago. and I can't really connect all that. And yet I know that all happened. And I'm like, yeah, same.
Starting point is 01:33:47 It doesn't mean anything. It's just what it is. Yeah. I never want to talk to my mom about any. Yeah. I was just like for that. I know. That's one of these things.
Starting point is 01:33:58 Yeah. Because then you kind of end up feeling guilty. And it's like, well, I don't want to feel guilty about this. It's like it's a weird cycle that starts happening. Yeah. What you really want to say is. like, well, it's just a truth. I have zero resentment against it.
Starting point is 01:34:14 Like, I have no ill feelings about anything. Yeah. Yeah, I'm just like, that's cool, man. We all took a wild ride together. Also, you guys are parents. So you could, I assume, imagine that if you heard your kids talking about some horrible stuff, you would also want to say I'm sorry for that. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:34:36 True. Yeah. So maybe it was good for her that she got to say that to you. Yeah. You know? It's not like she doesn't know. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:34:44 Yeah. Maybe it was a good outlet. And that, yeah, and I think she's been able to say like, I'm, I'm really sorry and I'm like, yeah, you don't need to be. Yeah. Yeah. You were fucking 22 years old. I know. Two kids.
Starting point is 01:34:56 It's a lot. Yeah. Um. Share. Very on topic. It is on topic. You would love her book, dude. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:35:04 I think I might already told you this. I loved it. She talked about a wild fucking ride. Did through it. Yeah. Yeah, and she's been adults since she was nine years old. Yeah. Okay.
Starting point is 01:35:15 So Prim Nevada. Remember she said Prim? I brought up. Her mom's boyfriend was a man with the last name Prim. Exactly. Who owned a casino. Right. And I thought maybe he started Prim Nevada the whole town.
Starting point is 01:35:29 Uh-huh. But she didn't know. So the casinos and resorts in Prim Nevada are primarily owned and operated by Affinity Gaming, though they were originally developed by the Prim family. Ernest and Gary Prim. It's got to be it. Right? Yeah. Gary Prim.
Starting point is 01:35:44 It says who the town is named after. Mm-hmm. Okay. That's cool. I looked up, are you born with your temper? Okay. Because she said her dad had like no temper. So she could relate to him kind of because of that because the rest of her family
Starting point is 01:36:01 had a, has a big temper. Yeah. It says you're not born with a specific temper, but you are born with a temperament, a baseline for emotional reactivity that's influenced by genetics around 20 to 60 percent and shaped by your environment and learned behaviors, meaning some people have a natural predisposition to frustration or strong emotions that can be managed or worsened by how they're raised and experienced life. I have a bad temper, I think. Yeah. You like real bad? I have a bad temper, I think.
Starting point is 01:36:34 Crickets. I don't know. Do you? I'm easily frustrated. I'll say that. Yeah, you don't have like temperate. Well, no, you have your tantrum. Oh, yeah, those are fun.
Starting point is 01:36:48 Yeah. Playful tantrum. But I don't think I get angry that back. Maybe I do. I don't have a thought. Just so you know. You can have a thought. No, no, I have none.
Starting point is 01:36:59 It's your birthday, so you get to be whatever. No, no, no, no. I have none. I'm like I'm evaluating you real time with you as you explore this. I have a short thing. You're mercurial. That's worse. No, mercurial sounds cool.
Starting point is 01:37:13 It sounds cool, but it is bad. No, it just means that you have a lot of ebbs and flows in your disposition. Yeah, but Mercurial is like... This is funny. We're going too long, but I got to say I couldn't not observe it. I think there's so many funny gender things. I just constantly see them. And then as I enter different age groups, I see the gender thing play out differently.
Starting point is 01:37:35 But we went to this very special place. in the Bahamas over the break and everyone's well to do. And I just was observing, I think men, men just, we just don't want any emotions. Yes. And we're so afraid of emotions. We don't know what to do with them. And then we get resentful at you if you have them. And so we're constantly, if we're in a position to, we're trying to create the perfect environment where everyone will be happy, which can't happen, obviously. But you think it can. You go, well, take everyone to where it's warm and it's a nice house. Clearly everyone will be happy for six days. Right. And that's, of course, not the case because you can't buy your way into just being in a good mood. No, you can't.
Starting point is 01:38:24 So I'm experiencing that. But mostly, then I get distracted by noticing, oh, all the dads here. I mean, it's like, I'm watching a table like with a meltdown happening. And I can just see on the guy's face like, fucking Amy, I fucking brought everyone here and the food's good and it's sunny. Like, why is everyone so upset? Oh my God. I do that too. Do you do that? Yeah. Like, so I pay for, yeah. You think you can create the perfect situation where you'll control really what I think is a guy you're trying to control is no emotions. I know, which is like guys. You want loved ones. I like, I like love ones. I know you guys only want the good ones, but it's just that's not real. It's not how it works. And can I, I mean, I, I actually.
Starting point is 01:39:05 Actually, I can't say this about Aaron because I've never seen it. Yeah. But you have negative emotions. Never. Yes, you do. And they come up and they affect people too. And that's life. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:39:18 And it's okay. Yeah, but vacation should be perfect. I know. That's why we went there. We all declared this was going to be a perfect week. Yeah. That's the, no emotion. But look, that's also your expectations.
Starting point is 01:39:30 Like, I was crazy sick. Still, I'm a bit sick. Yeah. Like with my brother to New York, you know, really, really sick. Yeah. But no one heard about it. You know, I wasn't laying in bed and people were bringing me things. And I wasn't like, oh, my God, I'm so sick.
Starting point is 01:39:44 But, you know, some people got a little feeling less than perfect on the trip. And it's just like a big event that they're sick. I know. Is that not a gender thing? No. It's not. Oh, there's men that are. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:39:56 I think men kind of can't handle being sick personally. Oh, okay. But I think just because you don't. share that you're sick doesn't mean other people shouldn't say that they're sick or get taken care of yeah i also you're with your brother so that's probably why neither of us knew how to take care of yeah but if you are home you get taken care of people do try to take care of me yeah for sure yeah i don't do well with that and i try to minimize you seen that i need any help right but you're right it's probably just me it's probably not male female do you like do you like being
Starting point is 01:40:33 taken care of? Well, I wish I could lie. Don't lie. But I can't lie. It's been getting pretty ridiculous. I like to be taken care of. Yes, good. Aaron, good.
Starting point is 01:40:50 I'm glad you're saying that. It's a good feeling. I mean, it's limited to one person I'll complain to, but I'm like, yeah, kind of been turning into that a bit. Oh, good. Yeah. It feels good to have someone take care of you. It feels safe.
Starting point is 01:41:08 It's nice. Well, and I've always, well, like I've always been taken care of by Dax. Yeah. He's always been the caretaker who can't show weakness. He can't receive. I don't want to take care of him. I think you allow me to help you sometimes. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:41:31 Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. It might be harder for you to. It's becoming clear. It's just my issue. It might be more of a male thing, though. You might not be able to receive help from a male more than you probably can receive a little more from women. Yeah, that's definitely true.
Starting point is 01:41:46 I've never liked it in the past, but I definitely. Like it now. I've seen it get out of control where I'm like, I'm like, oh, you're not feeling good either. And I was like, well. I'm not here to do the taking care of. Yes. Now we're really getting some or two because I do think a good chunk of mine is like, no, no, we're all in an agreement.
Starting point is 01:42:11 We're in a social contract. Handle your business. And like, I don't want to receive it because I suck at giving it. And I'm like, don't give it to me because when it comes time to give it to you, I'm going to suck at it is and I don't want it. Even though you're not going to suck at it because there's no way of sucking at it other other than just saying like, are you okay? Do you need anything?
Starting point is 01:42:29 That's what's crazy to me. Yes. So women are great at that. My thing is like, I can't fix it. I don't know that you're going to be. Everything I need to say, I don't know if it's true. I don't know if you're going to be okay. I don't know if you're going to feel better tomorrow.
Starting point is 01:42:45 You don't have to say you're going to be okay or you're going to feel better tomorrow. You just say, how are you? And then I'll go like, can I get you? Like, can I do anything to help? And they'll say no. But I know there's nothing to do to help. It just feels like shit. And you're going to feel like shit for five days.
Starting point is 01:42:57 I know. It just, it just means. something that somebody is thinking of you and somebody's like wants to whether they can do anything they want to that's exactly right yeah and that's the hurdle i have to get over yeah this i had to get over 18 years ago with christin she was like we should go to africa this spring and i would go well we can't go in spring because you're doing that movie there and i'm doing blank oh that sounds reasonable that's the reality of it yeah and i don't want to be promising you were going to Africa in spring when I know that's not possible.
Starting point is 01:43:33 So I'm so literal and I have such a fear that I'm going to disappoint something, you know, I've promised you something. Yeah. So I'm not going to do that. Because of your mom. And then after a year or two that I realized, she just wants to know I'd like to go to Africa in the spring with her. Oh, that's what she really wants to know.
Starting point is 01:43:51 Like, we should go to Africa in the spring. Yeah, we should. Okay. And that's fine. Yeah. And when I had to learn in trust, she's never. going to be mad at me come spring and say, why aren't we in Africa? You said we were going to go to that. That's never happened. But I had to learn that that part's never going to happen.
Starting point is 01:44:08 So now I'm going to be like, yeah, she'll go like, let's go to such and such tonight. And I'll go, yeah, that sounds great. And in my head, I'm like, we're never going there tonight. Oh, wow. I know this thing's happening at four. We'll never make it. Okay. The other day, she's like, oh, they did a pop up of the home alone pizza shop in, um, on Ventura Boulevard in Studio City. At a pizza place. Prince's pizza. Okay. They made it look like the home alone pizza place.
Starting point is 01:44:33 Which again, I don't even know what the home alone pizza place. I guess they're just ordering pizza. They don't have a pizza place. They order it at the beginning. Oh. So they make it that place. Okay. And Erica took the boys and everyone had a great time.
Starting point is 01:44:45 So this is Friday night in L.A. Yeah. And Kristen says, and we're going to go to a party at seven or eight. We're going to drop the kids at the Hansons. She goes, let's go to this pop-up. at six before we drop the kids at the Hansons at 6.40. Sure. And I'm like, not a fucking chance.
Starting point is 01:45:03 We'll drive there in rush hour. But you say yes? I said yes. Wow. I go great. That is growth. We drove there in rush hour. We got there and lo and behold, there was the line two blocks long.
Starting point is 01:45:16 Oh, no, you did drive there? Which I knew would be the case. It's Friday night in L.A. A week before Christmas. By the Hansons anyway. Oh, that's true. It wasn't like completely. I knew, like, I'm like, a.
Starting point is 01:45:27 Okay. I'm going to say yes. Let's do it. I go, great. Let's do it. I'm like, it's not going to happen. Wow. But I go, but we'll be in the valley. There'll be other places to eat. We'll get drive through. We'll make this work. But I was smart enough just to go like, yeah, let's go. And we went there and was everything I thought. There's two block line. And Kristen goes, oh, fuck this. I'm like, yeah. And I'm already know. I'm like, I'm almost like actually real growth there. I am impressed. I haven't done that. That I find it. And then I just, what's suspicious is I go, oh, well, let's hit Sharkey's. Like, clearly I decided two hours ago. We'll be able to hit Sharkey's.
Starting point is 01:46:04 No one will be there on Friday night and it's right by the answer. I just, from the set, like, as she was saying that lines long, I'm like, let's just go to Sharkey's because I already knew we were going to end up at Sharkey. But that's because you, you know her. That's very individual. You've adjusted. And what did she wanted to know is that her partner was excited to try this fun thing she heard about that could be really fun.
Starting point is 01:46:24 and she's with someone who wants to go do that. That's nice. And I got to give her that. Right. And the outcome was all the same. We didn't go there. We didn't wait in line for two hours like I thought. But you drove there.
Starting point is 01:46:36 But we drove there. Yeah. That I have, that is impressive. That would be hard for me. I don't think I could do that. It's hard. It's hard. I would have to say the reality, which is like, okay, but there will be a line.
Starting point is 01:46:50 So we either have to go really early or probably won't be able to go. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. So I'm impressed that you can do that. That's very impressive. Color me impressed. Well, this brings us all down perfectly to New Year's resolutions, which do you have any? I have two.
Starting point is 01:47:05 And then this is one of them. No, let me hear it. One is just continue. I'm not going to crack it this year, but I know, and I've already vocalized it, like, we've got to not be affected by the emotions of other people. We got to fucking get on this like it's a job this year. Yeah, I like that. So this is front of the mind.
Starting point is 01:47:23 Like, you're just going to let everyone. have all their emotions. Yeah. But do you get to do you, so in that case, are you able to have any like when? Don't need them. No. Spoken like a true dad. Well, it's the expectations.
Starting point is 01:47:39 It's just having the right expectations, I guess. Yeah. Yes, true. Had I thought we were going to go there and walk right in and get a slice of pizza, and then we got there and then it was two hours and then she did want to. I mean, luckily she didn't want to wait in that line. Right. Well, we couldn't have because we had to be at the same.
Starting point is 01:47:54 Yeah, exactly, yeah. Okay, then, and then sprints. Oh. Yeah, I want to do sprints once a week this year. Okay. They're the worst. When's the last time you did a sprint? A long time.
Starting point is 01:48:04 I just decided if there was. They're hard on the knees. They're hard on everything. I'd be terrified. Yeah, right? Just tear everything. But you know, don't you know intuitively like, oh, if I can run full speed, I'm in good shape. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:48:17 Like, if ever there were one signal of your fitness is like, can you run as fast as humanly possible away from an animal? That's pretty important. Do you get to work up to a sprint like, I'm thinking of, and this is even a long time ago, but I. Baseball fantasy camp. It was before that, but it was just the softball league, like a bar league. Yeah. And I was so excited to play some ball.
Starting point is 01:48:44 Yeah. You know, and I'm drinking and I'm everything else and I'm not stretching and not doing anything. I fucking crank the ball. my first at bat. Sure. And I take off like a son of a bitch and just tore my hamster. Oh, yeah. On the way to first base.
Starting point is 01:49:01 Yeah. And I had to be the catcher the rest of the year. Oh, no. And I have a pinch runner. Like today's going to be day one. I'm going to do six 30 second sprints. Wow. 30 seconds?
Starting point is 01:49:15 That's long. I know. So I keep reading as the magic number. But can you maybe work your way up? 30 seconds is probably. like a 200 meter run for me. I don't know. When we were kids remember Brooke?
Starting point is 01:49:32 He did the one lap, like a quarter mile in like 59 seconds. Oh my God. Bill Booker. Bill Booker. Junior high. That was his last name. Yeah. And Brady Tucker. Those two were the fastest. Brady Tucker was built like sliced alone in eighth grade. Wow. So muscular. Anywho, so I'll probably run at like 70% today, so I don't tear anything.
Starting point is 01:49:58 Yeah, don't want your birthday get hurt. But within four sessions, I intend on running as fast as I can for those 30 seconds. Wow. I hope I won't rip anything given that. Just stretch. Make sure you're stretching. Really stretched. I hate stretching.
Starting point is 01:50:11 I also torn my hamstring in high score. I don't stretch ever. No, the older you get, you have to start stretching. I believe in a warm up, but I don't believe in a stretch. You're stretching, yeah, it does negative things for me. And I know Pickleball and everyone laughs at it, but like I walk into where we play pickleball and every fucking asshole is doing the most stretches. You have to do, Aaron.
Starting point is 01:50:35 I'm like, give me a break. You guys. I mean, come on, right? Let's get real. I play every day and I don't stretch. I shouldn't set that out of. Yeah, you're going to rip something. You're going to rip something.
Starting point is 01:50:46 Exactly. Okay. My new year's resolution is stretch. But it might be now because I do want to stretching. You need weight training. Yeah, I do. I have to get back into that. Your farmer carries.
Starting point is 01:51:01 I did do some accidental farmers carries over the break because of shopping. Oh, sure, sure, sure. And that was carrying a law crusay and all this other trip. Do you do any jogging this trip? Because you generally jog on your trips to Georgia. I normally am very good at exercise when I'm home and I was not. Yeah, it's okay. I need to do my exercises, but I will.
Starting point is 01:51:23 That's, yes, that is a resolution to get back in a routine, a workout routine. And I had another one, but I forgot it. I feel like that wasn't obviously that good. More mercurial? No, I guess less mercurial. I don't know. Oh, well, one that we kind of talked about on the Christmas special is I want to get. I want to have a looser grip on change.
Starting point is 01:51:56 Right, right, right, right. I want to accept change more and not be so scared of it. So, yeah. All these things are the exact same thing, by the way. Control. Funny enough. Yeah, and also just this like, if you could start by telling yourself, like, I'm not going to die. Like, okay, she wants to go to this pizza place.
Starting point is 01:52:13 There's no way it's going to work. But at the end of that, no one's going to shoot me in the head. Yeah. I'm not going to be in pain. Like, things won't go my way. But I'll be just fine. That's hard for me to believe. Right.
Starting point is 01:52:27 But if I don't get my way, I will be upset. But it's not even a, okay, I'm going to give you a little something here, though. That's not get your way. That's do something you know is not going to work out. Yes, yes, yes. That's different. That's true. That's true.
Starting point is 01:52:41 That's true. It's like you're entering a situation that you know is doomed. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And that, I think, is hard. But also, it won't kill me. me it won't kill you're right it's fine if i can just get to the part where it's like you're control so it's like they're doing this and they're doing you know whatever the thing is that's stressing you out yeah and you're like yeah and then i'll also be fine i know it's it is all also
Starting point is 01:53:05 sort of um cousins to getting taken advantage of and and things like that yeah yeah like they don't respect my time yeah they don't you know but again we know it's like none of it's that deep it's not it's not it's well but then i don't like that's a thing. Yeah. I don't like that there's zero thought about the other people. Who did Phil Spector murder? He murdered actress Lana Clarkson, finding her dead from a gunshot wound in his California mansion in 2003. He was later convicted of second degree murder and sentenced to 19 years to life in prison, dying in custody in 2021. Oh, he's dead. Yeah. Can you visually picture what He looks like, Monica.
Starting point is 01:53:51 He's insane looking. Google a picture of him. Can you picture Phil Specter? I sure can. The same hair, dude. He looked the same. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Scary.
Starting point is 01:54:00 He looks scary. Why does his hair like that? He looks like a murderer. I can't believe how many women he worked with. Oh, yeah. Wasn't he? Yeah. I can't Tina.
Starting point is 01:54:11 Yeah, I think he did all that. He was doing Sunny and Cher. Yeah, all the Motown. Yeah, Ikinina. Yeah, you're right. John Lennon. The Wall of Sound. That was his.
Starting point is 01:54:24 Yeah, Wall of Sound. Good job. Okay, you said, you were giving her, like, credit for all the stuff she did. And you said 100 million albums, which, what's the, I'm kind of confused. So she sold over 100 million records. Yeah. But I think albums means, like, how many are putting out, right? No, albums records.
Starting point is 01:54:46 Same thing. Yeah. Okay. Was that number right? Over 100 million records. That's fucking crazy. Yeah. I was just, I saw this over the break.
Starting point is 01:54:54 I saw a list of the top 50 rap albums of all time. Okay. What would you do off the top of your head? Like, what do you guys think? Who's leading that? Um, like a single record or artist? Yeah, it was like per album, like number one rap album of all times sold. And I'll give you a hint.
Starting point is 01:55:15 It was like, I think it was 51 million copies. Eminem. Boom. Eminem was. five of the top 10. Oh, wow. Jay Z wasn't, he didn't show up on the list until like 40.
Starting point is 01:55:27 I think his biggest album had like $7 million. I was saying to Kristen, after I read that list, I was like, the industry is weird. Like, Jay Z's a billionaire. And he's in 38th
Starting point is 01:55:38 with only one album on the list. Yeah. And I was thinking like, what you're really talking about is like the monetization of cool. Yeah. And cash. Like it's so weird.
Starting point is 01:55:49 JZ doesn't. He doesn't have these 50 million, but we all know he's the coolest motherfucker to ever do it. And so if he has clothes, I want those. And if he has this, like, it's just interesting how you can skin a cat. The respect that comes with some people. Yeah. It's worth a lot. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:56:06 Like MC Hammer's above him. Right. In like number eight or some shit with the, you know. No one's wearing those pants. No one's wearing those pants and he's not a billionaire. Yeah. I still say proper, though. You do.
Starting point is 01:56:17 Yeah. But, I mean, it is, to me, the reason I picked it is because white people listened to Eminem. So white people isn't a, they listen to all around. But not all white people. In certain areas, they don't. And they would listen to Eminem. So I feel like he was really universal. I remember thinking, I remember when his album came out.
Starting point is 01:56:47 the first one, which was 99, maybe, or close to that, 2000? Mom Spaghetti. My name is, our Slim Shady. Yeah, yeah. And the real Slim Shady. Yeah. I remember being at the Detroit fireworks, like in a sea of craziness, if you remember. I think that was one of the last years I went.
Starting point is 01:57:14 I was like, why do we do this? It's, people get shot. It's like, and then you can't escape. Anyway, so I remember that song or that album was playing everywhere. And there's barely white people, at least where I was. And I was like, wow. Yeah, he broke through. The weirdest thing about Eminem is like, A, I think he probably is the most skilled out of all
Starting point is 01:57:40 them, white or not. His, his, his, his poetry is off the chart. His rhymes are so... Yeah. And Kanye? Yeah. Yeah. They're so abstract yet work.
Starting point is 01:57:54 They're so complicated. The things he's rhyming don't make sense. Like, I think he's next. I think he might be skills-wise. But he was never for me. Like, I can totally appreciate the mad talent, but I never owned an M&M album. Yeah. And I'm not sure why.
Starting point is 01:58:12 Because in fact, in this case, he was why. Exactly. I don't want my rap. You were like, that's not cool. I'm getting it to get a glimpse into your world. And I love being able to get this authentic glimpse into your world. It's like, wait, this dude grew up in Clarkston by me. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:58:27 Derry grew up. No, he grew up in Detroit. Okay. Wow, the movie, I guess. All right, we really did it here. Okay. I think that's it. Okay.
Starting point is 01:58:39 Okay. I think that's it. Yay. Yay. Yay. Happy birthday. Happy birthday. JTC.
Starting point is 01:58:47 All right. Love you. Love you. Love you. joining Wondry Plus in the Wondry app or on Apple Podcasts. Before you go, tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at Wondry.com slash survey.

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