Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - Josh Gad Returns

Episode Date: January 27, 2025

Josh Gad (In Gad We Trust, Frozen, Book of Mormon) is a Grammy Award-winning actor. Josh returns to Armchair Expert to discuss why he believes he would be the Unsinkable Molly Brown on the Ti...tanic, the unthinkable bravery and precision of LA firefighters, and questions whether Dax thinks he would’ve ended up as an Ira Glass or a Howard Stern. Josh and Dax talk about having permission to send Kumail Nanjiani shirtless pics, growing up without his emerald kingpin father, and how his comedy was born out of the despair from his parents’ divorce. Josh explains bombing his audition to Juilliard, how Disney became the salve to soothe loss in his life, and the acknowledgment of being your own worst enemy as long as you come out the other side.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 and I'm joined by Monica Mouse. Hi. Hello, our returning guest.
Starting point is 00:00:21 He was phenomenal the first time he was here. He joined us for Christmas as well. He came by for Christmas. He's been around a few times. Josh Gad, what a party Josh is. Josh is a Tony Award nominated actor. He was in the Book of Mormon, which I got to see him in. Just lucky, I feel very lucky about.
Starting point is 00:00:41 So lucky. He was in the Putnam County Spelling Bee. Yes. We get some backstory on that. Yeah. And then Frozen, Pixels, The Wedding Ringer, Beauty and the Beast. Oh, Gutenberg, the musical too, that was recently.
Starting point is 00:00:53 I saw that too. Yeah. He has a book out right now. That's very, very well done. A beautiful memoir called In Gad We Trust. This is a really fun interview. It was at the apex of our terror Keep that in mind. Yeah, and we talked about it. We process it at the top. Yeah, there's some fire talk, but it's a really
Starting point is 00:01:13 armchair episode Because it's funny Josh is so funny, but also it's pretty deep We talked about his dad and a lot of, and, and his insecurities and I don't know. I thought it was a really, it has all the full encapsulation of what we try to do here. So it's great. I agree. Also we have February armchair anonymous prompts for folks who have great stories and want to chat with us on zoom. Here are the February prompts,
Starting point is 00:01:44 live sporting event disasters. I hope to not be reporting one of those. Proposals gone wrong. Yeah. I guess that could be a wider net than first meets the eye because you would think just wedding proposals, but there's like business proposals. There's, yeah, there's proposals.
Starting point is 00:02:02 So proposals gone wrong. Crazy 23 and me DNA testing stories. This is by popular demand. They all were. I wanna thank the Armchairs. I put out a post and said, what do you want to hear on Armchair Anonymous? And people really gave amazing prompts.
Starting point is 00:02:20 So I appreciate that. Yes, love to our own devices. We would do wildcard nurses and poop your pants stories exclusively. Okay, and the fourth is at home DIY project gone wrong. Yeah. Yeah, there's got to be a lot of those. So please enjoy Josh Gatt. You want a coffee, right? I always want a coffee. Do you remember what I like? You like cold brews.
Starting point is 00:02:59 Oh yes, you remember. You mean something to me. You mean something to me, You mean something to me, even though you don't have me over unless it's for work. But isn't that true across the board for all of us? Yeah, it's kind of fair because I don't invite you over to my place. You've never invited me over.
Starting point is 00:03:14 I've invited you over too, albeit for work. Still, it's invites. I don't have a podcast. Well, then fucking invite me over to chat. Okay. I can't top this. Oh yes, it's been done and you could. No. Back, yes. It's been done and you could know back to work Ideally you get enough leverage at some point that really you just get to work with all your friends, right?
Starting point is 00:03:32 That's the apex goal My goal is get enough leverage to just work with my friends and do it across the street from where I live Maybe ideally in the backyard now that is sort of like next level thinking. Okay, so let's address the obvious context in which we record this. We had a guest who canceled, well, we had two guests that canceled for reasons they could not avoid the LA fires. And so I called you as one of my friends. Yes. And conveniently you have a book out. So you do need to do some promotion.
Starting point is 00:04:01 That's convenient. Have we started by the way? Oh, yeah. Don't you remember ABR? Oh god. Always be recording. Have you had the Titanic conversation? Like who are you on the Titanic? I'm Kathy Bates. Are we talking about the movie or are we talking about the real incident? The movie. The film. Well which is based on 100% reality. The unsinkable Molly Brown. Okay. I'm clearly playing a cello on the deck of the ship as it goes down. Right. I think you're the Billy Zane character.
Starting point is 00:04:30 Wasn't he naughty? He was a bad boy. He was the bad guy, right? You seem like you could go either way. Shh. As you spray whatever that is into your mouth. Nicotine spray. You saw I had the lozenges.
Starting point is 00:04:40 I like to think of myself as the little old lady who's looking for a necklace towards the end of her life. She survived. And then it's just like, if I have to die, so does the worth and value of this necklace. Yeah, I'm going to take it with me. Yeah. Throw that back in the ocean. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:04:55 But yes, we're in a situation where a good part of the city is on fire. Continues to be. I will say, it's not at the peak of scariness. They're starting to contain a little more. A lot of help has arrived. There's a lot of airplanes on the scene now. Can I say three things really quickly? Yeah, absolutely. One, my heart breaks for every single person
Starting point is 00:05:14 who has lost their home right now. We know personally, 15 people who have lost everything. It is unthinkable what's happening. Entire zip codes are gone. Our friends from the Pacific Palisades, their communities are wiped out. It's like Dresden. Yeah, it's raised completely.
Starting point is 00:05:30 It is absolutely a war zone. Secondly, I have never seen on such a personal level the kind of bravery, the kind of camaraderie, and the kind of we are not taking this sitting down attitude as the SoCal community has shown, hosing down each other's homes. We've been dropping items off at various shelters around town.
Starting point is 00:05:55 They are rejecting what we're dropping off because it is so full. And on top of that, we continue to donate. And I would encourage everyone who's listening right now Can we make a list available of the various places that people can make donations? You're looking at me as if I'm gonna miss but I bet I can get the list made I don't want to personally lie to you and commit that I'm gonna make the life. I want you to I don't want her to have Anything to do with it. That's why I refuse to lie to you even in these pressing times. Okay, as long as you delegate.
Starting point is 00:06:26 Yes. And then check it off. Because if there's any fake numbers on there, I'm gonna blame you. If there's any bank routing numbers that go directly to your account, I'm gonna be pissed. To primate LLC.
Starting point is 00:06:36 And I will do this a fourth time. So, and I wanna say that whatever happens next is on DAX, how we rebound as a city. The final thing I want to say is the firefighters. Oh my god. What bad motherfuckers. I don't know That I've ever seen such fucking superheroes in real life as these guys who are Risking it all without giving a flying fuck about fires two inches away from them
Starting point is 00:07:04 Yeah, I'm watching it like it's Sunday night football. These guys are so badass without giving a flying fuck about fires two inches away from them. I'm watching it like it's Sunday Night Football. These guys are so bad ass. Yes. They really are. The aerial stuff is unbelievable. Blowing my mind at night in a mountain range, zero visibility, Chinooks, everything right on top of each other,
Starting point is 00:07:18 flying in complete blindness and dropping it bullseye every time. It's blowing away the top gun flight sequences. It really is. And I think that was their objective. They all watched Maverick before. Thank God for Tom Cruise. They flew out there and they said, let's make it look as cool as possible. All things are true. It's a tragedy of really unimaginable proportion until we saw it. Also, the folks that have trained to fight fires in the craziest situation, they're enthralled.
Starting point is 00:07:47 They're doing the job they've been training to do in the craziest circumstance. So I'm just imagining what it's like to be in the helicopter the whole time. It must be incredible to be able to put your skills to the test like that. I don't know if you've had this sensation watching them when they drop the fire retardant in the water.
Starting point is 00:08:04 The red stuff. The precision with which they do it, this sensation watching them when they drop the fire retardant in the water. The precision with which they do it. It is exhilarating because you're like fucking save that whole community, please. And they're doing it. And it seems unthinkable because you see these massive flames heading towards these communities. It looks unstoppable and they are stopping it. It's a war. and I have to admit, when I'm watching those harrowing drops,
Starting point is 00:08:28 many times I'm saying out loud by myself watching downstairs, fuck yeah. Yeah. And then at the same time, you think about the too little, too late communities like the Palisades and like Pasadena and it is heartbreaking and devastating for those people
Starting point is 00:08:43 who aren't on the ground in SoCal. Let me tell you now, going to be years and we're going to need all the help we can get. That's my sort of plea is we're in it right now and we're in triage mode and we're dropping stuff off and we're X, Y, and Z, which is all great. We need to be doing it, but we need to be doing it in a month, in two months, in a year. This is going to be easy to forget, just like all natural disasters are. But this is a long haul and it's going to take a long time. I encourage people to keep an eye on us and keep donating and keep helping if you can, of course.
Starting point is 00:09:15 If you can in whatever way you can, even the amount of people who have lost clothes. We were speaking to a family who lost their home and we said, do you need anything? And they said, we don't have any clothes. And it's just little things that you don't even think about. You think about all the possessions. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:30 It's actually in a way really nice to be here. I needed a little bit of a distraction from the chaos. Well, and I wanted to ask you, because I sense just a hint of like, there's some ethical dilemma about doing something like this. When you asked me to come today, I definitely hesitated. Yeah. And I dilemma about doing something like this. You asked me to come today. I definitely hesitated. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:48 And I posted about this the other day. I am doing everything I can and none of it feels like enough. The reason I came on today was I was like, oh, we can start by talking about this. That is actually making me feel better about sitting across from such a piece of shit like you who continues to do podcasts in these kinds of situations? Well, I think a knee-jerk would be, all these people are suffering and I'm gonna go do this thing that has really no value outside of just entertainment, and that feels like I shouldn't be having fun while my friends are suffering and dealing with loss. I think that's an obvious thing to contend with right out of the gates.
Starting point is 00:10:23 But my thing is, me joining people in misery isn't a solution. A it doesn't help them. It doesn't help me. I have a job and when I can do my job, I should do my job. Amen. All the other people are at their jobs. That's my takeaway. No one at 7-eleven right now is going, do I feel guilty that I'm selling hot dogs right now when people are suffering? Like, no, I'm at my job because I have a job and that's my commitment.
Starting point is 00:10:46 So that's my own personal takeaway on it. It's a great point. This morning, we actually had this conversation where I said to my wife, I'm gonna make a pot of coffee and she said, why don't you go to Starbucks, get it. And I said, well, I go to Starbucks. I don't wanna go outside with the air. She goes, because the community needs that right now.
Starting point is 00:11:03 Restaurants need the support. There are so many people who are fleeing right now, and these places that aren't even in the line of fire are going to feel the effects of it. It is going to hurt everybody. Yeah, it's catastrophic. I'm also just coming off watching the Churchill four-part documentary on Netflix,
Starting point is 00:11:19 and you're watching what the folks in London did, 57 nights in a row of this. Have you ever read The Splendid and the Vile? That's Eric Larson. Eric Larson, one of my favorite authors. Unbelievable. We've had him on the show. Not to brag.
Starting point is 00:11:30 Who, Churchill? Yep. Him too. He was great. Controversial, but yeah. You guys did like through Ouija, how did you do? AI. We talked to the estate.
Starting point is 00:11:40 See, that's the promise. There's a downside, but that's the promise. Yeah, I can chat with Churchill. But you know, those people were waking up in a subway platform next to six kids. There was no bathrooms, and they went straight to work. Unbelievable. They stayed calm and they carried on. So people will have complaints about me working,
Starting point is 00:11:56 but that's my own ethic, which is, no, stay calm, carry on. It's a great point. A stiff upper lip is exactly what I think of when I think of the British people going through that period. And it is true. We're unfortunately living through a period of post-apocalyptic situations.
Starting point is 00:12:12 The reason I started writing my book, I was inspired by telling the story of parenting in what feels like it's the end of the world. I have had two children and most of their lives have been defined by pandemics, by disaster, by socio-political upheaval. You never stop and think about it, but we lived and we grew up in a period in which we had great ease. The world was a very peaceful place in the context of history. But Josh.
Starting point is 00:12:44 It wasn't. think about sapiens. Have you guys read the book Sapiens? Yes, yes, yes. We've had them on October. I know you've had them on through AI. I wrote half of it. But you think about what Yuval said. We are living in the greatest time of prosperity and peace
Starting point is 00:12:57 in the history of mankind. And lack of starvation and our handle on diseases. And really by all metrics, what you're saying, which I also feel is Objectively wrong. So yes our tranquil 80s our parents were freaked out by something much larger, which was you had Bay of Pigs Nuclear Holocaust was on the table in a real way before you were born. No 81 you were born in 81 He's not even looking at any cards right now February 23rd. Whoa You were born in 81. He's not even looking at any cards right now.
Starting point is 00:13:23 February 23rd. Whoa! 1981? Yes. The show The Day After was on NBC when you were five years old. That was a show about what do we do the day after the nuclear annihilation?
Starting point is 00:13:35 The greatest existential crisis of all time on planned earth was crescendoing when you were a little boy. I didn't remember it. You weren't really aware of it. And then prior to that, our parents, Vietnam and Kent State, and shooting students? Again before we were born. I'm just saying, our parents.
Starting point is 00:13:50 Our parents definitely lived through a period of upheaval, the likes of which resonates with what we're going through today. Political leaders being assassinated one after another. The world on the precipice of nuclear war. My parents hiding under their desks. That was not my experience in the peaceful and prosperity bubble that I lived in. Playing with G.I. Joe in Hollywood.
Starting point is 00:14:12 In the 1980s and 1990s. Right. Now, that is not to say that everything was perfect, but it is certainly not to say that it wasn't better than what I'm raising my kids through right now, which is climate change is an existential crisis. The world seems like it's on the brink of chaos on a daily basis. We had a first of its kind pandemic the first time in a century. We're doing this as half our city is on fire. So it's that proximity
Starting point is 00:14:40 to chaos. And that is not to say that areas of the world Haven't experienced this. Oh, they're interviewing last night. I'm watching on K cal You've got a family that just came here from Ukraine Escaping the war and their apartment building burns down. Oh those people are going from war zone to war zone Israel I mean Israel Palestine it's happening on a global level and it's not to say that there hasn't been places that have been directly affected by genocide, by starvation, by all sorts of crises during the past 40 years. But this period feels particularly dark.
Starting point is 00:15:19 I just wanna push back and say it feels unique, but I actually think it's completely consistent with what happens on planet Earth. So when we were at Carnegie Mellon, you had the Serbian Croatia genocide with like a million and a half people and the kind of things they were doing to the people as they killed them, they really surpassed anything
Starting point is 00:15:37 that's happening, think about Rwanda. Rwanda, so it's been ever present and I think the real thing to remember is it's a challenging place. There's seven billion of us. A lot of shit goes wrong. A ton of stuff goes right. We're not unique and we gotta carry on
Starting point is 00:15:52 and we gotta continue to make it a little bit better because this is status quo on planet earth. It just feels because we're raising kids now. So we have a different lens than we would have had if even we went through the pandemic without kids. I'm like, oh, this is kind of cool. You drink all day and you hang out with friends and blah, blah, blah. But now that we have kids, you're like, wow, they haven't seen other children
Starting point is 00:16:11 for a year that feels scary. So I just think our lens obviously changes because we have these little people we care about so much and we're turning this world over to them. And we're a little scared. Like, what are we turning over? That's a hundred percent true. And it's also, I think, frustrating that we don't learn from history.
Starting point is 00:16:27 That when it comes to, for instance, geopolitical conflict, there are certain things outside of our control. The pandemic, for the most part, was outside of anyone's control. This virus. This is outside of anyone's control. Yeah, there's all these people
Starting point is 00:16:41 who wanna be mad at the mayor, they wanna be mad at the governor, they wanna be mad. Like, there's so many people that are trying to line up and blame this horrific thing on a single individual. It's like, Yang, blame Santa Ana wins. It is really, really hard for me to think about at a time like this, criticizing anyone. You see the video that Karen ambushing Newson. I saw it. But by the way, in the same way, I never hold Washington, Newson. I saw it.
Starting point is 00:17:02 But by the way, in the same way, I never hold DeSantis responsible for the destruction of hurricanes. I grew up in South Florida. I know the pain and the chaos of those events. I lived through Hurricane Andrew. There's only so much you can do preventatively, and there's only so much you can do during the crisis.
Starting point is 00:17:22 Really, your job as a leader is what you do after, what you do to speak calm to people during, and then how you rebuild. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I know, you were gonna say, see, you lived through. You lived through a hurricane, we just forgot. And also 9-11, terrorism, like, our memories are so short. Yeah, they are.
Starting point is 00:17:41 And we do forget that we go through these horrible periods and we recover from those periods and then they come back You know, it is all temporary. It's really hard to say right now It's funny I was thinking I was reading your book this morning and you have the line in there which is comedy is Tragedy plus time and I was like well, we're gonna engage without the benefit of time. Yeah, we've had polar on We've had a lot of different people who was like some people's first week on Saturday live was 915 people have had to decide whether or not they're gonna carry on. I remember that episode. That was Giuliani coming up But them having the ethical dilemma is it appropriate to be funny right now and
Starting point is 00:18:24 Everyone gets to choose how they handle the stress. And so, I have a way of handling the stress and mine is through laughing. And all I would ask is like, if that's not your way of handling stress, that's cool. Do it however you want. But I don't think anyone can tell someone else what they're allowed to do to handle it. Amen. I promise you, if my house was engulfed in flames, I would be making a joke,
Starting point is 00:18:47 because I've done it. I'm making a joke when my dad's dying. This is how I process it for better or worse. That's how I process grief too. It's therapeutic, and it's not appropriate for everyone, but it is how I'm wired, and I've always been unapologetic about that. My grandparents told me themselves
Starting point is 00:19:03 that when they were in the Holocaust, a lot of how they got through their daily lives and being on the brink of death on a daily basis was by laughing. If you can give yourself that little burst of happiness, it's a reminder that it's still possible on the other side. It's a great reminder like, oh yes and I will laugh and I will experience fun in levity for me everyone gets to do it their own way yeah this has been great guys thank you so much I'm glad we processed it all for the nation because I couldn't get my
Starting point is 00:19:32 therapist on the phone today so this ended up being a good because you no longer have phone I'm glad that you guys were here for me thank you where you got you're leaving though right you're deserting this town in its time of need. Yeah, I... With all that stuff you just said. So having said that, I think it's best to get out of here while we're going, it's good. No, we're sticking close right now. We have discussed leaving because of air quality. We live on the west side, very close to the fires right now.
Starting point is 00:20:03 We're talking about it. We're talking about about do we maybe go like an hour south or north just to get the kids to be able to go outside? I'm supposed to leave tomorrow for my book tour. Yes, that's what I meant. And I was gonna cancel it and to your point my wife said absolutely not. How's that helping anybody if you- Well, that's what she said. She said you are actually more of a burden if I'm evacuating than you are a help.
Starting point is 00:20:28 And so I think it's best for our family if you leave. That you go. Yeah, go to New York where you're useful. Yeah, go away. Leave LA where you're a burden to this family. You piece of shit. But also I just want to touch on one other thing. Yesterday I was like, I need to stay
Starting point is 00:20:44 on my bike riding schedule. I have a New Year's resolution then I ride to to touch on one other thing. Yesterday I was like, I need to stay on my bike riding schedule. I have a New Year's resolution that I ride to the observatory twice a week. So yesterday I get out there and I start riding up the hill and the gates are closed to go up into Griffith Park, but I'm presuming for cars. And so I go around the gate and I get halfway up the thing. And then some Rangers rolled down on a loud speaker
Starting point is 00:21:01 and they let me have it a little bit. And they're like, it's closed. And I go, oh yeah, to cars. And they're like, no, it's closed. There's no hiking. All that to bit and they're like it's closed and I go oh yeah to cars and they're like no it's closed no I can't all that to say I'm like why can't I ride my bike get home and I realize oh all these motherfuckers there are arsonists out in force so they have no clue who is up in the hills that's right at the start of fire they've arrested two already yeah by the way you were probably like a prime suspect to them because you look like a piece of shit like a real piece of shit You look like the guy from the Titanic who took all the same again
Starting point is 00:21:34 But with beautiful hair, I do think it is tough because to go back to what I said at the beginning I've seen such greatness and I've seen such beauty in this city and I've also seen such ugliness. We're all here. The looting, the people fucking flying their drones and affecting planes from dropping water, fuck you all. It's so fucked up. I know.
Starting point is 00:21:58 And then the arsonists, people fucking going around and lighting more fires. People setting their houses on fire. Yep, and so that part of it remains really heartbreaking, really frustrating. And this is where we file into our natural state. So yesterday, Kristen is out. This is Kristen Bell, for those who don't know.
Starting point is 00:22:15 Your co-star from the films, Frozen 1 and 2, and hopefully 3 at some point. She's out doing the Lord's work with the children, and I'm selfishly taking a bike ride. But I'm also nonstop with my buddy Brandon from the LAPD. She's thinking about helping and I'm thinking yeah I can feel the energy I was at the gas station late at night and a lot of the boys were out on dirt bikes and It felt like Detroit on Devil's night. I was like, yeah, the young men are gonna get into some shit. I get it
Starting point is 00:22:42 She's out helping but I'm like, yeah, the young men are gonna get into some shit. I get it. She's out helping, but I'm like, okay, we got some chance I will have to defend the family at some point, and that's where my focus ends up being. We all just kind of funnel into wherever. I don't have friends at the LAPD, and now I feel like I should. Would you like me to put you on a group text with Brandon? Can I?
Starting point is 00:23:01 Yeah. If I see anything suspicious, I'd like someone official to reach out to. Yeah, it's also status right now. Like, it's really cool to be friends with a firefighter right now. You have a direct number. I've got just three 9-1-1. That's all I know. Yeah, I just have the three numbers.
Starting point is 00:23:17 I just have the three numbers everyone has. It sounds like you're not going to play it super cool if I do give you as a number though. I'm telling you now I won't. Do you want to role play? I'm telling you now. It would be like putting me on a text chain with Harrison Ford. Ha ha ha.
Starting point is 00:23:28 Hey bro. Ha ha ha. What kind of gun do you carry Brandon? Ha ha ha. Did you report these potential hooligans? No, I just hit him up and I said, I was just at the gas station, the boys are out. He's also from Detroit.
Starting point is 00:23:41 I'm like, it feels like Devil's Night Detroit. And he goes, yeah, isn't it wild? You can feel it in the air. I'm like, yeah, it's like palpable. If you used to be a scumbag, I'm on that wavelength I said if I'm 21 and I'm broke which I was and I'm drunk and I think oh, yeah All these rich people's house burnt down They took a bunch of stuff but probably there's a bunch of jewelry and stuff just sitting on the ground Your mind starts wandering and I don't have anything and they have everything. Even someone who's on the spectrum of dirtbaggery, they can be midway through and convince themselves.
Starting point is 00:24:13 You can just see people making the argument, or at least I can see that happening. I think that there's a lot of people taking advantage of a horrible situation right now. They'll feel bad for it at 50. You will either eventually pay a price. Right, exactly. Or you will eventually regret it. And it's horrible to take advantage of people in any situation who have already lost so much.
Starting point is 00:24:34 Yeah, to prey on people who are victims is a rough look. But again, if you're penniless in the middle of nowhere and you're looking at multimillionaires. Are you planning on doing this tonight? It sounds like you're... He's talking it through in a way. You're really like starting a strategist in a way that's... I'm saying I'd be lying if I couldn't understand the rationale.
Starting point is 00:24:51 Am I at risk for me to... Are you like chasing my house right now? We're not keeping an eye on your house. Well, I did notice you upgraded. Last time you were here in a Lexus 300 four-door sedan. Right. You're clocking in cars. And now you're in an upgraded Lexus SUV. That's a nice car What are you doing right? I'm just very uncomfortable. I couldn't even tell you what my last car was it was black Oh jeez right he parked it right over here, and we took a long look at it because I said
Starting point is 00:25:18 This is the car I'd put you in it's so South, Florida I was like this is your car do you feel like when you look at my new car, do you understand why I'm driving in that one? Or are you sort of like, this doesn't fit as well? I do understand it. First of all, I don't own any of them, but they're great cars. You can drive them for a million miles.
Starting point is 00:25:36 I love them. They get the job done. They're not flashy, but they're comfortable. But I'm gonna tell you this now, I've never been a car guy. I know. I'm jealous of all of my friends who know every model and make of every car and I can't do that I've never operated like that. I look for a nice interior
Starting point is 00:25:53 That's right in a quiet soft ride great stereo. Yes, and it can get me from point A to point C Exterior colors immaterial you probably don't care about that. No, I'm jealous that you have such a knowledge of cool cars. I'd imagine what he's jealous of, and I don't wanna speak for you, you're jealous of my enthusiasm, cause I get this. I'm jealous of hobbyists in general. Right, right.
Starting point is 00:26:15 So if you have a knowledge of something niche or something specific, I am jealous because I love knowledge. I love to collect knowledge. I love people who know something so well that is very attractive to me. I'm like, that's really cool to have great expertise. That's why I love your show.
Starting point is 00:26:39 You collect knowledge for a living. This particular episode is making people stupider. But in general, when you have experts in different- No, we have that list of numbers, remember? We got that list of numbers that come in and curate. That I'm gonna delegate. Yeah. But what I love is that that's what you do.
Starting point is 00:26:57 You invite people on this show who are experts in different areas. Oh, it's so great. It's the coolest thing. Are you gonna add my book to your bookshelf behind you? Absolutely. I wanted to start this episode, it's so great. It's the coolest thing. Are you gonna add my book to your bookshelf behind you? Absolutely. I wanted to start this episode, it's too late, but we've never started with a hard like this,
Starting point is 00:27:11 and I wanted it to go. Hi, if you're joining us, we're here with Josh Gad, author of Engad. That just felt like something I never got to do. That's such a PBS 1979. Yeah, as if the interviewer would be just finishing. Yeah. Ugh, what a book.
Starting point is 00:27:28 If you're just joining us, we're with Josh Gad, author of In Gad, we trust. Gad, do you think there was another world in which you were born maybe like 20 years earlier that you ended up on NPR? Or do you think your career would have gone stern, like before podcasts? I could answer, but I don't trust what the answer would be.
Starting point is 00:27:45 I think my soul and heart always wanted to be MPR, but I grew up in an area where toxic masculinity was the currency, I didn't have a dad, and I was doing all the things. So I would like to believe, yes, I would have become Ira Glass, but the truth is I probably would have tried to be a knockoff Howard Stern.
Starting point is 00:28:01 Right. Yeah, not as good as Howard Stern. So I've just through many years been able to finally pursue and embrace the person the little boy wanted to be and not necessarily the aggro dude that was sending a message to everyone not to try to hurt me. Still there. Oh yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:17 As someone who edits, I think it's more Stern than it is NPR in a great way. Who doesn't love Stern? But you know what's great about Stern too? I think like Dax, Stern could have ended up easily is NPR in a great way who doesn't love but you know what's great about Stern too I think like Dax Stern could have ended up easily on NPR I think Stern has a capacity and the skill set to be equally riveting on NPR He's choosing his authentic honesty over I love NPR I don't want to be disparaging, but that's more curated and Start is what NPR has very wet mouths.
Starting point is 00:28:45 Oh, ew. When you listen to NPR, it's a very moist, don't be upset about it, it's an observation, but you know I'm right. There's like a quality that's very intimate and very wet. Yes, I admire, they're like great comedians who they're pacing so slow and they're not scared. They talk so slow and monotone
Starting point is 00:29:05 and they're not worried at all they're losing people. In fact, the more boring is the more into it I am. Yes. But what I think you're highlighting, which is worth highlighting is our heroes, they were Trojan horses. Letterman came with the promise of irreverent provocative comedy,
Starting point is 00:29:21 but what you stayed for and fell in love with is you were like, oh, I think he's always smarter than the person he's talking to did you ever do Letterman? Yeah He was the one host who always intimidated me. Oh, it's so scary because you know, he's smarter This was the same thing being on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart when I had to sit and pit something to John I have never been more intimidated in my life. Yeah, he scares me He's the smartest man in every room and he just knows better than you know
Starting point is 00:29:49 what's funny and what's gonna work and what is not gonna work. Yeah. And how to articulate it all. Yeah. And the delivery. Somehow he's confrontational without ever feeling like a bully.
Starting point is 00:29:59 Yeah. He's magic. But Stern's the same thing. You come for him making fun of Ronnie, but really it's the intelligence that keeps you there for a long time. And Conan, Conan's the same thing. You come for him making fun of Ronnie, but really it's the intelligence that keeps you there for a long time. And Conan, Conan is so insanely smart, it's crazy. So he's making dumb, dumb jokes, but you know there's this intelligence behind it. And I think for me, that's the appeal of all those guys.
Starting point is 00:30:17 Yes, I agree. Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare. Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare. New year, new resolutions. And this year on the Best Idea Yet podcast, we're revealing the untold origin stories of the products you're obsessed with. And we promise you have never heard these before. Ever wonder how the iconic Reese's Peanut Butter Cup
Starting point is 00:30:40 was invented? Cause it was by accident. H.B. Reese, a former frog salesman, true story, stumbled upon the idea after accidentally burning a batch of peanuts, classic. Proving that sometimes our best ideas arise from what seemed like our biggest mistakes. And Jack, did you know there's a scientific explanation
Starting point is 00:30:57 why humans crave that surprising combo of peanut butter and chocolate? I didn't, but it sounds delicious. It is delicious. So if you're looking to get inspired and creative this year, tune in to the best idea yet. You can find us on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. And if you're looking for more podcasts to help you start this year off right, check out New Year, New Mindset on the Wondery app. Who knows, your next great idea could be an accident that you burned. This is Nick. And this is Jack. And we'll see you on the best idea yet.
Starting point is 00:31:26 On January 5th, 2024, an Alaska Airlines door plug tore away mid-flight, leaving a gaping hole in the side of a plane that carried 171 passengers. This heart-stopping incident was just the latest in a string of crises surrounding the aviation manufacturing giant, Boeing. In the past decade, Boeing has been involved in a series of damning scandals and deadly
Starting point is 00:31:48 crashes that have chipped away at its once sterling reputation. At the center of it all, the 737 MAX, the latest season of business wars, explores how Boeing, once the gold standard of aviation engineering, descended into a nightmare of safety concerns and public mistrust, The decisions, denials and devastating consequences bringing the Titan to its knees and what if anything can save the company's reputation. Now follow Business Wars on the Wondery app or ["Wonderful Place"] So I went back, we're almost exactly at five years since you were here last time.
Starting point is 00:32:34 Is that right? Would you have thought that? No, I don't think about the show very much. Sure. Yeah, of course. I mean, I don't remember your car. But to save your family's life, if I said how long ago were you here,
Starting point is 00:32:44 what answer would you have given? Oh man I don't want to say goodbye to my family This has become very ominous this episode yeah five years that feels right, but I remember doing a Guest spot or another appearance you've done Christmas with us. That's what I did. Then that was after. So that's why I feel like it hasn't been five years because you invited me like today as a last minute sort of we need filler. Gad is good for filler episodes.
Starting point is 00:33:15 No, no. Can I be honest with you? Just to alleviate any shadow talk you're having. I said to my wife, I'm fucked. I don't really know what to do. We had two episodes that were gonna easily come out cause I was gonna record'm fucked, I don't really know what to do. We had two episodes that were gonna easily come out because I was gonna record them on Thursday and I don't know what to do.
Starting point is 00:33:29 I'm like, who's in town and who would even be willing? So we start thinking and then I walk by on our kitchen table, your book is sitting and I go, well, fuck, Gad's gotta be promoting this book. Call him. It wasn't, let's go to the end of the list. It was like, God, Gad set this book on my fucking dining the list. It was like, God, Gad, set this book on my fucking dining room table.
Starting point is 00:33:47 And I was like, oh, duh, he's got a book to promote. He should be in anyways. So was it pre-pandemic? Yeah, February 20th. Yeah, it was right before your birthday. Oh my God. Right before the pandemic hit and right in the middle of the fire.
Starting point is 00:33:58 Can't wait to see you when the dinosaurs come out of the ocean and start cobbling up people. I'm really concerned about my third appearance on this show. I don't know where we're going to be. Ailey Kim from the set of Hell. Here's Josh Gatt. From the bowels of Hell.
Starting point is 00:34:14 Can I tell you what I love about you? You are so fast and witty and fun. And I am, I don't want to label it competitive, but I'm not going to let someone operate at 120 miles an hour while I'm next to them going 60. It's just not in my nature. That's why you case their cars. That's why you know everything you need to know about them so you can hurt them if they try.
Starting point is 00:34:33 You think so fast and you're so funny that it brings out the best side of myself. But I'm not an expert in anything. That's not true. This whole fucking forensic NFL bullshit I was learning about. What a nerdy, like I'm reading words I've never read before. Like I talk about in my book, I thought it was the chopping up of dead bodies
Starting point is 00:34:51 for investigative purposes. And instead it's actually a thing that high schoolers do, which is another word for speech and debate. And so I'll get stopped today, not today, because today we're in the middle of something. There's bigger fish to fry today. But maybe next month again, people will be willing to come up to me and say,
Starting point is 00:35:09 I know you from high school, but people watch my high school videos from speech and debate and forensics. Well, you're a three time national champ. I was a three time national champ. You have more respect for me than you've ever had. Because she's a two time national champ. Are you?
Starting point is 00:35:23 I'm a two time state champ cheerleading. I never did that. Yeah, competition cheerleading, but I understand how hard it is to do. Because she's a two-time national champ. Are you? I'm a two-time state champ cheerleading. I never did that. Yeah, competition cheerleading. But it's in your list of things. But I understand how hard it is to do. Cheerleading? No, just winning anything at that level when you're in high school.
Starting point is 00:35:34 So I didn't make the cheer team. But you tried? Multiple times. In his book, he lays out the options for a high schooler. And he's like, okay, the jocks are, the athlete's not gonna happen. Pretty accurate, right? Cheerleading, I just don jocks are the athletes not going to happen. Pretty accurate. Cheerleading.
Starting point is 00:35:46 I just don't fit in the outfits you said. Yeah. And then model UN insufferable. And then you get to forensics. And so like I fit that group because it's got a performative element to it. Never learned how to play chess. Still to this day, don't know how to play chess. I would have been the kind of guy that played chess, but nobody taught me how.
Starting point is 00:36:06 This is what not having a father around does, is you don't learn things like love of cars, how to play chess. I missed all of that. So I was like, oh, speech and debate. That feels like something I can do. A lot of how I fell into this was through that world. The performance element.
Starting point is 00:36:22 Well, that's another thing that not having a father around will do. It will make you a performer and a comedian. 100%. It really will. I'm so glad that you start the book in the way you do. First of all it's very very well written. Did you write it? No, Chad GPT. Okay. God they got your voice. They really do. They have it down. It's really really well written but you start with your personal story which of course starts with your parents. And we touched on it last time, but your dad's almost out of a movie.
Starting point is 00:36:48 Tell people about where your dad came from. We've had this conversation, but every time it surprises you. Well, the Columbia part was new to me. The Emerald trade. It is out of a movie. My dad was a Jew born in Afghanistan. Which was maybe their third or fourth stop.
Starting point is 00:37:02 Correct. They were nomads. You can actually trace my lineage back to one of the original tribes of Israel, the Gad tribe. They were just going from place to place and being told, no, you are not welcome here. And surprisingly, Afghanistan, which seems like a great place for Jews turned out not to be. Yeah, I always think about Jewish in the next taboo. My father got into precious jewels along with his brothers in Israel. They then moved to Israel when he's 12
Starting point is 00:37:28 and he learns to cut diamonds there. When you're 12 years old, that's a great, great way to make a living. And so by day he was doing that and by night he was a bodybuilder. Not what I'm expecting. No, and I have a picture in there, I think of my dad just ripped.
Starting point is 00:37:44 I mean, he looked like Venice Beach, Schwarzenegger, really crazy. That's who we talked about last time. He looks like Kumail. His body had just been unveiled five years ago. Right, from Marvel. He looked like Marvel-era Kumail. Does Kumail still look like my dad? Yeah, I've been texting with him non-stop about our bodies. He's my only outlet to send shirtless photos of myself anywhere. Really? Because I can't send them to women. Do you think Kumail would welcome outlet to send shirtless photos of myself anywhere really can't send them to do you think? Well would welcome me sending him shirtless, but he'd love it myself. We'd love the mail form all right. I'm gonna send it you should Know I'm giving you Brandon's number from the LAPD and then Kumail
Starting point is 00:38:19 Get me the fuck off this chain, so anyway my dad and his brothers end up moving to the United States and They decide to start an emerald business. My father moves to Columbia They own emerald mines in the 80s at the peak of Pablo Escobar I remember traveling to Colombia at the age of four and I just remember seeing armed people all around my father and just Uzis like Automatic weapons not even semis and just thinking to myself Wait, is this what everyone's dad does? I was so confused all my friends fathers were doctors or lawyers in South Florida
Starting point is 00:39:01 And my dad was literally in the middle of the jungles of Columbia surrounded by dangerous people. He was always a larger than life guy when I was growing up. My parents got divorced when I was six and I talk about my relationship after that. But what I also talk about in the book, which we've never spoken about was, I haven't seen my dad in about 20 years.
Starting point is 00:39:23 And I got a call one day while I'm doing Gutenberg, which you were so gracious enough to come to. So much fun. And my dad is in New Jersey and he says, I'd love to come see your show. This is like a couple years ago? This is last year. Oh my God.
Starting point is 00:39:39 And I said, okay. I think he's on his third or fourth family now. And I said, come alone, I'll send a car for you, and why don't you stay the night? Wow, that's nice. And I was very anxious about it, and he comes to the theater. I'm looking for him in the audience, I don't see him.
Starting point is 00:39:56 Are you like eight years old? 100%. It's Halloween night, Andrew and I, after the show decide to dress up as the Mommy Dearest characters. He's the Faye Dunaway character, I'm the daughter. Is he holding a coat hanger? Uh-huh.
Starting point is 00:40:11 And I look at Andrew after the show and I said, I need you to come with me. I'm very nervous about this. So we go out, both dressed as women. My father's never seen me on stage in my life. Wow. Even as a kid. He was not the dad who came to my shows. Right. So this is the first time my father's ever seen me on stage. I come out and I see a man that I know immediately and yet don't recognize at all. It was both exhilarating and really painful. I didn't know what to say.
Starting point is 00:40:46 I didn't know how to interact. He looked frailer than I remember. Was pretty old, right? He's in his late seventies, but the gregarious person that I am, that's from my father. Yeah. I think about my dad as this invincible figure, a force of nature, and he's not that. So Andrew is amazing, sort of helping me navigate it. I get in the car with my dad.
Starting point is 00:41:11 He's hard of hearing English as his like third language, so he's repeating to me that he was telling everybody that he was sitting next to you that I'm his son and he was so proud, but also I could tell he understood none of the fucking jokes in the show and just saw everyone laughing and so started laughing with him. Great show for him. It's almost Cirque du Soleil. You could not speak English and very much understand what is happening. Just unbridled chaos. Yes, yes.
Starting point is 00:41:35 We go back to my place and I order us some sandwiches and I realize that like I'm the father. Yeah, okay situation Well, you've always been really. Mm-hmm. We start talking. He starts telling me about his life. It's incredibly Awkward at first and then incredibly easy and then I start to fall back into like being a kid again I don't know how to describe it. I start to feel like I'm in how to describe it. I start to feel like I'm in my eight year old body and I'm talking to this man who approximates my father and I can also tell that there's extreme memory loss going on from him. Could you sense this was a mission of repair or just curiosity?
Starting point is 00:42:21 I think it was neither of those things. I think it was, my son's in New York, I'm here, I'd like to see him, and we'll go from there. As simple as that. There's no question in my mind that my father loves me dearly. What he did to me and my family doesn't support that. But he has never not expressed his own form and his own idea of love.
Starting point is 00:42:48 So we're sitting there, we're talking, and it starts to become very apparent to me that he's lost everything. He's living on welfare. Wow, because he was a kind of high roller. He owned, I think, the largest producing mine in Columbia. Had he held onto that, we would have been billionaires Right and lost it all as there always is he and his partner fucked each other and all paid the price
Starting point is 00:43:10 So I'm sitting there and this guy who I always was like, oh my god He's invincible is now like Al Pacino and Godfather 3. Yeah, the next morning I hug him I'm get him a car and I give him his jacket and he goes, what's that? And I said, that's your jacket. And he goes, it's not my jacket. And I go, that's your jacket, dad. He goes, it's not my jacket.
Starting point is 00:43:34 And then I put it on him and I say, this is the jacket you came in. And it occurs to me, perhaps this is the last time, A, my father recognizes me. He's not the kind of guy who will go to a doctor. And it seems to me like there's something debilitating going on. And I love him and so I wish he would. But I'm also having this moment of going, is this where this journey ends for us? And if it does, I'm so grateful I had this. I lied to my mom.
Starting point is 00:44:01 I didn't tell her that I saw him. That's a pattern because I think one of the meanest things he did to you without probably any awareness that it was mean. He's left when Josh is a kid. Josh has no idea why they got divorced. Mom throws him out and then when he's eight, two years later, he invites him to the Sheridan. By the way, that was the place when we were kids. Oh, it was. Remember the Sheridan? Of course.
Starting point is 00:44:21 My mom took us there to tell us she was divorcing my third dad. Why is that? That was like the Fouridan? Of course. My mom took us there to tell us she was divorcing my third dad. Why is that? That was like the four seasons for us. So you get invited to the Sheridan. And he says, surprise, and introduces me to his mistress and their son from Columbia. The dad had another family.
Starting point is 00:44:38 I didn't know what to do with that. And you're eight. I'm eight, I start spiraling. And he swears you to secrecy. This is the cruelty that he probably wasn't even aware of. He was oblivious. My dad doesn't operate in familiar ways that we understand responsible parents.
Starting point is 00:44:53 And I'm grateful for that because man, did it fucking teach me how to be a great parent. Yeah. I'm sure you have the same sort of experience of learning from mistakes and vowing to never fucking repeat those mistakes. Yeah, just gonna share one part of my story because I happen to be writing about it just recently. Even at a young age, I was a little skeptical.
Starting point is 00:45:12 So I would go to his house on the weekends and he was so loving. That's a gift I had. He was so affectionate for a dad in the 80s. He hugged us and kissed us and snuggled us and showered us in love. And he wasn't around. So there's this huge disconnect from what I would feel in that moment, but then the actions afterwards never matched it. And it just created this huge dissonance where I'm like, what is this? I appear to be the most important thing in the world.
Starting point is 00:45:38 And then I don't see him for three weeks and he doesn't show up for my brother's field hockey games. We all know he's very important to my brother. And also how's he living this kind of rich lifestyle and we're fucking dead broke? How's that happening? So there's all this really just confusing, how do I compute the messages versus the actions?
Starting point is 00:45:53 The exact same story, except my dad would go months at a time and would live in another country. Right. With one of his many other fuck buddies. It makes love so confusing for the rest of your life, I assume. A hundred percent.
Starting point is 00:46:07 Who's to say what's real and what's not real. But then that's the question you live with forever. What is real? I vividly remember sitting at the window in my home in Hollywood, Florida, waiting for my father to show up on countless nights where he never came. And my mom knew he wasn't going to come. for my father to show up on countless nights where he never came. And my mom knew he wasn't going to come and he would tell me he was coming and I believed he was coming and then he wouldn't show up.
Starting point is 00:46:32 And I talk about this in my book too, which is the sort of the kismet of my Disney journey is the one place my father would always take me when I was growing up was Disney World. Wow. And so Disney World became a symbol of my relationship with my father and Disney escapism became the salve that was healing any sort of absence that I felt in my life. I also think it sets you up for this pattern you then replicate in life where it's just like
Starting point is 00:47:03 highs, lows, highs, lows, right? Because the dads are always winning you back over. They feel bad. And whether they are consciously aware of it I think it sets you up for this pattern you then replicate in life where it's just like highs, lows, highs, lows, right? Because the dads are always winning you back over. They feel bad, and whether they are consciously aware of it or subconsciously, but yeah, when they have you, they're putting on this incredible show and they're going to make up for all this time. So it's like you get pretty used to these insane spikes of love bombiness and then nothing. For me, it can kind of fuck up all relationships going forward because it's like, this is the
Starting point is 00:47:24 pattern of love. Yeah, it can. It had up all relationships going forward, because it's like, this is the pattern of love. Yeah, it can. It had the opposite effect on me and my brothers. I have such an incredible mother. My mom was so badass. And despite the emotional shrapnel that I felt as a result of her divorce, and I've had to heal and talk to her about that and forgive that because I didn't understand at the time
Starting point is 00:47:50 that her mood swings and her anger and my brothers having moved to college, I was the only one in the house who was absorbing that and that was scary and that was lonely and the birth of comedy. And it was the birth of comedy because as a result of her pain and her depression, I somehow found this weapon where I was able
Starting point is 00:48:11 to make her laugh and I was like, that's something. And tapping into that and then making that a career came from the seeds of that despair, as it often does, I would imagine. But that was heart. When you were choosing to Honor your dad's request to keep the other family Secret was that out of loyalty to him or were you afraid of how that would make your mom feel to know?
Starting point is 00:48:35 100% the latter the latter right you're responsible for mom's mood as a little boy You're protecting her feelings from finding out about the other family There's a lot of adulting going on. I grew up too fast and I didn't grow up enough I'm jealous of my friends who had both parents till they were 18 at least and then a later divorce I think is Sometimes maybe better sometimes maybe worse for me It was very different experience than it was for my brothers.
Starting point is 00:49:06 My brothers were 10 and eight years older, and they got the family journey. Mine was ripped away at six. You don't have the skills to process that. And so I became very destructive. I would lie constantly to my mom. I was doing horribly in school. It is almost impossible to flunk first grade. I was getting Fs and Ds.
Starting point is 00:49:30 Of course you were. Regulating with food, enters the pitcher. That's when I started to balloon and I was also actually physically destructive. I remember a day where I took something in the back of my mom's car, the little cigarette things that you would push down, and I started burning holes in the back of my mom's car, the little cigarette things that you would push down, and I started burning holes in the back of her car.
Starting point is 00:49:48 And my mom could not figure out what the fuck was going on with me. And it was this absolute burden on my shoulders of having to keep this secret and lashing out because I didn't know what else to do. And my mom finally sat down and said, something's gotta change. Got me to speak to a therapist.
Starting point is 00:50:08 I was able to finally unburden this secret. I was able to finally find some sort of path for myself to navigate my own very difficult emotions and then was able to overcome all of the chaos. And did the therapist tell you it was okay for you to tell your mom? The therapist did. This was a period where I only wanted to sleep in my mom's room, was afraid to sleep by myself.
Starting point is 00:50:33 There was so much shit going on. So I had one therapist who told my mom to lock me in my room. Oh boy. And my mom, God bless her, was like, you're out of your fucking mind. Yeah. Let's switch.
Starting point is 00:50:44 And then I found this incredible woman who was able to talk to me as a child and was able to get to why was I feeling so scared? I had this enormous fear of death. I was constantly afraid of dying. I was constantly afraid of loss. And once I had a grasp on that, I was then able to take all of that and start to focus my energies on performance. And so my mom found this local children's
Starting point is 00:51:14 theater called the Hollywood Playhouse for the Performing Arts, signed me up, and that changed my life. Especially being overweight, I found that the greatest superpower I had was making fun of myself and using that self-deprecation to win people over. And so I also parlayed it into popularity. I became class president. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I became sort of a king in high school. And I didn't fit the sort of physical bill of what that usually looks
Starting point is 00:51:46 It makes it even that much better funny is funny and it attracts people and I Suddenly was like, okay. This is my high this is What I'm going to lean into cut to me going to Carnegie Mellon drama for some Well, but really quick, you're crushing, you're in AP classes, you're the class president, you're a three-time champion, you apply to Northwestern, in fact, eight of you from your school apply,
Starting point is 00:52:13 and then you're gonna go to Juilliard, or you apply to Juilliard, and then you get rejected from Northwestern, and you're like, oh, I can't wait to go commiserate with these other seven dipshits who certainly didn't get it. All got in. All of them got in. Oh, no! Class of 99, all got in. Oh no. Class of 99.
Starting point is 00:52:25 All got in except for me. I love these reality checks every now and then, just when you're certain you're the king. I'm confused though, because in the book you go and you audition for Juilliard and it seems you got in, but then you went to Carnegie Mellon. I did not get into Juilliard. Oh, you didn't.
Starting point is 00:52:39 I had the worst audition of my life. But you said I Trojan horse my way into Carnegie Mellon. Sorry, tell me about Juilliard. So Juilliard, I go in there and I am bullish. I'm like, I got this. After you didn't get into Northwestern? Actually, Northwestern is all about grades and SAT. Yeah, it is.
Starting point is 00:52:57 At the time, I had gotten like a 1350 on my SAT. It's not bad. So I was thinking like, oh, I'm shooing. But like all my friends had got 1400 or above. Oh. So Northwestern was out of the picture. And I'm like, oh, I'm shooing. But like all my friends had got 1400 or above. So Northwestern was out of the picture. And I'm like, well, it doesn't matter. My backup Julliard is all about like the audition.
Starting point is 00:53:12 So I go in there and I do Marty by Patty Chayefsky. That was the piece that I had gotten third place in my sophomore year of high school. Which is also a beautiful story. Someone forces you to do drama basically. Correct, for the first time. And you fall in love with that as well. So I do it, and I'm thinking to myself,
Starting point is 00:53:28 I'm fucking killing this. I describe the three people auditioning me as like the ringwraiths of Lord Sauron. It is really truly these hooded kind of like figures who are not willing to express at all. I admire the lack of people pleasing. Oh yeah. Can you imagine just watching something and saying nothing?
Starting point is 00:53:49 And you have to think about this, these are also the same people at that time who had Kevin Kline and Robin Williams and all of the greats come through. So they don't fucking care about like who I am. They also get a high off of being so stoic. 100%. So their stoicism absolutely gets to me.
Starting point is 00:54:08 And then Michael Kahn, who's running it, goes, do you have anything else you want to do for us today? And I said, you have a classical piece. And I do something from Henry VIII. And I forgot all of the words. And-ing in iambic pentameter to a man who literally is responsible for not only Juilliard but a Shakespeare festival in Washington DC. So I look at them after I finish and I go, I will see myself out. Good luck with Juilliard.
Starting point is 00:54:45 And I go outside and I start crying. And I look at my mom and I go, I don't know what I'm going to do. And I'll never forget we were walking through Central Park and as we crossed the threshold into the park it started snowing. And for some reason I was like, I think it's going to be okay. And then I applied to Carnegie Mellon and was feeling the weight of all the rejections. I saw that I could apply as a director.
Starting point is 00:55:10 And when you apply as a director, you have to do an audition for some reason to sort of communicate that you understand an actor's journey as a director. So I come and I do this audition and the guy who runs Greg Lehane goes, huh, are you sure you wanna be a director? And I said, why, what are you thinking?
Starting point is 00:55:30 Yeah, good answer. And he's like, well, I'd like to share this with my acting colleague, Tony McCabe. So Tony comes in and watches and he goes, you wanna direct? And I said, I guess I could be convinced to act. I love directing, but I don't know. So I completely Trojan horse my way into musical theater.
Starting point is 00:55:50 And then tried to Trojan horse my way into musical theater. That's where they drew the line. And my class was crazy. It was Leslie Odom Jr., Josh Groban, Rory O'Malley. So that is how I ended up there. Also, what's a conservatory? So conservatory is basically like Hogwarts for drama kids. You don't have to do shit other than act, right?
Starting point is 00:56:11 You just act. In fact, I was desperate. Here's again my absolute jealousy of expertise was I wanted more academia. And I didn't wanted more academia. And I didn't get more academia. I got movement class one, two, three, and four. I got voice class one, two, three, four. You basically had to take seven to 10 classes
Starting point is 00:56:37 that were academic in nature during the duration of your studies. And that wasn't enough for me. I'm more jealous of the liberal arts. Yeah, mind expanding, understanding. I definitely would never trade in my experience, but I did miss out on a fuller body of learning. But I think the group that went sounds so fun because you describe a night, it
Starting point is 00:56:58 was a three story dormitory and there's a party and you drink a half a fifth of tequila and then you piss your jeans and then take a 20 minute nap. Have a threesome. Regroup, go to the first floor, hook up with someone, go to the third floor, hook up with someone and then make love to someone on the second floor. Yeah, it was fucking crazy. All the same night.
Starting point is 00:57:16 And you say it's not because of your prowess. It's not because of my prowess. It's because I was the only straight person in my class. What a blessing. And so it was just a fuckfest. And you know, I lost a hundred pounds in college. I substituted my food addiction for sex and alcohol. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:57:35 And so that just became the chaos of that period for me. I'm imagining from your high school experience to this experience. I don't know how on earth one would resist that. It was a complete body transformation. Yeah. I dyed my hair blonde. Sure. We're going to need a pic.
Starting point is 00:57:51 I will show you a pic. I lost myself a little bit. Yeah. By the way, I think you should. That's what college is about. No, no, no, in a bad way. Yeah, yeah, but I think you should lose yourself in a bad way. So I started to get extreme anxiety.
Starting point is 00:58:02 I was being looked at in a different way, and I didn't know how to handle that attention. And I also didn't know this was me as a blonde. Wow! We gotta show the cam. Yeah, this guy lives for three ways. This is awesome, dad. Okay, so for the listeners,
Starting point is 00:58:22 you still have the dark eyebrows. Eyebrows. But the hair is quite blonde. Yeah, hair is platinum blonde. So I felt like a stranger in my body. I was not used to being attractive. I was not used to being sought after. I didn't know how to operate in that body. And I also didn't know how to play the roles in that body.
Starting point is 00:58:42 Okay, Josh, really quick. This is why I'm saying it's a blessing that happened to you then, because I've brought this up many times on here. It's a trope in Hollywood. A lot of people end up getting enormous amounts of status, and that wasn't their experience all growing up, and they don't really know how to handle it.
Starting point is 00:58:56 And I've seen it most often lead to this bizarre version of misogyny. It's like, these dudes have all these women that like them, and they don't really trust it, and they kinda hate them for it, and why don't really trust it and they kind of hate them for it Why don't you like me when I'm younger? I mean I've seen that pattern materialized a bunch of times for people who got that attention and status like you all in life like Yuval I don't even know I didn't say him by name. We're all thinking it. Yuval's husband is gorgeous
Starting point is 00:59:17 Oh, yeah, he joins him when he comes But I think like how do you not have that thing, you would have had an opportunity to do it later. It's true. Why does that result in anxiety? Just because you're very disconnected, your identity is kind of fractured. I felt like a visitor in my body. I felt like an alien taking over another person's body.
Starting point is 00:59:37 I don't know how to describe it. I had my eyes, I had my ears, I had my voice, but it was not me. I was playing a character. Yeah, yeah, yeah, cool guy character. And by the way, I think it's why I continue to struggle with weight at this point in my life, because I really didn't know how to be that guy.
Starting point is 00:59:53 Now for health, I wanna lose weight and desperately trying to, but that was really, really strange. Yeah, this is something I also wanna bring up and I don't know how to tiptoe around it, but I'm just gonna be dead honest. I was just thinking of you on my trip to Mexico City. So I'm with somebody who's on a version of a GLP-1,
Starting point is 01:00:13 who's loving it. He more often is telling me like, it's so weird to see this stuff and not have that pull I normally have. If you listen to our first episode, we do 20 minutes on what the perfect day of eating would be From your point of view what you would start the day with we got a general child's chickens in there We got everything bagel. We went through the whole thing. You're gonna finish the night with sushi, but it'll be a lot of tempura and
Starting point is 01:00:37 Hearing the amount of joy you get from that. I literally thought in my head I wonder if they'll be people when GLP-1s are virtually over the counter, if they'll choose not to do that because so much of the joy in their life is that. They don't want that relationship where it's not appealing. I'm on a GLP-1. Is it limited your joy at all? It has suppressed in a great way that noise,
Starting point is 01:01:04 when I wake up, I feel hunger pains. And so much of that is psychological. Right. Right. And what this does is it takes away that signal. Yeah. It's even working on addicts. It is a miracle drug. It truly is, yeah. I was on a different drug that caused me diverticulitis.
Starting point is 01:01:20 Okay, no good. And I had lost 40 pounds. I was really bummed out because it was working incredibly for me and I had to switch I'm figuring out this new one and it is life-changing But it also doesn't negate the fact that it can't be in the place of having a healthy relationship with food And it can't be in the place of having a healthy relationship with exercise
Starting point is 01:01:40 Well, would it be fair to say it's treating the symptom? It is treating this and by the way This is the first time I've opened up about this. Okay, and I didn't mean to put you on that spot I'm actually really happy that I'm opening about this because I'm having my own journey with it sure Sometimes I feel like I'm cheating myself by doing this you shown in and I know a lot of people Who are an overweight like I am who are taking it and then I feel like? Okay, I should be able to do this because I need it for health. Someone shaving off the last three pounds. Which is I think becoming ubiquitous now. Yeah how do you feel about that? I'm not going to pass judgment to each their own. I think that the problem becomes when it prevents others who need
Starting point is 01:02:19 it medically like myself from getting it. That's where I get upset. Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare. Yeah, I like to evaluate it in a world where it's completely ubiquitous and it's available. I think that's where you need to place this theoretical thought process when you're gonna decide if you're judgmental. Because I don't give a fuck if anyone does anything like that that's safe and doesn't have many side effects.
Starting point is 01:02:55 That makes them feel better. I don't know why I wouldn't want that for somebody. Would you judge someone for taking suppressants for nicotine? Would you judge someone for taking antidepressants for anxiety? No. This is medication.
Starting point is 01:03:06 It's treating a disease. I'm not saying everyone should be on it, but for the people I know who are on it, it's making their life a lot better. Yes. Why would I not want that for them? My wife is not thrilled that I take it. Because she's worried you're not gonna confront
Starting point is 01:03:20 the core thing that's driving it. Correct, correct. But again, the decision is binary. It's either or. It's like either you choose this route or you choose to confront. Obviously you can do both. Yeah, or a divorcer.
Starting point is 01:03:29 Right, well we'll see. Seems like you'd need her if she gets out of the fire. That's the thing. Right now I need her this week. Yeah, unfortunately. And then we'll go from there. This is not your wife, but I can easily see a hypothetical
Starting point is 01:03:43 where someone fell in love with someone that was larger and there is perhaps some shadow in their mind that says well I wonder if they had all the options if they would have still picked me and now they're gonna be thin and they're gonna have all the options and there's fear behind that. I mean I think that that's fair. Some people hate that when their partner becomes a gym rat and they're in great shape. They're like scared all of a sudden
Starting point is 01:04:08 that they won't be enough. I think that that's very fair. At the end of the day, my wife is so much hotter than me. You're like, she's not worried. I should be more concerned about like her. Yeah, there's no version of you that still wouldn't be dying to be with her. No.
Starting point is 01:04:20 Another generous take on that is that they're worried that their identity will shift completely. Yours did, as you're saying. I've always been the funny fat guy. Can I be the funny skinny guy? Right. Can I be the hot leading man? I know I could be those things. I don't know that people would accept me as those things. And that's always really hard. We get typecast. We do a thing and people see us as that thing. And I've been very blessed that I continue to challenge myself to not be typecast,
Starting point is 01:04:47 to do things that nobody expects. Listen Josh, I would honor this fear if I thought you were a one trick pony who fell through tables as their main deal. You're like a crazy good dramatic actor. You're an improv genius. You sing like a motherfucker. Olaf is you.
Starting point is 01:05:05 All blessings to all the writing, but that creation is Josh Gad. That fear for you should be nowhere in sight. Thank you. I also think I have a healthy relationship with my brain than I did back then. So now I think as I go on this journey of weight loss, I'm not as worried about that
Starting point is 01:05:23 because my primary goal is I wanna be there for my kids. Everything else is bullshit. You also make your own shit. That's part of your genius. You do your own thing so no one can take that from you. You'll keep doing your own thing. I appreciate that.
Starting point is 01:05:36 At the very least, I'll do more of this. Exactly. More of your podcast. You can come on. But I don't get paid for this, do I? Once every five years. I actually am going to give you $100 for coming in last minute. Really?
Starting point is 01:05:46 Yeah, I already planned on it. I put my billfold in my pocket. Is it in cash? It's in cash, it's old-fashioned. So I don't need to write it off. But now I do because it's on record. But then you'll say you gave it back to me after and it was just a bit.
Starting point is 01:05:55 Oh, smart. But really you'll be fucking blowing a hole in that hundo on your way home. You're gonna come home with so many trinkets here. What if that's how the IRS takes me down because of this $100 that was promised to me on this bullshit? You're gonna come up with so many trinkets here. That's how the IRS takes me down because of this $100 that was promised to me on this bullshit. No, but I can give you up to $18,000 tax free.
Starting point is 01:06:13 I'll take it. Yeah. So tell me about the gap between graduating from CMU and then I guess it would be Putnam. I was singularly focused on one thing. I wanted to be on Saturday Night Live. That's all I wanted. In my fucking fragile little brain, I somehow thought going to Carnegie Mellon drama
Starting point is 01:06:37 was enough to audition and be accepted. I'm not sure what I was thinking, but I started immediately out of college putting together a reel for SNL. I got Ron Howard to open the video. He's live from Josh's VCR. Oh my god. How'd you get that done? Bryce Alice Howard is my best friend. Okay. Because she married my actual best friend Seth Gable from when I was four and so she let me borrow her father, who was very willing to help me out. It was incredible.
Starting point is 01:07:09 He did not get jobs. He didn't open the doors, he thought he might. So I kept sending in tapes for like three years. Didn't get on. Signed up for the Groundlings. Did that for two years. You did that for two years? I did the first two classes.
Starting point is 01:07:21 They didn't accept me into the third level. And then I start to get little jobs here and there. I'm sort of at the breaking point. And I talked about this on my last time, so I'm not going to revisit all of this. But I basically am like, I'm quitting acting. I'm not making money. I had met my then girlfriend, now wife, Ida, and I was like, I need to become a lawyer. So I started applying to law schools. My mom, as you know already, basically is like, you're a fucking coward if you do that. I audition for this show called 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee. And I get it, but I got the San Francisco version, and I don't know what I'm thinking because I have no work, but I turn it down.
Starting point is 01:08:01 Oh wow. They are done with me. They are fucking furious and somehow I find out that they're replacing Dan Fogler the Tony Award winner for the show and I get them to give me another chance but they're like not having it. I go in, I do my audition, goes fine, I then do the music audition, goes fine, I do the dance audition. It's an unmitigated disaster. I look like a fucking beached whale learning to swim again. And then I somehow get a phone call that I'm supposed to go to the theater that night. I go to this callback. It's me and this other guy, Jordan, who's on Broadway doing Avenue Q.
Starting point is 01:08:41 I have nothing on my resume. I have one episode of ER and I have... You were just summarily released from the ground. And you were studying college. Yeah, and I fuck a lot of college. It's out of necessity. First floor, second floor, third floor. Every fucking day. Smoke coming out of the pulleys. So this guy goes first. He's out there for like 10 minutes. I come out.
Starting point is 01:09:07 I see 30 people who are all sitting in the circle in the square of theater. They're all directors, producers, investors. I crack a joke. I start my scene. I get a minute and a half in and the director, James Appine, and I talk about this in the book says, Josh, can I see you up here for a second? All of your teachers sound like Bill Hoffman. Oh, Philip Seymour Hoffman.
Starting point is 01:09:29 You know I do basically. We've established this. I do one impression, it's Bill Hoffman. Everything else derived from that. Yeah, Josh, can I, I wanna talk to you, come here. James calls me up, dismisses everybody, and he says, I don't think you take this seriously. And I said, excuse me?
Starting point is 01:09:44 He goes, I don't think you take this seriously. And I said, excuse me? He goes, I don't think you take this seriously. And I said, well, what makes you think that? And he goes, this is the opportunity of a lifetime. Everybody wants to do a Broadway show. And your first instinct is to come out and crack a joke. And I said, well, forgive me, but there are 30 people sitting in front of me who are about to decide my fate and
Starting point is 01:10:06 I figured I had two options. I could either break the ice or Projectile vomit on you and your colleagues. So forgive me for choosing the former. Yeah, and I'm not even saying it jokingly I'm like super fucking pissed And then he starts to lecture me about the fact that I don't have the discipline in craft to take this job Oh my god, and I look at him and I say all due respect You can tell me I'm not right for the role. You can tell me that I am Not your favorite actor You can fucking tell me I'm not funny for you to sit there and tell me and judge my discipline after I literally
Starting point is 01:10:43 to sit there and tell me and judge my discipline after I literally spent four years in conservatory, spent every last penny that I had to learn my craft, to study my craft, to stick with my craft through thick and thin. That is not something you get to take away from me. And I said, good luck with your show. I appreciate this. Thank you for the opportunity.
Starting point is 01:11:03 I walk out, I congratulate Jordan on getting the role. I go back to my hotel. The Sheridan. Ding ding ding! No, actually it was a Hilton. That was a Hilton. Well they kind of... Yeah, it's either Sheridan or Hilton. Modern day Sheridan. And I call my mom up. She said, how'd it go? I said, didn't happen. As bad as it could.
Starting point is 01:11:20 As bad as it could. I'm coming home and I got a call from my then agent, Hannah Roth, and she says, hey, and I said, hey, I'm not really in the mood to talk right now. And she goes, well, you have two tickets to go see Spelling Bee tonight. And I said, why the fuck would I want to go see that show? And at this point, I had never seen the show. I didn't have enough money to get a ticket to see the show.
Starting point is 01:11:42 I was just approximating what I thought it should be. And I said, why the fuck would I want to go see that and she goes well the director Feels that you should probably see it before you start rehearsals in two weeks Unreal Wow, so it was a mindfuck. What was your all's post conversation of that initial? My relationship with James is now Wonderful recently we had a dinner where we talked through everything and he was incredible about it, but he was Horrible to me during that process. Oh, he was the whole show the whole show. I was a punching bag It was brutal. Was he so upset. He was losing Dan
Starting point is 01:12:18 I think that was a big part of it when we sat down and we discussed it and we had it out and he was So gracious and has since apologized to me for what that experience was, he said I needed to get my ass kicked. I agree with that. I don't think the psychological warfare was necessary, but I agree with it. But I would come back and I would smoke every night a full bong of like hashish because I was so fucking scared. I was just fucked. I was always in a state of fear, panic, and it just didn't get better.
Starting point is 01:12:51 I couldn't wait to leave. And the cast was awesome, but also they missed Dan. Yeah, that's a hard position. It sucks being a replacement sometimes. I'm not sure if that's everyone's experience. I go out of my way to be kind to my replacements because of what that experience was, but it fucking sucked.
Starting point is 01:13:12 And I would do it all again if I could because it taught me resilience. Yeah, if you can get through that. I think we coddle a lot now, and I think actors who are breaking in, you need to get your ass kicked, man, because it's a fucking brutal business. I learned from every minute of that, even though it wasn't all roses and candy,
Starting point is 01:13:32 it was everything I needed at the time to prepare me for a career that is filled with so many more lows than highs, and once you have that, you can handle the rest. Yeah, absolutely. And there were times when I didn't think I could get through it. There were times when I would literally have
Starting point is 01:13:51 anxiety attacks because James would call a rehearsal that I knew was just about putting me in my place and keeping me in a box. And I didn't feel safe, I didn't feel comfortable improving, I didn't feel comfortable being my funniest. It's like with your confidence. I had real problems with my confidence. That happened again on Book of Mormon.
Starting point is 01:14:09 It did. How? Because I saw that. I talk about this in my book as well. So my director there, Casey, who's brilliant and amazing, he came in after Jason Moore, who we had workshopped the show with for three years, left the project. He was coming into a situation that was like,
Starting point is 01:14:28 hey, we're going to Broadway, it's your turn to get it all going in a couple of months. He wanted to put his stamp on it, and based on my experience with Spelling Bee, I think I had my guard up. Yeah. You had a chip on your shoulder maybe a little bit. Don't fuck with me.
Starting point is 01:14:41 Yeah. I am not to be fucked with here. And I think he felt that, and I think he in turn sometimes did not love that I was basically doing whatever the fuck I wanted on that stage, and he wanted to control that. And right or wrong, it was his job, and I respect that. But we definitely butted heads,
Starting point is 01:15:04 and it was sometimes very unpleasant. And Andrew and I sometimes got into it because a lot of what was going on during that time was Reynolds and I, suddenly we went from zero to 60 and we had this entire show on our backs. We were not prepared for what it became. I was not ready for that kind of pressure and I think Andrew wasn't.
Starting point is 01:15:26 And so we felt sometimes like we were being pitted against each other. And you're in the midst of like Tony season and you're both vying for that award. Were you guys nominated for the same thing? We were both nominated for the same thing. Yeah. What the hell do you do with that? And we both lost. It was a fucking roller coaster. How old were you at that time?
Starting point is 01:15:42 I had just turned 30. And Andrew and I now talk about it laughing about how stupid and petty all of the little bullshit was. But it's a pressure cooker. But it was a pressure cooker. And it was so funny because going back and then doing Gutenberg,
Starting point is 01:15:54 we had the complete opposite experience because we're in our 40s and don't give a shit about anything anymore because we've had so many life experiences. The bucket's been filled up. All of that stuff feels so insignificant. Yes. And it's beautiful because our relationship
Starting point is 01:16:10 has never been stronger. We came through the other side of it. We had the most amazing experience doing that show and being a part of a pop cultural phenomenon, the likes of which musical comedy theater hadn't seen since the producers musical comedy theater hadn't seen since the producers and I think hasn't seen since. It's just Hamilton and that. But in terms of comedy right? Yeah. In terms of comedies we're a rarity. That was hard. I
Starting point is 01:16:34 have since been able to look back at all of it and own my part in all of it. What's your part? I was a cocky fucking guy. And part of the cockiness was a defense mechanism. You're scared. I'm scared and I'm not good enough. I'm scared. I'm not funny enough. I'm scared. I'm not worthy of the attention.
Starting point is 01:16:55 I'm scared that I am going to let people down. I'm scared I'm going to let myself down. You'll be revealed at some point. I'll be revealed. And so I really. Peacocked. Yeah. Puffed up. You'll be revealed at some point. I'll be revealed. And so I really peacocked. Yeah. Puffed up. You know what's weird?
Starting point is 01:17:10 I've never to this moment considered, although I experienced it being on stage at the Growlings, but where theater is so different than doing a movie is you don't really know while filming the movie who's popping and stealing it. But on a stage, boy, the fucking verdict's popping and stealing it but on a stage boy the fucking verdicts in every 30 seconds and it's very obvious what the response to the crowd is so if you're someone that's still doing a great job
Starting point is 01:17:34 but you're third in the crushing it you know it do you know how petty I was in hungry and starving for love and adoration. I'll never forget being so mad. This is so ridiculous. But I was so mad that Andrew got the last bow. And I didn't. Ah! Sure. And that is such a fucking joke.
Starting point is 01:17:55 I love that you're admitting that. That I would even think that way. Yeah. Because he clearly was the one who should get the last bow. But at the time I was like, I've been doing this show for four years. I've been here from the beginning. I'm the funnier role.
Starting point is 01:18:08 I wasn't, I wasn't any of those things. I was involved longer. That's it. Well, if I can make an excuse for you a little bit, or not even an excuse, but an explanation. No, you don't make an excuse. I'm just a piece of shit. And I deserve what's happening to me.
Starting point is 01:18:19 Yes, yes, yes. Isn't it true you're at fault for these high winds that just set LA ablaze? This is the same thing with black folks, with women. In your mind, if you're not the best, they're gonna kick you out. Yeah, but also you said it earlier. You grew up with a huge fear of loss.
Starting point is 01:18:38 That does not go away. I have the exact same thing. It doesn't go away, and also, I have always felt like a fraud. I have an absolute case of imposter syndrome. Yeah. And when I go and I put myself out there, I am so scared I'm going to fail.
Starting point is 01:18:57 And I am so scared that what I think is funny, other people won't find funny. And if I fail even one person, I don't think about the 1 the thousand people who enjoyed it. I think about the one person who hated it Also, do you give it the power that like when I fail publicly? It's actually gonna be so powerful the failure that it'll make you go back and reevaluate everything you thought thus far I do it all the time Yeah like it has the power to not only fail in that moment but but erase everything that happened before. It is to the point now that I can't even watch
Starting point is 01:19:28 anything I'm in because I judge it so harshly and so critically that I feel like a fraud. Actually, the beauty and the reason that I went back to Broadway and did a show with Andrew was I needed that again. I needed to put myself out there in the most vulnerable way at the age of 40 and have this guy who is the single funniest fucking human being
Starting point is 01:19:52 I've ever worked alongside, other than the two of you. Even though we've never worked together. Is it a lie because you haven't worked with us? Well, no, it's a promise. And so I needed that. I needed my ass kicked. And the difference between when we did Book of Mormon and we did Gutenberg was being on the other side of that
Starting point is 01:20:14 and no longer focused about any of the little shit, any of the dumb shit. I was able to just enjoy and do a trust exercise every night. And it was fucking incredible. That's the thing. The ultimate victim ends up being you because you are robbed of the experience. So that whole experience you had,
Starting point is 01:20:32 which is among 10 experiences on Broadway like that, you didn't get to experience. I didn't. Because you were so in the future and so behind and all these places other than this bizarre gift that doesn't really come around for people ever in this business. And yeah, you can run the risk of missing the whole thing. It's funny, I think in a certain way, you need to go through that. I'm at an age now
Starting point is 01:20:54 where none of that is a factor anymore. Because I've learned these lessons, every job that I do, every day I take in and I give gratitude and I am savoring it. And you read about stories like Mandy Patinkin talking about he was so miserable to others and to himself for so long. And like my experience of working with Mandy was the complete opposite. I've never met a more giving person. And I think that we all in a weird way have to go through that, not just in this industry, in our lives.
Starting point is 01:21:23 Oh, yeah. You have to experience that., not just in this industry, in our lives. Oh yeah. You have to experience that. Everyone with coworkers knows this. It's okay to go through all of that as long as you come out the other side acknowledging it. Yeah. I'm finally at a place, maybe too late, but I'm finally at a place of acknowledgement to say,
Starting point is 01:21:38 I was my own worst enemy in many of these situations. I was not present. I was afraid to be told no because that meant that I had to concede I was doing something wrong. Proving you didn't belong there. It was a waste of one of the greatest years of my life. I wanted to get the fuck out of that show by the end because I was miserable.
Starting point is 01:22:00 And I am so bitter about that because if I could go back and do Book of Mormon right now, I would fucking leave this room and put that outfit on and get on stage because it was the greatest joy ever. What Trey and Matt did is for the ages. And I didn't appreciate it enough at the time. I have two stupid questions unrelated to your book. Yeah. In my research, I discovered something that is an Alexander Payne movie waiting to happen.
Starting point is 01:22:25 So your mother and stepfather were involved in a legal battle over a burial plot that was dealt with. When I read that sentence, I was like, it's insane. If I was pitched that as a studio executive, I'd go, no, what in this day and age people could be fighting over a burial plot? No, what in this day and age people could be fighting over a burial plot? My grandparents were buried in this South Florida cemetery and my parents bought a plot next to them. My mother is the daughter of Holocaust survivors. There are books about this generation. Yeah. It is really difficult. The guilt is unthinkable. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:23:03 For me, I'd be like, just put me wherever. For her, it was such a loss, it was such a betrayal. And the way she found out, which was accidentally from a friend who was told they gave that plot accidentally away was so fucked. So it was a thing. What is the solution to a problem like that? Do you exhume grandma and grandma?
Starting point is 01:23:24 Well, going through it now, we are literally in the process of figuring out what to do because there is no good solution. No, Barry mom on top. But you sort of anticipate that the fucking place will do its job. It has one job, which is put the boxes where they're meant to go.
Starting point is 01:23:42 Where they've been sold. That's your only job. Yes. I don't know how they fucking mix and match that, but. This is like the backside of babies. I was about to say, get swapped at the hospital. Yes. We can imagine you going and paying your respects at the wrong grave for years.
Starting point is 01:23:57 You should write this. It's actually a great fucking Alexander Brown movie. It is, it is. There's no good solution, there's solutions. All of them suck. But that's a good device for a film There's really no solution. That's gonna make anyone in this now worried about what the second question is I would urge you to tell people about picture face Lizzie because it's another book you have out
Starting point is 01:24:14 You're so prolific. This has been a year of writing for me. I really wanted to Challenge myself as a writer. So I wrote picture face Lizzie a kid's book Which is basically about my girls are obsessed with what their friends have and what they don't have. And that a lot of times comes in the form of social media apps. So they are constantly asking us why their friends are allowed to have TikTok, YouTube, Snapchat, and we put such restrictions on them. This is a conversation so many of my friends are having, so many of my friends' kids are having. It inspired me to write a book from the perspective of both the parents and the kids,
Starting point is 01:24:51 talking about this new doll called a picture face Lizzie that is a mixture of an American girl doll with the technological advances of having a social media application to it so that it's all encompassing. And this little kid, Eve's, finds herself in a situation where all her friends do is talk about their picture face Lizzie's and she gets left behind. And so she goes to her parents and she says, I want one, how can I get one? And they finally cave in, they give it to her. And basically they say, just don't lose who you are in the process of playing with this have a healthy
Starting point is 01:25:28 relationship with it she becomes absolutely consumed but over the course of the book she starts to miss the little things she used to do the imaginative play this sort of experiential things as she starts to sort of balance having this thing and doing these analog things Her friends become really attracted to what she's doing Yeah, and put their dolls down and start doing that as well And it's been really amazing to watch families read this book together experience this journey together and
Starting point is 01:26:02 Start a conversation from it. Why did you get such a hack to narrate it? Kristen Bell was the only option I had at the time because similarly I was cancelled on by most of my previous guests and that was without an apocalyptic event. I am doing what I can to give them a healthy relationship with technology, but also giving them the skills to be able to be without that technology, because my concern is, I know I'm addicted to it. Yeah, parents are giving their kids advice that they themselves are incapable of following,
Starting point is 01:26:39 which is hysterical. That's it. We at least come from a background in which we didn't have any of this. We can remember the halcyon days. And I think part of the reason my kids love Stranger Things, your listeners are like, what kind of dick shows their little kids stranger things but doesn't give them Snapchat?
Starting point is 01:26:55 You knew the shit I've shown my children. Yeah. In fact, when the fires were this again, I was making jokes. So the fires were getting closer and closer. They're a half mile from here and they were starting to evacuate. And I said to the 10 year old Delta, if it looks like we're going down tonight, I'm gonna let you drink wine and we're watching Pulp Fiction.
Starting point is 01:27:11 There you go. I'm not letting you leave this planet without seeing Pulp Fiction. I was fucking six when I watched Nightmare on Elm Street. Oh, my grandpa took me on opening day to Scarface in 1981 and I was six and I watched a chainsaw cut. The worst thing that's ever happened to me is I was in college and I took my mother to go see Unfaithful, the Diane Lane sex film.
Starting point is 01:27:40 Sex tape. Just like fucking snuff film. And I sat next to my mother as like she's getting rammed by this really hot young man. And I was like, god damn, I should have just read the reviews. I gotta tell you one more moment. My memory of the Thomas Crown Affair, I'm like, that is the funnest movie.
Starting point is 01:27:57 I can't wait to show my, at that time, like it was probably nine. I'm like, I remember the sailboat scene and the cool this and the caper with the bowler hats and the Magritte paintings cut to Brosmans making love on the staircase and he's sitting there and it's going on for a long time. Do you fast forward? No, we would go for it. Sex isn't bad. Same, we showed Ava Rainman and I forgot that there's a scene in Rainman A hot one with Tom Cruise. Yeah, he's just fucking away and same with Jerry Maguire Here's a period of Tom Cruise movies.
Starting point is 01:28:25 Well, he's gonna sprint in every movie? He was sprinting or fucking. Yeah, because he's a great kisser on screen. He's a great kisser. We gotta give him that. He knows that's where some of the money is. He's a great runner. Yeah, he's an incredible runner and a great kisser. So anyways, we're watching this scene that's now,
Starting point is 01:28:37 as I remember, maybe 30 seconds, which now feels like it's 11 minutes long. And Lincoln just goes, do people do that, have sex? And she goes, no, on the stairs. Because the absurdity is very clear to a nine year old. Like, why would you lay on stairs? And I go, actually, no, only in movies do people have sex on the stairs.
Starting point is 01:29:03 I'm not. No, only in movies do people have sex on the stairs. I'm a... Uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh It's very well written. It's quite funny. You're never more than three sentences away from a Josh Gad zinger Why didn't you have a blurb on the back? I was um, not too late. I could just send out a flyer Why don't I just write something in pen and I wanted these book promotional things you find a single armchair You can go like do you want this one that backs shit on in pencil? Consider calling it the book of Gad I did at one point actually. Okay, that got taken off the table. There were so many puns available.
Starting point is 01:29:48 So many of these. How does one pick? And is that you? That is truly me. What is that from? What photo is that? I did it exclusively for the book. They take photos of...
Starting point is 01:29:58 You think that they like pull it off of the internet? This is the first book I've ever read. They take it from your gram. Where do you assume pictures on books come from? I don't know. I just... You know who it kinda looks like? Tell me. And I'm embarrassed that I'm forgetting his name.
Starting point is 01:30:07 But did you watch the second iteration of Wet Hot American Summer? Yes. Do you remember the guy who always wore three collars? What's that actor's name? I know he went to school with Jada Pinkett. Jordan. Joseph Gordon.
Starting point is 01:30:17 Josh Gordon. Joseph Gordon Leavitt? No, Josh Gordon, I think. None of them matter. Everybody reading Dad We Trust. And please go to Dax's curated list of places where you can support. Yes, please do that as well.
Starting point is 01:30:29 And if you're struggling, I hope this two hours was a reprieve. Yeah, amen. All right, love you. This was, by the way, reprieve for me. Me too. Thank you. Me too. All right, be well.
Starting point is 01:30:37 Josh Charles. Josh Charles. That's a little late for that. Thanks, Rob. Josh. Josh. I sure hope there weren't any mistakes in that episode, but we'll find out when my mom, Mrs. Monica,
Starting point is 01:30:50 comes in and tells us what was wrong. Burberry? That's correct. That's correct. Only wear Burberry to swim. That's a JZ line. That's when you know you've made it when you only wear Burberry to swim.
Starting point is 01:31:03 I don't, I wear it for fact checks. Oh yeah, looks stunning. Thank you. Are you noticing anything? About you. Yeah. Yeah, you're growing your beard out. Okay, great, sure.
Starting point is 01:31:12 Or maybe back out. I just blue dried my hair. Blow dried? Wow, okay. What do you think? It looks nice. A lot of volume. It looks fluffy.
Starting point is 01:31:23 Yeah, I got out of the shower and I was like, what if we put a little mousse in our hair and then hair dry it? Oh my God. And here we are. Cause 50. No, I think new year. Okay, that's great.
Starting point is 01:31:35 Stagnation. Sure, you want to mix it up. Yeah. Do you think a little bit of this potentially has to do with, we had a guest in who has like really fluffy hair. No, but it is slightly impacted by the guests we're gonna have after this fact check, which he is such an eclectic.
Starting point is 01:31:56 Very. This won't sound like a compliment, but it is. Okay. One of your classic compliments. One of my classic compliments that has you feeling terrible afterwards. Whatever the most exotic lizard is, right? That's rough, but.
Starting point is 01:32:10 That's bad. With the colorful, when they. He's just cool. Maybe you'll go with some original words, like cool. And he knows this, he's also dangerous. He's like Snake in the Garden of Eden. He already, and that, so much Easter eggs happening right now, but we're gonna talk about that. He's like Snake in the Garden of Eden. He already, and that, so much Easter eggs happening right now.
Starting point is 01:32:25 But we're gonna talk about that. He's dangerous. Oh, I'm excited for that. I like a little danger. But he's dangerous and colorful. So if you can think of another, I don't wanna use unicorn, because unicorns are for babies.
Starting point is 01:32:37 And you don't like unicorns. Right. Except you do. I love them. I love to call everyone a unicorn. Yeah. But that's another thing I gotta stop. I gotta start blow drying my hair, and I gotta stop using unicorns. Your love them. I love to call everyone a unicorn. Yeah. But that's another thing I gotta stop. I gotta start blow drying my hair
Starting point is 01:32:45 and I gotta stop using unicorns. Your contradictions? Yeah. Dangerous but colorful is like a flamingo cause I think they eat you. You think they're dangerous? Yeah, I do think they're actually hidden danger. Moni, you can just snap any part of them in half.
Starting point is 01:33:00 They're very tall. Exactly. They're so tall and not robust. Well, that's your privilege, because you're tall so you could snap, but I'm too short, I wouldn't be able to reach. Totally disagree. I would put you on the running back category.
Starting point is 01:33:13 Ding, ding, ding. Thank you. Troy Lyons, we'll get there. Yeah. No, you were low and powerful, so you would smash into those flamingos, little dainty toothpick slash chopstick legs. Okay.
Starting point is 01:33:25 And it'd be, no one wants to know this, but it would be. Facts, no, this is like two fact checks in a row. We've been like. Animal cruelty, true, but no, I need something more, a little more dangerous, but also radiant and beautiful and colorful. So I'm thinking with some of those lizards, they get pissed and they start walking on their back legs
Starting point is 01:33:44 and they got their arms out. And then they- They're funny. Their mantles out, they flare out their big parachute around their neck and it's full of colors. What about peacocks? Are they mean? No, these are broken. Are you sure you know?
Starting point is 01:33:56 If you're gonna use a bird, will you use a predator bird? Those aren't colorful on purpose because they're trying to blend in. Right. I feel that I'm drawn to birds, not in life, but in pictures. Okay, sure. I have a big photograph in my apartment of a woman.
Starting point is 01:34:13 She has a cage on her head, but the bird is free. What does that metaphor mean? Oh, it's deep. It is, locked in the cage of your own mind? It's like golden cage a little bit, but the bird is readily getting to it. Golden handcuffs. Also, I almost bought this other piece of art,
Starting point is 01:34:33 not Anne Monsoor, new lady. Okay. And it was also a woman with a bird, and I like immediately DM'd and was trying to get it. Yeah. And then I thought, how many things with birds can I have? Yeah, cause now it's probably about to pass the many, many self images you have
Starting point is 01:34:51 that my children have generated and that Kristen's generated, right? Cause you have a lot of, as we know, photos of yourself, art of yourself. Well, I'm not in the- We talked about that though. Is it like, would it freak someone out who came over? Okay, there's a picture that Lincoln painted of me
Starting point is 01:35:11 when she was like five or six. She was really young. And Kristen painted a picture of me for Secret Turkey. And she made a figurine of you. Yep, with big boobs. And then Lincoln also made a big boob figurine, as I recall. Oh, okay, I only have one.
Starting point is 01:35:30 I think I have the one Lincoln made. Okay. And it's in a drawer. So no one would see that unless they were. Yeah, I mean, I want people to see it, but it invites a lot of questions. Which could be helpful in the right context. Circumstance, perhaps.
Starting point is 01:35:49 Maybe if I get on the apps, which I probably won't, but if I do, maybe that could be my little picture. Well, that'd be great. Yeah, so I have a little mystery too, but it's also being very obvious. You're also leaning over, leaning in. Leaning the witness a little bit. But those other ones aren't hung up.
Starting point is 01:36:04 I am gonna display definitely Lincoln's. Yeah. That's less about me. That's playful. Yeah, it's a huge. They're all not about you. Right. In your defense. Yeah, I didn't ask for them. But we did ask the question, what would be critical mass? Where even if they're not about you, someone might go,
Starting point is 01:36:21 my Lord, this person has like 30 or 40 pieces of art depicting her. I'm not doing that. Even these famous artists, they tend to only do one or two self-portraits, as I recall, right? Yeah. Also the mouth, I mean, that's why I also have this space. I've put some of my art of me here.
Starting point is 01:36:39 Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, that's right. So there's all that art too. And then there's the armcherry art, which we have a lot of. We do, but that lives in our workspace. That feels fine. Right.
Starting point is 01:36:49 That feels fine. Real quick question. If you were a great artist, do you think you would do self-portraits and how many would you do? Like, I guess I'm delighted Van Gogh did a self-portrait because there were no cameras around. Right.
Starting point is 01:37:03 So my only idea of what he looks like is what he drew of himself. Yeah, but it's probably so inaccurate. Like if I did a self-portrait. Well, that would be great. If you were a really, really talented artist and you could actually show us exactly what you see. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:37:20 That would be incredible. Yeah. Because I guarantee you it would be super off. Crickets are out. Oh, yay. I mean, you're a good artist, so you could do a self portrait. Aren't they all those, all those monsters I draw?
Starting point is 01:37:33 I think those are all secretly self portraits. It's also a little like, that's how you're gonna spend your time drawing yourself. Yeah, but you're always there, right? If you need a model for something, it's like all you need is a mirror and you're sketchy. Yeah, I'm probably not gonna do that. Okay, should we dive into the heartbreak?
Starting point is 01:37:51 Yeah, let's hear about it. So, went to the game. The Lions game. The Lions playoff game against the Commanders. And if I'm listing a top 10 experiences with my best friend Aaron Weekly, this is making the list. We were so beside ourself that we were down on the field
Starting point is 01:38:12 at the Lions. I had the singular goal of standing next to Dan Campbell, the coach, in hopes I could get a sense of just how big he is because I see him on TV. I also looked him up and it says 6'5". Oh, wow. But these football players are infamously, they're all a little bit embellished
Starting point is 01:38:29 because they were coming out of college and they're entering the draft and they want to see him as big and as enormous. So it's always like, if you see 6'5", probably 6'3 1⁄2". Okay. I'm just going to guess there's a standard 1 1⁄2".
Starting point is 01:38:44 Flub. Flub, fluff. So I was just hoping to stand next to him. So Keegan Michael Key's there. Oh Which is the pot friend of the pot and the ultimate detroiter and and I don't even pretend to be as authentic and committed to The lions as he is it's his life. Okay, great. So a bit of a poser But I'm I'm as excited as anyone, so that counts. Yeah. So he starts, he knows everybody, as you might expect.
Starting point is 01:39:13 So he introduces me to Martha Ford. Do you know who Martha Ford is? Mortha? Mortha Ford, Martha Ford. Oh, no. Rob, will you look up her age while I'm chatting? She's 99. Huh? 90 fucking nine. Monica, I have to tell you, of all the things, Oh, no, Rob. Will you look up her age while I'm chatting? She's 99
Starting point is 01:39:30 90 fucking nine Monica. I have to tell you of all the things. I mean she's tied with tan with Dan Campbell So she if I am to believe Aaron, uh-huh was the daughter of the Firestone tire Dynasty. Oh, okay married Henry Ford's son She hot I'll get there. Okay, they own the Lions. Yeah. I wasn't even positive I knew. The Ford family owns the Lions. Oh wow. They own the Ford Field, the arena. Martha rolls in on a golf cart and she gets out. Next thing you know, I'm meeting her. She's so tiny. Yeah, I love her. Immediately because she's so tiny. She has a walker. What color hair does she have? White. Okay, I bet. I loved her immediately, because she was so tiny. She has a walker.
Starting point is 01:40:05 What color hair does she have? White. Okay, just checking. I think once you're 99, your standard hair is white. Yeah, but you might dye it. Not Martha. Oh, good for her.
Starting point is 01:40:15 She is such a spitfire. So they get us to line up, the team photographer is gonna take a picture of us. And Martha has a walker, she's 99. And we're about to take the picture and she goes, get this outta here. She chucked her walker. She didn't want that walker fucking anywhere near this photo.
Starting point is 01:40:34 And I was like, I love her. I'll be standing for this and I don't want any evidence of this walker. Oh, I love that. Fun. When I was shaking, I shook her hand for a very long time because I loved holding it. It was like shaking hands with Delta.
Starting point is 01:40:49 Oh. It was a tiny little hand and she was so sweet. And I felt like I was in history. Yeah. Married Henry Ford's son. That is wild. That feels like from another eon. Yeah, it does.
Starting point is 01:41:02 Then I start talking to Dan Campbell's wife, by chance. What color hair? Brownish. Okay. From Dallas, super fun. And before I know it, she's turning her attention away from me because Dan Campbell has walked out of the locker room.
Starting point is 01:41:19 He walks directly up to her and gives her the longest kiss. That's nice. It was so nice. I was like, oh my God, I just love this whole thing. Then she introduces me to him. I'm shaking his hand. I'm very excited to be shaking his hand and saying things. I'm not even sure what I was saying.
Starting point is 01:41:38 You know, oh, sure, I love it. Yeah, it was me. And- Did you hope he would kiss you? Well, I'll get to that. Oh my God. So it's some chit chat, here is me. And- Did you hope he would kiss you? Well, I'll get to that. Oh my God. So it's some chit chat, chit chat. And then he gets distracted and then he's talking to Keegan
Starting point is 01:41:52 and then he's gonna carry on and he gives Keegan a huge hug. And I'm like, I'm gonna, well even worse. I'm like, I'm gonna hug him goodbye. Oh. I'm really afraid to say this because I'm afraid some Lions fans are gonna blame me that this hug jinxed everything. Oh no.
Starting point is 01:42:10 And by the way, I did think it in my head for a couple hours. I started feeling really guilty, like I shouldn't have. But I was like, all right, yeah, great meeting you. And I just gotta make it very obvious I wanna hug and he hugs me. He obliges. And Monica, it was like hugging a water buffalo. I
Starting point is 01:42:27 What do you mean? I need more he is so big like squishy No, no his lats are like this wide his neck is like, you know this wide right for the listener I'm holding my hands very far apart. Yeah, he is I Don't think he's six five. It's a little bit like Toto. He's taller than me. Toto is six nine. In my heart. Same.
Starting point is 01:42:53 But he's definitely taller than me. Let's just say that. And he is just like hugging a redwood. Were you like this? Like you couldn't get your arms? That's what I thought I was, but then I saw a video of it. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 01:43:04 All right. I just loved it. I hugged him then I saw a video of it. Oh, okay. All right. I just loved it. I hugged him. I felt his lats. They were so big. Yeah. I wanted him to throw me on the ground, kind of. A shirt.
Starting point is 01:43:12 Which is interesting. I just kind of wanted to feel his power a little bit. Yeah, I get it. But he was so nice. He's such a nice man. Yeah. He got emotional in the post-game thing. I don't know if you saw that.
Starting point is 01:43:21 I know. It was very sweet. I didn't watch. Yeah, I think he's a vulnerable. Oh. I'm beaming like I'm eight years that. It was very sweet. I didn't watch. I think he's a vulnerable. Oh. I'm beaming like I'm eight years old. Aaron is so excited. Yeah. He took a couple pictures.
Starting point is 01:43:31 He goes, I took a couple pictures. I'm like, oh my God. I'm so glad you took some pictures. Yeah. And they look like a little baby next to him. And Aaron goes, you guys look like twins. Twins? So he's not, wait, I'm confused now. You should be. Twins! Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha Let me look at this person. Hold on. Do you just want to see a picture of me hugging him? Yeah. So you can get a sense of what I'm talking about?
Starting point is 01:44:07 Wow. OK. For the listener who doesn't know. Dan Campbell. It's everything I'm saying, right? No. I'm about to say the actual opposite. The way you describe him is not accurate.
Starting point is 01:44:19 OK? I'm imagining a who? God, how do I? OK, I can't do this well so you were picturing like a monster from Game of Thrones like the Hound or something but not muscular really oh no he was a guy's safety dreamy muscular oh he's the most muscular you say water buffalo you have to understand what people imagine. Water buffaloes are pure muscle.
Starting point is 01:44:47 That's why it's a great comp. It's not. Anyway, he's hot for the listener. This man is very attractive and he's not what Dax explained. And he does look really tall and- Insanely fat, right. Very muscular and fit.
Starting point is 01:45:02 Yeah. And a very handsome face. He looks like he could just run right through a cinder block wall. I don't want to know because I think he's younger than me, which would be a bummer, but I think probably true. Not much. Not much? Yeah, not much.
Starting point is 01:45:15 Okay, that helps. How old is he? 48. 48. Okay. April birthday. Oh, here we go. Here we go.
Starting point is 01:45:23 Rob's kind of got it. Look, I'm not here to make you feel... Okay, first of all, there we are together. Yeah. Look, I see what Aaron's saying. And Aaron, I have the advantage that Aaron's behind me, so I'm closer to Aaron than, look at this. Oh, look at his back, Monica.
Starting point is 01:45:42 Look at the fucking width of his back and how tiny my hand looks on it Oh, well actually that's not my hand. That's That's a lot of beef right there Anyone who watches football has a crush on Dan Campbell. Yeah, I get it. He's like the rock of NFL. Okay. Ben Johnson.
Starting point is 01:46:12 Oh, that's a heartbreaker. I don't want to talk about that. Why? We lost our offensive coordinator, right? I thought he died or something. No, the life of the coordinators now, Coach and the Bears. The Bears took him. Oh, this guy is attractive, yeah. Dan Campbell?
Starting point is 01:46:28 No, we already established he was. Now this new guy is also very attractive and he is 38. Okay, that is just a few months older than you. Correct. Oh my God, what if you were dating him and I was dating Dan Campbell? We could go to the drive-in. We'd be rivals.
Starting point is 01:46:47 Well, now, because of Rob, because he's with the Bears. Well, if I'm dating him. But if he was still at the Lions, we'd both be rooting for the Lions. Oh, this guy was at the Lions? Yes, he was the offensive coordinator. Oh, wow. Okay, so it'd work out perfectly.
Starting point is 01:47:02 We could go to the games together and sit in the box and cheer for our boyfriends. That'd be fun. That would be really fun. It would be just like Taylor, your best friend. Oh yeah, how fun. Okay, wait. Real quick, you're not letting me get a compliment out.
Starting point is 01:47:14 I agree with Aaron in that picture. You guys do look similar. God bless you. God bless you. If you hugged him, you would know we're not terribly similar, but I'm delighted that that's your verdict. Thank you.
Starting point is 01:47:29 Now you know what it's like to be me. Like when I hug big men. Charlie. Yeah. It has a very specific feel. Do you like it or I like it? Do you like the feeling? Of being small?
Starting point is 01:47:46 And safe? Yes. That's what I'm getting at. Like I'm hugging this guy and I'm like, oh wow. I'm good. If whatever runs up behind us a rhinoceros or whatever like it's on him. It's his job. Wow. That's very unlike you.
Starting point is 01:48:02 Exactly. It's a unique feeling for me to be being held by a man that is so much more powerful and big than me that I know he should handle the grizzly bear when it comes through the door. And do you not feel that with Aaron? Aaron, I feel this perfect equanimity. Like I'm a wrestler, he's a puncher. Together we're great.
Starting point is 01:48:23 We're a duo. Mm-hmm. I totally feel safer around Aaron. I know that, like, I don't need to worry about what's behind me. I know that Aaron's always looking out for me. I know Aaron would jump through fire for me. Yeah. I think he feels that way about me.
Starting point is 01:48:36 So, yeah, when I'm with him, and this has been since seventh grade, I feel so safe all the time. Yeah. He'll do anything to protect me and vice versa. But if a rhino comes through the door, Aaron and I got a team up on it. I'm not like, Aaron, go handle this.
Starting point is 01:48:53 But if Dan Campbell was there, I'd be like, Dan, you're up. You would? Yeah, I think so, yeah. Wow. That's a first. I've not heard you say that about anyone. Hence my giddiness. Because you like getting into it. I like being the guy that confronts the rhino,
Starting point is 01:49:09 but also it feels very nice. That's great. To feel very safe that Campbell would be the one that would handle it. Pinning this, I wanna circle back to something, but. Okay, great. Pinning the safety? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:49:20 Okay, I'm sorry. So fast forwarding, got to be on the field when they ran out. That was incredible. Will Ford, son, it was just very fun to meet the Ford family, chatted with a lot of different people. And then we were in the box with Roger Goodell. Roger Goodell is the NFL commissioner. Okay.
Starting point is 01:49:38 And has been for a long time. And just to put, I know it's terrible to quantify it this way, but it made me recognize how esteemed the job is. His previous contract is 70 million a year. And he just signed another three-year contract. No one even knows what it is. But when you're paying someone more than Lewis Hamilton, I feel like you've got a pretty important job. All this info is coming from Aaron because he knows way more about football than I do. So Roger, people don't like him. I think it's the nature of the job.
Starting point is 01:50:07 Yeah, no one ever likes the commissioner. No, no one ever likes the commissioner. That's why they have to pay you a lot. Probably. But I'm not entering with that kind of baggage. I don't dislike him or like him. I just am flattered. He wanted us in his suite. I think largely because of that Golden Globes thing. Oh. I left one thing out. Before I went up to the suite, they played a video on the big screen of me watching the Golden Globes, watching the Lions game at the Golden Globes,
Starting point is 01:50:36 and then cut to, you know, and I had to wave and all that. Oh, cute. That is like McConaughey. Big time, and I've been in that situation several times at Lakers games and these different games. They'll put me on the Jumbotron. Yeah. And it's at best, I would say, it's in the past,
Starting point is 01:50:51 it's like a C plus. Like I feel like generally, maybe 30% of the Lakers crowd will know it's me and be excited. Okay. Because of that Golden Globes thing. It was legit. You know, I've always said, I never got, I'm always. Because of that Golden Globes thing. It was legit. You know, I've always said, I never got,
Starting point is 01:51:06 I'm always envious of that experience that the American Idol people get where they go to their hometown and they're in a convertible. I didn't think that would ever happen to me. And I'm like, when does that happen? That it happened. Oh!
Starting point is 01:51:17 They showed that thing, they cut to me and the place legitimately went bananas. Oh, that's lovely. It was almost hard to accept. But it was, it was unbelievably lovely. I felt so like loved by my people. Then back, okay, Goodell, Roger,
Starting point is 01:51:32 he was immediately most engaging with Aaron. Who wouldn't he? Asking Aaron a ton of questions, really engaging him, talking to me, but like he's not playing there. He's not playing the status game. There's a lot of people in the fucking Barry Sanders is in the box. He's the most famous lions player of all time and the best player of all time and the best running back in history. He's in the thing.
Starting point is 01:51:57 Roger could be chatting him up. He's talking to Aaron. I love him. Yes. He is the, and Aaron's like, I was anticipating that I would have to see my way out of conversations while we, you did your thing with the person who got us the tickets. And I was like, oh, this guy wants to chat with me,
Starting point is 01:52:15 which he did. He's so down to earth and he was so lovely and hyper intelligent and you can see why he's- How old is he? 65. Because- Still good. I did is he? 65. Because. Still good. I did make one joke that got him.
Starting point is 01:52:27 We were talking about the thing I talked about on the previous fact check where it's like, you used to be younger than the players, now you're older than them, but you're younger than the coaches. Yep. Then you're, now I'm older than the coaches and I hope to be younger than the owners.
Starting point is 01:52:40 Thank God Martha's with us, 99. Thank God. I have a lot, yeah. And he and I weren't talking about that. And I said, well, how old are you? Then he goes, 65. And I go, well, you look fucking great, which is true. He's very fit and looks great.
Starting point is 01:52:54 Yeah, look up. Oh, he looks great, yep. And I go, you look fucking great. You're definitely gonna make it to 70. Oh. Pfft. And that, that really tickled them. That's fun. OK, so as you can see, we were on fire.
Starting point is 01:53:09 We were screaming. We were meeting people. We idolized it. It was the two of us were from down the road in a dirt road. And it was really, really fulfilling and beautiful. And I was sharing it with Aaron and it was so special. Yay. Biting back the tears the whole time. And the game starts, it's rough right from the get go. We cannot get a stop.
Starting point is 01:53:31 They score every time they get it. Luckily we score every time we get it. Our offense is great. And it just goes downhill and it gets worse and worse and worse and the crowd gets quieter and quieter and quieter. And I start thinking it's completely my fault because I haven't been to a game.
Starting point is 01:53:47 And you hugged. And I hugged Dan. I'm sincerely regretting hugging Dan Campbell. That's quite a scene. Yes. Yeah. But I think all fans do this. Carly thinks that the two games they lost this season
Starting point is 01:53:57 was because Lola, her dog, didn't have her Detroit Lions bandana on. Yes, people do this. Now you understand my knocking on wood. I do. I was taking a lot of the blame for it. Now you understand my knocking on wood. I do. I was taking a lot of the blame for it. Sorry. It's not your fault.
Starting point is 01:54:10 But I was also refusing to let the outcome take away what a fun season it's been and then this crazy experience with Aaron that was as good as it could possibly get. Good. Remember when I thought that Trump won because my ring was off my finger? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:54:26 And you said, you're not that powerful. I kept telling myself. You said it in a nicer way, but you did say that. I was saying to myself to try to get myself out of the dumps, you don't have any control over the defense. It'd be great if you did. Not that powerful. You're not that powerful.
Starting point is 01:54:41 But I was afraid other people would think I was that powerful. Sure. We'll tell them now, here you're not. I'm not sure if it's not my, I'm only like 70% it's not my fault. That's how I feel about Trump. I still feel it. I still feel like potentially it was the ring and the B.
Starting point is 01:54:57 I feel like that's very universal. Rob, do you blame yourself when your team loses? Yeah, I've got lots of superstitions when I'm watching. Yeah, oh, remember Rob Reiner was on, he said he went to the bathroom and they scored, and then he, so he had to keep going to the bathroom. Yeah, it'll happen. Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare.
Starting point is 01:55:30 Okay, you wanted earmark safety. Yes, I did. So this is a big pivot, but it did remind me that while you were at the game, I had therapy. Oh, okay. I had two big epiphanies. You did? Would you call them breakthroughs? Yes. Okay. Guided two big epiphanies. You did? Would you call them breakthroughs? Yes.
Starting point is 01:55:47 Okay. Guided by my incredible- Your spiritual advisor? Yes, she's, whew, she really is worth her money. Okay, great. Especially because you were a little bit on the fence on the New Year's about whether you're gonna continue on. Well, yeah, I was like, maybe I just go to once a month,
Starting point is 01:56:02 and now I'm like, I gotta go back to two times a week. Um, so the like, maybe I just go to once a month and I'm like, I gotta go back to two times a week. So the fires, you know, it was the first time I'd seen her since then. And first of all, January sucks. I'm gonna say that just like as a fact, January is the worst month of the year. It's horrible, bad things happen. Jan one is when I had nor oral virus yakking for eight hours.
Starting point is 01:56:25 I'm kind of on board, the lion's loss. Go continue. Three out of the five last Januaries have been horrendous. Oh, I got it. You're saying across the board, January blows. Januaries are bad. Okay. Okay, I'm sorry that your birthday is in there,
Starting point is 01:56:40 but like it's a bad, bad, bad, bad, bad month. Weather generally sucks. Yeah, weather sucks. People die. Like things go up in flames literally. It's bad. But I do think they've all like taught me something. I've come out of the, I walked into February with new information.
Starting point is 01:56:59 It's been a gloomy January for a lot of reasons. And I was talking to her about that. Obviously for the fires, we were fine, right? We didn't have to evacuate, our houses are okay. Yeah, we have the best version of it. Exactly, so lucky. But still it's just been like, oh my God, there's so much loss everywhere every day.
Starting point is 01:57:18 You're hearing about somebody else you know who lost everything and you're trying to figure out how to help and it's just like overwhelming. So I kind of figured it was just that. I was like, I think I'm just overwhelmed by everything going on. Then we kind of got to that it was, I think more than that, a more personal,
Starting point is 01:57:35 and I think people who are sort of struggling through this here, who didn't have massive loss, but are still down. Because I know a couple of people who are depressed who aren't normally, I'm surprised. And I realized that in the moment, especially in the moment when you're packing your bag up, and you're panicked because you're like,
Starting point is 01:58:02 I might have to be out of here in 10 minutes, you're standing in your house or apartment or whatever. And you are faced with the two most, like deepest, most existential questions that we have, which are who do you really have and what do you really need? And it's both at the exact same time in a moment of panic, like you have to know the answer.
Starting point is 01:58:32 And I think we walk around with so much false security about those questions, like we think we know or it's fine, but this is like push comes to shove, what's your reality? Yeah, yeah. And- The rubber meets the road in a evacuation. Yeah. Yeah. If you're forced to ask those questions and the answer is I don't know,
Starting point is 01:58:56 it's very heavy. Unsettling. It's very unsettling and destabilizing and like you feel untethered. Yeah. And I think that's potentially what, that's definitely what I am feeling and what I think other people might be feeling too. It's just gonna take some time to process.
Starting point is 01:59:18 Yeah. But I found that helpful to know like, oh, that's what I'm sort of struggling with. Right. It's a deeper, it's much deeper. Well, because you can't work on future natural disasters as a cure. Right? You can only work on the things that actually emerged in that situation that are personal. Yeah. Also, she told me, and this was also fascinating, is in times of true crisis,
Starting point is 01:59:51 and this also happens in death, people become their truest, most base version of themselves. Right. And not the person they've worked on becoming truest, like most base version of themselves. And like not the person they've worked on becoming or are mostly, but who they are at their core. And it's so true. I was thinking about who I was
Starting point is 02:00:20 and who other people were in my life and what was happening. It kind of is what I was bringing up about, like, we do have this genetic wiring to fulfill a role that when it happens, that thing really goes to the front and center. Yeah. Is it related to that or not?
Starting point is 02:00:36 Yeah, I think so. I think it's connected. I think you're, almost your genetics take over, not the artifice of your identity. But I don't know if it's genetics so much as, yeah, yes, but also what you did when you were a kid, how you coped, how you, like a lot of, like your biggest fears,
Starting point is 02:00:58 your insecurities, those things come to the forefront and they're leading the charge. Like they are the thing that comes out. It's wild. And this is one of the times where having a high ACE score is like really nice. Because you've already, you've done a bunch of these. You know, I've done a bunch of police are at the house
Starting point is 02:01:22 and fire departments at the house. But you're still a person. You're still a person in there. You still have a personality. But I have a lot of practice, like submersion therapy, which is like, yeah, we're going to dads in the middle of the night. You live there now.
Starting point is 02:01:36 That's disruptive. And then in sixth grade is fun. You know, like I have a ton of personal experience where it's like, I lived on the other side of those. Right. Does that make sense? Yeah. And I think for a lot of people that have been terrified a bunch of different times,
Starting point is 02:01:55 one of the only benefits is like, you're like, oh yeah, here's another thing. Yeah. And it'll be all right. Yes, I think there's like two things happening. One is like what you're doing, right? And then the other is what you're thinking, who you are in those moments.
Starting point is 02:02:11 Like it is, it's different, right? Like we talked about this before, where it was sort of the first time I had to be like, I have to do everything. I have to figure out what I'm taking. I have to load it in the car. I have to make sure I have this, this, and this. Things I don't normally, things I normally just say,
Starting point is 02:02:26 like whoever I'm with is gonna do half of that stuff. Right. And so I'm doing it, but what's coming up and who I am in it and what I'm thinking is like, I have nobody, I am abandoned. I am really all I have is myself. I'm scared first and foremost. Like that's, I'm scared.
Starting point is 02:02:50 I'm a fearful person. And I have overcome a lot of that in life, but not in this circumstance. I can't. So it's like, it's at a 10. Well, you've probably just been ratcheting up what level for you is manageable over time As you've grown right? Yeah, like panic attacks and soul cycle versus now
Starting point is 02:03:12 There is a threshold that you've kept moving up you can handle it and such and such yeah, yeah some things Exceed that threshold. Yes, and it also was I think important for me to have understanding for how everyone's behaving. Like, everyone is going to behave quite differently because we're all different and had much different life experiences and deal with trauma in very, very, very different ways. Yep. and deal with trauma in very, very, very different ways. Because like on Tuesday, Tuesday night, the first night when it was starting, I was like, you know, texting with a lot of people.
Starting point is 02:03:57 And I was like, I don't even know, I don't know what to do. I don't know how, how do we, Callie and I were both like, well, yeah, we don't know what to do here I don't know how, how do we, what, Callie and I were both like, well, yeah, we don't know what to do here. Like where do we go? What do we do? We were also like kind of joking. Of course.
Starting point is 02:04:11 And then I, and I was also texting with Jess and in my head I was like, well, Jess is down the street. So like that's easy, we'll go. And then at like nine, the other, we start, I start looking at the other fire, the Eaton fire, and it is getting like bigger and bigger. And I called him and he was asleep. And I was like, oh my God,
Starting point is 02:04:30 how can you possibly go to sleep right now? Like, this is crazy. And then I was like, yeah, I think that's who he is in crisis. He like really calm, but to almost like whatever happens. Disassociated almost. Disassociated, whatever happens is gonna happen.
Starting point is 02:04:51 I can't really control it, so I'm just gonna go to bed. I have a question. Yeah. Potentially dangerous, but this just happened, right? It happened with Tom Hanson. I was, to be vague intentionally, I was very much on the verge of blowing everything up in a very public way because of my anger towards something. And I ended up sharing about it in a meeting
Starting point is 02:05:19 that he was at. And in that share, he learns of the timeline. So then he calls me the next day, cause he's my dad and he wants to help me. And I don't call him back. And I don't call him back for three days. And finally in the third day, he's like, what the fuck's going on?
Starting point is 02:05:35 Why won't you call me back? And I finally FaceTime him and I go, I didn't want to talk to you because I didn't want to hear the right answer. I didn't want the right answer. And I know to hear the right answer. I didn't want the right answer. And I know you have the right answer. And so I was avoiding you because I wasn't there. I still wanted to torch everything.
Starting point is 02:05:54 And I didn't want to be talked down. And I apologize, but I just... So in that way, I think we often call people that we want to confirm the answer we're looking for. I do it, I know people call me. Someone wants to buy a motorcycle, they don't call their doctor, they call me. Well, of course, but that's your expertise.
Starting point is 02:06:16 Well, and they know I'm pro motorcycle, right? So I'm curious in that same construct, when you start texting people, do you feel that you start texting other people that you know will also be really nervous and not texting people that you know are gonna tell you, it's not bad? Hmm, that's a good question.
Starting point is 02:06:34 The dangerous part is like, what didn't happen was, you didn't text me. Yes, I didn't. And you knew it wasn't gonna go well if you did, which is fair. Correct. And we invited you over and you didn't wanna be around my energy, which would have been probably rough. Well, there were multiple things,
Starting point is 02:06:50 there was so much happening then that that is more complicated. Okay. But back to, do you think that's happening at all? Are you calling the people that are gonna most reassure you, are they gonna call the people that are gonna confirm it's as scary and dangerous as you feel like it is? That's a good question.
Starting point is 02:07:08 I mean, I guess I'm probably reaching out to people that will confirm, but more, especially in this case, I know for certain that you aren't panicked about this, right? So like me reaching out to you, all I would have been able to- It's gonna be frustrating probably. All I would have said is like, I'm really scared. Yeah. And then I think my fear then is
Starting point is 02:07:39 if you respond without compassion, that will upset me. So what's the point, right? I know where you stand on it and I'm not sure. I know what I would have done. I've been like, first of all, you will not die because you can get in your car and drive away from this fire.
Starting point is 02:07:55 I'd start going through the reasons that, let's just start with, you're not gonna die tonight. You're not gonna die tomorrow. And if your car doesn't start, you call me, I'll pick you up. You're not gonna die tonight. I'm not gonna die tomorrow. Yeah. Right? Yeah. And if your car doesn't start, you call me, I'll pick you up. Yeah. You're not gonna die. Yeah. That would be like, my first goal is just to go like,
Starting point is 02:08:11 there's a lot of things on the table here. Yeah, you might lose your shit. You might lose this beautiful house you've been building forever. Like, we might get to that, but let's just, I would have just wanted to start with like, this isn't a tsunami and we live on the- No, I know.
Starting point is 02:08:25 You know, like we can escape this. Right. Yeah. Which would have been helpful, I'm sure, but I don't know in that moment, what is out of 10 is I'm alone. Right. So I don't think, like all I was really trying to do,
Starting point is 02:08:43 subconsciously, is confirm that I'm not. Right. Or that I am. Right, like all I was really trying to do subconsciously is confirm that I'm not. Right. Or that I am. Right, right, right. Get some validation or confirmation. Yeah. And so I don't know. I mean, I was texting,
Starting point is 02:08:55 the range of people that I was texting was not, they were not, wasn't all panic. Again, Jess slept. So I was like, okay. Yeah. Well, there's probably two things going on. There's like a logistical call list. Yeah. Well, there's probably two things going on. There's like a logistical call list. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:09:07 And then there's a comfort call list. Yeah. And yeah, I probably would have been bad at it. I would have gone straight into what I do often and try to avoid, but still keep doing, which is like not observe you, but try to fix the anxiety. I would be trying to point out,
Starting point is 02:09:27 we are not going to die tonight. I wouldn't, I would be bad at going, yeah, I wouldn't be good at, I wouldn't be good at it. Yeah, which is, you don't need to be good at meeting me at anxious. Like, I don't think that's good. I saw some people, I'll just leave it at anxious. Like I don't think that's good.
Starting point is 02:09:45 I saw some people, I'll just leave it at that. And when I saw them, this was on Thursday morning, the look on both of their faces was, and I registered, oh, fuck, their house burned down. But it didn't. It didn't. Yeah, but maybe they were sitting with some of these things. They were.
Starting point is 02:10:04 I'm not at all shaming anyone for how they dealt with it. But I went, oh my god, clearly their house is gone. And it wasn't. So then I think the primal, primitive side of me goes, we can't have this, it's not productive. We are actually in a situation and there is not room for that. So snap into survival mode.
Starting point is 02:10:36 Yes. And so yeah, I think I can tend to get frustrated in that situation that I think certain people are making things worse. Yeah. In an already bad situation Yes, I do think and that way that was definitely the vibe of my household, you know, yeah So yeah, that's um, and I think I know that yeah about you and and Sometimes that is where we butt heads
Starting point is 02:11:02 because I feel like I can, should, it's okay for me to care. To be scared. And scared and whatever, yeah. And you have no more control over your reaction than I have over Molly. Exactly. I think all of those things would have been true if we were heavily interacting during all that.
Starting point is 02:11:28 Yeah. And I accept it all. And I cause a lot of that. Well, we, but it's both of us. But the only thing I wanted, the thing I need to say out loud that I hope you didn't feel is, I would not be judging you or thinking you're stupid.
Starting point is 02:11:41 I don't think you'd be thinking I'm stupid. If there was any part of you that's afraid to tell me how you feel because I'm going to be judgmental of it. That wouldn't happen. That wouldn't have happened. And I ha and I don't feel that way. I do get pragmatic about if everyone's bawling before we've got in the car, that's going to be a really hard, right? Totally. But do you think-
Starting point is 02:12:01 But I'm not angry at anyone for having their emotions or judgmental of it. I recognize and accept it and I'm not, I don't feel above it. But do you think, and whatever answer is right, my guess is you think I overreact a lot. In general, just in general as a person. See, it's the over that makes it a judgment. Right.
Starting point is 02:12:23 Can I observe that you and I, like I break four ribs, break my clavicle into five pieces, break my hand, break my humerus, drive home six hours, we'll ride two more sessions on the track, drive home five, six hours, go to sleep, don't go to the doctor, don't go to the following day. So that's how I react to things. And then when you cut your hand, you were very scared and you reached out to a lot of
Starting point is 02:12:47 people. So do I recognize the humongous delta between how you and I react to things? I absolutely do. But it's not over and I'm not under. It is this is how Dax reacts for a myriad of reasons. Yeah. And this is how Monica reacts for a myriad of reasons. And this is how Monica reacts for a myriad of reasons. And so that's the thing I wanted to bring up
Starting point is 02:13:09 and make sure you're crystal clear on. I'm not saying overreact. I'm saying I see how you react to things. I can observe it. It's much different than how I react to things. But that does not make me conclude I'm better. I feel that you think that I get upset over things. Well, I do.
Starting point is 02:13:31 I get upset over things that you don't get upset over. To me, that's fine. It's like, the things I get upset over, I believe are upsetting. Like, and I think it's okay to be upset about those things. And I understand that you don't. Like I'm not, I do think at one point
Starting point is 02:13:52 in our long friendship, I was like, why aren't you upset about this? I used to be like that towards you. Like, I don't understand why you're not upset about this. This is upsetting. I don't think that anymore at all. And I respect that you don't, but I wonder if- Well, we can go right at it.
Starting point is 02:14:14 There's a lot of things on the table here. Do I accept that about you? Yes. Does it make me love you less? No. Does it make me not wanna be friends with you? Absolutely not. Now, you and I also do a job together.
Starting point is 02:14:26 We sit down in here to do a fact check and I sit down on a couch and I look across to see you. And often you're upset about things like the election and you can't shake it when you're in here. So now do I think inside of this box, we have to be entertaining and we have to kind of manage how much of a downer we are?
Starting point is 02:14:48 I do professionally. Right. I think we have an obligation. Like, the newscasters got to come on and they can't start crying during the thing. Now, they can feel however they want throughout the whole day. Go ahead. Well, it's just very subjective. Like you cry and people come in here and they cry
Starting point is 02:15:07 and they're allowed. And it's actually some, to me, it's an asset, not crying, but what we've built here, and I do think it's we have built here, a place of honesty and to come in and to plaster a smile a place of honesty and to come in and to plaster a smile when I'm scared or there's fires or there's an election that I think is deeply disturbing to me.
Starting point is 02:15:40 I mean, I'm not saying we need to like wallow in it, but I think it would be such a disservice, not just to me to this show, to our audience, to what we've built here, to pretend like those things aren't upsetting. Like- It's fine if we have a bit of a difference of opinion on that. I do think this show has to be entertaining,
Starting point is 02:15:58 and I don't think either of us can be in a shit mood for four weeks. I think we have an obligation to rise above that, I do. And we differ in that, and I understand what you're saying. I think we have an obligation to rise above that. I do. And we differ in that. And I understand what you're saying. I'm like, well, this is honestly me. And of course, I'm not trying to make someone not be honestly them.
Starting point is 02:16:11 But I know if I'm listening to Howard Stern and Robin, and one of them is just in a dark hole for three weeks, I have compassion for them. But I'm going to go listen to something else at some point. I can't join someone on my hour drive where I'm trying to feel or I'm trying to distract myself from the things I'm worrying about I'm looking for a reprieve. So I think it's I think it's okay. We do have different opinions on what this what obligation we have here to a degree and
Starting point is 02:16:44 I think there's only some, I think there is room for us to be our real selves. But I also think it needs to be monitored and we have to be responsible to do these people that rely on us for an escape deserve something fun and funny a lot of the time. I get that. We did a really good job at that, I think.
Starting point is 02:17:07 Yeah. Anyway. Do you think we did a good job at that? Yeah. Yeah. Okay, but we are running low on time. Facts. Yeah, we have facts.
Starting point is 02:17:18 Okay, so this is for, oh, and I guess it's timely that we talked about the fires and stuff because this is for Josh Gad. Gad, wonderful. We deep dived. Yes, yes, yes, yes. Into that. He's a perfect guest.
Starting point is 02:17:33 He is. He's a perfect guest. He really is. I DM'd him and said so. Oh good, yeah. He's funny, he's smart, he's emotional, he's truthful. Yeah. Yeah, what a soup to nuts.
Starting point is 02:17:48 Same with Adam Scott. I was really delighted with the Adam Scott episode. Really, really delighted. We are. Okay, Josh Gad, you can gift up to $18,000 tax free, but now it's 19,000. Great news. Great news for everyone.
Starting point is 02:18:04 You said your grandparents took you to Scarface in 1981 on opening day and you were six and it was 83. Not as good of a story. Well, eight is still young. It's still young, but it's not a great story. But you know what? We already know that you wouldn't remember it if it was six. So it actually makes more sense that you were eight.
Starting point is 02:18:23 It does, it does. Well, here comes the great thing. And this is on topic because he's written a memoir. Yeah. I have tons of memories. I have tons of memories. And I know my kids don't remember shit. So of course I'm quite skeptical of them,
Starting point is 02:18:37 but I could take a polygraph. Well, yeah, because you believe it. I do. So you'll pass it. I know every time someone says now and I feel bad, but when people say like, oh yeah, I was three. And I remember I'm like, you don't. But okay, I'm reading Bill Gates book right now.
Starting point is 02:18:54 Oh, he might. Cause he does. I believe it. Yeah. But his brain's different than most people's. So speaking of Easter egg, I guess we can talk about this later maybe if you want. Have you started telepathy tapes?
Starting point is 02:19:12 No, what is that? I saw that in the comments. It's a podcast about neurodivergent, mainly nonverbal autism. Oh, Kristin listened to it. Yes, she did. Most of the girls are listening to it in our group. And nonverbal autism,
Starting point is 02:19:33 a lot of people have stories about their children. Communicating telepathically over a distance of miles, like in a town, meeting at a place called like Mine Mountain or something where they are. I haven't got there yet, but also they, mainly with their like parents often. I mean, I'm only one upset.
Starting point is 02:19:50 I do think the human brain. Has more potential than we're aware of. Than we'll ever know. And I think I kind of do think anything is possible. Yeah. For the brain. I overheard a lot of it. I was debating whether or not to listen to it. Yeah. I asked a
Starting point is 02:20:05 friend that we very much trust, you and I. An incredibly smart friend. Yeah. He says there's little science to back any of that up. Yeah. And that will be so hurtful to the people who have experienced this and maybe they've experienced it, whatever. But I would need a pretty robust bit of science behind it to believe that people are telepathically communicating over miles. It's a tough one for me. I don't know about the over miles, because I'm not there.
Starting point is 02:20:32 Well, someone said something really interesting about it. They were like, we've all in some ways communicated telepathically, like non-verbally to people we are very hyper-connected to. Sure. And just in a room, you know, you can feel, we can feel energy shifting. There's real.
Starting point is 02:20:49 But would you agree? I think that's way more pattern recognition. So like, I know you so well. I've observed now so many contexts where things happen and then I see the results of it. Yeah. So, so often we're at a dinner and I hear someone say something
Starting point is 02:21:03 and I know in a second what you're gonna think and I look Over at your face and then you look at me and I confirm. Oh, yeah, I do know exactly and vice versa Yeah, but that to me is more pattern recognition like oh in stimulus a Generally results in output B, but don't you think even when we're sitting here? I'm sitting there next to you. You can't see my face, but often- I can feel the fuck out of your energy. Yeah, and vice versa, I do too. But I can't actually hear your thoughts.
Starting point is 02:21:33 I know, but I think that's a little rigid, I think. Okay. Because all I'm trying to say is, I think people do communicate non-verbally a lot and we don't even really recognize it. Yes. And I do think people are on a scale of how attuned they are to other people's energies and it depends on the person, definitely.
Starting point is 02:21:56 Yep. And so I don't know. I'm open to that being the truth. Let me just say, I want that to be the truth. Yeah. I would love the notion that these non-verbal kids are communicating telepathically. Yeah. The truth. Let me just say, I want that to be the truth. Yeah. I would love the notion that these nonverbal kids are communicating telepathically. I actually want that.
Starting point is 02:22:10 Me too. But I have such a knee jerk about getting duped. Yes. Like, I know there's an emotional thread to this that makes it a little bit, and that is a red flag to me. It's like, yes, I think when you get me emotionally involved and I am very sympathetic already to the subjects, I'm not really in my most subjective mind anymore.
Starting point is 02:22:31 Yeah, remember the woman we had on. About hiring more neurodivergent people? Yes, and she herself is neurodivergent. And remember, like she has synesthesia, she could just pull the meaning from a book from basically staring at the pages. Like she does have skills that just. Boggle the mind.
Starting point is 02:22:52 Yes. Absolutely. Marine Dune. Marine Dune, yeah. Yeah, Marine Dune. That's all very interesting. And I don't know why I brought that up. There was a, oh, memories maybe? Memories, we're at about memories. Okay, real quick. I don't know why I brought that up. There was a, oh, memories maybe?
Starting point is 02:23:05 Memories, we're talking about memories. Okay, real quick. He said the funniest person he ever worked with was Andrew Reynolds, minus us. Present company excluded. Exactly, but we have not worked with him. So then it brought up this interesting question. Although you could count us doing an episode with him.
Starting point is 02:23:26 I don't count that. That's our work. And his work is promoting. I don't count it. It's a stretch. Then that brought up this interesting philosophical question that's in my book, Intermezzo. There's a really interesting question that comes up
Starting point is 02:23:38 in this book I'm reading that's sort of similar to this of what's truth and what's a lie. And I'm gonna, we'll talk about it next week. I'll bring it up. It's kind of a riddle. Okay, great, yeah, read it like, do the thing from the book exactly. Okay, I will.
Starting point is 02:23:52 That's kind of, that's it. That's it? Yeah. All right. I mean, GLP-1s, that was a really interesting topic and conversation, I thought. I was happy he talked about it. Yeah, me too.
Starting point is 02:24:04 But also, yeah, they're just doing some, they're finding so much interesting stuff about GLP-1s and I'm interested. I'd say 10% of Eric and I's conversations are about GLP-1s. Yeah, it's really wild. Very fascinating. I kinda wanna try it.
Starting point is 02:24:20 Oh wow. Not for weight loss. For wine? No, not for weight, yeah, not even for, I just want to see. Like what does it do on my psyche? Yeah, Eric's the exact same. Like there's no shift other than he doesn't eat as much. Right. You know what I'm saying?
Starting point is 02:24:36 And he doesn't crave sugar. Which that was his addiction. And so he's not in a shitty mood because he hasn't eaten 10 pounds of sugar. So it's like it does impact his mood, but not because it's changing his mood, but because he's not actually dealing with all the fallout from.
Starting point is 02:24:49 Interesting. Yeah. Again, it sounds all great, but beneficial to me. It might highlight what your addictions are, because if you stop wanting something, it might tell you like, actually you crave that a lot. Yeah, yeah. Anyway, all right, so that's it.
Starting point is 02:25:06 All right, I rode my bike by your house today. Oh, you did? Yeah. Did you wave? Yeah, love you. Love you. Follow Armchair Expert on the Wondry app, Amazon Music, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen to every episode of Armchair Expert early and ad free right now by 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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