Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - Laufey

Episode Date: April 27, 2026

Laufey (A Matter of Time, Mei Mei the Bunny, and Bewitched) is a two-time Grammy Award–winning singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist. Laufey joins Armchair Expert in between Coachella... performances to discuss growing up between Iceland and the US with a violinist mother in the Iceland Symphony Orchestra, how having an identical twin helped shape her sense of self, and navigating her identity as a biracial kid in a homogenous society. Laufey and Dax talk about the discipline of classical music training at Berklee, building a fanbase during COVID through her Sunday livestreams and vintage jazz-inspired covers, and why she believes general admission is the best way to experience Coachella. Laufey explains how discipline should be about building habits rather than winning, how choice can be more overwhelming than limitation, and how vulnerability is the real key to connection - both onstage and off.Take printer ink off your to-do list with HP Smart Tank | hp.com/SmartTankCheck Allstate first for a quote that could save you hundreds: https://www.allstate.com/See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome, welcome, welcome to armchair expert. I'm Dak Shepard. I'm joined by Monica Padman. Hi there. Hi, today we have Lave. Yes. We have Lave. She is a two-time Grammy award-winning singer and songwriter.
Starting point is 00:00:13 And what was so special is we got her right between her two performances at Coachella. I know. We got her like right off the presses. So we got to hear about how that first experience went. Yes. And then added bonus, she brought her identical twin sister. Oh, it was so fun. We love twins.
Starting point is 00:00:31 We love twins. We have twin experts just coming on. I mean, it's really in the zeitgeist. Her album's Everything I Know About Love, Bewitched, a matter of time, and a new deluxe album out now, a matter of time, the final hour. She also has a children's book out now called May May the Bunny, which we'll hear about. Yeah, May May gets a little nervous before a big performance. Of course she does. Please enjoy Lave.
Starting point is 00:00:59 He's an ultra expert You guys, are they really twins? Identical. We love twins! We do. We kind of obsessed with twins. We have so many questions about twins. Well, we've had a twin expert on, and of course you're probably, yeah, yeah. You should watch that.
Starting point is 00:01:28 Yeah, you should. It's interesting. First of all, you should watch all 1,000 episodes. I've seen all 1,000. I've seen all 1,000, 1,000. No, there's all. kinds of mind-boggling things. You know, twins separated at birth, identical twins separated at birth.
Starting point is 00:01:45 Just studies about personalities. We don't get to do that with many people, but with twins. Yeah, everybody is supposed to be the same. Experiment subjects. Oh, totally. You could cut like a scar on our knee, track how we heal. Like, we could just do that for some. So we could put one of you in the Amazon with the same cut and one of you in Iceland,
Starting point is 00:02:06 and ding, ding, and see where you healed better. Yeah. Or there was one in Brazil or Columbia where two identical twins were born in the same hospital, and they accidentally switched one from each. And so a pair of twins went into the country, raised in a very rural environment. And then another pair of twins were raised in the city, completely different kind of parents. One was wealthy. One was rural. But when this all got unveiled and they realized, oh, no, you're an identical twin and your twin is in rural Brazil. When they got to, you. together, despite being raised in those dramatically different environments, they were almost the exact same person. And same with the other two. Wow. I'm so pissed if I were the one who hadn't been raised in poor and rural. I know. I know.
Starting point is 00:02:52 I see those, like, studies where they show a twin that, like, drank more or smoked more. Oh, yeah. And, like, they look worse for wear. And I always think that's going to be me. You're going to be the one that looks more haggard. I drink and Larry doesn't drink. Oh. So I'm to look like ass.
Starting point is 00:03:09 Okay. Just because I'm on like a continuous tour. Yeah, you're like I just want to take care of. It's not like a choice to appease the above. Yeah. If you had your druthers, you would be drinking much more and smoking much more. You went smoke. You sing too much, right?
Starting point is 00:03:24 Yeah, I think so. What about pranks? Have you guys done pranks on people? The pranks are super underwhelming because they haven't shocked anyone. One time on April Fool's Day, we were like, like, fuck it. We're going to swap. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:03:40 And we swapped and we were in two different classes. So I went to her class and she went to mine. Oh, this is, okay, back in school. Yes. And her class watched a movie. So I watched a movie and my class had a pop quiz. Oh, no. Oh, so she got screwed.
Starting point is 00:03:56 Yeah, but also you got screwed. No, she got to watch a movie. I know, but your grade is now. Exactly. She got the last laugh. Yeah, she did. but no one noticed and then when we told people
Starting point is 00:04:09 people felt like a little embarrassed because they wanted to treat us like human beings which is sweet so they couldn't laugh right? Okay They were also just like
Starting point is 00:04:18 ashamed and embarrassed so it wasn't like a gotcha moment it was like a oh you heard their feelings how we react by treating them still like human beings oh wow
Starting point is 00:04:29 don't you agree that's kind of how it read yeah people were too woke to laugh about getting twins next up yeah that's upsetting We should always be able to laugh at twin mixups. Yeah, yeah, yeah. We put the effort in.
Starting point is 00:04:40 Just a giggle. Yeah. Okay, so I'm most curious right out of the gates how mom and dad meet because mom's from China, dad's from Iceland. How do they meet? So my mom's a violinist and she got a place in the Iceland Symphony Orchestra. Congrats, Mom. So she, for some reason, was just. ready for an adventure, decided to move to Iceland and be the one Asian person in Iceland.
Starting point is 00:05:11 How did they meet? I don't know the exact story, but Iceland is a very small community. I'm sure my dad just saw my mom around was like, wow, she's so cute. Yeah. I went a couple summers ago, very, very small. Did you get good weather or bad weather? Great weather. Really?
Starting point is 00:05:27 Okay. Yeah. I mean, it's on the chilly side. I take it really personally. Like, if people hated Iceland, I'm like, I will personally take them back. and walk them around the country. Okay, but have you ever heard someone say they didn't like Iceland? Have you gotten that feedback?
Starting point is 00:05:42 Yeah. You have? Iceland's an unpredictable beast. You know, if you're going and you want to see a rainbow behind the waterfall or the northern lights and there's just like an orange weather warning the whole time. Yeah, that sucks. What's an orange weather warning? I forget the exact levels of it, but there's like a yellow warning, orange warning.
Starting point is 00:06:00 I think there's a red warning to just different levels of how fuck do you are and how much She cannot travel around the country. Because of snow, blizzard. Yeah. The second it hits any type of warning, it's like, get off the roads. Okay. Which doesn't stop anything. Now, here's something I could see someone complaining about.
Starting point is 00:06:18 And we were blessed, privileged. We had great blackout drapes in our hotel. But you're there in the summer. Doesn't touch me. You're not going to sleep if you don't have blackout. I mean, because it's light out at 3 a.m. Well, yeah, it's so fun to go out at night during the summer because you, leave the bar and it's past midnight and there's just this orange sunset slash sunrise because the
Starting point is 00:06:41 sun just doesn't hit like it just sits on the horizon. Yeah, it just kind of goes across the horizon. It just goes across. Yeah. And it's so beautiful. It's just electric. So just get drunk. I'm an ex-addict. I don't know if you know this about me, but the whole time there I was like, man, I could have died so well here in this city. It's very, with cocaine. I could have just gone. That is also how people just thrive in the cold, chilly, odd climate that Iceland is. Heavy drinkers, right? Yeah. I didn't really think about it growing up. When I left Iceland for college, I noticed how weird Iceland was, or not weird, but just different.
Starting point is 00:07:14 I remember distinctly coming back from my first, like, holiday for Christmas, coming back to Iceland and noticing how very dark it was. And you wake up and it's still dark in the winter. It's affected me a little more now as I've spent more time in the States. California will mess you up. People get very pressed about like daylight savings and like, all. No, no. Like, it's getting dark so early. And I'm like, you guys should go to Iceland and then come back and you'll be so thankful. It's weird. You also spent time in D.C. So dad worked for the IMF. He's Icelandic. What's the IMF? International Monetary Fund? Thank you. Yeah. You guys went to D.C. when you were seven to nine. Is that the ages? Yeah, seven to nine. And then also when I was like a teeny tiny baby, but I don't remember that. I sound very Americanized. but I really only lived there from a bit of first grade, second grade. But it was so formative, right?
Starting point is 00:08:11 It's like when you learn to read and write. So I always had this kind of memory of living in America at that age. It's like you have McDonald's and you have American girl dolls and you have Target. Yes. And that was like daily Disneyland. Yeah. Whereas, and then you back to Iceland. Also, we moved back in the middle of the recession, the financial crisis, which hit
Starting point is 00:08:35 Iceland really hard. So it was such a different atmosphere to land into. Yeah, was your dad stressed beyond belief? Because that was the role he was taxed for the government. Yeah, well, we lived in America when all the bad shit was going down. V-08 meltdown. Yeah, exactly. And then we moved back into just like this absolute mess of a system. And I have the class, like, I don't really know what my dad does. But he was definitely working very hard to help fix things there. Is he 11 feet tall? How tall is he? I don't know. I don't think about my parents' height. Okay. What makes you think he might be 11 feet tall? Because the Icelandic men are really tall. Like all those Nordic folks, they tend to get up there.
Starting point is 00:09:16 Viking-like. Now, listen, I'm a father of daughters. And I'm going to be honest with you. If I was listening to my daughter on the show and she didn't know how tall I was or what I did for a living, I think my feelings might be hurt. Well, it's all confusing because I still don't completely understand American height. Oh, because you're in meters. I lost a little bit sight of meters, too.
Starting point is 00:09:35 So I'm kind of stuck in an in-between. It's the same with Fahrenheit and Celsius. I kind of never really know the temperature. Some people can be a person without a country or a person without measurements. I'm a person without measurements. Yeah. Well, numbers don't matter. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:49 It's about feeling. That might be liberating. I think a lot of people don't know what their moms and dads do specifically. They know, like, the overarching. How tall is your dad? I don't know. Oh, God. You guys.
Starting point is 00:10:03 I really don't know like his exact. No, he's not. No, he's not. He's like, that's your father. He doesn't know how tall I am. Yeah, I don't think my dad knows how tall I am either. Like I'm girl height. You're very rare.
Starting point is 00:10:15 Oh, I love numbers. Also, I find that in the States, maybe this is because I went into the conversation of dating and then height became this thing. I never thought about height until I started dating. Then that became the number. Like, 5-11 meant nothing to me. before the age of like 20. How tall are you? Do you know how tall you are?
Starting point is 00:10:37 Uh-oh. Five, five, five, I think. Like five, four and a half, five-five. You just threw out five-11 and I was like, I just hugged you. I don't think you were five-11 from dating men. That's the height that men are scared of saying that they are. Oh, right. They'll say they're six feet.
Starting point is 00:10:53 Exactly. Yeah. But I don't really know what any of that means. Yeah, you're like, who cares. Exactly. You're 5-11 is bigger than six. It's 511. So it seems bigger.
Starting point is 00:11:03 makes no, I don't understand that system. What do you mean? It caps out at 11, then it turns to like a new number. Yes, it's a terrible system, the English system. I agree. Okay, so mom was this concert violinist. What was her time commitment there? I know she practiced every single day, but what was the hours worked? Because they know how she was on you both learning music. And I'm curious, how much free time she had for that. She's also a teacher. So taught a lot of violin students. And we just kind of were her students as well. When we were born, she definitely prioritized our music education, but she was always in the orchestra as well. How was she doing in Iceland? That's a big change for her from China. Yeah, huge. I ask her all the time because it's so, well, as somebody who's moved very far from my country to a different part of the world, I have all this modern technology.
Starting point is 00:11:54 Like I can call her every single day. I can connect to Icelandic culture still. And even through the internet finding like an Icelandic community in L.A., like there's just. so many different ways that you can connect to a culture still. I don't want to say that she didn't think about it, but I think that was the option. So she just went with it. And what I really admire about my mom is she never saw being Chinese or being Asian in Iceland as some sort of drawback. She didn't sit around lamenting that she was different than everybody else. I think I do a whole lot more of that than my mother. She's never done any of that. She just moves forward, very entrepreneurial, And she just makes beauty out of everything.
Starting point is 00:12:34 Don't you think that speaks volumes about when you decide something versus something's been decided for you? So she decided to leave China. So she's not going to go to Iceland and be like, boo-hoo, I'm Chinese in Iceland. She chose it. But you're just born in Iceland. You're like, what's up? Why am I the only person here? I've been thinking so much actually about the choices we have and how confounded by choice I often am.
Starting point is 00:12:57 I think about in contrast with my mother where she didn't have. nearly as many options, you just take what you can get in a sense. Yeah. And when you get a position in an orchestra, you just go. And whether that's in Iceland or Antarctica or Singapore, you know, in the States, you go where a door opens. And I think that there's kind of a beauty to that. And it's such a privilege to have so many options. You go to a restaurant and there's one plate on the menu, just eat it and I'll be happy.
Starting point is 00:13:26 But, you know, you go to the cheesecake factory. You're confounded by choice. Yeah, yeah. And sometimes that is a whole lot more stressful experience. Yeah. It makes me realize that because she chose it, it's one thing. And if you didn't choose it, and if you could trick yourself into going like, oh, I chose this experience at all times, you would experience it much differently if you could just
Starting point is 00:13:46 fool yourself into that. Oftentimes, I think about my mother's journey and how a door would open and she would just walk through it. She wouldn't look around like, is there another door around me? Is there racism there? Oh yeah Everywhere I guess Absolutely
Starting point is 00:14:02 And it's something that Whispers in Iceland too Because there are so few people Of color Right I guess it was my question That it's like people in Iceland Oftentimes love to pretend That it doesn't exist
Starting point is 00:14:13 Because it is a very progressive society Yeah And we are very Forward thinking in many ways Like we had the first democratically voted Female Head of State The President
Starting point is 00:14:22 In the 80s Vigti Svimpo who was a single mom And she was voted And currently we have a female president, female prime minister, a lot more female ministers as well. It's truly like a country that is run by women, which I'm so proud of. So progressive in so many ways, but I still think there's so much work to be done when it comes to diversity. But there's so little diversity that
Starting point is 00:14:45 the conversation doesn't come up as often. But I think it's something that's increasing and I'm happy that people are talking about it. Yeah, I don't want to excuse racism, but I also want to acknowledge people, when they have no experience with other groups, they are less, left only with stereotypes. The way I like to describe it even for myself, and I'm only half Asian, I am white passing in many instances, but in a class of 250 blonde-haired, blue-eyed people, you walk in and you have different features and you're eating different food at home. Immediately, everybody will turn around and be like, oh, what's this?
Starting point is 00:15:21 Sometimes, but it wasn't meant to be like a negative thing, but I often felt so different growing up by the nature of being a part of a very homogenous society. Yes, okay, but you're also saved by the fact that you're bouncing around everywhere, right? So you're in Iceland until seven, then you're in D.C. for a couple years and you're with international students where you go to school. By nature of being in D.C., I went to a public school, but everyone was from a different country. Yeah. Which was really cool, which I think is why I loved being in D.C. so much.
Starting point is 00:15:51 And then summer's in China. Yeah. So when you go to China, are you also feeling exotic and all? Yeah, but I never really thought of it. For some reason in China, I was always so excited to go to China and excited to be with my grandparents and excited to speak Chinese and eat the food. When I speak Chinese and China, people are so warm about it. They love speaking Chinese and they love when Westerners are trying to claim their language or speak it or something like that. And you speak Mandarin, right? Mandarin. Whereas Icelanders, I often find, if you try to speak Icelandic to them and you even have a lick of an accent, they'll switch to English. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:16:30 Like, don't even try it. Exactly. That's kind of the difference. It's fun to try to be a part of China because the culture, the food, they love when you embrace it. Whereas like in Iceland, there's all these kind of weird social rules. But they're both music professors. So obviously, this comes very natural for you to be in this situation. But when I'm looking at your life, I have a lot of.
Starting point is 00:16:50 and I could be totally wrong, but I see, like, moving around a lot, that leads to crazy loneliness, Ken, the level of dedication to learn cello, to learn piano, to end up yourself playing cello at the symphony orchestra at 15. These are lonely endeavors. And until I read you at an identical twin, I have like one whole thought of your childhood, but then when I think you have an identical twin, that must help Buffett all of those things. Absolutely. Yeah. Can you imagine having done this whole same life of yours, but by yourself? No. You know, it's funny you say the word lonely, and the whole time I'm thinking, I really don't know. Like, lonely in a sense, but different is always the word I use because I felt different, but I was never alone. Like I always had, you knew, my sister with me. And especially classical music education can be quite a lonely endeavor. When I started playing in chamber groups and orchestra, I started loving it so much more because it became a social thing. And you'd hang out with your other friends that were doing this. really odd thing as well, which is like studying. You're basically Olympians. Well, it's a solo sport
Starting point is 00:17:55 until it becomes a group sport. But also just the bond of practice required is all consuming, no? Yeah, I mean, it takes up your whole life in a way. And that becomes your identity. And I never questioned it. I don't want to say that I didn't have the freedom to do other things, but I just came from a family of classical musicians and knew that that's what I was meant to do. When I was younger, I saw it as just like a part of school. It's cool. And then I went home and I cello for an hour. You're like, it was just part of the routine. Like this is just what I do. Yeah. And then as I grew older and it became more of like a choice of are you really going to want to pursue this? That's when my mom was like, this is in your hands now. If you want to continue on this
Starting point is 00:18:35 journey, you continue. And if you don't, you don't have to. What age was that? 14, like high school age. Did your sister also play? Yes. But she played violin and I played cello. We both played piano, but we had our kind of separate things there, but we could often play together, which was lovely. And what does that do to the dynamic between mother and daughter when mom is the teacher and mom's overseen? And I heard you in an interview on Fresh Air saying, like, yeah, if she hears you not play the right note from the other room
Starting point is 00:19:05 while she's working with her on the violin, she's screaming to you. I went to, again, another stereotype, but like the Chinese immigrant American child in America has very specific. And it's going to be like fucking math by row. this really intense, you've got to get this skill because you must be safe. I want to know what that dynamic was. Was there tension or was that easy? Instilling this level of discipline, healthy discipline in me, I think a lot of kids get it
Starting point is 00:19:31 through sports and I got it through music. It's funny how much of a taboo, I don't even know if taboo is the right word, but I think sometimes when people talk about immigrant parents and how hard they are on their children, they love to, especially when it comes to like music or school, they love to make it sound like this really oppressive thing. And sometimes it totally is. Do not get me wrong. I had a really healthy relationship with my mother and discipline. So many kids get this through sports. And I feel like it's okay with sports somehow in the eye of, you hear about kids who push really hard to become Olympians or football players or basketball players and they grind and they spend all their time
Starting point is 00:20:10 with their coaches and their coaches push them hard. And I find that the conversation around that, it's like, okay. Whereas people talk about the mean Chinese mother or something. Well, I have opinions about the sports thing. So yes, it's great when you turn out to be Tiger Woods. But for every Tiger Woods, there were a couple thousand kids whose relationships with their father was completely destroyed. For something that didn't amount to anything. Because the dad had fucking dreams of being on the PGA. So definitely it happens. And yes, when I'm talking to you, it works out. Like here, here, you have two Grammys. Of course here. But I think unfortunately, a lot of people end up modeling that. Again, if the payoff is there, then yeah, if you end up at the Olympics, yeah, but if you also just rode your kid for 12 years and they weren't destined to be an Olympian, then no, I don't think that's cool.
Starting point is 00:20:53 I've definitely seen mean examples of it. I mean, of course, in classical music. I'm kidding me. But this is where I think it was really healthy. My mom's goal with making sure I practiced every day was not to make me the best solo cellist in the world. It was only about teaching. teaching good habits and discipline, being able to stick to something, seeing it through, dedicate yourself to something. And that's something I'm so grateful for. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Even as I've left classical music, I've been able to transfer that to school or life or work. I think I'm really fortunate that it was just about good habits and not just about winning.
Starting point is 00:21:38 Yeah. She didn't care about me winning. And I think that's where it gets really unhealthy. healthy when parents just want their kids to win. Miss the spelling being yelled at the whole right home. Yeah. Like my mom would never ever do that. But societally, I do think you're right.
Starting point is 00:21:53 This is interesting. I'm even thinking just personally, I do that. Like if I hear that a coach or something is pushing their protege very hard, I'm like, yeah, that's what you have to do. That's how you do to get a gold medal. I don't have any judgment of that. But yes, if I hear someone's like, oh my God, they made me do so many math problems. like wouldn't let me get out of my seat.
Starting point is 00:22:14 I'd be like, oh, no, that's a problem. Yeah, exactly. There's a different dynamic. If you have a coach and you've told your parent, I really want to be a gymnast. Okay, great. Here's the best coach. And then when you disappoint the coach, you understand they're not disappointed. They're teaching me this thing.
Starting point is 00:22:28 But I think where it gets blurry is when your parent is your teacher and you fail, I do think there's an extra layer. Yeah. I mean, my mom always made sure we had teachers. Oh, okay. She was never our. primary teacher. And I think that's really important.
Starting point is 00:22:46 Yes, yes, yes. It was more for my sister because she's a violinist, so she taught my sister who played violin. I literally chose cello because I was like, I don't want my mom to teach me. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And I don't want to have to be measured by her either. Like, here's an example of perfection in the house.
Starting point is 00:23:02 Do I want that? My grandfather was a violin professor in China, and he taught all of these amazing Chinese prodigies. And I just saw those kids. I was like, all right, I'm not going to. match up, but I love the sound of cello. It sings more. I think cello is my favorite instrument of all of the traditional ones because it goes more places. It's like, I don't know, is it a base sometimes? It can go a bit high. Like, it just feels very versatile. It can be all over the place. You're playing with the bow.
Starting point is 00:23:27 Sometimes they're not. It feels more of a flexible and improv-friendly instrument than some others, but maybe that's completely rubbish. I don't know. I think what it is is just when people listen to violin, they think a lot more about technique, fast passages, funds, if you will, like to compare it to singing. Whereas if you think about cello, it's about tone, it's about heart, it's about how it touches you. It's a lot more melodic in that way. Do you love watching Wednesday play the cello? Are you stoked that like it looks so cool? I'm stoked that there is any type of cello in the world. In pop culture. That always makes me feel so seeing, whether it's School of Rock or Wednesday or anything, I always celebrate.
Starting point is 00:24:11 celebrate it. Whenever a character plays the cello, I'm like, yes. She's also such a badass. Yeah. And I love how Wednesday gets her anger out by playing cello. And I feel like that's actually really cool because cello is known to be this melodic, like, sad instrument. I love it. I always think string playing in movies and TV is so funny because it's almost never synced correctly. And you know too much. I know too much. Yeah. And it always. And it always. always looks kind of silly. But I can tell that Jenna or take up put in the time to like learn the instrument. And I think that's so cool. Yeah. I want to acknowledge how you and I are almost like if there was a spectrum of this, we'd be on opposite ends of the spectrum, which is like I'm not a master of anything. I did one million things as a kid. I mean, you're a master of something. I don't know if I
Starting point is 00:25:02 am. But my childhood was completely undiscipline. My mom was at work all day, single mom. By the way, despite all of this, I'm extremely jealous of. Okay, great. Because when I'm looking at your life, and of course, my life got me here, and I like where I'm at. And your life got you here and you like where you're at. So we could make cases for either. But when I look at your childhood, I go, oh, no, well, where was the childhood? Because when you weren't doing those things, which are already very time consuming and repetitive and so much practice, you're doing ballet. Highly disciplined.
Starting point is 00:25:32 Yeah, like the level. I know. But I was terrible at it. It was just dancing. So for me, discipline's like, oh, but I'm just curious, do you think you pay? paid any price or you gave anything up for that to end up as skilled as you were? No, I don't think so. Okay, gray.
Starting point is 00:25:52 On the spectrum of classical music, I was still pretty lax. Like, when you look at the kids that are really out there performing, they are on a different level. I still had a childhood. Like, I still had fun. I think I didn't start being a teenager early enough, but that came a lot more from my personality. I was really scared of growing up. I really didn't want to be an adult.
Starting point is 00:26:14 I really wanted to be a child. I had this weird complex about wanting to be a child always. I can't explain it. I was scared of drinking and scared of going to parties and scared of going on dates. Super scared of boys. I was a very insecure child. I didn't feel great about how I looked or my body. And I just didn't feel confident enough to go do that.
Starting point is 00:26:37 And how similar are your personalities? Like what was your twin experience? We were both like that. And I think we both like spiraled into it together. I felt weird and times two. Imagine feeling like you take up a lot of space and are super annoying. And you're in your head about that and you feel like you dress differently and you look bad and you look ugly times two. I felt like I was walking around being extra weird, extra different.
Starting point is 00:27:05 This is tough because she's here. But yes, I was insecure. and then any family member of mine also made me insecure, right? Like, I might not have like what was going on with me, but also it's like, then you bring other family members, and I'm embarrassed on their behalf. Oh, yeah. So if you didn't like yourself and then there's an identical version of you cruising around, that's just more embarrassment in a sense for me.
Starting point is 00:27:25 Absolutely. And we were referred to as the twins. We didn't have our own names. There was like this two-year period where the teacher would be like, oh, and twins. And we would scream back, it's live and you're. We genuinely, that was like my one act of rebellion ever in high school. I hated being called the twins because I wanted to have my own identity. I'm sorry we're so interested in it.
Starting point is 00:27:48 No, honestly, I love talking about it. It's a weird thing. And I feel like I've overcome it so much. So I do love talking about it because I think when you're in high school, you can feel so trapped in your identity and think that that's the only way you're ever going to be. But to your earlier point on where was the opposite of discipline, right? I wouldn't be where I am now if I didn't leave home for college, leave my twin sister. She went to University of Scotland.
Starting point is 00:28:13 I went to University in Boston and start living life. How scary was that first year? It was really scary until it was really fun. Can I back up, though, because I want to know how this girl with this personality means very understandable insecurities that we all have. How did you deal with being on stage at 15 for the orchestra, symphony orchestra, and then TV twice? Like you were on Ireland got talent? Why isn't it in Iceland got talent?
Starting point is 00:28:35 It's island got talent. But Iceland and Iceland is Iceland. Oh, Iceland got talent. Okay. I mean, Iceland is an island. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And then also the voice. I competed in every single singing competition or talent competition I could find.
Starting point is 00:28:53 So how did you do with those when you were feeling insecure as a young woman? And then you're also having to get on TV and performance stage. Did you disassociate and have a different persona? How did you manage that? I was insecure as a girl, but I was not insecure as a musician. Oh, great. That's great. Many that's part of the reason you loved it so much is like it was your superpower.
Starting point is 00:29:11 I loved going on stage. I've always felt so comfortable on stage. And I think that's where I found my confidence. So you were a finalist in one and then a semi-finals in the other. Yeah. Were kids at school not intrigued by this? Were you like popular for it? I don't know if popular is the right word.
Starting point is 00:29:29 People definitely knew that I was doing all that. But it didn't mean I was cool by it. anyway. Were you getting any credit for that? Where people like, hey, I saw you on Iceland got talent. You were great. And you're like, thank you. It was like, however little credit she got, I got less because when I got it was kind of like, oh, I'm sorry. Yeah. I think your twins, like the Wednesday version of you. Would you say that? I mean, we need to talk more. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I'm a really fun complimentary vibe.
Starting point is 00:30:02 Yeah, yeah, yeah. We fill into each other's sentences. Is he the naughtier twin? Oh, for sure. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Was that always the case? Or is that when you said when you guys went to college and you kind of separated? We went in and out of naughty and now I'm touring a lot and needing to make sure I'm sleeping.
Starting point is 00:30:17 Discipline comes back in the play. And both of our lives are quite crazy. I've literally dragged Junia into all of this with me, which is so lovely because it's such a weird thing to go through and to go through it together. Again, I'm still not lonely. Yeah, it's wonderful. Stay tuned for more armchair expert. If you dare. We are supported by Allstate.
Starting point is 00:30:44 Checking Allstate first could save you hundreds on car insurance. That's smart. Not checking the pockets of your jeans before doing laundry. Classic oversight. That mystery clunking in the dryer? Yeah, that was your lip balm's final moments. And somehow, there's always one random receipt in there to dissolve into confetti. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:31:02 Checking first. is smart. So check Allstate first for a quote that could save you hundreds. You're in good hands with Allstate. Potential savings vary, subject to terms, conditions, and availability, Allstate, North America Insurance Co and affiliates, Northbrook, Illinois. Okay, so was the decision, though, to go to Boston and go to Berkeley hard? It was really tough because despite taking every opportunity I could, I was really, really scared of jumping into becoming a singer. I was like, this is not going to go anywhere. I don't want to say I'd given up, but I felt, that I had enough proof that I wasn't going to make it.
Starting point is 00:31:41 I had competed in every single singing competition. I had all these producers in Iceland promise that they were going to work with me or listen to me and nobody really responded or gave me the time of day. And I would see them work with other girls who were more like down the middle pop. I think I also truly hadn't found my sound yet. I was going to say, you probably didn't have an identity yet. I absolutely did not. I was a classical cellist, a jazz singer, and I loved pop music.
Starting point is 00:32:05 I loved a terrible ballerian. And a terrible baller. And a terrible ballerina, yeah. And I don't even know if I knew if I could find my sound. Yeah, that's scary, right? Nobody was making the kind of music I wanted to make. And I didn't even know what kind of music I wanted to make. If you would have asked me back then, I would have told you, in my dream world, I'm mixing all the things I am, which is a song writer.
Starting point is 00:32:27 Like, I'd not written any songs. I'd written maybe one song. I wouldn't call myself a writer when I had gone to Berkeley. I written a song reluctantly for a class or something. Yeah. So I didn't have songwriting experience. I didn't have life experience. I didn't have anything to write about.
Starting point is 00:32:42 I was a classical cellist and a jazz singer. I hadn't really experienced heartbreak. Maybe I'd had some secret crushes. But my biggest fear when I was in high school was admitting to having a crush. I don't know why I thought that there was absolutely nothing more embarrassing than that. Well, don't you think because then rejection might be on the other side of that? I was genuinely scared that if I so much as admitted I had a crush on like a movie character, that the world or that my friends or something would be like,
Starting point is 00:33:11 oh my God, do you think you can get that? I don't know why I thought it was that deep. Monica did the same thing, but her crushes were like, oh, I'm going to go so outside of what's possible to prevent that. I was happy to talk about it. I like to talk about it actually because it was like everyone's doing this. So maybe that's the difference though. Everyone had crushes and had my friends.
Starting point is 00:33:32 My friends did too. I don't know what it was. You thought you'd be made fun of. That's so interesting. I think I was judging myself. Yeah. I think it came from like deep inner judgment. And that's something that I completely worked out of when I got to college.
Starting point is 00:33:46 And I was known as just Luevae when I went to Berkeley. Yeah, so I was very afraid to jump into the deep end. And it was my mom who was like, you have to go. She was like, you have this beautiful opportunity. And she believed so much in me. And I did so much unworking of my kind of childhood. although I just had so many walls up and I broke them all down. But barrier by barrier as I got to Berkeley and then in the last eight years,
Starting point is 00:34:15 I've just been knocking it down and now I feel so free. Yeah, so walk me through the steps of arriving in Boston and how do they start eroding and what's it like to be in Boston and how are those things falling away? Because yes, by your junior year, you're now like writing and making music and by your senior year, you have songs that are on the radio on Iceland. What really changed for me is I kind of had my first touch with depression, I think. We just a safety blanket wasn't there. My safety blanket wasn't there.
Starting point is 00:34:46 And I didn't really know who I was. I was really confused when I got to Berkeley. So I went as a cello student because they offered me a full scholarship as a cellist. The presidential scholarship. The presidential scholarship. I can only guess it's just due to lack of string players. I was very fortunate to get to go for free. And that was one of the reasons I decided to go because my parents were like,
Starting point is 00:35:10 we're not going to pay for college. This shit is free here. If you want to go, you pay for it. So, of course, that kind of felt like this golden ticket to go. And so I went and I was there playing cello and singing a bit. But I couldn't fathom why they had invested that much in me. I really didn't understand. I kept telling myself, they just need cellas.
Starting point is 00:35:30 They need string players. They need people in the orchestra. That was what I kept saying to myself. So I was just trying to figure out who I was in the tapestry of Berkeley at the time. And it took me a couple months to realize that a lot of people were doing a lot of different things. People had majors, people had principal instruments, but most of them were mixing everything together. Yeah, we just interviewed Charlie Puth, who was there at Berkeley. And he was doing like sound engineering or something.
Starting point is 00:35:58 Yeah, but he plays every instrument and could have probably done any major there. It was so healthy for me to be around these kids who didn't have as much of a classical upbringing. And their relationship to music came from a true place of love. People were willing to do anything. And they were really down to collaborate and mix different genres together. And a lot of people had this honest, blind faith in themselves, which I needed to instillard. in myself, you cannot do this job without having that blind faith and thinking that you are going to make it. You cannot reluctantly jump into this. And that's where things started to change.
Starting point is 00:36:46 Am I right or wrong in that? To me, classical, it's in so many ways the opposite. There's so many rules. It's already been there. You're trying to reach perfection. It's wrote. It's hitting the exact note and all these things. It's rules based. Very rules based. And And this other thing, creating new music that's novel and not been made is the antithesis of that. It's breaking every rule and experimenting. The way I saw it was I'd come from a system where we were training to be the best players of the music. Right. The best musician at the school was the musician that could play the best.
Starting point is 00:37:24 Literally, yeah, the best musicality, best technique, the combination of everything. Whereas at Berkeley, I was all of a sudden in this environment where, The best musician was the best creator, not necessarily the best player. Yeah. I mean, of course, you know, good players, everything. In a dream world, you have both. What I thought was the coolest was the person creating the music. Everyone has a different voice.
Starting point is 00:37:45 Everyone plays differently. It wasn't necessarily about who had the best technique. I was so in awe of the storytellers and the people that could make me feel something and the ones who had found their own lane. And I was like, I need to do this. So I think I realized quickly that I should just lean into what I'm good at and what I love, which is I loved singing songs from the Great American Songbook. I love classical music. String arrangements can totally be transferred into that.
Starting point is 00:38:15 And then I just needed to live a bit of life to write. And I started dating for the first time. And I was so heartbroken. I was talking to this guy who did not give a shit about me. And he's also much older, which in hindsight, I'm like, ew. Are we talking like five years older or 15, 20? He's like six years older. Okay, okay, okay.
Starting point is 00:38:35 But when you're that young, yeah, I'm like, I'm 26 now and looking back like I would never with like a 19 year old. Yeah. Anyways, it was my first brush with rejection. Which is so hard. You had been avoiding that your whole life. I had been avoiding that my whole life and I think I was so scared of it. And then it came and it was worse than I couldn't imagine. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:54 But then you have something to write about. True. Genuinely for three months, I could barely get out of bed. And it was also a couple of different. for things that played into it, like being away from home and not being sure who I was as a musician. As you're saying this, I just got to say, it's the most unavoidable part of a human life. I remember graduating. I was going to do one thing. I was in Detroit and then I woke up there. I'm like, what am I doing? Like, just that panic of like, what am I doing? Where am I going to end up from like 18 to
Starting point is 00:39:20 24? And you can't sidestep it. You've got to just go through it. You got to walk through the storm and It's a storm for almost everybody. It is. Yes. People think going to Berkeley is some sort of magical button or highway to Hollywood. And it's absolutely not. The best thing I think you can get from Berkeley is it's a nest to discover who you are as musician. To try out different things to collaborate with the people around you.
Starting point is 00:39:50 Like the real wealth, I think, is the other students there who are coming from all corners of the world. and bringing different lessons with them. It's like a safe place to walk through that crazy, painful. It's a safe place. It's a really expensive place, too. You know, so it's really scary for a lot of people being at Berkeley and trying to figure it out. When I think about the artists who have really succeeded from Berkeley, it's really social media.
Starting point is 00:40:15 You know, you can collaborate with the people around you and then you use social media. That's what happened to me. Tell me how in your senior year you write this song that ends up, yeah, being number one on Icelandic radio. Number one on Icelandic. Icelandic radio is so... Dude! It sounds so much more impressive than it is.
Starting point is 00:40:32 It is. You're right there. What are you talking about? If I was the number one song in Milford, Michigan, that'd be thrilled. He's so self-deprecating. I want you to take on how cool you are. No, you guys, the population of Iceland is so small. Who cares?
Starting point is 00:40:47 It's still awesome. I wrote this song called Street by Street. It was one of the first songs, if not the first song I wrote while at Berkeley where I was working through this heartbreak and it was the first like heartbreak song I wrote. It was a movie moment of healing. I wrote many of the lyrics in a bus leaving Boston because I was escaping to New York because I couldn't do it anymore. I was like the whole city's tainted. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I remember that. He's feeling. And looking back, it wasn't that dramatic, but it felt so painful. I wrote down the lyrics like street by street.
Starting point is 00:41:27 I'm going to take back my life kind of because it had taken over my whole life. I was so depressed for this very small, I'm not going to call it a small reason. I was feeling so terrible, but it was ruining an entire city for me. So I wrote these lyrics down and it was the most healing thing.
Starting point is 00:41:48 And then I ran to get a guitar when I got back to Boston. I was in this dorm room that had a view of the city and I wrote the first lyrics and it was like this feeling. used to bring a smile to my face and now it makes me disgusted. That's not the exact lyric. You're paraphrasing yourself.
Starting point is 00:42:05 I'm paraphrasing. And then the chorus is like street by street, like brick by brick, I'm going to take back my life. Yes. From the back bay to the sky. I just wanted to claim ownership of this thing that this guy had kind of ruined for me. And it was like I snapped out of my depression. I mean, it probably took a couple of days, but in hindsight it felt like I snapped out.
Starting point is 00:42:26 I was so excited. I was like, oh, my God, I found my sound. Wow. You took something that you were powerless in, which was the relationship. And then you turned it into something you had total power over, which was the output, this song. So it transferred from powerlessness to powerful. Yes. And I was so excited because not only had I lyrically found that it helped me, but I had found a way to use the cordal language that I was used to from the Great American Songbook.
Starting point is 00:42:56 put it into a song that still felt modern, like it still felt new. So maybe more impressive to you than the Icelandic number one is that Billy Elish noticed this song. She didn't. She didn't? I did a cover of her song called My Future, a couple months into the pandemic. Okay. And I did all these harmonies because it's such a beautiful song.
Starting point is 00:43:16 It's one of my favorite songs. Have you worked with Phineas? I'm just a fan from afar, and they're both so sweet. And they have done wonders for pop music. I genuinely feel like what they did for pop music help me even be able to have a moment. Oh, yeah, yeah, I think so. Absolutely one of those musicians that created that space so that me and many other musicians could come in and thrive. Be melancholy and pop and dissonant and have these jazz chords and my future totally had that.
Starting point is 00:43:47 So I did a cover of that and she posted on her story. Oh, okay, okay. It wasn't straight by street. No, no, no. I think that got lost in translation somewhere. And that was just me being a true fan. Okay. And then so on the back of that, you put together everything I know about love.
Starting point is 00:44:03 No, you have an EP first. A EP called Typical of Me. And this is where everything got really soupy with the pandemic. So I recorded the song Street by Street the day that we had to leave campus, March 2020. And that's a week or two to the pandemic is when my social media started blowing up. So it was all this kind of magical timing. Yeah. Where did you retreat to?
Starting point is 00:44:26 To Washington, D.C. So my parents moved to Washington, D.C., January of 2020. Oh, what a blessing. Great timing. But I went back to D.C. into this house that I did not recognize, never been there before. I thought it was going to be a two-week break from school. And I said to myself, I was like, okay, I'm going to use these two weeks to just post videos of myself singing, playing cello. I would play cello and sing jazz standards.
Starting point is 00:44:52 And then I'd also, in between posts. songs that I'd written. I did it almost every day, every other day. And I think people were like, why is this young woman singing these songs from the 40s or the 30s? With a cello. With a cello, yeah. And it was one of the very few moments I've said, I'm going to do something and it actually works. And I just kind of stuck to it. I figured out that if I stayed consistent and communicated with the people who were following me, it became this community really quick. I would do weekly live streams as well. I called them my Sunday Luleleleby. series. Every Sunday I would sit down and I would just sing and there was like a chat going on and
Starting point is 00:45:31 people were from all over the world and we'd be talking about like, oh, like what's COVID like there? And it was such a beautiful community that it started with. And I think that's the reason it's flourished into the community that it is today. I feel so close to my fans and I hope that they feel close to me too because it's been this kind of continuous conversation from the beginning. And I literally would write a song that day and I'd play a little bit of it. And then that song would end up on my EP and people remember it when I'd written it. They probably felt a lot of ownership over that first EP. Yeah. And they should because so much of the information that they were giving me whether they like liked it or not was going into. It was some weird version of performing live in a way
Starting point is 00:46:13 because you're getting feedback, which is rare. I am struck by the fact that. that there's so many overlaps in a lot of these musical stories. Like I'm thinking of Anderson Pack, who was saying he drummed in church. He wanted to be a rapper. Well, first he wanted to be a DJ, then he wanted to be a rapper. And then out of like not having a drummer decided to play the drums
Starting point is 00:46:33 while he was also performing, then he does Tiny Desk and never anticipating, oh, the drumming and singing is what people are like, oh, wow, okay. And it's not just that it's a gimmick. I think there's something we can detect that we know, that's Anderson. Like he's always been a drummer.
Starting point is 00:46:50 He's supposed to be drumming and singing. And I think like this cello thing is very similar to that, which is like it gets your attention, but it gets your attention for a lot of ways. I think there's something we can detect in that. That's authentic as fuck. I think it's because nobody would ever consider picking up a cello and singing at the same time
Starting point is 00:47:09 as something that would result in any type of viralities. But it's you. It's very mean. It's like you to your core. The more you can believe in everything. It comes from a. very honest place. And it comes from true love for the instrument. So then it happens pretty quick. Then you do everything I know about you, your debut album in 2022. So two years into the pandemic.
Starting point is 00:47:27 And then 2023 Bewitched comes about. And from the start is on that album. Yes. Which is enormous. I was listening to it today. And it has over a billion streams on Spotify alone. How does one experience going from college two years before to a Grammy winning album? How are you keeping up with it ratcheting so quickly? I think I'm still playing ketchup. Yeah, I bet. What was your sister saying about all this? Because you guys have diverged.
Starting point is 00:48:00 She went to Scotland. You went to Boston. And now all of a sudden you're winning a Grammy. She's like, hold on a second. Should I have gone to Berkeley? We've gone through the whole thing together. She's immediately became my creative director. for free and for fun first, and then it actually became a need of mine, and she fulfills it so well.
Starting point is 00:48:18 So she's extremely involved in everything. Anything that goes out into the world, she's touched except for the music. But even the music, she plays violin on it sometimes. So the biggest blessing is I felt like I've gone through it with my sister. And we share a face in a sense. So even the really new kind of weird parts of getting recognized, the first question that people ask me is almost always are you union or lebe yeah uh-huh and which twin are you or they'll go are you although i think that's maybe because my name's hard to pronounce well the spelling i don't know how we get lebe from
Starting point is 00:48:54 l a ufee quite the spectacle it's become i'm sure oh god a u is just a in icelandic and that's i don't know i've been seeing people on the internet making fun of my name and i'm kind of like at the end of the day it's my government name it's your name And it's my great-grandma's name, and it's funny because it's such a normal name in Iceland. It's a little weird here. Interestingly, this is my question for later, but we're here. I'm going to ask it now. So she is the mother of Loki, the Nordic mythology, God of mischief.
Starting point is 00:49:27 But you don't seem very mischievous. And this goes back to the childhood. Is there some mischievousness? For sure. There is. Yeah. What's secretly going on? Also, how are you updating your self-esteem and thinking, no boys liked you?
Starting point is 00:49:40 and now obviously probably tons of boys are liking you. You still don't think they are. No, I mean. Okay, so we haven't caught up yet. We're still not there. I was going to ask you like, what's your current relationship with dating, with how people see you?
Starting point is 00:49:57 I'm very happy and in love right now. Oh, great. Wonderful. It's all fine. So we've updated ourselves. We've updated ourselves. Yeah, for sure. I feel so much more confident.
Starting point is 00:50:10 To your point earlier with the mischievous, I think people read from the world that I'm this very kind of like poised. Very even-toned. Type A, even-toned person. And I'm not. I'm a tourist, first of all. Monica, what's that mean? Tell us what that means. A little stubborn, right?
Starting point is 00:50:28 A little stubborn, but I guess more so. I'm just very calm. Oh. I have a very calm demeanor. Because I whipped up this whole thing, right? I don't know you've never met you. I'm like, to get to this level of musicianship. the amount of work and perhaps the loneliness.
Starting point is 00:50:44 And then I hear you, yeah, and you're so even tempered in all these interviews. And my thought is, is there a rascal in you that is trying to claw out and do you love being inebriated? Do you love? An escape. Yes, you have an escape. But I think I might just be entirely wrong about the original assessment. I don't think you're as type A as I thought.
Starting point is 00:51:03 I'm so not type A. I have a lot of problem focusing. I do think that is short form content's fault, though. Yeah. But I'm not as type A as people think. I'm really chronically late. You were late today. That's true.
Starting point is 00:51:18 Do you like to get fucked up? I do. I do care so much about my tour, my career. Both can be true. Both can be true. I care about showing up for people. So I'm not going to get wasted and not show up to a concert. That's kind of what that part is.
Starting point is 00:51:33 But I'm like an anxious mess. And that's something I really wanted to show with my album, a matter of time. There were a lot of moments. in that album where people were quite shocked because I was writing a little more honestly about things. Like the end of the album is just noise. We were just throwing instruments like sounds at them, pounding on instruments for the end. Because I wanted to kind of break out of this perception.
Starting point is 00:52:00 But my demeanor reads quite differently. Yes. How did you take to, because right after Bewitch, you start your first, I would imagine, world tour. Yes. And how do you take to that? I feel like you were built for it because you were bouncing all around the whole world already. But again, Longley's, what was the tour experience like? I love playing concerts. I love going on stage. I make music so I can go on stage. That is what fulfills me. I know my purpose when I'm on stage. The stage is you're getting fucked up. So I was also noticing like you're so even tempered, but your wardrobe is incredibly flamboyant and exuberant. And I was. I was like, okay, maybe that's one of the releases is like, I'm steady eddy, but then I have this
Starting point is 00:52:44 really flashy and exuberant wardrobe and I'm on stage doing this thing. So it sounds like maybe the stages where you get to let it rip. Absolutely. I feel like I am the prime version of myself on stage. Yeah, your truest self. My truest self, my most honest self on stage, and I can let go of a lot of the shackles around me. It's funny. It's almost counterintuitive. It sounds like when you're on stage you feel no judgment. Yeah. And in life, you're a little more. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:53:14 In life, you might be afraid of judgment. Not really. I've let go of the fear of judgment. I genuinely don't care what people say about me. I get so much, especially recently, people are like, who the fuck is this girl that's singing jazz and they like can't stand it or something like that? It doesn't touch me because I know I'm being my most honest self. That would only touch me if I weren't being honest.
Starting point is 00:53:36 Yeah. And I work being authentic. This is a part of the interview where I psychoanalyze you really quick. Please. I love being psychoanalyzed. One lyric. Yeah. Okay.
Starting point is 00:53:45 So in Mad Woman, which the music video just came out, it's fantastic. It's very 60s. It's very bewitched. It is. One of the lyrics is, called me stupid as a mindless joke. This is what the guy said. Yes. And so I went, he was nagging you this guy that the song's about.
Starting point is 00:54:04 Back to the feeling insecure. ridiculous to even have a crust. Do you think initially when you're finding your confidence in dating that you were susceptible to that? Someone confirming your story about yourself? I'm insecure in love. I'll put it that way. I'm very secure everywhere else, very insecure in love.
Starting point is 00:54:22 Yeah, and I would imagine you're very vulnerable to someone identifying that and leveraging that against you, confirming your fears, whether they even think it's true or not. Yeah. I always think guys are thinking much deeper than they are, but they are. Called me stupid as a mindless show. It was probably a mindless joke, but I was like, oh, my God. Yeah, you took it. He recognized a part of me that is not good.
Starting point is 00:54:44 Who's the hunk in the video? He looks like an Asian Glenn Powell. Yeah, Hudson Williams. Oh, my God, Dax. Did I just offend everyone? Yes, he's a huge, huge, huge star. Does he not look like Glenn Powell a little bit? I don't know if he looks like Glenn Powell.
Starting point is 00:54:58 Okay, I'm wrong about that. He's in heated rivalry, like the biggest show on television. Yeah. I'm so sorry, everybody. I'm upset. I hadn't watched rivalry. And I was looking and I was like, oh, you should. It's a big deal.
Starting point is 00:55:12 He's so great. He is a hunk. The body looks great. The wink is on point. Absolutely the perfect madman for the music video. And I gathered three of my friends who are all wajian, as they say, half white and half Asian. Oh, that's the term wazian. Waysian is the term.
Starting point is 00:55:30 Okay. Yeah, I thought it'd be funny because I sometimes get mistaken as other. girls who are half Asian and half white. Sometimes I'll literally like get tagged and like so. Oh my God. Instagram. It was kind of a joke. I went to the Golden Globes.
Starting point is 00:55:46 And for some reason, halfway through the carpet, it was a really long carpet. And it was like an obstacle course. It like went up and down and up. And I was up at the last part and they start going, Megan, Megan. I don't know what. I think people were screaming like Leve and maybe one photographer heard Megan or something like that. I don't know. Or maybe there was a Megan coming after me or before me.
Starting point is 00:56:08 And so either way. Or they maybe thought that there's a girl in this group Katzai called Megan, who's also half Chinese and half. She's wajian. She's wajian. Uh-huh. And we could pass the sisters. She is a beautiful young woman and does not want to be compared to a 26 year old.
Starting point is 00:56:24 And I will not compare to that. Oh, my God. How dare you? We just died. Both of us just died inside. She's enjoying. She is in a week. She is an absolutely like.
Starting point is 00:56:33 She is like relishing her 26. My 26. Yeah. She is like this incredible dancer, singer. But I'm also friends with her. And her name was Megan. It kind of became this joke that they were like, oh, my God, they're mixing us up. And it became this internet joke. People started commenting, Megan.
Starting point is 00:56:51 Oh, my God. So I was like, I have to have Megan in a music video with me. And then I had Alyssa Liu gold medalist. Amazing. Her short program was to my song. Did you tell her you were a figure skater when you were a child? I did. That was the fourth endeavor also too much.
Starting point is 00:57:06 I did everything. Wow. I had so much fun. She is an incredible person, an incredible artist, and her message to the world is so beautiful. And she came back to skating and after being away from it for a bit and she used my song that I wrote about a boy. Oh, really? But interpreted it as the song is about needing distance for something, but you love it. And she interpreted the song.
Starting point is 00:57:31 Her relationship was skating. Cool. She came back and she won the gold medal with it. Oh, my God. Did you feel so, were you like, this is. I would love that. I sat there like, oh, my God, I'm honored. She'd been skating to Promise for a couple of months.
Starting point is 00:57:42 And so I reached out to her connected months ago. And she came to my concert in Oakland. And so I've known her for a bit. So I, of course, had to have her too because she is also half Chinese. Yeah. And Lola Tong, who plays belly on the summer I turned pretty. Oh, yes. I've been friends with her for like four years.
Starting point is 00:58:01 And I love her so much. Even before she did the summer I turned Pretty, the first year I was releasing music and nobody knew who I was. She had messaged me. She was like, oh, we kind of look the same. And she sings so beautifully too. She said that she liked my music. She just like sent me a DM. And I didn't notice it, which is weird because back then I saw everything. And then a year or two later, the summer I turned pretty came out. And I was, of course, stalking her Instagram. And it was growing so fast. I saw that she followed me. And I was like, oh my God, I got a deal. Yeah. Like we're both a wasion. And it opened up this message that she had sent me prior. And I was like, wow, this is Kismet.
Starting point is 00:58:39 And she is genuinely one of my favorite people that I have met in this industry and is one of the most elegant, poised, kind people that I have met. A true gold of a human being. Stay tuned for more armchair expert, if you dare. All these girls that I know, I was like, it's just fine. You just answered my question because I was going to ask you how it has. has been falling in Hollywood to young, hot, everyone's got style, lifestyle of LA, given the previous security level in high school. Like, has it been easy for you to drop in and be a part of it?
Starting point is 00:59:25 Oh, my God. No, it's like going back to high school. Yeah, right. Every red carpet, I'm like, oh, my God, oh, my God. You just played Coachella. And I was looking at a lot of pictures of people who went to Coachella. And I was looking at it. I was like, I'm just not young and hot enough and I don't dress well enough, I think,
Starting point is 00:59:37 to attend Coachella as much as I would like to go. everyone is looking peak. And I was thinking, how are you in that environment? I think style is all about who you are and how you carry yourself. The coolest girl I know who has the best confidence and aura, that is style to me. She could wear a T-shirt and cutoffs and I'd be like, wow, wow, I'm going to copy that. So that and Coachella really showed that to me. No matter what, if you are a shitty person, your outfit's going to suck.
Starting point is 01:00:03 Yeah, that's so true. But if you are a really kind and lovely hot energy person, And you can wear whatever you want and you will have the best outfit. Okay. That's encouraging. So you go and you carry your confidence. Okay. But as a musician, I'm currently in between the two weekends.
Starting point is 01:00:21 Yeah. This is raw. Yeah, yeah. It's very raw. I know. I feel like we're getting a hot take. I was Sunday night. So I'd seen Sabrina Carpenter.
Starting point is 01:00:29 I'd seen Katzai. I saw Bieber. What did you think of that? I saw clips of it and I was like, I really wish I would have seen that. It was awesome. Also just being a part of that. Yeah. I've never.
Starting point is 01:00:39 God, I couldn't. You know, there's like an artist pit and a VIP pit. They're always different. It rungs. Everything completely, like, you couldn't get in. My takeaway from Coachella is my first Coachella is the way to do it. General admission. General admission. Oh. Okay. Tell me more. The screens are huge and the music is carrying. If you can just be in the back with your friends, dance around with a little space, you can take outfit photos, you can go run to the bathroom. You won't lose your plays. You can go get a taco and not lose your place. That is, I think, the move. Okay.
Starting point is 01:01:13 Also, the toilet situation is shitty, no matter who you are. So you may as well be in GA. Yeah. So you were in the way back. I was in the way back for Bieber, and it was amazing. And then I had to go check out my stage. And I went all the way around. And I was by the outdoor stage, which is kind of further away from main stage.
Starting point is 01:01:30 And there was no one there. And I watched Bieber from so far away, just the end when he started like going through all this old hits. Yeah. I had the time of my life. The time of my life. But I was vocal resting and wearing a mask, so I was kind of like just emoting. Okay.
Starting point is 01:01:45 Yeah. You let your body do the talking? I let my body do the talking, yeah. But I love it as a concert goer. I admittedly don't get nervous when I go on stage at all, especially when it's my own concerts. Because it's such a unique thing. I think people are confused about what the experience of a Lueva concert is like, do we stand, do we sit, do we sing, do we sit in silence?
Starting point is 01:02:06 Is this a theater show? Is this an arena show? What makes sense? I feel like I've really balanced it out and it makes a lot of sense in my show. It's very cohesive your arena. You've got ballerinas.
Starting point is 01:02:18 You've got the jazz set up. Yes, but we're in an arena and we can move around. There's a pop portion of the show. There's the jazz portion. There's the more classical bit. And an arena, you can kind of morph into whatever you want. And then obviously, I feel a theater is always lovely.
Starting point is 01:02:31 So are you happy with the way it went? The festival, by the time I got to my set after seeing all of these incredible acts. Oh, yeah, I would not want to see that before. Yeah, scary. First of all, I was like, I got to lock in because they were all so incredible. But also, I kind of got in my head. I was like, is this a place for me?
Starting point is 01:02:49 I would do. I was like, are people going to be okay that this isn't necessarily going to be a mosh pit? Well, also, just acknowledge what it is. You're with the best of the best. Yeah. And the audience is there for everybody, somebody, nobody. your audience, you walk out in the arena. These people love you.
Starting point is 01:03:08 There's a lot of discovery going on, which is super exciting. And I got a little nervous. Completely melted away after the second or third song. But when I came out first, also, it was a little cold and windy. There were all these natural elements that you're all day. They were like, we don't know if we can do the pyro, which I had pyro in the end. Oh, fun. All day, they were like, we don't know.
Starting point is 01:03:30 We have to chain up the castle because I have a castle on stage. They were like, we've got to chain it up. It's windy. So I was like, I have no clue what this stage is going to be like. And I don't play many festivals for that reason of I really like creating a community that fans get to come into and feel safe. And on tour, I have so much control over that. Whereas like at Coachella, but I want to play Coachella. My whole goal as an artist is to introduce people to my music, to my sound and as many people as possible.
Starting point is 01:03:59 And Coachella is absolutely the place to do it. And I want to be on those stages. want to be in front of those people. So it was daunting, but after the second song, I was like, okay, this is fine. I know what to do. Yeah, and I love performing. So I really settled into it. And it was so cool to get to hopefully turn some new fans onto the music. And there was a K-pop group on after me called Big Bang. They're like legends. And all of their fans were in the front, which was also daunting because I kept actually like looking at them being like, oh no, are they disappointed right now? Yeah, yeah, yeah. And when they're super young, am I crazy to think
Starting point is 01:04:34 the K-pop audience is going to be pretty young? Yes and no, but Big Bang's been around for a while. They're kind of like the OG K-pop group that has really like made it in the West as well. So they were a little older than I thought, but my audience is very young. If anything, my Coachella audience was older. Oh, really? Yeah. Are you going to do anything different next weekend?
Starting point is 01:04:52 What's next weekend? Also Coachella. It's still going? Oh, I'm in between Coachella's. I could go. I can go. It's so raw, yeah. And is it the same performers?
Starting point is 01:05:02 Yeah, you'll play again. That's the whole point. is like, this is a big moment we're getting you right now. My head's spinning. It goes on for two weekends. Two weekends. But people come home, I guess. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:05:12 I mean, how else was I supposed to do? I'm chair expert. I know exactly. We got, we got it. It was so lucky. But so anything you're going to make any changes? Are you happy? You want to just do it again.
Starting point is 01:05:24 I say you don't chain the castle down this time and see if it blows away. See if it blows away. I have a swing on the top of the castle too. Oh, my. I had to chain the swing down. Because I would have to fly off. I loved it so much. So I don't think I'm going to change much.
Starting point is 01:05:38 I'm going to have a different outfit. Oh, fun. I'm really excited to just go knowing how it feels. You can't sound check at Cortella. You don't get to feel the stage. I got to see the stage before, but other than that, I didn't get to move on it or try the instruments or anything. So you're really going into a completely new environment.
Starting point is 01:05:56 But now I'll recognize it. Yeah, yeah, yeah. What a cool thing to check off the list. That's a huge thing as an artist. Okay, now I do not. mean musically when I ask this. I more mean just trajectory. Is there an artist that you're like, that's the road I hope I'm on? Is there someone that you idolize in this space that you kind of want their trajectory? I don't think so because the second I stopped playing that game with myself,
Starting point is 01:06:21 I started to succeed. Meaning stop trying to get somewhere specific. Start trying to figure out whose road I was going to walk, if that makes sense. Yeah. I want longevity, I think. That's my main goal. I love doing this, I don't want it to go away. Music is something that can follow you forever. I'm not a football player that has to retire. There's so much beauty to that. So as long as I love it, I'm going to keep doing it. Okay, really quick, you wrote a children's book. I wish you would have brought it or someone would have sent it to me. Is it May May May the Bunny? Tell me. Tell me about May May the Bunny. Why are we encouraged to tell her story? May May the Bunny is a little bunny who is playing violin. Learning the violin is she has her first concert.
Starting point is 01:07:06 Stressful. And she's nervous. Yeah. Lots of butterflies in the tummy. Yeah. And she has like an anxiety dream the night before her concert where it all goes horribly wrong as we've all had. And she learns that making mistakes are not always bad that you can redirect it into something beautiful.
Starting point is 01:07:27 We love that for May May and for all of us. What's the Japanese word? I never going to get it. Tsugi. Kensugi. Not Lombiexies are the beauty. No, it's not. And then, of course, a matter of time, there's a special version that just came out.
Starting point is 01:07:44 There is the final hour. The final hour. And you just finished your world arena tour. How many cities did you go do? I've done the U.S. and Europe. I think we're over 50 now. Wow. Leve, this has been incredible.
Starting point is 01:07:59 I'm really glad that we got to meet you, especially that you took time in between these two shows. I didn't realize it was double weekend. I'm so excited. I didn't know about Hudson. The only thing I'm bummed about is, are you going to play on Sunday again? Yeah. Okay, because I'm mad because you can't party.
Starting point is 01:08:14 Yes. Okay, nobody talks about this. And I've discovered the absolute horror. No, not the horror. The sadness of playing on Sunday night. Yeah. It's beautiful because you get to send people off into the night. And for me, that is my perfect slot.
Starting point is 01:08:29 In the evening, in the dark, as one of the final little show. It's cozy. It's a little more like romantic. Everyone's ears, drums are out. They're all hung over. Like, it's a good place to be. You can stand with a glass of water and not get moshed on.
Starting point is 01:08:44 Right. But I had to vocal rest Friday, Saturday. I didn't go to the festival Saturday, say, for Bieber and going to see the stage. But I was like, wow, this sucks. Like if I played Friday, I could party all Saturday Sunday Sunday. You have a whole week to recover. Outfit picks. Is that what you called them?
Starting point is 01:09:01 Yeah. I was not doing. that I was so stressed a little bit because I was like, oh my God, I'm going to get sick. Yeah. Or also you get to the desert. It's new conditions. You're super dry. I was wearing a mask.
Starting point is 01:09:14 Do you blow in the bottle with the straw that we saw? Yes. Marcus Mumford do? Yeah. Yeah. Oh, this vocal straw is very important. Yeah. I want to go into just for fun.
Starting point is 01:09:21 I know me too. It looks cool and it sounds cool. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. My only regret is that I did not make your sister bring her violin and you the cello. I would love to see these sisters play the strings. You do not.
Starting point is 01:09:33 want to hear us play in our current state. I bet we wouldn't. It would sound perfect to us. You would know we would have no idea. If you guys could play like uptown girl by Billy Joel on it, we would be like, oh, I was incredible. She's like, that's the hardest song in the whole world. That was a callback because she played with Billy Joe at the Grammys.
Starting point is 01:09:50 Oh, yeah, yeah. That's awesome. It was very funny. I did play cello with him. All right. Well, good look on everything. Thank you. Look for Mamie the Bunny.
Starting point is 01:09:57 Get the new re-release of a matter of time. Go on that YouTube. Watch the Coachella sets. Are those all on YouTube? They are, I think, right? Just skip the first song. Yeah, just go to the second song. Keep the move.
Starting point is 01:10:09 Go with you when you're in a saddle. Once you got a saddle. Look, we can all relate to that. Sometimes it takes a second. I'm sorry, it was cold. I'm sure it was amazing. It's a desert. It's a hostile environment.
Starting point is 01:10:22 All right, well, good luck with everything. It was lovely meeting you. You too, you too. I sure hope there weren't any mistakes in that episode, but we'll find out when my mom, and Mrs. Monica comes in and tells us what was wrong. We were sent this. Oh.
Starting point is 01:10:37 And this is super cute. Aw. These are chocolate covered Oreo. Oh. There's, um. That's so cute. The Lincoln peeling out on a smore. Oh.
Starting point is 01:10:51 Yeah, Utopia sweets. And here's one, Monica. Can you see? You can't see either. I definitely can't see. This is you and I holding microphones some. Where? There you go.
Starting point is 01:11:05 Rice Krispy tree. We were at a restaurant. We went a real award and we were accepting it and we were answering questions. Yeah, look at this one. This is us back in the saddle upstairs. Good catch. Oh, this is the good old, no. This is the good old days from upstairs.
Starting point is 01:11:28 Wow. Cute. Very cute. Thank you, Utopia, sweet. Yes, it's so adorable. This guy, that's really cute. You can't see that. I can see it's a chair, I think. It's a microphone. There you go. Guys, one, two, three. Another great cat. I'm so good at catching. Ding, ding, ding. I saw some video where they were saying for your brain, a good exercise is this trainer makes the people bounce a ball off a wall, but with one eye covered with an eye patch. Oh, never. And, I mean, this is now a brag. I didn't see it going this way. But I was like, oh, I got to start doing that. I want to make sure both sides of my brain are working.
Starting point is 01:12:08 Yeah, yeah. So I brought two eyepatches up to the gym today, and I ordered white tennis balls so they wouldn't even mark on the wall. Oh, smart. And I didn't. It wasn't, it wasn't hard. Really? I don't know if that's a good, that must be a good sign.
Starting point is 01:12:19 I must be doing something else. Because the person that was being trained, it was like, they had to get there. All right. Once your one eyes covered. But it went really now. Okay. But this is tricky because, like, okay. You might just not be good at catching a ball even with two eyes open.
Starting point is 01:12:35 Well, again, you could set your baseline with your eyes, both eyes. Uh-huh. Okay. Can I do this a lot? Can I do four? Mm-hmm. Can I throw with one hand catch with the other back and forth? That would give you a sense of how good you are.
Starting point is 01:12:46 Right. But let's say you could do it six times in a row with your eyes, both eyes. And then you couldn't do it with one eye. Wow. I don't know. I'm into shutting one eye down. Great. I think that's fun.
Starting point is 01:12:58 I guess. Crazy update. What? I had it again last night. Uh-oh. So I was like, okay. I think you're sick. No, it's not that because it was so specific.
Starting point is 01:13:07 Really? And then I reverse engineered. We're talking about Honest. People are going to love this. People who hate peptides are going to love them. Oh, no. Hold on. Let's go back in time.
Starting point is 01:13:16 Let's tell people what happened. Yeah, we went to a screening of a movie, the three of us. Yes. And Rob and I ate popcorn. Mm-hmm. And then I also, you described the milk duds. I ate. Okay.
Starting point is 01:13:27 So, yeah, we went to a cool screening where there's like treats, It's not like these treats, worse treats. None of us, no pictures of us on any of it. And Dax likes milk duds in his popcorn, and they had milk duds. And it was like, are you going to get milk duds? I just might get milk duds today. How exciting. It might be naughty, I said.
Starting point is 01:13:45 I mean naughty. And then he opens the milk duds, plural. And turns out it's just one enormous milk duds congealed together, but with like a dust on Like this has been there since the 70s. When Chonkla gets really old, you know, it gets that dust. But it congealed. And I have to, because you got to brag a second ago, I want to brag right now. Okay.
Starting point is 01:14:11 You started to pull one off and put it in your mouth. And the restraint. Oh, good job. I know. Yeah. Thank you. I wasn't even going to tell you. Okay.
Starting point is 01:14:20 But here we are. Yeah. Where I wanted to say, no, do not eat that. Uh-huh. Please don't eat that. Yeah. This is clearly very old. Or has been to.
Starting point is 01:14:30 some weird heat cycle minimally. Exactly. Exactly. And I just want for the listener to know if the box of milk duds is like six inches long, the congealed mass was only like three inches. It was. It was a small brick. Maybe even a third of the box and it was a brick. But I could see fissures in there where the old duds had formed.
Starting point is 01:14:51 I know. So I broke one off. And you ate it. Yeah. I did have very few. I think I probably had like seven. Okay. Just enough to give me.
Starting point is 01:15:00 that little sugar pop to make the popcorn even better. So it was a great movie. We loved it. You'll hear about it. I mean, really great movie. I loved it. And then got home, did my nighttime routine, which involves peptides. Uh-huh.
Starting point is 01:15:14 And now here's something I kind of just ignored in my analysis. So, yeah, when I came in yesterday, I had to report to Rob and Monica that at about 2 a.m., I woke up and was like, oh, my God, I got to go to the bathroom right now. I never have to go number do in the middle of the night, ever. That's not my. Yeah. And then when I did do that, it was an event. Right.
Starting point is 01:15:40 And then there were a few events. And it was miserable. Mm-hmm. So I came in and I admitted to you guys. Well, first I said, Rob, did you get sick? He said, no. So I said, it wasn't the popcorn. I was convinced it was the popcorn.
Starting point is 01:15:52 I know. When you said that, I was like, oh, gosh. It's like a communal handle and communal everything. It's just like. So simple, though. It's popcorn and oil. I know, but it's the handle. It's like peanuts on a bar. It's like, you're handling this handle that everyone's dipping their hands. And they don't clean the inside of that. All right. Okay. So we all said it's the milk. It's obviously the brick you ate. Yeah. Yeah. And it made total sense. And I was like, yeah, that's it. So then last night, I do my peptides again. And now when I'm laying in bed, I'm having like an excessive amount of saliva. And it's like driving me nuts because I'm trying to fall. sleep. And when I was experiencing that, I did go, oh, yeah, I had this last night when I went to bed, right? Oh, did. I'm like, what's going on? I'm allergic to something I'm doing. Fall asleep. Fucking 1 a.m. I got to run over to the commode. And I do, I repeat the whole
Starting point is 01:16:48 experience. And now I go. And you didn't have this issue at all during the day yesterday. So it's 100% either the barrage of vitamins I take. take at night or one of my peptides. Okay. And here's my deduction. It's easy to make the case for the pills because I'm doing omega-3 fish oil. And then I'm like, oh, has some of these fish oil pills gone bad? That kind of makes sense.
Starting point is 01:17:17 Uh-huh. But then I'm like, but that's a really quick reaction. So then I go, oh, I started a new vial of a peptide on Monday night. Oh, fuck. Well, and I'm like, that's what it is. There's something in that one vial. But it's one you've been on for a while, though. It's a peptide I've used from my doctor for a long, long time.
Starting point is 01:17:38 So it's not the peptide. Oh. You know, there's, you go through a bunch of vial. I was saying this morning to Kristen, it's like, you eat enough lettuce. You're going to get Listeria on some of the lettuce. It's just like a number scheme. You just got to wash it. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:17:52 But bacon. You know, anything you eat. You're going to like, it happens. Okay. So that's most certainly what it is. So I guess tonight will be the trial. I will take all my pills, but I will not touch the other thing and then see if I have any issues. So it's that.
Starting point is 01:18:08 Now the problem is there's two that I started. Oh, fuck. So I just threw them both away. Okay, yeah. And then we'll start a new. Interesting. Yeah. I don't love the idea of peptides going rancid, you know?
Starting point is 01:18:24 Yeah. And I don't know that that would be what happened. I don't think the peptide goes rancid. I think some contaminate was either on the rubber, you know, I don't know. You clean it. I clean it, but it's a big chunk of rubber. You've put a needle all the way through. I can't clean the inside of the rubber.
Starting point is 01:18:41 I can't clean the underside of the rubber where it's inside the bottle. So just like when I got my shoulder surgery, they sterilized everything. And also they left a bacteria in me that became a huge infect. So anyways, that'll make people happy that hate peptides. Okay. Probably, I think. Wow. Okay, well, now we have to apologize to the milk duds.
Starting point is 01:19:03 We do. I know this is like kind of my formal public amends to milk dud. I guess that milk dud was not a dud like we thought. No. It was just fine. I wish I still had that brick. I might get into it right now. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:19:16 Oh, man. Yeah, so a lot's been going on at night. Oh, yeah. Well, hopefully tonight, new night. New night, fresh start. Fresh time. Now, if you have it tonight, we're going to have to say it's the vitamins. Correct.
Starting point is 01:19:33 Okay. And then the following night I own, what I don't believe is that I have a virus that only strikes at 1. I agree. If you had had it all day, yes. Immediately after I take all this stuff. Yeah, no. Yeah, yeah. That doesn't make a ton of sense to me.
Starting point is 01:19:46 And then I feel completely fine and I don't have the saliva thing and I don't have anything throughout the day. Interesting. Weird. It's interesting. Speaking of that movie, which we're not going to talk about, but because we're going to talk about it later, I was saying this to you the other day, but I think it's worth putting out in the world. I just think there's something in the air right now, storytelling-wise. Okay. Marriage stories.
Starting point is 01:20:09 They're everywhere. It's in the zeitgeist. It's like all the things I'm consuming are about marriage, drama, beef, strangers, this book that I read that's like everyone's reading, this movie. we saw, it's, it's like people are really commenting on marriage right now. Yeah, yeah. It's interesting. I guess sometimes. And mostly all negative?
Starting point is 01:20:33 Is that? I don't, I wouldn't say it's all negative. It's, it's just like examining the union. What it means to be married. Uh-huh. Yeah. And I don't know. It's kind of wild out there.
Starting point is 01:20:49 What do you think is, what do you think set this ball in motion? Exactly. Like what, I guess sometimes these. things just happen. It's like when Armageddon and Deep Impact came out at the same time. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Wyatt Earp and Tombstone. Yeah. I know what those are. So, so yeah, I just, because it's funny because the movie that we saw, I actually thought you, during the beginning, I was like, oh, he doesn't like this. Oh, really? I thought you didn't like it because it was kind of at first, like kind of a negative portrayal. It really starts with an Oscar Wild quote, which is like everyone deserves love, something like that.
Starting point is 01:21:30 Yeah. That's why you shouldn't. That's why you should never get married or something like that. Yeah. I'm not triggered by that. Like if people hate marriage or they had a bad marriage. Yeah. Again, probably because I don't have any insecurity on the topic.
Starting point is 01:21:45 It's like, yeah, some people have terrible friendships. Some people have terrible parent-child relationships. Some people have terrible marriages. We have terrible boyfriend-girlfriend situation. Yeah. That's par for the course. I know. I just because the portrayal was pretty like, e, like at first. And I thought you were thinking that, oh, this like isn't a good portrayal of marriage. But then you loved it. So then that was interesting. Yeah. I mean, what's kind of inherent is story is driven by conflict.
Starting point is 01:22:18 There is no version of a story of a happy marriage. That story can't really be told. There's nothing there. You can tell the story of two people falling in love them being challenged, and then the end is marriage, or you can tell the story of a marriage dissolving. But, you know, a movie about a good job, it's not a movie. You need devil wears prodig. You need conflicts. You're never going to get the other version portrayed. I mean, there's always going to be conflict, but like rom-coms historically and happily. In marriage, yeah, but the marriage is the end. Right. You're not, and you never live in the marriage.
Starting point is 01:22:55 You live in the story part, which is like getting to marriage. Yeah. Great genre. Marriage can be in the background and it can be portrayed as very happy and nourishing. Yeah. But it can't be the storyline. Right. Unless something happens to it.
Starting point is 01:23:09 So my assumption is anyone who's going to tell a marriage story, it's going to be one filled with conflict. Sure. Or it's going to be boring as hell. Right. It's just, it's very, it's, it's in the ether. And as someone not married, I feel. find it kind of fascinating that all of a sudden all these stories are popping up all at once.
Starting point is 01:23:28 Does it feel like confirmation? Do you like, oh, I wouldn't want to do that? No, it doesn't. It doesn't feel like, oh, I dodged a bullet or something at all. I can see why that some people would take that away from some of these things. Absolutely. I think if you've decided you don't want to get married, any portrayal of it being terrible is confirmation for why you don't want to get married. I know. I also interesting, like, I don't give a fuck who gets married. I think, you know, like, a lot of different countries have transitioned
Starting point is 01:23:58 still into lifetime pair bonding, but not the title married. Now, there is a reality, there's a statistical reality to the outcomes of being married, which are also very true and kind of undeniable, like these bizarre health ones, you know? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:24:14 Like, I just read one, like the cancer rate for unmarried people versus married is like, it's dramatically different. And it's even higher for women. I wonder if that has, but I wonder if pair, like, if that's in the United States because most people who are partnered for a long time get married, like the majority. Sure. So I wonder if in these other countries where they don't, what the stats would be. Yeah, I imagine they need a category on these surveys that are like long-term pair bonded couples. Exactly. What are their health outcomes? But I think like, look, we have, you know, Vivick
Starting point is 01:24:50 Murthy, there's so much great data about just being communal. Oh, yeah. Loneliness is death. Yeah, it's worse than smoking cigarettes. So it's like, okay, so that's, we don't know what that mechanism is, but we also can't deny the really stark data. And then the marriage thing, I don't know, like you, I think you'd be inclined to go like, oh, because you tell each other to go to the hospital.
Starting point is 01:25:14 And I think that's a component of it. Mm-hmm, mm-hmm. And you have another outside observer that might notice that your energy. energy level has been low for three weeks when you, it didn't even occur to you. So you have a co-pilot. Yep. But that's the, that's the mechanical, tangible part that I definitely think is part of it. But also there's another thing. We don't even know what it is. Well, I think I know what it is. I think if you are happy, then you care about your health. So like, if you're happy and you're noticing, like, I'm really tired, you're incentivized to go get that figured out. Yeah. Because you want to live.
Starting point is 01:25:49 You want to return to happiness. Yes, exactly. You notice when you're not happy. Yes, exactly. But I, you know, I think loneliness can be handled in a lot of ways, you know. But I also think like people can find purpose in it as well. Yeah. And that's like a huge driver of your life.
Starting point is 01:26:11 Yes. And you can certainly find purpose in other things. But that's one sitting on the table in that situation. 100%. Yes. I mean, look, on a very, just very fundamental level, of course, I've thought, okay, so last night, we won't talk about it because I know everyone hates dreams. But I just had like a series of horrible dreams throughout the entire night. Okay.
Starting point is 01:26:37 And I just like kept waking up after them and being like, oh, it's like still night. Like, this is horrible. I have those nights. It's so bad. And I have this weird thing happens to me. sometimes where tell me if you've experienced this or if the audience has they can comment I won't read it where I'm like stuck in this pattern in a dream so like and then I'll wake up from the dream but I'll still be in the dream and I'm but I've like woken up and then the whole thing happens again but I think
Starting point is 01:27:10 I've woken up yeah yeah and it's weird because when I lived in the apartment and this would happen the dream, the being stuck was about my house. Okay. Like I would wake up at my house and then things would happen. And then I'd be like, no, I think this is a dream. Like, I got to wake up. Yeah. And then I would wake up and I'm still in that house.
Starting point is 01:27:35 Yeah. And it's this bizarre thing that just keeps happening until I finally actually wake up. Right. But my dream last night was that, but it was in my apartment. Oh, geez. Okay, now we're going on. It was so weird. But it kept happening over and over and over again. And it's like horrified because you think you're awake and you're not.
Starting point is 01:27:55 Yeah, and I don't know what it is. And so I did wake up and think, I wonder what's happening with my body or my voice or anything during these things. Like, I wonder if I'm doing anything. In real life. In real life. Someone's observing you in your bed. Are you talking? Exactly.
Starting point is 01:28:12 Are you? Exactly. Or if like something was happening, could I be woken up? Uh-huh. And I was like, well, I won't ever, for now, I won't know that because no one shares a bed with me. Right. And that's like an example, even with the epilepsy, like the first seizure. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:28:28 I didn't know. Yeah, your back hurt. Yeah. And I peed. Yeah. And yeah, everything hurt, but like no one saw. So even those things. Because when I was at a hotel with, remember, I was at a.
Starting point is 01:28:42 hotel with Callie and she said that you called someone a stupid bitch in the middle of the night. It's like, oh my God, how often am I doing that? Sure. There's just moments. I mean, I think there's moments for both. I think when you're married, there's moments where you want to be not married. And when you're single, there's moments you want to be married. It's a given take.
Starting point is 01:29:03 Stay tuned for more armchair expert if you dare. The problem with our current culture is, things can be in the Zika so much easier. So it's like you read that book. I don't know. You ordered that book. There's a paper trail on the internet of you having ordered that book. People buy that information.
Starting point is 01:29:32 Then you see a post that's this. And now it's feeding you everything that's about marriage right now. And then it has the illusion that everyone's talking about it or making art about it. But it's like also you're missing all this other stuff. This is for everyone. Like all of our interests are driven to us. Yeah, this feels a little different because it's like. It feels objective, right?
Starting point is 01:29:57 Well, no, it's just there are a lot of movies and shows right now that are about it. Even DTF St. Louis, I would say, is a relationship. But then there's also some 60-year-old woman right now that is like she's being fed the four different projects that are about child trafficking. Right. And for her, it feels like child trafficking is the big thing. I'm really noticing it because my mom's here and I'm really, really learning how much she's on her phone following links on this trip. The amount of stuff that she knows about that's going on in the government.
Starting point is 01:30:32 Yeah. It's an older person. I think there's, I think moms and dads, they're doing that. We keep talking about the youth. And I don't know that that's the right focus. We live in an era where you can fill your. entire day. There's like one thing that comes out about the courts. Then there's a few things that are happening in Congress. Then the Senate. Then the president's doing stuff. Then there's the
Starting point is 01:30:56 DA and the ICE. It's just like never in history have people been receiving more updates on what's happening with the government. And I think, although it's bad, but the onslaught of knowing of every little thing that everything a congressman said to another congressman in a hallway is at your your disposal. Yeah. And it's just, I, too. It's a lot. It's a lot, man.
Starting point is 01:31:23 But I do think, yeah, the older people. Well, also, you're retired. Like, what else? Like, if you don't have a job to go to all day long and kids to take care of or whatever, like, you may not have as much of a social life, the older you get. Like, yeah, it's there. It's a very convenient, easy source of engagement. Exactly.
Starting point is 01:31:44 But I think it gets you, I mean, I know. Well, yeah, it gets everyone. It's profiting on your outrage. The impact it has on your emotions. Yeah. And I just think you're turning over a ton of your emotional agency. Yeah, definitely. Oh, and it really worries me.
Starting point is 01:32:01 But I just do think, I just wonder if there's any changing people once they hit a certain age. Yeah, it's just hard for me to accept. In the same way, if I was watching my children go down a rabbit hole, I would feel very inclined to somehow try to intervene. I know. Because I hold as a family member, and I was really realizing this this week, you have a very unique role in that you really do tell each other the truth. There's no protecting of the relationship in the way and interpersonal friendship. Right.
Starting point is 01:32:35 There's boundaries. And a lot of shit's know your business. And you got to let people be who they are. But your family will tell you, your family, my mom will just, you know, she's here and she's looking at me, your hair is getting so curly and back. I would have never thought it was curly. I never thought I would have gone curly. It was so straight when you're kid.
Starting point is 01:32:51 You know, and then it's on to the next thing. And she's just scanning me. Yeah, I know. And that's what they love to scan. Yeah, and that's what family members do. Right. And of course, I'm reading so much Sedaris. And so I'm hearing how they talk to each other.
Starting point is 01:33:02 And so it's a gift in a lot of ways because they're just telling you the like, wow, I've noticed you're this way now. Right. Which is different from how I've known you to be. Right or wrong. Maybe that's a good change or bad. Yeah, yeah. But we'll family members tell each other.
Starting point is 01:33:18 I know. I tell people sometimes it gets me in trouble. Yeah. It doesn't really go well with friends. Well, I guess depends on the friendship and the closeness and the trust. But like you're paranoid to go. You're gaining, you gained weight. I know. Why do they do that?
Starting point is 01:33:30 You've lost weight. You've gained weight, right? Why are they always doing that? It's so, it is annoying. Sure, but I also think it's an important mechanism in our life because it's someone that's not a yes, man. It's not a friend. No, God, no. Yeah, and it's not bad to have some people in your life that are just like, hey, man, here's what I see that's different.
Starting point is 01:33:52 Yeah, I think it, well, I definitely think it's not good to have like, yes, man. I very much believe that. But, like, I don't know that anyone needs to just be anyone, whether it's your family or not, needs to be like, oh, like, what's on your, like, you. So you got a little, like, wrinkles now here. Like, no, I don't. Like, it does not. You can just keep your mouth shut about that. The little wrinkles here.
Starting point is 01:34:15 Like, Yeah, the physical. Like I'm noticing your chin. The physical narration, I don't know, is helpful. Because what can you do? Exactly. But big shifts in personality or I know you. I notice you're sad lately more than you have been.
Starting point is 01:34:28 Like, that's what family will tell you. Yeah. And friends don't always do that. Yeah. I think they should, though. So it has an enormous value. Right. I think.
Starting point is 01:34:38 Well, sure, yeah. Yeah. Even though it's uncomfortable. But we've talked about this before. It's like telling people they shouldn't do something. whether they're a family or not, it doesn't work. Like if it's like, well, we even just had someone on and we were talking about, and it's coming up, so we won't spoil it.
Starting point is 01:34:54 But a kid who got himself into a very bad situation. And the parents were like noticing, but they can't be like, hey, don't do that. Because that just makes the kid be like, fuck you. Well, they were, they hadn't thrown up their arms in the air either. They were trying to ride the line. Sure. And they knew more than anyone that he had changed. Well, of course, but the point is just saying like, hey, what you're doing is wrong or this is bad, just straight up calling something out like that.
Starting point is 01:35:24 It might not be the best approach. Always. And in fact, like, doesn't work. Yeah. Which is interesting. I mean, there's times it's bad and times it's good. Right. And certainly I have heard when my parents have made observations about me.
Starting point is 01:35:37 And I have had to think about it one way or another. I might conclude I don't agree with them or there's. no value to what they're saying. Yeah. But it forced me to take a minute to do a little inventory and examine if there's any merit to what they're saying. Right. And most friends aren't even going to say the thing that would get me thinking that.
Starting point is 01:35:59 They should. Not you in general. Yeah. There's a tactful way to do it. There's a kind way to tell people, like, I'm noticing this about you. I'm concerned. Yeah. I love you.
Starting point is 01:36:12 So that's why I'm saying it. Like, I think that's, again, maybe because, like, I invest a lot in friendship. That is, like, extremely important to me to be able to do and to receive it. And again, like you said, like sometimes I'm like, well, I disagree. Yeah, it goes right and it goes wrong. I'm just like, sisters will look at each other and go, holy shit, you should never get bangs again. It looks like shit. Right.
Starting point is 01:36:38 Now, no friends can say that. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. But your sister's going to just tell you the goddamn truth about that. And so that might be, you might go like, you know, yeah. Yeah. My brother's coming. What the fuck are you thinking with blank? Like, does siblings do that to each other?
Starting point is 01:36:55 Sure. Sure. Sure. They do. They do. Yeah, my brother's coming to visit tomorrow. Tomorrow? Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 01:37:04 What fun? I'm excited. With his lady? Yes. Lovely. I know. I'm really excited. Have you planned a bunch of things?
Starting point is 01:37:09 No, everyone keeps asking me that. And then I say no and everyone's like, you know, doing the side eye. Oh, I think that's fine. I just, I'm going in Asheville. Yeah. To have a guy's trip with Aaron and Aaron. Oh, nice. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:37:22 And so I've planned a bunch of stuff that we may or may not do, right? I normally am such a planner. Yeah. We've got a horse. I've fucking scheduled us for horseback riding. Oh, my God. Simply because none of us would want to do that. And I think it'll be so funny.
Starting point is 01:37:40 Oh, it will be something so. funny about us all doing something that we don't want to do. Yeah, and also Aaron went horseback riding over spring break in Kentucky, and he liked it. Did you, so there's an untold, I watched yesterday about a horseback rider. Oh, the one that just came out. Yeah. I don't know that for the plane. I love Untold.
Starting point is 01:37:58 It's a great series. All blessings untold. They do such a good job. They really do. But yeah, it made me, I'm like, okay, people are going to be mad. I mean, for saying this, but like, the horse world is an interesting world. Specific. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:38:11 You've not watched the chess. You must watch the chess one. I'm going to. I love that. I love chess. I love not knowing how to play. I do want to learn how to play chess. It's a fun game.
Starting point is 01:38:20 I want someone to teach me. The only bummer with chess is unlike most other games where at least minimally for your ego, you can go, I got bad cards or I got a bad tile deck. Like sometimes it's just luck. It is a battle of your brain. Yeah. And when you lose, you're like, oh, I'm dumber than this. It's hard.
Starting point is 01:38:41 Yeah. You don't go like, oh, experience has a lot to do with this game. Right. But I used, I had a spell and it was one of my favorite zones of life. Me and my friend Kareem who's not with us anymore. We used to play chess, listen to Fiona Apple and drink. Fun. Can you drink while playing?
Starting point is 01:39:04 Because don't you have to like think a lot? You're probably not getting better at the game. Okay. And probably he didn't drink as much as I did. But I think he did other things that I wasn't doing. The point is it was so lovely. And we were so beautifully matched that it went back and forth. Like no one left going like, yeah, I'm fucking.
Starting point is 01:39:21 Every time. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I think that's what you're hoping for a partner that's like once in a while you're winning. Yeah. I mean, you got it. You're supposed to be better than you. If you want to get better. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:39:32 But if you want to have fun in this life. Yeah. Okay. Let's do a little facties. This isn't backies. Okay. This is for. I'm very impressed by classical musicians.
Starting point is 01:39:44 Yeah. I really am. It's interesting. I wish I was, woman. I can see that you would be impressed by them. Yeah. I think discipline is... Yeah, you love...
Starting point is 01:39:54 Well, it's hard. The gymnasts. I'm impressed by ventures that have a level of talent, obviously. But what separates the good from the best are... is discipline. Yeah. I love that. I know.
Starting point is 01:40:13 Yeah. A lot of people do. A lot of people do. Yeah. Yeah. When I look at, oh, I can't even really say my opinion of all of it. It kind of came out in the interview, but it's like. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:40:24 The whole goal is to ultimately play this thing like a computer. Like play every single note perfectly on perfect pitch. There's a math to it. The music already exists. You're not. So that, to me, versus jazz, improv. Right. To me, it was like, wow, this is great. This parallels so many of our debates. It's like Neil Patrick Harris, that he would watch a woodworking video on YouTube and replicate the steps. And you were like, yes, that's great. Yeah. And I was like, why even woodwork if you're not being creative? I know. I was like, what are you saying? Yeah. And then the reward of figuring it out for me without instruction is so wonderful. Yeah. But yeah, the notion that like you're going to replicate something perfect. is the goal.
Starting point is 01:41:11 Well, here's, okay, I have a little bit of a difference. Okay. I think that, like, I like being taught. I like knowing the rules. I like knowing how to execute. I want to be perfect. But I also want all of that so that I can't, we, I, you can, yeah, you can play a little on top of it.
Starting point is 01:41:33 You can be a little, like, fun and playful on top of, like, the bedrock. of perfection. Yeah. Like the classic, like jazz to me is that they still know, like they know music in and out. But they could never play in a symphony orchestra. Right. Like as great as Coltrane was, I don't know that he can be first chair in the Boston Symphony Orchestra for the saxophone. That's true.
Starting point is 01:42:02 Probably maybe not. Yeah. I don't think one's right or wrong. I just think it's funny which one you're drawn to. And for me, I can't imagine. being proud of myself that I replicated something through lots of wrote. And that in its best version, I played as good as this violinist
Starting point is 01:42:19 from the 1960s everyone thought was perfect. Versus I'm Bob Dylan. I kind of sound like shit, but I like push an entire genre somewhere. Right. I don't know. I guess, yeah, different. But I don't think I'm trying to replicate anything. But I am trying to be.
Starting point is 01:42:39 good at what I'm doing. Like objectively good. Right. And subjectively good. I want it all. You want it all. Don't we all? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:42:49 Okay. What are the levels of weather warnings? Red is the highest alert level. Synonyms. Extreme. Danger. Warning. Signaling imminent risk to life and widespread damage.
Starting point is 01:43:02 Orange is the second level. Synonyms. Severe. Preparedness. Watch. Indicating severe weather that may cause significant localized damage. It looks like there's a yellow as well. Moderate, localized short term. Good. Look for those colors. I'm not even aware of this system. I've never seen the weather.
Starting point is 01:43:20 I know. We live in L.A. But even in Michigan, I don't remember them saying like there's an orange warning for a blizzard. Yeah. Well, this is an Iceland. It's only an ice. Well, I don't know. It might be other places too. All that weather talk gave me a moment to really take in all the many things that are on your sweater. And it's a real hodgepodge. It totally works, but it's like, I'm looking at first, I see the deer in the corner. I'm like, oh, this is kind of an autumnal deal. But then I see what looks like a snowflake, but then I realize, no, that's like a spring tree. Yeah. And then, I mean, and then there's some flowers. It's really anything the artist, there's a sheep. It's pretty gorgeous. I really like that sweater. Thank you. Thank you. But it's a real.
Starting point is 01:44:09 Hodgepodge of different images. What do we think this one is? A havelina. What's that? A wild pig. Yeah. Okay. Well, I think technically.
Starting point is 01:44:18 Or a pumba, the wardhog. It also looks like a warthog a little bit. I think technically. Yeah, what's the theme there? These are like biblical images. Oh, biblical. Okay. This is part of your conversion.
Starting point is 01:44:34 Yeah. I'm trying to just sneak it in. No, I just loved the switzerland. wetter, but I think it's like biblical animals. Okay. And then they threw in some, I guess. Yeah. Don't get me started on Noah's Ark.
Starting point is 01:44:50 I want that to be real in a sense, but I want there to also be a discovery documentary about what absolute pandemonium and chaos there was out of all. Oh, what it would be. Yeah, I know. I know. I know. I know. You know what. And the genetic diversity.
Starting point is 01:45:06 I don't know where the genetic diversity came from. From the animal? If there's only two, where's all this? Well, they're mixing and matching. Oh, Jesus. Interspecies? Yeah. And the bird, why did this birds stay put?
Starting point is 01:45:21 Oh, like feet on the boat? Yeah. Maybe they flew above. So just the boat was cruising and it was just like every known bird was hovering above. I know. Listen. Okay. And these birds that have to live in. No, maybe not every note.
Starting point is 01:45:32 Maybe all the birds weren't invented. It's just a bold of all the stories. And I understand they're all allegory or whatnot and their parables and they're, right? Like you're thinking too hard about it. But it's a bold one to even pitch. It's like go with me on this allegory. Why did they pick two? So they could reproduce.
Starting point is 01:45:49 They needed a male and female. Oh, right. The whole goal was to repopulate the plan after God murdered every single person on the plan other than. And Adam and no. Noah. No one is bride and his kids. Who's Noah's bride?
Starting point is 01:46:03 I don't know. But also we're all descendants of just. Noah? Incest because only their kids were here to repopulate. Even though that doesn't even make sense because we're supposed to be, there are so many questions. I'm just saying it's a tough one. Yeah. Noah's wife from the Bible.
Starting point is 01:46:19 She apparently doesn't get a name. She's just been referred to as Noah's wife. So all of our mom. Women are useless. Our mom doesn't even have a name. Oh, not worthy. Jesus Christ. They identify her as Nama or MZara.
Starting point is 01:46:33 And how many kids did they have? I want to know how many of these kids were making love to reproduce the whole planet. I think every modern Christian would go like, hey, man, it's not literal. Three sons. Three. Oh, fuck. So they all had sex with the mom? Where did the fucking kids come from?
Starting point is 01:46:48 I don't think. I think there were some other people like Moses. No, no. That's before. Oh, right. Yeah, so this was explaining to me. The humans were having sex with the angels and they were creating fucked up creatures. And so God had to flood the entire planet and kill every single person.
Starting point is 01:47:10 an animal other than what was on Noah's art. Okay. Okay. Okay. And then those remaining animals repopulated the planet we now live on. All right. So either Noah and the wife had many more kids after the waters subsided and those kids had sex or the three sons had sex with the mom. The three sons had their wives apparently.
Starting point is 01:47:37 Oh, they had their wives. Yes. Where did the wives come from? They were invited. They were adults. Yeah, they were allowed to come on the boat. So Noah's a grandpa. No one was tasked with, believe in me, start building this arc.
Starting point is 01:47:49 I'm going to flood it. I was like, you're crazy. Get all the animals. Good luck. He gathered them all. People are he's crazy. And then the flood came. And it killed everybody except for the people he had on the boat.
Starting point is 01:48:00 So apparently his son's had wives. That helps with the genetic diversity. I guess. So I guess it's just cousins were making love in the second. Yeah. Year long catastrophic deluge sent by God to destroy humanity due to widespread wickedness. Only Noah, his family, and pairs of every animal species survived on a large arc. It is considered a global event by believers and is historically linked to regional Mesopotamian in floods.
Starting point is 01:48:29 That's why that's a terrible in there. Noah's sons, wives. The Tigris and Euphrasis constantly flooded. That's why it was a really relevant story. Oh, eight people survived the flood. Okay. So we're all the product of eight people. We have the three sons.
Starting point is 01:48:45 We've got the wife of them. That's six. And then I guess no one the mom. I guess the cousins took care of the rest. I want to learn more about the wives. Me too. I bet they were hot. I'm not so sure.
Starting point is 01:49:02 Okay. Okay. What's the average height of an Icelandic man? Five feet 11.6. seven inches. Just shy of six feet. What's the average height of an American? Average height of an American man.
Starting point is 01:49:15 Ooh, do Indian. Okay, five foot nine is American. Okay, so they're two and a half inches taller on average. Okay. Indian is going to be lower. Yeah. Five five. Five five.
Starting point is 01:49:26 Yeah. So they're six and a half inches taller on average. Yeah. Than Indian. Let's do Chinese five, six point eight. Aller than the Indians. Yeah. Okay.
Starting point is 01:49:38 That sounds right to you. Yeah, probably. What about Philippines, Filipinos? So Rob feels seen. Five four. Five four. That's lower. That's our lowest so far.
Starting point is 01:49:51 Should I look up, what's the lowest national average? For men. Yeah. Timor Leat least. Okay. Island in the Pacific. And that's five three. Five three.
Starting point is 01:50:07 Yeah. Yemen is also low. Louse, Liberia, not low. Yeah. Liberia. Let's do tallest. Okay. Oh, I also typed in Hortest instead of Shortest.
Starting point is 01:50:19 Figure in New, though. So those are actually the Hortest. Those are the Hortes. Yeah. Netherlands, six feet. Point four inches. Then we got Montenegro. I'm still above the average in the Netherlands.
Starting point is 01:50:34 Yep. Montenegro. and Estonia also top topses. Stretch limos. Okay. Okay. Now was Charlie Puth doing sound engineering at Berkeley production and engineering? Yes.
Starting point is 01:50:47 Okay, population of Iceland, 402,000 to 400 and 2,300. That's a small city in the U.S. It's a small place. And then the Presidential Scholarship, U.S. Presidential Scholars Program is a prestigious invitation-only non-monetary award, recognizing up to 161 top graduating high school seniors annually for exceptional talent and academics, arts, or technical education. I know someone who got one. It was a big deal.
Starting point is 01:51:17 All right. Well, that's it. Okay. Do you know when I told Lincoln that I had a hunch she might like her? Yep. And she's like, oh, my God, I love her. She has an identical twin. And I'm like, I know she came.
Starting point is 01:51:30 She's like, she did? Yeah. And this was good. because the twin episode just came out. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Of Armchair Anonymous, so that was perfect. Perfect timing, as if we scripted it. All right, love you.
Starting point is 01:51:42 Love you.

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