Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - Susie Wolff (Managing Director of F1 Academy)

Episode Date: June 24, 2026

Susie Wolff (Driven, F1 Academy, and Williams Formula One) is a former professional racing driver, and managing director of F1 Academy. Susie joins Armchair Expert to discuss her motorsport-o...bsessed childhood in Scotland, her grandfather's career as a daredevil motocross rider, and discovering karting as the only girl on the track. Susie and Dax talk about racing against Lewis Hamilton as a kid, the physical toll of driving an F1 car, and building F1 Academy from a financially unworkable idea into a fully-backed series for female drivers. Susie explains why performance is the purest validation, how femininity stopped feeling like weakness, and why writing a letter to her younger self was the most emotional part of writing her memoir.Check 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
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome, welcome, welcome to armchair, expert, experts on expert. I'm Dan Shepard. I'm joined by Lily Padman. Hello. We got a fox in today, but her name is Wolf. Oh, good job. Yeah, Susie Wolf. Oh, we love her.
Starting point is 00:00:15 She's so incredible. We love her. She's so incredible. Coolest person. On Earth? Yeah. Yeah. I felt really lame.
Starting point is 00:00:25 I said it. Yeah. Well, I did too. It's hard not to feel lame. She makes me feel lame. But she is also so sweet and nice and kind and inclusive. But her gift is to make you feel lame. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:00:36 Yeah, yeah, that's her gift. Susie is a former professional racing driver and current managing director of F1 Academy. She's also one of, I think, either the only one or maybe one of two women to ever drive an F1 car on a track on a race weekend. Incredible. And if people remember the Total Wolf interview, that is her husband. And he said she's a half second faster no matter what he does when he cheats. He used his different tires, puts weight in her car. You can't get anywhere close to her.
Starting point is 00:01:03 She has a new memoir out called Driven. Very appropriate title. Please check that out. Susie Wolf is a blessing on planet Earth. Enjoy. He's an object square. You ever fucked with the Topichico, though. This one bites hard.
Starting point is 00:01:35 What's sweet as it bites. A lot of carbonation. Yeah. It's good. It's good. It's very good. Yeah. And...
Starting point is 00:01:42 I didn't know they had different... And there's a shortage. This is only gaining value as we sit here. Well, now I feel really bad that I'm taking it. Oh, no, no. No, you must take it. You must take it.
Starting point is 00:01:51 If I only had one, I would want you to have. That's right. No, it's a whole world sparkling water, like the size of the bubbles and the volume of the bubbles. Well, Toto only has sparkling water because he has this theory that he doesn't need to get out for the toilet in the night. If he drinks sparkling water. Only sparkling.
Starting point is 00:02:06 Oh. I'm not convinced. Okay, yeah. How successful is this? He's still up, right? He's still up. He's still up. He's still up.
Starting point is 00:02:14 He and I both old men. I think it's an age thing, but I'm not going to tell him that. I'm just like, you just keep drinking that spot from water. I will tell him. I will tell him. But it was so funny because I flew in last night and he's like, oh, where are you going? I said, I have that. He's like, I've been there.
Starting point is 00:02:28 He's like, yeah, I know. He's like, you're going to really enjoy it. I'm like, oh, that's so nice. I think you called him while we were interviewing him. You did. We have this bypass where we can always reach each other. I know. Which can be embarrassing.
Starting point is 00:02:40 No, I've adopted it since that interview. I didn't know that was an option. Because in general, phone's just off, right? It's so annoying. Who can break through to you? Toto? That's it. Okay, Jack doesn't have a phone yet.
Starting point is 00:02:53 No, he doesn't have a phone yet, but it's a good point because I should put my mom on it because she's on duty this week. Okay, let's pop for on there. But sometimes Jack grabs her phone and he calls me to ask me trivial things like, do I really need to have a bath tonight? Yeah. Like, yes, Jack. Just do whatever your grandmother says. Oh, my God. So he doesn't need a bath.
Starting point is 00:03:12 He does. He does. He might be stinky, dad. And there's nothing worse than smelly boys. I know. And they need to learn early. They don't want to sing. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:03:22 Hygiene. There's nothing worse than smelly boys. I'm with you. Now I'm paranoid that I smelled when I gave you a hug when you walk in. You didn't. Don't worry. But I have girls, so maybe I've been misled. Because we were bathing them every single night.
Starting point is 00:03:35 More is the routine to get them sleepy. Yeah. And at some point we're like, they're not getting dirty enough. to justify your bath. Now it's pretty, you know. No, now they bathe, right? They do, but not every day. We need to get, I think, because we're getting into some hormone tears. Well, yeah, yeah, now it's probably time to pick up the...
Starting point is 00:03:51 It's time. But I think they'll come to the realization on their own. Of course. What was standard in Scotland? You were bathing every night. There's no way, right? What happens in Scotland is not really relatable to the rest of your... Yeah, what's the vibe in Scotland in the 80s as a little person?
Starting point is 00:04:07 The vibe was, we were discussing recently, memories of your birthday parties when you're younger. My memory is my dad bringing in an ATV, like a four-wheel terrain vehicle home with a trailer, nine, ten kids on the back of the trailer hanging on for dear life and him going through huge mud
Starting point is 00:04:24 on this mountain behind the house on a big hill. And I was going faster, and we got home and he just sprayed us all down, him and my mum water. It was a really outdoorsy life.
Starting point is 00:04:37 Yeah. It was, if I look back, now a brilliant, brilliant childhood. None of the pressures of, like, city or expectations. It was just so wholesome. It's a little town on the western edge of Scotland, on the water, right? It's a tourist town. Well, it was where everyone took the ferry to all of kind of the outer Hebrides.
Starting point is 00:04:58 So it was more like a hub where people arrived. Did you say Hebrides? Outer Hebrides. Yeah, what are Hebrides? Outer Hebrides. Is that like... Oh, islands. Islands.
Starting point is 00:05:07 Islands. Like, they're all these little islands. I thought it was my accent at first. Who knows? I mean, some of be new words. Okay. Yeah. Well, the Hebrides are like a whole area of Scotland
Starting point is 00:05:18 off the west coast. Okay. And you took the ferry from Aubin. Would there be transient boyfriends? Like a new boy comes into town in the summer. He's with his family. They're on vacation.
Starting point is 00:05:31 You fall in love. They have to return home. What kind of girl do you think I am? A fun one. A transient boyfriend. One. Driven, focused, aggressive, determined of the kind that could snag any kind of boyfriend she wanted. Not at that age.
Starting point is 00:05:46 No, I was completely uninterested in boys. You were. And my dad, I remember so distinctly when I was younger, around the age of 12, and my brother was only 15 months older. And he said something about a girl in his class. And then my dad looked to me and said, you are way too young to have a boyfriend. And I was like, yeah, you're right. I'm way too young to have a boyfriend. And then there was this moment in my childhood that this person will never know what effect they had
Starting point is 00:06:11 because one of my dad's good friends who owned a pub, his name was Mario. And he said a throwaway comment to me, and I must have been like 13 or 14, and he said, you'll be pregnant by the time you're 16 and working in your dad's shop. What? Also, that is a crazy thing to say to a young girl. Maybe he did it as like a reverse engineering. I was like absolutely not. So then it was like, stay away from boys.
Starting point is 00:06:33 Okay, you have kind of my dream childhood. Not even kind of. You have my total dream childhood. In that your father owned a motorcycle dealership. Let's start with grandpa. It probably starts with your maternal grandfather, yeah, being into motorcycles and whatnot. So my mother's father was works,
Starting point is 00:06:52 motorcross rider in the 1950s. Look at this. Wow. Yeah, and he was an English daredevil. Anything he did he was really good at. Did he ride trials bikes? Yes. And he was sponsored by BSA?
Starting point is 00:07:03 Yes. He was a BSA works rider, which in his day was like... He's a god! But what, for, you know, I have to do this, for people who don't know what that is? Triumph, BSA, this is one of the like historic motorcycle brands. Okay, great, okay.
Starting point is 00:07:14 And he had a shop also in England that kind of sold the bikes. And when the Japanese bike started to arrive and kind of took over the market, he realized it wouldn't be a proper sustainable business. They couldn't really compete with the influx. And he didn't adopt selling them. No, because he's a staunch. Loyal. Yeah, nationalist and loyal.
Starting point is 00:07:33 I get it. Now, his most of his business. motorcycle shop was in Scotland or no. He moved there to open that. He moved to Scotland to do diving. He was changing completely his career. Diving into water? Yeah, he was a commercial diver.
Starting point is 00:07:47 Whoa. Was he welding underwater? No. No, I think he was more, like in the West Coast of Scotland, there's a real industry there to go and collect propellers, which had fallen off. Okay. Because there were so many boats and ferries and stuff like that. But then I don't really know much about that period because of course he got the bends and became paralysed.
Starting point is 00:08:07 So yeah, he lost the use of his legs, yeah. Oh my God. He'd done a dive when he hadn't been feeling well and came up too quickly. And he tells the story of them dragging him onto the boat. Now, bearing in mind, it's a super athletic guy, very, very sporty. And he remembers lying and his leg was falling off the edge of the bed. And he said there was a moment where I realized I couldn't bring my leg. back up. Oh, my God. Oh, that's panic-inducing.
Starting point is 00:08:36 And he said, that's when I realized this is not good. So I've only ever known him in a wheelchair, but you shouldn't think that that stopped him. I mean, I never once heard him complaining. He did paragliding as he got older. He opened a caravan. So he very much pivoted around. He even had crash landings in his paraglider. Broke's ankle. My God, I guess it doesn't matter. But just to add in there, my grandmother never got a carer. Wow. She looked after him all on her own and dedicated herself, which if I look back now with the perspective I have with age and obviously becoming a wife and a mother, incredible.
Starting point is 00:09:13 Yes. Really incredible. Wow. So the results of having that risk takery of a grandfather is that your mother herself was also quite a risky young woman yet, and she rode motorcycles from what age on? Well, my uncle kind of took after my grandfather, did trials bike and nearly won the Scottish Six Days trials and was very talented also on a bike. But when the accident happened, it was difficult for them because suddenly the whole family dynamic changed. I think my mum lost quite a lot of confidence because suddenly this father figure who so many people looked up to at that time
Starting point is 00:09:48 came back home a different man in a way and relied so much on my grandmother. So she lost a couple of years of her teenage years to that whole dynamic changing. And I think when she was 16, my grandfather said to her, go down and see John Stoddard and get yourself a bike. And she loved speed. And she is very much, you know, get up and go like my grandfather. And that, of course, is where she met my dad in the bike shop. Oh, wow, this is such a great story.
Starting point is 00:10:19 Love story. I love this. Meek you. I just wouldn't be who I am today without my mom. Because you say role models, but she set the foundation, you know, she had her own business. She raced bikes. It was such an equal marriage between the two of them. And she had as much get up and go as my dad.
Starting point is 00:10:35 It absolutely shaped who I am. Yeah. So she was in a motorcycle. They meet and fall in love. What's the age gap? She was 16 when she went to buy a motorcycle? And now you're testing me. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:45 Does not make them look bad here. Well, she got her first. So you have to be 17 to drive a motorbike in Scotland. So she was maybe 16 turning 17. So maybe she went at 16 to get ready to buy the bike. for when she was 17. She was dating someone else, one of my dad's friends. Oh, scandalous.
Starting point is 00:10:59 Small town. Who was not treating her well. Oh. And it was a really good friend of his day, but on bike tours together, everything. And then it became clear that my mom and dad were better suited. Simmering. Simmering.
Starting point is 00:11:11 Yeah, yeah. Yeah. And then I think actually quite similar to me. I think it was my mum was the first one to say, actually, John. I'm interested. I'm going in this direction. I think you and I fit. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:22 Okay, so, yes, they fall in love. They, they, get married, and then father's running a motorcycle shop, but he's selling everything, presumably, because you're getting quads and jet skis. Yeah, and outboards for the fisheries and the fishermen. And basically, in a small town, you know what it's like, you sell whatever anyone needs. Yeah, right. So it was motorbikes. In the summer, a lot of motorbikes would tour through, do the whiskey tour, up through Scotland, because it's beautiful scenery.
Starting point is 00:11:46 But then the all-terrain vehicles for all the farms. But so basically, you had access to every single thing I wanted as a kid. Your first bikes of PW50, yeah? Yeah. How old were you when you got that? Well, no, my very first was a little three-wheeler, a Yamaha three-wheeler, and then Pee-W-50, and I must have been five. Yes, great.
Starting point is 00:12:05 This is when my daughter got her first PW-50. Love it. Yes, yes, yes. And then P-W-E-80, love that P-V-80. Sure, sure. Now you're shifting gears with a clutch. No, that's not a T-100. The P-E-A-T doesn't have a clutch, no.
Starting point is 00:12:17 Oh, okay, here are the 80s all head clutches. No. And I remember the first time I tried with the clutch. I was just like, oh. It took me a while to it used to. It's a humbling experience the first. Dear brothers and sisters? The older brother.
Starting point is 00:12:30 Yeah, 15 months older than me. Oh, yeah. Yeah, so I would imagine it's kind of a perfect storm for you because similarly, I have a little sister. And I think if you have a little sister and she likes you, she's just going to trend a little bit more into, I don't know, conventionally boy stuff. What do you think about that?
Starting point is 00:12:48 I think so. And I think it was also my character. Like, well, anything he can do. can do. I was very competitive. And he was a wonderful brother. He still is a wonderful brother. So he kind of took me under his wing. There wasn't a huge rivalry of, you know, and I don't want her around. If he went on his motorbike, he was on his RT 100. I was in my PWE 80. He was in a PW 80. I was on a PWB 50. It was always that we were together. He was probably proud of you. It's cool to have a little sister who rides.
Starting point is 00:13:12 Not true, it goes far to see him. That's too much. But we definitely did a lot of things together. And my parents never really differentiated between the son and daughter. It wasn't like I ever had the feeling that I shouldn't be on a bike or that I was doing anything unusual for a girl. It was very much if you want to do it, you do. And if you don't, you don't. There was no real pressure or feeling that I was doing something unusual for a girl. We do have to take one second to worship your father because for people who aren't super into motorsports, the craziest form of racing is definitely MotoGP. It makes the F1 drivers look cowardly. So that just start there. And then the scariest thing in the motorcycle world by far is the Isle of Man TT. And for people don't
Starting point is 00:13:49 No, they're racing on a public road, on the circumference of an island. What is it, like an 80-mile, 90-mile loop. Every single year someone dies, pretty much without exception, is the most dangerous motorsport imaginable, and your father raced in the aisle man. And lost his best friend there. Lost his best friend. Just standard. It's so funny you say that now.
Starting point is 00:14:10 He literally is going there this week. Oh, he is? Yeah, because it starts, I think, this weekend. And he now goes and obviously spectates. He had a team for a while, but this year there's no team. just spectating. Have you ever been? I haven't. I've been invited by Dukadi, and I'm like, yeah, I'm going to go, but I know I'll ride on Saturday. You need to go. Wait, you're going to ride in it? On Saturday, the public can take a lap.
Starting point is 00:14:32 Yeah, but you can take it easy there. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You need to take it easy there. Well, that's my concern is how easy I'll be able to take it. But yes, I do want to do that very bad. I ended up taking Toto, and it was an incredible experience, because you just cannot comprehend the speed and the bravery until you get there. The sides of much of the public road are cobblestone walls. So if you come off, you're going into a cobblestone wall.
Starting point is 00:15:01 There's numerous... You're not into it at all, Monica. No, Monica, there's numerous hills and dips where the people are at 195 getting air for like 130 feet and landing. It's full on. It is truly the most hair-raising, scariest motor sport in the world.
Starting point is 00:15:18 It is. Your dad did that. He's a warrior. I just want to worship him for one second. So I got to imagine if dad is doing that, it's hard to take anyone serious if anyone's saying, like, be careful. Or maybe that wasn't even being said in your household.
Starting point is 00:15:32 It wasn't being said, but it wasn't like we were kamikaze either. I guess there was a structure to it that it wasn't just like grottling your bike and go flat out. We built a little track kind of in the hills behind where we lived. And, of course, we got the stopwatch out
Starting point is 00:15:45 and it was who could go quicker. But we weren't kamikaze. because there was an element where you always had to have your helmet on, you had to have your proper boots on, and you had a respect, you cleaned your bike when you came home, you put it properly away in the garage. So we weren't kamikaze, but we loved speed, and we loved that life of being out and that feeling of, you know...
Starting point is 00:16:03 Yeah, adrenaline. Were you scared when your dad went to do this thing? I was too young to even realize. And actually my mom made him stop when he lost his best friend and when we were young kids, because I think for her she's felt, well, that's way too risky now that we've got... I also doubt they said, like, okay, so daddy's going away to the most dangerous lethal race in the world this weekend. Well, yeah, but like...
Starting point is 00:16:26 They probably kind of hush that part. There were pictures up in the wall, but I never really comprehended until I went. I never really comprehended what he did. It's madness. Promise me your goal. Oh, yes, yes. Because you would really, really love it. Okay, when do we get into a cart?
Starting point is 00:16:41 Eight years old? Slightly before, because my dad had a bit of a mid-life crisis and went back to racing road bikes for his 40th birthday. got himself a bike. So we would spend a lot of time at Knock Hill, the only track in Scotland, but because we were not really that interested in just watching my dad, there was a kind of perimeter road to the track where we would be doing laps in our Pue 50 and Pue 80s, taking on RT-100s and water-cooled 1-2-5s. And there was a little cart track there. And I remember distinctly it was five pounds for 15 minutes. Well, we hounded my parents for five and another five and another five. And then eventually, I think my mom said to my dad, listen, we come to these race weekends.
Starting point is 00:17:19 It's all about you. I think it's time that the kids did something. Yes. So we got a go-carp kind of around our eighth birthday. A shared go-kart between you and David? No, because he was bigger than me. I mean, they were secondhand. They were, I'll never forget, Swiss Huttliss.
Starting point is 00:17:33 It was red. It was quite rusty and peeling with pain. But I was so in love with this thing. Yeah. And did you show more aptitude in that relative to David? Like, you had to be a mildly competitive with your brother And did this feel like something Shit, I might have the upper hand here?
Starting point is 00:17:50 At that time, no, we would like be out on the higher carts Smashing lumps out of each other To see who could win. And then suddenly, when we got to our very first race, We were a bit like, oh, there's like 100 kids here. Yeah. And it wasn't any more me versus him, It was more like, this is big now.
Starting point is 00:18:10 We've got a lot of competition. Intense. And we never really had, well no that's not true I was going to see we never really had a big rabble but we did have one race where I should have won he took me out on the last lap and we didn't speak for the whole way home
Starting point is 00:18:23 oh gosh and after that my dad always made sure we were in different categories so we moved my brother up and I stayed and then we never raced each other again your father had Serena and Venus on his yeah that's smart so were you receiving instruction
Starting point is 00:18:39 or were you just kind of learning as you went I definitely wasn't a clear talent at the beginning. I mean, it was quite daunting being on a much bigger track and lots of other kids out there. I always tell the same story. I went out the first time and it was like scary. And I came into the pits and I said to my dad, I really don't like it out there. I mean, that's a lot. A lot of chaos going on.
Starting point is 00:18:59 A lot of chaos and they're kind of like getting hit as you were getting past and it was just. Aggressive little boys. Yeah, lots of aggressive little boys. Yeah. Are you the only girl there? I was, but I never realized I was. He didn't clock that. No.
Starting point is 00:19:11 Because we're all wearing hell. Nobody really spoke about me being a girl at that time. I was just Susie. And my dad said, well, we got two options now, Toots, because his nickname for me was always Toots. We put the cart back in the truck and we head home where you go back out there. You try and go quicker and when they hit you, you're going to hit them back twice as hard. So me being the character I was, I was like, I'll go back out there. I will get faster.
Starting point is 00:19:29 And then it was something that just became all consuming in a very good way. You're so cool. Yeah, she's so cool. Oh my God. I feel so, so, so lame. Yeah, yeah. I'm lame. You're not lame.
Starting point is 00:19:42 You're not lame. You're not lame. No, no, I am. I think it must be meant. Like, how do you not have fear? I'll let you answer. Both that you can answer. It's funny enough, I'm watching it right now. So I went to our eldest daughter when she was about seven or eight. And at that point, she already rode dirt bikes. She had an off-road razor like a vehicle. She's great at driving that, like a real immediate aptitude. And I said, hey, we could get carts, you and me, we have a tour bus. We could just start hitting races. I'm ready if you're up for it. And she was like, well, take me to the cart track and let me see if I like it. I take her to the cart track.
Starting point is 00:20:17 She'd go go to one of the juniors. It's all boys who've already done it a bunch of times. She has one session. She comes back and she's like, I don't like it. And I'm like, mm-hmm. Okay. Heartbroken. All I wanted as a kid was to someone to support me doing that.
Starting point is 00:20:32 I now have the money to do that. And she just was not interested. Fast forward to like maybe eight months ago. She's like, I want to go back to the cart track. Take her back. Now she's super into it. She's 13. It's too late for anything competitive.
Starting point is 00:20:44 It's not. It's not. No. Okay, well, that's encouraging. It's definitely not. Point is, is what I got to observe, which was the most rewarding was in soccer when she played soccer, she didn't have that, like, I'm going to kill this person for the ball. She didn't have that, which I could care less. But within three sessions at the track, when she started getting good and there were slow adults out there,
Starting point is 00:21:03 I started noticing like, oh, she wants to kill these people to get by. That magic thing has just kind of happened. And, yeah, you kind of either have that one of a lot of. of us is going to the center of this turn. And it's going to be me. But you know what I'm doing now with F1 Academy, it's because of girls that you're a daughter. Because I'm pretty sure if that little girl at eight,
Starting point is 00:21:21 at her first time with the cart track, had seen another little girl out there, it could have changed her whole experience of it. But because that first experience was daunting, like mine was daunting, but I had that older brother, I was like, well, if he's doing, I'll figure it out. Yeah. And now she's 13, she's got a bit more confidence,
Starting point is 00:21:37 she's a bit older, she asked to go back there. Uh-huh. It's in her. Anyways, it's not about her. No, but this is so encouraging for me because that I think is the shift that's happening within motorsport now. Because before it's always seen as this egoistical,
Starting point is 00:21:51 macho, male-dominated world. It's changing. And it has to change because there's so many talented young drivers that are female like your daughter out there that just need to be exposed to it because they've got that passion within them. You were saying in a different interview I listened to you in which I hadn't thought of this,
Starting point is 00:22:06 there's only really three sports where the men and women are together and it's horse jumping. riding or jumping. Oh, yeah. Sailing and driving. Whoa. And all involve either a big piece of equipment or a big animal. Yeah, that's true.
Starting point is 00:22:20 Weird. I definitely don't believe, and having been in this sport for as long as I have, that there's any reason why a woman can't compete at the very top. It just comes down to the talent pool and the kind of pipeline. Well, let us, for the most skeptical audience member, what about someone who's like, well, what about just testosterone as a, aggressive hormone that boys at 18 have an excessive amount of, do you think there's any deficit for not having that? Listen, I would never claim to see a man and a woman or a young boy
Starting point is 00:22:51 and a young girl are the same biologically. Clearly, we're all made up differently, but it also comes down to individuals. Exactly. And it's so funny you mentioned testosterone because when I was racing, I won't see what age I was, I had a medical, and I had high levels of testosterone. We were just never taking supplements or anything like that at that time. And immediately, the guys that did the kind of assessment said, oh, this is an outlier. You know, can we do some more tests and studies? Because I think this is maybe why you were a racing driver. And I went away and thought about overnight and came back the next day and said, no, I don't want me being singled out. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And I don't think my results are the basis or should form what a
Starting point is 00:23:30 female racing driver. Exactly. Because I think it comes much more down to characteristics of the individual. There are some girls who are really tough. Also, they were chicken and egging it, and I would argue your participation in it, your body starts reacting. We have tons of data on stockbrokers. When they make riskier trades or testosterone goes up, which begets more riskier trades,
Starting point is 00:23:52 it's working in both directions. So, yeah, your body could have been like, oh, no, we're in a situation where we need more testosterone regularly. But I don't think that the aggression is something which can stop a woman not being successful in the sport. Because you can also argue that red mist
Starting point is 00:24:08 and overaggression is a real negative. Exactly. Yes. Unless you're somehow Max Verstappen and you're on the edge. Whatever that thing is. It's like I'm willing to die. Did you watch the Nureberggring 24 hours? Yes.
Starting point is 00:24:19 Incredible. He's such a God. It's crazy. Yeah, it was impressive. I know 13's a pivotal moment, but between 8 and 13 when you're starting to cart a lot and you're starting to race,
Starting point is 00:24:30 walk me through some of those challenges. You're slowly, I bet it starts occurring to you. Oh, I'm the only girl here, or one of very few. Not at that age. I wasn't your stereotypical tomboy. I loved pink. I played with Barbie.
Starting point is 00:24:42 I asked for pink sideboards for my go cards. I had a pink race suit. Your father was using Barbies as leverage to get you to do things. He offered to buy you a very specific Barbie. Cowboy Barbie. The cowboy Barbie. I still have her. You still have her.
Starting point is 00:24:54 So cute. And it was, when I was 13, I was taken to watch a Formula 3 race at Donington. There's an English driver at that time called Jensen Button, who of course went on to be a world champion. He's also fucking gorgeous. I just, sorry. I can't judge drivers as hot or not. You can't?
Starting point is 00:25:10 I always had this rule I would never date another driver. And even now, and obviously there's a lot more interesting than F1, and they're like, oh, he's hot. I'm like, is he? Yeah. There's a lot of fun. It is a stable of the cutest boys in the world. Really? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:25:23 It's asymmetric to any other sport where it's like, why are they all? Well, I kind of have a theory on why they're all so good looking. They're often the children of rich people. Right. I mean, that's just a fact. No, not always. Oh my God, let's go through the current grid. Lewis is not from...
Starting point is 00:25:37 Yeah, keep going. He's an exception. Kimi Antinelli is not from huge wealth. Okay, you're right. George Russell is not from huge wealth. Huge wealth? Okay, okay. No, no, no.
Starting point is 00:25:48 Okay, no. I mean, his father sold his business recently, but he didn't have a lot of money. That's why he relied on junior program. Landau's family's loaded. Charles's his uncle, uncle who was supporting... But his uncle helped, but he comes from a very humble background. Okay. Yeah, okay.
Starting point is 00:26:03 But he's just so, he's a model. Yeah, he's just gorgeous. Oh my God. I wonder if this is a thing she plays for Toto. No. What I will see is his wife is beautiful. Yes, she is beautiful. They're a beautiful pair.
Starting point is 00:26:19 They're a beautiful pair. But Toto's so hot. Oh, Toto's definitely hot. Yeah. He's the hottest. Okay, so back to F3. You saw an F3 race. Jensen Button, I interrupted you.
Starting point is 00:26:28 And that's when I think it all changed in my head because suddenly what was just a hobby, I suddenly thought, oh, wait a minute. I can do this and that environment, the car, I'll never forget the first time I walked into the garage, everything was so immaculate and precise and the engineers. And I just thought, this is where I want to be. And suddenly I was like, okay, I can be a racing driver. I can get some car thing, move to single-seater's and get to F3 and then maybe get to F1.
Starting point is 00:26:49 And never once did I question why there was no woman in F1. I simply had David Coolhart on my wall because he was Scottish, Jack Villeneuve, because he was in the Williams. And at 18, we'd done the world championships. Lewis Hamilton was there. You also had Wayne Rainey on your wall? Wayne Rainey, Kevin Schwartz. There we go.
Starting point is 00:27:07 In the Kimmerchwant's fan club, loved him. With the yellow bandana. Oh, I loved him so much. So once you saw that and you got more focused on, okay, I want to do this as a career. Did you start taking your time the weekends at the race to start educating yourself? Like, I want you to explain to people what you had to learn about the mechanics of the car and the engineering of the car. Your job's not just to get in there and drive the car. You could do that.
Starting point is 00:27:35 But the great drivers in history have been able to give really important feedback to their mechanics and their engineers to make the car faster. And if they don't have that vernacular, there's going to be only so much you can develop the car or the car. This is kind of a big component of it. It really is. And then when you get to European and World Championship level, it comes down to the finest details, like what toe you're running, what camber, what sprocket. It's not like you need to sit down and really educate yourself.
Starting point is 00:27:58 You live it. So you're trying different things with your carts to get small advantage, like different thicknesses of rear axle, tire pressures, how many, what do we call them again, seat supports? Because that changed the way. Where your weight distribution was in the car. And I always had to carry extra weight, so we would move the weight around to see which was the optimum.
Starting point is 00:28:16 Which could have been nice because you could put it on the weak inside wheel. We talk the same language. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. But some people don't. I want to give you credit. Some people don't take the time to do that. Sometimes it's exhausting. I'm a real perfectionist.
Starting point is 00:28:28 So I was the one that curated all the folders that had the set-up sheets from every race so that when we came back, I knew exactly where to start from, what we changed, my notes on each track. I loved, like, the color-coordinated folders and all the set-up sheets. I also want to introduce, when is juggling the pros and cons of being the only girl at these races? Because there's upside and downside, and I want to explore what those tensions were. I think the only moment I really, because I'd grown up racing with Lewis and that generation. Let's talk about that.
Starting point is 00:29:02 So for a while, you were in the Scottish League. Scottish, then British. And you won driver of the year, 14 people? Well, no. Yeah, but that was really national. But then you step up to the British carting. Yeah, and had a bit of success in the British carding, which allowed me to qualify them for the European championships. And where do you meet Lewis at what rung of this?
Starting point is 00:29:21 Oh, very early on. I think I was only nine we'd gone down for our first British race. and they were all talking about this little boy with the yellow helmet who was outstanding. And it was Lewis. How old was he? He would have been eight. So you're a year older than him?
Starting point is 00:29:33 I'm nearly two years older than him. A little boy with a yellow helmet. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. That's a really cute picture. And did you race against him? In karting, we were at the age of kind of 14. We ended up in the same class because then became 14 to 16-year-olds. So we weren't always direct competitors,
Starting point is 00:29:49 but then became competitors towards the end. And then when he moved into single-seaters, We were always nearly, but I was sometimes the category above. Because you're a little older. Yeah, but there's the famous Formula I know podium where I made P3, he won the race, and I couldn't get my champagne open. And he was a lot more used to winning than I was, so he grabbed the bottle from me and opened the champagne for me and gave it back to me.
Starting point is 00:30:12 Oh my goodness. If I go back to the World Championships, I'd finished 15th overall, which was solid because it was over 130 people there. but I was called to the podium ceremony and when I was called the awning, the team where I ran, there was like maybe 20 of us in the team, we were all like,
Starting point is 00:30:30 why are you being called? I'm like, oh, I hope I haven't had an issue with my card or something or I'm disqualified from the race. And it was really weird that they were calling me over the tannoy. So I run over the podium ceremony is happening and I'm called up on stage to receive an award for top female in the world. Oh my God. And I was like so embarrassed in front of my whole team.
Starting point is 00:30:51 And my first thought was, I don't even remember seeing another girl. And I was actually, there was like there was four of us. What if you had won the best and worst female driver? I mean, seriously. Slowest and fast as female driver. It feels like a pat on the head. And I think the organizers, they were probably just trying to be nice. Yeah, I'm sure.
Starting point is 00:31:09 But I think that was definitely the moment. And, of course, everyone made jokes afterwards with the fact that, oh, you're great. You beat three other girls. Right. But it was the moment I definitely thought, oh, this is going to be different than I thought. This is a thing. Because they see me as different. When I moved into single-seater's, it became the topic.
Starting point is 00:31:26 There was a girl trying to make it in racing. Yeah. Wow. Stay tuned for more armchair expert. If you dare. We are supported by Allstate. Checking Allstate first could save you hundreds on car insurance. Not checking what the warning light means before pulling out of your driveway.
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Starting point is 00:32:08 Insurance and Roadside assistance plans are subject to terms, conditions, and availability, insurance provided by Allstate North American Insurance Company, Northbrook, Illinois, roadside assistance plans provided by Allstate Motor Club, Incorporated in Allstate Affiliate. Now, again, there's trade-offs with that, right? Is it fair to say maybe you would have gotten a sponsor easier? Definitely. I got a lot more media attention.
Starting point is 00:32:34 Didn't always know how to manage it. Yeah, that's a lot. You kind of need it commercially because racing is expensive. But on the other hand, I remember going to some photo shoots and there was stuff, I'm not wearing that, you know, I'm a driver. At that time, the sport isn't what it is now, and there was very much stereotypes of you were a girl that had a leather on and posed on a car, or you were a girl that drove the car.
Starting point is 00:32:53 Yeah, right, right, right. And I would imagine, too, you want to be asked about driving, and they probably want to ask you about being a female. All they wanted to ask me about was being a female. And that's fair enough. And I always thought talking about it can help others maybe be inspired by, or not being inspired, because at that time I was never out to inspire others. You wanted to win races.
Starting point is 00:33:13 Yeah. And I realized pretty quickly that it was all about the performance on track. Yes, you could talk about my gender, but it made it even more important that I went out there and showed what I could do because everyone seemed to have an opinion that I was either not going to be good enough or not physically fit enough or she's just there because she's a girl or she's only got the sponsor because she's a girl. So for me, I needed to go out and have the validation of a result sheet to say, no, this is why I can do it because, look, I'm quick enough and I can compete. So it was always that validation through results.
Starting point is 00:33:41 And that's what I love about sport. It's so pure. Yeah, it's empirical. It's objective. Not subjective. I would struggle in your industry. Yeah, this one is pretty subjective. Yeah, but sometimes you hit the hot streak of the subjectivity.
Starting point is 00:33:53 And you're like, fuck it, I'll take it. I don't think I'm better than that guy, but I'll take it. Yeah, what kind of neuroses arise in this period? Because you're young and you're asked to, yeah, represent all girls in racing, which you didn't sign up for. You're a token. I'll just advise you to listen. Do you know who Malcolm Gladwell is? He's like a very famous American writer.
Starting point is 00:34:15 And he has a great podcast called Revisionous History. And he did an episode called The Token and talking about the weight of being a token. and how it's not fair to judge someone like Sammy Davis Jr. Because he was first one through the door and what he had to deal with just to be there so other people could walk through. I don't know, it's just until you take a minute to stop and think about the pressure of being a token,
Starting point is 00:34:37 I think it's a really isolating. Did you feel very isolated in that experience? I remember real periods of loneliness, but it's difficult because I only have my own experience. So I don't know how different it was to someone else that wasn't a woman or feeling lonely anyway. ways, but I definitely struggled sometimes in the environment because it was very much of a male kind of macho, egoistical. And that's why I decided I wouldn't date another racing driver
Starting point is 00:35:07 because I would overhear the way they spoke about women and girls. And I thought, well, I never want to be spoken about like that. But I didn't feel like in that situation, I could always be the one saying, hey, don't do that. Stop saying that. You shouldn't be saying that. Or that's not fair on her. So I just kind of detached myself from it, but thought, I never want to be spoken about like that. I just, I had a love for the sport that meant I didn't want everything around my gender to take away from my love for just doing the sport and achieving. But you're giving up a big chunk of your life when you're a kid. All your weekends are that.
Starting point is 00:35:36 You're traveling. So if you don't have friendships at the races, then you're really missing a big opportunity or a big chunk that you would. Did you have friends in the race? I had. I shared a house with a bunch of Irish drivers and they became like my big brothers. And there was a lot of camaraderie. I did have friends who looked out for me and who we had a laugh with, but there was always just that invisible line.
Starting point is 00:35:59 Yeah. Looking back now with the perspective I had, I think there was definitely moments where I would walk into a garage, especially if I joined a new team and I could feel the skepticism. Many people say, well, what did they say? It's not just a direct comment. I feel this skepticism or this idea that, oh, we have her and we didn't get him. And then when you have a bit of success with that team,
Starting point is 00:36:19 First of all, they're a bit like, oh, you can. But then the minute you get them with you, they are loyal. The environment and everything that comes with racing, aside from being in the car and performing, you just become used to, well, that's part of it. And that's part of the game. And it's an important part of the game. Because if you're not doing the media and the sponsorship commitments, you're not racing. Yeah, talk about the financial stress of that whole period.
Starting point is 00:36:43 Well, I'm giving away my age here because my main sponsor was British Telecom, because they were launching something called broadband. Okay. That's how long it was. But they were my saviors. And actually, I had a really tough year in 2005 because they were my main sponsor for Formula 3. And then I was at home visiting my grandmother,
Starting point is 00:37:04 went out to buy her milk, slipped, broke my ankle. Oh, no. And those were dark months. I lost my race license. I lost my sponsor. I lost my seat in the F3. And you were how old then? 22.
Starting point is 00:37:15 And you'd already left because you went to University of Edinburgh for a year? Yeah. I was a very conscientious student because my parents always said, can't race unless you do a little school. I'm a grafter. I don't have the natural ability, but I have no problem to work really hard. So I ended up second in my year in high school, and there was a lot of expectation that I would go to university.
Starting point is 00:37:33 I picked international business, the easiest thing when you have really no clue. But really felt like a duck out of water at university. They were all partying, drinking. I'm like, what am I doing here? Is that because you had a certain immaturity? because you hadn't been hanging out on the weekends and going to dances. Maturity.
Starting point is 00:37:51 Because you've been doing something so adult. You don't feel like you had missed out on childhood at all by racing? Aspects of it, like boyfriend, girlfriend stuff. Social stuff, going to bar. I'm not a big drinker at all, even to this day. So I would see them all go out and get blind drunk and be like, what are you guys doing? Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:06 And then I would have races on the weekend, so I would be kind of training. And I was just in a different planet to the planet I got transported to and did never feel right there. soon. I left after one year. Was that hard? Do you feel like you were disappointing mom and dad? It was more hard that it's what everyone expected me to do to have this backup plan. And I remember going into the economics lecture in the first day of my second year.
Starting point is 00:38:30 I'd gone back. And I just thought, what am I doing here? I'm here because everyone tells me I should be here. I'm just a sheep that's following the flock. I just don't want to be here. And then I called home and one week later had all my possessions in a little golf TDI, which was my parents' car. rented a room near Silverstone, worked as a marshal waving the flag in the little shop that sold racewear and focused fully on racing. You get into Formula 3 in 2001, 2001 to 2004.
Starting point is 00:38:57 No, was that not Formula Renault? I'm sorry, you're with Renault. So now you've gone from carting to a single-seat race car and you do pretty good there. 2004 you finished fifth overall? Yeah, and I nearly got third and that's the breakthrough year because I got nominated for British Young Drive. driver of the year, not just girl. And that was the first time a girl had ever been nominated. Wow. And that's when Toto first heard my name.
Starting point is 00:39:21 Oh, wow. Oh, really? We were a support race at this big festival, and he tells the story of coming over the loudspeaker, the Formula Renault race coming, this girl that was fighting for the podium. And at the time, there was just no girls racing, never mind fighting for a podium. And he remembers thinking to himself, I need to go and find this, Susie. Just because he was interested, because he was driver managing at that time. Yeah. Right.
Starting point is 00:39:43 But let's just say I wasn't a very polished version of myself then, so I'm glad he didn't find me. Okay, so you break your ankle. I read jogging. Now you're saying to help grandma. I was exiting the newsagents with the milk and the bread, and I slipped. Oh, were you so mad at Grandma? No. You couldn't be mad at my grandma.
Starting point is 00:40:02 No, grandma had taken care of. I know. But he deserved. No, it was the other side of the family. Oh, it's the other side of her. No. Yeah, you could have been. Okay, so what was the...
Starting point is 00:40:12 Formula 3 experience. You're on the feeder for Formula 1. Yeah, it's F3, F2, F1. If we had to like make an analogy to U.S. sports, to go from carding would be like you're a state champion high school team and then to go to single seat Renault, you've gone into college. And now when you get to Formula 3, like you're in the professional league. Yeah. This is very serious. You're bubbling. How many female drivers were in Formula 3 at that point or had been? There were a couple racing at the time. Like Catherine Legg, who's in Indy 500 now. She was racing at that time.
Starting point is 00:40:44 And how would you all get along when you saw each other? Because this might be counterintuitive. You might think, oh, you would get along so well, but maybe not. Because often the tokens are pitted against each other. Exactly. We were always pitted, and I felt it was an unnatural to try and form a relationship with someone just because it was another girl. Yeah, right.
Starting point is 00:41:01 And I remember distinctly then when we made it to German touring cars, they would always arrange these photos shoots just with the girl drivers. I was always so against it. It's like, why do you pit us against each other when we've got everyone else that we need to beat? Exactly. Right. Okay, so how did Formula 3 go? Well, it didn't because I was testing and then the anchor and I didn't ever compete in a race.
Starting point is 00:41:19 I lost everything that year and I went to a really, probably the toughest time of my life. And then I got from an old team boss, I was testing World Series, which was like a competitor to F3, with the thought that I would be racing that the following year under kind of like a sponsorship agreement. But I got called into a meeting in February six weeks before the first race and got told that they kind of miscalculated the marketing budget and I'd need to bring 250,000 euros or pounds, which just was completely unrealistic for me at that time. I walked out of the meeting and I remember, like yesterday, I was sitting in my golf TDI and I called my dad. It sounds like I only speak to my dad. I speak to my mom a lot as well. It was just in those moments. It's my dad. And I remember saying to him, well, what am I going to do? So I don't know to. As I was kind of not really knowing
Starting point is 00:42:03 what to say to him, a German number was trying to call my phone. So I said, oh dad, there's another call coming. I'll take this and I'll call you back. And I picked up the phone and this gentleman in a very thick German accent said, this is Gajornan from Mercedes-Benz Motorsport. What do you think of German touring cars? Now, I had tested the car in the British Young Driver of the Year award, so I knew the car. It was 500 horsepower, mega-touring car. A C-Class Mercedes, right? Monica, this is your car, ding-ding, ding. I have one of those. You have a... Well, it was a gift. C-63? She has a C-43. She's not...
Starting point is 00:42:33 He didn't think I was ready. You're a good colleague. It was, it was a, it's an extremely nice gift. I don't know if you're into cars or not, but that's a really nice car. She's not, but she was making a lot of money, and I borrowed her car one day, and it was this fucking beat-up Toyota Prius, and I was driving in traffic. I was fine with it. I was like, you're not fine with it. Don't say that.
Starting point is 00:42:55 I was, and then he was like, you can't have this. We're doing too well for you to be driving this car. It's going to cap your. There's so much about you, which car you drive. See, I did not grow up like that at all. So it didn't. But all to say, I love my car. And I love my car.
Starting point is 00:43:09 And I can hear her coming through the gate when she goes to her house across the street. And you really mean that. You get the joy now of... I understand what it does to you internally. Not the speed, unfortunately. But it does something to your identity. It does. You infuse its muscularity and its agility.
Starting point is 00:43:27 It makes you confident. It says something about me. It's a signal. Yeah. I think it's more than a signal. Because I give you the counter argument. I live in Monaco, which is really superficial and everybody drives supercars. So what do I drive?
Starting point is 00:43:38 A 1972 piggo. I buck the trend of everyone trying to outdo each other. Yeah. I get my pagoda with a roof down and it's like from the 1970s so you can't like bounce along. But I love that I'm not trying to. You guys are also on a 300 SL lot, I see. So you can only tell me so much. I'll give you that.
Starting point is 00:43:56 You also have the nicest Mercedes in the world. I know what you're saying. I know. And Toto said he was going to give me a ride. Yeah, yeah. That was excited. Come to Monaco. I know.
Starting point is 00:44:06 I know. To Monaco. I will. Now that you're into cars. It's a strange. Watch Formula One, Comedy. I love watching Formula One.
Starting point is 00:44:15 Okay, so you get this call. We got to get to Williams, but you have a long road to Williams. Well, the DTM years, everything hung on that taste. I got myself out to Barcelona. And one story you will appreciate. I arrive at the track,
Starting point is 00:44:26 and the Germans are very direct. So I got my seat fitted and they're like, okay, and then we'll do a warm, but I'll say, yeah, can I just do a lap of the track? Like a lap of the track? Do you don't know this track? It's like, no, I'd never driven Barcelona before. And they kind of looked to me.
Starting point is 00:44:37 And then Gerhardunger kind of said, Okay, Mika, come over here. and it was Mika Hakenen, two-time F-1 World Champion. Show this girl around the track. So there I am in a higher car, Mika Hakenen showing me the racing lines. Is he sober? Oh, oh. I'm going to pretend I didn't hear that.
Starting point is 00:44:54 So I obviously give it all on the test. They leave me waiting 10 days, but then finally I get called over to Stuttgart, get offered a one-year contract, and then, of course, ended up staying for seven years and chose to leave off my own back Met Toto there. I thanked my lucky stars to this day. That was my big break. Such a sexy car you were racing.
Starting point is 00:45:11 Way different though, right? So heavy, so big. Was the transition out of one-seater easy for you? No. And because I'd missed that year of F-3, I was up against really, really quick drivers who were after F-3 levels, so I had a lot of catching up to do.
Starting point is 00:45:25 But that's where I come into my comfort zone. I drilled down, and I had a great engineer at the time, HP, who got me so well prepared for the season because I knew this was my one-shot, one-year contract, and managed to pull off a couple of really good races. Now, here's where we're.
Starting point is 00:45:38 get into the fun, this is your history with Barbie and your history with pink. You've at times had to kind of silence your femininity or felt inclined to. And so they put you in a pink car or you had a pink race car. You had conflicting feelings about this? It's really good water. A good bubble density. Strong, right? And you've let it cool for a while too. Mubbling. Yeah, I think in my teenage years, I went from me that little girl that loved pink to feeling that my femininity was seen as a sign of weakness. So, kind of boxed it away. And then it was really by being made to drive a pink car in DTM because the sponsor was a magazine that had a logo that was pink. But then realizing that I think because I was older by that point, I was more confident in myself. And suddenly all
Starting point is 00:46:22 these little girls have started appearing at the track and dressed in pink. And they all asked me is the Hello Kitty car because it was a big Hello Kitty time then. And I think that made me realize that, well, actually, if pink is going to inspire little girls to come and see my car and to like racing, I can drive a pink car, it's cool. And I think it was also a transition of my life where I got married and Toto was so good at, he never wrapped me in Cotton Wheel. He was tough, but we were a team and I wasn't on my own anymore. And when we got married, the Mercedes comes and marketing department, like, well, you can't change your name. I was like, oh, I'm absolutely changing my name. Like, I'm not on my own anymore. I'm a wolf. It's a good name to take on.
Starting point is 00:47:01 You kind of hit the jackpot. Yeah, it's a good name. And that also gave me a confidence that it just wasn't me on my own anymore. He tells the story. So he had crashed at the Nureberg Ring, and he was in the hospital, and that you came to see him in the hospital. Well, no, we were testing in Portugal, because this is the start of our love story. We were testing in Portugal in a track called Esterell, and Hans-Ewan Mathis, who was a team manager.
Starting point is 00:47:25 He came into the only world the drivers were because I had seven teammates, and he said, Toto Wolves had a really bad accident. Now, I remember the first time I even saw Toto in the hospitality. I was, well, I can share with you the very first time. So we were sitting at a team dinner. And Matthias Lauda, Nikki Lauda's son was opposite me. And he was a very good friend of mine. Him and his brother, Lucas, even to this day, but in a brother-sister way.
Starting point is 00:47:45 And Toto walked in and I'm following him thinking, who is this guy? I haven't seen him here before. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And Matthias is watching my eyes and then turning around to see what I'm looking at. And he was like, you're looking at him. And of course, my face went bright red. I said, well, no, who is that? He's like, well, his name's Toto Wolf,
Starting point is 00:48:04 and you've got no chance. He's dating Miss Austria. Oh, my God. Oh, my God. When all your friends are men, this is how they talk to you. So I'd obviously noticed Toto, but he was off balance. And then when Hanzh Juergen and Mattis walked in and said, Toto was had a really bad accident in Nureberg going,
Starting point is 00:48:22 I was kind of like, I hope he's okay. It hit me. Yeah. And he said, well, I think it'd be really nice if one of the drivers you called as a group And Gary Paffett, who was kind of de facto where most senior drivers, said, yeah, that's a really good idea. Susie, you should call him. Oh.
Starting point is 00:48:36 I was like, yes. I'll call him. I guess I have to. Yeah, for the team. I'll do it on behalf of the team. And then I had his number. Oh. And then you'll go see him in person and that?
Starting point is 00:48:47 No, I called him. No, it was just a call. I called him, and it should have been like a 10 minute. The drivers are all wishing you well, but we were on the phone for like an hour. And then he said, I'm going to get better in the next kind of 10 days. The doctor said, I'll be fine, and I'll see you and do so. for the big presentation of the championship. So of course, I'm counting down on the days of Dusseldorf.
Starting point is 00:49:04 Outfits, thinking this is going to be brilliant in Dusseldorf. So we have this big dinner. New haircut. The night before I did everything, like everything. And I'm sitting at the dinner, he's not there, and I'm thinking, okay, he's going to walk in any second. Long story short, he doesn't turn up the dinner. And I am... Total.
Starting point is 00:49:21 Total. Thank you. Come on. So, comes to breakfast the next morning, and I say to myself, I'm not even going to get in dress. Who cares about that? to my race suit, hair tied back, who cares about total? It's arrogant off. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:49:34 Shithead. So I go down to breakfast and he comes over to the table all jolly and kind of sits near me. I said, well, what happened to you at the dinner last night? He said, yeah, I called one of your teammates to check where it was. And he said, don't bother coming. It's boring. Oh. And I'm looking at the guy that he caught.
Starting point is 00:49:49 That person was in love with you. No, he wasn't even. I like that take. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, you don't want to call. Everyone just left. Bye, Cote.
Starting point is 00:49:58 It's really boring here. It sounds almost like an S&L. It's boring here. Like, don't come. Everyone got food poisoning. It's a mess. Don't come. So we talk a bit and all the butterflies come up.
Starting point is 00:50:07 And then I go off to do my thing and he's off to his thing. And then at the lunch break, all the drivers and kind of the management around and they're talking. And of course, comes to people's love lives. And I was actually dating someone from another team, but who was a manager, not a racing driver. Someone then said to Toto, you know, how is it going after Miss Austria? And then someone says to me, well, isn't it time that you dated someone at Mercedes, Susie? And I kind of said, well, there's nobody at Mercedes. And then Toto, in front of everyone said,
Starting point is 00:50:32 well, sure, there's me. What about me? It closed my face. And I'm looking down at the ground where I'm trying to laugh along. So I didn't really seem for the rest of the afternoon, but when I left to drive back to Switzerland, I had one of those thoughts, well, it's now or never. So I got my phone, I pulled into a fuel station, 10 times drafted this text message.
Starting point is 00:50:53 And it basically said, if it had to be someone from Mercedes, it would only ever be you. Wow, Susie. I put it all out there. That's all out there. I'm so ready. I know.
Starting point is 00:51:07 I'm jealous. I want this text. I know. So I sent it and then got back on the motorway and I got a reply pretty quickly. And I remember because it could have gone either way. Like, oh, it's so sweet, but no. Yeah, get real. Miss Germany has just become available, it turns out.
Starting point is 00:51:25 I'll circle back after I get there all the misses. I know. I've got a few more. Countries to go. Yeah. But no, the message back was something about I'm getting in a plane. Oh, that's nice. I'll call you.
Starting point is 00:51:34 I'm like, what? Oh, boy. So it wasn't like a no, it wasn't yes. But then he called two hours later and that was. That was it. You guys were engaged eight months later. Then it's fast. He bought the ring six weeks later.
Starting point is 00:51:45 Oh, my gosh. And we were engaged eight months later. It was an immediate click. Okay, quickly. Are you sensitive at all about talking about Toto or no? No. Okay, great, great, great. Because I wanted to ask, tell me about the cultural chasm
Starting point is 00:51:58 between the Scottish and the Austrians, right? So you've already hinted at a couple of them. It's like very direct. Very direct. Some of the things he said to you over your, we'll get to, but when you drive for the first time in Formula One, he's like, don't be shit. It was like giving you a pep talk.
Starting point is 00:52:13 I thought it was going to be this big pep talk, and he just looked to me and was like, don't be shit. Did you get enough fight? Did you say, hey, you need to be a little softer or no? No, that fires up something in me. I thought to myself, I was telling you. Well, yes. Your whole life.
Starting point is 00:52:28 is about saying like, you think, okay. You think I can't, I will. It's her feel like Jordan. Yeah. Did you watch the last dance? The blue game. Yeah, and he just has to come up with an enemy. He's like, I'm going to pick this guy from the team.
Starting point is 00:52:41 You know, he makes up a story why he hates this guy. It's a good moment. I could share with you just how direct he is. Yeah. The night before our wedding, well, the day we were signing the paperwork, he was very quiet. And the next morning, is everything okay? He's like, yeah, I think so I've done a positive and negative list.
Starting point is 00:52:55 Oh, my God. And there's more positive than negative. And I'm like, excuse me? That's not very romantic. Excuse me? I'm like, I don't care what's on that list. We're getting married tomorrow, okay? Too late for that list.
Starting point is 00:53:06 Throw that list. Oh, my God. That is so funny. I think I was really lucky that Toto is nearly 10 years older or just over 10 years older than me. So he'd been married once before. He had two wonderful little kids. So he'd kind of been through it and knew exactly what he wanted. Probably what to do differently, hopefully.
Starting point is 00:53:23 Exactly. And I come from such a wonderful family who really embraced him. And, you know, he lost his father a young age. So I think through me, he saw this sense of family and this loyalty to each other that we stick together through sticking sense. And probably his dream dad. Fucking racing motorcycles, own in a shop, speed, speed, speed, speed. That's a good family to click into it. And I definitely struggled, and I have obviously speak to my stepkids about it.
Starting point is 00:53:43 Now I struggled at the beginning because I was this selfish racing driver who suddenly on certain weekends would have to be a mother. And I just had no idea how to be in that situation. And I knew from my childhood and obviously the respect to his ex-wife that I didn't want to come in. and pretend to be like a second mother. So that took a bit of navigating. That's hard. Come up and you are mothering. Yeah, and there was a little girl.
Starting point is 00:54:04 I mean, Rosie, the cutest little girl you could imagine. And you feel so much affection, but then you don't want to overstep. Yeah, it's a fine line. And we weren't married then, so you're just trying to navigate. That wasn't easy at the beginning, but he was very understanding of it. And then when we got married, it all became just much easier because we knew, okay, we're a unit and we'll figure this out. It wasn't like I was going to disappear or anything. I'm going to talk in broad stereotypes right now.
Starting point is 00:54:27 forgive me. There's going to be tons of exceptions to this rule that are Austrian. There's tons of exceptions that are male. But a very common tension with men and women around me is the woman says something. The man hears, oh, she's asking me to fix this problem. And then they start laying on, I'm going to fix this. And the woman's like, hey, man, I just wanted some compassion. I wanted you to just be with me with this. So that's like already a male, female thing that kind of exists. And then I I think Austrian, Scottish. Scottish are much more fucking Gaelic. We got flutes.
Starting point is 00:55:02 We're very expressive, right? We're dancing around in the kilts. You know, it's a different culture. So I feel like that would even compound this male-female thing a little bit. Completely. Because I'm someone that's pretty tough. Like, I give you example, like, when I get ill. So it's like, do you need anything?
Starting point is 00:55:17 I'm like, no, no, no. I'll be okay. So he just disappears. Oh, my God. Like six hours later he comes back. I'm like, did you have a nice dinner? He's like, yeah. Are you better yet?
Starting point is 00:55:25 You think of bringing me anything or checking on me? Oh, my God. Well, are you better yet? I'm like, no, you're like, oh, well. He's like, no, you said you didn't need anything. It bores him. Whereas if he gets ill, the world stops. Oh, my God.
Starting point is 00:55:36 The world stops. And he's like, no, but you had can't be what I have because it's so bad. I can't. Certainly the same virus. I gave it to you. Now you have it. And how do you like it? Exactly.
Starting point is 00:55:46 I definitely have to say he's got better with age. I arrived here yesterday and he wanted to surprise me about coming to the airport, which after. We've been married 15 together, kind of 17 and a half. And I obviously had a car boot to pick me up, and he wanted to surprise me. But he didn't realize that one of the group chats that he was speaking to our office on, I was also on. So he's like, I want to surprise her.
Starting point is 00:56:06 I'm going to cancel her car and come to the airport. And I'm reading this on the airplane. I'm like, that's so sweet. Good intention. Such a good intention. That is sweet. It's very sweet. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:56:16 Okay. So now, back to your racing. Back to racing. After racing for DTM for seven years, I guess. How do you get called to Williams? Frank Williams had come to watch a German turncar race, the DTM race at Brands Hatch. But at the same time, Toto was looking to possibly enter Formula One by investing. He looked at Tora Roso at the time, was looking at Williams.
Starting point is 00:56:36 So I don't shy away from the fact that I was on the radar, obviously also being Toto's wife. And Frank, I remember at the time... Because his daughter hadn't started running the team. No, she was simply working in the team. Okay. And it was actually Toto was a big part in picking Claire up and saying, you need to be on the board. You need to be more involved and you're Williams. But let's just say for Frank, he came from the era where women definitely didn't go out on the track to race.
Starting point is 00:56:58 They were very much behind the scenes. And I was teammates at that time with David Coulter and Ralph Schumacher, former drivers of his. He was always so interested in asking me about my racing and how did you start and you're Scottish. And he went to boarding school in Scotland and hated it. So we always had this joking about how I loved Scotland and he hated Scotland. And I said to him in one of those conversations, well, it's my big dream to drive a Formula One car. And at the end of the weekend, he called over Adam Parr, who was a CEO at the time. And they said, we've got something to tell you.
Starting point is 00:57:23 We're going to give you 25 laps in an F1 car. And that's all that was ever supposed to be. And at that point, you had not been in a single-seat, massive arrow car. So, like, you're rusty for this. Rusty, but DTM was a high level. So it wasn't like it was completely detached. But just open, wheel, close-wheel, tons of down-fors. A Formula One car is completely different to anything else.
Starting point is 00:57:48 Yeah. We've interviewed a few drivers at this point, but just to remind people, The easiest way to say it is like the car is creating so much downforce. It's a reverse airplane. It has a lot of aerodynamics to create the opposite of lift. And so it's pushing the car really far down. And the current car weighs like 980 kilograms or something. I love how informed.
Starting point is 00:58:08 He's very informed. But the car is creating 2,000 kilograms of downforce. So for real, the car at a certain speed could drive upside down just fine. So you just got to remember, that's the element in F1 that's not in other. racing. Yeah. And that's why at Silverstone, you can take a right-hander in seventh gear going 190 miles an hour, a sharp right-hander and be stuck to the fuck. And that's a leap of faith. It is because it's counterintuitive that the more speed you have, the more downforce you have. And the more you're going to stick to the ground. Yes. You've got to unravel everything you've
Starting point is 00:58:41 learned almost. But the great thing is, and I was really lucky because as soon as that decision was made, I mean, really hats off to Williams. I was put through my pasties in the simulator, straight-line and test everything to get me ready to perform in that test. There was no way I was getting in without being really ready for it. Stay tuned for more armchair expert if you dare. Let's talk about the physicality. The physicality was harder to prepare for. I ended up getting access to the machine that Michael Schumacher built at the end of his career
Starting point is 00:59:18 to build up only your neck muscles. And interestingly, when I stopped racing within months, my neck had just shrunk in size. because neck muscles build up quickly, but shrink quickly. Susie wears her hair always down to cover her neck. She's insecure about how big her traps. Not anymore. I mean, with the ball.
Starting point is 00:59:34 Back in the day. Back in the day. Yeah. My Botox guy says I have a thick neck as well. Oh, is he going to? But you don't. Well, I guess I do. We work to keep it small.
Starting point is 00:59:46 But maybe I could have driven F one. Oh, my God. I miss my calling. But in a nutshell, so, yes, your body at rest, If you weigh 150 pounds at one atmospheric pressure, you weigh 150 pounds. But as G forces go up, there are moments on the track. I know the one that got you really hardcore was braking. You'll hit 4.5G's braking.
Starting point is 01:00:09 And it's like something coming behind you, forcing your head forward. Because you're strapped so tight into the seat, and the seat's made for you, and everything's down to the millimeter. So you're really well strapped in. You need a very, very strong braking leg because the brake pressure is important. And then there's power steering in the car. So it's not actually your arm muscles that take strain, it's your neck. But Lewis had said to me, put a neck pad in, paint it white so people can't really see it.
Starting point is 01:00:34 It fades into the car. This is in Barcelona. There's one really, really long turn. And he's like, use it because if your neck goes, you had to do 72 laps at Barcelona. It was a test to see if I could do a race distance. And he said, if your neck goes, which means you just can't hold it up anymore, he said, you'll have to stop. And you don't want to stop. So he said, use, he said, I do it at the beginning.
Starting point is 01:00:53 of a season as well before my neck muscles get built up. And that was one of the best tips because he said, as you just enter the right, lean. Don't even try because it's like being a roller course about trying to keep your head straight. It's nearly impossible. 20 turns for 72 laps. It's like impossible.
Starting point is 01:01:08 Yeah. Yeah, if your head weighs 18 pounds, it now weighs 90 pounds in the turn. Yeah. Those very first 20 laps, it was a damp track to begin with, which helps G-Force, but it's more challenging to be on a damp track.
Starting point is 01:01:20 But there was never a moment on that day where because they'd done such a good job, in the preparation. Obviously, there was so much media around the fact that a girl was getting back in an F1 car, which they had underestimated, and I didn't even think would factor. But to your point earlier, it then worked to my favour because they realized I did well in the day, and this is a big opportunity because this amount of interest for the team is hugely valuable. So they developed a role for me because it was in November,
Starting point is 01:01:45 and the team was already set for the following year, development driver, which is a common term in F1 now, a development driver. Yeah, so what were your duties as a development driver? Lots of simulator work, lots of straight line tests, and then some testing throughout the season, because it wasn't as limited as it is now. Okay, so when you get called and told, you're going to drive in practice at Silverstone for the British Grand Prix. At that time, it had been 22 years since a female had been on a track in an F1 car. Wow. How'd that decision come about, and what was your response?
Starting point is 01:02:20 So I did that one test that went well and then it became development driver and I was doing steady work of not crashing the car, straight line test and it was all kind of a natural development and I was obviously also pushing to say, well, what's next? Because you're getting used a lot in the media and there had to be an authenticity to it. And to be fair to Williams,
Starting point is 01:02:38 they also just didn't want it to be a show. It had to have substance. Well, people were accusing it of being some kind of promotional media. Completely. So we felt then, well, there had to be substance to it And that's why it just kept progressively getting to be more opportunity. So just talk about the morning waking up. I can already imagine this.
Starting point is 01:02:58 You'd love to go into that day very rested. But of course the brain is like there's no way you can sleep the night before, right? And Toto's next to you. He has a race as well. He's now principal of Mercedes in this time. And so you're just up all night, right? Yeah, it was really difficult because there was so many thoughts going through my head. and the first thing I did when I woke up is you immediately checked the weather
Starting point is 01:03:23 because that plays such a big part and if it was going to be damp. And the very difficult thing with FP1 sessions is that I was taking Falteri BOTisi's car. And if I caused any damage, it had a huge impact on his race weekend. So you're very much told by the team, we're going to let you go for a fast lap because it means nothing to me if I can't go out and do a fast lap. Everyone's looking and I'd rather not drive than just drive around slowly. B-20th on the...
Starting point is 01:03:48 Exactly. Yeah. But the golden rule is there's no way you can crash that car. Yeah, the amount of stress that you're taking on, it's not even a real fair test of what you can do. This moment that people that aren't into cars wouldn't understand. But like, the most humiliating thing you can do is fucking stall a car. So even just right there, you getting out of the garage is like packed with stress, no.
Starting point is 01:04:10 Yeah. And I was just like, who you stole or not? Got out of the garage. And it was the first thing my dad said to me when it was like, thank God you didn't stall. Oh, my God. You're either going to stall or spin the tires, which you don't want to do, because then you're all out of control leaving the garage. It's just a tiny little window.
Starting point is 01:04:24 Yeah. But you get out, you've got to be like, okay, first turtle, right? And then you get out there, and what does the experience like once you're on track? Well, my very first test was a great experience, the FP1 at Silverstone. My wonderful Mercedes engine blew after one lap. And that was such an anticlimax.
Starting point is 01:04:45 Oh, yes, yes, yes. Okay. you go back out, you do another practice session in Spain? Hakenheim. That was where I'd made my German touring car debut. Now, this is a big day because on this day, you ended up finishing the practice session, just
Starting point is 01:05:03 two tenths off of Philippe Masas? Was it two? I thought it was one. Okay, the internet says two. No, I think my head I have is one. It was probably two. Two tenths of a second next to the team driver. is fucking awesome. But that was such a different mentality to Silverstone
Starting point is 01:05:21 because I think the disappointment of Silverstone, I got to Hockenheim and I was in such a different statement. You were angry. Yeah, let me get out there. I have to use this chance now. Yeah, you're pissed off. Yeah. It's a good fuel source. And I was so thankful I had that other chance
Starting point is 01:05:38 because I thought if it had just been that and the engine had gone. So I was so grateful. And there was just one corner. I knew that there was a chance of hitting the gravel. so that's where I lost about a tenth and a half. Everywhere else on the track, I was on the limit. Uh-huh. The feeling of driving an F-1 car on the edge,
Starting point is 01:05:55 I think there's nothing else that comes close. Everything's happening so fast. There isn't a single stray thought about anything else. It requires such concentration in looking ahead nonstop that it is a unique state to find yourself in. Completely. And if you ask some of the current F1 drivers, some even prefer qualifying because it's all down to. into that one lap.
Starting point is 01:06:17 Whereas in a race, you're always having to think of, okay, when the pit stops, where you are in the race, everything, whereas in qualifying, it's everything into one lap. And it's such a hyper-focus. It's a special feeling. How fatigue did you feel at the end of Germany? Zero. Oh, really? I was so hyped and pumping with adrenaline.
Starting point is 01:06:35 The neck was huge. I won't say that by the, yeah, it was like. The neck was baldy. You need to tell you a Botox doctor. If he wanted to see a big neck, I'll send him pictures. I mean, don't get me wrong, by the evening, I was completely, the adrenaline had worn out. But for me, it was the best day of my career.
Starting point is 01:06:54 You ultimately retire in 2015, although you do have a race in 16, race of champions. Yeah, that's more like a fun event for current and X drivers. You have cute Jack in 17? Best thing I've ever done, yeah. Oh, yeah, well, could be better. You become the team principal in Formula E for Venturi racing. It was a team that was at the back, losing a lot of money,
Starting point is 01:07:15 and I was searching for what to do after stopping my racing career. I was fighting a complete lack of identity. Yes, I'm sure. As much as I love being a mother very quickly realized that I can't only be a mother. So I was searching to find that thing. And then the formula E opportunity came. And I was a real skeptic of formula at the beginning because I was like electric racing cars. That wasn't my era.
Starting point is 01:07:38 But it gained a lot of momentum when dieselgate happened and electrification became a big thing. And a tough challenge. Yeah, because, The same principle is a much different role than driver. Hugely different. Yeah, you're a manager, you're an inspirer, you're so many things. And I had a lot to learn. But I had watched Toto closely, start to become very successful on F1.
Starting point is 01:07:59 And I kind of had a front row seat of hearing what his challenges were, of watching him do it. So I knew what the job entailed. And Formity obviously is a much smaller scale than F1. And my business partner, who offered me the role and took a real leap of faith in me, Gilde-o-Pasta, was someone, I just, had a good connection with and felt, okay, I can trust him. And we turned a team around and then nearly won the Formula E-World Championship. Yeah, and then you became the CEO of that team?
Starting point is 01:08:26 Why did you leave? You left in 2022? We sold the team. Gilda wanted to exit and move into the space industry. He wanted to build an electric rover to go on Mars. Oh, why. Which we were set to do together again until I got the call from Stephano Domenicali for F1 Academy. All right.
Starting point is 01:08:42 So tell people what F1 Academy is. F1 Academy is a series started by F1, which is for all female drivers. We've nearly fully fund the drivers in the series. And it's basically a platform or series to give female talent the opportunity in the sport, to break down the preconceptions that it's a man's world and to kind of inspire the next generation to see that there's a place for women in the sport. And it's a response to noticing, right, the demographic of fans was changing pretty dramatically. Like a lot of young females were coming in as spectators of the sport.
Starting point is 01:09:11 It had shifted massively. Because of the show. I bet that's a big part of it. Which show? It definitely got a lot of people who didn't know about F1 to be paying attention. I'm into Formula One because of Drive to Survive. I was like, oh yeah, I was like, that's the boringest racing in the world. They don't ever pass each other.
Starting point is 01:09:29 Who cares? And then once I found out like how much is going into the nobody passes anybody? I'm like, oh, there's so much going on that I just didn't know. It's a science fair. It completely is. And then there's drama off track as well as on track, the politics. Yeah. What a show.
Starting point is 01:09:44 What a show. Yeah. So, yeah, they had all these new female spectators. And a very young female demographic. And I have to give credit to Stephano to Liberty. They said, okay, we need to create something that gives opportunity to young women because they recognized that it was shifting. And would I have started an all-female series?
Starting point is 01:10:05 I mean, we were the only race series in the world that over 80% funds our drivers. So basically, we're giving half a million euros to every driver in order. to do a season and really have the possibility to nurture their talent and allow them to develop. But in some weird way, did you have to step over the notion that this is going backwards? We're trying to get women and men to race together. So if we split this off, is that lowering the bar for the women? Yeah. And there was someone that had tried and failed before called W series.
Starting point is 01:10:34 And people had always said, well, why didn't you get involved in support? But I didn't get involved for them to understand the business model. I didn't understand how they were going to make it work. and they were doing it as a business venture. So it was more that I didn't understand the sustainability of how to make it into a business. Whereas with F1 Academy, it was backed by F1. It had the investment from Liberty.
Starting point is 01:10:54 It was set up very differently. I think we should talk about that. When you got there, the driver was responsible for a third of the budget. Liberty was going to give a third and then F1 gives a third. The driver one third, the team one third, and Liberty one third.
Starting point is 01:11:08 Right. So this is a lot of onus on a young driver, and there's not a lot of sponsor money flooding into this new thing. So when you got there, it wasn't actually tenable. It wasn't tenable at all, and I will never forget the first time I, because there was a lot to get the contract on board. I obviously had to exit from the space project, and I was letting Gildo down, so it all took a bit of management.
Starting point is 01:11:27 So by the time I got to my first race, I remember getting near, it was Paul Ricard and South of France, thinking, there's no cars around. Why is this so empty? And I got to the entrance, and there wasn't even a security guy on the entrance. I'm thinking, it's really strange. and I get to the paddock. You thought you had the wrong date, maybe.
Starting point is 01:11:42 I thought I'd said something wrong. Calendar debacle. And I get out of my car, and I'm immediately made by drivers to say, I just want to give you the heads up. I can't find the one-third sponsorship money. It was 150,000 euros. Then some of the team managers came and said, we're not finding any sponsorship out there, so we're out.
Starting point is 01:11:55 Oh, boy. You're finding out you've taken on a roll or it's collapsing, basically. And I called Stefan. I said, listen, this is not working. He's like, okay, well, what do we need to do? I don't know just now, but let me figure it out, give me time. And that's when I quickly realized, okay, we need to race with F1. We need to get the F1 teams on board
Starting point is 01:12:11 and we need to get commercial partners on board and bring all the assets in the house. And so then you go through this precarious building of commitment from the teams and you go to Toto first. He's like, get everyone else and then you'll get me. I can't be the first one and then you're going to help to get six in and then I can be the seventh. Right.
Starting point is 01:12:32 But I can't get it. No, you can't show favoritism. Exactly. And I completely get that. It wasn't even that I felt angry about it. completely understood. So you were able to do that, though. You got six teams.
Starting point is 01:12:43 You had to go to Horner, which is its own unique thing. Because of the rivalry between Toto and Warner. But to be fair to him, he was great. He was quick in. You were able to make this kind of a viable offering. And then how has the success of it unfolded? With the F1 teams, I didn't sign them up long term. I said, listen, if this doesn't work, you can all leave.
Starting point is 01:13:01 I'm not obliging you. Because what I didn't want it to be was a charity. Yeah, a charity. But also like a feminist crusade. It was against the world. It wasn't. I said to them, you know, I think this will be for the greater good of the sport. We have this new fan demographic, but it's got to work. And if it doesn't, you're all free to leave because this is not something I'm obliging you to do that you feel you have to do. And then within the year, it kind of started gaining momentum. And then when I kind of at the beginning of this year went to all the teams, it was clear that they wanted to sign up for the long term and we have commercial partners. But it's just really gone from strength to strength. But I don't take all the credit for that because I do think the sport in itself should take the credit because they've created this opportunity. And they've all got on board. with it. And they made some compromises they hadn't in the past. Like they're letting you use the logo in a way that other teams can't. They've carved out some provisions to be helpful. And then you've got
Starting point is 01:13:48 some major sponsors. You got Hillfigure. You got a makeup brand that I don't know. Charlotte Tilbury. And now we have Sephora. We have Pepsi with Gatorade. We have American Express. Lego. Marquis. You made an F1 Academy car. Oh, cute. The commercial partnerships were very strategic in that I want your 13-year-old or however old your daughter is to feel some affinity. Well, I can belong there. a place for me in this sport. So when she goes to a cart track or another little eight-year-old goes to a car track, she's like, I can do this because she's seen others doing it and she sees the pathway. And it just takes one, but it can change everything. It makes that reality possible. Yeah. Do you have any part of scouting who will join the Academy? Do you have fun observing young
Starting point is 01:14:28 racers and thinking who would be, are they already coming by way of the teams? It's kind of a mixture. I get a lot of fun, and that's a little bit why I wrote the book of passing on all my learning. because I really feel as women, especially when you have knowledge and experience, it's so important to pass it on to the next generation because it can help so much for others not to face the same battles you did. So I do love that I'm giving them a chance because I've got chances in my life, that I'm kind of passing on the challenges that they can learn from. They don't have to go through themselves.
Starting point is 01:14:59 And I love being on the race weekends and seeing them take this opportunity. And we still have our skeptics and we still have our egotomaniacs in the paddock who will always be negative about it. I know them and I know their opinions are never going to change, but that's okay because I feel the momentum of it as a whole. And I think ultimately, you know, we see more young girls turning up a carting tracks. And a lot of the young women are very popular. Like, they'll outpace the popularity of some F3 drivers. Like if I look at Instagram and stuff, you have some drivers that are pretty wildly popular, which is cool.
Starting point is 01:15:29 Which is very cool. Now, if you had to distill everything you know of your last 30 plus years Navajo, a fully male environment. What advice do you have as far as like, no, you can be out loud and be pink? But also, here's a reality that you're not going to get around. I mean, do you think you can be out loud and pink? No, I do.
Starting point is 01:15:53 Looking back, you know, it was so funny because at the end of the book, my brother kind of said, oh, what would you tell little Susie? And when I sat down, it was like, not what I can tell her. It's what that little girl, that belief she had in herself,
Starting point is 01:16:05 that fearlessness, that ambition. that little girl who said at 13, I want to make it to F1, despite the fact there was nobody that looked like her doing that. And I sometimes think that if we go back to the child in us, what would your life be if you had no limitations? If you didn't have society's preconceptions shoved on you of what your life should look like and what you should be. For all my years, and that's where the book's given me so much perspective,
Starting point is 01:16:28 because I think I compartmentalize. I'm always looking forward. I never really looked backwards to think, okay, well, how was the journey? What did I learn? but I think it's having that belief in yourself. And sometimes there'll be moments of your life where you do doubt yourself. There's moments where I'm not sure I've got this all under control. But you've got to have that belief.
Starting point is 01:16:45 Are there like domains that you've seen where it's like, oh yeah, that's how it is. And this is where I can make progress. I think where we are in the sport now compared to even just five years ago, even 10 years ago, there's been a huge shift culturally. And maybe it's linked to society in the whole Me Too movement. And some say all went too far. It helped industries like ours. Because let's say,
Starting point is 01:17:06 the behaviors of certain individuals, and I don't want to say it's blackmarking everyone, but the culture changed. You don't get away with it anymore. You're seeing it everywhere across the board. You're seeing these older figures in Formula One putting their feet in their mouth pretty regularly, like in the last five years.
Starting point is 01:17:22 There's all this residual racism that you're like, whoa, what do you say? A German driver has a different mind than a Mexican driver. You know, there's been a lot of rapidly evolving cultural changes. And I think Lewis should take some credit for it. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You know, he's someone that the easiest thing to do is just follow the trodden path. But he chose to be different.
Starting point is 01:17:41 He brought a culture into the sport. He made that entry into the pits like a catwalk for all of us, which has been great for the sport. But he chose to stand up for what he believed in. And he chose to be different because that's who he was. And that also helped. Helped. It all forward. Yeah, when your most valuable asset is being out loud about racism, what choice do you?
Starting point is 01:18:01 You can't silence that person. And he's a goat. Yeah, yeah. So if he says it, people are forced to listen. objectivity. You can say what you want. This guy's won 100 races. He has the goods. Yeah, but definitely what I see now, the minute I go into an important meeting, I can tell within the first 10 minutes if the man at the table has a daughter or not, because it's such a different view when you're a man with a daughter at the table, because it's as if you're able to see the situation through what your
Starting point is 01:18:29 daughter would experience. Yeah. And you want the world to be the most inviting place for her. And even some of the decision makers in the sport who maybe their daughters are not going to come into the sport, but you can see them understanding, yeah, I get that because actually, would I want my daughter to be treated like that or not get that opportunity? No, I wouldn't. And so they're much more
Starting point is 01:18:48 proactive. And I think that's also changed because the leaders now, they're the next generation and they want this sport to be in the right place. Yeah, Stefano is just a good dude on top of everything else. Yeah, he's not like some of the previous heads of F1. No. Yeah, he's an evolved guy.
Starting point is 01:19:04 You've been fearless. What has it been like watching your son be in carts? Well, it's so interesting your story with your daughter because Jack is really into racing. He has been for my age. And you could argue, well, he's surrounded by it. But Toto was very against him getting into racing because he kind of felt, why would we do that to ourselves? You know, with the name and it's our industry. And I kind of said to him, I get that.
Starting point is 01:19:28 But I got given that chance. And if he really wants it, I'm not going to not give him the chance. Yeah. He got scared. Tota got scared by one accident. He was a parent that has fear for his kids or just anything happening in general. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:19:41 But he also, when we started going to the cart track, he could see how much Jack got into it. And now we have the life of the motorhome, the racemies. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And those are some of the best weekends we have because it's back to basics, and it's together as a family. And it's seeing this little guy have to dig deep in moments.
Starting point is 01:19:58 And yes, his name makes him a target. Yeah. But I say to myself, well, it'll toughen him up because no matter what he does in life, and whether he's good enough or not, he'll have to figure it out. But I think sport for a young person just teaches you so many life skills.
Starting point is 01:20:12 How about you driving? Do you still get joy out of driving? Do you do track days? I don't have capacity because now every weekend that I'm not on a F1 weekend, it's with Jack on the car track. I kind of feel I had my turn. Okay.
Starting point is 01:20:24 Great. I still love driving fast. Toto and I think if we would have a free weekend, we would love nothing more than to get on a racetrack with a GT car or something. But then it can always end up where there's not speaking to each other because we both want to beat each other. Yeah, but he was very honest about he tries to cheat every time
Starting point is 01:20:38 and that you're always a half second faster no matter what cheating. Oh, I love that. He put different tires on the car. He put ballast in your car. Can't be beat. No matter what, you're still half second always faster. Yeah. There will be a moment in time where we will be the old ones out on track.
Starting point is 01:20:53 Oh, I hope we're best friends at this point. That's so fun. I'll be there with you. Oh, we have. So cool. Well, I'll tell you what your book does a great job of. The book's called Driven. is you really do a good job of helping people understand
Starting point is 01:21:08 what it's like to be sitting in the car strapped in. The experience of it is so unique and you do a great first person job of explaining what that feels like. That's a very unique perspective. Well, that's a real compliment coming from you. Yeah, yeah, no, it's so unique. And I think it's so applicable to any situation where it's like, okay, I've been aiming at nothing but this.
Starting point is 01:21:31 We're now here. Oh, fuck. You don't have to be into racing to have that experience. You're pitching for the first time as the head of your department and this is the day. I think it's highly relatable. I adore you and I'm really glad I got to meet you. You're going to make me blush. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:21:48 This is so great. But Driven is out now. Also, people can listen to it, which I advise. You read it? I read it, yeah. Nice. Was that daunting? You know, my publisher said, oh, you need five days.
Starting point is 01:21:59 I don't have five days. I did it in two. Yeah. So it's like double speed. But I found it therapeutic in a way. I kind of got into a rhythm. I really enjoyed it. And did you have this moment?
Starting point is 01:22:08 I think sometimes when I've read what I've written, it helps me integrate what happened in my life. I found it was a lot more work than I anticipated and we were perfection. So we got to nine draft, my brother and I. But I found the whole experience really enjoyable and therapeutic, definitely. Yeah, like it helps you take a minute and recognize, oh, right, I really did go through all those things. And I survived all those things.
Starting point is 01:22:31 And I can survive a lot. Did you get unexpectedly emotional while reading it ever? Yes. Yeah, what parts? The hardest was a letter to little Susie. I took like five attempts because I kept welling up. Because I guess it was the moment where I was speaking to myself in a way, but it was very emotional.
Starting point is 01:22:48 I bet I know what was going on, which is Susie's been talking so mean to herself since she was a little kid. And you got to be kind to her and you probably deserved a little kindness from yourself. Yeah. And that's really hard, right? That is so true. It was always more. It was always you're going to keep going. This is not good enough and keep in it.
Starting point is 01:23:07 You're so mean to yourself. I look at that little girl and I want to give her a hug. Just take a break for a second. And aren't you proud of her? And so thankful to my parents looking back. But this little girl who had this dream and drive and ambition is like, I just want to hug her and say, you did okay. It's stressful having a huge dream. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:23:27 Oh, God. Well, Susie, I adore you. This has been so. fun. Everybody read driven. I'm so glad you wrote it. You're so good for the sport. And I hope we get to talk to you again. I really hope we're like in our 70s driving the Nureberg ring together on a weekend. I think let's do a trip to the TT and then from there go straight to Nureberg ring. Do a few laps. I'm in. I took Kristen the Nureberg ring in a rental. But do you know the track? I didn't. That was my first time there. I rented a car at Avis rental
Starting point is 01:23:56 car at Frankfurt Airport. And I asked the German Davis rental guy, could you put into the nav because it was all in German? Can you put in the Nureberg ring? Oh, no, you must not drive this car on the ring. I said, oh, no, no, no, I would never drive this. No, you must not. I go, no, no, I'm going to go spectate.
Starting point is 01:24:12 I just want to look at it from far as, okay, he reluctantly put it in. Sure enough, we went and just bought laps. And yeah, went out, and we were in a Pact between a GT2 and a Gt3. We were in, like, base 9-11. But it was so fun. But anyways, Kristen, just like reading a magazine. the whole time. I'm like,
Starting point is 01:24:27 on the Bulls coming up. You got to look at them. She could care less. She's just like reading. Yeah. I just have one funny story to share with you. When I just joined Mercedes-Benz for DTM,
Starting point is 01:24:36 we'd done preseason testing. We'd done the first race. And then I got told to go to Nurebergring. And I was a young Scottish girl that really only in single-seater had driven nationally in the UK. So Berndt Schneider, who was like the king of DTM.
Starting point is 01:24:47 He's like, oh, let's go and do a lap of the Nureberggring. And I'm like, what's the NERBerg ring? He's like, come with me. Oh, boy. Yeah, okay. I'm getting the C-63. The barrier goes up and he takes off and I'm like,
Starting point is 01:24:57 and because I didn't know what it was in the corners, this is the never-ending racing track. It's like a 12.8 mile lap and there's every different surface. You're almost on cobblestone at one point. It's like you're in a cement bowl, then you're on asphalt,
Starting point is 01:25:09 then you're in the woods. Incredible. Then if it starts raining, things get really exciting what's happened to us. Okay, I adore you. Thank you. Thank you both so much.
Starting point is 01:25:19 We hope you enjoy this episode. Unfortunately, they made some mistakes. Well, I don't like time again. Why? Because that was so sad and sweet. That made you miss the time that's gone by. Yeah. Should we play the audio of that?
Starting point is 01:25:43 I don't know if it's good enough audio. You really get to see the face. The faces. She looks like a mix between Rumpelstiltskyn and Throw Mama from the Train. Yeah, Dax, okay, Dax found an old video of Delta. Yeah, and she's being interviewed for the quote documentary that Lily's making. I wish we could show it. We can't.
Starting point is 01:26:03 I know. God. You know, Delta just said to me the other day, if there's ever a way I could be on the fact check again, I was like, I miss you on the fact check so much. I know. We can put a bag over her head. Yeah, that seems. So, Delta, why don't you tell us what your favorite thing to do is?
Starting point is 01:26:20 My favorite thing to do is play basketball. She never played basketball. What are your talents? Multiple. My talent is, I try to be like Lincoln because Lincoln does good stuff. That's sweet. That's what I'm trying to do. It's too much to handle.
Starting point is 01:26:49 Rethinks, Lily says, what are your talents? And she says, my talents are, my talent is, she switches it to singular. Oh. So good. It would be like Lincoln? Because Lincoln does good stuff. Oh, my God. Yeah, I guess it's heartbreaking, but it's, but thank God for videos.
Starting point is 01:27:14 I know. Like, there's no video of me doing anything. Me either. None of you? You guys had probably camcorders, right? We had those big camcorders and, you know, when you put the tape in. Yep. So there was some tapes, but they're all gone.
Starting point is 01:27:29 They haven't been digitized? Uh-uh. That feels like something your mom would have done in her retirement is digitized the VHS. She needs to call Blockbox. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Our old safe box. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:27:43 Yeah. What is it, Rob? I'm trying to look at it. Oh, Jesus. No. Well, I feel less bad. Any time, Rob doesn't know something. It was called.
Starting point is 01:27:49 Safewalk. No. Legacy box. Legacy box. Are they still with us? They're alive, yeah. Oh, great. I don't know that they're with us, though.
Starting point is 01:28:01 You should yell to your mom, make go digitize our stuff, Mom. Make me a milk shake. Yeah. Let me have a sandwich. I'm a sandwich, too, and digitize everything. She should. She really should.
Starting point is 01:28:12 Yeah. But also, it might be like lackluster. Back then, like, I can't have. I bet it was a mess. There would never have been a two-camera. Like, it would have been like a fifth grade, some singing or something, you know, something like that. An event. An event.
Starting point is 01:28:29 There wasn't just random, candid, B-roll being shot like it is now. I don't think so. Yeah. But this is a ding, ding, ding, because time is sad, as we know. Uh-huh. The passage of time. Yeah. And.
Starting point is 01:28:41 Father-time. Yeah. Mother Nature father time. Because he's just so mean. He's strict. Yeah, he's strict. His word is final. He won't lay up.
Starting point is 01:28:52 Like, he won't just, like, give us a break. No, his word is unwavering. When he says the time has passed, it has passed. I know. There's no going back. Yeah. So rude. Rigid, rigid.
Starting point is 01:29:03 Very rigid. Yeah. Stuck in his ways. But I think it gives our life its meaning. Without it, what's the meaning? I have a wreck. Oh, let's hear it. And a curiosity.
Starting point is 01:29:14 I hope you are. Are you watching Widows Bay? Oh, yeah. I think we did I don't, did I not tell you? Yeah, yes, I am. But, okay, so pin in that. Okay. Well, pin in whichever, I guess.
Starting point is 01:29:26 Which one do we want to move forward with? Which one would come back to the other one. Widows Bay, yes, I'm watching. I'm not caught up. Okay, no spoilers. So no spoilers. Everyone's dead. Great.
Starting point is 01:29:40 It's like a comedy horror show. Oh, the comedy is comedy, though. It's so funny. Well, it's Katie Dippold, who is. so funny. I used to watch her at UCB in my heyday all the time. She was a big star there. Yes. And she created it and she is so funny. She wrote for Parks and Rec and she's just like, I think she's written some stuff for that Paul Figue is directed. She's just brilliant.
Starting point is 01:30:09 And so when I saw that it was her, it's like, oh, I got to watch this. And it's fantastic. Well, what I was so pumped about is Nancy from Bless This Mess. Do you remember Nancy on Bless This Mess? She works at the museum, at the Widows Bay Museum. If you've seen the first episode, you saw it. They go to the museum and it's the history of the island. And what's so funny is, of course, which burning is a real black mark on Salem. But when she's walking this reporter through the museum, they get to this bloody outfit from a burning.
Starting point is 01:30:46 from a burned witch. And she said, well, here's a source of great pride for us. We found them. We burned them. Her delivery of them. Wait, so she was in Bless This Met. Yeah, she was one of our neighbors. And she was so, I loved her so much.
Starting point is 01:31:05 She was so fun. She knitted me like a couple of scarves and stuff. She was a knitter. That's so cute. Yeah. Wait, who's the actress? Nancy Leneham. Oh, cool.
Starting point is 01:31:15 And she's so good. Well, it's also shot. A lot of it's directed by, um, hero. Yeah, who did a lot of Atlanta. Yes. So it's just, it's brilliant. Powerhouse crew. Yes.
Starting point is 01:31:29 Can't recommend it enough. It's so silly. It is, but it's also getting skilly. It's Matthew Reese, one of our faves. Oh, we love him. Oh, we love him. So good. He's so, so good.
Starting point is 01:31:38 A movable feast. That's the name of his boat in, in Manhattan. Oh, my God. Yeah. Check that episode on the archives. Give it a listen. He's so charming. He was COVID, though.
Starting point is 01:31:53 He wasn't in person. Was he? Yeah. God. That's crazy. I want to sit with him. Okay. So back to what I was going to say about time.
Starting point is 01:32:04 Yeah. Okay. So yesterday, I can say this because it's been announced. Elizabeth came over because she's moving. Her and Andy are moving to France for a whole year. Plus the opposite of wee-wee. No, no. No, no.
Starting point is 01:32:23 No, no. Not a wee-wee. I know. And, like, it's going to be great for them. They're going to have so much fun. And it's a beautiful thing to do. Will they be podcasting from France? They will be.
Starting point is 01:32:33 Okay. So that's so fun. Yeah. And, like, it would be very fun to listen along on their adventures. You know, that'll be great. But I hate it. I hate it, you know, I really hate it. But then it's, you know, Elizabeth is kind, is a crier.
Starting point is 01:32:52 Okay. Her tears come easy. Okay. And, you know, she, like, gets out of the car and she's, like, already, like, I didn't bring, I didn't wear mascara, like, on purpose. I know I'm going to cry. This is to tell you that they're moving? No. Like, it's just the last time I'll see her.
Starting point is 01:33:08 Wait, they're moving tonight? I leave on Friday. Okay. And then they leave like a couple, they leave like a week later while I'm gone. Oh, yeah, I should say. So this is the last time I'm going to see her before they leave. Until you go visit in front. Where are they moving in from?
Starting point is 01:33:24 Bordeaux. What tell me about Bordeaux? That's the wine country, I guess. I don't know. Yeah, it's like there's wine there. Is it on a river? Should be. I don't know much about it.
Starting point is 01:33:32 I've never been. How did they pick that place? They just want to be so close to the wine? No, they don't even really drink much. So they went last summer. It's always been a dream of. of Elizabeth's live in France. So last summer, they went to just test the waters. Yeah, they went to test the waters and try it out. And they loved it, but they had to come home a little earlier than
Starting point is 01:33:54 expected because unfortunately Andy's father passed away. So they came home. They loved it, but I didn't think they loved it that much. Right. Like, I wasn't like, oh, like, their unfinished business. Everywhere I'm at on vacation, I'm certain I want to live there for a year. I mean, everywhere I go virtually. I know. So she, so I didn't expect this really. I thought they kind of got it out of their system last summer. Or like maybe they go back for another summer break. But like living for a whole year, I didn't expect it. And so anyway, she came over and she was, she was like, I'm going to cry, you know, just, I've come here to cry. Yeah. And there was another friend there, Sophia, who's kind of a new friend.
Starting point is 01:34:41 And so it was good. I was like, well, Sophia's here. She'll, like, buffer. And Elizabeth was like, you know, she's kind of like, well, I don't, that's not going to stop me. And also, like, I don't need that. Yeah, let's go. Right. And so, you know, we talked a lot.
Starting point is 01:34:58 And then. Does it make you nervous that she's going to cry because you feel obligated to cry in return? So, okay, this is what we started talking about because I was like. You felt pressure. Well, I think Elizabeth was like, you better cry. Oh, well, that's direct pressure. That's not even in your head. At one point she said that.
Starting point is 01:35:16 And I was like, uh-oh. I'm not gonna. I said, I said, I'm not going to. Yeah. And Sophia was like, you better cry for her. Oh, wow. And I was like, oh, my God, oh, my God. A lot of pressure.
Starting point is 01:35:28 Oh, no, oh, no. And I, you know, I didn't. Yeah, sure. I knew that. I didn't. And she, you know, at the end. In 10 years, I think I've seen you cry like three or four times. You have seen me cry like disproportionately than most people.
Starting point is 01:35:48 Right. And even still, yes, not that often. Correct, yeah. Anyway, so I didn't cry at all. And then, you know, we were hugging by and I still wasn't crying. Uh-huh. Were you trying to make yourself? Could you feel yourself like focusing on your eyes and stuff?
Starting point is 01:36:05 A little, a little. She was like, wow, not even not even a little. Not even a little water in there. Yeah, not even a well up. Yeah. And I was like, well, it's, it's there. It's there. It's on the inside, you know.
Starting point is 01:36:19 And it's a ding, ding, ding to the graduation, Delta's graduation, where everyone was crying and I wasn't crying. Yeah. And everyone, and I was like, some people are performing here, but really they weren't. You know, they just cry. You were just self-conscious that you weren't crying. Yeah, of course, yeah. And I, I, I, but I was sad. at the graduation and I was sad last night.
Starting point is 01:36:43 Yeah. But I have a problem. Look, I know this very well. I'm like, you know, deaths and people getting arrested and friends dying. And yeah, I feel the pressure of someone like waiting for me to have this expected reaction. Yeah, reaction. And then kind of once that occurs to you that you're supposed to, for me, trains left the station. There's no reaching the cry point because you're now.
Starting point is 01:37:10 self-conscious about not crying. Right. And that's just not the frame of mind to cry. I know. Like they say, you know, the trick in acting is to try your heart is not to cry. Exactly. I love that trick because I can do that. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:37:24 But then, but I'm, I was never good at crying as an actor. I'm caught between wanting to give another recommendation, but also wanting to talk about an actor I saw that was using menthol. And I don't ever want it to be exposed of who. I use menthol. all in employee of the month. I would have felt unethical about doing that like in parenthood, but I did not feel
Starting point is 01:37:46 unethical about doing an employee of the month. Yeah, because it was a funny scene. I had won a ring competition and I thought it would be hilarious if I was just like uncontrollably sobbing at this victory. Yeah. And yeah, I used a lot of it. And my eyes were fucking on fire.
Starting point is 01:38:02 And I was put to spray more. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I don't, I don't know. I just don't think I cry when I'm sad. You cry when you're mad? I cry when I'm mad and frustrated.
Starting point is 01:38:16 Frustrated. Frustrated. I cry. Wolf? No, never. I don't cry wolf. Liz is at the window? She was there.
Starting point is 01:38:29 Oh my God. I might cry right now because I'm being frustrated. I'm misunderstood. I don't want to frustrate you. Not before the break. Yeah. So, yeah, I think I cry when I'm angry. And I cry when I'm frustrated and I cry when I'm embarrassed.
Starting point is 01:38:45 Oh, yeah. That's the first time I saw you cry. That's the first time I told you when I ran into the window. Yeah. Because I ran, I went into the car and then I cried. Oh, you held your crying until the car. Yeah, I mean, I was walking to the car. Oh.
Starting point is 01:38:58 So it was probably, it was probably starting immediately, but no one had to see. When you turned back, I thought I saw what was the beginning of a breakdown that could be wrong. I definitely thought, ooh, like, who cares about banging in the glass? But the look was like, oh, we're going to have some crying. Yeah. Yeah. And some people... What was the event that night?
Starting point is 01:39:21 There was someone was in town. Yes, Bob Murbach was in town. Oh, Bob Murbach was in town. And it was the first time I ever met him. It was a long time ago. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. And some people are quick triggers for me.
Starting point is 01:39:37 Like, are quit, like, um, I, as I said, I've cried in front of you a fair amount. Yeah. I've cried. My parents often can get a good cry out of, yeah. Can get me to cry. Yeah, well, then this is consistent. Dad's. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:39:54 I mean, Bill so far hasn't. He hasn't. Yeah. He will. I hope not. I don't have cried in front of him. Okay. Um, I want to be like, will you let him hold you?
Starting point is 01:40:04 No. No. I don't let my dad's hold me. No, no, no, no. Yeah, so, so anyway, I just, I did. She laughed and I was like, God, like. I need to cry more. I can't.
Starting point is 01:40:20 I just, I wish I did. I wish I had cried then. Yeah. But it wasn't going to happen. I don't cry out of sadness. I cry out of my heart being touched. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:40:32 Yeah. Yes. Yeah. Me too. I think that's more, that's definitely more likely than sadness. Like if something's just like so overwhelmingly like sweet or beautiful, like life is beautiful. Yeah, yeah. I cry at life is beautiful. Oh, that's good. Not the movie. You've never seen it. But. Oh, just the beauty of life? Yeah. Okay. Yeah. Like sports moments. The last phase, I think, for me to be a complete cryer is I have had two or three different moments in the last couple years where. I was so frustrated that I did have the feeling in my body of like, oh, if I could just ball right now, I would feel so much better at the end of this. Or sometimes there's like, there'll be the occasion where, again, in my mind, whether this is happening or not, doesn't matter. I feel like all three of them are coming at me. And I'm biting my tongue.
Starting point is 01:41:28 Yeah, overwhelmed and maybe ganged up on. And I'm biting my tongues. I don't want to make anything worse. and I do reach a point when I'm biting my tongue or I can feel my eyes are going to betray me. Like I'm going to start crying out of my anger and frustration. You should let yourself because then everyone will stop being mean to you. And be like, oh, maybe we should throttle back.
Starting point is 01:41:50 Oh, no, he's like crying. What's so funny is I think half the time they'd have no idea because they don't know necessarily when I'm like fighting my hardest not to get involved or to say something. That's really hard for me. Do you ever just decide to walk away? Oh, God, yeah. I go upstairs.
Starting point is 01:42:09 I quote, go upstairs for something fucking all the time. Yeah, yeah. As I think it's a real patented dad. Yeah, it's good to go upstairs, as a dad. Or go out to the garage. I always have to go out to the garage and just do one thing and then I can return. Yeah, sometimes you need a minute. I like how generic I am.
Starting point is 01:42:31 Some part of me I like that I'm like doing what all dads do. And then I, you know, it makes me feel like I grew up. Was your like quintessential image of a dad? Well, that's what I was going to say. I've never seen, I never saw my father parent in a relationship. Mm-hmm. I only saw him operate as a lone wolf and my mom. And then my stepdad's, they didn't hold their tongue.
Starting point is 01:42:56 You know, they yelled all the time and screamed and, yeah. swore and said really nasty character assassinations of us a lot. But I've never seen the healthy version where it's like, oh yeah, dad's going out to the garage to check on, you know, a blank. Right. And now he's back and now he's calm. You know, like, I don't know. Interesting.
Starting point is 01:43:21 But I guess I've seen it in movies and in TV shows and I've seen it maybe in other people's family. And I just know I'm a part of like a great tradition. When I think of dads, the first image I think of is in a store, a dad just sitting in whatever seat there is, makeshift seat. There's always a dad sitting on the floor. Yeah, they're just sitting there waiting for everyone else to be the mom and the daughter to be done shopping. I mean, we would all go to the outlet mall. How could he do it?
Starting point is 01:43:51 I can't even do it. He would, he wants to do it too. And then he's not going, most of the time he's not even going in any stores. She's just waiting outside the store while we go in store after store. Because shopping is miserable. But then why does he want to go? I don't know. To be a good, to be a good dad.
Starting point is 01:44:05 To spend time. That's right. Sitting and getting exhausted in stores. And it's so hot out. And watching the saved money disappear. Exactly. And he's just sweating out there. It's like actually so sweet that he's just like going.
Starting point is 01:44:19 Real mensch, yeah. Just going to these stores for no reason. Getting through it. And even he's never like, let's go. Like he never says let's go. He's thinking it over and over again, and he's resisting. I wonder if he's ever had a solemn tear you missed. Like, and he's sitting in that chair.
Starting point is 01:44:35 It's just, well. It's just like, he wants to go like, oh, God, no. Like, let's leave. Please, let's leave. But then he doesn't. He already feels that complete angst of being stuck somewhere. He doesn't. That's the thing about him.
Starting point is 01:44:49 He's really strange. Well, he's a better man than I am. Yeah. Well, maybe it's his Indianness. I don't know, but like, it's pretty wild. He just like really... He'll spend seven hours out with you guys. And he doesn't buy one thing, right?
Starting point is 01:45:02 He doesn't pick anything up. Fuck that. That's like being in an eight hour long fucking cricket match. I couldn't do it. Well, he likes cricket. He likes cricket. Maybe that's what... Well, he played.
Starting point is 01:45:13 Formatted him to be so tolerant of boredom. I think they are just, I think Indian... Well, I shouldn't say. I don't know. I don't know. I just think, well, maybe Indian Med from Carolla. They just like know to go along with the women. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:45:30 And they're like, it's fine. Like, it's fine. Just let them do. I guess my question is why would, why, yes. Why does any of the women want us there? I think he wants to be nearby. Because he only sees you on the weekends and you guys want to spend the whole weekend shopping. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:45:49 Although now when I go home, he doesn't really come with us. Like if we go to T.J. Max, he doesn't come. Yeah, good. It just meets us at dinner or whatever. Yes. It's better. It's better. Do the lunches, drive two cars.
Starting point is 01:46:01 He can stop at Home Depot. It's better. But, uh, yeah. Can you imagine going to Home Depot with him for seven hours? No, I would, I just, I would never do that. Yeah. And think about how much pain. I mean, I did have to do that as a kid.
Starting point is 01:46:13 It felt like seven hours, probably 20 minutes. Yeah, 20 minutes because that's how guys shop. They, like, already know what they want before they walk in. I hated. I hated it. No, imagine, like, really put yourself in a situation where you were at Home Depot for seven hours. There's three and a half movies. Well, he must not hate it or he wouldn't come.
Starting point is 01:46:30 Or he's just like, he's like a monk. He can like just ignore the pain. He can, I do think, like, really just like, he just like doesn't complain about anything. Yeah, it's pretty wild. Yeah, it's hot. It's attractive. I guess like.
Starting point is 01:46:46 That's what you should be as a guy. Yeah, not complaining. That's right. My therapist said to me, you should never say what about me. That's not. in your domain. Well, I mean...
Starting point is 01:46:58 And I like, that's right. Well, no. You're still a person. But he doesn't. I've never heard him say that. Yeah, it's not... You can do that. You are free to do that.
Starting point is 01:47:10 Yeah. And then there are certain outcomes of that. And that's not... I don't want that outcome. Yeah, but you also don't want resentment. You don't... Well, I'm not going to get resented for... But some people could...
Starting point is 01:47:18 No, no, no. You could build a resentment. Like, nobody's thinking about me. No one's even noticing me. No one cares what I think. Well, you're not allowed to do that either. because that's not grown-up behavior either. Right.
Starting point is 01:47:27 That's going to be hard for some people. Yeah. But like in pursuit of being a man, the definition my therapist and I have for me as a man. Yeah. Includes shutting the fuck out. No resentments. No pity party. No, what about me?
Starting point is 01:47:44 That's the strength that you're supposed to exude as a man. You're supposed to bring strength to this. And that's, we think that's just screaming and shoving other men. No, no. The strength is. Restraint. Yeah. Well, this is good because it's, oh my gosh. It's a Father's Day. Is it this Sunday? Yeah. It is. Yeah. Rob, are you being spoiled? You're traveling too. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:48:08 Don't you feel like traveling nullifies the event? Yeah, I have my birthday always is right on it too, right by it. Oh. So you get triple screwed. I have Saturday Sunday. Okay. What would you want to do this year? Well, I don't know if it was last year the year before, but I hosted a Father's day party and it was tournaments. It was a volleyball tournament, a pickleball tournament, and sideline shoulder massages. That's nice. And food. And it was really quite fun. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:48:41 I didn't know about sideline shoulder massage. Yeah. When you weren't playing pickleball, you were getting a shoulder massage. That's cool. Right? I want one. Because for Mother's Day, I bring in all these people. You do, yes.
Starting point is 01:48:54 And so we're not going to get pedicures and manicures, although we could and they're fun. Mm-hmm. They are fun. I did. And you kind of need one. I need one. Well, you always complain about your toes. You're always complaining about them.
Starting point is 01:49:08 I don't even know if I would, in good conscience, let someone touch my toes. They probably want to. They're like, you know what? This is like Everest, you know, like they really, they want at them and they want to see what they can do. Remember I spoke about, we could look this up now. Uh-huh. Rob, do you, can you control the TV? Yep, sure can.
Starting point is 01:49:31 Will you look like Malala and Zarna Garg? Oh, Zarnah, she's very funny. Do you know her? Remember I was telling you about the video? Yeah. Well, someone was nice enough to tell me what video I was watching. Oh, yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:49:47 That's cool. Yeah, she's very funny. She's people really love her. We might be able to connect it to day. Max's Mac Studio. What if porn just popped up? Oh, I love it. A man and a horse.
Starting point is 01:49:59 That's your thing these days? That's my thing, yeah. Nice. I'm watching exclusively men and horses. But only kissing. Oh, you draw the line. Yeah. Oh, wow.
Starting point is 01:50:10 I've got to figure out to get this audio to go through there, though. Oh, boy. This is hard. What happens if you hit play? Let's find out. Yeah, no audio. Yeah. All right, never mind.
Starting point is 01:50:20 Okay. We're not as techy as we appear to be. I guess I could have just a little. looked it up on my phone. It would have been a lot easier. So Malala, I'm the world's leading almost therapist. Whatever your problem is, I can solve it. Just tell me what it is. Let's go. When I was 15, I was shot by the Taliban in Pakistan. Okay, that happens.
Starting point is 01:50:39 And then I moved a different country in the UK for my surgeries. Okay, that sounds fun. That sounds fun. New culture, new environment. I joined a school. But I couldn't make any friends. I was really lonely. Oh, because you were the problem. So by the end of my school time, I had only made one friend. You one friend, huh, that's sad, yeah.
Starting point is 01:51:02 Sad for the friend who was stuck with you. I was joining college at Oxford. I said, I'm going to make as many friends as possible. Oh, Oxford? You went to Oxford? See, yeah. What happened? You didn't get into Cambridge?
Starting point is 01:51:15 That was my dream place to go to. Oh, see, right there, we just identified the first problem. You have dreams. You know, I'm really sorry to just bring this up, but you sound like you complain a lot. You're coming across a little whiny about the old girl to need to be this and that situation. Like you got shot once, you're fine. The other side of your face looking great, as far as I can tell. Everything is fine.
Starting point is 01:51:40 You're welcome. The other side of your face. You're fine. Thank you. You're welcome. So you got shot in the face. Yeah. I love that accent.
Starting point is 01:51:52 It's so pleasing. Do you like it or is it making nervous? I mean, it makes me nervous, obviously. It makes me nervous when you listen to it. It does. You won't be able to help yourself. To do it. There's something so pleasing and melodic about it.
Starting point is 01:52:06 I mean, it's very... Malala, dick. It is melodic. It's sing-songy. That's the, I think, is maybe a pejorative way of saying it, maybe. No, but it is. But it's sing-songy. It has like a real...
Starting point is 01:52:20 That's his close. That's like as safe as I can Mm-hmm, mm-hmm, mm-hmm. You want me to, it's Father's Day, you want me to let you do it? Go ahead. No, it's not appropriate. You want to see me cry? No, no, no.
Starting point is 01:52:35 That's not my Father's Day wish. What is? Horse porn. Great. We can make that happen. Really passionate kissing between a man and a horse. Oh my God. All right.
Starting point is 01:52:48 Let's do some facts. Stay tuned for more armchair expert if you dare. Z. Wolf. I love her. What a stud. What a gorgeous. He got her. Awesome.
Starting point is 01:53:13 Good job, Toto. They're such a cool couple. They are. Really intimidatingly cool. You've seen them in their 300-s-L Mercedes, that old-ass Mercedes? The one that he said he would take me in? Yeah, they drive around Monaco in it. They're always dressed to the next.
Starting point is 01:53:26 What color is it? Silver. The one we saw on Instagram that time was green. Yeah, that was like a, I won't bore you, a Resto Mod version of one. So they were free to make it any color. Now they can't. They had already altered it. Now they can't.
Starting point is 01:53:40 Well, no, if you have a mint condition unaltered, you don't want to change the paint color. Oh. You would be degrading the value. So none were ever made green originally. Correct. That was, and nor they had put like a cool engine in it and bigger, you know, they did what I do to cars.
Starting point is 01:53:55 Right. So am I supposed to want an original or a souped up one? It's a tricky one because those cars, I'm ballparking, but I think a goal wing, 300, that's got to be like a $3 to $5 million car, I think. And if you chopped it all up and put all this school stuff in it, it would probably be worth like $800,000. So you would be losing $2.5 million of the value to have the car you wanted. Yeah. Like, if I take my Lincoln, it's not going to, it wasn't worth a lot of money before I did all that shit to it. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:54:28 None of my cars. But now it's worth more, it feels like. Oh, you're saying because it wasn't worth a lot. Exactly. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Because you're not getting it to be completely pristine and original. Well, this is interesting because I've never been in this position normal. Normally I'm on the other side of this where I like don't care about the value.
Starting point is 01:54:49 Like, I want to like what I'm driving in. Of course. And what it looks like. That's how I feel. Yeah. That's why I don't get those kind of cars. All right. I would never want to get a kind of car that I'm making it less valuable by making it better.
Starting point is 01:55:01 Uh-huh. Uh-huh. I'd rather just buy. So if like Toto and Susie buy me one and then I have you soup it up, they'll probably be mad about that. They will be bummed. Yeah. You made a couple million dollars disappear. Okay.
Starting point is 01:55:19 Now I'm in a pickle. Okay. Anyway, she was amazing. She was. She was amazing. Sounds like a fun family, too. I know. And remember she was talking about Isla Man T.T.
Starting point is 01:55:30 Yes. That started last weekend. Did you watch any? And Brad was there. Oh. And Channing. And they were filming. No.
Starting point is 01:55:40 Yeah. For their new thing. I think they're making a movie about, I don't know if it's both of them, but I think Channing was filming something for a movie about Isle of Man. Oh my God. I wonder if it's a dock or a... Wow. I doubt it'd be a dock with Channing in it.
Starting point is 01:55:56 What would be the point, right? Oh, he was starring. I thought you meant like he was like directing it. No, he was on a motorcycle in leathers. Oh. I'm presuming filming him, yeah. Wow. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:56:07 Cool. Okay, some facts. The Topo Chico shortage. Mm-hmm. Yikes. Crisis. Yeah. Okay.
Starting point is 01:56:16 A nationwide shortage of Topo Chico, original mineral water is affecting store shelves and bars in U.S. Coca-Cola suspended production of its flagship sparkling water at its Monterey, Mexico facility to perform well-stabilization and facility upgrades. Supplies are expected to remain extremely limited through late 2026. Yeah, this is a big boy. I feel like the well went dry. I'm not telling us.
Starting point is 01:56:41 I know. CNN said America's running out of Topo Chico mineral water. Oh, we love Topo Chico. I know. We have bottles in that fridge, just accruing value. What are we going to do when they're going to auction them? Remember people paid an insane amount of money for original Coke? Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 01:56:58 When they switched to new Coke, people were spending like preposterous amounts of money on a 12-pack. This is just like Liberty. It is. Oh, my God. And we're sitting on a stockpile of at least six or eight. Two. Two. Two.
Starting point is 01:57:11 Yeah, we're down to two. Oh, no, not even one for each of us. Fuck. No, no, no. This is horrible news. Okay. Oh, if you drink sparkling water, do you not have to pee as much? Sure. That was Toto's theory. It actually says fizzier sparkling water contains dissolved carbon dioxide. This results in an acidic solution that may increase urinary urgency. Irritate your bladder.
Starting point is 01:57:38 Irritate your bladder. Our advice is to let me your intake of one of these to one glass a day. Oh, wow. I think, well, Toto's only drink. bubbly water. But look, do I believe that what you just read or just looking at the man? Whatever he's doing works. It's true, but we don't know about his peeing. Prove is in the pudding.
Starting point is 01:57:59 That is true. Do you have any sparkling water? I don't want to wake up every night to go pee and wake up and then I can't concentrate on the team. I'm the cutest little boy ever made. Watch me jump. Watch me play. Oh. You think he ever sings that song.
Starting point is 01:58:14 So different. Oh, okay. I said something out of school. I left it in, but I want people to know. I know it was wrong. What did you leave in? So her grandfather was paralyzed, remember? Or from the waist down.
Starting point is 01:58:33 And then he got in an accident, broke his ankle or something. Okay. And I said, like, oh, I mean, like, doesn't really matter or something. But it does. Then I looked it up. Like, if you're paralyzed. and you break your leg, do you still have to do anything and you do?
Starting point is 01:58:53 Still requires medical treatment. I just feel like maybe if there's no pain, you could just heal on its own. That's definitely the silver lining of getting a broken leg when you're paralyzed. Right. But it's not nothing. It's not nothing.
Starting point is 01:59:05 But it's definitely less than if you're fully able body. Yeah. The current F1 car, you said, weighs about 980 kilograms. A current Formula One car has a minimum weight limit of 768 kilograms. This limit applies to the car and driver combination, but excludes fuel. 2026 reset. The current generation of cars is noticeably lighter than the previous era,
Starting point is 01:59:31 dropping 32 kilograms from 800 kilograms minimum seen in 2025. Ask it how many kilograms of fuel they carry. I think they have like 100 kilos of fuel. The fuel does an F1 car. I think filled up there in the 900s. Okay. It carries a maximum of 110 kilograms of fuel. Okay.
Starting point is 01:59:53 Because mid-race refueling is banned this maximum amount must last the entire race, taking the cars about 300 kilometers. Did my Botox guys say I have a thick neck? I don't think he used the word thick like I did, but he did comment. He basically was like, it's really strong muscles. But he was saying that because the neck was thick. Well, so he said you have really strong muscles, and you heard my necks, do you think? Well, no, because we're trying to make it smaller.
Starting point is 02:00:21 The whole point of the Botox was to make this. I'm trying to imagine if you succeed at giving yourself a pencil neck, how wild that'll be. Well, it's not really about the neck so much as it is like this in here. Yeah, exactly. But this is like very strong. Wow. Your elite muscle mass is all in your mastoid. My neck.
Starting point is 02:00:42 Exactly. He grabs it. He grabs it. He grabbed and said that. Oh, he the man handles you. I gave him permission. Okay. I like him a lot.
Starting point is 02:00:49 He processes you like a chicken. Yeah, he does. And I appreciate it. Okay. Was she two-tenths or one-tenth away when she finished that practice session? You said to it, yeah, point two. That's what I see as well. Kimmy and Max's qualifying lap at Monaco, second to last,
Starting point is 02:01:13 qualifying lab, 0.003. No. 3,000th. That can't even, no. 3,000th of a second. How can they even measure that? I know.
Starting point is 02:01:26 That is so. I mean, losing pole. No, that makes me want to die, actually. By something that's way less than a blink of an eye. Exactly. Way, way less. You can't even do it. We can't even like, yeah.
Starting point is 02:01:38 You initiate the blink of an eye and you're at 0.003. Whoa. That's the margin, man. It blows my mind. You have two different teams. Each team has a thousand employees. The cars are completely one-offs. They're not the original part.
Starting point is 02:01:53 Everything's original for each team. All these variables. And they land .003 often. That is so crazy. That doesn't feel real. I know. Okay. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 02:02:06 Were those the facts? Yeah, those are the facts. We have a story. Yeah, we have a little bit of a story about Susie, which is when we walked her out, Lincoln was hiding. in the bushes. She knew Susie was here and she wanted to meet her. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:02:18 She's super an F1 now, which I thought was so adorable. Yes. So she comes out and she meets Susie and they're chatting and Susie says like, who's your favorite driver? And she says, Kimmy, of course, Kimi Antenelli. And for people who aren't following F1, there's the cutest human being on planet earth is currently destroying. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:02:37 He's 19 years old. Kimi Antonelli. He's Italian. He lives with his family at home in San Marino. Oh my God. And he's a little boy. Yeah. And he's dominating.
Starting point is 02:02:48 And he's so cute and friendly. So anyways, Lincoln says Kimmy. And Kimmy drives for Mercedes. Right. Which Toto is the team principal of. Yes. And Susie said, oh, well, we're in town because we have a Mercedes event tomorrow. Would you want to meet Kimmy?
Starting point is 02:03:07 Yeah. And Lincoln immediately started crying. Wow. It's so powerful. I was like, I love that. Her response was just to start crying. Yeah. It's like an overwhelming offer.
Starting point is 02:03:20 Yeah. Yes. Yeah. So we went, so then we were going to go to the event. And then the next day you and I were recording all day long. So it was like I wasn't able to connect with Susie. But all these flurry of texts I had missed, I now see. By the way, they all do WhatsApp, right?
Starting point is 02:03:37 Oh, yeah. True. True. So anyway, Susie's like, okay, bad news. the event's 21 and over, so Lincoln can't really come to the event, but we're going to be hanging in this hotel room for an hour before the event.
Starting point is 02:03:50 You want to come by the hotel room? And I'm like, well, this is so much better. Yeah. It's been like being at a big noisy event, standing around awkwardly. And so I go, yeah, absolutely. I would tell me what time is like at five. And I'm like, perfect, I'll be there.
Starting point is 02:04:04 It's downtown. So then they come in and I tell Lincoln like, okay, so this is a situation. It's not the event, but we're going to go hang. And she goes, I know yeah no no I can't that's too much it was too stressful for her and I'm like listen love I don't really push you to do much but you're gonna we're going to meet coming out to that this is this opportunity ain't coming around ever again there's so much funny stuff we ride down there on the motorcycle because
Starting point is 02:04:30 traffic's fucking horrendous and we got to go downtown so it's like we're gonna take the motorcycle we get to the event it's at the soho house warehouse which I didn't even know they had it's so cool there's a really cool warehouse downtown that the sow house has. Oh. So we parked the motorcycle. It's the pain in the ass to try to get two helmets in the back bag, the top box on the motorcycle.
Starting point is 02:04:51 So, of course, I'm just going to carry them. And Lincoln's like, no, no, put the helmets away. And I go, wait, why? I don't want to, I don't want us to have helmets. You know, like the stakes were so high. But that's cool. I told her that. I go, what are you talking about?
Starting point is 02:05:05 It's so much cooler to walk in and we're both holding helmets. Yeah. You ride motorcycles and you're on a motorcycle. No. And here's where as a dad, you just got to go like, okay. That's what she wants. Yeah, this is a great lesson she's teaching me. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:05:16 She's wrong? Right. I know she's wrong. Yeah. And who cares is how she wants to do it. Yeah. So we put the motors, we put the helmets away. We're not even going to talk about the fact that we were, when we can't talk about the
Starting point is 02:05:26 fact. Oh, my God. We go into this room. And I'm also, look, I'm, I hope I'm really conscious of the fact that, like, I don't want to bum a famous person out. I don't want to complicate his. downtime before he has to do this event with me and my kid, you know. And so I'm planning on being like, whatever, man.
Starting point is 02:05:50 We'll talk to Toto and Susie or whatever. But we walk in, he immediately comes up and introduces himself. He's so likable and outgoing and kind. He engages Lincoln right away in conversation. And they sit on a couch and just chat. And he's showing her pictures on the phone. He's talking about how hot the race cars. And I'm just hearing little glimpses and it's just so cute to hear my little girl like, oh, I know.
Starting point is 02:06:15 Europe's so hot. You know, just how she's responding. And so then Toto's videoing them. Yeah, secretly. Secretly. Yeah. And he's like, shut up, shut up. Because I'm talking to the other guy from Austria.
Starting point is 02:06:26 And he's like, shut up, shut up. He goes, we're going to show them this video at their wedding and embarrass them. It's so cute. In that moment, I was like, oh my God, what if Lincoln married Kimmy Antonelli? And then I just thought, oh. Oh, my God. One of my son-in-law is an F-1 driver that fucking fun will have. And not only just an F-1 driver, like an incredible one.
Starting point is 02:06:50 It's soon-to-be-a-legent F-1 driver. Oh, I really hope she marries him. I was starting to lock into how these, like, Kings felt in France. Exactly. You're going to pair up your kid with somebody that you're going to love this family. See, it's easy to do. Slippery slow. It's easy to arrange marriage.
Starting point is 02:07:06 It's all the thing. That's so cute. It was the sweetest night. And I just, I want to scream from the rooftops, this generosity that this young man showed to my daughter. I am so grateful for. He's such a little gentleman. I love him. He's so kind and sweet.
Starting point is 02:07:25 And it just was a real fucking gift of all gifts. Thank you, Susie, for the invite. What an incredible. Oh, one more funny total thing. So then they had to go do stuff. They're in and out of the room, right? Yeah. What's funny is all the Kimmy stuff has.
Starting point is 02:07:40 happened before Susie ever arrived. So then as soon as Kimmy had to leave, Link's like, okay, let's go, let's go. Like, basically like we got the yes. You know, like it was a success. Let's get out of here before I embarrass myself kind of thing. Yeah, I understand the threat. So then we, Link and I are leaving.
Starting point is 02:07:54 We're departing. And we're getting on the elevator. And he goes, where are you going? We have the event. And I go, oh, no, it's 21 and over. And he goes, no, no, you're staying. Come here. Everyone out.
Starting point is 02:08:05 Come on. You're staying. And we go, no, we don't want the rules broken. And all since you got homework. He's like, no, no, those aren't the rules. He got into total mode, like, you're coming to this event. Oh, my God. We did not.
Starting point is 02:08:18 We went home. Do you know who's at the event? Brad. And that's why. Kim Kardashian. K.K. You ever heard of Kada? Not like that.
Starting point is 02:08:29 Tricky, too, because she's dating Louis Hamilton. He's at Ferrari. Oh, yeah. But she was at the Mercedes. Interesting. You know what? It might have been a different car. Oh, no.
Starting point is 02:08:39 I'm not sure. It was Kim or Chloe or Kendall or. Oh, don't say that because we want all of them on the show. Okay, Bernice. Okay, well, that sucks. You didn't get to hang out with Brad. That's fine. Probably the moment he was going to ask you to be in his movie.
Starting point is 02:08:55 He's like, hey, are you busy next weekend? I'm going to mail to T-T to shoot this movie. I need you. But I was there. But it's great because the whole night was for Lincoln. You don't want to bring helmets? Great. You want to pretend we took a cab here.
Starting point is 02:09:07 Cool. You don't get out of here, okay. Wow. Well, what a good time. I love her. I love her so much. We love her. We absolutely love her.
Starting point is 02:09:15 And I hope Lincoln and Kimmy and Maron put it out there. We're doubling down on that. I don't mind. I'm signing off. Yeah. All right. Love you.

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