Call Her Daddy - Emily Ratajkowski (FBF)
Episode Date: April 5, 2024Father Cooper sits down with Emily Ratajkowski. While you may think you have an understanding of Emily’s seemingly perfect life, this interview reveals that you never know what someone is actually g...oing through. Emily opens up about the traumatic experiences she has overcome throughout her life and how these events have reduced her to feeling like nothing more than a mannequin. Many are quick to dismiss Emily’s struggles because she has an envious body and posts provocative photos – but does one’s appearance diminish the pain and trauma they have experienced? Does one’s appearance and capitalization of their own body take away their ability to identify as a feminist?This episode discusses adult subject matter, including descriptions of sexual violence, and is intended for adult consumption only. Listener discretion is advised. If you have been affected by sexual violence, free, confidential support is available 24/7 through RAINN's National Sexual Assault Hotline at 800.656-4673 and online.rainn.org.
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What is up, Daddy Gang? It is your founding father, Alex Cooper, with Call Her Daddy.
Hello, hello, hello. We're back at it again, Daddy Gang. It is another episode of Call Her Daddy.
And today, we got a big one. We've got Emily Ratajkowski. A lot of you probably
think about Emily Ratajkowski and you're like, wow, she's just really hot. Thought ends there.
She's really fucking hot. And she is. And I will be honest, no negative feelings towards Emily at
all. I just didn't have much of an opinion. I was like, she's beautiful. I wish I looked like her and that's that. But I had the privilege of meeting
her and sitting down with her and reading her book early. From the time that Emily was a little
girl, how she looked mattered. And that didn't just come from the outside world. It was
generated inside her own home. Her mom, who was also beautiful, and her mom's experience as a
beautiful woman directly affected how she raised Emily. In the Ratajkowski household, looks were everything. So then Emily starts modeling
in high school and is actually using her looks to make money off of her body.
And that complicated things even more. So now instead of just her mom and her dad and
random people in the supermarket commenting on her beauty now it's a creep with a binder filled with her photos commenting on underage emily's fuckability
and trigger warning in this episode we are discussing sexual assault
two chapters in three four chapters into her book every single chapter is unveiling a new
story of her experiencing sexual assault trauma rape i had no fucking idea about any of this and what's pretty
frightening and shocking is that people may not even care
I was staying at the Greenwich Hotel in New York City and I had Emily there like right after I landed and she
walked in and her and her publicist I had asked them because the news had just broken Robin Thicke
assaulting Emily Ratajkowski had just hit the internet and I had read the book at that point
so I knew the behind the scenes in the story and what this man had done and how he was abusing his power and what was going on in Emily's head when all that happened.
And then also just the backstory of her having been assaulted numerous other times in her life. Like this was not just a one off. This woman has been taken advantage of and sexually abused since she was a very young girl and so she walks in and her
publicist was like yeah it's really it's really shocking to see some of the comments in twitter
people are like oh woe is you emily okay you were fucking dancing around naked on the blurred line
set like boo hoo no fucking shit someone's gonna grab your tits you're naked what you were
doing your job and so for anyone to be like emily you were naked on the set of blurred lines yeah
and so were multiple other women and that was their job that's what they were getting paid
to do i don't care if she's naked or she's wearing a turtleneck. That doesn't give you the right to fucking go up and sexually assault someone.
Having good looks absolutely gives you a certain privilege that others don't have.
That's a fact.
But just because you're hot doesn't mean that we can then deem your sexual assault experiences as void because you're just fucking hot.
Shut up and go model.
No. salt experiences as void because you're just fucking hot shut up and go model no just because you're hot doesn't mean you aren't a feminist miriam webster definition of feminism
feminism is the belief that men and women should have equal rights and opportunities. Unless you post bikini photos. No,
it doesn't fucking say that. People that are going to look and be like, no, because Emily
is objectifying herself. She's posting these slutty bikini photos and she's the one that's
making herself an object. No. So maybe you're the type of feminist that likes to wear turtlenecks.
Amazing. You're doing great, sweetie. Or there's Emily, who likes to post bikini photos to make
money. Again, you're doing great, sweetie. There is no right or wrong brand of feminism. If you
believe in the advocacy of women's rights on the basis of equality of the fucking sexes,
then you are a feminist. Emily's book is a discourse on how being treated like an object
affects a person. You can be privileged, but that doesn't exempt you from feeling bad,
feeling pain. And the result of lifelong objectification is dissociation.
For example, Emily writes in her book that she dissociates so much from her body that when she's
having sex with her own husband, she has to fuck in front of a mirror.
So she can watch herself and visually attempt to reconnect with her body.
And in her mind says to herself, I'm having sex.
My body is having sex.
Now to everyone that hasn't read the book or everyone that just likes to skim through Twitter and not actually read. Emily in this book is just shedding light on her journey and her experience and isn't asking for anything.
And she also isn't taking any like huge controversial stance. She's just talking
about her experience. Emily and I, we only had an hour together and I was really impressed.
There's a lot in this interview that she sheds even more
light on in the book and it's it's pretty remarkable daddy gang let's just get into it
here is Emily Ratajkowski, welcome to Call Her Daddy.
Thank you so much.
I'm so happy to be here.
I'm so happy you're here.
Congrats on the huge deal.
That's insane and so awesome.
Thank you.
Thank you.
It's been a wild ride.
I'm sure.
But how cool.
You definitely won.
Pretty cool. Also just showed. But like how cool. You definitely won. Pretty cool.
Also just like showed them all is how I feel.
Most importantly, congratulations on having a baby this year.
Thank you.
Well, you have two babies.
You have your book and then you have your baby.
Yes.
I had two babies.
What is the best thing about being mother and what is the hardest thing?
Oh my God.
Best thing is like everything you've heard before.
The love that you have for them is indescribable.
Like I know everyone says that. I truly don't have words I've tried like it doesn't
work they are just this like chunk that you made and your body like it's insane um and he has
personality now like he really like respond like all that stuff and it's just getting better and
better the worst thing I mean I just nobody told me that they feed every two to three hours
when they come home from the hospital, really like two, every hour and a half. And if you're
breastfeeding, that means you're in demand and you don't know how much they're getting. And they're
like, you know, it's like a creature when it comes. I mean, he was really cute when he was born,
but still, you know, and you're trying to keep them alive with your boobs and you're not getting
no, no, no sleep. So it's hard to picture it though, um you're not getting no no no sleep so it's
hard to picture it though until you do it honestly i had so many friends who talked to me about it
and i still didn't get it so now i say the two to three hours thing so does my husband will be like
every two to three hours they feed like you're gonna come home and that's through the night and
that's for months like just get ready you know because like somehow it didn't get through to us
so that's like your life yeah it is but it's also like you're on cloud nine and hopefully you're not trying to write a book
or something like because that would be so crazy to do that at the same time.
How long did it take you to write the book?
I've been working on it for three and a half year, three and a half years.
I sold it around this time last year and it was already like 50,000 words.
So it was really more the editing and stuff I was doing post baby. And the last essay I wrote after and stuff. So yeah. Okay. We're going all the way back.
Raised in SoCal? Yes. Okay. And only child. Yes. My mom is an only child, but I always will hear
her be like, you know, I basically had to become an adult quickly because you're just surrounded
by adults all the time. What was your experience
being raised as an only child? Definitely that is true. It's interesting. My husband's also an
only child. I know a lot of only children because I think we have like a weird understanding about
just like baseline stuff in our experience. My parents were definitely, I was just kind of included as an adult in the family like we were
more of a unit than a family dynamic of parents and kid I remember like having a lot of imaginary
you know friends but also just being like sitting at the dinner table and trying to have fun with
adults and like make sure that they like me so you just kind of get this I don't know yeah you
grow up quicker and I also remember like I really like I definitely you just kind of get this I don't know yeah you grow up quicker and
I also remember like I really like I definitely had a lot of friends growing up and stuff but I
remember coming into middle school and it felt like I was a little bit behind everyone else like
I I just think that I had spent so much time with my parents that it wasn't like I didn't have the
same sort of like cool around people my age got it but I feel like it ended up being a
good thing in the long run but it definitely at points I felt like awkward I was like I feel more
comfortable talking to adults than I do my peers you know do you think that you are gonna have one
child no I don't think so I definitely want more than one for that reason that's interesting yeah
I didn't realize because your husband also is the only child. That's interesting that you guys like know. Yeah. I mean, listen, it's having more than
one child in New York city is like kind of psycho. Yeah. Like it's crazy. I also have a 90 pound dog.
Like what am I doing? Also when you get older and you're, you have to start taking care of your
parents. It's so nice to have somebody else to lean on. And like, that's another reason,
not just childhood, but also adulthood. My mom mom just went we had gone through that with like her mother before she passed and it was like my mom was
the only one yes okay so you get it and it's like I felt so awful for her watching her I'm like
because with my siblings I'd be like my brother take her my sister take her at times how big is
your family I have two older siblings okay oh nice yeah the youngest. Oh nice. Yeah. The youngest girl. That's so nice. But I
feel like I felt that for my mom watching that so I feel for you. Yeah. In your book when you talk
about your mom getting sick I was like damn it's just you. Yeah it's just you. Also in high school
your father was a teacher. Yeah. At fucking high school. Can't even imagine. I know. What was that
like? So I like begged my parents I did not want to go to
his school I remember the first day of high school like my eyes were super swollen because I like was
I had I was leaving all my friends like everybody I had known in middle school and elementary school
went to one high school which was kind of it was they're both in the same district but one was like
the like big football team cheerleader and then the one my dad taught at was a little bit further and was there was like a skate team and a surf team no football team like everyone
listened to like David Bowie and like Biggie and like smoked pot instead of like drink handles I
mean that everything was happening but you know what I mean it was just a little bit more like
indie yeah yeah um and I was terrified and my dad had taught there for so long so he had
like this big reputation everybody called him Rada which is how I got the nickname M Rada and
yeah I was so scared but he was pretty cool about giving me some space it was actually the other
teachers who were terrible they'd see him at lunch and be like Emily was 15 minutes late to class
today and you know then he would be like should I say something to her should I whatever did you ever get in trouble
in high school like what was your biggest punishment I never got caught in high school
yeah I mean I wasn't like a terrible kid but I definitely like did a lot of like broke the rules
skip class whatever um but yeah I had a lot of like experiences where I was very close to getting in trouble and didn't
got it okay that's fair and like bless up honestly thank you honestly I mean I don't know some part
of me is like maybe it would have been better I would have been safer if I had gotten caught but
yeah it is what it is yeah a lot your mom is stunning yeah how do you think her experience
as a beautiful woman in the world impacted you?
Mother-daughter relationships are just this sort of really sensitive, crazy thing.
And I feel like it's something you talk about with your closest friends and like you hope
that they never repeat and they don't talk about, you know, the more complicated aspects
because you also adore your mom.
I don't care who you are.
Even if your mom is a terrible person, there's a part of you that's your mom. And becoming a mom, like, I understand where that
comes from. It's physical. I was really interested in, like, the lessons that our moms teach us
as women about the way we look. So my mom grew up in a family that was very, like, you should never
say thank you when you're told that you're beautiful. You didn't do anything to deserve it. There was like kind of a shame around being attractive. And the whole thing was like,
you need to work extra hard to kind of like prove yourself. I had puberty pretty young and got boobs
like before I even knew what sex was. I had boobs and basically looked like a woman, but was totally
not. And of course, I'm sure you had the same experience where you're going to middle school
and, you know, middle school teachers are snapping your bra strap and just being, you know, dress code like I'd have to put on the because like an inch of my midriff was showing.
And she was very anti that.
She was like, fuck those people like you should never feel ashamed.
But in some ways, also, I think she felt like beauty was a way for me to be powerful because I think she had experienced much shaming.
It felt like a way for her to make me feel special and to protect me.
I had an ex-boyfriend and his mom said to me one time like very casually she only had her son.
And she was like, yeah, if I had had a girl, I would have talked to her about weight and like I would have made sure she stayed thin.
And I was like outraged. You know, my instant feeling was feeling was like first of all your son's not even in that good
of shape like screw you you know and then I started thinking about it and I was like oh that's because
she thinks that's like loving her daughter because she knows that if her daughter is considered
attractive in the world she might have a better life so I think there was a little bit of that
I think that's really interesting when you talk
about it with your mom because like having this put on you then this over emphasis on your looks
I'm interested to know like how did that affect yourself worth at a young age like did you
you were clearly obviously hyper focused then on your looks because your mother is putting up I mean I was and I wasn't
I just um I think there was also a part of me that was like ick like I don't want that you know
and I think that I kind of write about that in the book too like there was a weird part of me that
pushed back um but also had this like sense of pride about it um I guess the best way to describe
it is that you know especially being an only child it really made me feel special. And it made me feel very loved to be like, you know, in a public
high school and be modeling and people be like, Oh, did you see Amrata's whatever? And I'd be like,
I'm cool, you know? Totally. And then also, like in high school, this sort of at the same time,
it wasn't just about how my parents sort of, know were like hyped that I was getting into this world that was sort of glamorous it was also that I had money
in a way that like none of my friends did everybody was like working at sandwich shops or like
American Apparel making minimum wage and I'd go to LA and shoot like a lookbook once a month and
get what they were making in a month and it was was amazing, you know, so I started to really love that too. When was the first time that you became aware that other people treated you differently
because of your looks? I remember like, not the way I looked, but the sexiness thing, like that
felt way more like a thing. Because I feel like you don't really know why people are treating you
a certain way when you're a really young kid. but people started to name it once I like had boobs because they were scared for
me or feeling uncomfortable you know so I have this really visceral memory of I was doing theater
and I was like 12 and I had makeup on because I'd been on stage and we went to dinner my cousin and
my mom my cousin had like a glass of wine and started crying, like freaking out and was like, I see the way men look at her and it's like not safe. And
da, da, da, da. And you know, I was, I was embarrassed because I didn't understand that
she was like trying to protect me. Right. That memory. I was probably in sixth grade and that
feels like really like it happened yesterday. It gives me, I feel stressed even thinking about it
right now. I felt stressed reading the book when I remember the scene where you're like you're not the scene your life when you're you
have I love that it reads as a scene though that I feel like that's a compliment I felt like I was
like reading a movie like it's you're in a tank top and I think it was like your cousin left the
room or something and like ran back in because it was you were left alone with the guy and she
realized like oh fuck even though you're so young yeah don't feel comfortable leaving emily in a room with men at this age which is fucking crazy yeah
i guess the point is that it was like really mixed signals because obviously at school it was cool for
like the boys to think that you were hot you know like that was great like that was amazing that's
what you wanted and like you made more friends like girls were nicer to you or maybe meaner too, but like it just gave you a certain kind of status.
And then in other ways it was deeply shameful and embarrassing and straight up scary, you know?
So yeah. I remember in the book you were underage at your casting and the adult in charge looked at your photos and said now this is the
look this is how we know this girl gets fucked we always know which girls are having sex by their
pictures how did you feel when people were making those comments I mean that I was a little bit
older I was probably 16 and I mean it was the same thing right like I was like little bit older. I was probably 16. And I mean, it was the same thing, right? Like,
I was like, oh, wow. Like they're pointing out a picture because I guess like, it's a good thing.
And like, I can be sexy, but then also felt like I'm so called out and humiliated and embarrassed.
And like- Dude, 16?
Yeah.
Someone saying that to you?
Yeah, of course. Now, no, listen, now in person, like retrospect.
Totally, totally.
But at the time I was like like are we is this
cool like is this you know I just didn't know what to make of it that moment I wanted to like
give you a hug in a virtual way because I'm like I agree I wouldn't have known what the fuck yeah
because you're not able to decipher like like you said is this a good thing yeah or is this
so wildly inappropriate so wildly inappropriate and I'm here to do a job and
you're 16 also yeah and I was I was with one of my girlfriends too who was also modeling so it felt
like this really weird like moment of like oh like is she better than me like they didn't say that
about her is she better than me or am I better than her because I have this fuckable look like
I mean it was weird I didn't even like think about that experience a lot of things in
the book were not things that I like talked about until I was writing and I was like oh yeah I
remember that happened you know it's strange that's what I was gonna ask you of like did you
talk to anyone about these things no not really I mean I had some really good girlfriends in high
school who like they helped a lot yeah but I was too embarrassed and
also like honestly excited because I thought I'm modeling like I'm at this big agency it felt like
something maybe was wrong with me or something if you know what I mean yeah like I could see people
being like okay Emily like I'm going through my awkward phase right like yeah it's hard so many
people look at you hot chick perfect. Perfect life. Perfect Instagram.
Perfect body.
And with this book, I truly believe you're blowing that shit up.
Good.
You are.
It's an amazing book.
Thank you.
I couldn't put it down.
I finished it in two days.
Oh, my God.
Thank you.
It's really, really good.
That's so nice.
Wow.
Thank you.
Chapter one is titled Blurred Lines.
Well, now it's chapter two.
You changed it?
Yes, I did.
Oh, my God.
Yeah.
Wait, can you tell me why you decided to do that?
Well, because Blurred Lines, what we're about to talk about,
is like something that I didn't want to write about at all.
I feel like I've spent my entire career trying not to be the girl from that video.
So to just open up that can of
worms and be like let's talk about it went against like every instinct that I had I'm still going
against every end like I even talking about it right now I'm like okay yeah no I'm glad we're
bringing it up you know what I mean like yeah because the truth is the reason that I wrote
about it is because it was something that I had just completely put into a certain category and box and thought about and talked about in one way and didn't even like fully remember the experience because I just was like, no, no, have been actually a little more complicated than I've always wanted to believe they were.
That's when I remembered this situation and experience and then was like, wow, that was why I initially had it first in the book.
And then like final last minute, like we're talking day it was supposed to go to the printers.
I just had this thought of like somebody walking into a bookstore and seeing my name and being
like okay my body all right this girl I know who she is and then they open the first chapter and
they see blurred lines they're just gonna be like of course okay and it's the book isn't that it's
not a celebrity memoir it's a bunch of essays about a lot of different ideas and I just wanted
to give myself that shot with that person so it's so fucking powerful that you wrote about it.
Oh, thank you.
Well, hopefully people will still like it, even though it's second in the book now.
But listen, when I read it, because guys, I got a advanced copy.
Yes, you did.
But it's amazing and it's powerful.
And it's your story, Emily. You found the strength to also, like, kind of badass, come out with the story on your
fucking terms.
Thank you.
And in your book.
Like, good for you.
Yeah.
So chapter two.
Yes.
Chapter two.
Is titled Blurred Lines.
Yeah.
You reveal that Robin Thicke assaulted you on the set of that music video.
Take me through that day. So I mean I think
that you know one of the things that a lot of people don't know about the video is that it was
directed by a woman and part of the reason that I did the job was it didn't pay that much really
in general but it paid initially it paid about like a half of what I ended up getting which was
just not that much. So I got this offer for this music
video and I was like, okay, well, the money's not good enough and I'd have to be naked in a music
video. And like, I don't even know who Robin Thicke is. And you know what I mean? I didn't
know who he was. I thought Pharrell obsessed with Pharrell when I was in middle school,
thought he was like a God. But you know, it was like, I don't know who this is. I don't know
where it's going to go, whatever. Anyway, they came up on the money a little bit and this director was really cool. She's still somebody that I know and like I think she's
awesome. She said to me like it's going to be all these women. So I got to set and it
had this really different vibe than a lot of the jobs I was doing at that time.
Usually people kind of just were like sit over there, kind of shut up, put on what we say,
like don't like complain about the hair and
makeup. Like everything is just like, you're a mannequin, which is what I write in the book,
truly just being used as a body and a face. And it wasn't like that. There were like girls who
were a little bit older than me being like, Oh my God, like you look so cute. Like, do you like
your outfit? And you know what I mean? That's why I think I like dance so funny and stuff.
When you're like relaxed with your girlfriends and
you're dancing around and you just feel completely comfortable so that was the majority of the shoot
and that's why when a lot of people would say to me like oh this video is misogynistic why did you
decide to do it aren't you kind of embarrassed basically I was like get off my back fuck off
like it was my choice and I did feel powerful in that moment and like guess what
now I'm famous so and like making more money than I definitely did then so how can you say that I'm
not empowered quote-unquote you know what I mean during the day kind of later in the afternoon
the part that I kind of I guess I don't want to say I forgot I would say that I just completely
put it out of my mind because that also makes it sound like it was like a choice like I I didn't, it wasn't a choice. I wasn't like, you're just not going to
remember that part. You know what I mean? It's how people dissociate. Yeah, I guess so. I mean,
I feel like people who have way more insane things happen to them. That's a word that I would think
of with that, but yes, it probably is some type of that. And yeah, actually one day I was just
laying in bed and went to Robin Thicke's
Instagram because I think his girlfriend had gotten pregnant or something like he was on
E! News and I was blocked. And I was like, why am I blocked? And sat there for a second and was like,
did I say something like in the press? And then I was like, oh, and I remembered this moment
when he was kind of drunk and he was in a little bit of a like not great mood
and we were shooting by ourselves and he put his hands on my breasts really quickly and then
I think I just like moved away and Diane stopped the music and there was this sort of like weird
moment and then we kept shooting the news actually leaked this weekend um and it wasn't
my choice which was annoying for me because like the whole reason I wrote this book was to tell my
story and be in control of the narrative but I'm also like that's okay and like hopefully people
will read the essay and like get a sense of what actually I'm trying to say about it because the
fact that I didn't remember that
and didn't let myself think about that and was almost like defiant like was literally like fuck
you I am a feminist and I'm naked and whatever and yeah I couldn't have complained in that moment I
was 21 I was like an actual nobody like a person on a mall on a wall in a modeling agency that you
could pick like this girl who's
maybe a little bit taller this girl who has like prettier eyes or you know what I mean like it's a
true true meat market industry you know yeah so I didn't complain and I just went home and I like
never told anyone about it really except I do remember I told the director like oh he blocked
me and she was like why would he do that and I did say like well I remember what happened on set
that was like a few years later.
And did she like be like, yeah, I know.
I think she didn't respond.
But she did when this leaked.
She like talked about it and had a memory.
And yeah.
Have you looked at any of like the feedback yet
that's come from the news or anything?
A little bit.
And some of it is so terrible.
I have to be honest.
Dude, I was on Twitter last night
yeah before this looking and I was like people are disgusting I was like first of all there is no
timeline of when someone should come out with something that happens to them it doesn't negate
what happened whether it's a year the day of 10 years later I mean also for
me like the reason that I didn't just like be like press release everyone like testing one two three
like I wanted it to be in my own words and like in a 5,000 word essay that really explains like
all the aspects of that day the parts that were good the parts that were good, the parts that were bad and like what this meant to me and why it was so defining to me and like sort of a huge part of like the
evolution of my politics and beliefs. You know, I don't believe in canceling someone. I don't,
I'm sure that, you know, Robin Thicke has a lot of wonderful things about him. I don't believe
in good guys and bad guys. I think that like our world needs to understand that like we live in a culture that allows for men to feel like they can behave a certain way. It doesn't mean that
like just because this person did this one thing or didn't do that one thing, they're good or bad.
It's been frustrating, but I'm also I think it's really amazing how detailed you got
because it shows like you weren't going in there for shock value like this is something that
fucking happened to you yeah you haven't talked about it was there ever a point before the book
that you were considering telling the story?
Absolutely not.
And I honestly don't think, I mean, maybe if I hadn't published the book, I would have
just published that essay.
Okay.
I honestly don't even think so though, because that was one of, that essay took the longest
in the whole book to write.
And like, it's kind of more of one of the more simple ones in a lot of ways.
I knew that the reaction that I've seen this
weekend was coming. Like I know people, I knew that people were going to be like,
she was naked, like in a music video, why she waited so long, did it all the same things.
Actually, I had a male journalist be like, so like, this is going to come out. And what do
you think the consequences will be? And I was like, for me or for him? And he was like, for him.
And I was like, okay, definitely there's consequences for me. Like people think that have all kinds of assumptions
about me because this news is out. I also had somebody be like, last night, be like, you are
so brave. Thank you for coming forward. And I was like, that's not also not it. Right, right. I'm
just telling my story. Yeah. What was your relationship to the song when it came out versus like now so interestingly
if I was at a wedding or at a bar and it came on I mean it was also one of those things where
everyone in the bar would be like pointing at our big moment like you'll never believe who was at
the bar and so that's probably also what ended up happening because I would always be like oh no and
I would go to the bathroom or whatever.
I don't know if that's what it was or if there was a little part of me that was like remembering just the experience in some way and feeling something.
Because I definitely did when I would see Robin Thicke's name or, you know, I also had to talk about it all the time.
And I was very like, man, I just showed up for work one day and now
I'm defending lyrics that I didn't even pay attention to I was 21 and you know whatever
so yeah that was my relationship with it it kind of evolved into that now I don't I mean like you
know what it's catchy like yeah good like good like everybody enjoy it like I don't know what
to say you know what I mean no that's I can imagine like every fucking time you're at a bar you're like I'm leaving the minute it plays you're like because
it's like but it's also been who like it's 2013 to me that feels like a thousand years ago so yeah
have you heard from Robin Thicke since that photo shoot I actually haven't okay okay it seems like
with this book chapter after chapter you're bravely discussing your experience
dealing with men treating you like an object. Do you feel like you've been combating that your
whole life? I do. And you know why I feel like I've been combating it my whole life is because
it also had its serious advantages. Being treated like an object got me my career.
It's probably why a lot of people are going to read my book.
Like that's the, I guess, what I want for people to take away.
I am not saying to any young girl, don't capitalize or work it.
Commodify your image.
Commodify your body.
It's definitely one way to succeed in a certain way in this world. It also means all these other things that I'm writing about. Like,
that's the truth. It's complicated. It's very complicated. I think it was like,
Charlize Theron was like, people are insane if they say that looks don't matter. Like,
let's all just be real. Let's just put it on the table. And so especially for women. Yeah. Like, let's all just be real. Let's just put it on the table. And so especially for women, like, hello, flat out. I mean, I just, I like that girls now who are like a little bit younger than
me are just very open about that. What that was not true for when I, when I was like on, you know,
trying to build a career, people be like, don't post that on Instagram. And I was like, yeah,
but like, this is how I'm like now making money. And people were kind of like rolling their eyes
and also judging me for it. And I feel like that's changed a little bit which is
really great so I'm just like okay let's be clear like that's just that's facts you know yeah how do
you define feminism that's a loaded oh my god I know we could be here all day yeah I used to feel
like okay let me tell you like I would tell you it was about choice I would tell you about you know use the word empowerment which like if I have to hear
that one more time I might lose my mind like yeah I mean it's listen it's real I use it in the book
but also um I can talk about like what I know feminism isn't like which is like I mean the power
dynamics that exist in our culture in our world are often unspoken, but they're evident in very big and
small ways. Like it's evident in the, you know, you can go on a drink for a drink with a guy
and it shows up in little ways. And like, maybe you can't put your figure on it, but like,
there's something about their attitude and like how little they have at stake that like,
you know what that is. Do you know what I mean mean they have a little bit more power they don't they could take or leave this interaction in a different way my career was
based off being attractive to men which you know I've done pretty good you know what I mean like
it's not bad but that also I think like points to some power structures that are in place you know
you wrote about how you've capitalized on your looks in this patriarchy
that we live in I have too like we just said but you've written about the internal struggle
that you've had in managing the emotional and your mental health around like I know this is
helping my career but also like at times feeling weird inside about it and maybe guilty, like for someone
who's not you or hasn't experienced this, how do you describe that battle within yourself?
My best friend is single right now. I don't know if this might be totally wrong and I could be like
going in the wrong direction, but you know, she's been single through COVID and she's kind of like,
when's still going to get her groove back, you know? And she's like, I covid and she's kind of like when's still gonna get her groove back you know and she's like i don't know there's just like i go on these dates and i have
drinks and i just don't feel like playing into the bullshit at all she's like i just seem kind
of like here i am did you watch white lotus yes um when jennifer coolidge is like here's the core
of the onion it kind of was that vibe you know she was just like, I don't want to have to like seem like I don't care.
Like I don't have to play any of those games.
So it's not totally the same, but it's a little bit like that.
Except this is like when I'm playing those games and, you know, taking the check from the guy that's a little bit of a creep.
But like also could, you know, he has a director friend
who could, you know, this was most of my twenties was like hoping that someone was going to like,
like me enough to tell their friends that I'm great. And then I'll get this part in this movie
and blah, blah, blah. And not just great, but like flirty and like cool and smart, but like
not too smart that she would like come after you or, you know what I mean? I, yeah, I used to do that a lot and it just made me feel
really bad in the long run. And I'm 30 and I just feel like that has left, been left behind in my
twenties. What do you say to people, I guess, who don't understand? Cause I feel like this is like
what you've lived is like that you can be sexy and you can be like a raging feminist. Like those two
can live together in one. Yeah. Well, I write about this in the book. Like I wish that I didn't
feel, I'm sure you have this too. Like you're, you know, done this amazing deal. You have your
podcast, like, and you still have a lot you want to prove to people. I feel that way all the time.
I'm like, I want people to take me seriously as like a writer and a thinker. And there's just some people who are just never going to do that. And I've kind of,
I guess, accepted that, but also totally not because I wrote this damn book and published it.
And like, listen, the reason I did that was because I have something to prove. I want people
to understand that I'm not just a body. Right. Yeah. I've had that so in in my career like I built this initial brand off of
knowing what was gonna sell yeah now at times looking back like there was a lot of
feminist roots within call her daddy at the beginning because it was like I know how to
get a guy like if you want the answer I'll literally give it to you and it may not be
coming off like I'm
playing the game because I'm recognizing the world that we live in yeah and I and some may say like
well then you're like appealing to the male gaze but it's like but also like how even not appealing
to the male gaze is reacting to the male gaze so like yes it's we're all playing the game I have
friends who like you know wear like men's clothes and are like super
like boyish and only hang out with dudes and like are kind of like, you know, that's their thing.
They're also playing the game. They're just taking it a different angle. I would love to hear your
opinion. Have you seen the fucking thing about like pick me girls on TikTok? Okay. Oh, yes,
I have. Yes, I have. Yes, yes. And like, I guess pick me girls. I'm sort of trying to hone in on
the definition, but it's's like apparently it's like
women that do certain things maybe by putting other women down to like appeal to men like oh
I never wear makeup yes I've seen them yes but I'm also like by women pointing out women and
they're labeling them as pick me girls now we're just pitting women against women again okay so I always feel
like this is what it comes down to because of course like that is so annoying we all know those
girls and we're like okay you're you know I just will say to people sometimes like I'll say to a
friend or whatever like she's just not a girl's girl and that's exactly what I'm referencing it's
when you just know that they like actually want to like skewer your head off and like hope you die. And you're like, okay, cool. Like fun hanging out. You know what I mean? So, okay. I get why
the instinct is to be like, that's what this is. I even remember the first one I saw, I was like,
damn, so real. Like I know that girl for sure. That being said, like, of course girls do that.
They want the dude, they want to feel special. Like it's, we all kind of do some kind of version of that, whether or not it's that
obvious or if it's the complete opposite of that, which is like, I don't give a fuck,
whatever.
Right.
So why are we always asking women to adjust instead of like saying, okay, this is the
system we work in.
This is the framework that we're in.
My relationship to other women is so complicated.
I catch myself all the time, like comparing myself and it's whack.
But like, that's what we've been trained to do instead of being like, okay, what, what's
going on here?
Like, why, why are we being this way?
You know?
I feel a sense of obligation with my platform to be like, okay, let's just call it as real
as we can.
Like the girl that then is on TikTok making the video about another girl being a pick me girl.
You're yes. You may think you're calling her out for like appealing to the male gaze, but you're
also just calling out a woman that's doing nothing to you. And you're like name calling. And it's
like, and she's just trying to like do her best in the system. So why are you trying to bring her
down? Is that going to fix anything? Right. Instead of shaming them more.
Yeah.
Let's find a way to almost like bring them cut through that.
Yeah.
And bring everybody in.
Yes.
I did an episode two weeks ago where I admitted to getting caught photoshopping a picture
on my Instagram.
I saw that was brave.
Have you ever photoshopped a photo of your on your Instagram?
I definitely have photoshopped, but of your on your instagram i definitely have photoshopped but like duh right exactly that's why i was like i'm like everyone knows it's happening but i
remember the first time somebody like showed me facetune i was it was a group pic and i was like
oh i hate it like my leg looks big and someone was like oh let me show you like this will change
your life whatever i have stopped doing it though oh Yeah. Yeah. I mean, listen, I, it's hard because
it's like also people get plastic surgery. Like I'm a little bit, I don't know if I blame people
for Photoshopping like also because it's the same reason that you get like, okay, you can get a
job, which is real and real life. Or you just make your boobs bigger on like on FaceTune or
whatever. Like, I don't know. I, yeah, I think it's like on facetune or whatever like i don't know i yeah i think it's
a really confusing topic because i think we've all agreed like instagram isn't real like it's
it's a curated version of a perfect life that we're creating so it's like whatever yeah so
it's like what's the difference between using the dog fucking filter the ears or i mean also like
magazines have been editing photos forever so yeah I mean I just don't
know like I don't know how I feel I personally don't feel right about it um it feels like a lie
and I'm just like I don't want to lie you know yes it's so exhausting but also I make sure to
find good light when I take a selfie do you know what I mean so is that a lie you know what it's
just a slippery slope we all need to take a lesson from
you how the fuck to get a perfect selfie I completely was relating to your story in the
book where you're like I'm on fucking vacation with my man oh yeah and I am scrolling I post
a photo and I can't stop looking like how many likes like it's addicting yeah I recently turned
off my likes and my comments is that something you would ever do with your career?
Like, can you even do that?
Yeah.
I mean, I've thought about it.
I think I've turned.
There were a couple of pictures like when I first had my son and I was at home and I
was I had decided to share them with the world.
And I just was like, you know what?
We're not going to do.
We're not going to let people like have opinions that I can then easily check.
Like I'm not doing that.
Yeah.
So I think it's like a case to case situation. But does it feel better to have them off?
I feel liberated. I literally feel like a different human because I find myself spending way less
time. Like I've been posting more too. I post it. Interesting. And you're like bye. Bye. Like, I can't tell you how powerful it's felt being like, damn, no one can comment on this
photo.
I go and like it once I post it, because why wouldn't you like your own photo?
Right.
I love that.
And then I'm done.
Yeah.
And it's like, I don't I don't know.
I think there's just a lot of negativity and I love all the hype at times.
Yeah. of negativity and I love all the hype at times yeah but there is something to be said about like
don't allow your like your self-worth to literally be predicated on the amount of comments and likes
you get it's intoxicating of course and then it's more complicated when it's tied to your
actual livelihood you know if you're not making money off of Instagram like listen to me turn
that shit off like girls were DMing me
after that episode being like I only got 200 likes and so I delete it and I'm like no you liked the
photo keep it yeah I know but I mean a lot of the times people literally post something to test
whether or not it's a it's a good picture of them I mean I feel like that's something I do I'm like
I think I looked good like did every does everyone agree the fact that's something I do. I'm like, I think I looked good. Like, did every, does everyone agree?
The fact that also you're saying that, I think there are a lot of people listening that would
be like, I feel like she would never feel that way.
Oh my God.
I feel that way still.
And I'm an adult.
Like, you know what I mean?
And I'm a professional model. reading the book i was jumping out of my skin reading this chapter about the photo book
situation oh yeah and i felt angry for you the lack of control you had over your likeness and image is disgusting that
you had to go through this can you lightly describe that situation and and where you are now with it
interesting about that essay is it kind of like it's kind of like three different parts
and I had written I hadn't written the part about the
photo book and the photographer until I was actually on the plane ride back from that vacation
I write about that you mentioned, which was such a long flight because we were in the Maldives.
And I couldn't sleep. And you know how planes make you feel kind of crazy, but you can also
sometimes have good ideas. I just couldn't stop thinking about this experience it was one of
the most shameful things I had in my life like I felt so responsible for how things had gone down
and how the public had viewed it and how under protected I had played been myself and like how
much I had played into things and whatever and then I wrote that piece and like was like, okay, well,
that's never seen the light of the day. Like I felt like I sounded so young in it. And I was,
I thought the writing was bad, whatever. And then when I was thinking about all these ideas around
ownership and image, which like included, I've been sued by the paparazzi for posting a picture
of me holding like flowers in front of my face, outside of my apartment yeah and I've had like artists make artworks of me that I've then like bought back myself and then
my ex-boyfriend tried to like kind of get it back and whatever and then I realized like wow this is
totally what happened with this photo book when I was I guess I got I was maybe 19 or 20 I was in
New York and I had just kind of come into New York. I had, I read in the book, like I
actually just lost some weight from a flu. And my agency was like, actually, like maybe you could
work in New York, which is so fucked up, but whatever. Really? Oh my God. And like figured
out like, okay, it's definitely because I'm skinnier. So I'm going to try to make that a
priority now. You do a lot of things called test shoots, which are basically just like
important or good photographers, build your book, whatever. So this photographer was someone who it was for like a magazine and they were like, take a bus out to Catskills, which again, now I would like if I had a daughter, I'd on some level. Like it's impolite to say no.
Like, you know, you the whole thing with modeling is that you trust your agent.
They're in charge of your career and that they are sort of the guiding force.
And if you push back, they're like, you don't know anything about this.
And like, why are you being difficult?
There's a million girls who wouldn't be difficult.
So I was very blindly following what my agency recommended because I was like, this is me giving it.
I dropped out of college and I was like, this is me giving my best shot to this career.
And yeah, I basically got up there and his vibe was very, I don't know.
Sketchy.
Yeah, I would say like unimpressed by me, which made me really want to impress him.
It felt like a tactic almost that you could read into.
You're like.
I don't know if it felt like a tactic at the time. Like now looking back, I'm like,
I thought it was definitely some kind of nagging. Right. But at the time it felt like, oh no,
like he's not going to like me. And I want this guy to like me for so many reasons,
for personal reasons, but also professional reasons. Anyway, he ended up serving me a lot
of alcohol to make a long story short. And the pictures were super, super sexy,
like naked, whatever, just like very kind of like they're poor. It's in there very old erotic
images. They feel like from like a dirty man's closet and like 1963 for lack of a better
description. I was so drunk that I barely remember some parts of the experience was very spotty. And you know, for me,
getting drunk and losing control like that, that is I think the thing that I had the most shame
around and also wanting to be like, cool and be like, Oh, well, I know about like photography
and whatever. Anyway, there was a weird physical thing that happened in the night. Long story
short, I kind of put that behind me the
magazine came out with like nine images or something like that from the shoot and then a
couple years later after the blurred lines video and after I think gone girl like I had done a
movie and stuff people reached out to me and they were like oh like you have a book coming out Emily
Ratajkowski Polaroids or whatever and I was like what and I realized that this photographer had put together every image it seemed like from the
shoot into a book and was selling it in a publishing company that he had set up like
makeshift publishing company and I freaked out at that point look I had another type of voice
saying to me like you do not do do
sexy stuff anymore like do not do that like your career as an actress won't happen if you like
continue to represent yourself that way which again like I think has changed like the euphoria
girls can like post bikini pics and no one's like you're a bad actress you know but at the time it
felt like it was death so I was so freaked out about it. And basically the long and the short of
it, which is in the, in the book is that I couldn't do anything about it. There was nothing to be done
legally. And so I decided to go on Twitter and be like, this book was put out against my wish.
I got a very similar response to what you probably saw this weekend about the blurred
lens video, which was just like like she's just asking for attention like
you shouldn't have taken these pictures if you didn't want like them to be out in the world
basically just everything terrible you can imagine about slut shaming essentially and yeah I really
I lost I was really unwell first of all reading it I was unwell for you I'm reading it and like
I remember randomly when I was in college I went
and did a um like a photo shoot with this guy and I remember going to his apartment and having to
change in his bathroom and like the door wouldn't fully close and close and like I'm trying to
change and I remember feeling like realizing in that moment because I wasn't a model I wasn't
doing this often that I was like wait why am I alone in I wasn't a model I wasn't doing this often
that I was like wait why am I alone in this man's apartment and I'm in his bathroom that doesn't
lock and I'm naked and I'm getting changed thank god nothing fucking happened but like when I'm
reading your book the whole experience I felt for you of like why was he first like lubing you up
with wine and then it's like you keep drinking and so I felt the terror for
you of like wait something feels off yeah but I don't know what to do yeah and he would like make
little comments about my body that were like low-key insulting but like also made me you know
again want to be like no no no like what no I'm good at my job like I'm hot and I'm you know like
the uncomfortable comments I remember about like your nipples yeah we're just like what am I supposed to say so then I think for the book to come out that's you that's your
image and no one had signed the release in the first place yes so that was the whole thing is
again like at that point everything was like the modeling agency handles these deals blah blah blah
and so I thought you know I assumed that there was like some random thing but again like right I was 1920 like now by the way like I am so crazy about that stuff
partly because I had terrible experiences where I was like I got screwed I mean I annoy people
sometimes because I'm like wait is there a line about this potential catastrophic situation because
I just know as you know I've been burned yeah well I'm sure you know too and especially if I have a
male lawyer reading it I'm like no no one over it a fucking again yeah my lawyer's female okay I
think for a reason for a reason because it's just about a trust thing like yeah to anyone also
listening I feel like all that legal shit is confusing but yeah you the reason it's such a
fucking issue is because you went there assuming
that those photos were going to be for one project yes and then they ended up getting used and you
didn't make any money off of the book right zero dollars yeah and also yes it's literally emily
radikowski is the name of the book and then he published two other volumes maybe three other
volumes i can't remember right now like it actually brought him more press me talking about it on
twitter but it actually brought more attention to the book which was one of the most painful things
and I think he was like making a ton of money off of it I don't know how much but I think a good
amount and I was entitled to none of it and I had no right to shut it down and I guess you know my
agent at the time basically said that like maybe he had forged a signature he provided something the New York Times that he had like forged just say that she claims
she didn't sign right it's also one of those things we're like I don't know does she just not
remember signing it because I'm sure at that point she was just signing stuff all the time like
you know so yeah it's awful awful now with the world like I feel like you don't have to be a model to be worried
about this stuff like revenge porn like we grow up now everybody's growing up in the age of the
internet like you just you know I was a part of the iCloud hacking like it was but that's something
that can happen to anyone at any point and I mean you see like AOC they found like some like sort of
sexy picture of her or just anyone.
And it feels like this weird, like scary thing that could happen at any point. And I really
like have enjoyed seeing, you know, obviously the OnlyFans stuff is really complicated, but
the part of it that I think is interesting is the way that women are like, no, no, you can't take
this from us. Like we own it. We are in charge. We're the ones who are going to make money off
of it. This isn't going to be some dirty little secret that we're scared of, you know,
signing a fucking contract. I think back to contracts that I signed when I was younger and
like you're young and there's desperation of like, I need to make this money. And I would just urge
anyone. I remember I sat down with Mia Khalifa and she was like, I basically signed a fucking
contract under duress for a porn agency that I now look back and I'm like I should not have signed
that like I didn't even know her story is like so horrible right so it's like I just urge anyone
like before you sign a contract like if you can find anyone if you don't have the means like try
to find someone that has any type of legal friend that can help you out because it's like it's not fucking worth
it I'm thinking about my younger self if I heard that I'd be like well yeah easy for you to say
kind of thing and I just have to say like those people are going to make you feel like you're
lucky and you're this is your one chance and that they're going to walk away unless you like sign
it right there and this is like you feel like you you're not in a position you're always in a
position and if they're going to walk away that easily,
then let them and there'll be something else.
Like that is the truth.
That is the truth.
Like I don't care who you are.
That's the truth.
So I know that there's people who listen to this, I'm sure will.
And I at least as a younger person, I would have.
And I would have been like, for sure, I guess.
But like they don't know me.
They don't know my situation.
But like every situation, it's just true.
It's true. Yeah. Coming into mother into motherhood full circle I love it beautiful like I'm gonna be honest I
literally got emotional reading the last chapter it was so beautiful the way you described giving
birth and your relationship to your body has it at all changed since giving birth my body or my relationship to my body um both no
but yeah um a lot of the book is and obviously what we've even been talking about is like control
yep obsessed with control because it makes me feel safe and it makes me feel like i'm gonna
be good when you're pregnant you have zero control you just wake up every day and there's a new thing happening and you're just
like watching it kind of that I was a little bit worried about for me I learned to be humbled and
amazed by what my body was doing because it is so crazy that and just understood like this is some
ancient mechanics like that's straight up what's going on and it's bigger than
me that just brought so much I guess it was respect yeah I know we're wrapping up the the
other thing I do think is that I almost want to vocalize because I have so much respect for you
for voicing it in and writing it in your book that I don't know anyone would think is true for
Emily Ratajkowski is when
you just talk about how you basically would dissociate from your body. Yeah. Because it was
so like it was in your work, your field of work. It was like like you said, a mannequin. And you
talk about when you would have sex, you would like literally have to look in a mirror to like
connect with your body. Yeah. Do you feel like your relationship has shifted or do you still feel like
you're working on that I'm still working on it I would be like I mean honestly that last chapter
was one of the hardest one I mean blurred lines was definitely the hardest this was also hard
though partly because I was just like I'm not like writing this book to be like and this is what I've
learned and I've come out the other side and everything's great that's not that's just not
the reality of my experience so I wanted to give people like glimpses of moments where I do feel good. But
like, that's not the total experience. It's still a struggle. And you know, yeah, for me for a long
time, I thought confidence was what I was experiencing when I was actually basically
disassociating. Interesting, which is really weird, because I was just like, I was like,
see, I'm so not scared. And like, whatever. like whatever but yeah I don't know I feel like actually a lot of women can have that
sometimes in experiences with men or just like when you're wearing something that makes you feel
a certain way and you're like no I'm confident like I'm chill and then you like are totally not
okay and you're in a manic state or whatever absolutely yeah what is your hope for this book
so I've thought about this
basically what I realized is a lot of the stuff in the book were things that I only talked about
with my very close female friends that just felt too complicated too specific maybe I don't know
not like almost taboo or something to talk about in a larger way there are like again the power dynamics that I'm
writing about and these experiences they're so real and they're just our experiences I don't
know I don't care like what you do for a living what age you are if you're a woman you've you've
experienced it so I guess my hope overall have better relationships with women like throughout
our culture yep amen Emily Ratajkowski thank you for coming on color daddy thank you so
much for having me yay oh my god that was great thank you very much anytime you want me to come
on maybe we'll do a part two at some point we'll catch up great yeah it was fun Bye.