Call Her Daddy - Gwyneth Paltrow: The Ultimate Dating Roster

Episode Date: May 3, 2023

Gwyneth Paltrow joins Call Her Daddy to reflect on past relationships and give the life advice we all need to hear. Gwyenth opens up about her engagement to Brad Pitt and discusses how she came to the... decision that she wasn’t yet ready for marriage. Speaking of her exes, Gwyneth plays a little game called “Brad or Ben” where she determines whether Brad Pitt or Ben Affleck was the better boyfriend. Who was more romantic? Who was better in bed? Gwyneth reminisces on her love story with Chris Martin and how she ultimately knew when it was time to end the marriage. Gwynth shares the wildest place she’s had sex, why she loves vibrators and chimes in on the nepo baby debate. Call Her Daddy Apparel is here. Shop the Spring '23 collection at  shop.callherdaddy.com

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Starting point is 00:00:00 what is up daddy gang it is your founding father alex cooper with call her daddy gwyneth paltrow welcome to call her daddy thank you very much i am so happy you're here how is it feeling how are the vibes the vibes are a triple plus i mean it's gorgeous the marble table the colors it's very soothing. Thank you. Because I know you're very into like home design yourself. Yes. How would you describe your style? I think I always like a traditional frame. So, you know, like walls, fixtures, floors, I like it to feel like there's some history and some provenance with it.
Starting point is 00:00:47 I think I always gravitate towards a house where like the bones are more traditional. That's like, I always want cozy vibes. I actually designed this. The pink color in this room is the exact color that I have in my closet. And so I wanted it to feel like we were kind of at my house,
Starting point is 00:01:04 but I wanted to bring a little bit of me to the studio which is very fun this actually this this wall color is very similar to our goop office wall color right yeah you don't want like a hot pink like I needed to get away from the hot pink I was like I feel like I'm a little hot topic I'm a little in college still like I have elevated a little bit ladies give me give me some credit. Major credit. But need to have it like classy, but still fun. Let's talk about you though. Oh boy. So I love how, so Apple is here, your daughter,
Starting point is 00:01:32 and you guys walk in and Apple is like, roaster, go for it. And I was like, Gwen Paltrow's coming on the show, guys. Like, let's keep it classy. And then Apple was like, oh, ask her everything. I'm like, like oh thank you apple for letting me go in so you're an entrepreneur you're a mother and you're an actress you won an entrepreneur, you're a mother, and you're an actress.
Starting point is 00:02:07 You won an Academy Award at 26 years old. How did winning an Oscar at such a young age impact the way that you viewed and felt about your career? Well, I guess I should start by saying like I was so driven, like I was working so hard and I didn't know exactly what I was working towards. I just wanted to be successful and to be well regarded. And I, you know, was kind of on this really fast track and it all kind of happened so quickly, which is what I think you're alluding to. And then for somebody like me, who, you know, I think I was working through a lot of the harder parts of my growing up through achieving success. And once I won the Oscar, it put me into
Starting point is 00:03:02 a little bit of an identity crisis. Because if you win the biggest prize, like what are you supposed to do? And where are you supposed to go? I also it was hard, like the amount of attention that you receive on a night like that in the weeks following is so disorienting and, and frankly, really unhealthy. I was like, this is crazy. Like, I don't know if I can, I don't know what to do. I don't know which way is up. And so I think it was a lot. And then I also, you know, not that I would give it back or anything.
Starting point is 00:03:37 Like, it was an amazing experience. But it kind of called a lot of things into question for me. And then I think because I hadn't done a lot of healing work yet, I was like, well, now I need to, you know, what am I going to do? Where am I going to, how am I going to continue to achieve? Do you mind sharing, like when you're referencing, like you were working towards solving things in your past? Yeah. Do you mind sharing what you're talking about? Yeah, sure. I mean, I think, you know, we all go through traumatic things in our childhood. And, you know, I think our parents, especially my parents generation, they had a very different
Starting point is 00:04:16 orientation around parenting. It's like, you know, Apple and her brother are like, you know, I kind of revolve around them and hopefully not to their detriment. But I think it was I grew up in a generation where there wasn't that orientation. And I think, you know, we we moved a lot to move with my mom when she was working, which also, of course, had great things. But it was you know, it could be very, it could feel destabilizing. And I think there was, there were also like really high standards prescribed to me in my house. I don't even know if my parents were conscious they were doing it, but I always felt like I had to prove on some level that I was worth something, that I
Starting point is 00:05:02 was lovable. And not only for my parents, but I think just from the culture that I was worth something, that I was lovable. And not only for my parents, but I think just from the culture that I was growing up in. No, I get what you're saying. And I think that's something I've been realizing in therapy is like, of course, we can look at how our parents fucked us up. Like, I don't think there's anyone on the planet that's like, my parents were absolutely perfect.
Starting point is 00:05:22 But I do think generationally, it's also important to look at, not to give them a free pass, but like they don't have the tools that we now have. Like therapy wasn't even a conversation. Mental health wasn't even a conversation. So even you saying like, I don't even think they were aware
Starting point is 00:05:36 of the pressure they were putting on me. It does make sense now, especially if you are in therapy or working on yourself. Like the past generations to me it's it's very apparent as like what they were lacking and how fortunate we are now to have conversations with like you having with your children when you talk about having this like almost like crisis of like you win this oscar everyone's looking at you you're this beautiful young woman how do you think that impacted like your self-worth
Starting point is 00:06:06 at the time I felt a real pivot on that night because I felt like up until that moment everybody was kind of rooting for me in a way and then when I won it was like too much you know and and I could feel a real turn and I remember I was working in England a lot at the time. For some reason, I was doing all my movies in the UK. And I remember the British press being so horrible to me because I cried. You know, and they didn't necessarily know that, you know, my grandfather was dying of cancer. My dad, who was in the audience with me, was like, had just had all this crazy cancer treatment. And he was really debilitated.
Starting point is 00:06:44 And it was just this totally overwhelming moment. And and he was really debilitated. And it was just this totally overwhelming moment. And, you know, I was 26. Like I cried and people were so mean about it. And I just thought like, wow, there's this big energy shift that's happening. And I think I'm going to have to learn to be less open hearted and much more protective of myself and filter people out better. It was like this big reckoning in a way. When I think back to the 90s, I think it's so funny that so many trends are coming back. Like Apple just walked in and just like, mom, look, I'm wearing your shirt from the night. It's
Starting point is 00:07:17 like everything is making comebacks. But the one thing that I feel like never went out of style and I have to say it is Brad Pitt I have to say it I agree how did you meet Brad Pitt because you guys were like the hottest couple okay how did you meet Brad I met Brad on the set of seven and I think I was only 22 years old at the time. And I had seen him in Thelma and Louise and like whatever the other movies he had been in. So obviously, everyone knew he was like the most gorgeous movie star in America. And I got this little part in Seven and I was so excited to meet him and Morgan Freeman, who I had like grown up adoring as an actor. And we we got we sort of said hi on set and it was like major, major love at first sight. It was crazy. I just got chills. The fact that you get
Starting point is 00:08:22 to be like I had love at first sight with Brad Pitt and it was mutual. OK, Gwyneth, no big fucking deal. So you eventually got engaged. Yes. To Brad. How did he propose and how did you initially feel about him proposing? Well, we went out for we had been going out for like I felt like a long time and I was like ready to get married and I was like ready.
Starting point is 00:08:47 And we were in Argentina. He was filming a movie down there and I had gone down there for most of it and was like making dinner and, you know, hanging out with him. And one night we were kind of on the balcony of this house we were renting in this little town in Argentina. And I wish I remembered exactly what he said, but he proposed. It was fantastic. I was thrilled. And were you surprised or did you know this was coming? Did you guys talk about it?
Starting point is 00:09:17 We had talked about it, but I was surprised in the moment. I remember that. And how old were you at this point? I must have been 24 oh my gosh so I know I've read that you ended the engagement with Brad because you were like I I was too young I was not ready to get married and I feel like when you are in love I don't care what age sometimes you can be so in it that you don't see big picture. How did you realize that you were not ready to get married? Well, I had a lot of development left to do looking back in hindsight.
Starting point is 00:09:55 Like, you know, in a lot of ways, I didn't really fully start to come into myself until I was like 40 years old. And I had such a pleasing issue. Like I didn't even really understand how to listen to my instincts and act from that place, like for what was right for me. I was always trying to adjudicate like what's right for everybody else. You know, being the sort of thermostat in the room, like, oh, you know, it's getting a little uncomfortable. Like, let me cool it down. Like, it's getting cold. Let me warm things up. And always sort of outsourcing that and not,
Starting point is 00:10:35 not really giving myself like the dignity of being close to myself, you know? And so when I look back, you know, I, I think I was really a kid, like really more so than a lot of 22 or 23 or 24 year olds I would meet now. You know, I, I really had not explored who I was, what was important to me, what my boundaries were, anything like that. And so I was totally heartbroken when we broke up. But it was just, you know, the right thing at that time. But it was really, it was really hard. When you say you broke up, like, did is that how you explained it to him? Like, I'm too young, like, I can't do this. No, it was like, there were sort of a number of things that had happened. And
Starting point is 00:11:25 also he was nine years older than I am. I guess he's still nine years older than me. And so he was like far more, he knew what he wanted. He was like ready to do it. And I was kind of all over the place. And so it was really like one of those difficult things where I felt like, oh my God, I'm not, I'm not only am I not ready but I'm not like living up to the standards again you know it was like a familiar refrain that I felt about myself when you think back to that time period like what questions do you think people should be asking themselves if they're wondering like am I ready to get married because like I know there's a lot of young women listening that it's like oh maybe I am like how will I know like do you have
Starting point is 00:12:10 any advice I think that as women we know on such a deep level what is right for us and so it's really just a matter of how many layers we've put on top of that. And I do think we're socialized as women in this country to not do that. Like we don't tune in and really listen to ourselves. And so I would say the best thing is like to work on your friendship with yourself. The closer you are to yourself, then the more decisions you will make from that place and that will be the right decision. Anytime I have a deep conversation with my friend,
Starting point is 00:12:53 whether it was like she stayed in a relationship too long or I was in a toxic relationship, you always kind of know. You know. And like, I really feel like a woman's intuition is never wrong. Like when you're feeling something's off, a lot of the times we're just not acting on ending something or doing something for ourselves
Starting point is 00:13:09 because there's a layer like you said of something prohibiting us from making that decision whether it's like the societal issues of like we're living in this patriarchal society and you're like I want to please the man and it's been so ingrained like whatever it is usually it's actually you know the truth you just have to be in tuned with yourself that takes a lot of time though yes and one layer of complexity I would add is that you know when I look back and I think this is pretty pervasive like most of us are sort of replaying relationship, that dynamic out in our romantic life that we had with our most difficult parental relationship. Like Kerry Washington said to me the other day, there's only one letter difference between parent and partner. And which I thought was, you know, a very succinct way of articulating it because,
Starting point is 00:14:06 you know, that's something that I did for sure in my romantic relationships. And, and some people don't do that. And, you know, they're attaching in really healthy ways. But, you know, those are things to keep in the back of your mind to like, am I trying to work something out with this person? That's really my own work? Because a lot of times that means you shouldn't be with that person. You should go do your work and then find somebody that's going to really uplift you. Because most of the time when you're in a situation with someone that you're trying to play out like your issues with your dad or your issues with your mom, you're right.
Starting point is 00:14:42 Then when you actually go do the work, you wouldn't go back to that partner. You're like, wait, no, no, that actually doesn't work for me at all that's right I'm interested to also know about Brad and then we're moving on but like actually let's do the whole episode about Brad um when you're since you're in this Hollywood sphere of like it's a pretty close-knit group how did you guys like move on and like I'm sure you saw each other at parties and like had to socialize in moments like was it awkward for you and like do you guys would it's not awkward now obviously but like how did you go about running into each other yeah right they always say like Hollywood is like high school with money it's like kind of true which is probably why I didn't
Starting point is 00:15:19 live here for so long um I remember seeing him this is so crazy like because I was so I was like heartbroken and so upset you know and then I remember the first time I saw him I was presenting at the academy the year after I won and I like walked out and I was like I was so cognizant of him being there and I was like oh my god this is so scary and so awkward because he's probably like in almost front row yeah it was like right there and we hadn't talked in like a couple years you're like I would be like I'm basically giving a speech to my ex I know and I was like I think I even fumbled my words I was like yeah I hope that's on youtube so i can go watch that after this all of a sudden it's gonna like spike up it's like oh my god it
Starting point is 00:16:10 was like the year after i won yeah it was crazy i know he's a great guy he's um he's just he's wonderful i really like him a lot yeah casual okay another relationship you had was with ben affleck which is like i'm sitting here being like you have the most stacked roster of any person that has ever come on call her daddy gwyneth i'm not kidding i'm like no one has sat in a chair and i'm like brad pitt ben affleck i'm like what tell us your tips my actual question was this do you think that all of your exes have bought your vagina candle? They want to really relive the good times. That's what it's there for. Can you imagine someone going into Brad Pitt's house and like,
Starting point is 00:16:56 is that Gwyneth's vagina candle? What the fuck? Okay, we're going to play a game. Okay. Brad or Ben? It'll be game. Okay. Brad or Ben? It'll be fun. Okay. Brad.
Starting point is 00:17:09 No. I didn't even ask a question. Oh, I thought that was the question. Brad or Ben? Okay. That's so good. Now I get it. Okay, that's good.
Starting point is 00:17:19 Okay, now overall it's Brad. Now. Okay. Okay. Okay. Who had better style? Oh, my gosh. I'm going back, back in time now trying to assess wardrobes. Probably Brad.
Starting point is 00:17:40 Okay. Who was more romantic? Brad. I'm like brad brad who was more likely to make you laugh ben who were you more likely to get into an argument with ben who was more high maintenance gosh that's a really good question I'm not sure I would characterize either of them as high maintenance they were both like pretty chill yeah okay who cared more about their appearance oh I'm not sure I feel like they're neither of them were very vain like that like I'm not attracted to guys who are
Starting point is 00:18:28 like looking in the mirror the whole time you little scruff like a little little scruff although Ben did have like a mirror face that he would throw at the mirror you have to do it for us like I can't really remember but it's sort of like you know like uh he had a funny mirror face i think he was joking okay okay who was a better kisser oh my god let me think gosh i have to remember so far back they were both good kissers okay who was better in bed that's really hard. That is really hard. Because, like, Brad was, like, the sort of major chemistry love of your life kind of, like, at the time, you know? And then, like, Ben was, like, technically excellent.
Starting point is 00:19:23 Holy fuck! I can't believe my daughter is listening to this technically yeah excellent yeah holy fuck god bless j-lo and everything she's getting over there oh my god that's amazing okay last question okay this is really gonna cause some issues am i blushing i am oh my gosh who is the better actor oh wow i mean they're both so talented i feel like and ben is a great writer and director but I guess I would probably have to say acting alone Brad like if you think of all the really different roles he's done I mean Ben is great too they're both great they're both great I mean you've got great exes like you can't really
Starting point is 00:20:17 go wrong you know I mean and those are just the ones you know about oh well we're gonna get to that you can't tease me here gwyneth and not expect i was gonna ask you know we know a lot of your exes but would you be willing to maybe drop a name of someone you've like even had a makeout with that's alice that like the world doesn't know about i don't think i could say the name can you get names what about a little Leo action no never made out with Leo never he tried back in the day but he was already like you know he was very doing his thing loose with the goods like from when he was 19. What about Johnny Depp? Never made out with him.
Starting point is 00:21:11 We did a movie together, but we did not make out. Bradley Cooper? No, I don't even know Bradley Cooper. I mean, I've met him, but I've never like, you know. Okay, well, we're going to have to sidebar. You're going to have to tell me one name that I can like hold close to the chest i'll tell you after okay okay you also dated and married chris martin one of the biggest musicians in the world yep shout out coldplay we are gonna do a little one last game okay fuck mary kill fuck, marry, kill. Brad Pitt, Ben Affleck, and Chris Martin.
Starting point is 00:21:51 Wow. Well, obviously I'd marry Chris Martin because he gave me my two children who are the loves of my life. So I would do that all again. Oh. Hmm. Wow.
Starting point is 00:22:11 But kill is so that's such a hardcore. It's not actually. It's like put to the wayside. OK. I can fuck one more time. I think we know your answer. I think Brad. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:22:20 Yeah. And then Ben. Yeah. God bless. God bless him. God bless him. It is Dunkin Donuts. OK. God bless Ben. God bless him. God bless him and his Dunkin' Donuts. Okay.
Starting point is 00:22:29 What initially attracted you to Chris? So Chris and I met. It's a funny story. I was a huge Coldplay fan when his first album, Parachutes, came out. And I loved it. I was doing a movie in London, again, as usual. And I was kind of had the TV on in the background. And he was playing, they were playing at Glastonbury. And when I heard the music, and I like, you know, had this very powerful reaction to it, I was like, this is incredible. And I watched
Starting point is 00:22:56 their whole thing. And I was like, this band is going to be huge. And no one had really heard of them in America at the time. I remember coming home and like telling everyone about this great band. And they said, you know, they're going to be playing this teeny show. I think it was maybe at the Bowery Ballroom or something. So I went with Mary, my best friend from kindergarten that I was telling you about. And because I was there, I, I, someone wrote in the newspaper that we were dating. We had never met. Um, and it was, I was like, what? Like, you know, he's like, five years younger than me. And I was like, please, I'm not like, we're not dating. I just went to this thing. And we thought and then but they kept writing it all summer, all summer, all summer. And then that fall, my dad died,
Starting point is 00:23:35 unfortunately, in sort of a surprising way. And my brother and I were listening to that parachutes record. I mean, not Parachutes, Rush of Blood to the Head to Set all the time, all the time. And I remember I had called Mary and I said, like, I need you to get I need you to come to London. Like, I can't breathe without my dad. I don't know what to do. And so she came over and then someone reminded me we had had tickets to go see Coldplay that night. But from, you know, months before my dad died.
Starting point is 00:24:06 And I was like, I can't go. And she was like, Gwynny, like, please, we can't like we have to get you out of the house and get some air, even if it's just for. And it was really hard for her, too, because my dad was like her dad. And she's like, you've got to stop smoking cigarettes. We've got to get out of here. And I was like, okay. And so we went and because they had been writing that we were boyfriend and girlfriend, you know, his, his assistant, Vicky, who we still love to this day, she was like, she came and said like, Oh, hi, this is so crazy. You
Starting point is 00:24:38 want to go meet your boyfriend, you know, after the show. So went backstage and um we met and he was just so sweet and like I met him when he was like 25 and I had just turned 30 and he was like Tigger the tiger you know bouncing around and I really didn't even think we would go out but I don't know he called me and asked me to come to Ireland to see him and go to a show. And I was so depressed. So I remember my other friend Henrietta at this time saying, you know, she was like, I said, this is crazy. This kid from Coldplay asked me to go, you know, see his concert.
Starting point is 00:25:19 I'm like, this is nuts. Like, I'm not going. And she's like, yeah, you've got to go. This is the first time you've smiled since your dad died. Oh, my God. So I went. How was your relationship with Chris different from all of your, like, previous relationships? Well, you know, there was just something.
Starting point is 00:25:40 I don't know. I think there are certain things that kind of have felt preordained in my life and like my my children feel like to me like the whole reason I'm on this earth and so when I met him there was a very deep thing there and I couldn't quite put my finger on it because it felt very different than my other relationships. And it's not so much that the relationship itself turned out to be like healthier than my other relationships. It's just that I think I had this deep calling on some level. I knew he was going to be the father of my kids maybe or something. Oh my God.
Starting point is 00:26:20 It was very, it was a very strong feeling. Yeah. I'm interested to know too, like, you know, you mentioned that right before you kind of met Chris, like a few weeks prior, your dad had passed. Yeah. Three weeks before. How did that impact? Do you think like the early days of your relationship?
Starting point is 00:26:38 I mean, I was broken. I was, my father was, you know, like I just just adored him. And he was like, you know, my, my teacher, my rabbi, he was like, the comedian, he was like, so unconditionally loving. And he was the center of all of our, my whole family kind of centered around him. So when he died, you know, I was completely like decimated. And so I was very raw and very open, you know, didn't totally have my, like I couldn't see straight. Like I was in full, full grief. I don't, I don't know how Chris kind of like dealt with me through that time. Yeah. Cause I'm interested, like, I think loss is, there's no way to describe like how you're
Starting point is 00:27:26 going to grieve and thinking about like meeting Chris falling in love while also like deeply grieving yeah those are like very opposite emotional head spaces to be in and when you look back do you think that affected your perception of like of the relationship at all? Probably. I don't see how it couldn't have. Like I was so altered and so destroyed. I can't imagine it didn't, you know, and I can't imagine that I didn't project like hope and safety and future, you know, onto him because I was in such a bad state yeah so we talked about how you were engaged at one point to shout out Brad and then you eventually who doesn't love Brad you love Brad we all love Brad um I love how it's like Brad or Ben
Starting point is 00:28:19 this is about to be a game you're like Brad I'm like wait I didn't play the game yet we all love Brad shout out Brad you know we love you so you got engaged and you said you weren't ready to be married right you marry Chris how did you know when it was time to end a marriage and to move on with your life well it was interesting because, like being so driven by this like feeling of the impending children. Like I. I got pregnant really quickly and had our kids like in pretty quick succession. And so then you're sort of thrown into like I was like in grief and then I I had Apple and then I had Moses and um and then I think you just you just try to make it work especially for me you know I don't like barely I think we have one you know barely any divorce in our family all of my best friends from, you know, elementary school, high school, they're all married to like their college sweetheart, like no one I wasn't around to like, I just felt like it was such a failure.
Starting point is 00:29:32 And, and even contemplating us not being together. And I, I was so worried about it for the kids and for what it said about me. And it was so hard. And then, you know, I, I really wanted something very different to what he wanted. And, and I felt very, um, kind of lonely in the marriage in a lot of ways. And, um, and I just finally got to the point where I thought like, you know, I need to, I need to listen to myself. And so, you know, it wasn't until right after I turned, you know, it was like kind of around, it was sort of like around 38 that I started to sense that the marriage wasn't going to last.
Starting point is 00:30:23 And then I tried really hard for another couple of years. But, you know, I say this all the time because it's true. You get this software upgrade when you turn 40. Like, you just get an upgrade. Like, you wake up and your software is fucking upgraded. And you're like, wow, this is bizarre. Like, I don't care what anybody thinks of me. Like, I like myself. Like, you click into this thing. And that happens again when you're 50, by the way. And it's so, it's so, it feels like you feel whole. And I just realized, like, I need to not be in this. I need something else. And it's okay if I'm alone.
Starting point is 00:31:07 And it's okay if I disappoint people. And it's okay if I never find anyone again. All the things that you're so worried about, you know, when you're contemplating divorce. And I chose myself. I love that. And thank you for sharing. Because I don't even like no matter where you're at in your life I do feel like it kind of goes back to what you said of like we know when we're
Starting point is 00:31:31 not happy when we're not feeling it when it's not right anymore doesn't mean it wasn't right. Right. But like we keep growing and we keep evolving as individuals and naturally sometimes that means you're going to outgrow a partner or you're going to outgrow something that you initially were attracted to and I think that's okay and I think especially as women it's like a very negative feeling and shameful feeling you have on yourself if it's you the one that's having those feelings because I feel like we always learned like men will leave and men will do this but if it's you like it has been a pretty like new concept that like oh my god you can leave a marriage like you can stand up for yourself you can have a voice so I appreciate you sharing that because it is
Starting point is 00:32:11 in some way inspirational to just know like you have these incredible children you had a you know a healthy marriage at one point and then it's like and then it's time to move on and that's okay it is okay it is okay and it's like not what you want and it's not when you get married it's time to move on. And that's OK. It is OK. It is OK. And it's like not what you want. And it's not when you get married. It's not what you hope for. But it's OK if it's not the right thing anymore. You know, and for me, it really then became about, is it possible to stay a family with this person that I really love?
Starting point is 00:32:41 And I wanted to minimize the impact on our children, which, of course, they're impacted and divorce is terrible. And I know it was really hard on them. And, but I wanted it to be as least, you know, like, I wanted to try to figure out a way that Chris and I could stay like real family which we have the last question I have on that it's like has it gotten easier to co-parent like in the beginning I can imagine it's like any family feels it like it's a little rocky or like trying to get your footing yeah and then eventually does it get to a place where like it does feel more cohesive. If you work on it, like you really have to work at it. And I think you have to choose every day to remember the good in the person, why you love them, you know, hold them with a lot of love and respect and cultivate that, especially on days that you don't feel that because you feel, you know,
Starting point is 00:33:45 wronged or angry or whatever it is, you know. And so it became a practice for me to remember all the ways in which, you know, Chris was a blessing in my life. And, you know, and like, there are just things about him that are so fantastic and he's so funny and he's so talented and he's goofy and we all laugh a lot. And so I tried to really focus on those things and then also use the opportunity to focus on my side of the street and what I had not done well and what I could learn and, you know, the ways in which I hurt him and the ways, you know, so it was a, it was a big, I think, you know, it's probably best said, like, I really milked the opportunity. I didn't, you know, it's like a divorce. It sounds weird to say it's opportunity, but I really wanted to learn as much as possible. And I wanted to grow as much as I possibly could out of it. Yeah. I kind of feel
Starting point is 00:34:45 like a theme today is just like knowing what's best for yourself. Yeah. And you played a vital role in starting the Me Too movement and you were very open about your experience. How did you decide to come forward and talk about everything? It was scary because, you know, I had grown up watching the women who had spoken out, be reviled, rejected, you know, pilloried in the town square. And I had never seen a model where a woman could speak out and there would be repercussions that weren't were on the man and not on the woman. And so this was a story that, you know, everybody it was like this, the worst kept secret. Not that Harvey Weinstein was raping people, but, you know, that he was sort of crossing boundaries and trying stuff on. And we all kind of knew that was happening. And like my story had happened to
Starting point is 00:35:53 10 of my friends, you know. But when I had learned the full extent of what he had done through my cooperation with the New York Times and talking to Jodi and Megan, who are two incredible women, incredible investigative journalists. I just thought, you know, this is, this has got to stop. And I felt like if maybe there was a chance it could impact the workplace for my daughter and her friends. Like I felt really obligated to say something. I appreciate also just how open you are about your experiences and kind of speaking about like, you know, raising children now in this new era as like women that can have a voice. Like, how do you talk to, I guess, both of your kids about like dating and sex and relationships?
Starting point is 00:37:00 I mean, I think you have to tread lightly and let them come to you. I remember my kids both went to this fantastic elementary school here in Los Angeles once we moved from London. And they taught them sex ed in sixth grade, which, yeah, like, okay. But I really was not prepared with the information that they came home with. What did they say? I will never forget Apple and her best friend, Emily, sitting at our kitchen banquette in shock, like color drained from their face.
Starting point is 00:37:41 They taught them everything everything anything you're thinking they taught like the 11 12 year olds told them everything what i swear and what are they saying to you like uh mom they're like do people do this like it was beyond you're like you know what one day you'll hear a little bit more of this onalled her daddy apple exactly it will be in a more appropriate well that's what i was gonna say then you took over so i didn't have to tell her anything holy shit so i'm in hawaii and i'm walking to the elevator with my boyfriend we're staying at a resort and i see this girl sprinting down the hallway with a bag and I'm like what is going on I think she's beelining it to me it is a fan of mine and she hands me a goop bag and there was
Starting point is 00:38:33 there's like a goop store in this Hawaii resort the monolani shout out so I'm like oh thank you she's like I love you like you've taught me. Like, I want you to enjoy your vacation and winks at me. So I go upstairs and I open it and it's a beautiful vibrator. And I was like, oh, my God, this is incredible. And then immediately I'm like, thanks to Gwyneth. Like, because I hadn't brought a vibrator on this trip. And it was used and it was used again. It was great.
Starting point is 00:39:00 It was a great time. It was a great time. I thought you were going to say, I thought you just said, like like meaning you opened the box and it was used and i just died and this vibrator was fully used fuck you no no i used it on my trip okay thank you it was phenomenal and so i'm curious to know because i i'm a big advocate for toys and vibrators especially for women we have like obviously a harder time getting off when is the first time you used a vibrator wow um probably when sex in the city came out and you know samantha was talking about like everyone i remember like you would go to a bridal shower and like they're all of a sudden there were vibrators like as party favors and it's almost like they stopped being party favors and they
Starting point is 00:39:44 need to be again because i remember in college being like, I think I need one. This is disgusting. Well, it's not. I started to use the back of my electric toothbrush because I didn't know where to get a vibrator at the time, Gwyneth. Yeah. Thanks to Goop. Now we know where to go.
Starting point is 00:39:59 Thank goodness. At the time, it was like, I'll get a new toothbrush in the morning. Like this is desperate time schools for desperate measures. And there I was with a good old back of the toothbrush. I didn't use it in the morning, everyone. Don't come for me. Why do you think women are so intimidated, though, by vibrators? Well, you know, this is a very, this could be like a very long discussion i mean there's such um systemic shame
Starting point is 00:40:26 for women historically around pleasure and we are to your point we do live in a patriarchal society the paradigms aren't there for female pleasure um and so we've been taught to be like ashamed of it not ask for things not ask not say like this feels good or this doesn't feel good and this is why at goop we have really kind of indexed into this area because i really feel like it holds us back so much it's this one area where and look i like i'm still not comfortable talking about, this is inculcated in for decades. And I'm so happy when I see it changing in your generation, Apples, and this sort of
Starting point is 00:41:13 freedom around the idea that women deserve pleasure. It makes me so happy to see that. But it has not always been that way. You're so right. The shame comes from obviously as women. It's never been celebrated to like pleasure yourself. You hear about like men or boys when you're younger. It's like, oh, he's just touching himself.
Starting point is 00:41:32 Oh, girl. It's like, stop doing that. Like it's wrong. Just do it secretly. So now I love though. I agree that like it can be cute and fun and clean and not scary and veiny and too large that you're like that's bigger than my thigh like what is happening so no I really appreciate that you have what you've done because now I have my little baby purple little like bullet vibrator in it I use it all the time
Starting point is 00:41:59 I don't know if that freaks you out but not not at all. Not in the slightest. OK, Gwyneth, what is the craziest place that you've had sex? Um, I mean, I don't know. I've been famous for so long that like, you know, I think one time back in the day, I did it in an airplane bathroom on an overnight flight to Paris. Would you would you drop the name of who it was with? It wasn't anyone famous. in an airplane bathroom on an overnight flight to Paris. Would you drop the name of who it was with? It wasn't anyone famous. OK.
Starting point is 00:42:32 Isn't that terrible? It's amazing. Look at her face. No, I'm like, I want the tea. I'm like, oh, that won't make headlines. No, I'm just kidding. No, that's great. OK, so when you were famous, you were having sex with normal men. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:42:42 You're a woman of the people. I was. Yeah, of course how would you meet normal guys though and like not be freaked out well well that's a good point i mean you know do you know like i missed the whole dating app thing and all of that like i totally missed that um like one normal guy did when i was famous was you know friends with my friends growing up in New York like that kind of thing there were I think I dated like one or two you're gonna tell us who that other a-lister is at some point by the interview okay you started a wellness
Starting point is 00:43:18 brand but you did this before it was cool to like start a wellness brand how did you come up with the concept of goop well I think kind of circling back to where we started by the time I had apple I felt like I really needed a break from acting I had worked like non-stop for years and years and years, running, running, running. And I had her and and I had like, one of these moments in life. And, you know, we had like a really crazy birth, it was very dramatic. And I kind of, at some point passed out after having a seizure. Anyway, I woke up and I opened my eyes and these like, giant blue eyes were looking right at me, we were like this. And I was like, this is, this is it. This is it. And barrymore actually said this to me the best where she said when she looked into her daughter olive's eyes um she had the same thing and then she said to olive later i was born the day you were born it always makes me cry because it's true
Starting point is 00:44:42 but that's how i felt and like I didn't I I was like I don't know what I'm gonna I don't want to leave this baby I don't want to go back to work and luckily I was in a position where I could take some time off with so many women in this country cannot do and in Scandinavia they do it and places like that but we are not good at that so I was very fortunate. And the longer I didn't work, the more I started to call into question like, wait, was I doing that? Because I really loved it? Was it like, and I gave myself the space to kind of contemplate if I wanted to go back or not ended up not doing a movie for like three years, I had
Starting point is 00:45:22 my son. And then I went back a little bit to do like smaller parts and Iron Man and stuff like that. But actually never starred in a movie again, since I was pregnant with Apple, like we were in my last starring role together. And then I did something which I think I would really encourage women to do, which is at some point stop and say like, am I where I'm supposed to be? Am I doing what I love? Am I spending my life feeling fulfilled? And am I brave enough to give myself permission to do something different if I want to? And I knew that if I started a company, I would take a lot of shit for it. And people were like,
Starting point is 00:46:13 what is she doing? And there was no model for this, except for the great Jane Fonda, who had, you know, done her fitness business, but also took a ton of shit for that at the time. They called into question like her seriousness as an actress. Like everybody likes us in one little box, you know. But I was really interested in this other space, which was really essentially like connecting people to great things that would make their lives better. And I was, I had always been that person for my friends. Like what temperature do I roast a chicken at?
Starting point is 00:46:44 Like where can I get a bikini wax in Paris? Like, you know, and I thought, God, you know, I love answering these questions so much. I love doing the research. I love figuring it out. Like, maybe I could do this as a job. And so percolated for a long, long, long, long time. And I got a lot of advice from different people. And that's when I thought, okay, I'll just start it as a newsletter and then we'll see how it goes. And it was unmonetized. It was just, you know, I just was sending content out. And it stayed like that for probably five years until I had the guts to start to think around monetization and what I would do. It's amazing to hear you also explain it because I agree with you. Like when you immediately said Jane Fonda, as you were talking, I was thinking about Jane Fonda because I'm like, it's so crazy that as you're trying to put something together that had never been done, your first reaction, even though like you knew you wanted to do it,
Starting point is 00:47:40 you, we immediately think like, oh my everyone's gonna shit on me like they want me to just be just be an actress like just stay in your lane that's right and it's so detrimental because that's so not the only thing that you are talented with and that also that you're interested in and so I love the story because it shows full circle of you putting into action an idea you had. And then obviously creating something so much bigger that also is so helpful to so many women. Including myself. Thank you. What is one goop product that you wish you had in your 20s that now you're suggesting to Apple and her friends? Like you need this.
Starting point is 00:48:21 This is real. Because when I was in my 20s, I lay in the sun with baby oil on my face I never use sunscreen believe me I'm paying that price now you look great thank you I'll give you my surgeons please but actually please so I wish that I had taken greater care of my skin earlier and what's so great now is that we've come so far with product development and because clean beauty is a huge thing for me like obviously that's why one of the main reasons we started goop I was appalled at the levels of toxicity in beauty products that are largely unregulated. We put all over our skin.
Starting point is 00:49:09 They're transdermally absorbed. They mess with our endocrine systems. There's like real toxicity levels and a lot of stuff that we think is safe. And that just drives me crazy. So I saw a real white space to create these products. And anyway, for the women out there now, I would recommend – I mean, we have this new eye cream that's coming out right now that's so incredible, and it's packed full of vitamin C, and it's got caffeine and niacinamide,
Starting point is 00:49:41 and it works so well, and it's very preventative as well. So I can use it for my crow's feet and my dark circles. And Apple can use it preventatively. I love it. I need it. We brought you one. Oh, thank you. Thank you. You recently also launched the Goop Sex Instagram channel. Yes. What's a conversation that you're looking forward to having on that page? Well, again, like just to sort of traverse back over what we were saying, it's so important for women to have places that they can, you know, and resources. And like, that's why what you do is so fantastic in terms of destigmatization, creating a space where women can explore these questions and these feelings and
Starting point is 00:50:27 like the normalization. It's really beautiful. And I'm so glad that you do what you do. Thank you. And we really felt like, you know, there's more to explore here in terms of questions people have, products, etc. So we thought we'd make a dedicated page. You know, I learned from the Goop Sex page. Like, I'm like, wow, what is this? I love that. One of my last questions is, I was just thinking about this for a I think like maybe not as much anymore but I think like there was a misconception like that I that me and goop that we together were like wacky or you know like dealing in pseudoscience which which is such bullshit. And like, we're actually so rigorous around like what we're talking about. And sometimes we talk about really cutting edge
Starting point is 00:51:34 things, but we really label the content as that. So we're not saying this is fact, we're saying like, this is an emerging theory or something. So I think that's a way to keep also the power of the brand down, right? So it's like if you're threatening the status quo, like people used to throw that at us a lot. What about personally? I think I can maybe come off or look quite cold maybe or like unapproachable I've heard, but I think I'm really opposite to that like I do think I'm so curious about people and I think I'm warm but when you walked into my house I was like oh my gosh hi we like hugged and I was like I felt like a part of the family when apple walked in I'm like oh we're all going to hang like you yeah I can dispel that rumor now i have a gift for you really well it's kind of a yeah i'm gonna
Starting point is 00:52:26 give it to you it's brad pitt no no no i saw a comment you made okay wait i saw a comment you made on the internet okay and i wanted to gift you this what did i say oh my god I always you know me and my internet comments oh this is so good I hope you got one for apple too oh my god I should love it I saw your comment on Haley Babers this is. I'm going to wear this loud and proud. I truly love it. No, Gwena, thank you so much for coming on. This was truly so fun. It wasn't too aggressive, right? Not at all. You had a good time. I'll check in with her and see what Apple has to say about it. Apple, we're going to walk in as like this. No, seriously, thank you for coming on. This was so fun. Thank you for having me. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you so much on this was so fun thank you for having me thank you thank you thank you so much that was really fun that was so fun i am dying laughing you are comedy

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