Call Her Daddy - John Mayer (FBF)
Episode Date: December 24, 2025John Mayer joins Call Her Daddy - and you’ve never seen him like this before. He discusses his rise to fame, relationships, love and what’s next. Get ready for the first ever Call Her Daddy Holida...y Special, featuring live performances from John Mayer. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
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What is up, Daddy Gang?
It is your founding father, Alex Cooper, with Call Her Daddy.
John Mayer, welcome to Call Her Daddy.
Thank you, Alex.
I am so happy you're here, John.
I think we need to tell the Daddy Gang, who are my listeners, how did we get here?
Because we went to a little dinner the other night.
And I want to kind of go through what happened at that dinner because people are probably
like, how did you get John Mayer to come?
on your show. There's only one way, which is to find me personally, have dinner with me, be
cool, and you're actually an incredible pitch woman for coming on the show. And I didn't
really have an intention of coming on. We had a great dinner, Kazi David, you and me. And I think
there's something to do with December where you've all year been yourself, followed your rules,
done what you normally do, don't do what you don't normally do. And I think somewhere in the last
couple weeks of each year I go like I want to do something out of character I'm so happy this is
what you're calling out of character and you get to sit down with me because I yeah I pitched you like
why you should come on the show and you and I kind of like battled for a minute meanwhile
cassey sitting there like eating her chips like loving every second of it just being so happy that
it was a debate it was a debate and you decided to come on what I liked about that meeting
at um dinner was that you are very sure of yourself
Have you always been that confident?
Like, what were you like in high school?
Oh, that's, I've had some degree of confidence.
It took that to get out of my town, to get into the world,
to push against the forces of people who were saying,
not just not encouraging me, but actively discouraging me
from doing what I ultimately have done.
And so the quality of that confidence has changed from like a beat down every door
push yourself on people as much as you can all the time
to something way more relaxed
so everyone when they first start out is way more confident
than they need to be because they don't know how confident they need to be right
and so it was kind of obnoxious when I was younger
I mean if you're spending your whole youth
pushing against these forces of you can't do it
you're crazy you're going to end up on the street this is a
terrible idea. That's going to have a hangover effect on you for a long time where you're going
to still keep pushing. That's really interesting because I can imagine. Why I'm asking about
high school is because I feel like we can agree that there's such formative years where peer
approval socially is so important towards the way that you view yourself. How did you get along
with people and how did people treat you? I didn't and they didn't. I didn't have a presence. I went
to school to get it over with, and my life began at three o'clock in the afternoon when I came
home and played guitar. So I didn't dislike anybody, and I almost didn't even need that
particular level of approval. I was kind of invisible, and I just went to go. I didn't really
pay attention in class. It's really hard to explain. And there are people out there who I think
would understand when you're 13 years old, you got five years before you can even do anything
on your own. And that was the hardest part of my entire life was from 13 to getting out of high
school because you already know what you know. And you have to go through the rest of this kind of
wrote plan that's been set for everyone. And I remember sitting in class going like, I'm not
supposed to be here. Right. So you're saying you knew what you wanted to do. You knew you were going to be
a musician. You're like, why am I in social studies? Like what the fuck am I doing here? Did people bully you?
Like, were you the, like, dorky musician or no?
I was bullied a little bit, but I was always kind of big.
I was tall.
I remember getting punched in the arm for flinching.
I don't know if you've, if that's still a thing.
This is the most butch your show has ever been.
I'm talking to.
I love it.
Talking to you about.
The Christmas special.
We're, okay, did you date in high school?
I had one girlfriend in high school, but I didn't really date.
I had one girlfriend in high school.
What were you like in, like, what was John like in high school dating?
Probably the best version I ever was of myself.
I would like to think that was the best version and the next time is the best version.
I only had one girlfriend before everything changed in my life.
To me, like, the truest, most innocent, realest, like, sweetest.
It was high school.
Did you ever through your fame wonder if you should reach back out to her?
I did reach back out a few times.
because you were looking for what?
Maybe to bring that part of my life into the new part of my life.
But by that point, she was married and had kids and I thought that's a separate chapter
or that thing in my life was a separate chapter.
I don't have to talk to people to know that I'm okay, that we're okay.
Yeah.
I think that's telepathic.
I liked you said that at dinner.
Just something about like, there's certain.
people in your life that you don't need to be in their life anymore, but it's really cool when
you have a mutual understanding, whether it's an ex, whether it's someone that was your friend
at some point to just be like, we don't need to talk to know like, we're good. We're all right.
We don't talk anymore for whatever reason, but like mutual. Yeah. I mean, there are a couple
little outstanding still vibrating things. Yeah. I would love to get to a hundred percent closure.
I don't think that's realistic in anyone's life. Do you have someone in your life that it's
always going to be incomplete? Yeah. I think everyone has a couple of,
But for the most part, it's been important for me to move on into my adult years in my life with the piece of like, we're cool.
We don't have to talk.
Okay.
So we're about to leave high school because I'm just kind of going through the journey of you.
Yes.
You performed at your high school graduation.
Yes, I did.
Were people nice to then or no?
Yeah, that was right around the time where I started to reveal myself as a guitar player.
And I was in a band and we'd written a couple songs.
We'd written a song for graduation.
I didn't actually graduate at that ceremony, so I didn't get enough credits to graduate.
I had to go to summer school.
And so it was a very deep moment to play that song and walk off the field while the rest of my friends graduated and I walked home.
Okay, but just so everyone knows, how bluesy is that?
Six years later, you're a Grammy winning artist.
This part freaks me out.
Chronologically speaking, this part is maybe.
one of the only aspects of my life that truly blows my mind.
Why?
Because it's such a short period of time that felt longer to me.
I graduated in 1995 and six years later, I was playing arenas.
At that point, I was playing clubs, but I had an album out and that would end up winning
Grammys and that was six, that was six years.
So it didn't really fucking matter that you had to go to summer school.
You're like, I didn't even need to graduate.
And you know what I always think now is like, there are people who get branded,
misfit, loser, you know, in some way sort of develop mentally disabled.
No, they're not.
They're on some other track that they have no school for, you know.
I love that you're saying that too because it goes back to what you said of like,
I was sitting in that class and I knew I wasn't supposed to be there, but I had to be there.
That's right lyrics.
It's interesting to hear you say, like, it's so crazy to me that six years after
I graduate college, I'm winning a Grammy for your body is a wonderland. You were dating someone
at the time that you're writing this iconic song, which, no, I wasn't. You weren't? No, that was
about my first girlfriend. That was about the feeling, which I think was already sort of nostalgic.
I was 21 when I wrote that song, and I was nostalgic for being 16. I thought it was about a different
No, that's one of those things where people just sort of form that idea.
It gets reinforced over the years.
No, no, no.
I had never met a celebrity when I wrote that song.
And did your high school girlfriend know you wrote that about her?
That's a good question.
Maybe she didn't.
Maybe she didn't.
To this day.
To this day, maybe she didn't.
So if you were my one and only high school girlfriend, that was actually about you.
and this happens a lot with songs right so i've made a rule i guess i always had a rule that i would
never tell anyone what's i don't i don't write songs about people i don't write them for people or
about people i might use a relationship that inspires me to write something so yeah even if i was
writing a song because of someone it's like that goes away and i'm left with the song
So I'm not, I don't like telling anyone that a song is about somebody because most of the time it's not and it takes people away from themselves because they're just visualizing who I'm writing about.
But the songs come out. They mean things to people. Sometimes people think it's about one person and other. Sometimes it hurts the song. Sometimes the song doesn't do as well because people go, well, he's just petty. And I go, that's got nothing to do with that. But I'd much rather keep the sanctity of these.
songs intact and have a couple of them kind of burn a couple of them because people think it's
about one person and it's not because it's really important the most important thing in my life
now is are my songs yep and so when I go play songs now I'm playing songs that I see people in
the crowd are reliving their life it ain't about anyone but the people I'm singing to it's now
about their college years it's about their sick family member who died it's about their fight
with cancer and how they beat it
it's these songs now for people
are these waypoints in their lives
it's not about any one person
you know the first three
three records in my life was just like
proving proving and you should
and then you start hearing people
tell you thank you
your music got me through a dark time
that's so much deeper I mean I
definitely think everyone should have those prove
it ears and enjoy them
because I definitely did
like now do you see
now do you see and I had a lot of that I had a lot that I had to get out when I first started
and it was obnoxious and to them and I get it and I think it explains a lot of younger people
who have just hit the scene who you're like this person is obnoxious I have a lot of
grace for it because I you never know how hard someone had to punch to get out of their town
or their family or a relate you know and and you just
I think that's where people were like I got the douchebag title a lot and I was trying
incredibly hard but I had been trying incredibly hard since I first played the guitar to get
where I needed to get I couldn't get the message like John they like you just fine you can calm
down they like you just fine yeah you know I really appreciate you explaining it that way
because I I now too have a different opinion especially maybe in the music
industry or, you know, actors and actresses, like the way that maybe people are being perceived
online and the way they're acting probably is really not who they are. It's they're trying to
elevate to get the attention, to get the approval. And eventually as you see people in their
careers, and this is, you don't even have to be famous to have this. Yep. You can be doing it at
your job. You can be doing it socially. You're trying to make a name for yourself. You're trying to
have a presence. And it probably feels inauthentic, but you want to be seen. You want to be heard.
You want to feel accepted. And that can lead to you feeling like,
What? Am I even being myself right now?
Yes.
So I respect that.
That's thank you.
I mean, that's what everyone goes through.
Everyone by the time they grow up have grace for other people on the way up as they fight through those things.
The people who are the most vicious are the people who have yet to ask for grace because they don't need it yet.
Because they still have this view of the world like they're in total control and they're going to make all the right decisions for the rest of their lives until they don't.
And I feel like.
like, that's just something everyone passes through.
What do you cherish the most about the rise of your career?
Oh, that's a great question.
The rise or where I am now?
I'll tell you, I'll answer both.
The rise is that it was during a really cool time.
I don't think I would have had the same success.
I have now if I had begun three years ago.
I think I'd be trying and trying and trying on social media and trying to get things out there.
I mean, there was just so fewer people doing things that you automatically had more people paying attention.
So I'm really lucky that I came up when there were just fewer cars on the road in terms of, you know, making songs and having people pay attention to you and being seen.
And now, where I am now, the greatest thing is that.
that any idea that I have I can do. Any idea that I have. I feel like if there was a song
idea that I had for any musician in the world, I'd have a pretty good chance of them at least
listening to it. And that's really interesting to me. That to me is the greatest thing.
The songs I already have that I'll take for the rest of my life, but also any idea that I have,
I think any musician in the world would want to go like, I want to hear what Mayor has for me.
So I feel like that's the idea that I could bring anything to life that came to mind.
That's the ultimate for me.
I'm interested.
So as your rise to fame, how did your interactions with women change?
Oh, that's a good question.
And I think I saw.
the approval of women as being something that was like each time somebody liked what I did,
I felt like because of the way that I was brought up, that that was the only time that was
going to happen. And so I feel like I was made to believe growing up that if somebody liked
me, that was pretty much an accident. And that should be capitalized on. And so,
I felt very deeply when somebody liked me.
Very deeply.
I think, look, you know, the elephant in the room is that I'm on a show that caters to women.
And I have a couple of nameplates on me, like Lothario and Womanizer and stuff.
And I think, look, that is what that is.
That's the role I play on the big TV show that I didn't write.
That's fine.
Maybe I had a hand in it or something.
But I think people would be surprised to know that it was less me going like, you know, the meme of the guy behind the tree.
It was less this and more like this.
Me?
Yeah.
You know, because it was always set forth to me that like that shouldn't happen.
Right.
Like without dissecting into your childhood, the, a woman's approval.
and attention to you, clearly there was an insecurity within you
that you perk up and would fight till the end
to make sure that you're getting to experience that
as long as they're willing to give it to you.
And you're like waiting for someone to give you the approval
and that like breathed life into you essentially.
And you loved a woman giving you attention or validation.
Most of that is true and it's so true.
I can't even, I won't even flat spin about that after this is over.
I won't even, that's, some things are too true for me to get upset about.
That's remarkably true what you just said, except it was a little less overt in terms of me being like, yeah, keep going, keep going.
Right.
Because I did invest myself.
I did invest myself in relationship.
Well, and I think we can also agree, and we talked about this a little bit at dinner, like there's, you have perspective now.
Right. Yeah. Like we can wrap things into a bow now. It's like, oh, I see what I was doing
in high school. Why I was so insecure and I was looking for the guy's validation. And then like,
I can now see what I was doing. In the moment you have the feelings, but you can't put it
all into a box. You now can be like, I get it now. I get what I was doing. I see the interactions
I had. And now I see this theme. And now I'm able in later in my life to be like, whoa, that's
why I did what I did.
Also known as growing up.
What a fucking concept.
Also known as growing up.
And like I said, like the people who were going to understand this interview the most are the
people who have had that, either been on the receiving end or the giving end of that, you know?
It's the people who haven't had that yet who will probably have the loudest reactions
because they don't understand it yet.
And we all meet up at the end of this.
At the end of these crazy 20s and 30s, we all.
all meet up and I meet people I can't remember if they were mad at me or if I was mad at
them because we all meet up after this craziness and we all go through our own stuff you
know we all meet up at the end and I say and we go hey how you doing this is I'm sure
a hard question to answer what is it like try your best yeah for almost everyone
in the world to know who you are
Because I don't really live exposed to all of it, I don't quite feel it, and I'm okay with it because it's linked to something that I have to do anyway.
I get to do this thing.
If I'm having a day where I don't like any of this stuff, I can pick up a guitar and listen to myself play and go, that's why you do it.
So the fact that this is all linked to something that I do objective.
well that I can listen to and I could write a song, I can play a song, I can play the
guitar. That's what anchors me to all this stuff. All of this is happening because I play the
guitar, write music, and sing in a way that people want to pay attention to. I can't imagine
what this would be like if I didn't have that grounding element. And as I get older,
I have so much empathy for people who are really well-known, but don't quite
have something to hold on to like a buoy, you know, my life gives me this buoy, which is I can
write a song, I can play guitar. It's tough even that way, but it's not like I'm famous from a thing
that happened to me or a thing I was a part of that I was no longer a part of because the person
who hired me for the thing didn't want me anymore. So it's very stable. I've come to terms
of the fact that it's never going to be another way.
And most of it now, because I don't really interface with people for anything other than music,
for the most part, it's like I have manufactured irrelevance in the parts of my career that I want to be irrelevant.
That is really scary to do.
It's really scary to come off of that loop when you're in a news cycle, news cycle, news cycle, news cycle.
To really go, I want to shut down this part, that part, that part, and that part.
and feel like you're dying inside because those parts are going away
now all I have left is like people who want to talk to me want to talk to me about
music I make people aren't I'm not trending on Twitter just because I got on a flight
and it was tough it was tough to be like yeah you're gonna play music you're gonna play
music and you're gonna put it all into that and not a day trading how people feel
about you so you're saying that you didn't essentially play the role
of the guy in Hollywood, the singer, everything didn't work well that people started,
like you said, like people started writing headlines about you.
I didn't deserve the role.
Why do you think that?
It wasn't made for me. I'm the musician guy who writes songs that are like kind of hits.
And I thought that I was just through my own manipulation of the thing was an A-lister.
And I was going to, I'm an A-I-list celebrity.
No, you're not. But I had this moment in my 20s where I thought, well, this is why I belong.
This is why I should be.
And obviously it wasn't because I didn't really handle it very well.
You know, I was like, didn't handle it very well.
And so then that all kind of shut down and I got a chance to start it up again.
And I haven't ever been happier in my life.
I'm known for what I do.
You're kind of essentially alluding to like you fucked up in your 20s or that's what?
Yeah, late 20s, early 30s.
Okay.
Yeah.
And that kind of set you on a different course of I've got a, okay.
But a more natural course.
I'm only doing what I should be doing.
And I think there's a lot of people who are stuck in that loop of like not being where they want to be, but not wanting to be forgotten.
And it's scary the idea that if you pulled away, you'd be forgotten.
That if you got off Twitter, you'd be forgotten.
That if you didn't throw yourself into the mix every day, you'd be forgotten.
It's beautiful to be forgotten in the ways you ultimately don't want to be known, you know.
What is an experience that shaped who you are that very few people know about?
That's a good one.
anxiety deep anxiety before there was a social media that could tell you what anxiety was
not to say it makes it any easier but anxiety feeds off of feeling isolated by it and so
it's a little bit easier now when you can read other people's experiences and go oh okay
I mean, having anxiety in mid-90s, late 90s, it's like, you think you're going crazy, you know?
And so that to me gave me so much more depth, so much more depth.
Those feelings, those feelings of panic, those feelings of the walls are closing in.
They come with questions.
They come with every question on.
Why can't I sleep?
What's going on in the universe?
What's going on in my body?
It turns into hypochondria.
How many, is my heart beating faster?
Is my, it's my throat closing?
Why do I feel my pulse in my ear?
And you're on WebMD, looking up everything.
And whatever that is also makes you super keyed in to yourself in a way that, for me,
I wrote a lot of, a lot of my music came from wanting answers after feeling really, really lost
because I lost my weight just in my head.
Like, it got to the point where when I would,
have an anxious moment, I'd be like, well, here comes a song. Do you ever get that?
Totally. But I think there's points where I was worried that good content sometimes comes at
your lowest. And it's really hard to describe unless you're a creator where you're
wondering if you're self-destructing to, like you're going to write a great sad song if you go
through a great breakup. I have an incredible episode if I break up with my partner. But at what
cost for you as an individual outside of your craft and your job is that extremely detrimental
to just your life? I never, and I can say this with great confidence. I never tried to induce
an experience just to write a song ever in my life, ever. I've never thought if I do this,
I'll get material.
I promise you, I would have absolutely, in those moments, as a 20, 21, 22, 23-year-old guy
traded every song I was going to write to not have that feeling.
No doubt about it.
No doubt about it.
I would have said, take all the songs he'll ever write, stop this feeling from happening right now.
And for whatever that feeling was, it just focused my,
eyes on the important things what's going on in life what is that's where these
lyrics come from you know that's where my first three records are from they're
about managing anxiety why Georgia why am I fucking here am I living it right
like why am I here you know there's a song not myself on the first record
would you want me what that's all about having a panic attack in front of somebody
suppose I said I you know
would you love me
I don't remember the lyrics like would you want me
when I'm not myself like
you ever have a panic attack on a date
no oh man that's that's how you bond
with someone right there
John that's how you
do you often have a panic on a date
well I mean they make things you could take now for that
but I yeah I'm
I want to okay so
I went on a date I was going on a date
am on my senior year in high school with like one of the prettiest girls couldn't believe that I'd gotten to the point where like this girl wanted to go to the movies with me I didn't drive until I was out of high school so I was writing shotgun so right there I'm being driven by the girl I'm going on the date with by the time we got to the movie theater and I was eating like tums because I had such bad nervous stomach this is before like you figured out benzodiazepines and I was eating to
Tom's stomachache and before we even got out of the car I was like I have a stomachache
can you drive me home and she drove me all the way home and I got home and as soon as I got
home I was like I'm deeply uncomfortable in in in a lot of situations and so for a really long time
I would resist going out with anybody because it would make me so nervous that my stomach
I would just be it would be terrible this is why I love sitting down with people because
When you think John Mayer, you can get any woman you want, right, in media land.
You could get any man you wanted.
Thanks, John.
I was saying being a famous guy is like being a hot girl.
Oh, that's so interesting.
Being a famous guy is like being a hot girl.
Okay, well, let me bring up my next question, okay?
People have been obsessed with who you've dated in your career.
And if you're going through like the tabloids and everything, it's like John Mayer is the it guy, right?
And recently you joked that you're America's ex-boyfriend.
Why did America break up with you?
That's my way of taking some of what I think is the air out of a, you know,
that's like elephant hunting in the room.
I like the statement.
Yeah.
I mean, that's how they see it.
Bottom line, I'm one guy living one life.
I don't need 300 million people in my life to agree.
that I'm an okay person.
Most people, until the dawn of the internet, need it about eight.
I've got multiples of eight, which makes me a very happy and lucky human being.
I only need to meet one more person that I want to spend the rest of my life with.
So I do not need to have this worldwide consensus that I'm an okay guy.
What is your type, right?
Hot, successful, makes more money than you?
That's really funny.
Well, I mean, every relationship I've ever been in was devoted to the idea that this could go, the distance.
My entire life, today included, if you told me that I could have a great two months with someone, but it would end on the first day of the third month, I would not be interested.
I have always sought potential for long-term relationship.
I know what my mistakes were looking back
Not worth talking about
We all, as long as you do the accounting
As long as you do your homework as a human being
As you stand in the shower
And you waste a little water
And you go, yeah
I really meant well but I did do that
Or yeah, they meant well but they did do that
And you go, wouldn't do that again
I would approach that a different way
Maybe even from the beginning
Maybe even from day one
seeing them across the room, who knows,
as long as you're aware of what those things are
and how you can apply that to the next relationship,
I don't see a problem with any past relationships ending badly.
I just don't.
Mine are different because they are well known.
And I have not had a relationship in a lot of years.
And it's funny how, I think I started to notice
like people would look at pictures of,
of hot dudes on the internet and be like,
I love this guy, I'd be like,
that picture's from 2002.
You know what I mean?
And it helps me understand
that we tend to hold on to
the part of someone's history
that we sort of revealed itself the most
or was the brightest, the most easy to visualize.
And so I still, look, I'm still in a lot of people's minds
in a good way doing something I'm not doing anymore.
Whether they're attached to a record
or a tour I was on.
They're still wanna share,
are YouTube videos of a tour I did in 2014 or whatever. And there are still people who go,
oh, yeah, he's the, he's, he's, he's the manhole or whatever, you know. But it's not on
each and every person to update their knowledge of me every year. You know what I mean?
But it's like you haven't updated your Facebook status. There you go. So everyone's looking at
your like 2009. That's actually a brilliant observation. It's like the world creates my Facebook
status. But, but so here's, here's why that's okay.
If somebody gets you a little bit wrong, if you said something and someone recounts it and they get one word wrong and it makes something sweet sound not sweet, you're going to jump out and go, that is not what I said, here's how I said it.
You're going to fine tune that thing that you're being misunderstood for.
There comes a point where if you're so misunderstood, it's almost like they're thinking about a different person.
so the me that most people who don't know me are thinking about is so far away from me that
I don't actually feel I don't actually feel like disrupted in any way by it they're talking about
a character or a thing that's been like an artifact right like this one little glitch that
sort of grew and became this other thing I don't feel the need and I hope you don't think
this is like me going like, let me set the record straight.
No, no, no, I'm, I'm in, you know, you're just taking us through your psyche.
Yeah, being being, being misunderstood at this age is nowhere near as painful as it was being
misunderstood in my 20s.
And a lot of the shit that I did in my 20s was an attempt to reset the misunderstanding.
And I made it worse.
Someone said to me years ago, you're trying to eat the monster that's trying to eat you.
I've never heard a more true thing.
said to me and I look at other people right now and I go, Elon Musk, you're trying to eat
the monster that's trying to eat you. I see it and I have grace for other people trying to do it.
We haven't learned that retreat is an option. Retreat is an option. I don't know where this
idea of stubborn fight to the death stuff came from. You'll lose everything. It's really interesting
to hear you talk about it because what I think we can also get to and you don't have to be
famous to have this being misunderstood there is something inside of all of us at one point when
you start to feel that it's a really exhausting scary feeling and you really want to fight to correct
everything if you if there's a rumor about you in high school if you if something happens at your
job and people see you the certain way you start to spiral and then there's that moment where all
of a sudden after so much fighting so much clawing so much trying to eat them all right yeah you're
like at peace with like I don't give a fuck because you're good with yourself your reality
is stronger than their ability to distort it and at first when it's not it's one of the most
sickening frightening painful things to have your reality distorted and if you're smart
theoretically you start coming up with a plan to engineer how to undistort the reality
that's been distorted and that's the beginning of the failure
because your behavior stops being natural and starts being what I did.
If you're going to distort me, I'm going to distort me.
I lost myself in that.
The idea of I'm going to be more like you think I am as a way to somehow phase cancel what it is,
as if playing into it would make everyone in the world who shares my exact thinking go,
oh he can't be that because he's acting like that he's in on it so that didn't work and that
didn't work and it was like I look back sometimes I go like you could have retreated and nobody
knows how to retreat because the stakes are so high the stakes are so high you've got half of the world
going well you love it when you do that and the other half of the world going you're losing your
mind and you go well I know one thing can't give up now and it's like but you could and six
months from now, you would be so happy that you did. I feel especially with social media,
you're trying so hard to prove yourself on this platform that's fake to begin with. And I really
feel like it's helpful to talk through like there is an option to retreat and you don't have
to post that photo to prove you were at that place. You don't have to post this photo and edit it. So
you look a certain way, even though you don't look like that way in person. Like there is just some
extreme peace in allowing yourself to enjoy what's in front of you and the people that know you
and care about you and your friends and your family.
Like, I've been subjected to it where I'm trying to prove that I'm not this girl and I'm not this girl.
And then all of a sudden I'm like, I don't even know these people.
Yeah.
What am I doing?
And you're losing your center point.
And I also think that people need to go through that.
A lot of times people think that the stuff that didn't go right in their life was a mistake.
And I don't think it's a mistake because I don't think there's any other way around it.
I don't even look at it like a problem.
It's like that's just the way it has to go.
Have you ever been in love?
Have you ever been in love?
Yes.
You're currently single.
Currently single.
Looking back at past relationships, is there anything that you have looked for of something of like a theme of what you want to work on within yourself moving forward?
That's a hot question.
I don't know yet because I haven't gotten, I never really got to the part.
of relationship that was the smooth sailing part.
I have a feeling when I do, I'm going to have a lot to work on,
but I'll be excited to work on it because it won't be that incredibly fundamental stuff
of like, how do we stay together?
You know, like, I'm always supremely impressed by couples that I know who are having a hard time,
but haven't even considered breaking up.
That's hot.
Like that to me is the hottest.
Someone complains about their girlfriend or their wife
and you're like,
you start to allude to them wanting to go somewhere else.
I'm like, what are you talking about?
No, I'm not going anywhere else.
We're just having a hard time.
I want that.
And I have a feeling that I'm going to be ready to cop to
a little bit of intellectual control issues.
Only on an intellectual,
sexual side. Like I can be, I can be, I'm trying to be a little more heart overhead, but I can
be a little heady. And I think it's cool to say to someone, this is my thing, this is what I'm
going to work on. And I love the idea of sharing that with someone and them saying, you're doing it
again. And you go, I'm doing it again. Sorry. What is your dating style? Like, and how has it evolved?
Like, what are you like? I don't know. I don't date that that much. I look at it like this.
Dating is no longer a codified activity for me.
It doesn't exist in any kind of,
it's not patterned anymore.
I quit drinking like six years ago,
so I don't drink anymore.
I don't have the liquid courage.
How do you feel about that?
How has that changed your dating life?
You have to be honest.
You have to express yourself.
You have to be really glaringly honest.
Here's who I am.
Here's what I like.
Here's what makes me nervous.
Here's what I reject as an idea in relationship.
I don't know about, you know, you have to express your anxieties.
You can't just walk over them by drinking.
You have to be like, here's what I'm anxious about.
And when someone in life accommodates your anxiety, that's bonding.
Right.
Kind of cutting past the surface level bullshit and being like, can we connect on a way that feels cozy
and like we know each other past just like hey so like that's right where did you grow up for
yeah where you're done with giving the um the free trial yes there comes a moment where your free trial
runs out how quickly will someone know that you're into them it takes me a while it takes me a while
uh i think the way to my heart now as i get older is i don't know that i have like five-hour dates in me
I don't have these deep excursions at a table that go into like this sort of job interview vibe.
I would rather have someone, I'll be honest with you.
I've thought about this before.
I would love someone to say, hey, I'm coming over your house for an hour and a half.
I'm bringing my laptop.
Just need the Wi-Fi code.
I'll be on the couch.
I'm not trying to take up all your space.
I have a really good feeling about you.
I don't want to do the thing where I start to make you feel claustrophobic because I really
have a good feeling about you.
Give me the Wi-Fi code.
I'll eat one of your yogurts.
Talk to me when you want to talk to me.
I'd be like, I want to do that.
Do you know how many people are going to DM you?
I'd be like, John, can I have the Wi-Fi code?
I'm going to just come over.
Maybe I said that just for it.
I mean, but I actually think more people would find love sooner if it was less intense
exposure for shorter periods of time, but more frequently.
Just settling down freak you out.
Nope.
This is the part that always shocks people.
They go, you don't want to get married.
Of course I want to get married.
I'm just, you're not going to see me go on a battery of dates with different people.
I am a pocket listing.
I'm not really on, what is it, the MLS.
All the heavy lifting's done in my learning what I need to learn.
just in terms of entering in a relationship.
I can't wait for someone to be mad at me
because I said that I would take the dry cleaning in.
And they were going to until I said I would,
but then I didn't.
And if you're going to tell me
that you're going to take the dry cleaning,
you have to do that because I would love that.
I would love that
because that would suggest that we're into something deep,
meaningful, and secure.
It goes back to what you've said.
your friends you're like okay so you're gonna leave and they're like fuck no like we're in this
nothing's hotter to me than conflict resolution conflict resolution I am horny for conflict resolution
in the middle of an argument we're having an argument and I go wait I do do that I did do that
I'm sorry you're right I didn't nope you're right I didn't get it I do do that I do do that I'm sorry
do that. I'm sorry. What's something that is currently keeping you up at night?
What's something that is currently keeping me up at night? Metaphorically keeping me up at
night. Yeah.
Whether I should put out a whole record as my next release or song at a time, can't tell. Put a record
out you get a week comes and goes put a song at a timeout and you get repeated shots repeated
looks at the ball um so why wouldn't you do that what's that so why wouldn't you do that
i think i'd probably put a song at a time out i think i think that feels right i think i think song
at a time is right for this next record like i would love a record personally so i can just binge it like
little netflix moment but i get what you're saying is like you get to kind of yeah i'm not on a label anymore
And so that kind of keeps me up at night
that the next thing I do
would seem to be
would seem to be
I hope it was small enough that a camera
couldn't catch it.
You literally go, I'm not with a label anymore.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
That was badly times.
That was badly timed.
I was bad.
What's up, bitch?
Can I also get a nail file?
So I can I get a nail file
and say, I'm not with the label anymore.
No, I'm sorry.
I'm deeply concerned about anything being on this dark sweater.
Oh, looking good.
Thank you.
Not being on a label feels a little bit like the next thing I do I have to prove myself.
Can you explain what are, how is your writing going?
Like you write everything.
I write everything.
I mean, that part's really fun looking back on it to have 100% ownership of the songs I've
read.
But it's, I mean, it's hugely time consuming.
Yeah.
hugely time consuming and as you get older time gets more valuable which makes this you know this deep diving that I do feel a little harder because no matter how old you get this stuff still takes a year to write you know when you're one guy and you want to sound like you're five guys you've got to be yourself five different ways and you can't do that all in one day so the way you make music that sounds
really complex is to hit it repeatedly on different days
with different mindsets
which takes a very long time
very long time you write a whole song and you'll go
oh I only needed that one verse which is actually the chorus
to this thing and that dies and then this moves over to here
and I would never do it any other way I'd rather not put a record out
than fall off in that way and when you're saying this like are
you go to a recording studio I go to a recording studio every day
nine to five, I have a job. Without it, I would fall apart. How many people are in that studio
with you? One or two. Wow. It's just me and an engineer and an assistant sometimes. The
guitar tech comes in and out. And I go home. I think about what I did that day, how I can make it
better. I'm always writing. I bring a new thing in. Is this a thing? No. Is this a thing? Yes.
actually no is this a thing yes actually hell yes they're all different experiences and when
you win you go home feeling like a god did anyone see what i just brought to life today i cannot
believe i still have it i still have it this is incredible this is incredible and then you have to
go write another one you go write another one and you're stuck in the same slog that every other song was
and you go, I'm garbage, I don't have it anymore, I'm out, I'm done, and you'll find another
one, I'm on top of the world. Sometimes I'll write a song and it'll be really good and I'll go,
just don't write another one for two or three days. Just relax because you're going to only be
as happy as the last thing that frustrated you. Right. You know? What does it like, what does it
feel like to be on stage performing in front of thousands and thousands of people?
It's its own dimension. It's its own dimension. It's its own
dimension. I will go on record as saying I'm really different than most musicians in that
I don't. And I'm going to have to finish this thought because it's going to sound a little scary
if I don't. I don't feed off the energy of the crowd. It is not a drug to me. You hear people
say when the lights go down, you hear that noise, it comes in me like a drug. And I know that's how
most people feel. That's not how I feel. Every night before I go on stage, I go, okay. All right.
here we go because I'm a little nervous to do that not that I don't think I'm going to be any good at it
but just the act of it is foreign and then I'll get on stage okay all right and then somewhere in the
middle of the first song I'm gone I'm gone having the time of my life the one thing people
don't understand about that job the entire time I'm up there I am worried that they're not
having as good a time as I could give them
Not worried to the point where it's unpleasant, but it is a constant consideration.
Do they want this song?
Or do they want a different song?
Are they waiting for this song to be over?
Or do they want a nice song?
Am I playing?
Like, if I had to make a set list right now, I'd hate it because I have so much music
from so many different areas of music that I don't know what anybody exactly wants.
So I have to start writing a set list that would disappoint people equally and satisfy them equally.
and so I only want people to go that was great
I only want them to be happy
so I spent a lot of time while I'm playing going like
do they want this one
and the answer is always yeah man they want those songs
but while I'm playing it's a very strange mix
of like hyper confidence
and like the person I really am
which is like I hope you like this
as I'm like ascending
through the cosmos playing guitar
I'm like, I don't know if you like this one or not, but I hope you do.
It is the holidays.
This is a holiday special.
I've never done this before.
Are you a New Year's Resolution kind of guy?
Vaguely.
I don't.
I also think, like, I've done well enough in my life that I don't have to like overhaul everything as I go through.
Yeah, I'm a New Year's Resolution guy.
Are you asking me what that might be?
Do you have one?
No, not yet.
going to come up with that on vacation.
This is part maybe of the New Year's resolution, which is to just do things that are
a little uncharacteristic, what you find uncharacteristic every once in a while.
And so this is really me going like, okay, this is out of character and that's okay.
I know it's out of character.
It's going to be okay.
If I say a thing that the news cycle picks up and gives me a headache for two or three days,
I know I'm going to be okay.
So there might actually be something that exists that I didn't see coming.
That's really nice for people to go, oh, I never really heard him talk in long form, you know.
So we're kicking off your New Year's resolution with you coming on call her daddy.
Yeah.
Okay.
You're going to kill me.
Okay.
I begged you to Britain.
This is what I did.
Okay.
I beg John.
Yeah.
I know there's a guitar here on the phone.
To bring his guitar.
Yes.
More because, you know, I love the Daddy Gang.
Everyone listening, watching, I love you.
Selfishly, I need you to play just a couple things.
I get it.
You want to watch me do the thing I just talked about for an hour?
Yes.
Okay.
Get the guitar.
Let's go.
Here we go.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
It's not a silly little moment.
It's not the storm before the calm.
This is the deep and dying breath.
It's the little that we've been working all and on.
Can't seem to hold you like a water to want
so I can hold you in my arms.
Nobody's going to come to save us.
We put too many false alarms.
We're going down.
and you can see it soon
we're going down
and you know that we're doomed
my dear we're slow dancing
in a burning moon
I was the one
I was the one you always dreamed of
You were the one I tried to draw
How dare you say it's nothing to me
Baby you're the only light I ever saw
I make the most of all the sadness
You know you be a bitch because you can
You try to hit me just to hurt me so you leave me feeling dirty
Because you can't understand
We're going down
You can see it soon
We're going down
And you know that we're doing
My dear, we're slow dancing in a burning room
Oh, go cry about it, why don't you?
Yeah.
Go cry about it, why don't you?
Yeah.
Oh, go cry about it, go cry about it.
Oh, my dear, we're slow dancing and a burning room.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Oh, no, no, in a burning room.
Don't you think we ought to know by now?
Don't you think we should have learned somehow?
Don't you think we ought to know by now, but you think we should have learned somehow?
I don't want to burn, I don't want a burning, burning, burning, da-da-da-da.
My dear, we're slow dancing in a burning room.
Thank you very much.
Wow.
Thank you.
I have no words.
Thank you.
It's not like, there's like this guitar solo stuff that I do in the song, but on an acoustic, I just have to be like, no, it's fine.
We can use that line in Georgia.
We love.
Afternoon
I'm just stuck inside the gloom
Yeah
Do you know who says?
I think I heard it
Who says I can't kiss on
Turn off the lights in the telephone
Me and my house alone
Who says I can't get stone
Who says I can't take time
And meet all the girls in the county line
County line, we don't
fade to send this. Oh, I did it wrong.
It's okay. Don't you see the
cheat of having a guitar?
Yeah. Do you do this
before you have sex with someone? No, I
do it after sometimes.
No, you should never play a guitar
to have sex with someone, but a little
naked guitar playing after
is very memorable.
With a little gut hanging over.
Sitting on the end of the
bad little gut hanging over.
You know? It's nice.
I don't think anyone is staring at your gut, John.
I like the way people look when they fold all up all weird when they sit up.
No matter who you are, you look weird when you sit up and it's cute.
You know what I mean?
You look great right now.
Sure not.
But people, everyone, no matter who you are, you sit up.
Of course.
It's great.
Humans.
We have skin.
Yeah, and after you're all done, everyone just looks sort of like dopey in a cool way.
Okay.
So, yeah, this is actually when I came up with, I came up with,
I came up with, who says I can't kiss stone.
I think I was in bed, a little stoned on a bed.
And it was after having some fun.
And that's one of the acoustic guitar is great.
It's so lame to do it before.
So you're telling me that a special someone got to watch you create a line.
I think so.
Damn.
Can you sing daughters?
Yes, I can sing daughters.
And daughters, I think it might have been on this guitar.
I wrote that in 2003.
I was in New Zealand or Australia
and I was in the shower
when I came up with it
and got out of the shower naked
and skipped the next thing I had to do
which was a radio interview.
I was like, I can't do the radio interview
I have to write this song
because it was the cyclical
as soon as I broke because it was like
fathers be good to your daughters
daughters will love like you do.
You know, that was interesting.
And then when I came up with the circle of,
Girls become lovers who turn into mothers.
And then I came up, so mothers be good to your daughters too.
That whole swirl, I was like, that's something.
Like the geometry of that.
It seems like a lot of your songwriting is happening when you're naked.
Because a lot of things, yes, yes, in the shower a lot.
I want to put a microphone in the shower.
But what I like about Daughters is that for all the tracks people use for songs, and I love songs with a lot of tracks, but this is one of the songs where the whole song is on the guitar. This is, this is the whole song of Daughter. That's the song.
It's like pressing play-up, except for the shaker.
I know a girl, she puts the cut.
in the color inside of my world.
But she's just like a maze
where all of the walls are continually changed.
And I've done all I can
to stand on her steps with my heart in my hands.
Now I'm starting to see
that maybe it's got nothing to do with me
Fathers be good to your daughters
Daughters will love like you do
Girls become lovers
Who turn into mothers
So mothers be good
To your daughters
Too, oh yeah
Now the thing that people got wrong about that song
Was that I'm not really talking too five
I'm not a 24 year old guy going like
Hey, older man
It was
It's about the frustration of wanting
To have a relationship with someone
who can't because of upbringing so if you've ever met someone you're like oh I can't I can't
fix this particular part of your operating system and then you're so desperate because you wish
you could have that person that it really is a leap of logic to say you're so upset that you're
going like stop you know what I'm saying like I wanted this girl so badly to be to be able to
receive my love who's ass do I have to kick and I think it got red
that's what happens when you work metaphorically
as people misunderstand it a lot
and so I think people thought that I was just like
well I'm 24 let me tell dads how to raise their daughters
but it's like a big like first dance wedding song
and I think it works both ways
and as I get older it works a little easier as both ways
I just didn't think a 20 it didn't make sense
to some people out of 24 wait now I didn't get that obviously
and now I completely get it where it's like oh you're kind of being like
hey I love this girl so much but she's little fucked up
because her dad did I or the mom yeah it's it's this idea
that it's a little selfish you know yeah like hey I kind of I kind of wanted to love this person
asshole right you know it doesn't make it it's emotional it's like it sounds logical but it's
mostly emotional what is the one okay I'm gonna forget the name because it's not give me keywords
it's fine um um not broken heart but it's like not dancing with a broken heart dreaming with a broken
heart yeah such a good one it's on the piano but
It's weird to do on the guitar
Sounds exactly the same
It's up there
But it's like
When you're dreaming with a broken heart
It's like I have to really sing it
The waking up is the hardest part
I figured out how to sing it now
You roll out of bed
And down on your knees
And for a moment you can hardly breathe
wondering was she really here
is she standing in my room
no she's not
because she's gone
gone gone
When you're gone.
When you're dreaming with a broken heart,
the giving up is the hardest part.
Isn't that what it is?
I think so.
She takes you in with a crying eyes.
Is it giving?
I don't remember.
And all it wants, you start to, uh, that's not the same lyrics as the.
I don't know, but I'm trying.
Yeah, that's right. All it wants, you start to say goodbye.
Wondering would you say my love?
And when you wake up by my side, no, she won't,
because she's gone, gone, gone, and it's like,
How about being old enough now that I can't remember some of those songs?
And me picturing myself driving home from a break.
I'm like, John!
Right.
Do I have to fall asleep with roses in my hand?
That's right.
Do I have to fall asleep with roses in my hand?
Yeah.
Then it's a way up.
Do I have to fall asleep with roses in my, roses in my hand?
And would you get them if I did?
No, you won't because you're gone, gone, gone, gone.
It goes, just the verse more more time.
When you're dreaming with a broken heart.
The waking up is the hardest part.
I haven't played a song a while.
That song got me through.
So much heartbreak.
Yeah.
I did.
I woke up.
One day I was making continuum.
I woke up and I had a dream about someone.
And I had a crush on them the whole rest of the day
because I had had a dream about them.
Do you still have dreams where you wake up
and you loved someone and now you have a crush
and you're all emotional.
Oh yeah, you're thinking about them.
It's the best feeling in the world as you get older.
But I went to the studio and they were working on something else
and I went and sat in this big reverb chamber and closed the door
and I was like, I've got to work on this song.
And that's all about the pain of having a dream.
about someone that you don't know but have a crush on or that you know and have a crush
for me i didn't really know this person but just had a crush on them i'll never say who uh
because it's random it's very random it's not yeah waking up is the hardest part wow yeah because you're
like oh john i want to i'm going to speak for the masses that you just made a lot of people's holidays
oh cool truly like it's so fucking cool to see uh-huh oh i mean keep talking i yeah this is a good way
to end the show i'm really happy that you came on the show we got deep we had fun we're friends
now which is fun i have a new friend thank you for sharing your location with me
Cassie was like he does that yeah I'm excited um no you brought out a side of yourself that I
really appreciate you sharing because it is very cool to see someone that is so huge in their own
right but to get to sit with you and hear just a little bit of the personal side of you makes
this even cooler thank you thank you for um being kind to me good to me and making me feel
comfortable. I'm now a fan of the show.
I don't know if there's an initiation into
the daddy gang, but I will do whatever it takes. I think you
have to look into the camera to say hi daddy gang. Hi daddy gang.
Woo! John Mayer, thank you so much for coming on Caller Daddy.
Thank you for having me. It was a pleasure. So much fun.
Have yourself
a merry little Christmas
let your heart be light
From now on, our troubles will be out of sight.
And have yourself a merry little Christmas now.
Thank you very much. You might have to edit that one. I didn't nail that bridge.
