Call Her Daddy - Zayn: For the First Time in 6 Years
Episode Date: July 12, 2023Multi-platinum recording artist Zayn joins Call Her Daddy for his first sit-down interview in nearly 6 years. From Alex's childhood home in Pennsylvania, he opens up about his surprisingly quiet life ...in PA, his pre-fame days, his X Factor audition, his reflections on his time with One Direction, and his decision to leave the group. Zayn also discusses the impact of fame on his mental health, proudly sharing his experiences as a father and how it has shifted his priorities. With his highly anticipated new music on the horizon, Zayn provides insight into his inspirations. Get ready to discover a whole new side of Zayn, zaddy gang ;) Pre-save Zayn’s new single coming out next week!https://zayn.lnk.to/presave
Transcript
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what is up daddy gang it is your founding father alex cooper with call her daddy
hey zane welcome to call her daddy hey i'm so happy that you're here we have to preface this
with my fans are watching this like where the fuck are you guys we are in my childhood home
daddy gang okay Zayn and I are in my living room that I grew up in Zayn got here and has had to
look at all the embarrassing childhood photos of me thank you so much for coming I've never done
what did you say I didn't see any embarrassing photos. I think you hid them all.
Actually, there's a couple.
You'll see them on your way out, and then you'll never look at me the same.
I have never done a podcast in my childhood home.
So this feels like a little sentimental.
Also, you never really do interviews.
I don't.
When is the last time you did something like this?
I think I did an interview like six years ago was last time I did one so we're kind of like
popping the cherry back off I think so yeah something like that so you're living in Pennsylvania
and I obviously grew up here I loved it growing up it's very family oriented very suburban
but I'm curious to know like of all the trendy spots that you could have picked why Pennsylvania um yeah it's interesting
a lot of people ask me that like they always think it's super random that I live out here um I ended
up coming out here um with with my ex a bit like and I fell in love with it like it was just super
like calm and chill like you said suburban um and I just wanted to like take a break from like the
busy city because like I was living in New York for three years at the time.
It just got a bit overwhelming,
going out of your door to just craziness all the time.
So I just wanted a bit more of a surrounding that I'm used to,
like where I grew up in Bradford, in the UK.
It's a lot more this kind of pace and vibe. So I feel like I just fit
in better around here than I do in the trendy spots as it were. Yeah, you give trendy vibes.
But I think I totally relate to that of like, sometimes when you get to that, yeah, yeah,
I give trendy vibes. You give trendy vibes, like look at your outfits, like pretty swaggy.
But then you're also like hanging with the Amish folks.
So it's like a good little juxtaposition Zane.
But what I find interesting is I love that you said like you would be in New York city
and I'm assuming you would be going out and there's paparazzi everywhere taking photos of you.
Pennsylvania,
there ain't no paparazzi.
That's a great thing.
Are they finding you or no no no
there's none out here I think there's like laws and stuff they're not allowed to even take photos
in certain places oh that's amazing okay the most important question have you gone to Wawa yet I have
Wawa is a nighttime lifesaver out here I was like I how am i gonna get along with zane if he hasn't like had a love
for wawa yet so you love it yeah like late night studio sessions there's nothing else open you have
to go to wawa get the the meatball soap yeah it is so fucking superior i remember growing up and
my excuse whenever i would want to go like meet up with boys would be like mom like i just want
to go get a wawa sub and she'd be like you're not using wawa as your cover-up
okay so i feel like again you're kind of this mysterious guy zane we don't really know too
much about you you're kind of under the radar so can you take me through a typical day in the life
of zane in pennsylvania like what are we doing make us feel like we're a part of your life um
a typical day for me is uh it kind of varies, depends, you know, like, what kind of mood I wake up in, but I take it pretty easy, like, I just, either now, because obviously I've got my daughter, like, 50% of the time, it's a balance between the two things, but when I'm by myself, a typical day is, I probably wake up around, like, mid a shower eat some food and then like figure out if
I'm going to go to the studio and do some writing because I've been in like writing mode for a long
time just like working on my records and stuff so just yeah just getting into the studio pretty
much and then I'll be there like all day until I go to sleep. Then you're going to Wawa? I'm going
there I go to Wawa yeah and stop off for a sandwich. Are you someone that likes to be alone? I like my own space. I like to
collect my thoughts in like a more quiet environment. I feel like when there's a lot
of people around, it kind of like just gets a bit hectic for me yeah I just I like to chill by
myself from time to time but I don't mind hanging out with people now like on occasion you know I'm
saying like it has to be the right kind of environment and I have to like want to be there
you know no I get that I feel like that's also growing up like I was recently talking to some
of my audience I was meeting them in person and we're like it's kind of weird when you just start to grow up you just get more specific with who you want to spend
your time with I think that's a healthy thing obviously you're on a even bigger stage because
you were around millions of people in stadiums and tours and everything but I also think that's
kind of relatable it's like you know what sometimes I want to be alone and then I'll still hang with
people but like you got to be good company yeah I've always thought like um it would be you know
a pretty normal reaction to feel that way around so many people I think anybody who was like
overwhelmed in that manner would feel you know a certain type of way about it but um I'm definitely
learning to manage it a lot better like um as I'm older, it's more of a choice rather than a hindrance.
It's not like I can't do that.
It's like I'd rather prefer not to.
Yeah, that makes sense.
I own it a bit more, yeah.
You obviously love music, but can you share with us what are some of your other hobbies?
What are you passionate about?
What's other than music?
My main passion i think
outside of music is is art i love to paint and i love to draw um i do a bit of cooking okay tell
me one of your dishes come on i can't cook for shit i can cook a lot of different things um but
i like to cook meat like specifically like um i have a smoker outside and i like to smoke like lamb and and i cook like
my like i'll do like grilled vegetables with it and stuff is this like new or were you always good
at cooking i wasn't always good at cooking unfortunately for me no my mom kind of spoiled
me as a kid so when i was living by myself like at 17 there was some botched jobs done for some meals yeah it wasn't wasn't great
some some disgusting uh stuff was going down for sure yeah horrible yeah just sandwiches you know
out of like crisps that's kind of nice to be able to know like you can cook you're over there
painting you can sing okay no big deal don't keep bragging over there wow making us all look bad
do you have animals i do yeah i've got a lot of animals i have three cats three dogs do they get
along uh they're kind of like in different places i have some dogs at one part of my house and the
cats in the other um the we have three turtles six chickens do you name them all
no i haven't not this time i got too attached last time and it did it made me really sad did
the chickens die yeah i took i took my chicken to the vet um to get a scan because something
was wrong with her and the vet laughed at me and said people don't bring
chickens here um and and then they still charged me for an x-ray and then i took my chicken all
the way home and cried and she died in my arms what are you saying i'm like not laughing because
it is kind of funny but not because the chicken died but it's just funny seeing me take a chicken
to and when you say you're holding your chicken like are you holding your chicken like this yeah fully on my lap yeah
she died on my lap so you weren't crazy for going to the vet no yeah she had something wrong with
it we tried to rescue them they were going to be uh slaughtered i think um and uh they had all
kinds of things wrong with them yeah but i've got new chickens now and they're all healthy and stuff.
But I didn't name them for that reason.
Okay.
And what are the names of the cats?
Salem, Dobby and Vito.
Dobby.
Is that from Harry Potter?
It's from Harry Potter.
He's a sphinx.
He's a pink sphinx.
Yeah.
So he looks a little bit like Dobby.
Dobby!
Harry!
That's so good.
You're a Harry Potter fan.
I'm a big Harry Potter fan. Zane, I didn't know that about you. I wouldn't have pegged you as're a Harry Potter fan I'm a big Harry Potter fan
Zayn
I didn't know that about you
I wouldn't have pegged you
As like a Harry Potter guy
Yeah
This is like really good vibes
It was my thing as a kid
Yeah
That's really good
Okay and what are the dogs names
Um
Zion
Zeus
And Thumper
Thumper
With an F
With an F yeah
Thumper
Thumper
Like Thumper
But with an F
How did you come up with that Uh Bambi thumper thumper like thumper but with an f how did you come up with that
uh bambi thumper the rabbit but you wanted an f yeah thumper thought sounded better yeah
it's better in my accent thumper yeah it does sound pretty good um something i love to do on
call her daddy is like the reason we all are the way that we are is because of our childhood, where we came from, who we were raised by, our environment growing up.
Obviously, you living in Pennsylvania right now is so different from where you grew up in the UK in Bradford, like you described.
Can you explain to people that may not be familiar with Bradford, like, what was your upbringing like and what was that environment like?
Why do you want me to start? wherever it feels right go ahead uh yeah Bradford's not obviously like Pennsylvania in terms of you know like the wealth and the way that it's like
you know looked after taken care of it's uh it's a impoverished community you know there's
people below working class there that um that you know, a hard environment that they're growing up in.
You know, everyone's kind of got some issues going on at home or something's happening, you know, even if it's on the street or whatever, wherever you go, there's a lot of confliction, you know.
So it was very different to here in that sense, for sure.
But I'm very grateful for where I grew up because it definitely, like you said, shaped and molded a lot of identity for me.
Early on, I was questioned, you know, like interrogated about my identity because of my environment.
Like it's just the way it is. Like you have to have a good understanding of who you are.
And I'm really grateful for that.
You know, it helped cement my own identity myself, I think.
When you talk about like people
would question your identity.
I know your family is not from the UK.
Your family is Pakistani.
And I'm curious, is that what you're-
My father is, my mom's English. Okay. Yeah. So did, are you saying like, is that what you're... My father is, my mom's English.
Okay, so are you saying, like, is that how that was influenced?
No, not necessarily, just in every sense of the word,
like, even, like, your fashion, the clothes you want to wear,
the way you want to cut your hair, it was always,
something was questioned, you know, if you weren't doing the norm
that was, like, that everybody was doing,
or everyone was following, you know,
everyone would wear a certain type of pant or a certain type of shoe,
and if you weren't dressed that way you would get questioned about
it you know like people would be very like in your face and be like give you shit so you had to like
have a bit about you so that you could you know know who you were and have a conversation back
have a bit of wits about you as it is you know street smarts for sure you got to be able to like
hold your own exactly yeah and when you say people are coming at you is it more like peer dynamics of or is it more like
authoritative figures there's there's a yeah there's a a balance a mix sorry of everything
it's um it depends you know there's there's the peer pressure in schools and stuff but then it's
on the street if you go out there and stuff if you're just trying to have a good time, you know, like it's not as friendly fun, you know.
It's a bit more like irate.
There's a bit of aggression going on.
You know what I mean?
Talk to me about where you grew up.
Like, are you in an apartment?
Are you in a condo?
Oh, no.
I grew up in a terraced house.
In a rented property. We never owned our own house um so yeah it was it was a small house there was like three bedrooms
kitchen living room but the streets like are all like every house is like stuck next to the one
next to it you know i'm saying there's no space you have a garden that's like like enough
for maybe a dog to sit in um so yeah it's it's a bit different for sure yeah so you have three
sisters okay and so you are the one boy and three sisters what was it like growing up with all
mostly women around you like how do you think that shaped you um I feel like I learned a lot of
things like early on um my sisters are very opinionated you know they're very um strong
characters um and uh yeah I love them they're great they were a lot of fun yeah it was always
entertaining in our house for sure I love i really love when i meet a guy
and i'm you can just tell that he has sisters because you can just tell the way they move
around women you guys learn what a fucking tampon is earlier i had to go to the store and buy them
wow so you were like really supporting that time of the month yeah terrified yeah but supportive
for sure okay were you reluctant to
go to the store and buy definitely not it was just kind of weird like when the shopkeeper would ask
me like why i was buying them and i'm like obviously i'm not buying them for myself you
know like do you have to ask me that like just let me buy this you wouldn't stick like a couple
extra like snacks around it you're just like tampons we didn't have money for extra snacks
it was just it needs to mean yeah zane's like i'll take this super as these bitches are on it the other way
around but yeah exactly it was always an awkward conversation but yeah i didn't mind it i respect
it i really do sisters okay to people obviously that weren't there in your childhood how would
you describe your personality as a kid?
My personality as a kid?
I think I was a bit of a cheeky, cheeky chappy.
Yeah, I used to be mischievous.
I used to get into all kinds of just childish stuff, you know,
like climbing in places I shouldn't have been and falling out of trees and smashing windows and stupid things.
Oh.
With a football accidentally
of course you know right we're right for sure for sure so you were getting in trouble a little bit
just like childish stuff though you know nothing too serious yeah like climbing trees exactly yeah
exciting shit okay so you were kind of just like doing your thing as a kid but I also think the
way that you're describing the environment that you grew up was there a way that
you could have gone down the wrong path easily because of that environment it was easy to get
wrapped up in the wrong crowd oh definitely yeah I think there was always uh an opportunity to
go and do something that you know uh would have got you in like serious trouble um I was uh really
lucky in a sense that like my mother and father like were super protective
of that environment my dad was always aware of you know the things that were out there and he
always explained stuff to me from a young age and kind of kept me away from that if I'm being
honest and that's where like I developed into being a person that likes to be by myself and
like in my room like singing singing, recording, writing,
I got into, you know, poetry and things like that. Cause I was in my room a lot, like,
and I didn't like to be in them kind of environments. It was just a bit too much.
I was always a bit more of a reserved kind of guy, a bit, you know, artistic, wanted to do my
own thing. I didn't really want to be in that so my parents did a good job of
keeping me away from it I think yeah did you get along with kids in school were you like the cool
kid were you bullied like what was the vibe yeah I think I got on with with pretty much everyone
but I wasn't like I was the type of person who only had like two three close friends I didn't
have like a big group like I knew people people knew me. I don't think I was the cool kid, but I wasn't bullied either.
Yeah.
Like if people knew me, they were friendly with me.
Yeah.
I feel like a lot of kids, we always have that like memory.
Maybe it's financial.
Maybe it's something with the parents or the siblings or extended family.
Like of like a childhood memory that you remember your family kind of just
being like stressed or going through something difficult,
kind of like if you could remember kind of a childhood memory that you
remember just being like stressed about something in your life.
Like looking back at like childhood stresses,
like I feel like a lot of them were so like fin, finicky that it was just probably just some teenage shit,
you know what I mean?
It wasn't anything important.
So I don't really look back at things like that
in my personality, the way I am.
Like, I've never really, like, looked back and been like,
oh, yeah, this is one thing that, like, kind of was, you know,
a stressful thing.
I think life is interesting like that.
I think, you know, it depends on what you're going through
at that time and how you feel, and then you can reflect on it at a different
point and feel completely differently about it. It's so interesting. I have a lot of respect even
for you answering it like that. Cause I know that you've been open about like at one point,
your family being on food stamps. And I feel like a lot of people would sit here and that
may have been the answer, right? That would have been like, well, fuck, like I couldn couldn't even i didn't know where my next meal was and you're like oh you know maybe it was
childish shit like no big deal and it's like that's interesting if you yeah no and obviously
there is there was some serious things like that for sure too but i don't look back at it in in
terms of a negative light you know it all helped to like shape and mold who I am and make me grateful for
the things that I have now, you know? Yeah. So we are here because you can sing. When did you first
realize you were passionate about singing and you could sing? I think I was about 11, 12.
I'd sung a little bit before, like I done a bit in in like school choir and stuff um
funny story i actually fancied like these three girls that were in choir um and they were triplets
and that's why i just was like i'm gonna be in choir just so i can hang around these girls
um and then it developed from there when uh i went into high school i went to a performing arts college like specifically like majored in in sports and performing arts and um they were doing the
school production that year for greets and i auditioned um and nobody could sing like at all
like in our whole school and i went and did this like singing audition everyone was like whoa you can sing and then my um music teacher like recommended that I get like a couple of singing
lessons and stuff um and then she said I think you should go on x factor I think you've got a
good chance like and it just kind of went from there like I love that the story started with
you know there were these three triplets and it just felt right to join
choir I was like eight as well by the way so swaggy you're like I gotta get in that class
to just yeah spend this time right so like your natural just like boy interest ended up you
realized something that you had a true talent from the triplets to x factor you made so it's so funny
too because you say you wouldn't be where you are without your mom because you didn't want to get
out of bed the morning that you had the x factor audition and your mom made you go why did you also
not want to go initially um i think it was just nerves um i i built it up in my head and i was
like yo this is a massive thing
and yeah i was like i don't think i'm gonna go today my mom's like you are going you're going
right now you're gonna go see what happens so yeah i definitely owe it to her for that for sure
my god and so did you like practice you were practicing for it yeah um but i had no idea
no clue like they told us like we had to have like a backing track like a karaoke version and
like i was so like inexperienced at that time that i didn't even know what that was so like
i was just planning on singing acapella so i was just gonna do it like without anything
um and it was so weird for me to adjust to singing on a backing track i was like this is
such a weird experience.
I think even Simon looked at me a little bit weird,
like when I did the acapella,
because everybody had backing tracks and stuff, but yeah.
So that probably made you stand out, though.
I don't know.
It could have worked either way.
Maybe it made me sound really bad, too.
No, well, obviously not.
Look where you're fucking sitting.
Yeah, true. Do you remember what you sang?
Yeah, I do.
Mario, Let Me Love You.
And the reason I said that is because I've seen that performance back a few times
and cringed every time I watched it.
So, yeah.
It's not my best vocal performance.
There's a lot of nerves involved there, for sure.
But clearly there was something in there, Zayn.
There's some talent.
Yeah, there's some potential.
Acapella, and he just nails it.
When you look back at that moment obviously is it like
surreal like if you even had to like watch it back like is it does it even feel like a lifetime ago
yeah it does it feels like so much longer than it actually was um because so much stuff's happened
in that time um yeah it's it's very interesting very surreal um and i i feel all them nerves
again like when i watch it
like i i feel like i could like give myself a hook you know and be like it's okay bro because
i literally i'm like holding on to the mic for dear life please nobody hurt me um it's so good
it's so good so obviously then x factor everyone simon everyone came to you guys and they had this
idea to invent one direction
and then i i think people don't i don't even know like did you even meet anyone before they put you
guys together yeah we knew each other like just from around okay because we were like a similar
age and stuff so naturally you speak to people who like a similar age to you around there and
stuff and we were at boot camp together and we'd i met harry on my audition day
because um we both auditioned in manchester and we literally sat next to each other in the
audition oh so it was like fucking meant to be he was sat right next to me we spoke and i went in
and did like a producing audition round and then he went in straight after me and we spoke a little
bit there yeah so you weren't complete strangers that's good to know because i didn't know if they like just threw you all together and then you were like hey
said it very well obviously you know you don't see all the behind the scenes and stuff but yeah
you spend a lot of time with the contestants okay got it once you started obviously one direction
and you joined one direction like how quickly did your actual life change was it overnight immediate or was it a little bit gradual um it was kind of strange
the like visual evidence of life changing like people being outside of the the studio and stuff
was like um when we were on the live shows um we started to get like a fan base and an audience and
you could see that people were paying interest in us um so yeah from
that point on like it was kind of a bit crazy like what were you even able to comprehend it
uh not really i don't think uh comprehended it at all like i think it's just a rush you know it was
like just fun um and then the repetitive fun over and over again, eventually is going to take its
toll. You know what I mean? So then you look at it a certain way when you're in that and like,
it feels overbearing. Now I look back at it like it was a rush, you know, it was, it was fun. It
was, and it was something that was amazing. Like, so of course I wasn't going to understand it.
It's not something I expected in my life, um it was definitely fun for sure yeah because it is so interesting I think people forget like you were
17 at the time yeah 17 yeah like my brother lived in this house at 17 and was like picking his nose
and going to wawa and like trying to fucking get girls to pay attention to him and you are like
all of a sudden overnight become one of the biggest stars in the world can you help us commoners over here zane commoners can you help us understand like what skyrocketing to that level
of fame can do to you as an individual when you're like by yourself at night laying in bed trying to
understand like what is happening to you in your life? Yeah, you can definitely get into, you know, deep places of thought if you really reflect on it in
that kind of manner. To be honest with you, I don't think I was even, like, intellectually capable
to do that at that age, you know? Like, I think it's took time for me to process them things. I think I've had to like process it with an older mind
and look at it backwards and be like,
yo, this was why this happened and this is what happened.
And, you know, we took off at this point
and this interview made this happen
and then this song made this happen
and just decipher it, you know, as like facts
rather than like in an emotional manner. Cause emotion like
just seems to just blur things, you know? So I try not to think about them things on that kind
of level. Like, Oh, I'm super famous. Like I just make music, you know, I love singing and people
seem to have an interest in it. So a little bit just a little bit no i almost
get what you're saying like you kind of have to black it out and just be present because if you
stop to think about all of it then it's all gonna come exactly yeah that's how i deal with i don't
black it out so much but i just don't overthink you know um it works for me that way i think yeah
you just almost have to stay present because it's like
what else in the moment yeah just enjoy it and then like in you know 10 years time you can look
back and be like this is what happened like now you can look at it in hindsight and be like if
you have 10 years time but right right right that looks true yeah but you've had time probably now
to be like whoa in your quiet moments now in life where you can actually sit and dissect things
that at 17, 18 years old,
again, like you said, I was just having fun.
I was just going with it.
And also it's not like you were just on this solo tour,
like you were a part of something.
So that also probably affected of like,
be a good team player, like go with the flow,
like do what you gotta do.
Obviously your guys' fans are insane.
They're obsessed.
They're still obsessed.
They're everywhere.
They love you guys.
Can you share any like memorable fan moments
that you remember to this day that have stuck with you
of just like anything that happened
that you're like, damn.
I've probably said this a lot of times,
but honestly it was one of the craziest
and most bizarre moments ever.
Um,
I remember coming out of a,
uh,
the studio once in Sweden when we were recording what makes you beautiful.
And this is before even we dropped our first single.
And there was like a row of like maybe five,
six bins,
like trash cans,
like outside of the studio.
And I came out and like every single one of the trash cans opens
and there's like three people inside of each and they tried to like grab me and it was it was a
very memorable moment that was for sure yeah i think i had a mini heart attack humans popped out
from garbage cans and tried to grab you yeah it's like a fucking video game like swallow you into the fucking what
yeah oh wow do you think that in any way that's dedication though right to get into a trash can
like zane they were willing to get in the trash bucket for you okay motherfucker they are loyal
they are do you think that those kind of moments though not that we don't love the fans
we're obsessed but like people being so obsessed with you like is there any lingering paranoia
from people constantly staring at you and following you no no not really i don't have
paranoia in that sense no that's good you sleep well yeah i do i sleep in pennsylvania
i can hear the crickets it's. There's no crazy people out there.
No one crazy in Pennsylvania. That's debatable. You're performing in front of massive crowds.
And I know you're kind of saying like you were in the moment, but like,
were you able to just easily get in front of all these people was there no fear or anxiety that
came with like standing in front of thousands and hundreds of thousands of people when you're on
stage um i think there was but i don't think we had time for it like there was no like you have
time to have anxiety or be nervous you're just kind of gonna go do it you know like get on with
it um so yeah we just we can't i think we just got thrown into the deep end and we kind of
just had to swim you know like um and i feel like we did a good job like in terms of like you know
the the keeping it together and and making the music that we were meant to make i think i got
out the right time i think if i'd done it any longer it might have affected me a bit more but um i think uh we did the right amount you know i think it's interesting too because when
you look at bands or even just like any brand that has like multiple people attached to it
like everyone loves to put archetypes with people like the spice girls for example perfect example
you have to label everyone and so for a boy band it would be like the boy next people like the spice girls for example perfect example you have to label everyone
and so for a boy band it would be like the boy next door like the bad boy like the in like the
brooding one or the funny one like what persona do you think you played this is the make out that
i was like the the brooding serious one yeah but that wasn't necessarily my personality type just
i think it's just a marketing scheme you know you've got the telly to be's you've got spice girls you've got whatever like it's just a marketing scheme you know like
oh this is this one um so i get it um but i don't i don't think you can define an entire person to
one personality trait you know we're a little bit more complex than that. Yeah, I don't know what my trip would have been
if I'd have given myself one.
It might have took a long time to come up with one
if I was going to do that.
So I can see why they just said,
oh yeah, you can be the mysterious one.
Yeah, it's interesting.
I love the Teletubby reference.
You're like, the Teletubbies,
the Spice Girls, One Direction.
I'm like, the fucking Teletubbies.
Yeah, I think Simon was behind the teletubbies too
yeah and the power rangers yeah it's so fucking crazy it's all coming full circle
fuck no but it's interesting so i was gonna ask like i agree you kind of had this like
brooding mysterious personality and that's why i'm excited to sit down with you today because again those stereotypes that were put on to people i'm curious if first of all who comes up with that
marketing people i guess i'm guessing yeah it's not like the fans it kind of just happens well
yeah and maybe some some of the fans kind of like naturally say this too you know i mean from black
pictures and things like that like so you did you agree
so you didn't agree with it but do you think you leaned into it more or do you think i just had one
face to pull you know in my i was doing the zoolander like that was it you know i mean i was
only a young kid i didn't know what else to do i get it if anything maybe it made it easier because
you're like this is just my lane yeah this is me just stick with this they won't ask me too many questions do you think you're mysterious um not really i just uh
i just like to just like chill you know like to be in the back a little bit um yeah i'm a bit more
relaxed i'm not like trying to like be in your face you know you're not trying to jump in yeah
exactly okay well now you're solo so you gotta jump in front okay we're gonna get there
um i love how you kind of mentioned you know you got out at the right time and i think that you
leaving the band obviously shook the fucking world and everyone was like zane like no like
keep it together but i think what again we forget is you're a human being and you clearly
had to take care of your mental health and do what was best for you can you I know you've lightly
talked about this but just so we get a full circle moment can you just take us back to that moment of
like actually sitting with yourself and knowing it was time to leave uh yeah I think I'd known
for a minute there was a lot of look I don't want to go into too much detail,
but there was a lot of politics going on.
Certain people were doing certain things.
Certain people didn't want to sign contracts.
So I knew something was happening.
So I just got ahead of the curve.
If I'm being honest with you, I was like, I'm just going to get out of here.
I think this is done.
And I'd just seen it.
And I completely selfishly wanted to be the first person to go and make my own record
if i'm being completely honest with you i was like i'm gonna jump the gun here for the first time i'm
passive dude but when it comes to my music and and my business i'm serious about it and i'm
competitive so i wanted to be the first to go and do my own thing that's that was the reason and then
there was obviously underlying issues like within our friendships too we'd been together every day for five years and we got sick of each other if we're
being completely honest so we were we were close you know we done crazy things with each other and
that nobody else in the world will ever understand or have them experiences that we've shared
with each other and and i look back on it now in a much fonder light than I would have, you know, as I just left. There were
great experiences, I had great times with them, but yeah, we just run our course. I love that you're
saying that too, because I think people can relate to that, of like, if you're with the same people
24-7, no shit, and I think I can imagine as you guys were younger, everyone was so idealizing this
band, that you couldn't say that back in the day of like
yeah we got fucking sick of each other it was time to like do our own things and i think that's so
okay but because there was this obsession obviously i get it there's the nostalgia for sure yeah it's
an idea in it it's like when you watch friends you you don't want joey cussing off chandler you
know i mean you want these people to be best friends, like, it's an idea. Yeah, you want them to stay together forever, but I also think it's so healthy, because imagine if
you hadn't ended it, then you really would have fucking hated each other, and being able to go
on your own way. Also, someone always has to be the first one to leave. Exactly. And maybe it's
the best thing for it, but in the time, I can imagine there's hurt feelings. Were you afraid
of what the world was going to think of you when you made that decision?
I don't think I was afraid.
No.
I just, the first thing I wanted to do was call my mom.
As cheesy as that sounds.
I just wanted to call her and be like, is it okay if I come home?
Like, is this good?
And she was like, yeah.
So as soon as she said that, I was like, yeah, I'm good.
Like, I'm done.
Like, I'm over this.
I didn't really care about what anybody else thought.
That's the type of person I am.
Like we were talking about earlier, I try to close them opinions off.
I'm not really the type of person who defines myself
on other people's opinions of myself.
If people know me and know me well, they know who I am.
And I spend that time on them
people and make sure that they you know looked after and they get that time with me rather than
the people that I'm never necessarily even going to see or you know have a conversation with
especially if it's a negative remark you know positive remarks always nice I don't really pay
attention to either of them if I'm being completely honest with you just don't let it get in my head i think that's so smart because i think social media even if you're not famous like
everyone is feeding themselves and their worth by what other people are saying about them
and it's like you good with your family and like i don't mean family by blood like you may just yeah
people that you have around you yeah your circle yeah and as long as they're good then that's all that matters to me but did you not tell your mom you were doing it uh did not tell
my mom i was leaving yeah no it was like kind of spurred a moment like i i'd not told her
beforehand like oh i'm thinking of leaving um i just called her on that day and that i was leaving
and said i'm coming home is it okay have you still got a bed for me she was like yeah man so she's like can't come back my dad wasn't so cool but he was like nah now you gotta
stay with simon simon's gonna stay you're right like don't come home stay there um but my mom was
like yeah you can come home please son come home you know oh my god that's actually really cute
that the first person like mom do you have a bed for me she's like let's go because didn't you also buy your mom one of the first things you like, Mom, do you have a bed for me? She's like, let's go. Because didn't you also buy your mom?
One of the first things you did with your success is you bought her a home.
I did, yeah.
How cool is that to be able to buy your mom something after everything she's done?
It was amazing.
It was a great feeling.
Wild.
Okay, so you leave the band.
And take me to when you're laying in your mom's home, you're in bed.
What were those next couple weeks like for
you like mentally and emotionally it was interesting I was just trying to get stuff together like I
wanted to get like a plan of action you know I mean so I was like on a bit of a mission I wasn't
there too long I went home for a little bit and then I went back to London and started working
and stuff that must have been so stressful too because I feel like I guess we see it in various different forms but like if you make a
jump even if someone like quits their job right they're like I need to prove to myself and other
people that like I now can do it like and so did you put pressure on yourself when obviously you
came out being solo like were you fucking nervous for sure. It's a very different experience
standing on stage by yourself too.
Like, it's a whole different workload as well.
Singing three and a half minutes of a song
completely by yourself.
Like when you've got a song divvied between five people,
you're singing a little bit of a verse,
maybe some ad-libs, you know.
I preferred the workload.
I'm going to be honest.
You're like taking a nap in the back.
You're just like, dang, it's your part. You're like taking a nap in the back yeah oh yeah nice one um but yeah it i just kind of had to like make an adjustment i started practicing a lot more
singing a lot more and just like making sure i could sing for three minutes right you had to be
like i need to get back to my let me love you days where i'm like back on x factor it's just me
i'm curious and I don't know because
I know you were saying and I I totally respected of like you were kind of just in this phase of
going going going and you didn't have time to stop but when you did go solo and you left did you
have to take any moment to be like who the fuck am I independent of now not being a part of something that i was identified as in media
um yeah definitely i think that's why um i've took the time i have to like
not even necessarily do interviews and do too much like press exposure because
i feel like we were so overexposed in the band that like it takes a bit of time for you naturally
to progress as a human and give something else that is interesting that you have to say.
You don't want to be sat there just saying the same shit on repeat, you know what I mean, day in, day out.
Like, I think there should be a good, healthy break in between.
And that was my approach to it for sure.
So I feel like in terms of, you know, figuring out what your identity is as as an artist the
only way you're going to do that is by living you know you can't just be on the conveyor belt
and expect to have any sort of experience that's new that you're going to give people
i love that too because i feel like people especially creators there's such a stress
about taking a break and it doesn't mean you're actually taking a break you could be
working still working yeah you're just but like popping out of not doing it in the spotlight yeah
and you did were you able to just not have anxiety about it because you're like i know i'm coming
back but it's like i gotta just be good on my own shit and not be fulfilling the tabloids and
everyone else like how am i on my own right exactly yeah that's that was all thought behind
it for sure you start doing your own solo music and I remember when you came out pillow talk all
the good stuff you popped off and it's like really dope to see you coming out with your own sound and
creative and it's you and that's exciting to know like you are producing this and it's not obviously
no shade to one direction but like
you're one of five like you can't really have a full say in shit now this is you when you started
on your solo career like was there anything that you really wanted to make sure that you could
bring to life that maybe you weren't able to when you were in a band like creatively creatively i just wanted to talk
about things you know that were a bit more real like an authentic um to situations i was going
through in my life like obviously certain things that we would talk about in the band was always
very you know clean cut like just glazing over the top not really any depth or any stories to
what's going on um and that was always
a big thing for me obviously i understand again from a marketing scheme that like the the audience
and the fan base we were appealing to at that point was that kind of vibe so it was never going
to work um for that kind of audience but yeah i just wanted to show people that had a bit more depth yeah yeah i get that
because like even earlier you said like you like to write poetry and i'm like i can only imagine
how much the writing process is therapeutic and you get to infuse parts of yourself and your
identity whereas that just like wasn't in the past which it shouldn't have been like it was a band it
was great whatever but now you can actually artistically exercise that part of yourself
which must be i think it's difficult for people to write songs even from one one perspective you know like
there was five of us in the room when we used to write sometimes and it was so hard to get us all
to like have the same viewpoint and want to talk about the same thing so in that sense from a
creative point it is a lot more freeing for me Like I can fully get to grips with every part of it, you know, the melody, the story, the production, the emotion, the feeling that I'm trying to convey in each song.
So in that sense, it's super liberating.
It's cool because I think you're getting now, we're getting to know you a little bit better now that you are doing solo music. But do you think, do you think that the world even like slightly knows Zayn yet?
Um, I don't know.
Um, I, I try to, uh, like move in a certain way that, you know, hopefully I will still
have some juice, you know, I don't want, I don't want to give everything all it will go. So, um, if they don't know everything yet, that's okay. But hopefully
they get to know me a bit better in this interview, you know, they get to see my thought patterns.
Still a little mysterious. I'm trying, I'm trying, I'm trying to be an open book.
Okay. How about this? Describe yourself in three words.
Describe myself in three words?
Well, I'm definitely not going to use mysterious as one of them.
I would say I'm a chill, funny, loving guy.
All the girls watching this are like,
so nice, that's so nice.
What's your favorite thing about yourself?
I don't know.
I think I like the fact that I'm pretty witty.
I'm pretty smart. And think I like the fact that I'm pretty witty. Like, I'm pretty smart.
And I enjoy that about myself, I think.
You're in good company with yourself.
Yeah, yeah.
I enjoy that I'm pretty smart.
I have a little laugh to myself, you know, about that.
What's your least favorite thing about yourself?
I'm a bit sensitive sometimes yeah not in a bad way yeah
yeah i can like take things the wrong way sometimes i'm definitely working on that like
give me an example like i just like tend to like if somebody says something to me like i'll take
it the wrong way if i can't really care about their opinion what they're saying to me got it
yeah then you'll get upset yeah I think that's good though.
That means you care.
Mm-hmm.
Right?
Yeah.
Like I said, with the people that are close to me.
Right.
Do you think you at times can be too caring in moments
that you need to learn to like...
I'm learning to be a bit more tame with it.
Yeah, for sure.
Little boundaries.
Yeah.
No, not boundaries. no not not boundaries just like
i'm just learning not to like get in my head about certain things you know um across the board like i
i exercise that well in terms of like dealing with the media and things like that but i don't
necessarily do that too well in my personal life sometimes i take things out yeah that's good
though again it does mean you care but But I get, then you're like,
yeah, but then I'm over here like dying inside.
I got to like
muster up the courage
to be like.
Then I go write a song.
Yeah, yeah.
Put that into a song, okay?
Give us one that's like
really sad
so we can like cry.
Oh, I've got a few.
I've got a few.
Oh, really?
A few really sad ones, yeah.
See, this is what we need, Steve.
Okay.
We need some criers.
We've got some cry moments.
What do you think
is the biggest
misunderstanding about you
um that i'm like super serious like that i like just i'm like super stern and serious yeah all
the time when i'm not like um i'm just chill i i know that like a lot of people have like um high energy personalities and it's
just not the way I am it's you know I'm saying I'm just a bit more relaxed about things it's
actually nice to be in person with you because I could see in media it could come off I get it
like serious you're literally just chilling yeah you're relaxed i'm just relaxed you're cozy in your
sweater there's thunder there's rain we're just Pennsylvania didn't even have to drive too far
came to your mom's house let's talk about anxiety i know that you have lightly talked about it in times and i just want
to talk to you about like how anxiety affects your life what has it done in terms of playing a part
in your personal life in your career like just talk to me about what you're comfortable with. Uh, yeah. So I think we kind of touched on it a bit earlier. Like, um,
when we're talking about, you know, like the, the, the, the nature of our job, you know, like
what we were doing in the band and the situation being on stage in front of thousands of people.
Um, I think it's a really normal place to experience anxiety.
You're going to go and perform in front of a lot of different people that you don't know who they are.
And it's not a natural thing to do in terms of everyday life.
You don't just talk to thousands of people.
So it was something that I had to learn to adjust.
Anxiety, for me, I've learned is a feeling that now has a word.
And I feel like for generations, human beings have felt it
and not really even been able to put their finger on what it is.
But we overcome it.
And certain things in life can change your
perspective on them things and i think for me like since i've had my daughter and since she was born
like the main thing in my mind is like trying to be a good example to her like in terms of you know
i can do things and i can achieve things and i can overcome things and you can do this too um and to let things
like you know a feeling stop you from doing that after having a child feels like a really small
thing like i feel like i've like had to step up you know as as as a man or just you know as a person
um and be this example to her that doesn't succumb to these feelings.
That's why I'm even doing this interview.
I used to get a lot of anxiety around having a conversation like this,
just in this kind of environment.
And I want her to be able to look at me and be like,
yo, my dad's doing this.
He's the man.
He's cool.
He is cool.
He's a cool guy.
Yeah.
So that's helped me a lot for sure that is
so fucking cool to obviously my mom's a psychologist so i grew up and i think mental
health was not a conversation for most families and hopefully it will be but like i've watched
so my mom talked to so many people and talk them through how to get over a panic attack,
how to get over anxiety,
how to not get over it,
but like manage it, live with it,
be okay to go about your everyday life.
I think sometimes if you don't have anxiety,
people look at people with anxiety,
like just get the fuck over it.
And I think it shows up in everyone's lives
in such different ways.
And I don't think that's the way you can look at it.
I think everybody's situation is individual individual I think it takes an individual experience then to happen
for somebody to overcome that too you know totally if you think about the first time you can recall
in your life experiencing anxiety did you experience anxiety prior to fame for sure like
take me to like a moment in your life where you remember being like wow i didn't know that was anxiety but now i do i enjoyed it that was the thing yeah like i enjoyed
being in that feeling and they got to a certain point i think where it just became too much like
i just was was weighing on me that feeling of um like anticipation and then getting the adrenaline and then the after feeling of that you know um
as a young kid i loved it like i loved being on stage and i loved performing it was like
a free space for me to go and be a character because it was you know i was playing a role in
some little school performance it was nothing serious um when it became a thing that had a lot
of weight behind it in terms of you know people
watching and stuff then you're gonna have um you're gonna have natural feelings of anxiety
yeah people staring at you judging you writing about you following you taking pictures of you
that's a lot can you share with us like in the heyday of paparazzi and insanity like what would be something that would really
trigger your anxiety in those days um just the idea of like um like not being able to just do
normal things like to just go outside and like walk out onto the street you know like because
where we lived it was kind of a bit crazy
and there's just people always there like waiting to take a photo and stuff. And obviously thinking
about having a child and like raising her in that environment, it was just very claustrophobic for
me. I didn't want her to have to be like exposed to that because she didn't choose it, you know,
like it was a choice that I made. So I was like, we need to get out of here so that she can have
some chance of like a normal childhood, you know, where there's not cameras flashing in her face
constantly. Let's talk about you being a father, because it's really cool to see you talk about
anxiety, which again, I have so much respect for even you being able to talk about it, because I
know it's like, you're not that public about your life,
and that's something that you live with every day.
And to say like having a child has helped you overcome something
that is like in your day-to-day,
that's like pretty debilitating in moments.
Yeah, but you being famous and having a child,
like deciding to move here,
I can imagine you're trying to shield her from
this life that you also are still trying to figure out. Like, is it a lot?
Um, I feel like, um, there's, there's a, there's a healthy way to do it. You know? Um, I'm not
necessarily trying to shield her from it because she's, she's going to know, you know, she's going to get to a certain point, she's going to have a certain level of awareness.
She's going to know what's going on.
I'm just trying to give her an option.
It's like a choice for her.
If she wants to be away from it, she can be out here.
I am a famous person and I get sanctuary here you know I'm saying so I feel like she um
is gonna have a lot of options and whatever she wants to do in her life obviously I'll support her
for sure yeah okay how has becoming a dad shifted your priorities in life um the the crazy thing is
obviously I have a 50% of the time so um that time i have with
her is so important because i feel like she's growing up so fast like um so when i'm with her
i don't work like at all i just spend a full day with her doing the things that she wants to do
like painting play-doh this that go to the, go to the park, go to the theme park,
go to the zoo.
Like, we just have fun.
Like, and I feel like I've, like,
rekindled my own childhood, like, through her.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, I feel like we get to a certain point
in adult life where everything's kind of vague
and gray and boring.
And she's brought that color back for me, for sure.
Same.
What is a dad quality that you've proudly taken on
that makes you laugh a little when you think about it?
Of like, oh my gosh, I can't believe I'm doing this.
I keep being told I'm telling dad jokes.
And I'm leaning into it.
I'm just like, it's okay.
It's cool.
Like I'm using like Christmas cracker jokes and stuff. And it's really funny. Like people just it's cool like i'm using like christmas cracker jokes and stuff and
it's really funny like people just look at me like i'm a weirdo i'm like yeah i'm a dad now
i'm allowed to tell these jokes you have to give me a pass wow zane i didn't expect that i'm not
gonna lie i love a dad joke you're like full dad vibe that's it yeah i'm going i love it you're
like i'm fully leaning in. There is no stopping me.
Okay, well, you haven't cracked one here.
So if you want to, you can always give us your best.
But, you know, when it feels down. We'll save that for another time.
Okay.
What is your favorite thing to do with your daughter?
My favorite thing to do with her is she shows a lot of signs of, like, musical intelligence already.
So I just love like playing instruments
with her and singing with her um like I'll sing and she sings along and she can do like
good harmonies and stuff already and she's only two and a half like and she harmonizes with me
well and like finishes notes and she can hold them for a long time I'm like you might have a
bit of ability you um I'm picturing the two of you playing with play-doh and you start singing and then your
daughter starts singing you can hit these high notes like falsetto like yeah it's crazy i'm like
yo like whoa you're good i couldn't do this i didn't speak till i was three
how the fuck do you sing oh wow and she remembers like full lyrics to songs as well
like every word it's mad wow we got a superstar in our hands okay okay it's interesting to hear
you say like you're singing to her which like uh would have loved if my dad could have sang
he can't um what are you singing to her and like what are her favorite songs that you sing she
loves disney movies so we sing a lot of Disney songs together.
And I sing like, You've Got a Friend in Me and stuff.
She sings it really cute.
Honestly, that's really cute thinking about you guys singing that.
What qualities of yourself, aside from like having that musical aspect,
more like personality, like what qualities do you see from yourself and your daughter?
I think she's funny. Like she's a bit of a cheeky one yeah she likes to have a bit of a joke and stuff and
like laugh a lot um she's she's chilled though but she loves reading as well um which is something i
think she definitely took from me like she just has a affinity for words like she remembers everything
has becoming a parent changed your relationship with your parents definitely yeah in in a
in a like respect way you know like you you just have so much respect for the things that
they've put aside for you you know like when you realize all the sacrifices that you make as
a parent, like, just to be there and be present with your child, like, you can't have nothing but
respect for that, for sure. Yeah. I know you said, like, obviously, you have for 50% of the time,
you want to make the most of these moments, like, what's something that you guys have done together
recently that made you so happy, and you had, like, such a great time? We went to Nickelodeon
in New Jersey. Oh my god,on in in new jersey which was really
good i enjoyed it i know it's like super childish but like i had a lot of fun yeah i think i had more
fun than that it was good that is so good how is co-parenting going co-parenting is is good yeah
um we have a really good relationship for kai she's the the you know the main importance yeah um
so yeah it's going well yeah yeah okay I think Zane's like uh from me from me yeah okay so
I want to ask you if I can ask one question just about like as delicately as i can go about it i feel like i wouldn't be
doing my job if i didn't ask about the 2021 incident okay i know you can't really speak on it
i think obviously as a man you like there was a lot out there said about you and you basically
took the high road and didn't say anything and you kind of put out that like blanket statement of just like i want to respect my daughter and not say anything
exactly yeah and i can imagine how difficult it is kind of like almost a culmination of everything
we're talking about today of like how do you balance when something is out there about you
about your character that people are reading and speculating and saying
things about you and how do you decide when you when to speak up and when to like be silent and
like chill on it and not really go there yeah so for me like we were talking about earlier i don't
tend to get involved when people um say things, whether it's got something to do with me or whether it doesn't.
Because for me, my most valuable thing that I have in life is time.
And that takes so much time in a toxic environment
to explain yourself to people and justify this.
So I just kind of keep to myself i knew what the situation was i
knew what happened um and the people involved knew what happened too um and that's all i really
cared about um if anybody um you know of of a sane mind would look at the situation i believe that
you could respect that.
Like, I just didn't want to bring attention to anything.
You know, I just wasn't trying to get into a negative back and forth with her, any sort of narrative online
where my daughter was going to look back and read that
and be able to read into it,
and it would just be something that was, there was no point.
I believe I dealt with it in the best way,
like in an amicable, respectful way.
And that's all that needs to be said, you know?
Yeah, I just, I feel like it's a lot of negativity, you know?
I can only imagine, like, first of all,
no fucking family is perfect.
And so to be on the stage that you guys are on, I...
And like you said, your family issues, you know?
Like if something happens in the family, like I'd rather like you said your family issues you know like if something happens
in the family like i'd rather keep that between the family you know you don't need a whole audience
of people and opinions because yeah it's hard enough to manage between two i more so just also
wanted to give you the chance because i think you obviously handled it so amicably i also think in
doing my job like this is a podcast where i'm trying to support women right and like reading headlines
like I wanted to hear from you obviously because hearing you even today I don't know if like I'm
just going to say what it is like you have said you have 50% custody and so anything that has
we've all read online like well if that was true then that would have affected that so I think it's
important to just say like me doing my job i just
wanted to clarify like it's not like unless you can correct me like you don't have to have people
with you while you're with your daughter and like visitation rights like you have custody of your
child yeah so i think it's just important to say because people are reading this shit being like
oh yeah no for sure yeah and i'm super full-on yeah like hands-on with my child every chance i
can be if i could get 60 i would have it yeah okay let's talk about your music you're coming back
we're getting a song tell me what inspired the song what can we expect give it to us yeah so
i'm working uh well i've been working on on my record for a minute.
And I have a single for the summer coming out called Love Like This.
That's like a standalone song.
Just a summer jam.
It's a good vibe.
Like, yeah, it just feels like summer.
That's what I think we need.
We do need a good summer tune. We just need a bop.
Like someone asked me recently, like, oh, like what's the song of summer?
And I actually said, you know what? like i'm interviewing someone and i know they have
a single coming out and i have a feeling that could be the song of summer are you nervous to
go on stage like alone um i was yeah like when i first started like performing by myself i was i
was nervous and i'm still nervous now because it's been a few years that i've been on stage but i have this like energy too like i feel like i have
something to give and i want to get on stage and be there again and feel that that's one thing i
can say you know like my fan base has always been supportive in that manner they're always just like
we're here we've got you like when you're ready we've got you you know like come we're gonna we're gonna come and listen to your tune so yeah no i gotta be um super thankful
for that and i'm super grateful um and i feel that love for sure so i'm ready to to prove these
people right you know can we expect any music inspired by your daughter on your records uh yeah
definitely yeah i'm um i'm doing a i think i'm
doing a record i don't think people are really gonna expect like um it's a different sound for
me and it's got some like more narrative going on like real life experiences and stuff so yeah
my daughter's mentioned in there a couple of times wow i think that's gonna be so fucking
dope to actually hear from you in long form essentially because an album is in long form
like we're going to get to know you more which is exciting again because mr mysterious over there
we're still trying to understand things um okay what is something that you want your fans to take
away from this interview i'd like my fans to feel like
they got to know me a bit because you keep saying i'm mr mysterious yeah no so i'm hoping they got
to know me a little bit and they feel like they've seen me and caught up with me a bit and you know
they're gonna see me a lot more like and i want them to know that like across the board like i've kind of had a full like mental
rehaul and in the best way thanks to my my child and you know being able to see things in a
different light and um i'm going to be a lot more present and hopefully people are going to see me a
lot more i love it yeah zane thank you so much for coming on call her daddy this was truly a pleasure
thank you so much for coming on Call Her Daddy. This was truly a pleasure. Thank you for having me.