Freakonomics Radio - "I Started Crying When I Realized How Beautiful the Universe Is” | People I (Mostly) Admire Ep. 2: Mayim Bialik
Episode Date: September 5, 2020She’s best known for playing neurobiologist Amy Farrah Fowler on The Big Bang Theory, but the award-winning actress has a rich life outside of her acting career, as a teacher, mother — and a real-...life neuroscientist. Steve Levitt tries to learn more about this one-time academic and Hollywood non-conformist, who is both very similar to him and also quite his opposite.
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I struggled all the way through undergrad, and I struggled all the way through grad school as well, because I'm not a natural science learner.
I'm a person who wants to understand deeply the mysteries of the universe, and even if you're a stay-at-home mom after that, even if you become an actor on a TV show,
the knowledge that I have as a scientist has transformed my understanding of my religious life, my parenting life, and really everything about the world that I live in.
I'm so excited to get to speak with Mayim Bialik today.
I've never talked to her before.
This will be the first time we've met.
But in a strange way, I kind of feel like I know her having watched her on Big Bang Theory for so many years.
Welcome to People I Mostly Admire
with Steve Levitt.
I'll be totally honest with you.
I'm not sure that I have much to talk about
with a typical Hollywood star,
but I'm hoping that Mayim's going to be different.
She's got a PhD in neuroscience
and she really seems to play by her own rules.
And I just can't wait to get to know her a little bit.
And let's hope I'm right and she's interesting.
We'll find out.
Such a pleasure today to talk with Mayim Bialik,
renowned actress, neuroscience PhD,
a best-selling author,
a mother of two teenage boys,
a producer and a director.
And all of that's incredibly impressive.
But the real reason that I wanted so badly to talk to you
is because it seems like you've managed to succeed
by breaking all the rules, by being true to yourself and by being authentic.
And I don't see very many people who have the courage
to be him or herself and to make their way in the world.
So I'm just really excited to talk to you today, Maya.
Thank you. I'm very honored to speak with you.
All right. Already by the time you were, I don't know, maybe 10 or 11,
you were an incredibly successful child actor.
You had tons of roles on TV even before you landed the role of Blossom
and were in primetime network TV for five years.
You were maybe 15 years old when you started that?
I was 14 to 19, yeah.
14.
How does all that get started?
Let's see.
I actually don't have kind of a typical child actor story in that most child actors start
when they're toddlers.
That was not my story.
I wasn't raised in the industry. I didn't have
Hollywood parents. My parents are actually first-generation Americans. I did not grow up
with money. So I went to public school in Los Angeles, and I was part of the busing program
of the 1970s and 1980s, where kids from not-so-great neighborhoods were put on buses
early in the morning, and they sent us to neighborhoods with more opportunity.
And some of those schools had enrichment programs like drama.
And what I found was that I really liked being on a stage.
So what I said to my parents is, I really, really like this.
And, like, there's kids on TVaches about a year after I started acting. And I played Bette Midler's character as a young girl and got a lot of, I guess, notice for that.
It was from that that I was cast in Blossom.
And to be perfectly honest, no one looked like me on television.
You know, there was something called All-American Kid in the 80s.
I did not look All-American.
I had the blonde hair and I had the blue eyes,
but I was a very prominent featured child. I'm a Polish-Hungarian mix. So I ended up getting
kind of character roles, which is the euphemism for the roles they give to people who don't
look all American.
You talk about character roles, but you seem to have been working nonstop on TV.
That must be rare.
There must have been hundreds of kids showing up to each of these auditions,
and you just kept on getting the parts?
I mean, I didn't get more parts than I did.
You know, this is part of the reason that my parents really weren't interested in me going into acting is, you know, it's an industry of rejection.
It's an industry of being told,
you're too this, you're too that, you're not enough that. I mean, it's really a ridiculous
way for anyone to live an adult, much less a child. But, you know, I definitely was successful
enough that I needed to, at some point, you know, do a kind of homeschooling, you know, program
starting in high school, starting in 11th grade. But, you know, otherwise, honestly, I lived a pretty
standard issue, you know, life. I still had to do chores. My parents were very strict.
Most people didn't, I don't want to say they didn't like me, but I was a strange kid and I
was a strange teenager and I'm a strange adult. What was strange about you as a kid?
I mean, I was bookish. I'm a rule follower. You know, I wrote with a glass pen and an ink well, and I read Dostoevsky and Sartre at 15. You know, I was a very tortured soul. And also, Idled with the shadows of the Holocaust. There's mental
illness on both sides of my family. I had OCD as a child and also probably, you know, a very high
level of anxiety. I had a lot of psychiatric challenges really all through my teen years and
into my 20s. And it's something I live with all the time. It's amazing that you felt at home in
front of the camera because I think many people
who would share some of the challenges you just talked about are absolutely terrified
of public speaking.
So I actually am a very nervous public speaker.
I'm also a very nervous performer.
My therapist has many opinions about why I like to be, we like to say, you can hide on
a stage. And I also
wasn't the kind of kid who liked acting because I liked the applause. I really liked getting it
right. It's interesting you say that about hiding on stage, because I was the exact opposite kid.
I was terrified of speaking in public. So for instance, in college, I did not raise my hand
once in four years. I didn't volunteer to talk. But then after I had some success in academics, people wanted me
to speak. And I learned how to, I created a persona that I would go into that I would be on
stage and present. And then one day something happened that was very eye-opening for me. I
didn't fully understand this whole persona thing until I was going to give a TED Talk. And as I was waiting to go on stage, the person who introduced me, introduced me by saying that, among other things,
I was the father of a child who had died. And my son had died at the age of one, maybe a year
earlier. And I had gotten very good at putting on my public speaking persona. And when she made that comment,
I was shocked back into my regular, I'm Steve Leavitt persona. And if you watch that TED Talk,
you can see for the first like 30 seconds, I like really don't know where I am or what I'm doing,
because I'm struggling to try to get out of my own body and into this fake persona that I live in. First of all, I'm very sorry for your loss. You know, you touch on a very
kind of significant aspect, not just of an actor's life, but, you know, it really is true. We wear
masks and we're sort of acting all the time. I think some people do it more seamlessly than
others. But that notion of kind of having to find yourself in yourself again
is terrifying. And it is something that performers do under exceptional circumstances as our job,
you know. So I've watched a lot of the videos you've put up on your YouTube channel where you
talk about things happening in your life, whether it's the decision to homeschool your children or
growing older. And it seems to me that you've made
a choice over time to reveal a lot of yourself to the public, but not in a senseless way like
reality TV, but in a very thoughtful way where in measured doses, you really open yourself up for
people to see. For instance, some of your videos, you know, after the COVID lockdown, when you're
clearly in the COVID
doldrums, or when you decided to talk many years later for the first time about being divorced,
how do you approach your relationship with the public?
Well, I'd like to thank you for making a distinction between, you know, sharing willy-nilly
and what I consider to be mindful, meaning even if my audience doesn't always agree,
the decisions
behind the scenes are often heart-wrenching and complicated. But what I have tried to do
is really highlight, in a lot of cases, mental health and also a perspective of someone who
really exists because of the resources I've been able to have access to to support my growth as a human being
and not just a human doing, as we say. One of the things that I've decided to gear my life towards
right now, definitely motivated by being at home and seeing how we're all being impacted,
but I've decided to start a podcast and we're calling it Mayim Bialik's Breakdown,
both because it's just going to be fun to say I'm myambiolic and welcome to my breakdown.
But the notion being that I'd like to break down a lot of our preconceived notions and misperceptions about mental health and have either an expert or someone who's an expert because they are living it to understand where mindfulness plays into these things. What are the, you know,
the holistic things that many people dismiss as hippy-dippy? What's the science behind them?
What are the things that we can actually do to have a better understanding of our mental health
so that we literally can live without breaking down. I'm a person who feels very,
very deeply, kind of all the time. It's a superpower, and it's also a curse.
My wife has a term, she uses the word sensitive to refer to people like you, as you've described
yourself and her. I don't know if it's a clinical term or not, but there's some people I think that
are very empathetic to the suffering of others. Yeah, they call us highly sensitive people,
HSPs. In children, they're often called indigo children. I actually wasn't so much like this
as a child. I was very analytical. I was a problem solver. But as an adult, I'm one of those people
who, and I don't think there's necessarily anything
mystical to it. There are people who have said to me, wow, you have a lot of information about
people from knowing very little. It is a strange superpower. My younger son seems to have inherited
it. It can feel very burdensome, I'll be honest, and also beautiful.
I actually have the opposite gift, if you want to call it a gift, of being a little bit on the spectrum. So I kind of have a hard time actually remembering that other people are alive and are not merely created on the planet to entertain me and my existence. And so that also is both a superpower and a curse. But it seems to be, if you're sensitive, being an actor is a kind of a crazy choice, isn't it?
Yeah. I mean, honestly, I left the industry for 12 years to get a doctorate in neuroscience,
partly for this reason, less so that it was necessarily triggering and more that
I'm a person who really wants to be appreciated for what's inside.
And the industry does not really highlight that. It's not made to,
it's not supposed to. I don't mean to sound pretentious about it. I'm an artist. I'm a
person who feels a strong need to create, to write, to perform, to emote, to make you feel
something. That is really where I tend to thrive. It's where people seem to want to employ me.
And it is all the other parts of the industry that are the most trying for me.
The publicity, the demands on women, the obsession with appearance and youth.
And, you know, I'll be perfectly honest.
I am grateful for my job beyond explanation.
But for someone with social anxiety, I absolutely live in a career that does not match
my personality. And I do not feel filled up from being around people and talking about myself.
I do not get filled up from being complimented, from getting dressed up,
leaving my house. These are all things that have really nothing to do with the fact that I can play
dress up really well, right? I can pretend to be someone I'm not in a way that makes you believe
it and feel something. To me, that's my job. It's interesting that you call it a job because
you did say earlier in the
conversation how when you were acting in school plays, it was really fun. Did it transform from
being really fun to being a job? Absolutely. Because when you are a child actor, and this
is the reason I am not a huge fan, honestly, of people getting their children into acting, you are not allowed to have a bad day.
You're not allowed to be grumpy. You are really responsible for managing your emotions in a way
that makes other people happy. And that's actually exactly what we want to teach our children
not to do as humans. And it's precisely what you're being taught to do as an actor.
And, you know, thinking from a strictly consumer capitalist perspective, it's absolutely necessary.
You know, if you want to stare meaningfully into a cow's eyes before you slaughter it,
you're not going to slaughter many cows in a day, right? The way we get things done is to
essentially depersonalize them.
I mean, Marx and Engels figured that out a long time ago. So you essentially become part of a
system that is an industry. And on any given day, if you're sad, if you're, I mean, my first TV
acting job was the day that my grandfather was buried. My grandfather died the night before my first TV acting job. And you don't get a hiatus for that. It's a job.
Yeah. Usually, if you ask people who've succeeded at something, they always will say,
oh, yeah, follow your dream. You know, they've been the winners in this big lottery. But it sounds like with you, you are almost saying, you know, even if you win, quote,
the lottery, it's not as pure a victory as people might perceive.
I mean, correct.
And I happen to be a person of faith.
And what I have found that my tradition teaches is that there is not an amount of money in
the world that makes you
not want more. There's not an amount of possessions in the world that makes you feel done consuming.
And at the end of the day, and when you are buried, your gravestone will not tell any of
those things. We live in a hyphen. We live in the hyphen between the year that we were born
and the year we died. And that's, you know, I once heard a rabbi say, what will you do with your hyphen?
That's the purpose of my being on this planet is to figure that out, not to make money and not to make you happy and not to win an award.
There are things that we do in life that we hopefully will find pleasure and joy from, but we're one of the first generations
to actually have that luxury.
Also, falling in love with someone,
also pretty recent in human history.
So when my older son says,
I really think I kind of, I'm really into Shakespeare,
I said, great, when you can drive yourself to auditions,
you're welcome to go and pursue that,
but what's your other skillset
that you're gonna do in the meantime? Because But what's your other skill set that you're
going to do in the meantime? Because I don't mean to sound like a terrible mom, but I'm not really
into like, follow your passion. It's like, we all need to get things done on this planet. And the
life of a struggling actor is a life of having another job and living off wages that are often
not sustainable. It means putting off having children, if you're a woman,
because that completely curtails your higher ability.
What kind of life do you want?
So you've written that as a young teen, you believe science and math were for boys.
And actually, I suspect that has to do with you being this highly sensitive type that you picked up on subtle cues that society was giving off that I think I would have been too tone deaf to have heard.
But then something happened, obviously, that shifted you out of
that mindset. Do you want to explain what that was?
Yeah. I mean, part of it absolutely was this cultural notion. And, you know, boys in the 80s
and 90s would say to your face, like, girls are stupid. Girls can't do math and science. Like,
we didn't know about girl power back then, you know. So, there was definitely a lot of that.
Also, I didn't have any real role models. I didn't see any women who were scientists.
That's not how our culture represented it.
I will also say that everyone learns differently,
and the way that math and science were being taught to me
was not working for my brain.
Do I think that the way it was being taught
doesn't work for a lot of girl brains?
I'm going to go ahead and say yes,
because I think
that we need to have a different way to approach how we teach. Because contrary to a lot of current
belief, male and female brains are different. We do have different skills. And while those aren't
absolute, there's absolutely different ways to teach that can, I think, please more male and
female brains. How would you teach differently? How should we be teaching STEM stuff differently?
Well, so it actually leads into how I got interested in science. I had a female tutor
when I was 15 years old on the set of Blossom. She was at that time 19. She was a dental undergrad
at UCLA, and she came from a prominent Persian Jewish immigrant family.
And she came from a family of girls where they were all encouraged to do science or math or be
doctors or be dentists. And this was the first time that I heard a person and a woman yet talk
about science as if it were poetry. No one had ever said to me, the world is this unbelievable place,
and look at the details that we can understand as humans. The only place I had gotten that was in
my religious and spiritual upbringing. The world is this unbelievable place. The reason it's
unbelievable is because of science, right? That's its own divinity is kind of what I learned as a
teenager. So one of the things I think about teaching STEM is I think we need both male and
female voices in the mix. I think that a lot of people think that a career in science and math
is an isolated kind of lifestyle. You know, the kind of lone scientist in a laboratory is what many of us are taught.
And I think that for girls who tend to be more social, meaning more engaged in social interactions and more verbal, that doesn't sound interesting to sit alone in a laboratory. But if as a young
girl I had been told, oh, you love animals? Listen to the dozen careers in math and science
regarding working with animals. Oh, you're interested in Listen to the dozen careers in math and science regarding working with animals.
Oh, you're interested in saving the planet? Look what it's like to be an environmental biologist.
Wouldn't it be cool to get to take samples from ponds and animals? You have to present the full
variety of the possibility of STEM in order for us even to see where men and women want to fall in terms of their interest.
And those are things that I was absolutely missing. And I was so grateful to meet this woman,
Firze was her name, because no one had ever also taken the time to teach me the way I needed to
learn. And I was getting lost in those big classes, you know, and my highly gifted magnet,
I was getting lost in those classes where the boys were finishing their math requirements in eighth grade because they
were so accelerated and so fancy. I couldn't even get the basics. And no one took the time to say,
we're leaving all these kids behind, and most of them are the girls. So having a one-on-one tutor
and having someone say to me, you get to learn about the cell. We're going to
draw it. We're going to model it. I still remember the parts of the cell from the lessons when I was
15 years old. I can learn it. I needed to be told how to. And in the 70s and 80s also, we knew
nothing about different styles of learning, at least not in public schools that I went to.
We knew nothing about learning disabilities, that people learn differently. This is one of the greatest revolutions, I think,
in the educational awareness we have. Not everyone learns the same.
What did Faraza end up doing? Did she become an incredible dentist,
or did she go on to do something else?
She did. She became a dental surgeon. She has four children. We're still in touch. And she changed my life. That was it. That woman changed my life. And she not only gave me the skill set to become a scientist, she gave me the confidence
that even if it's hard for me, I still deserve to have a shot.
I think we're still so terrible today at communicating the value or what you can do
with a STEM career. Why do you think it's so hard for us as a society to bring that message to people?
I think that, I mean, you might have a better answer than I do.
I'm assuming you would.
But I think that a lot of people do see STEM careers as laborious or expensive to excel in.
And I also think that we have a huge component of this country that is lacking access to the education
required to pursue those jobs. And that's where we're getting this disproportionate representation
of individuals in the STEM fields. I mean, honestly, for me, a lot of it does go back to
what does our society value? And the fact is, we value a very kind of shiny productivity. I think that especially now, I think there's a lot of drive to make a lot of our lives very kind of like sexy and successful in ways that I don't think are always smooth paths.
I have come to believe that the way that we teach what an economist would call a production function of teaching is archaic. Another way of organizing education would be to use technology and
essentially to do away with the traditional role of the teacher. And so it seems to me that there
are people like you who are thoughtful and who are brilliant communicators and who are respected for other
things they've done in their lives. And imagine if you could be teaching 11th graders neuroscience,
not in one classroom, but literally the entire country, right? If we had a system set up where
there were, you know, 100 or 200 amazing teachers whose words were broadcast
to every student. My own personal view is, number one, that would be transformative because
I know other people can teach economics far better than I could ever do it. It's wasteful,
both of my time and of the students' time, to suffer with me when there are others who could
do it better. But also, I think it gets at the point you made about access and how that could really level the
playing field for people who are, you know, not as privileged as you and I have been.
First of all, I think we should talk about this off the air, because I think it's an amazing idea.
And like, I'm sure you didn't want a global pandemic where we have all been stuck in our
homes and our children are needing to learn through technology. But I actually have taught a bit online during this
pandemic. And I did teach neuroscience. I did two separate sessions. We had thousands and thousands
of people. It's a beautiful, beautiful, and also very, very doable thing. I think that you know best what the
limitation is going to be. How do you pay for this? And who pays for this? We're still really
creating a class system and a prison of our class system. And that's something I would love to see
remedied. You're absolutely right. I also think what we teach should be up for reconsideration.
And I think we teach a lot of the topics we teach because it's what we taught in the early 1900s.
But like you said, we've learned an enormous amount about the mind and about what makes people
content and maybe even about the soul. And I think that curriculum has not kept up with that. And
if I were to redo curriculum, I think I would radically change away from learning facts towards maybe
self-understanding as the goal of a high school degree. Well, my children happen to be homeschooled,
which is unusual from two graduate people who are raising them. My now ex-husband has a master's in political theory.
But one of the reasons that we did homeschool our children, well, the first reason was that we
couldn't afford private school. You know, I was in grad school when I had my first son,
and the public schools in Los Angeles are very, very different than they were when I was a kid.
And we had two very atypical developing children, And we knew that if we put country where you can have that experience,
the city that we live in really does not have the ability to do that. But what I'm interested in,
also in what I'm interested in other people being able to have access to, which means
not raising children who essentially are soldiers, you know, soldiers of education.
I was about as good a student as a person could be through high school and college. But it wasn't
until my first day in the real world on the job in management consulting, where my boss actually
gave me a stack of documents that had some numbers about FDA submissions, new drug applications to
the FDA. And he said, so by the end of the week,
I want you to tell me how our client can get their drugs approved faster. And I said, but I don't
know anything about the FDA. And like, how do you want me to do it? And he looked at me and he said,
it shows how old I am. He looks at me and says, look, we're not paying you $32,000 a year to tell you the answers.
And I remember I broke out in a cold sweat.
And it was the first time, really, that anyone had asked me to think rather than to regurgitate.
But what I realized is I love to think.
And I had never taken the luxury of thinking because it didn't serve me, because thinking
wasn't helpful for getting an A. Regurgitation is what you needed to do. So I couldn't agree more about the regurgitation versus thinking.
Steve, we just became best friends. Look at that.
Well, that's an accomplishment because when a highly sensitive person and an
autistic person can be friends, it's like the possibilities are really infinite. you're listening to people i mostly admire with steve levitt and his conversation with
actor and neuroscientist mayam bialik they'll return after this short break so whenever young people ask my advice about getting a phd economics i almost always try to
talk them out of it getting a phd sounds fun and romantic it's not fun it seems like it will open
all sorts of doors but the truth is really is it's brutal and it's hard. It destroys many people's self-confidence and sense of
self-worth. And people who love a topic as an undergrad often end up unloving it by the time
they finish their PhD. And in the end, six or seven years later, your job prospects aren't even
very good. So does that describe your PhD experience at all?
Yes. It literally, I mean, it near broke my spirit. And imagine also, you know,
giving birth to a human in that time. Literally near broke my spirit.
Do you remember what drove you into a PhD program? You've already said that you weren't that great a student at UCLA
in science. What kind of a person subjects herself to the punishment that comes with doing a PhD in
a subject where you weren't even that good as an undergrad? Well, what I said was that things
didn't come as easily to me as other students.
So I didn't party.
I studied all the time.
I went to every office hours.
I was a very diligent student, but organic chemistry was the death of me.
And I will say, though, I excelled in physics.
I excelled in calculus.
I did great in biochemistry.
Not a very precise lab technician, but really, really like
loved, loved what I studied. It just took a lot of extra effort. I think that your assessment of me,
Steve, is absolutely correct. I don't do things the way you're quote supposed to do. And I would
be hard pressed to find any region of my life that feels in any way typical. I was born different.
I was born butt-first, my mother will tell you. I was backwards from the beginning. And I missed
being creative, but still did a lot of creative things. I led a Jewish a cappella group at UCLA
at our Hillel for years, and I composed music for that group. I still did a lot of fun,
creative things. But what I ultimately realized is that the level of understanding that I wanted
to have of the universe was the level of the electrophysiology of the neuron. That is where
I put my life, really. So you wrote about Prader-Willi syndrome. Can you explain what
that is and what got you interested in the topic? Yeah. So I studied secretions from the hypothalamus, which is a structure about the
size of four Ps, kind of right in the middle of your brain. And the hypothalamus connects to the
pituitary gland, which a lot of people have heard about. And that region of the brain has been
implicated in obsessive compulsive disorder, specifically for oxytocin and vasopressin
secretions. And those might sound familiar because oxytocin and vasopressin secretions. And
those might sound familiar because oxytocin is the feel-good hormone. It's the one that happens
when you have an orgasm. It is also what is necessary for the milk ejection reflex, for labor,
and for human bonding. So it's a very, very important hormone. And individuals with
Prader-Willi syndrome have very high rates of obsessive-compulsive disorder. And Prader-Willi syndrome have very high rates of obsessive compulsive disorder. And Prader-Willi
syndrome is about 1 in 10,000. It's a spontaneous mutation on chromosome 15. It was the first
evidence of genomic imprinting, which means if you're missing this region from your father,
you get one disease. And if you're missing this region from your mother, you get a different
disease. So it's a very special syndrome. And individuals with Prader-Willi syndrome have puberty problems, sleep problems. They often have skeletal issues because they are
lacking growth hormone, cardiovascular issues, and also a bunch of psychiatric features that occur
with that. It's a fascinating population. They tend to be very, very combative. They will do
anything to obtain food because they specifically do not know
when they're full. And their drive to pursue food will lead them to all sorts of very, very
aggressive and often very violent behaviors. But their obsessive compulsive disorder is separate
from their desire to pursue food. And that was the population that I worked in. And I did what's called a pilot study where you're taking a pretty small number of people,
I think we had 26 in mine, to see if we can make correlations between their behavior and
the amounts of oxytocin and vasopressin in their saliva and in their blood.
This sounds highly empirical. It sounds like you went out and
found the folks with Prader-Willi syndrome. How did that work?
Yeah. So the reason that I studied Prader-Willi syndrome is I'm a vegan person, and there are not
many neuroscience departments that do not involve working with animals. So the kind of choices for
those of us who want to work with humans is often the field of mental retardation. And that is how I found my advisor is that she studied all sorts of different syndromes of mental retardation.
And when I read about Prader-Willi syndrome, I thought, well, that needs not just a geneticist,
but a neuroscientist. So that's kind of how I picked it. And part of learning to work in these
kinds of fields is getting connected with the organizations that want to be helpful in essentially providing data. So I worked with the Prader-Willi Syndrome
Association of the United States, that's PWSA, and essentially we would recruit. I would go to
fundraiser walks and I would take a phlebotomist with me and we would collect samples and then we
would also have them do behavioral tests
and I would do the testing for that.
There's a scale of obsessions and compulsions
and they would do a variety of tests.
And what did you find?
And has it been the basis of a strand of research
or not so much?
Well, this is something that in my field
is very, very typical.
We found enough correlations
that would merit further study.
And that's about all you can hope for, you know, in a pilot thesis study.
So what we found is that there were some correlations between those hormones.
We also looked at cortisol, which is a stress hormone.
But essentially, you would need a much larger scale, you know, project to be able to have
really strength from a larger sample size.
So yeah, I remain, you know, a particular kind of
expert of a very, very specific thing. And so you made this decision not to pursue a postdoc,
essentially to get off of the track to have kids. As a woman at that time, it was extremely
unfavorable to choose to have a child. It was like a scarlet letter. And I think it was very,
very difficult. But I knew that as a scientist, I knew I wanted to have my child. It was like a scarlet letter. And I think it was very, very difficult.
But I knew that as a scientist, I knew I wanted to have my first child before 30.
That's just how some of us, you know, science geeks who know a lot about statistics
and eggs like to do things.
It seems to me another example where, at least in economics, there is enormous social pressure
not to do that. Was that difficult?
Very difficult. I mean, I would say it was one of the most difficult decisions
of my adult life, for sure. I got pregnant with my first son after I finished my
course requirements. I wrote my thesis literally laying down while nursing. And I got pregnant
with my second son the week that I handed in my
dissertation. That's our mazel tov, baby. And I took my doctoral hood about seven months pregnant.
Yeah. But this was a case of really listening to, you know, my God-given instincts as a primate mama.
I really wanted to be with my children. And especially because I, you know, trained in the field of psychoneuroendocrinology,
I was studying the hormones of attachment and bonding.
I wanted to be with my kids.
Did I feel like I was an overqualified block stacker?
Of course I did.
And I can't say that my children might not have been better with someone else parenting them.
But this is who God gave them.
This is who the universe gave them. They gave them me. I'm their mom. And I wanted to be there
for those years. You get one life to live. This is not a dress rehearsal. This is it.
And that's ultimately why I left academia, was to be home with my kids. And I taught Hebrew,
I taught piano, I taught neuroscience for five years before running out of health insurance
and figuring like, gosh, if I can just get my Screen Actors Guild insurance, at least we'll
be insured. I had no idea I was going to be on a TV show again. That was not the plan.
This is a crazy life. Well, I'll tell you what's the
craziest thing of all is that someone who's trained as an academic ends up opting out because
acting is a safe choice. I mean, that kind of turns the whole world upside down.
Well, if you think about scheduling, you know, being an academic means you're really beholden
to a very specific way of life.
And what I realized was I was going to be hiring someone, essentially,
to raise my children while I taught other people's children.
And working on a sitcom, I essentially worked school hours,
and it really did allow me to be with my kids for a tremendous amount of time.
So it was more about scheduling and flexibility.
You started The Big Bang Theory as neuroscientist Amy Farrah Fowler for nine years,
and I know nothing about how TV gets made.
Could you just explain to me what the rhythm,
the weekly life of a sitcom is like?
Yeah, we work usually three weeks on, one week off,
and we do that from about August to April.
And we have three days of rehearsal and two days of filming.
The second filming day begins at noon and we tape in front of a live audience.
So that ends around 10 p.m.
But the other days of the week, and I don't mean to make it sound like it's easy, but let's be honest.
We're working school hours and only having to really not be in your pajamas two days a week.
It's not that different from being a science graduate student.
Well, I would have thought it was much harder, much more of a grind.
That's the secret we just revealed.
It's not that hard to be a sitcom actor.
Okay.
And do you have much input at all into the script?
No.
Whatever you're about to say, I don't have much input at all, no.
So you don't, do you do a read-through and say, wait, my Amy would never say that, or that's just not the way it works?
I mean, technically, our writers know the characters even better than we do because
they created them.
That's their baby.
Yes, there are times when we have conversations where I say like, oh, can I say this word? I was consulted for neuroscience specific things.
We had a physics professor from UCLA, Dr. David Salzberg, and he was our physics consultant and
he and I would work out stuff about neuroscience if Amy had to be in the lab or sometimes there'd
be stage direction of like, Amy's doing something in her lab. And I would say, well, why don't we,
you know, I'll be running a PCR or, you know, whatever it was. But no, on a show where you're
a hired actor, you are essentially, you're a tool, you know? I mean, I don't mean you're a tool in a
bad way. I mean, you're a tool in a toolbox of people getting things done together. The show
that I'm working on next, which is called Call Me Kat, I'm producing that with Jim Parsons from
The Big Bang Theory. And I'm starring in that. I am an executive producer, and that's a very different level
of commitment. That's like meeting the writers before we hire them, reading the scripts in their
first draft, approving outlines. That's a lot more kind of labor, as it were. But I also have a
production company, and it's Sad Clown Productions. It says something about you that you named your
production company that.
Well, there's a joke where a guy is very depressed and he goes to his doctor and he says,
I'm really depressed. I don't know the purpose of living. I don't know what to do anymore.
The doctor says, there's this circus and there's this unbelievable clown. And if you go see this
clown, he will give you a reason for living. And the man looks at the doctor and he says,
I am that clown.
I love that.
And that is how we got sad clown productions.
So I know you're getting into directing and screenwriting. And again, I don't know anything
about Hollywood. Could you explain what a director does? And then could you also explain
why there are so few female directors? Because it makes zero sense to me.
So I've never written a screenplay before. I've written books. I've written four books. Two of
them are New York Times bestsellers about puberty. And like, I know how to write,
but I've never written a screenplay. So what I did was after my dad died,
images started bubbling up and stories started bubbling up. And I thought,
is this what it feels like to be a
writer? Like I'm seeing things. Like I was seeing images from my childhood and I started to write
them. And I ended up writing a screenplay that I didn't even show to anyone for quite some time.
And I finally showed it to my manager and to my agent. And it's not an autobiography,
but it's a story, you know, it is a story, you know, based on my life and to my agent. And it's not an autobiography, but it's, it's, you know,
it is a story, you know, based on my life and a lot of people's lives of growing up in a house
with mental illness and what gets left over, you know, and what you pick up the pieces of.
And I figured we would find a writer to fix it. Apparently it's fine the way it is.
And Dustin Hoffman would like to play my father,
and Candice Bergen would like to play my mother, and Simon Helberg from Big Bang Theory would like
to play the brother character. And Olivia Thirlby is going to play the character that would have
been, in theory, me. And I thought, okay, so now we'll get a director. But then I realized, well,
I know what happened. Like, I know what these get a director. But then I realized, well, I know what happened.
Like, I know what these images look like.
How am I going to explain that?
It's a waste of time.
And that's what I was told.
Okay, that means you're the director.
So what a director does is a director's in charge of the vision and the tone of a film,
whether they write the script or not.
And a director kind of oversees everything about filming it,
from the angles to the crew that is in charge of the lighting.
A director also worked directly with the actors to help bring out the performances that tell the story best.
I think that there are not a lot of women directors for the same reason that there are not a lot of women a lot of things.
This is about, you know, our culture's trajectory of women, where we were expected to be, what skill sets we were expected to need. I'll be honest, the fact that women's fertility peaks when their career fertility also peaks being a parent, especially a younger one, you know?
I believe that we are seeing shifts. I believe that we need more mentorship possibilities for
women. I could also have a very similar conversation about people of color.
Yeah. I mean, directing seems especially strange to me to be so male-dominated because it's measurable. In general, I tend to think that
this cultural discrimination can survive really well when you can't really measure whether someone's
good or not. And honestly, I think it's very hard to measure whether a CEO is good or not because
there are so many other variables going on. But with directing, you get to see at the end of the
day whether people wanted to go to the movie or not. And I think it really speaks to the powerful
cultural factors that are at work.
There is nothing inherently spectacular about being a director that means that white men do
it best. I promise. There's also nothing about white men that makes them better CEOs. Like,
we just, we need time and we need to do better to increase the opportunities for people in
underrepresented populations, period.
We don't need to fight about it. You don't need to say, am I a feminist or not? We need more
opportunities for more people so that we can see more women's voices, more women's eyes,
more women's visions. I'm also not a 50-50 person, meaning there may be more men who want to be
directors. I don't know. But right now, we actually don't know that. So letickey and Allison Craiglow produced this episode
with sound design by David Herman.
Our staff also includes Greg Rippin and Corinne Wallace.
Our intern is Emma Terrell.
We had help this week from Nellie Osborne.
All of the music you heard on the show
was composed by Luis Guerra.
To listen ad-free, subscribe to Stitcher Premium.
We can be reached at radio at Freakonomics.com.
Thanks for listening.
Would you give almost everything to be anonymous?
Since we've become best friends, I can tell you, I look terrible at the supermarket.
And, you know, some celebrities, you see them and you say like, wow, they really look good
even without makeup. I'm not that person. I've gained and lost hundreds of pounds,
right, over the course of my life, nursing children for six years straight.