Fresh Air - Star Of ‘Pluribus’ Rhea Seehorn
Episode Date: December 9, 2025The new Apple TV+ series was created by Vince Gilligan, who also created ‘Breaking Bad’ and co-created ‘Better Call Saul.’ He liked her work in ‘Saul’ so much, he wrote the lead in ‘Plur...ibus’ for her. The story has a sci-fi premise, but the themes of the show are more existential – like what is happiness? What is the importance of individuality? Seehorn spoke with Terry Gross about the show, her secretive father who worked in counter intelligence, and her memories of Bob Odenkirk’s nearly fatal heart attack on set. Also, critic Ken Tucker shares Christmas music from Brad Paisley, Mickey Guyton, Leon Bridges, and Old Crow Medicine Show. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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This is fresh air. I'm Terry Gross.
One of the most talked about TV series now is the Apple TV series, Pluribus, created by Vince Gilligan.
It stars my guest Ray Seahorn.
know her as the co-star of Better Call Saul, which was both a prequel and sequel to Breaking
Bad. Seahorn and Pluribus were just each nominated for a Golden Globe. In Pluribus,
Seahorn plays Carol, a writer of best-selling romance novels. Her life partner, Helen, is her
manager. One night, Carol and Helen are leaving a bar when Helen has a seizure and dies. Suddenly,
everyone around Carolyn, the bar and in the ER, are frozen and
place or have fallen down and having a seizure. And then most of them get up and seem changed.
They're talking and walking in unison. Their faces are somewhere between happy and hypnotized.
What's going on? Back home, when Carol turns on the TV looking for a new show that might explain,
all the channels are blank, except C-SPAN. A man on that channel is at a White House podium talking directly
to Carol by name. He gives her a phone number to call.
for more information.
She calls, and the man she saw on the TV is the one talking to her,
he apologizes for Helen's death.
Millions of others have died, including the president.
He explains that everyone now has the benefits of an extraterrestrial technology.
Through pulsing signals that were sent,
everyone around the world is now held together by a psychic glue.
Here's part of that scene.
Rest assured, Carol, we will figure out what makes sure.
you different.
Figure it out. Why?
So we can fix it.
So you can join us.
Oh, God.
Carol?
You still there?
You said my life was my own.
It is 100%.
So what happens when I say no?
Carol, once you understand how wonderful this is, Carol?
As time goes by, Carol learns that everyone has access to everyone else's memories and knowledge.
Everyone is happy, and there's peace around the world, except for Carol and a few others.
She isn't buying that these transformations are a good thing, and she does everything she can to resist.
Ray Sehorn, welcome to Fresh Air. I love this series. I loved you on Better Call Saul. It's really such a pleasure to have you on the show. Oh, my gosh. Thank you. It is such a pleasure to be here. Thank you. The premise of this series is sci-fi. But the show itself is asking so many questions about human nature, like, what is happiness? Is it happiness if there's no longer a larger meaning to your life? And is being in,
An individual with your own temperament and thoughts, is that more valuable than this happiness?
And is anger lethal or is it good to let out your anger and resist what you think is wrong?
And, you know, maybe we'll find out some answers to those questions and many other questions later.
But I just want people to know there's some really interesting thoughts in this.
Thank you.
And did you find yourself asking what is happiness as you made the series?
Yeah, I definitely was asking myself a lot of those questions throughout this series.
And we had amazing conversations among the crew and the cast, you know, some of these late night shoots and even on weekends.
Stuff of like, well, would you choose what's best for the individual versus what's best for the community as,
as a whole, I personally think I would absolutely be Team Carroll as far as arguing, you know, the necessity and the positives of individual thinking and independent thinking.
For one thing, a big thing that came up for me was the fact that this group think, no matter how intelligent and how peaceful, one of the ideas of happiness and joy, which maybe is slightly different, is being.
surprised by things, whether it's wonder growing up as a kid and hopefully still as an adult or
a giant belly laugh. And if you cannot be surprised, there's never going to be any new art.
There's never going to be a joke that you haven't heard. There's never going to be surprise
behavior that makes you laugh. And that's just such a source of joy for me that I just can't
imagine that contentment is the same as happiness. One of the other characteristics of your character
in Pluribus is that she is angry a lot of the time. She already had a kind of anger issue,
but now that she's one of like 12 or 13 people in the whole world who haven't been affected
by this, whatever it is, this alien technology, she's angry all the time. You know, her wife
died as this thing started as a result of this thing. And she has known she can really confide in because
everybody is transformed. And she knows that she believes there's something really terrible
behind this. So she's angry all the time. Your character on Better Call Saul had her own
anger issues. And you're really good at expressing anger. Kim Wexler was
an incredibly capable person at suppressing it, whereas I do not think Carol is. But yeah, I guess
she did have anger, a certain righteousness about her. So, you know, we talked about how the series
has affected you thinking about happiness. What about anger? Because anger can be really destructive.
And in the series, in Pluribus, when she gets angry, people die. Like, anger is literally
poison, a killing poison. But in real life, sometimes it's important to get angry because, first of all,
you just need to express yourself, but second of all, somebody needs to know that you really
offended or hurt or think that something is morally or ethically wrong. And sometimes it takes
anger to really get the point across. Did you find yourself thinking about anger a lot and your
levels of anger. I have no idea if you like to express anger. No, I struggle mightily with
how much I suppress my anger. And as you said, there's this idea of anger can be, you know,
a miasma almost that like can spread. And we've all seen like horrible things can happen
when you just are riling people up with, you know,
frothing at the mouth with anger about things and negativity. But at the same time, it is a
necessary emotion, which I think is one of the arguments in the show that I side with of the
idea that all of the emotions are important. Not just happiness. But I had asked Vincent,
he wasn't coming at it from an angle of particularly a woman being angry, but because I'm a woman
playing the role, that I paused a lot thinking about that because I do think that I have
grown up in a world that maybe it's on me, but it felt as though I was taught that anger was
unpalatable specifically from females and that I should find a way to make it palatable,
make my requests palatable and and not express a lot of anger.
When I was much younger, I would scream it as a teenager, you know, screaming, yelling like
the typical arguments you have over hairspray and idiotic things at home as a teenager.
But plus it was my parents were divorced, and so it was a household of three women, my mom
and my sister and I.
So there were actually a lot of hairspray arguments.
But, you know, you kind of grow out of this complete.
temperamental just I'm going to spew anything I want coming out of my mouth and you get out
into the real world and it it did feel like and it's interesting you ask because I haven't pinned
down like was it something I saw was you know in real life or something on a television show or what
where was I getting this messaging that um that it wasn't okay to raise my voice at to be very very
sharp. I'm not sure of the answer of that, but I know that it got to a place where it went
too far, literally to the place of like, I'm nodding and just saying yes or whatever to, you know,
somebody that's maybe speaking to me in a way that I absolutely disagree with. And I go home
and break out an eczema. And that's not an exaggeration. So I'm just like, clearly the anger is
going somewhere. I don't think it's okay to scream and yell on someone.
face, but I think I have become conflict avoidant in the suppression of that anger to a degree
that's not healthy. I will stand up for somebody else, though, in a heartbeat. If somebody else is
being mistreated next to me, I'm in there. I'll take you to the mat. But if it's at me,
I tend to swallow it and try to figure out how I can make it better. In terms of absorbing the message
that women shouldn't display anger, no need to
to tell you that it's all over the culture. It's in movies and TV. Those expectations don't
need to be spoken. They've been passed on for centuries. But does anger expressed as an actor
become a great release valve for someone like you who has suppressed anger for many years?
It didn't feel, to be completely honest, it didn't feel like therapeutic, like, oh, thank God, I have a place to release all of my anger now.
But instead, for me, I would take Carol's moments of sort of explosive anger.
And I feel like prior to this event happening, she probably had anger issues, but she didn't explode a lot because Helen,
her partner was this complete buffer.
But now in this after event, I feel like if that's taken away from Carol, and it becomes,
and that was fun as an actor, to have this extreme obstacle to somebody that does just unleash rage,
is extremely reactive, extremely impulsive, no problem raising her voice, really doesn't care what anybody thinks anymore, what's the point.
But then to take that and give yourself as an actor this massive obstacle that she does care about not killing millions of people.
So this whole tool is going to be taken away from her.
So how does she express herself now?
How do you relay your feelings in a way that the world is deeming safe?
And as we just talked about, like, sure, the negative viewpoint of that is like the suppression of anger, but the positive thing was kind of like, yeah, but there's something to be learned from having to find a way to communicate your feelings and your boundaries without screaming and yelling in someone's face and character assassination, you know?
So there's something me learn from that too.
I want to point out something else that I think is very relevant to today.
in the series. The series is called pluribus, which translates to, you know, out of many one.
And in this era where diversity, equity, and inclusion is basically being outlawed to the extent
that they can by the Trump administration, e pluribus unum has always been like one of the
founding principles or slogans, if you want to call it that.
of the United States.
So this kind of conformity is really the opposite of DEI, because there's no diversity
and equity.
There's no need, there's no diversity, so there's no need for equity and inclusion because
everybody has the same thoughts.
Or you could argue that it's the ultimate in all inclusion and everybody has equal everything.
That's true.
That's true.
But that's by erasing their religion, their ethnicity, their geography, their geography.
Or you could say they are all religions and they are all geographies.
Right. And you could also say they're all artificial intelligence because that's also how they sound when they're speaking. They're not. But when they speak, it sometimes sounds like, you know, the verbal artificial intelligence talking to you.
I also really appreciated that our new pope that his favorite motto apparently is e pluribus unum. So I really appreciate him advertising the show.
Oh, yeah, I thought you were going to tell me he was a fan, and I thought, really? He has time?
No, no, he just says that, like, that came out, that that was his, one of his favorite
mottos, I guess, and I was like, we were just laughing. Thanks. Thanks for the shout-out.
So your character starts off as a famous romance novelist with this ardent following,
and she goes to a bookstore, and there's a reading there, which everybody loves.
And it's, you know, a romance novel, aboard a ship with a pirate.
Anyways, the language is full of, like, really typical romance book language.
So did you do research and go to readings of romance novelists?
I did.
I went to The Ripped Bodhis, which is an amazing romance novel store that only does romance novels.
in Culver City.
And just slipped in and looked around.
I have to tell you, one of the first things that struck me is the amount of subgenres
and the specificity of these subgenres.
It's historical, paranormal, it could be romance suspense.
Then within that, there were sub-sub-genres of ones that, people that want them to be more
dialogue, more chatty versus more descriptive, more descriptive, yeah. And certainly, you know,
those LGBTQIA stuff, there's stuff that people really want to sound period. There's stuff that people
want to sound futuristic versus very contemporary slang language. It was kind of incredible. But I also,
I watched a couple people do readings from their books. And I was really surprised.
at the breadth of people of fans listening.
There was a lot of people dressed like early Stevie Nicks in a beautiful way.
But then there was also like, you know, just a, there was some couple that looked like they came straight from a corporate job, a man and a woman in office suits.
Young people younger than me, people older than me.
it definitely
it definitely
wizened me to
how huge this genre is
and how much it encapsulates
you know
all the different novels it has
so the character in
Plybos was originally written
for a man by Vince Gilligan
and then he decided
to rewrite it for you
how did that happen
I don't believe
there were scripts
you know with the male
character and then he went back and rewrote. I think he said he was conceiving it from now.
Kind of kicking around, yeah, conceiving quite a few concepts he was interested in. I think he said that, and it was
during Better Call Saul in season one, I think he said taking breaks from the writer's room and walking around
on lunch breaks and stuff and just started, it's just how he works. He just ideas will pop in his head, sometimes questions without
answers and one of them was what would happen if you woke up and the whole world was
obsequious. The whole world was willing to do whatever you wanted to and give you
anything you want. And it was a male character and he has said that it's just because
that's second nature to him. He is a man and he has written male protagonist and then I don't know
the exact like shift that happened or where but I didn't know about it until after we
had wrapped all a Better Call Saul, but he said it was during, I think towards the end of season
one of Better Call Saul, that he was just watching me work and had talked to me a lot about
the way I work as well as watching me perform and decided that I'm stuttering because it's
hard to say this because I'm, I'm floored by the compliment and the flattery, to put it
mildly and struggle saying it about myself. But he said that he realized, like, I have to
write something for her. I have to, I need to make sure that I do a project with her and actually
wouldn't these concepts that I'm noodling with, wouldn't they work even better if they were
her? And he knew that he also wanted to play with tone and take wild swings as far as, like,
it could be darkly comedic or it could be darkly psychological. Sometimes it's going to, you know,
go between back and forth, and he was impressed at my ability to do those things so hard for me to
say about myself.
That can be the title of this episode.
Ray Sehorn brags about herself.
Yeah, I don't know.
Listen, I've had to sit next to him in interviews when he's saying it, and I'm just, my face is one giant tomato red ball when he's saying it.
But I'm certainly very thankful for it.
My guest is Ray Seahorn, star of the new Apple TV series Pluribus.
We'll be back after a short break.
I'm Terry Gross, and this is fresh air.
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Hi, this is Molly C.V. Nesper.
at Fresh Air.
And this is Terry Gross, host of the show.
One of the things I do is write the weekly newsletter.
And I'm a newsletter fan.
I read it every Saturday after breakfast.
The newsletter includes all the week's shows, staff recommendations, and Molly picks timely highlights
from the archive.
It's a fun read.
It's also the only place where we tell you what's coming up next week, an exclusive.
So subscribe at WHOY.org slash Fresh Air and look for an email from Molly every Saturday morning.
Let's get back to my interview with Ray Seahorn.
She was just nominated for a Golden Globe for her role in the new Apple TV series Pluribus, which was also nominated.
The series was created for Seahorn by Vince Gilligan.
Seahorn also co-starred in Better Call Saul, which was created by Gilligan and Peter Gould.
That series was a sequel and prequel to Gilligan's series Breaking Bad.
In Better Call Saul, Seahorn played Kim Wexler, a lawyer who marries Jimmy Mood.
McGill, an unethical lawyer who gets involved with a Mexican cartel, played by Bob Odenkirk.
The series lasted six seasons, and while shooting an episode in that final season, Bob
Odenkirk suffered a heart attack and collapsed on set. He had just completed shooting an intense scene
with Seahorn that were about to hear an excerpt of. It's the scene in which Lalo, a cartel
member had just killed a colleague of Jimmy and Kim's, Howard Hamlin, played by Patrick Fabian,
and the murder was in Jimmy and Kim's apartment right in front of their eyes. They're frozen in
fear, as Lalo then instructs Jimmy to go to the home of drug czar Gus Fring and kill him
while Kim waits behind with Lalo. Jimmy insists that Kim be the one to go because he thinks it
might be even more dangerous for Kim to stay with Lalo. Here's the scene.
Tony Dalton, as Lalo, speaks first.
I know, I know.
You're a lawyer and not a killer, but look, you can do this, okay?
This guy, he's a house cat.
Black, medium height, short hair, glasses.
He kind of looks like a librarian.
But don't be fooled, even a house cat can scratch.
So that's it.
Hard part's over.
Now you pull out the camera, same principle as the gun.
Point and shoot.
Take a picture.
One where I can see the face clearly.
And then you bring it back here where me and Mrs. Goodman will be waiting for you.
And then you're done.
I'd say it's about a 20-minute drive over there.
20 minutes back, maybe 10 minutes to do the job.
Let's call it an hour altogether.
So, you're back here in an hour or...
You sent her.
What?
She should do it.
Jimmy.
Why her?
Don't do this.
This guy, the house cat.
He looks through his people in the middle of the night and he sees me.
Who's this asshole? What's he doing?
Maybe he gets his gun. Maybe he calls the cops.
Either way, that door stays shut.
But he sees a woman.
She looks like she's in distress.
Maybe her car broke down.
I mean, you'd open the door for her, wouldn't you?
wouldn't you? Stop. Stop.
Yeah, but
she's really clever.
I don't know she's going to stick to the plan.
She will. No, no, no. No cops.
You know she will.
No. Look, this doesn't
even make any sense. I've
never shot a gun before. I've never even held one.
Like I have. Jimmy, what are you doing?
You know she's the best choice.
No, I'm not. I can't. I can't do it.
She can do it. You know she can do it. You know I'm right.
Let's just stop it.
Oh, my God.
Okay.
Shut up.
Yeah, her.
That was a scene from Better Call Saul right before the star Bob Odenkirk had his heart attack.
Were you on set with him when this happened?
Yes.
So Jimmy and I, Bob and I are now being held captive on the couch.
And we had just done our side of it.
We were getting ready to turn around, which is the cameras, the lights, the props, everything,
are going to, crew is now going to move to the other side of the room so they can turn the camera around on Tony Dalton playing Lalo because we were on opposite sides of the room.
And we had been shooting the scene for maybe about 10 hours. And they tell actors when it's a big turnaround, meaning there's enough time to go to your trailer because this is a lot of equipment that's got to be moved. It's not a quick thing.
But we didn't go to our trailers, which is another like, thank God he didn't. If Bob had gone to his trailer,
and just passed out, which is what happened when this heart attack happened.
He would have been dead by the time they knocked on the door, and that would be that.
No one would have even known.
He would have just passed out.
So we went down to that end, and Bob was watching a Cubs game and chatting with us, also on his exercise bike,
which he would do to stay just kind of alert instead of getting sleepy after hours and hours of shooting,
which did not cause a heart attack.
I have to say that his rebound from his heart attack was because he was in the best shape of his life from training for his film. Nobody.
But he and Patrick and I are just laughing and goofing off.
And then Bob got off the bike and looked like he was going to faint.
So we ran to catch him so his head wouldn't hit the concrete floor.
And then we realized, oh, this is, this looks like either a seizure, a stroke, or a cardiac arrest, all of which we need.
attention. And so we started screaming for help. And it took a beat, a horrifying, terrifying
beat. And eventually, a set medic was there, a different setmatic that had just started.
Then Rosa Estrada came over. And it turned out that they couldn't get his heart to start. And
they needed a defibrillator. And Rosa ran to her car and got it. And they brought it back. And they
were able to revive him, and then the ambulance came. But yeah, Patrick and I were, we wouldn't
let go of him either. They just kept having to tell us, like, yeah, you can't be holding on to him
while he's being electrocuted. But that was, that was, it was very hard to let go of your
friend for a second in that moment. I'm glad you have such vivid memories of this, because like
when I interviewed Bob Odenkirk, he had no memory of it. He has none. He has none. And so, we, we,
We went back to shoot that scene. We had to finish that shoot months later. And Bob has no memory of the entire day, not just the event, but the entire day. And they showed him footage so that he would know where he was sitting. And I go, I said, I mean, we shot this for 10 hours. We also rehearsed it for a week and a half, drilling it. And it's this very emotional, tense scene. I said, remember, now do you remember that day? Because we were shooting this whole day. And he looks at me and laughing. And he said, it is like I am watching.
an imposter in my body do a scene that I have never done in my entire life.
I was like, wow.
What a strange feeling that must have been.
Isn't that crazy?
It's just like, yeah, he has no memory of it at all.
We had to tell him multiple times after he woke up in the hospital.
If you're just joining us, my guest is Ray Seahorn.
She stars in the Apple TV series Pluribus, which was created by the co-creator of Better Call Saul
and the creator of Breaking Bad, Vince Gilligan.
We'll be right back after a break.
This is fresh air.
So I want to talk about your formative years,
and I know that you are officially named Debbie,
but at some point in your life,
you felt like I'm not a Debbie.
So I'd like to know how old you were
when you came to that realization
and what being a Debbie translated to you.
What did that mean to you?
I think I was 12, 12 or 13, and it's Deborah Ray Seahorn.
Oh, I see. So Ray was your middle name.
Oh, Ray was my middle name.
And it was shortened to Debbie.
And I can't even say why.
And it sounds fabricated after the fact, but I really did have a sort of disconnect feeling with the name.
And then I got a little chunky in puberty, and kids started yelling at me, hey, fat, Debbie, do you want some more little debbyes, which are snack cakes?
I was like, you know what, I just, it was over the summer one year, and I think it was me coming back to eighth grade, and I was just like, I just, I think I just need a fresh start.
and I think I identify more with my middle name.
And weirdly, there was no issue with kids that had known me forever.
Everybody just sort of was like, yeah, that makes sense.
Your father was a counterintelligence agent for the investigative service.
What is that, the investigative service?
Yeah, it was called NIS at the time, Naval Intelligence, and now it's N-CIS,
of the Mark Harmon variety.
Right, okay.
Yeah, he was in the Tet Offensive in Vietnam in the Army and then became a ranger and then went to NIS, which I'm not sure if that's an unusual trajectory or not as far as the switch from services.
But we were civilian and the counterintelligence unit, you know, would be like we moved.
I was born in Norfolk, Virginia, and then we immediately moved, or Norfolk, if you're from there, immediately moved.
They immediately moved to Japan, then Arizona, and then we moved back to Virginia to catch the Walker Spy family, which was a big case in the 80s.
That he worked on?
That he worked on, yeah.
That was a joint investigation with NIS, FBI and CIA about two brothers.
I think they were Navy and CIA, that both had decided to turn secrets to become moles for the KGB.
So it's counterintelligence, meaning our people, you're investigating our own who have decided to work for the other.
So did your father's work as a counterintelligence agent require him to do spycraft, like wearing disguises?
No, I hear from other people that he, when he was a deep-in-the-field agent,
even pre the fall of the iron wall and all of that stuff, before my sister and I were around
or at least conscious of his stuff. I hear there were disguises and things like that way back then.
But after that, it felt, we understood that he was investigating people and we understood that
he went to an office and that it involved government and military officials and stuff, or maybe just
government officials. And when we'd move, we'd sometimes live on a base for a short while while they
found us residential housing. But I wasn't, I knew he was investigating things and I knew that
they were secretive. But I didn't have a lot more details than that. And I am loath to say that
my head was too far up my butt as a teenager to actually be interested in what my parents actually
do. And then he died when I was 18. So I didn't get to ask a lot of the questions that I wish I had
asked. Well, he probably wouldn't have answered them.
Probably not. And my dad's favorite answer to everything was, what are you write in a book? If you even just said, like, where are you going? What are you writing a book? And I thought I was so brilliant when I was 15 that I finally had to come back. And I go, yeah, I am. And he said, well, then leave this chapter out.
Your father became a heavy drinker. Is that right? Correct.
Yeah. What impact did that have on you?
Um, apparently he was a heavy drinker for most of his adult life, but it just didn't get labeled as alcoholism, you know, and my dad was the life of the party and very, very smart, very, very funny with a super dry wit. And growing up into time where like having martinis, I don't know that they had them at lunch if you're working for the government, but it was pretty normal that that's what you do at the end of the day. And then that just keeps creeping up, especially if, uh,
I don't know. I wish it was here that I could ask him. It makes me so sad that it at least wasn't. I don't know if it is now. I feel like it's gotten better from what I hear, but regularly offering and even normalizing people in the service to get therapy. It just wasn't a thing back then. The idea that he was in the Tet offensive, and as far as I know, never talked to anybody about it.
and that you would have a life built of a lot of secrets and, you know, even investigating sometimes your own department.
And I don't remember him ever saying that he had anybody to talk to about it.
So I just bring that up because I think self-medicating was going on for quite a while before it physically became a full-blown issue and then full-blown disease.
you thought you would have a career in the visual arts as a painter
how did you get into acting what changed your mind
I wanted so badly to run away with the circus
and by that I mean television and film I was obsessed with television film
and as a kid in the suburbs in Virginia
I'd never known anybody that had even the loosest association
with the entertainment business
and thought it was just an impossible
dream. And then in my first year at George Mason University, you had to take an elective in
the arts that was not your major. And my major was fine arts. And so I took an acting class
with Lenny Riebeck. And very thankfully, it was not a emotional Ui-Gui class. I took
plenty of those later. But this was a hardcore do-your-homework script analysis class using
practical aesthetics that was developed out of the Atlantic Theater. And I just
just was in love with the fact that if you work really hard and study, you can incrementally
get closer and closer to being good at this and hopefully one day great at this. And that was
the best news ever to me because I didn't know a lot about how to do this thing. But I thought,
oh, if you just want hours put in and like stay home and study and work at this, I'm in. And then
almost immediately the idea that, oh, this is studying the behavior of humans and the
wise, and it was at times a very difficult household coming up. And the idea that you could
actually start thinking about people's behavior as a result of what it is that they want and
their inability to use the correct tactic or the given circumstance that are holding them
back. It's just like, it blew my mind that that is how you can organize human behavior and not only
have empathy for it, but mimic it in a way that invites people in to go on a journey with you when
you're on stage. And then I started going to DC theater, which I think is some of the world's best
theater is watching D.C. theater. And watching those performers and was just like, I have to do this
immediately. I have to do this for the last of my life. I don't know how many days.
job I'm going to have to have. It was not about being famous. I knew that I had to be an actor
and I'd support myself however I had to. Well, Ray C. Horn, I want to thank you so much. I've
really enjoyed this interview. I really like Plyrobis. Thanks. So thank you for all of that.
This is a dream come true being here.
Ray C. Horn stars on the new Apple TV series Pluribus. After we take a short break,
Kent Tucker will review some new Christmas songs.
This is Fresh Air.
It's a time of year when pop stars release holiday music,
and rock critic Kent Tucker has been listening to a lot of the newest releases.
He's got a roundup that includes Christmas songs from Brad Paisley,
Mickey Guyton, Leon Bridges, and Old Crow Medicine Show.
Let's start with country singer guitarist Brad Paisley.
Walking down the street, looking at the faces, seeing just a few,
more smiles
storefront windows
getting decorated
no it won't be long now
all the cafes
making peppermint and lattes
you can make mine a double
because it's been a grind
but I see Christmas lights
at the end of the tunnel
and we're counting
down the days
till the world
Brad Paisley is counting down the days until Christmas.
Are you?
Paisley, a superb country guitarist with a puckish sense of humor,
has made what is easily the best new collection of Christmas music.
It's called Snow Globe Town.
Paisley knows how to layer a proper Christmas album.
It's got some lovely ballads infused with snow and sentiment.
It's got a couple of novelty tunes,
such as one about a naughty elf on a shelf.
He covers traditional songs,
as Santa Claus is coming to town, and Christmas carols like Oh Holy Night.
My favorite new song on this album is this warm, pretty composition called Falling Just Like the Snow.
I am melting just like the ice on our boots by the door, and just like the fire I feel warm.
And you with your eyes all o' glow, girl, I'm falling just like the snow.
Another country vocalist, Mickey Guyton, has an album called Feels Like Christmas.
It's a cheerful bunch of songs. You can hear Guyton smile as she sings them.
One standout is the song Sugar Cookie, which is arranged to sound like a sweet bit of Motown pop from decades past.
Sugar Cookie is a new song that arrives with built-in nostalgia.
I got to say, I've been having this craving.
Every day I've been wishing and praying for the taste I can't wait.
It's been keeping me up all night.
You're the one I want the most.
You're always melting my heart.
Turn me to marshmallow
When all the snowflakes start
I've been dying for the silver to drop
Because baby, you're the accident on top
You're my sugar
Sugar cookie
Sugar
That goody goody
Sweetness
Fresh out the oven
Your gifts
I'll take a dozen
You keep me warm when it's close
The R&B singer Leon Bridges has released an enigmatic holiday track, a tune called A Merry Black Christmas.
It's a rueful variation on the Irving Berlin classic White Christmas.
Remember the line about a white Christmas just like the ones I used to know?
Here, it becomes a Black Christmas just like the one I've never had before.
His gravelly croon lends a certain melancholy to the beauty that Leon Bridges summons up here.
I'm thinking, I'm thinking about a merry-by-christmas, just like the one I've never had before.
Like in down in the street
With no shoes
On your feet
And they're happy
Oh the happy
Can't you see
I'm thinking
I'm thinking
Oh I'm thinking
I'm thinking
Thinking about
Merry
Christmas
We began with Brad Paisley
Counting the Days until Christmas arrives
We will end with
Old Crow Medicine show
Thinking about the day after Christmas
This jaunty Nashville-based string band
has a clever original song called
December 26
Well, another year has come and gone
We sang the songs and drunk the knob
The twinkle lights are staying on all day
Fa la la la
The fridge is full of Christmas goose
And needles dropping off the spruce
The ornaments are getting loose
And falling
It's time to throw away the tree
Clear out the opening debris
It's far too soon, don't you agree
Hang on, fa la la la
The relatives pack up the car
And follow back the evening star
With heavy bags and heavy hearts
Because it's the day after Christmas
And we got away to whole dang year
For the Harley and Garland and Elzone chef
The sleigh and the bells and the pine trees
I don't want to listen
To the fainting sounds of reindeer
Because it's the day after Christmas
And we ain't out of cheer
Whether you're anxiously awaiting Christmas
Or already wishing the holidays would be over
here's a lot of music that lets you know
you're not alone.
Rock critic Kentucky reviewed Christmas music
from Brad Paisley, Mickey Guyton,
Leon Bridges, and Old Crow Medicine Show.
Tomorrow on Fresh Air
is the U.S. headed toward another financial meltdown?
We'll hear from New York Times business writer
Andrew Ross Sorkin,
who says history has lessons to offer.
Author of a best-selling book on the 2008 financial crisis,
his latest is a gripping account
of the stock market crash
that led to the Great Depression.
It's called 1929.
I hope you'll join us.
It's a marshmallow world in the winter.
When the snow comes to cover the ground.
It's a time for play
It's a whipped cream day
I wait for it the whole year I am
Those marshmallow clouds being friendly
In the arms of the evergreen trees
And the sun is red
Like a pumpkin head
He's shining so your nose don't freeze
The world is your snowball
See how it grows
Whenever it snows
The world is your snowball
Just for a song
Get out and roll it along
It's a young, yummy world
Made for sweethearts
Take a walk with your favorite girl
It's a sugar date
And what if spring is late
In winter it's a marshmallow world
To keep up with what's on the show and get highlights of our interviews,
follow us on Instagram at NPR Fresh Air.
Fresh Air's executive producer is Danny Miller.
Our technical director and engineer is Audrey Bentham.
Our managing producer is Sam Brigger.
Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers,
Anne Reboldinato, Lauren Crenzel, Teresa Madden, Monique Nazareth,
Thea Chaloner, Susan Yucundi, Anna Bauman, and Nico Gonzalez Whistler.
Our digital media producer is Molly C.V. Nestberg.
Our consulting visual producer is Hope Wilson.
Roberta Shorak directs the show.
Our co-host is Tanya Mosley.
I'm Terry Gross.
