IMO with Michelle Obama and Craig Robinson - Behind The Looks with Meredith Koop
Episode Date: November 26, 2025In this intimate conversation, Michelle Obama is joined by her longtime stylist Meredith Koop and journalist and author Elaine Welteroth to talk through Meredith and Michelle’s incredi...bly impactful work together. They share the unexpected way that their paths crossed, offer a behind-the-scenes look at their process, and share the unique challenges that the White House posed to styling Michelle. They also share how they’ve approached this exciting post-White House stage of Michelle’s style journey (featuring a certain thigh high gold boot!).See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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I knew, like, if something went wrong with the designer, you know, if it was the wrong thing,
the wrong person, the wrong time, even just the zipper breaks, she falls down, her heels break?
Like, you've never seen her fall down because I checked everything.
You've never seen her zipper pop because I checked the zipper.
You know what I mean?
So, like, we can't have our first black lady falling down.
No, no, no.
That was breaking.
That was the biggest goal, getting out of the eight years without falling.
This episode is brought to you by Rivian.
Welcome to The Look, a special series on IMO.
The Look also happens to be the name of Michelle Obama's beautiful new book, which is available for purchase now.
I'm Elaine Welteroth, journalist, author, television host, and founder of Birth Fund.
And it is my absolute honor to be here today with the Mrs. Obama and her longtime beloved stylist Meredith Coupe.
Hello ladies. Hi, Elaine. Thank you for being. I'm so, so, so excited to have you here.
When we started working on this project, first person I said, we have to get is you, my friend.
So, you know, and look at you. Let me not cry. Look at you. Look at you two. I am so excited to be here.
Even just walking into this room, seeing these pictures made my eyes well up. This is a moment that we get the opportunity to sit together and
reflect on all of the history, all the fashion history that you all have co-created. So it is my honor
to be here. You both worked so hard on this book project. And I am so excited to get into all of it.
For this episode, we are going to go deep behind the scenes with both of you to hear all about your
style evolution from the White House to today. And before we get to all of that, though, I want to
take a moment to get to know
Meredith.
So fun fact, when I had the opportunity to share,
when I shared this opportunity with just a couple of people in my life,
even the fashion people were like, wait,
Michelle Obama has a stylist?
I was like, yes, people, yes.
So after being behind the scenes all of these years,
what is it like to finally step in front of the cameras
and tell your story and be able to share your work with the work?
This must feel so amazing.
Yeah, it's exciting, honestly.
I mean, I've done interviews and things here and there, but to have this project that's so much more in depth and substantive and really speaks to what the work is is awesome.
And my work with Michelle is different than I would say most stylists, but there's also a lot in common with what most stylists do.
So it feels good.
I mean, it's kind of scary, but it's good.
Well, you have to tell us a little bit of your backstory because you are literally living so many people's fashion dream.
And yet you didn't even set out to be a stylist.
So we have to hear how you landed this job of all jobs.
This is huge.
And by the way, you started your first fashion job was kind of just to pay the bills.
you went to school for psychology.
You were intending to pursue a path in psychology.
So I also want to hear how your background in psychology has influenced your work as a stylist.
My passion growing up was dance.
That was something that I felt truly passionate about, but that did not come to fruition for me.
Can I just say one of the favorite things about Meredith is that she is a bomb dancer.
She has moves.
Yes. And kickball change. I mean, she can throw down. But that's a factoid that I think the world needs to know that in addition to being a phenomenal. Let me be a middle age backup dancer. Please. I'm ready. She is ready. Okay. But yeah. So that was really something that had I had all the expansive opportunity in front of me with that, that's what I would have done. But that's not how I grew up. Like the culture of my family was,
You're going to go to a liberal arts college. You're going to go to a four-year college. You're going to get a degree. Something that could potentially translate into some sort of steady income. And I think it wasn't, you know, when I meet people that have children that are like pursuing the arts, I'm always so impressed with the parents of how open they are to that experience. So when I went to school, I chose psychology just because I was interested in people. But it wasn't like this big plan.
You know, and college was not a place where I thrived.
I was not prepared emotionally, mentally to be in that space independently and had a lot of issues.
So when I came out of that experience, I wasn't, oh, I'm set up for success and now I'm going to go climb some corporate ladder somewhere.
I came out like, what am what, what are people doing?
Like, how old am I?
What am I?
What am I supposed to do now?
Like, I think a lot of people have that experience.
It's just, you know, with my specific issues and things that I was dealing with, I was like, I just need to get a job.
I wasn't about my ego.
It wasn't about anything except I want to make money to support myself so that I can just be a functioning adult on some level.
I moved to Chicago and I just started looking through ads.
And at the time, a lot of those ads were print.
They were printed out.
I remember the day?
I saw this ad and it said sales associate at a high-end clothing boutique.
Like, I remember exactly what it said.
And then a number.
No name.
Like, I didn't really know what it was.
I didn't really know where it was.
I just knew it was in Chicago.
And I wasn't shopping at high-end luxury stores.
Okay.
So I had no reference.
So I called.
I, you know, they answered,
with the name of the store. So then I was able to research what it was. I went in for the interview.
And also just noting that like I'd always been interested in fashion. Like fashion always spoke to me.
Clothing always spoke to me. Like I always liked that expressive nature of it. I always like
playing dress up. I was laying out outfits for my mom at a young age. Like I was always drawing clothes and
designs and things. But again, it wasn't something where I thought, oh, here's a model of how I
could use that in a career. I had no idea. I mean, that's just the thing about unconventional careers,
you know? I mean, you go to college for a broad spectrum and you get the majors that you get.
You can be, you still learn you can be a doctor or a lawyer. I always say this. But nobody talks
about being an entrepreneur. No one talks about fashion design. No one talks about styling.
And certainly not in my community. Not in the Midwest.
San Luis, Missouri.
In the suburbs.
Like, I just didn't, I just didn't have a frame of reference for it like that.
So, yeah, so I went in, I did this interview.
And the woman that owned the store was like, sorry, no.
Like, you have no experience.
And so, therefore, you can't work here.
And what had happened was when I walked into that store, I saw all of these amazing clothes and jewelry.
I remember exactly how it looked where the jewelry cases were, the jewelry that was in it,
you walk over here, the gowns were hanging at the end of the rack, and I'm going a little out of order,
forgive me.
But prior to the interview, as I was walking around looking through, I was just like, whoa,
like this is crazy.
I've never seen this in person.
I had seen magazines.
Like, I grew up reading magazines.
I would go to Barnes & Noble and read the magazines that we didn't have at the house.
and then whatever we had I would read.
So I was just like, wow, I want to work here, you know, once I saw that.
So when she told me no, I was just like, oh, no, I am going to work here, though.
So I'm working here.
So I was just a moment of clarity, a moment of boldness.
I was like, well, put me in a temporary position if you think I'm awful.
You could just let me go, no questions asked, like, no problem, six months.
And she was like, okay.
So that's when I started working there.
And that was sort of like, you know, it's not just a clothing story.
You just kind of, you know, you walk in and you look around.
You had client books.
There was a lot of fashion.
It was a high end.
It was very high end.
And like, there's a fashion education that happens there with the staff, with the owner.
like she is incredible at her curation, her styling, the way that she runs her store.
So I just learned a ton being there about designers, fabric, alterations, tailoring,
like all of the things that you would sort of learn as a styling assistant.
I learned some of those things there.
So this is ECRAM boutique in Chicago, which is legendary.
Yes.
Even as someone who's not from Chicago, like I've heard of ECROM.
And so it makes sense to me
What you're describing as this like
I mean this is kind of the fashion fairy tale
Even starting at Ecromb
Yeah I mean that's how I felt when I first walked into Ecromb
I was like oh my God
This place is amazing
So flash forward
You get a call one day from Ecromb
And she says what
I'm at this
I can't swear a crappy job
And I
I get a call
And it's Ecromb
And she literally is like, Meredith.
Meredith.
Guys, are you seeing the scene?
Are you seeing this play out?
I can see this like on.
I don't want to do too much.
I'm not going to go too far.
But there was like a sense of drama.
There was a sense of like, this is something's happening.
Like she's calling me for something big.
So she said, I need someone to go to D.C.
Or she said something like, I need someone to go to D.C.
And be sort of the go between.
because I don't have anyone else to send
and I trust you, blah, blah, blah.
And I was like, huh?
Like, what do you think?
What does that look like?
It was just out of nowhere.
So I'm like, what exactly am I going to be doing?
I'm going to be working with Michelle Obama
in what sense, in what context,
D.C., what, like, when,
who, what, when, or how, why, what's going on?
And it was just like, you say,
say yes and ask questions later.
No.
You have 24 hours because I was like, I didn't want to think about it, you know.
I don't think that went over well.
So, yeah, so basically the next things were like, I was just saying yes to the next thing.
I wasn't saying yes to the whole kit and caboodle because I didn't even know what the kid and caboodle was.
So I wasn't going to be like, yeah, I'm in, right?
I didn't know you.
I didn't know anything about anything.
You didn't know D.C.
I didn't know D.C.
I didn't know like anything.
So I just agreed to move forward with whatever the immediate next step was.
And I think is a major lesson in life.
Oh my goodness.
It's just to say yes to the next best thing.
Yeah.
Don't overthink it.
Don't just say yes to the next best thing if your enthusiasm is calling you in that direction.
If it feels like the right step, when did you know this was actually the right step for you, though?
because it sounds like you went in with a little bit of trepidation and a lot of unknowns.
I did. Yeah. And I can say that that was a big plus. You know, to be cold called to drop your life.
Because what I said, I think that it's saying to be hesitant. I think I would have been a bit more suspicious.
I would have been like, okay, does this young person have some gravitas in our own life?
to really think about this, you know, because sometimes just saying, yes, that's not an indication
that you're really ready. Because if you haven't sort of thought through this big life-changing move,
you know, you're going to pick up from everything you know, move to a whole other city and enter into a world
that I couldn't even explain yet to Meredith. You know, there was a lot of, we don't know what we're doing.
We don't know what this is going to be.
But, you know, what I could say to her is that, you know, you'll be safe, you'll be respected.
You know, if you put in the effort, you'll be treated well.
I need the help.
And you've got to be ready to build and grow with this process because there really wasn't a process.
So it was two leaps of faith that we were both taking.
Kind of a fashion love story.
And really what you said, because I remember like when we had our little meetup for the first time, she said to me, she said, if you're smart, funny and you work hard, you'll be fine.
And I was like, well, okay.
You're like, check, check, check, check.
Just to create a bigger context to what we were doing.
I had been working with Ecromb.
I started working with Maria Pinto, the first time that I had ever worked with a designer.
And I met Ecromb through another friend.
And I hadn't shop at her shop in Chicago either.
And walking in, I was like, wow, you know, this.
This is a whole other level of design and styling that was just important to the overall role.
At the time we started working together, we were still campaigning.
It wasn't clear that he was going to win.
But I was thinking ahead, thinking about, you know, I'm going to need gowns and a whole range of things that I can't get from one designer.
So Iqrom was styling me for about the first year of the term, but it was.
was very difficult for her as the owner of her own shop to really, I mean, I needed somebody full
time. I needed somebody that was smart, capable, understood the baseline of fashion, but could
also get the political message. And there was just something about the way Meredith carried
herself. She was always poised. And she was always honest.
You know, she wasn't selling me on this job.
She wasn't sort of telling me a bunch of stuff that she was ready.
She was very clear.
I don't know about this.
I'm learning this.
But I could tell that she was a hard worker.
And I was like, well, we can figure the rest of it out, you know.
So she came on about this.
Well, you were always there facilitating.
But it was clear that I needed one stylist.
I needed somebody exclusively working with me for me with a range of designers.
And that's when I decided, okay, Meredith, you can do this.
Then I had to really tell her, you can actually do this.
I had seen her working enough to know that she could figure this out.
And I think there may have been a little kind of like, can I?
But I knew she could.
Hey everybody. I am here with my sister-daughter friend, everything, hairstylist, Yenay.
Yenay, welcome to the podcast.
Thank you for having me.
I know I get to have you here and we get to talk.
All the things.
More conversations.
Yeah, we've been working together for a while.
I mean, you've been styling me exclusively almost for a decade now.
Mm-hmm.
But.
In the orbit.
for about 16, 17, 17 years.
16, 17 years.
See, you look at you and you think, well, she's 16 or 17.
So you started when you were 8 years old.
Yeah, 21.
21.
Share with us, our listeners, our audience,
your story of how we met and how you came into my life as baby.
As a little baby stylist.
Scared baby.
We met in 2008.
nine, I started doing hair. I had just got licensed, actually, shortly after, shortly before we met.
But I had started doing hair when I was in middle school. That's when my interest in the beauty space
first peaked. By 16, I decided to go to cosmetology school. And you were like doing people's hair
in the neighborhood, your family. I was the neighborhood brader. I had a little salon set up in my
parents' garage. That's the funny thing. It's like your parents hooked you up, let you be a little
entrepreneur. Yes. Yes. It was so nice. It was like the early 2000s and I was doing all the
braiding and all the things. My brother was my very first client. I started to braid here. It ended
here. My braiding seals were horrible. But you were seven. Yeah, but it was fine. It was like,
it was my practice. So it was really great. And then went to cosmetology school. And shortly after I got
licensed, I met Johnny and I started working with him. And by Johnny, you mean Johnny Wright.
Yes, Johnny Wright.
Because my primary hairstylist throughout the White House years. And he took me under his wings and brought me in.
And that's how we met. And I started working with the girls, which is crazy because I was the baby, but they were the babies too.
And I got to her with them. How old were they when you first? Because it was at the very beginning.
So they were 10 and 7.
Yeah, they were very little.
You met them.
Yes.
We used to do the twists and all the things and Sunday wash day routines and all the fun times and chaperoning them and just being a part of their lives.
It was now being a little bit older and having my own kid, it's like, oh, those were the fun moments.
And I remember what that was like when I was in their age and I was getting my hair done by my mother.
Well, that was the beauty of them.
You were their big sister.
And it was good for them.
And you were my big sister.
Yeah.
It was all the sisters.
falling down, because you also did grandma too.
Yes.
So it was all of us ladies together.
But I love the fact that you were their big sister hair mentor at the very beginning that they had
somebody younger who understood what they were trying to do and you were teaching them all
along about hair health and hair care.
And you would have the arguments with them if they wanted to switch a style that you didn't
agree with.
I'd be like, okay, you guys learned this in school and this is all cute.
But we have to think about what's going to work beyond.
this period in time and making sure that when we finish throughout all of this, that your hair
is still healthy. And you could do whatever you want when you're an adult and you actually
have the freedom and the financial capacity to do whatever you want and be creative. And so
it was fun times. Yeah. And, you know, the thing is people don't realize that you were also
studying to get your degree while you were working. Because your parents were in, tell them about
that because your parents were supportive of this endeavor.
We're supportive of me doing hair kind of sort of, which is why they allowed me go to
cosmetologist school when I was 16, but there was a caveat. I still had to go to college.
But when I ended up working with Johnny and moving because you guys want and took office
and I packed my life and moved across the country from California to D.C., I dropped out of college.
And so my parents were like, okay, you still have to go to college.
So I did. I went back.
Still have to go to college, y'all.
Still have to go to college.
Which, you know, I'm so grateful for it because.
I think that people don't realize that as beauty professionals or service providers, we're
entrepreneurs. And it's extremely important for us to have these skill sets and to have the knowledge
to properly run a business. And going back to school and getting my degree in business really
helped me, which now that I have a salon, it has helped me build the team that I have. It has helped
me run my business in a way that is profitable. And that makes sense. And I'm able to scale.
So I'm grateful that I went back to college. But it would be in the salon, in the middle of
touchups helping Johnny out or doing the girls, I'd be in the corner writing my papers. Doing her
homework. Doing my homework. And it was actually kind of funny because the girls would look at me,
they'd be like, are you really doing homework? And I'm like, yeah, just like you guys, I have homework,
but I'm, you know, in my 20s now. And you're not, but this is the reality of life. So,
all good memories. What was it like for you being that young entering into that arena?
what did it feel like the first time you had to walk into the White House?
A lot of nerves. A lot of nerves. You know, and I think not only was it that I was young,
but you grow up in a society where people don't have respect for the traits, right?
People don't think that, like, even my parents are like, you have to go to college.
So I had to be a doctor, a lawyer, an engineer, go down this traditional trajectory when it came to education.
So coming into that type of space, you're always doubting yourself to be like, am I adequate enough?
And that was something that I struggled with all throughout our time there.
But there was this reinforcement.
I knew that I was adequate.
But you still have these doubts.
And so the first time coming in, it was just do the job.
It was Easter weekend.
It was before the Easter egg roll.
And I was shampooing the girl's hair.
And your husband walked in.
And you were like, this is, you know.
And I was like, shampooing hair.
And I was like, hello, sir.
And then I just went right back.
And I was like, don't say anything.
Don't make eye contact.
Don't look him in the eyes.
Just like, do your job.
And I just kept hearing my parents in the background be like, don't embarrass us.
Act like you have manners.
You know, so there was all of these pressures because there was so much respect.
And as a young little black girl, I also knew what it meant to have someone like you and your husband in office.
And so there was that added layer of pressure where it was just like we also had to make sure that we did you guys right and make you proud.
And we had to make sure that we were doing the best of our ability to keep your guys as legacy as bright as it was.
And you made me so proud all the time that, you know, your skill set, your professionalism always showed through. You were never late. You never complained. You never talked about your homework. You didn't treat it as a problem. You were kind, gracious, all the things. And it has been just amazing to watch you grow. And now you are your own business owner. Can you talk a bit about where you are in life now?
aesthetic salon in 2017. We have a team of 23 individuals that work with us. You have 23 people
working for a young little self. I can't stop but think of this child as a baby. So I came to the
opening. Yes. You came to the opening and celebrating with us. But still watching you be a baby boss is
fun. I still like to take the title of baby boss. I'm going to hold on to that title. But we have 23
team members that work with us from styling team to assistants to our operations manager.
And we have three apprentices right now that are going through cosmetology school with us as well,
because rather than going and paying, they're coming and getting firsthand experience, trade experience, on the job, which I'm extremely proud about.
I'm not just for myself, but for the other salon members who are pouring into these young girls as well.
And they're from all different walks of life and all different ages.
And so I'm grateful for that.
we have a thriving clientele book that we're so grateful for that supports us, that does a lot in the
community, that supports us, that gives back, that brings ideas to us, that we're always grateful for
as well. And as you know, like the relationship we have, we have very intimate personal relationships
and we get to be a part of all of their big life moments, good and bad to just have someone to lean on.
And like you, my clients pour into me and help me become a better person, a better woman, a better
mother, about her wife now in this era of my life, like you do. And your philosophy is beautiful hair,
but healthy hair. Good hair is healthy hair. So health is first, the health integrity of your hair.
We could have versatility, but we have to make sure that we're doing a 360 approach. We're looking at it
from the inside out. What are you eating? What is your diet? What is your lifestyle? Like, is this conducive
to what you do and what your hair goals are? And not really being so fixated on like length retention,
but healthy hair. So sometimes we have to do a cut or a chop to grow it out if we need to use
extensions, if we need to go into protective styles. All is well and all is necessary, but
understanding who you are and giving you a personalized approach. And this is what I like about
what you bring to the industry is that you're not just concerned about the outside, the aesthetic.
And people ask me, well, what's your favorite hairstyle that Yenai has done? I mean, I like them all,
But what I love about you is that you care about my health.
So you create styles for the moment that fit the moment, but also don't damage my hair,
that keep me looking fresh and healthy and up to date.
You know all the trends.
You can take me through all the things.
You absolutely do.
But at the core of your philosophy is teaching, training, and hair health.
Yes.
Education is extremely important and transparency is really important. I think that for so long,
women have felt captive to their hairstylists and they're not able. Say that again.
They're not able to recreate things because hairstylists are like, this is my territory, this is my
landscape, this is my space and I have to be in control. And for me, it's like, no, because
if a client doesn't come to me every single day, they're in control of their hair and they need to be able
to make it look good regardless because if someone stops on the train says,
who did your hair, you're going to say my name. So I need to make sure that you have the education,
you have the products, you have the skill set, you have the tools at home to maintain your hair
and that your hair is healthy and it works for you. And education is at the key foundation of everything
that we do. And one thing you all am very excited about is that services from people like
YNA are available to everyone now. Yes, yes. Because of Airbnb and
their new special efforts to not only offer wonderful places to stay, but they can access your
services through Airbnb. Can you talk about that relationship? Not just in Washington, D.C., but also
in L.A., which is where I'm initially from. So shout out to California. Airbnb's new platform
makes it easy to book services with professionals for all special events, from birthdays to weddings,
to girls' getaways. You could find a makeup artist, you could find a massage therapist,
stylist and even me. All you have to do is search my name, Yanei Damtu. And if you're also a
hair professional looking to grow your clientele, you too can list your business on Airbnb at
Airbnb.com slash services. Well, we, I want to go back a little bit to first impressions.
Because neither one of you could have prepared for the role of a lifetime that you were
both about to step into together. Yeah. So, you know, not just.
you being a first lady but the first black first lady is it that's a unique styling job that
there's certain complexities that no one can teach you that right you have to learn that there's
some innate intuitive and historical understanding that you have to have to step into a role
like that so i want to go to first impressions and how and because when i think about you know the
fact that most people don't know who this enigma is, this stylist behind Mrs. Obama,
what was your very first impression of Meredith? And Meredith, I'm going to ask you the same
question, and I want unfiltered, raw, first impressions of each other. Well, the first impression
was she's gorgeous. And I always tell Meredith this. I think she is one of the most beautiful
people inside and out.
And she seemed calm,
just steady.
Even though I know that deep down inside,
she can be a bubbling pot of everything.
You know, this poise,
this, I mean, this is who Meredith has always been.
She has not changed.
And even though Meredith worked in this high-end store
and she was very much a regular girl who I felt like I recognized.
And I'm always one to get to know people's stories, you know.
So throughout all the time that we work together with everybody that I work with,
I want to know, how did you grow up?
Tell me about your mom.
Tell me about your sister.
You know, her relationship with her sister and her brother-in-law.
and her honesty about her challenges in life.
I mean, she wasn't coming in phony.
She wasn't coming in trying too hard.
She was coming in full heart open.
And then there is the relationship with my girls, right?
Because Meredith didn't just style me.
I mean, I needed, the girls had to get dressed, you know, for events and for my mom had to get dressed.
I mean, this little girl at such a young age was taking that all on.
And she had a connection with Malia and Sasha and mom.
I mean, they were as close to Meredith as I was.
She's been through a lot over the course of our time in the White House.
She lost her sister in her battle with cancer.
I'm so sorry.
And she's in Washington trying to hold that down.
and making sure that her family was good.
It's just, you know, you just know a person's heart,
which to me is more important than the job.
You know, her heart was right.
And that was completely clear from the beginning.
And I'm so proud of her.
Just proud of the woman that she is.
So that was really my first and continues to be.
my impression
of marriage
I know
get the tissues
I was supposed to make you cry
you're supposed to make you cry
here here goes some
beautiful
what is it like
hearing her say
that those things
about you
I mean it's wonderful
I very much
appreciate it
and
I mean frankly
it's true
you know
I have done
you know
just to sort of
go back
a little bit
like
you know
by the time
I met you
I was 27
so when I was
21
after like
like a lot of struggles. I got sober. I started going to therapy. So any, the foundation that I came in
with was that. That was the foundation that I built over those six years of learning about what it was
to be in recovery, learning about myself in that way. So I'm in that, that's where I'm at when I
met her. And the first time that we met was at Ecromb store.
and it was her and Sasha and Malia.
That's right.
It was hectic.
Yeah.
It was like a lot of energy and also there was an expectation that I should sort of like be a little bit reserved.
Like I'm not going to go and hey, what's up y'all?
You know, like it's like you're here.
You're going to meet them.
And like that's it.
She's going to pull you for an interview.
I don't know when.
That's whatever.
So my first impression was there was a lot going on.
Secret service.
I know she looked at me and I know she acknowledged me, but it wasn't like warm, fuzzy right off the bat.
You know what I'm saying?
Like there was just...
We were in the middle of a fitting.
She was about her business.
Business had to get done.
She was about her business, you know?
And like, I get it.
And I had already worked with clients.
So I understood clients aren't going to come in and placate you, make you feel good.
Yeah. So like, right. So that I understood. And then, but then the sort of shift in that environment is her two daughters that are there jumping around and like just acting like they're at a carnival, you know? And I'm like, oh my God, they're just so cute. You know, they're just so like, so cute.
just ah you know and um so it was sort of more of a environment and when we went in the dressing room
we had like this very short interview i mean it was just like who are you like there wasn't
like a resume sitting out i was just like who are you what's going on i need someone like you seem
like this and i was just like uh-huh yeah uh-huh yeah yeah so it's i'm not you know just to go back
I'm not really shy.
I'm not reserved.
That's not who I am.
But I'm also, I think it's just my approach and what I see fashion as in this industry that I work in,
I think is probably maybe a little different than what a lot of people are projecting or what's sort of like the loudest voices.
Like for me, it's always been like the beauty and the creativity and the connection and the energy and that whole thing.
even if I couldn't articulate it when I was 21.
You know, that's always, I've always just been like imaginative and creative and wanting to be creative in that space.
So the fact that I got into this, this is now what I'm doing with my creativity.
It could have been other things.
It's just, this is just how it played out up until this point.
And I also want to say that there is a difference between when you think of,
celebrity stylist. I always think of which word are you emphasizing. Are you the celebrity stylist? Are you a
celebrity stylist? And there is a difference. There is a big difference, right? Because, you know,
what I say that I have a stylist, you know, I didn't know what that word was. I knew that I needed help
getting clothes because there was no way, as I write in the book, that I could go to Bloomingdale's
and run and do a couple of errands or go to Neiman Marcus like I was doing before I met Meredith,
there was just no room for it. And the art of getting dressed as a regular woman, it was not
executable for me. So I wasn't thinking style as much as I was thinking, I got a lot of events coming up.
And I can't, I can no longer go into the department store like a regular person.
Right.
I can't get stuff off the rack.
I can't browse.
I don't have time for that, nor do I have the ability.
The bubble was so thick and continues to be that the normalcy of everyday dressing was no longer available to me or my daughters.
Well, I think let's define the term stylist.
Oh, let's do it.
Because you started styling Mrs. Obama before that was a recognizable term or job that people,
that people even knew about.
And to this day, the average person doesn't really know much.
I didn't know about it.
I wouldn't have called Meredith a stylist.
Right.
Even though that's what she was doing it.
That was the only...
That was the first time I heard about it
when she had that reality show.
I was like, oh, wow.
Imagine somebody buying clothes for you.
Right.
That seems like...
That seems like...
Interesting.
It's some fashion fairy tale, like not real life.
And one of the words that Meredith has used to describe you,
like in a word she has described you as practical above all else. So I want to hear you guys,
we're going to get into that. It's so true. It applies to the fashion. We're going to get into that. But
but help us define what your role actually was because as you mentioned these days, sometimes the
stylists are as celebrated as the celebrities that they dress. And they have their whole aura and
a whole platform. In this case, that was not the case.
you were here to do a job
and the job was so singular
for an individual like Mrs. Obama.
So what, and it's not as glamorous as people might imagine.
So tell us what the job really entailed.
Yeah, so
a few things.
It's true, Rachel Zoh was the first stylist
in sort of, at least American culture
that everybody was sort of,
of aware of in the mainstream.
So I watched that show and I knew who she was and I was like, she's incredible.
I love her.
But my role and kind of coming back to this question of defining a stylist, it's true that
what I was doing in the White House isn't what a typical stylist would necessarily be doing.
Just because of the various considerations and the intensity.
of those considerations. Like, it wasn't about what's fabulous, what's new, what's hot, what just came down the runway.
Sometimes, little bits of that. Probably more so now than then. More so now. But it was more about
what works, what makes sense, what is not going to pull attention away from what is going on here.
That is the bigger, more important thing. There were so many other considerations.
in choosing clothing and accessories and research and vetting and all of the stuff that I think
it is different. And I needed to look good but not look apart, right? So it had to, you know, I had to
feel good in it. But I couldn't show up looking like, don't touch me. You know, don't come near. I am so
above you. I can't, I couldn't do that and sit on the, on the, the floor with a bunch of preschool
kids, you know, as I was alluded to, I didn't want my clothes to speak before me. I didn't, I didn't,
I could never wear anything that wouldn't allow me to hug someone, to drop on the floor, to do
jumping because, because we were literally because of let's move. I wouldn't never know when somebody would
say, let's do some push-ups. I mean, that happened on Ellen. That happened when we went to South
Africa and went to the World Cup event and we did this big let's-move event. Remember, Bishop
Tutu, Desmond Tutu, because we were doing all these, we were just supposed to be walking around
watching kids do calisthenics and things like that. And he looked at me and he said,
I'm going to do push-ups. And I'm like, oh, Bishop, please.
Don't do push-ups.
He was like, no, no.
He dropped on the floor, and I was like, I looked over at my team,
and I know Meredith was like, don't get on the floor.
And I was like, if he's doing push-ups,
if an 80-plus Bishop Desmond Tutu is on the floor doing push-ups,
I'm doing push-ups with them.
That kind of stuff would happen all the time.
We love Meredith, is cringing in the back.
Yeah, for sure.
And also, we were ready.
I remember what she was wearing that day.
It was just we were ready because by that time we kind of knew.
Had to stay ready.
Yeah.
Had to stay ready.
And it was a lot of very unglamorous activities.
Well, and then there is also the valet part of what Meredith had to do.
Those would be the unglamorous activities.
Hugely ungrammarous.
Packing.
Insane amounts of items and things and clothes and color coding them and organizing.
them.
And like, give us a sense.
How many events a week a month?
Well, it wasn't so, you know, I don't know how many events a week a month, but it was more
the foreign travel or campaign travel that was like the big huge lifts of like, and
let's be fair.
Like people do press tours and concerts and all this.
So like, it's not that it's not that it's out of the ordinary.
I guess the situation was because I was working for the government and because
there's only so many resources.
I was a one person doing that.
I was the one packing everything.
I mean, Rachel also has a team of stylists.
Lawroach has an entire team.
We didn't have that.
We're a one-woman show.
And also for structural purposes,
this is the difference between the First Lady
and the Commander-in-Chief.
The Commander-in-Chief,
his whole wardrobe crew
comes from the military because he is the equivalent of a five-star general.
And generals have valets.
They have people who were enlisted, who are trained to wash care for,
uniform suits, so on and so forth.
The president of the United States has the same thing when he travels, when he gets dressed.
So my husband was assigned three valets.
The family gets zero.
The family is a bit secondary, right?
So on the first lady's personal staff,
there was only a position budgeted for one person
that could be a babysitter or like a maid or a, you know,
I mean, it sort of was a catch-all position,
which didn't really fit into anything
that a modern-day woman was doing.
I mean, I was working.
I was up, as they would call it, at least three or four days per week.
That's just the average week.
And by up means, and this is how I would just structure my days, because I was also a mom.
And there were also the times when I needed to be at school and going to soccer games and have that time up.
And in those three days that I'm up three or four days, we would do anything from, the day could start off with me
harvesting the garden with kids, and then I would move to maybe a greet with military spouses,
and then go to a tea with a set of ladies or give a speech in the executive oval on healthy eating,
and then I would leave and maybe go visit a high school. I would get all that done in one day,
and we would have to be prepared. That might mean I'd be changing my clothes two, three times,
a day. And so Meredith would be responsible for getting me ready for each of those looks,
each of those days, getting those clothes ready, getting them fitted, getting them two designers in
back, coordinating fittings for me within that schedule, because then you have to still sit
and fit for clothes. I had one person to do all of that. That person was Meredith. And she had to
procure it. She had to go out and do the research and find designers and find, see who were the
latest and greatest. Who were those new up-and-coming minority designers? And I don't even know how
she did that or when she found time to do that, to get on the phone and actually procure
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I'm sure there was so much pressure on getting it right up front that by the time you left the door, you had to let it go.
The biggest decision I write about this in the book is the very first time we went to the Grand Canyon.
I write about this and we're on Air Force One because the schedule kind of screwed us up, right?
And this is sometimes when it's me, my own, I control the schedule, fashion, and all of that is factored into the schedule.
When I'm with the president of the United States, I'm on his agenda.
We're told, we're supposed to go on a hike in the Grand Canyon, right?
We don't know anything more than that.
This was at the beginning of the term, too, where we really didn't realize that we have to really know all of the details.
can't just get the, we're going to the Grand Canyon because we're on Air Force One about to land
and we're also, he's going to then go off and give a speech somewhere. So we are sitting in,
with this dilemma, what do I wear off this plane, right? Because we hit the tarmac and we're going
with a park ranger to the Grand Canyon. We were like, well, what would, what would I wear?
What would a regular person, woman wear with her husband, she would have on shorts?
And we spent like 15 minutes going back and forth.
Yeah, it was a really weird day.
I'm going to say that first of all.
But, I mean, for me, that whole thing was like, this is my perception.
Yeah.
The word hike was being thrown around in a way that if I were to define a hike and I've been on many hikes, this was not a hike.
But it was like, they just kept saying hike, hike, hike.
That's what they told us.
She gets in her mind that it's a hike.
So she's like, I'm going hiking.
And I'm like, there's no way they're having her.
But I can't prove it.
I don't know.
I don't have the information.
And nobody could tell us exactly what was going to.
Well, we might.
We might hike down the mountain.
Right.
And I was like, well, I can't.
But there were times when stuff like that would happen.
Or if my husband decided, come on, let's go down the mountain.
Right.
Right.
I have to be ready for that.
And you don't win.
I got crucified for dishonoring Air Force One by walking down the stairs in shorts.
How dare you.
Dishonoring.
I mean, the terms used were like, whoa, okay.
We have to start pushing for real clear answers.
I mean, we slowly started changing the way that we got prepped and what kind of information.
And this is why people started.
And it was detailed because it's like, no, you have to tell us, if my team hasn't planned it,
if I'm with the president, we have to know what exactly we're going to do.
And then I would have to opt in and out of stuff.
So we learned.
You know, we learned how to manage information and learn that the wrong management of it could be some crazy negative headline
that could then distort the whole purpose of the trip.
And that kind of stuff infuriated me, actually.
It really did.
It's wildly unfair.
Well, it just is pointless to the bigger issues of the country.
Right.
Right.
It just seems like the people who are sitting at their desk deciding to write about a pair of shoes, you know, again, we've lost the plot.
It wasn't like people in the White House were like, oh, yeah.
Fashion.
It was in fact the opposite.
It was very, it was not that type of environment.
People didn't, you know, there were people who didn't respect the work.
They had no clue.
I mean, of that pressure that is on the first lady, and I will say the first lady,
because it's a woman's burden of getting up every day and showing up in a readied way.
And the women who work in the White House, I mean, many of them were.
struggling as well, especially on foreign travel. I mean, one of the things that we had to do with
the State Department, which they failed to understand, is that we needed a lot of really important
details to make the fashion on foreign trips work. Because you have to think about colors. What colors
prints could be insulting, could be inclusive. We'd have to know things like weather. Is it going to
rain because you can't show up with a silk blouse if you're going to be standing in the pouring
rain. The pavement, you know, cobblestone versus grass versus, you know, all of that kind of stuff,
which Meredith would have to, at a loan, push to get this what seemed like meaningless
information from high-level officials that could make or break the whole trip.
so many powerful women, especially women of color, related to your journey and the tight rope
walk of even having to decide with such discernment and so much intention what you put on your
body, how you do your hair, how you present yourself to the world. I knew like if something
went wrong with the designer, you know, if it was the wrong thing, the wrong person, the wrong time,
even just the zipper breaks, she falls down, her heels break.
Like, you've never seen her fall down because I checked everything.
You've never seen her zipper pop because I checked the zipper.
You know what I mean?
So, like, we can't have our first black lady falling down.
No, no, no.
That was the biggest goal.
Getting out of the eight years without falling.
It's like, because really when you did tightrope, sometimes it literally was like a set of slippery stairs.
You know, she's walking down in three-inch heels or whatever.
So, yeah, it was really just keeping that all in mind.
And also, like, I just didn't, I didn't want to bring any negativity.
I was like, let me not be the one to bring negativity into this space.
Just for listeners who don't really have context, like, the role that you are describing doesn't exist.
This is one, one of one.
You are one of one.
So I want to give you your flowers.
And now that we understand the practicality, the logistics of the job, I want to talk about the creativity and the storytelling.
Because I know that that's what makes your heartbeat.
That's what gets you up in the morning and makes you excited to do the logistics.
And you're kind of like a professional schlepper in addition to being like this incredible visionary stylist.
So let's talk about the storytelling because that is such a big part of style.
styling and the two of you have woven together this incredible fashion narrative over the years
together. Talk to me about what were the stories you were trying to tell, both in the White
House and after. Yeah. I mean, it's different for everything. Everything is so specific.
You relish the moments of the state dinners or, you know, the events where you feel like,
okay, we can like have a little bit of more fashion and not feel nervous about it, not feel like,
oh, this is going to take away from something. It's part of it, you know, like it's part of it for a
first lady to show up looking beautiful, you know, as a representation. They're waiting or faded
breath to see what she turns up in. Absolutely. So it's true, there were a ton of like, I mean,
I would say even now, like logistics just like take over everything. I feel like in creative spaces,
unless you have a certain setup, which I don't know a lot of people that do. But that creative,
that storytelling was always for me just a lot of instinct, frankly, and just like taking in a lot of,
taking in a lot of information and then allowing it to come out however it would. And that
means like I'm keeping up with shows. I'm keeping up with designers. I'm keeping up with new designers.
I'm keeping up with politics. I'm keeping up with what's going on internally. I'm keeping up with the East Wing. I'm
keeping up, you know, so it's like you take in all this information and like it would just always come
back to like my process. Like I established and built a process for myself of how I procured clothing,
how I interfaced with designers, how I pulled things and then putting them together upstairs.
Like I would spend all the time I had laying things out, like digesting it, trying it on myself because
we're about the same height and like.
It's convenient.
Yeah.
So I kind of became a fit model.
A little bit of a fit model.
Because some things I was like, I couldn't understand it on the rack.
I was like, huh?
Yeah.
And it's also like things always look different on the body.
So it's like helpful to see, you know, to try on.
So really it would just be that.
Like I would just, over the years especially, I just.
just started to trust more and more like what my vision was. And we also never allowed anybody
else to dress me for a fashion shoot because we couldn't count on somebody not putting us in a
designer that could, you know, was doing something wrong or get you in trouble. And the fashion
editors aren't thinking like that. They're thinking, even with Vogue, and I want to thank Anna Wintour
for allowing us the flexibility. I mean, the first time I was on the cover of Vogue, I'm
I was wearing J. Crew.
I know Anna wasn't really happy about that.
But we were also sending a message that this Vogue cover was about something bigger than fashion.
And fortunately, every editor understood that.
So while there were those that took it too seriously, we had so much support from the fashion community, the fashion industry,
as they got to know us to understand this bigger story that we were trying to tell.
And we got a lot of really good support.
I can speak to that as a fashion editor at the time.
I don't know if you would remember this moment, but it was my first shoot ever.
I remember for sure, because it was essence.
It was Ebony.
It was Ebony.
Your first solo Ebony cover.
I wore that feather.
Yes, your black.
Yeah, the McQueen suit with the...
But the fun backstory here is that, and I don't even know if you know this, but before you arrived on set, we had racks for you.
And custom-made pieces.
And the stylist was just, you know, stressed.
Oh, poor thing.
And then minutes before you arrive, we get this phone call and we hear, she's going to arrive in her own clothes.
and she's going to shoot in her own clothes.
And while it sent the stylist in a tizzy,
my boss, Harriet Cole, who I have to shout out, took it.
She had a big smile on her face.
And she said, that's what we're going to do then.
We are pivoting.
There was something so incredibly awesome about that.
From the very first moment that you stepped on the scene,
you redefined the terms of how you were going to
play this fashion game.
And those who got it, got it.
It was powerful.
I just, I'm curious, were you a, like that day, did you know that?
I know it happened at Vogue as well.
Was this a thing that you all sort of did?
I mean, I think it was a part of us understanding that I had to be in complete control
of my image.
I had gotten burned by not.
by not being really in control of the narrative of me.
And it just became something that I knew I needed to do.
It's important for me to define me to America.
Yes, because I'm black, because I was the first,
because there were opponents on both sides.
It wasn't just Republicans, it was some of our,
my husband's democratic opponents who were, you know, who were going to play the race card and
use our otherness against us. So, and we talked about this, that I have to show up authentically
me because if I'm going to get dinged, it's going to be dinged. I'm going to get dinged.
It's going to be the real me that's going to get dinged. It's going to be the clothes I chose
to wear, not somebody else's clothes. It's going to be the words I said and not what
somebody put in my mouth. It's going to be
America understanding me.
Like me, don't like me, but don't like
the made up version of me.
That I think I would have more trouble,
I would have had more trouble with
than the opposite.
And also, I just respectfully
cannot imagine you showing up to a photo shoot
and trying on clothes for two hours
or whatever before a shoot.
It's a matter of practicality.
It's the capital-in- her.
I've never seen anything even close to that occur.
I mean, it's just not, it's not prepared.
What if she didn't like anything?
What if nothing fit?
What if they had a wrong measurements?
Like there's just a million things that could go wrong.
Also, given what era this is, is she campaigning?
Like, is she going to come to a shoot?
Do you know what I mean?
Like, these are the things that maybe differentiate her as a public figure,
first lady, incoming first lady, from a select.
I don't know, but like I would just never even imagine something like that happening.
Yeah. Well, it's interesting that you're contextualizing it in this way because, you know,
that cover was June 2008 for the September. That was when we shot. It was for the September
issue cover, which is typically the fashion issue. And so it was, it felt like you had already understood
the power of what you put on your body and what it can do. And so it was genius for you to say,
I'm going to control my narrative. I'm going to control my image. And I'm going to do it respectfully.
You know, the story that we wanted to tell was inclusion, you know, which started with the selection
of Jason Wu to design both of my inaugural gowns. It's an opportunity. It's an American. It's an
American opportunity. So we wanted to make sure that dressing me, which was a big deal we knew,
became an American opportunity. It became something that all designers that could aspire to
if they were ready for it, right? So if I have the body that is going to sort of showcase it,
I felt it was my responsibility as the first lady of the United States of America to wear
American designers.
That was an easy thing.
We never ran out of wonderful things to do.
And we believed in the immigrant story of the, which is part of the American story.
I will say it and continue to say it.
We are all immigrants in one way, shape, or form.
It is the foundation and the basis of this country.
So being able, and that is so true in the fashion industry, we would not have.
the clothes on our backs, if it were not for immigrants coming here with tools and skills and the
abilities as all of our ancestors did to make this country what it is today. And what better way
to hail them than to bring up the Jaysian Woo's and the Pro Bowls and the Maria Cornahos. I mean,
what a powerful way to talk about fashion without talking about fashion.
There was a mic.
If I could just, I would just
rock my floor right now.
That was so riveting.
And I remember vividly living through those,
that was fashion history.
And while you weren't trying to make it the story,
it was a huge story for folks like me
in the fashion industry and for anyone.
I mean, speaking about your influence on fashion,
I think about that White House black market dress
that you wore on the view.
It was, I think,
$137, $24 or something, sold out at their over 300 stores. And then there was a two and a half
month wait list for that dress. I mean, the incredible influence that you had cannot be
understated, although I know that you all are so intentional. And that's what I love about hearing more
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Welcome back to IMO, everybody.
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Sometimes you just need a little boost,
nothing wild, just something to help you stay steady through the day.
Between shuttling the kids to sports,
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just good stuff for some good energy. And you know what I really like? Well Withal is black-owned,
and they give 20% of their profits to support black, brown, and underserved communities. That means a lot.
to me. Three great flavors, super easy to grab on Amazon. And if you use the code IMOPod
10 on Amazon, you'll get 10% off. We have to talk about post White House fashion because you're saying,
you know, at that time, you were not representing yourself. Yeah. But now you are.
All of it, right? Your style evolution has just capital.
So many people who love fashion and those who maybe weren't thinking about fashion until they saw how good you looked at your book tour. So for me, as an outsider, your becoming book tour was really kind of this defining moment in your style evolution where you stepped out and said, honey, I am going to wear the Balenciaga boots that are thigh high, that are sparkly with the yellow dress. And like that was another moment that blew up the
internet. And I remember like the girlies going, wow. I mean, everybody was talking about that look,
that moment. So we have to talk about the Balenciaga boots. And just really beyond the boots,
was there like a post White House meeting? Was there a mood board? Was there like a decision where
you're like, my handcuffs are off? Let's go crazy. Let's have more fun. Let's be bolder. What was that
conversation like?
I mean, really, the Becoming Book Tour, we talked, and I had put together some images
and things, because it was different, you know, it was like, oh, we're going into a new era,
and the book itself was, like, massive.
I mean, it was a movement.
It was unprecedented.
So when we spoke about the tour, I mean, I just remember us being aligned.
It was like pants, suits.
Yeah.
Because we had done so many dresses.
First lady dresses.
Yeah.
Enough of that.
There's so much about a dress that defines, a dress or a skirt that defines the role of First Lady and has for so many years.
So it was like, we're not going to do any except for the Valencia.
But we're not going to do any of that.
We're going to do these like strong suits and sort of updated pants and tops.
And so really that was like the starting point.
and our conversation.
And then, I don't know if you want to say more on that.
You're being so reserved about the most fun part of your style evolution.
And it was fun.
And I will say, it was really a lot of fun.
It started with that.
It was like, okay, we're free.
Did you feel that liberation?
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
You can see it.
You can feel it.
And we talked about it.
And also, I felt like I wanted my team to feel like they could play.
I mean, for eight years, some of the most creative people work with me, and we were in a bit of a box. It was a great box. I always, always felt good, always looked good. It was a well-managed box, not mad at the box, but it was still a box.
And knowing that when you have creative people who have, but you can't do this and that that's no fun for them.
stifling. It's stifling. So I was like, okay, mirror, you know. Yeah, I'm pretty out there. So there's still things I feel like I can't do. I mean, I'm not, you know what I mean. Like, I don't feel like I'm so free. I'm just totally free. Like, you know. But yeah, I mean, it was, it was cool. Like, a lot of things that she hadn't worn and some that she had. I mean, she'd worn some fabulous suits in the White House too. I think it was just the whole energy of the tour. And then just.
how beautiful everything was.
Like every suit, every pants.
But how'd you get her in those boots?
Okay.
Oh, yeah.
The boots specifically.
So, yeah, she did.
Yeah, she showed me the boots.
And I was like, oh my God, they took my breath away.
Mine too, right?
Mrs. Obama?
Yes.
Over Instagram.
The whole look was like a big process.
Like all of these looks, it's not like, oh, I went to the store,
picked it up, threw in a bag, came over.
Like, it's a whole process.
So that, it was like Balenciaga, spring 2019 show.
I saw, there was a version in blue and a version of yellow.
And I was like, the yellow is kind of different.
Like, the yellow, there's something a little tacky about it in a way.
I don't want to say the wrong thing.
She was like, she'll never go for the yellow.
But also, and by the way, this was like just for people that are following fashion.
And this was pre-any Balenciaga scandal, pre-any Demna scandal.
But so I got the look.
It was a skirt and a top, actually.
It wasn't a dress.
And we fit that look like five times.
Like there's certain looks that we would fit over and over and over again because...
To get it right.
To get it right.
And also with the calendar, sometimes it would be like, maybe it's for this.
And then that thing would happen.
We went with something else.
So then we come into the next fitting.
So it was like, maybe it's for this.
So I really thought it was...
Puzzle pieces.
I never thought it was going to be worn.
I was like, it's never going to be worn.
I'm going to have to write them an email and be like, I'm so sorry.
Like, we love it.
I hope she can wear it in the future.
But it just didn't, you know, she's got the letter.
Yeah, I mean, I've written that before.
But I had a different shoe with it.
And I think at first, because I didn't want to pull that boot if it was just going to, like,
she was going to be like, no, I don't feel like putting that on.
Like, so I showed you a picture of it.
And then I brought the boots at the next fitting.
And the things with the thing with those boots are, you have to.
you know, kind of slide them down, the fabric down, and then put your foot in and put it on
like a pair of panty hose. So it takes a minute, you know, and backstage before a big appearance.
She didn't always want to be bothered doing stuff like that. So I just wasn't sure.
There's many a joke. Like, you know, you get something pretty and then you put it on. And then I'm
like, this is ridiculous. Right. There's no way. So it's like, three of us are. On the paper. On paper,
you said yes. I was like, I didn't say no. Right. Okay. There was.
We're also those.
I could do that.
I could do that.
But in your mind, are you thinking there's no way I'm getting these boobs up to this woman's
late?
So I'm like, you're breathing yourself.
I'm like, she's not going to do it.
I'm going to get it.
She's not going to do it.
But I'll get it.
Fine.
So you're writing the email in your mind already.
Regrettfully, we couldn't get it.
Yeah.
Once she puts them on, she's not going to want to do this.
So, but yeah, I brought them in.
We tried them on.
We prepped them.
So we knew how to get them on because it's true.
There's like a time limit.
And once that time limit is up, the item is out the door.
With your hopes and dreams.
Exactly.
So I'm like always looking at stuff.
And sometimes I don't get it right, but I'm like, okay, got to make sure I get this on quickly.
Like a science experiment.
Yes.
And I will make fun of a crazy thing that I'm putting on.
I'm like, look at this is ridiculous.
It's like, and I was making fun of the boots, you know, all while we were putting them on the first time.
because it took a lot of work.
I mean, because if it would be better,
if they were all just the stretch material,
which I love.
And here she's always got a suggestion.
And I love a boot like that.
And I love a boot.
You maybe need a line of boots at some point.
I'm very into boots.
I love boots more than I love stockings, right?
So all throughout the White House,
cold weather, Meredith knew that I wanted a boot,
a tight-fitting boot that like hugged the leg.
that was the inspiration for the second inauguration parade look.
You know, I had these amazing boots that I wanted them to fit like a glove, right,
so that they wouldn't add bulk to your leg.
Because you did wear pantyhoes the first inauguration.
Which was ridiculous.
I was freezing.
I know you were cold.
I know you were cold.
So I was like, don't want to be cold anymore.
So I was very into boots.
So she knew she could get me on the boot, but it was just the putting them on that was nuts.
Right.
And I was like, do I want to have my hair on and am I putting the skirt on first?
It just didn't make sense.
But once they got on, then, they were amazing, right?
So I thought, okay, New York.
New York is a play.
Like, I wouldn't have done that in the-
Sarah Jessica Parker, aka Carrie Bradshaw.
Like, that's the moment you break those boots out.
It would be fashion over the top, right?
Yes.
I mean, I wouldn't do those boots in Colorado, right?
I mean, you also think, yeah, you want to be special.
But I was like, we could get away with this in the New York show.
It's a big enough arena.
The boots won't look like, you know, a sore thumb in the middle of a, you know,
because I also think like that is like, is it too much?
No, it stole the show, though.
Even in the massive, on that massive Barclays stage.
And there wasn't even a good picture of the boots.
Like, there wasn't.
I saw a lot of good pictures of those boots on the internet.
Did you really?
Yeah.
There were like, like, the pictures weren't even that great.
So I was surprised that people even really registered it because they were like from the side.
You know, they weren't like posed really super, super high definition clear photos.
So I was just like, people are even going to like see this?
Like, I don't know.
It's in our mind.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Yeah.
I know Barack is like, where are those boots anyway?
Oh, oh.
Mr. Obama enjoyed those boots as well.
Where are those?
What are you doing?
Those boots.
And bring those back.
Are those in a museum somewhere?
Let them call this.
Have some fun in those foods.
On the top of the boots,
we also need to talk about the Stuart Whitesman boots
during Biden's inauguration because you told me a fun story about these boots.
It's not really fun.
It's kind of, it's a little dark.
But I do think it's relatable in this moment.
And it speaks to your practicality as a Capricorn.
But also this moment,
that we're in, where we all are sort of feeling a certain uncertainty in the air that maybe you felt at the inauguration just after we all know what happened, January 6th.
And there was this feeling in the air of we might have to run.
So tell us the story behind the boots that you put her in that day and what was going through your mind.
This is the psychology piece of your brain.
Well, so, I mean, it's the whole look, first of all.
So we did Sergio Hudson and he's amazing.
And it was such, it was just that moment to me outside of any of the context of the politics.
It was such an amazing moment for him as a designer.
And I was so honored to be a part of it.
But we had prepped that look around the demands and uncertainty of inauguration day anyway,
which are really about being cold.
So I had like multiple sweaters with multiple closures
and multiple layers underneath
and everything you could think of
in case it was this temperature or that temperature.
And then the shoe, I had Stuart Weitzman pumps or the boots.
And when we were in the fitting and talking about it,
she said to me, I want to be able to run.
I was like, whoa, okay.
Wow, that's intense.
But I had already, you know, I already prepare a selection of options.
So it was like I had them there, but just putting it into that framework.
And I didn't go to the inauguration.
You only went with one person, I think.
And even that was by design, right?
Yeah.
For your own safety.
Yeah.
So that was different because normally we would always go.
Like hair, makeup, me, we would always go to a big event like that and be in the hold in
case there was any issues to touch her up and anything like that.
And so, yeah, that was a crazy year.
she was wearing a mask as part of the inaugural festivities, which...
Part of the ensemble.
The ensemble.
But it really...
Not to like not minimizing or anything a mask, but it did sort of set the outfit off because...
Nothing like a mask.
It really did bring all the...
To the hair and the outfit.
But without that mask, it would have...
It would have just been a suit.
It would have been good.
It would have been good.
But that really, like, it just brought all your attention.
to those elements
in a way that hadn't happened before
because that hadn't happened
with her publicly before.
So, Fask was custom made.
Christy Rilling, shout out.
Okay.
Well, luckily you did not have to run that day.
Thank goodness, but we were prepared,
you know, and that's half of, you know,
the fashion story,
one of the fashion stories was be ready,
you know, be ready to be able to do the job, right?
And I would never in that moment say, whatever the job is.
I would never in that moment be like, oh, no, you really have to wear this foreign stiletto because it's so gorgeous.
Like, I would never, do you know what I mean?
Like, so I think that.
That's why you lasted all these years, girl.
That is one of the points of this conversation of like why these things matter more.
Yes.
Why these are bigger.
Why you can't, we've talked several times about being bogged down by different elements, whether it's fashion or haters or whatever.
Like, it's so easy to get bogged down by all of that.
And the other part of the story is was my comfort, right? And that's a big part of the fashion
message to women, to all people, but to women in particular, because, you know, fashion can be fun,
but it could also be a straight jacket, right? I mean, you know, with tiptoeing around in heels
that hurt your feet in clothes that are slipping off in things that.
that don't stay up in corsets.
And I've done it all.
The chain link Versace gown, beautiful, one of my favorite gowns.
That gown weighed about...
I found out, and it's in the book, but I can't recall.
10, 15 pounds.
Yeah, it's in there.
And I had to wear that for three hours.
Stand in a photo line.
I had to, you know, dance in.
I had to, you know, it's not a one runway look.
It's not going on the red carpet and sitting at the Emmys.
I mean, I'm working at a state dinner.
And luckily, I'm in shape.
So I have done it, you know, I've done it all, right?
And I believe in that beauty and sometimes the impractical beauty of fashion, right?
It is fun.
But like for most of us,
as women, I want to promote us feeling good in the clothes. I want to wear the clothes. I don't want
the clothes to wear me. And I think, you know, I want to encourage women to, you know, make choices
about fashion that are good for them. And I think that that's something that we did for eight
years and beyond that I didn't wear it. And if I didn't love it, if I didn't feel wonderful in it,
because that's the way fashion disappears and becomes a part of your story.
Like it's not wearing you.
And so because of that, I could focus on kids.
I could focus on the military families.
I could focus on the people who were right there in front of me.
I could hug somebody, wrap my arms around somebody,
have somebody cry on my shoulder and not be worried about what I was wearing.
And that helped with my authenticity, right? Because ultimately, I'm a woman who loves clothes, but I'm a woman who loves. And that, to me, Meredith helped me find clothes that let that shine through. And I want us as women to embrace that, to have that be the first thing that we think about when we put something on. Does it make us feel like we can love? Does it?
make us feel like we can just be our true selves. And I had to be that for eight years.
I couldn't do the job wearing some costume or tiptoeing around in something that was on point,
but not me. And the brilliance of Meredith Coop was that, and that's maybe this is her psychology
degree. I think a lot of it is her upbringing. Oh, that was a question. I forgot to answer.
But I think what Meredith did for me, what makes her such a special stylist.
And I know she does this for other clients because I have friends who've worked with her as well.
People of all backgrounds, all sizes, all occupations is that she saw me.
She learned who I was. She knows who I am.
I think the show is something about Meredith.
There's something about Meredith.
I don't know how you, you are a magical unicorn in the world of fashion.
Thank you both so much.
What a beautiful fashion love story that you've had.
And I'm just so honored to be able to be part of documenting this moment in history,
these many fashion moments throughout history.
And Meredith, to introduce you to America.
Hello.
Let's go.
You can call me mayor.
You don't have to be my full name.
Something about mayor.
Well, this has been such a delight.
Thank you both so much.
You're amazing.
I love you to death.
Thank you for this.
Love you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
