Mick Unplugged - Kim Roberts | From Theatre to Television: Kim Roberts' Path to Stardom
Episode Date: December 13, 2024Hey everyone, welcome back to another episode of "Mick Unplugged." I’m your host, Mick Hunt. Today we have a super exciting guest joining us—Kim Roberts. For those of you who may not know,... Kim has an incredible background rooted deeply in her Caribbean culture, which has shaped her journey in ways she’ll share with us today. From her university days, where she helped form strong communities, to her breakout role on the beloved show "Schitt's Creek," Kim's story is as inspiring as it is unique. We'll dive into her favorite roles, including her current passion project at the Stratford Festival, and get into the nitty-gritty of voice acting versus theatrical performance. Kim will also reflect on her experiences facing racial isolation growing up in Canada, and how she found her way into the world of acting, despite early aspirations to become a doctor or lawyer. Stick around as Kim talks about her personal interests, like cooking her favorite curry chicken, and her current and upcoming projects, including a special film debuting soon on Paramount Plus. To top it all off, we'll hear a heartwarming Thanksgiving anecdote and Kim's gratitude for the audience’s continuous support. And there might even be some light-hearted banter about her character’s pet Chick Aletta from "Paw Patrol." So, get ready to be inspired by Kim's perseverance and dedication to her craft, and maybe even pick up some tips on finding success and purpose. Let's jump right in! Takeaways: · Acting is like breathing; it's essential to me. · Mentorship is about sharing wisdom and opening doors. · Cultural identity shapes our experiences and perspectives. Sound Bites: · “Voice acting allows for creative freedom without physical constraints.” · “Emphasizes authenticity by connecting personal experiences with her characters.” Connect and Discover LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/kim-roberts-4586508a Instagram: Instagram.com/mskimroberts Facebook: facebook.com/kimmyonline Threads: @mskimroberts X: kimroberts1 Film: All The Lost Ones See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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What is Kim Roberts because?
Oh golly, my because for being an actor is because it's just in me, you know, it's the kind of thing
that when I have the opportunity to do the thing that I love to practice my craft, it's like
breathing, right? It's a source of air that I can't get anywhere else.
For me, mentorship is wisdom, right? Like it's not experience, it's wisdom. It's like, hey,
you should do this because it's a lesson learned from me, right? And I totally see you as being that mentor.
And for you, it was probably a little bit harder
starting out, right?
Because-
I mean, I won't say that I didn't have guidance
and wisdom, I did.
You know, there was a generation that came before me
and they were, you know, knocking down those doors as well.
So luckily I had a couple of mentors
who shared their experience with me.
Acting, directing, being involved in the arts
has been a thing since you were a kid, right?
So when did you realize that that was something
you actually wanted to do?
I don't think I did, honestly.
I think, I mean, it was something I did because I loved it.
I always joined the drama clubs.
I always took part in the school plays,
whatever was going, right?
Cause I loved doing it.
["Spring Day in the City"]
Welcome to MICK Unplugged, where we ignite potential and fuel purpose.
Get ready for raw insights, bold moves, and game changing conversations.
Buckle up.
Here's Mick.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to another exciting episode of Mick Unplugged.
And our guest today is a repeat.
One of my friends. We're talking about a dynamic, multifaceted,
trailblazing and inspirational actress
who has graced the screens with unforgettable roles
in movies and films and theater and you name it,
she's done it from voicing the beloved Mayor Goodway
in Paw Patrol to delivering compelling roles
in The Handmaid Tale and
Schitt's Creek.
Get ready for an engaging conversation with the remarkable, the charismatic, the fearless
and the talented, Ms. Kim Roberts.
Kim, how are you doing today, dear?
I'm great.
After an introduction like that, I mean, I just show up here every day, Mick.
I'll have you every day, Mick. Look, I'll have you every day too.
So, Kim, glad to have you back on the show. One of my favorite people on earth is Kim Roberts.
So just honored to have you here.
And I know you've had a busy theater season
and we were just talking offline and you were like,
Mick, I'm ready for a break.
Yeah, everybody's like, what's next?
I'm like, club bed. Club bed is next.
Club bed for like a month.
Club bed.
I love it.
I love it.
So Kim, again, for those that don't know
your story and your journey, I always
like to start with your because, that thing that motivates you,
that keeps you focused on the prize at hand.
And if we were to talk about today,
what is Kim Roberts because?
Oh, golly, there are a few.
My because for being an actor is because it's just in me.
You know, it's the kind of thing that when
I have the opportunity to do the thing that I
love to practice my craft, it's like breathing, right?
It's a source of air that I can't get anywhere else.
So that would be the because.
But there are more becausees.
It's also at this point in my career,
because I am laying track for those
that are coming behind me.
I feel like I've been doing that throughout my career.
There are doors that weren't open
when I got into this business,
that now I see the next generation just flying through.
They run in and they're like,
yeah, we want this, we want that.
I was just like, thank you.
Thank you for letting me be here, when it was my turn.
So it's really nice to see the progression.
It's nice to see that the work you do opens the doors
for others to follow.
Working on the play that I did this summer
at Stratford, Get That Hope,
I worked with two younger actors who are phenomenally gifted,
Savvy and Roach and Celia Loma.
And you know, they came with such a level of respect
for what Conrad Coates and I had already done in our careers
and they were just eager sponges.
And I realized that I still have a lot to share.
There are things that I've learned throughout my career
in terms of acting technique,
in terms of the business itself,
that really is valuable to the next generation.
So there are many reasons to be doing this
and they're all really fulfilling.
Yeah, and Kim, I love the fact
that you are a trailblazer, right?
And I wholeheartedly believe in mentorship.
And for me, mentorship is wisdom, right?
Like it's not experience, it's wisdom.
It's like, hey, you should do this
because it's a lesson learned from me, right?
And I totally see you as being that mentor.
And for you, it was probably a little bit harder
starting out, right?
Because you crossed over and did things that most people,
I'm being honest, that look like us don't get to do,
like voice, film, and theater. You are the OG. And I mean that lovingly. You are the OG of this.
So how did Kim start her trailblazing career without the guidance, the wisdom that you're
able to provide people today? Well, I mean, I won't say that I didn't have guidance and wisdom. I did.
You know, there was a generation that came before me and they were, you know, knocking
down those doors as well.
So luckily I had a couple of mentors who shared their experience with me.
And also, most of them were not of color, you know, because at that point in time, there
weren't a lot of sisters doing what I'm doing, right?
So I had good teachers, you know, very good allies, people who really just believed in
my talent
and wanted to see me succeed.
But also, like I said,
it's always been a thing that I love to do.
So, I say this to anybody who's pursuing it all the time.
They're like, how do you make it as an actor?
I'm just like, if it's in you, it's in you.
It's something you're gonna have to let out.
So just do your work, be good at it.
Always be working, always be training,
whether you're being paid or not.
I remember when we started out, our friends used to get together, actor friends,
and we'd do our own scene study classes, you know, where we'd bring in scripts or pieces
of work and we'd work with each other and then we'd critique each other as actors, you
know? And you just kind of got to find it wherever you can. As a kid, you know, my cousins
used to make us, not make us, but my cousin used to direct us in his performances in summer. So June, you know,
school's out and be like, here's a raise it in the sun, learn it, we're doing it in September for
the family. That was my family, right? So it was kind of like that. So acting, directing,
being involved in the arts has been a thing since you were a kid, right? So when did you
realize that that was something
you actually wanted to do?
I don't think I did.
Honestly, I think I really didn't.
I mean, it was something I did because I loved it.
I always joined the drama clubs.
I always took part in the school plays, whatever was going,
right?
Because I loved doing it.
But when I went to school, I come
from a West Indian Caribbean household,
first generation Canadians.
So as far as my mother was concerned,
I had to be a lawyer or a doctor.
Those are the options.
And, you know, when I was 12, I decided it would be doctor.
And then I reached my mid teens, I was like,
I don't like blood so much, so maybe we'll do lawyer.
You know?
And so I went to university.
I went to the University of Western Ontario,
which is now just Western.
And I majored in Poly Sci, politics. And I minored in philosophy, which I actually adored. And I majored in Polysci, political, politics,
and I minored in philosophy, which I actually adored.
Like if there was a career in philosophy,
that would be another choice.
And, you know, the thing about it was at that time,
you know, in hindsight now, I can see some of the reasons
why, but at that time I just thought I was a bad kid
because I didn't like to go to school.
I wouldn't wake up in the morning.
You know, I kind of make my midday classes maybe.
I played a lot of backgammon with my roommates
till like 4 a.m. and then was too tired for class.
But you know, it's interesting,
a group of us who were kids of color at Western,
now many years later,
kind of formed an association called Bawa,
which is black at Western,
to help out students with bursaries and support.
And in talking to each other, I realized that I wasn't alone.
We were all feeling really isolated
by being just like,
you know, one kid of color in your whole class, right?
Like there may be three to 400 black kids on campus
out of many thousands.
And you talk about that first year experience,
Frosh Week and all of that bonding,
but I didn't really get invited to a lot of those things.
Right?
And what happened is you had the Caribbean
Students Organization, which formed its own kind of nucleus,
and we'd have parties and events and cook, and it became a family.
We became a family to this day. They're still my family.
You know, I'm Auntie to everybody's kids and vice versa, and it's strong and it's beautiful.
But in talking to each other, we realized how isolated each of us felt in our experience there.
So what happened is I needed extra credits because I was skipping a lot of classes.
I took a theater course when I came back to Toronto at York University and it would have given me
an English credit, so that's why I took it
and I love theater, but it was taught by the chair
of the theater department, Ron Singer,
and he does that, did it as a labor of love every summer.
And at the end of the course, you get an evaluation
and he sat me down, he said,
I think you could really do this for a living.
Would you like to come to York and be a part
of our second year stream of theater students?
And I mean, that was a huge honor that I didn't even comprehend.
You know, in first year, they led in 1500 theater students and second year goes down
to 200.
And so he was just like giving me a fast pass.
I was like, thank you so much, but I've got a great schedule next year.
I've got no classes before 10, no classes after three, Friday's off.
So I think I'm going to go back.
You know, I got a really good apartment.
So I just like my life that was happening in London.
So I went back, again, didn't go to classes very much.
I had a great year of life with my roommates,
and then at the end of that year,
I decided to come to York, asked him if I could come now.
He was like, I'm gone, I'm on sabbatical,
pass you over to the next administration.
And they were like, we don't know you,
but based on his recommendation,
we can put you in at first year.
You'll probably be really bored, but if you'd like to come.
So I did, just to not be killed by my mom.
And again, didn't go to class very much, but got some valuable experience.
They threw me out on side jobs that people would call the university looking for students
for.
And then two years later, somebody I had been in that class with, Diane Roberts, was stage
managing a show for a professional theater company.
And she called and she said, I'd like you to come audition for this.
And I said, well, no, I'm finishing my degree.
I finally like, you know, I got three, three, you know, three months left to finish this
degree.
I'm just going to do it.
And she said, why don't you do it for the experience?
And it was with the company of Sirens and Audrey Zena Mandiella was directing and they
had canceled the auditions,
but she was there just in case I showed up
because they couldn't get me.
And I showed up and her daughter was with her
and her daughter climbed in my lap,
started playing with my hair,
and she was kind of astounded.
And she was like, as we talked, she says,
well, why don't you just do your piece?
And so I did the piece.
She said, can you sing?
And I said, yeah.
And I sang.
She said, can you start Wednesday?
And that's how my career started.
I thank Jujube Mandiella for climbing in my lap. And I sang, she said, can you start Wednesday? That's how my career started.
I thank Gigioubemandiela for climbing in my lap.
A couple of things.
One, for the kids listening,
Kim says she didn't go to class all the time, right?
Like still go to class.
Go to class.
We go to class.
Two, what was Diane's last name?
Diane Roberts, same as mine, no relation.
Yeah, there was a little nepotism going on.
That's all I'm saying.
No, there's no relation.
There was a little nepotism in how you got that role.
But it's OK.
It's OK.
No relation, I promise.
So that's how it started.
And you portrayed a wide array of characters
across different genres.
How do you approach bringing authenticity
to such diverse roles?
How do you bring Kim into your roles?
Well, there are various schools of acting, right?
There's the Meiser technique.
There's, you know, I can't even remember half of them,
but everybody, there are all these techniques out there.
I personally have always been the kind of actor
who's just very much, you know,
the character grows from me, right? So it's like some people want to put on a character
and build certain things. For me, the truth comes from what parts of me relate to this character?
Where can I see myself or people I know reflected in this character? And I believe in truth, right?
You have to really start from a place of truth. Something that I find very amusing is people
will always say, well, how do I know you're not acting right now?
You know, how do I know you're, I'm like, if I was a, you're not paying me, but B,
it's my job.
But B, it's like, to be an actor, you really have to embrace the truth.
You have to embrace the truth in yourself, the truth in humanity.
You have to see it.
You have to observe it. You have to understand it because that way you can play it
without judgment. When you're playing a good guy, a bad guy, whatever kind of character you're
playing, you have to understand the truth of that person, what they believe, what they feel, what
motivates them, why they think they're right. And so, yeah, so, I mean, that's kind of the work of
an actor. And so I look for those things within myself.
I look for what parts of me resonate with that character.
And if I personally don't have much experience,
I look for who in my life might,
can I reflect upon that is like that person?
Or who can I associate with that character
that gives me an end, gives me some understanding
to how that person thinks?
And then you just come from a place of truth
and it just kind of grows. And when we were on last time, I told you how my nieces. You know, and then you just come from a place of truth and it just kind of grows.
And when we were on last time,
I told you how my nieces and nephews, right?
When I told them that,
Hey, I'm interviewing Mayor Goodway, right?
From Paw Patrol.
They were going to be amazing.
And I promise you it was, and they still don't believe me.
They still don't believe me.
They're like, that doesn't sound like Mayor Goodway.
I'm like, just trust me it is.
Oh, tell them Chickaletta's in the post.
She's right over there.
Yeah.
Exactly.
So how do you prepare for voice acting
compared to like on screen or live with theater?
Because it's got to be a little different, right?
Like you don't get the energy from the person
you're working with and all that.
So how do you do that?
Well, it's kind of its own thing, right?
Because you're in the studio, it's you in a booth
with producers and a director on the other side
of that glass, right?
They're just telling you what it is they want,
but you get to go crazy.
You get to be very free in the booth
and create that character.
So in terms of like Mayor Goodway, for instance,
I'll go in, I've got the script, I've read the script,
I know what's going on,
but I'm really just reciting Mayor Goodway's lines. Nobody's really reciting lines against me.
Sometimes the director will feed you back and forth, but I get to just have fun, you know,
and paint the words with my voice. And there's a real freedom in voice work because you're not
really tied to anything but expressing what's on the page. You know, you don't have to worry
about how you look. It's not about makeup or hair or wardrobe.
It's not about hitting your mark and being here
under this light, the right spot, right, you know,
it's just about freeing yourself up
and delving into that character.
So it's a lot of fun, actually.
Yeah.
So a very smart and talented human being,
and I won't say his name out loud,
because he'll yell at me.
But he told me, Mick,
the best entertainers in the world are theatrical actors,
because you've got to be funny,
so you got to be a comedian,
you got to be able to sing,
and you've got to be able to draw the interest and energy
from the audience that's there.
And you're doing the same thing,
sometimes multiple times a day,
and you've got to bring the same energy.
Sometimes you change it up based on what didn't work before.
And your castmates have to be able to go with you
and you have to be able to go with your castmates.
What does Kim think about that statement?
I think there's a lot of truth to it.
The one thing that I think I would add to it
is that when you're performing in theater,
when you're on stage performing before a live audience, there's an element to that that is so
exceptionally beautiful that charges an actor and that's the audience. When you're in the studio
doing voice work, it's you, right? Just you. When you're on set, it's you and the crew and the fellow
actors and the director, but you don't have that feedback. When you're on stage, you hear them, you feel them,
you see them, they're right in front of you.
So they actually do become a part of the work.
They inform the work.
You know, different audiences,
you know, our director would say this all the time,
he's like, you know, you run the show,
we charge the show, we're setting the pace.
So you don't let them slow you down or speed you up,
you do your show.
But at the same time, the reactions you're getting
totally inform how you feel.
There were shows that were so meaningful
because the audience was so with us.
You'd hear every gasp, you'd feel them crying,
you'd hear them laughing, you know?
And some audiences, they couldn't even get through.
The show took twice as long
because they'd laugh at so many things.
They'd get everything.
And when you've got that kind of exchange,
it's so exhilarating.
It's exhilarating.
It's like, you're really in tandem doing this thing.
You know that you're providing an experience
and that people are with you and they're feeling it.
And it's a really wonderful feeling.
It's quite exceptional actually.
And so it just, yeah,
I think it makes the performances fly.
It makes you even more ever-present and grounded
and in the moment because something very live is happening,
something that can't be repeated ever again. Today's show is today's show.
Every show is like that, right? There'll be some shows where you're like, is there anybody
out there? It's very quiet. But that's when you draw your resources and you really have
to bring it and you have to actually step it up a little bit to make sure that you stay
on and that you still give them the experience.
And then you'll find out that they were just as moved.
It's just a different kind of response that you get.
I love it.
I want to go back to something that you talked about in the very beginning.
So you're a first generation Canadian, right?
Parents, Caribbean, West Indies, Jamaica, all that, right?
Canada is not the Caribbean, right?
Not even on a best day, though.
So talk to me about culture for Kim growing up.
You've got parents that obviously aren't from Canada, right?
But Kim is in Canada.
And for people that don't understand,
I don't want to say displacement because it's not displacement,
but when you've got culture in one place,
but home in another place,
it can be a little confusing for a child.
So I'd love for you to talk through,
what was that like for you growing up
and then establishing your own culture within a culture?
So many things.
Interestingly enough,
I didn't know you could swim in Canada until I was a culture. So many things. You know, interestingly enough, I didn't know you could swim in Canada until I was a teenager because I didn't know we would go, you know, summer we'd go
back to the Caribbean, we go to Jamaica on a summer vacation, or we go to Dominica where my
mother's from, and we'd swim in the ocean, you know, and when we were here, my mother didn't do
beaches in North America, so I did not even realize. I think it might've been a trip to New York
where we visited family and friends.
Then we went, you know, they took us to the coast
and I swam in the Atlantic Ocean.
I was like, what?
You guys have an ocean?
And like, you have an ocean too.
It's just on the coast.
I was like, okay.
You know, so there's that.
I grew up in a very Italian working class neighborhood.
And at the time I was growing up, you know,
racism was still a thing. Not up, racism was still a thing,
not that it's not still a thing,
but it was a thing.
The civil rights movement had just happened
and things were switching.
I'd say specifically Italian working class
because it was very particular culture.
There were two-parent families everywhere.
There was no divorce.
There was no separation.
My parents split when I was seven.
My dad was kind of back and forth, but it was ambiguous as to what was going on in their
marriage.
I was just like, he's away on business.
He's been away a long time.
Then growing up, because I was one of the only black kids, if not the only, yeah, I
was one of the only ones.
We had friends down the street who were also black family.
What's interesting is that the girl who's closest to my age, she used to pick on me and fight with me at school to
disassociate herself from me, you know, as opposed to where we should could have maybe
been allies and helped each other. Anything brown was a bad word. I remember being, you
know, on the playground and, you know, chocolate milk or caca merida or whatever was a bad
word thrown in my direction. There were times I didn't think I'd make it home from school
alive. And it's just it was it was tough. It was really tough. There was a lot of bullying. There was a lot of name calling.
The boy I liked told me he couldn't date me
because I was black.
This is in grade six.
He's like, not my dad would kill me.
I couldn't take you to the dance.
No.
So I grew up in a really kind of strange reality.
But then on the other side,
we had thankfully a really strong Caribbean circle
of family and friends. and my parents stayed,
my mom stayed very connected, you know, and made sure that we were, you know, holidays and just weekends.
We'd hang out with our cousins, whatever.
So I had on this other side a real validation of who I was and a real love for Caribbean culture.
So I think that helped me maintain a sense of self, even though I was being beaten down on at times.
There was this real dichotomy growing up.
But then you joined the larger world.
As I said, I got to university and there were all these first generation Caribbean kids
there as well.
Even though we weren't part of the fabric of the school at that time, we formed our
own quilt.
It was so strong and so beautiful.
We had the best parties.
Kids would come from schools all across the country to be at our cultural show events and parties and whatnot.
And we formed bonds that were lifelong
and that were so strong.
So, you know, was that quote about something,
making diamonds, polishing stone, you know,
sometimes it's the hardship that really forces you
to either shine or bend and, you know,
I think hopefully I came out the right end.
There you go.
Good stuff.
So did you have jerk chicken in Canada?
Oh, yeah, oh, yeah. All the food is here.
There's all the good West Indian food you can get here.
Jerk chicken and curry chicken.
And I mean, my mom is from Dominica,
which is a creole island between Guadeloupe and Martinique.
And so the food from there is also really good.
It's like French influence,
but it's Caribbean with African roots
and it's just lots of good eats.
You got me hungry now, Kelly.
I'm not on a diet, but you got me hungry.
That's all good.
I think we're doing some Uber eats
looking for your ackee and salt fish
after we get off here.
I'm telling you, I'm telling you.
So we talked about theatrical roles,
we talked about voiceover, now let's talk about on screen.
I'm always gonna go, each time we talk,
I talk to you about Schitt's Creek, right?
It's just one of those classics.
Like it's one of those shows
that's gonna go down in history, right?
Like just classic, so dynamic, so diverse from the crew.
So Kim, walk us through auditioning for that role
or hearing about the role, auditioning for the role,
getting the role, and then what is it like
working with that talented group?
Well, it was such an innocuous thing, you know?
It was, at the time, nobody knew it was gonna be
the show that it became.
Right.
And I just, you know, I had an audition like any other,
went into the casting suite.
It was just the casting director and myself and the reader.
You know, I did the scene.
I think there's only one scene for the audition or maybe.
Yeah, I think there's only the one scene, the one with Johnny Rose,
not even the one with Roland.
So I read the scene as a bureaucrat kind of thing.
And the casting director said, thank you. That was great. And I went home, you know, then I hear I booked it.
Fine. And we're shooting, you know, up north in cottage country.
So they kind of pick you up and you trick up there.
And, you know, at the time it was just it was just a show.
But I do remember halfway through taping, you know, I'm there with Eugene Levy, who's comic genius.
And then Chris is absolutely phenomenal, who plays Roland.
And so I'd done my scene with Eugene,
and that was a lot of fun.
It was just so lovely to ping pong back and forth.
And then we shot to the second scene when Roland comes in.
And I remember at one point,
A, first of all, we had never met each other before.
We had never, we hadn't even rehearsed the scene.
You know, we did kind of one kind of blocking
and immediately like we just had that chemistry
and the fun and the play was there.
And so it was, it was a no, it was just a no brainer.
It was just an easy scene to shoot.
We just played, we had fun.
And then I remember when I go back around the desk
and the two of them are sparring,
I'm looking at Chris Elliot and I'm looking at Eugene Levy
and I'm like, this is comedic genius
in front of you right now.
You need to really just appreciate this moment.
And so I really, I did have a fangirl moment
while being in the scene.
I'm like, yeah, this is, you're playing
with really good talent here.
And so that was fun.
But I just, I really enjoyed myself
doing that show, doing that, you know,
we shot the scenes in a day.
And like I said, Chris Elliott was just, you know,
it was a joy.
We just like, it was, yeah, it was very easy, very natural.
And lo and behold, the show became what it became, you know,
nobody could have predicted or even hoped for
how big it's become.
And it's lovely to feel that I've been a part of something
that will be iconic, you know,
that'll be one of those shows that gets talked about like when I was young we had ours,
you know, so yeah, you get a nice royalty check. Oh, this is what you don't know about being
Canadian. Our royalty checks will buy you that jerk chicken maybe that you're talking about.
That's about it. We don't get paid like y'all do down south. It's a whole different system,
which is another topic for another day maybe.
But yeah, no, our royalty checks are horrible.
Our deal is not good at all.
We get, our rights get bought out for about four years.
And so you don't see anything more.
You maybe get like an extra fee on your fee,
but it's not like in the States,
whereas you'll get your full fee once it airs
and then you get royalty checks equivalent to that
or even higher.
No, we get like $17.50 checks.
Wow.
So essentially you just get to put it on your resume
is what you're saying.
Pretty much.
Pretty much.
Oh man, that is awesome.
Kim, a couple of questions.
I want to go rapid fire with Kim,
if you're good with that.
Yeah.
All right.
First question,
what's your most favorite role
that you've ever been in?
Rap of Dude.
It's usually the last one.
So Margaret White from Get That Hope
that I just played at the Stratford Festival this summer
is currently my favorite character, yeah.
OK.
All right.
What's the role that you didn't get that you
wish you could go back and get?
See, you go in the room and you forget about it.
So I can't even remember what role I might've wanted.
That's fair.
Yeah.
I don't want you to think about it.
Let's not go back.
Okay. Honestly, no idea.
All right. So, Auntie Kim's favorite meal that you cook?
I'm a good cook. There are a few.
These are tough questions. My favorite meal that good cook. There are a few. These are tough questions.
My favorite meal that I cook.
Dude, I don't know.
I mean, I roast a good chicken.
I make a great curry.
Maybe my curry chicken.
Yeah, curry chicken.
Okay.
I'll be over at seven.
Cool.
I like it.
That's cool.
What's some advice you have for the upcoming actor, actress of how to have longevity in the entertainment business?
Oh, that's, you just have to stick with it, I think. That's the word on the street. It's like you just do something long enough.
Don't give up. And, you know, eventually, hopefully you're, you know, you'll have longevity. That's all
I can give you.
No, that's the same thing I tell people in business, just keep
going. Right? Like life is gonna get hard. If it were easy,
there'd be a lot of billionaires walking around, I promise you.
So true. So true.
Right. But those that you see successful, it's just, they just
kept going. I promise you, they just kept going.
All right, so what do you have upcoming?
Well, I'm currently in a film called All the Lost Ones.
It's in select theaters here in Canada right now.
It's at the, imagine Carleton Cinemas in Toronto,
but it's going to be debuting on Paramount Plus,
December 13th, so you can check that out,
called All the Lost Ones.
I'm on Paw Patrol, as mere good way, as always, check that out, call all the lost ones. I'm on Paw Patrol as Mayor Goodway as always,
and that's so much fun.
What else?
I mean, I think there's a lot of my old Christmas movies
popping up around this time of year.
So I've been getting all these texts,
I saw you in a Christmas movie, I saw you.
So, you know, Christmas Dance Reunion is out right now.
There are a few of them out there,
so yeah, just keep your eyes peeled.
They are.
So ironically, Thanksgiving weekend, right, just happened.
I had about 25 people over at the house and my family,
I got to fanboy over Kim.
I was like, that's Kim, I know Kim.
So that was kind of cool.
That's right, that's awesome.
Was it one of the Christmas movies?
It was. Nice, nice. Absolutely. one of the Christmas movies? It was.
Nice.
Nice.
Absolutely.
I'm glad I could have joined you.
Yeah.
Where's my turkey?
Absolutely.
So all you had to do was bring the curry chicken
and Thanksgiving would have been complete.
I'm like, where's my turkey plate?
Since I was a part of the family gathering,
I'm expecting a little package.
I got you covered.
OK.
I got you covered.
OK.
Because I did the turkey.
So there we go. You did? It was good? It was. I got you covered. Okay. I got you covered. Okay. Because I did the turkey.
So there we go.
You did?
It was good?
It was.
There's no more.
And it didn't get thrown away.
Well, that's a testament.
I'm sure it was great.
That's all we can say.
So that is awesome.
So December 13th, which is literally right around the corner.
It is.
You've got something coming out.
Anything else you want the world to know
about Miss Kim Roberts?
Just I love you guys.
Thank you for following my career and being there.
Yeah, I just happen to be a part of this industry
and getting to do the thing that I love to do.
I love it.
And just so the listeners and viewers know,
like been a big fan of Kim.
I like to say we're almost like friends and family now.
Like we, we talked to each other on Instagram a lot.
One of the best followers you can have on Instagram
is Kim Roberts.
Like just, just amazing human being.
And all of you know, I just love humans that are good humans.
And Kim is at the very top of that list.
So Kim, I just wanted you to know that.
I wanted to tell you that and not message you that.
Thank you, Mick. That's very kind.
I feel the same way about you. You're just amazing.
I love getting to sit down and talk with you any, any, and every time.
There we go. Well, we'll make this a regular thing.
How about that, Kim?
When you come back from Jamaica, I know you're going on vacation.
I am.
I'm going to get a little sun, a little rum,
a little family time.
It'll be good.
All right.
Well, I want you to bring me something back.
In any of the rum, the curry chicken, the rum, the rum,
like whatever you want to bring back rum,
like you just let me know.
All right, well, I'm actually on a hunt.
Ray and Nephew has been unavailable for almost a year,
and that is my rum.
I mean, you can't be at Jamaican without a bottle in your house.
So I'm going looking for it.
So yeah.
There you go.
I find it. I got you.
I appreciate you.
Well, Kim, again, thank you for your time.
Thank you for just being you and always being available to me.
I appreciate you, dear.
Well, it's a pleasure, Mick. Thanks for having me.
You got it. And for all the listeners and viewers,
remember, your because is your superpower.
Go unleash it.
Thank you for tuning in to Mick Unplugged.
Keep pushing your limits, embracing your purpose,
and chasing greatness.
Until next time, stay unstoppable.