Not Gonna Lie with Kylie Kelce - Kylie on Being a 12 lb Baby, Prom at The White House & Roster Heights with Michelle Obama | Ep. 15
Episode Date: March 20, 2025Kylie’s back for a brand new episode of Not Gonna Lie presented by Liquid Death and starts things off by reacting to the news of NGL winning its first-ever award for “Best Emerging Podcast” at t...he 2025 iHeartPodcast Awards (1:44). Then, Kylie gets into the realities of late pregnancy and the most popular at-home labor induction methods based on a TikTok she doomscrolled upon (2:45). Plus, it’s a doomscroll double feature because a photo of baby Kylie, all 12 lbs 1 oz of her, has resurfaced and Kylie shares her theory on second kids being built “sturdy” (5:35). After that, Kylie debuts a new segment tentatively called “Charity and Yap” until Queen Emma thinks of something better. Kylie shares that she and Jason have something very special up for auction at this year’s 2025 Night of Too Many Stars event benefiting the NEXT For Autism organization (8:45). Kylie’s then joined by the woman she claims she may have the “least business” talking to in the entire world, former First Lady, Michelle Obama (13:10). Kylie asks Mrs. Obama about her brand new podcast “IMO” that she hosts with her brother Craig Robinson and why they wanted to start the show together. Mrs. Obama and Kylie then get into the benefits of being a girl dad (19:52) and the realities of raising teenage daughters at The White House (21:20). Mrs. Obama talks about the importance of making sure her daughters were prepared for the world once they moved out and what it was like when they were doing regular teen things like learning to drive and going to parties. Kylie shares how much she appreciated Mrs. Obama’s “Let’s Move” campaign and asks her about partnering with the NFL on it, the changes to school lunches that resulted from it and why that cause was initially so important to her (28:47). Lastly, since they’re both exactly 5’11”, Kylie asks Michelle Obama about her feelings on growing up as a tall girl and the two of them bond over guys lying about their heights in their dating years and now being proud to wear heels (36:40). As always, make sure you tune into More Sh*t Monday on the Not Gonna Lie YouTube channel for exclusive clips from Kylie’s longer conversation with Michelle Obama. . . . Support the Show: Liquid Death: Go to http://liquiddeath.com/kylie for $2 off any 2 six-packs! Liquid Death is available nationwide anywhere you shop for water or iced tea Michelle Obama’s new podcast “IMO” is available now on YouTube and wherever you get your podcasts! Donate to NEXT For AUTISM: https://nextforautism.org/ ‘Night of Too Many Stars’ Tickets: https://www.ticketmaster.com/night-of-too-many-stars-benefits-new-york-new-york-03-31-2025/event/3B00616FE4A61D78?CAMEFROM=cfc_beacontheatre_EML_PRE_241209_3650239&utm_campaign=241210_BT_NOTMS_PRE&utm_medium=eml&utm_source=sfmc Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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I'm not going to lie.
This sweatshirt is a 3X team issued to my husband.
Why? Well, because nothing else fits.
So let's get this podcast started.
Welcome back to not going to lie.
Wave original brought to you by liquid death.
Yep.
Sounds scary.
It's not.
It's just the most outstanding hydration in a crisp can, nice and cool. They also have
iced teas. Just saying. I'm your host, Kylie Kelsey. I'm tall. I'm an Aries. I'm pretty
sure. And I'm officially a minivan driver. Yep. It happened. Do I look pleased? It's actually a really smooth ride and the
girls are so excited about the fact that the doors open without anyone touching them and
they can climb in and out by themselves. And the positivity surrounding it is annoying,
including my own. I don't want to talk about it, I'm not ready.
Whatever.
Coming up on today's episode,
I was inspired by a TikTok that perfectly sums up
being 38 weeks pregnant.
So I'm gonna share my personal late pregnancy challenges
in doom scroll of the week.
Then I'm gonna be joined by someone
I may just have the least business talking to
in the entire world. The former
first lady, Michelle Obama. We also have some NGL word news. Not going to lie has officially
won best emerging podcasts at the I heart podcast awards. Ah, see, I told you guys to vote for Caleb, but thank you so much. I am honored. I will say as much
as I was rooting for Caleb, the, our whole team at not going to lie and wave, uh, they
deserve this recognition. So this is not, this is not a me thing. This is my team thing. Uh, Queen
Emma, Queen Nicole, Greg, Brad, they're the people who won this award. So I really, um,
yeah, it's, it's them. It's not me. I'm just the talking head. Moving on this week, I doom
scrolled my way to the perfect TikTok that sums up what it's
really like to be 38 weeks pregnant.
And as someone who is currently right in that area, let's just say this hits.
From John Hartman one on TikTok, Queen Emma, roll the clip.
I just cut my underwear off because I didn't want to take my pants off.
That's perfectly logical.
First of all, he thought he was doing something by trying to expose her and her really honestly
smart and logical decision.
Okay.
He thought that he was going to be like, Oh people, this is absurd. And
I haven't got, I didn't dive into those comments, but I'm going to let you know my own comments
power to you girl. You can always get another pair of underwear, but the idea of having
to bend over to get it down past your knees, we're not doing some wiggle nonsense to get
them down without really like, like getting them over your knees, right? There have been some ridiculous times
that I've had during pregnancy that are similar to this. I can't say that I've ever cut off
my underwear, but I have had times where I will disappear and come back in like a robe or a dress and Jason
will be like, why did you just change your clothes? And I have to explain to him that
the feeling of anything touching my belly in a restrictive way, AKA a band from pants or underwear is too much to bear.
This is also right around the time as women that we start Googling ways to induce labor.
That's right.
I've said it multiple times to anyone that I've spoken to, I'm doing sprints next week.
You can't stop me. Fortunately for all the listeners, I have asked my OBs about the
most common methods, stuff like drinking herbal teas, eating dates, acupuncture, spicy food.
Oh how I wish. I will say my OBs have explicitly told me no castor oil. So if that comes up on your induction suggestions,
the ways to induce labor at home, opt out. I'm going to tell you the reason I was told not to
do that. Very simple. A simple explanation. I'm not going to get into it. You know what I mean.
A simple explanation, I'm not going to get into it. You know what I mean.
I was told it makes labor messy.
Ain't nobody got time for that.
We're not doing that.
Before I wrap up this segment, you're getting a doom scroll double feature because I doom
scrolled my Instagram so hard I landed on a photo of me
that seems to have resurfaced. I posted this years ago, but an Instagram account
at Kelsey Brothers just reposted it with the caption, you think Travis and Jason are impressive?
Meet baby Kylie. That's me. That's legitimately me.
When I posted this photo, I posted it with the caption, a couple of weeks ago, my grandmother asked me,
mind you, my grandmother at this point in her life
had dementia.
How big were you when you came out?
I told her that I was 12 pounds, one ounce
and showed her the picture and she laughed and
said, I knew you were huge. Thanks meme. Uh, I weighed 12 pounds, one ounce when I came
out and this photo is not distorted. That is genuinely how round my face was and how
little visibility I had. I have been told that at the time of my delivery,
the doctor who delivered me, I was his largest baby he had ever delivered.
I have since been dethroned by a 14 pounder. I'm not bitter. I'm a little bitter. I want to talk to that mom. Really. I want to, um, I want to make
sure she's okay. Um, my parents, I don't think we're very surprised that I came out that
large. My sister was nine five and broke her collarbone on the way out. So the minute they
told my mom that I was going to be bigger, my mom said, just that's a, that's a forward exit. That's an exit. You want
you to just slice me open. I'm pretty sure that Jason, I don't know about Travis. I'm pretty sure
that Jason was six pounds, some ounces. He was a little bit early. I want to say, I'm going to get this wrong,
but I've heard conflicting stories from every, from Jason, Donna and Ed. So I'm just going
to go with the average. I would say he was about two weeks early. Don't quote me. I don't
know about Travis either, but I do know that Travis was definitely
in all their baby photos was definitely the chunkier kid, which clearly he stretched out.
And same, it's that second kid. We're built tough. We had the same situation with Ellie. Wyatt was eight seven, Ellie was eight
thirteen, and she was just built sturdy. And I swear that it was the universe trying to make sure
that she could survive Wyatt. And I'm never going to, I stand by that. And that does it for Doom
Scroll of the Week. You guys know that I'm very passionate to, I stand by that. And that does it for doom scroll of the week.
You guys know that I'm very passionate about charitable efforts. We've been trying to make
sure that we can tie those into, not going to lie. And I'm not going to lie. The best
we could come up with for a segment name in a pinch was charity and yap. That's right.
I'm about to yap about a charity that I feel very strongly about,
an event that is called the Night of Too Many Stars. And alongside that is an auction. Jason
and I have submitted an auction item. You can actually win, I don't know if it's winning,
but you can win an opportunity to go to dinner with Jason and I in Philadelphia.
If anyone knows about the food scene in Philadelphia, at the very least, you might be having dinner
with two very dull individuals, but the food is guaranteed to be outstanding wherever we
choose. The event, Night of Too Many Stars,
is a live comedy show benefiting autism programs
all throughout the country.
It benefits the foundation Next for Autism
started by the Smigel family in New York.
They have a personal connection to autism
and the funds raised support Next for Autism's national grants programs focused on
initiatives that support autistic adults in the areas of work, home, and social well-being.
Anyone who works with the neurodiverse community knows that one of the most difficult transitions
to make is from school age, which oftentimes will be until an individual is 21
years of age and transitioning them out of school into the workforce or living independently.
So Next for Autism makes it a point to support that community. I have actually had the opportunity to attend the event last year. It was outstanding. The
comedians that were there were so funny. It was so encouraging to get into a room where
so many people had dedicated their time and volunteered their humor for such an incredible
cause. Something that you guys know is very near and dear to my heart and I am so happy to
have another opportunity to support a foundation that is doing great work in the autism community.
If you're in the New York area, the Night of Too Many Stars is Monday, March 31st at
the Beacon Theater.
Tickets are still available.
We'll put the link in the description.
And if you'd like to support a great cause,
you can donate at nextforautism.org.
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She's the former first lady of the United States.
She led public health and education initiatives
like the Let's Move campaign and reach higher. She's currently the founder of the girls opportunity
Alliance. She's also an author, podcaster, wife, and a mother. I cannot believe I'm saying
this right now. Michelle Obama. Welcome to not going to lie.
Hey, Kylie, look at you. I'm not going to lie, Mrs. Obama, this is a pretty surreal moment for me.
I feel like we manifested this a little bit.
I think so.
That's how it works, right?
Yes.
But I have always been such a fan of just sort of the way that you carry yourself and it in sort of the
election cycle and where it hit in my life it was like the first time I was
able to register to vote at 18. Wow. Was the first election that I was able to
vote for your husband but then seeing you as a powerful figure alongside him
as a partner was like such an outstanding image
of like female empowerment.
And I just remember that at like 18 years old,
that it sits in my brain really heavily.
So I'm so excited to get to talk to you.
I wanna start off by talking about something
that you just announced and I'm so excited for you. You have a brand new podcast with your brother, Craig, called
IMO.
Yes. I'm following in your footsteps. I mean, you're killing the game out here.
I don't know about that, but we're just, we're winging it.
Yeah. Well, that's the fun part of podcasting.
It is.
This is the first time we've entered into this space in a major way.
I did a podcast after my first book, Becoming,
which was really based more on the sort of focus
of the book, the story of my life in the White House.
But this is a bit different
because it's a lot more free flowing.
IMO, it's in my opinion.
So, I mean, I think a lot like you,
it's like folks have,
you're finding they have a lot of questions,
times are uncertain,
people are always looking for some kind of answers because I think we
think someone's got wisdom out there. And it just, it's, it, it eases our minds, I think,
if we can just talk about this stuff.
Now how far apart in age are you and your brother?
We're about a year and a half.
So we're really- That's so awesome.
Yeah, we're close.
We've been close from the very beginning.
And we also just lost our mom about a year ago.
And so it's kind of strange that we are now the elders.
I mean, when you lose both your parents and we were, we lost our dad
earlier, we, I, we were both in our twenties when my dad died and my mom has held it down
for us through all these crazy parts in our lives, you know, the White House years, um,
you know, she got us through those years.
Um, uh, but when you lose your lose your parent, you know, you're always
kind of wondering what on earth do I know? My mom is not here anymore. And, you know, I don't know
about you, but I'm just now feeling kind of like an adult that knows something, you know.
But does it not feel like it's all of the wisdom that she has imparted on you?
It's there, but until you activate it, you don't realize that it's just been there
brewing all along. Um, I find that I'm having that conversation with the girls now.
I mean, my girls are, you know, they are adults, they're, they're living on their own.
If you can believe that, going
from these little girls that people saw on the stage at the first inauguration, they're
grown women in the world.
But a lot of our conversation now is like, when do you feel like an adult?
When does this happen?
They think like, is there the magic switch that makes you say, yeah, I'm adulting?
And I was like, no,
it's not there. I still, I still on my fourth child, I'm like,
how am I old enough to have four kids?
You know, and, and when you leave the hospital with that baby, you think,
all right, for real, you're letting us,
no one's going to monitor this.
Yes. You're going to let us get in a car with this precious baby?
Yes.
I think the sadness or the postpartum that I felt
with my kids really came from,
like you love these babies so much.
Immediately you're connected and you think,
oh my God, all you have is me.
Yes.
I feel so bad for you.
I wish you had a parent.
You deserve more,
because I don't know anything.
And now I'm in charge.
This is like my inner dialogue.
It is, and you're doing it a fourth time.
I just had to stop.
I was like, I think I've been lucky with these two. Barack was like, we should have a third. And I was like, I think, you know, I think I've been lucky with these two. I, you know, Barack was like, we should have a third.
And I was like, dude, well, two good sleepers.
I'd call it too.
You know, I'm thinking we're going to get a crazy one.
That's it.
It's just the roll of the dice.
So I, I, you know, I admire your courage.
You're on number four, you know, and you know, you know, you, you, you don't
know what you're going to get.
No, no, it, you don't know what you're going to get.
No, no, it's always a toss up.
I call our first initiation because she didn't sleep for the first six months of her life
unless she was touching another human being.
I'm like, maybe that's why I keep going.
I'm like, that was bad.
I got through it.
It's, it's, that is, yeah, it is always a toss up.
You're like, I don't know what this one's
going to be like. Yeah. Yeah. We're going to find out. And they show you pretty early. And
they're like, Oh, right away. I have an attitude. That's it. Our oldest, I still remember the second
day in the hospital, we had all of our, all the grandparents were in the room and she just decided
to let her rip. She was screaming at the top of her lungs and I was laying in the bed as a first time
mom, like, uh, how do I stop it?
Where's the off button here?
And all the grandparents were like, and no one knew what they were like, do we intervene?
What happens here?
It was, and that was the moment I was like,
Oh, yep. No one knows what they're doing. No, but she's taught me a level of patience. I didn't
know I had, and she's like, she's going to rule the world. She's, she's gonna, yeah, I'm excited
to see what she does. Yeah. And you have girls too. All girls, all girls. That's because that's what
your husband deserved. Yes. Something in his deserved. That's what I told Barack.
I was like, the karma was like, dude, you need a bunch of women in your life to take
care of you. That's it. No, do a little smacking around. When I say take care of you, I mean
like handle you. Yes, like handle you. People kept sending me a clip online. There was a news outlet that
did a report on girl dads and how they live longer. I was like, of course they do. They
have women being like, are you serious right now?
Are you going out like that?
Yeah. What are you doing?
Are you going out like that? Yeah. What are you doing? Are you going to say that?
Are you okay?
Get it together.
Yep.
That's, yeah.
He now has five of us.
Yeah, that's right.
That's right.
He and Barack need to talk.
That's it.
Now you of course raised your daughters in the White House.
Yes.
I don't know about you, but my kids draw on the couches, the walls, the stairs, everywhere.
Did you have any moments in the White House where your girls were true kids and you were
like, oh crap?
Yeah, well because they lived in the White House longer than they lived anywhere.
They grew up in the White House.
So, you're thinking the little years, like when you have full control, the younger years
when you have control and the worst thing that they do is write on a wall.
Draw on surfaces.
Yeah.
My kids were teenagers in the White House.
Yes.
I mean, those years were just like, okay, you want to go where and do what?
And there's prom and you've got to learn how to drive and you have to be normal.
And you're going to a party and was there alcohol and you have agents and now you have a boyfriend
and you have agents and now you have a boyfriend and trying to do all that, right?
And allow them to be normal kids, right?
Just, you know, just the process of making sure
they knew how to drive when they have been driven
by men in armored cars with guns, you know,
because they had full details their whole life.
And so I'm trying to make sure
because at the end of this eight years,
they don't continue to live that life.
So when we entered, I'm thinking,
how do I make sure that they're normal and ready
when this is all over?
Right.
And they have to get on a bus and make their own plane reservations and live in an apartment
and have decent friends and be sane in the world.
And you start realizing that in the teen years because I wanted to give my girls enough rope
to live and be normal teenagers, but I was
also worrying about them turning up on page six because they were doing what normal kids
would do.
Without that many eyes on them.
Without that many eyes on them and they grew up with social media, which was different
from any other of the younger kids who had grown up in the
White House. When you think of Chelsea and Amy Carter and even the Bush
daughters who were in college, but it was really Chelsea and Amy who were
kids, but there wasn't social media, right? There weren't cameras everywhere,
you know, every party that they'd go to, you know, we'd have to build
a real community of trust around them so that because I didn't want them sitting home on
Saturday night, not understanding what it was like to be out and have a life before
they went to college, right?
Right.
So it was really those years, you know, the stressful ones.
I mean, it was like, forget the crayon on the wall.
Take some crayon on the wall, you know,
a magic eraser will handle.
And I think Sasha was driving one time
because I, once they got their license,
I told the agents they have to drive, you know,
I'm sorry, but you only learn to drive by driving.
You can't learn it through osmosis in the back seat of an armored car.
So once they got their license, we got a car for them.
And then the agents had to figure out they have to follow this teenager now to school,
to parties, to...
And it worked out, but one time Sasha got T-boned.
Literally her car totaled, some lady T-boned her.
And you get this call that Sasha was in an accident,
the car was totaled.
And then I thought, ooh, I hope the lady that hit her is okay.
Cause you imagine, right?
Yes.
You T-bone like Sasha Obama.
Yes.
And then their agents.
So I'm also like thinking about them in the world, right?
Right.
So, you know, the day-to-day kind of challenges
that any parent has with teenagers,
we had it on a hundred.
Amplified. Right.
Yeah, yeah.
So I longed for the days when, you know.
I do not.
Just right on the wall, will ya?
We can wash that off, you know.
I just was, I was so glad when we got out of the White House,
not, you know, it was just like,
I wanted them to have the freedom
of not having the eyes of the world on them.
I mean, they still are dealing with paparazzi
and being who they are and trying to, you know,
cover up their own identity.
But they got a lot of practice
in those years in the White House.
And so when people ask me, would I ever run?
The answer is no, you know?
I mean, you, then if you ask me that,
then you have absolutely no idea
the sacrifice that your kids make
when your parents are in that role.
Not only am I not interested in politics in that way,
but the thought of putting my girls back into that spotlight
when they are just now establishing themselves.
It's like, okay, I think
we've done enough question asked and answered, never going to happen. Right.
That's such a true mom answer that like you're like, how will this impact the really your kids?
And they've already been in, you know, they've already served their time, right?
In very formative years.
And you were very tactical about how you approached that.
And so to then do it again would be, you know, it would be unthinkable.
Nope.
Nope.
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One of the reasons you're someone I look up to so much is because you're the perfect example of a woman making a name for
herself beyond what her husband does for work.
So I'm such a supporter of your Let's Move campaign and the work you did to promote healthy eating and exercise for kids
because obviously being someone who was physically active growing up, I really saw a point in eating healthy,
fueling your body and focusing on just moving.
Why was that cause so important to you?
Well I experienced the challenges in this environment of fast food and more sedentary lifestyles and all that my generation of parents were facing
that was new, that was leading to a childhood obesity crisis. It was real. I saw it early
on as a working mom with my husband traveling.
He was a state senator when the kids were little,
then he was a US Senator.
So he would, like you, I had a husband
that had to travel a lot and I had a full-time job.
So when you're a single, not a single parent,
but when you're-
We called football season single parent, but when you're, you know, we called football season, single parent season, you know, right.
I was a political season, single parent, right?
Yes.
You know, you're, you're relying on juice boxes, doing a lot of process
stuff, trying to get things quick and, and easy.
And I saw the effects on my daughter, primarily Malia at the time, because the doctors
were saying, whoa, let's make sure that we're thinking about her diet in a way that I hadn't,
you know, I was buying what was being sold to me, right? The conveniences of parenthood, right?
Right. The conveniences of parenthood, right? And that had an effect. So we started making changes that were really simple, you know, no sugary drinks. We had the kids drinking milk
and water. They were always active. We cut out all processed foods, you know, no more
cheese dust in a box. You know, if you were going to have macaroni and cheese, it would be real
pasta, real cheese, just small common changes. And within months, her health numbers flipped.
And I thought, oh my God, here I am, this highly educated person out in the world with all these
degrees. And I didn't realize that we were facing this kind of dilemma and I thought now this would
this should be something that everyone should be able to get behind creating a
healthier generation because I was also thinking about my platform and it's like
okay I don't want to do something divisive. My husband's going to be pushing healthcare.
I was trying to be strategic about aligning my agenda
with something that was important to the West Wing.
And I thought there's no way
that anyone is going to take issue
with trying to make school lunches healthier,
getting kids more active,
really just trying to make the lunches healthier, getting kids more active, really just trying to make the next generation
healthier than ours.
And boy was I wrong,
which is really interesting in these times
with the current Secretary of Health and Human Services
who is now saying some of the same things that I was saying,
but it became a partisan issue.
People were telling me that I'm trying to be the nanny state
and I'm trying to control what our kids are eating
and telling them what's good for them
and what's not good for them.
Now, eventually we got a lot done.
We were able to improve the nutrition standards,
the labels so that they were more readable,
so that parents could really understand the breakdown of fat and sugar.
It was clear.
We got the school nutrition standards improved in our schools for the first time in like
50 years.
There hadn't been any updates.
And we were really focused on making it fun,
getting kids active, reminding parents that,
we gotta make exercise fun.
So we had a lot of amazing partnerships with the NFL
and we broke the Guinness World Record.
I planted a garden to try to get people more focused
on making vegetables a little more fun and interesting for kids. But it was all about
really dealing with a real health crisis that at the time a lot of people didn't take seriously.
I think it also is so important to take your own life experience to see that switch with Malia
and it makes that sort of messaging and effort more authentic. And I feel like people can tell
when you authentically feel passionate about something. So that, I mean, I still remember the different initiatives you guys did and programs you
put in place for specifically movement and getting kids active. Definitely remember all
of the school lunch changes because they were obvious.
I think your generation talks about nutrition and movement in a way that my generation didn't, especially as women.
No one focused on us as real athletic beings
when I was coming up.
And that has totally changed.
And I'm so, so happy to see folks like you benefiting
from Title IX and really embracing all of who you are, your power,
your strength.
It feeds into all of the things that are happening right now with women in sports.
Specifically, you have obviously that women are more encouraged to participate in sports.
But then on top of that, the way that we're able to talk about food in conjunction with
that, the way it nourishes our bodies, the way it fuels you to be able to have the energy
to play your sport.
And then also the way it fuels your body in a way that we're not trying to be slender
or slim or fit in a certain size, that we're trying to be strong, powerful, athletic, finessed
individuals to be able to perform our sport and do what we love.
And so it's, I mean, these are those let's move initiatives are directly impacting the
way the conversation has been steered up to this point. And the direction we're headed
in raising four girls right now and knowing that those conversations are happening because you
started those conversations then is such a beautiful thing. It really, we just have to
make sure we don't backslide on this stuff, right? I mean, because it can, it can happen in the blink
of the eye, the eye, uh, where the, we turn back the clock on a lot of this stuff and we're really thinking about
your girls, right?
They should have more opportunity than we have.
They should have more knowledge, more information, and this is something that I don't care what
your political party is, but as women, as mothers, as parents, we've got to be mindful of what some of this
rhetoric might do to turn the clock back on a lot of really important progress to give
girls, you know, acknowledge the power and the leadership that are inherent in all of
our kids, especially our girls.
Absolutely.
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Now, I've been looking forward to talking to you about something we have in common.
We are both 5'11".
Oh, yes.
What I say normal height.
Well, it's funny.
I have a friend who's about 5'4", and she wears a size like six shoe or something.
And whenever we would joke around about it, she's like, I'm average size.
And I'm like, okay. You're, you're we, you're tiny. My mom's only five foot two.
My grandmother was like four, nine and smaller. My dad is six, nine. So, yeah, hard over,
correct. Oh, and you know, I'm not going to lie. Doesn't it irritate you when the wee
people take the, the tall guys? Do you know the number of conversations? My know, I'm not going to lie. Doesn't it irritate you when the wee people take the tall guys?
Do you know the number of conversations?
My sister's five nine.
I'm five 11.
When we were in high school, we would always complain about, well, this girl is like five
feet tall and she's dating a guy who's six five.
You can't save that for us.
And my mom would always be like, hello, excuse me. See, I don't know.
I would have some issues with your mom. I'd be like, we gave it to her. Let me tell you,
she did not come out unscathed, but she would always stand up for herself. And it's, you
know what, to be fair, she'd stand on her toes. That's it. Look up and say, Hey, that's it.
Now I always talk about how being tall shaped me growing up.
But I'd love to hear more about your experience.
Were you always comfortable with your height and like, was that a, like where did that
start or was it something you had to learn and grow into?
I think it's a little bit of both.
I was always kind of a tomboy, being the having a big brother.
I was always trying to keep up.
And I always found what the boys were doing
were more interesting, right?
And we had cousins who were two boys
that we were close with some of our favorites.
And so I'm the only girl.
And my father raised me, it's like,
if Craig is learning how to do something,
you're gonna learn it too.
So my dad was a boxer, so he got us both boxing gloves
because he was like, you're gonna learn how to punch.
And Craig had his larger size boxing gloves
and I had my little ones and we'd do these
spars and I could always hit him harder. So I was fast, I loved to run. So I was taught
to embrace that part of me. So in my home, I felt tall, I felt proud. But then you go
out into the world, right? And, you know, before Title IX, being a sporty girl wasn't
a thing, right? Like, what do you do? I don't think there was any place for my parents to
put that gift, that interest, right? I took dance lessons. I was trying to be more girly and girly meant you were smaller than the guys.
And then as you got older, you found that, you know, guys would be lying about their height,
especially because I grew up in basketball culture, right?
Oh, yeah. My my brother played everything. Right.
So, you know, and I dated a lot of guys on his team, you know,
because those are the guys I were meeting.
So I would meet some taller guys, but they were always lying about their height.
A roster height is at least two inches.
Yeah.
For men, it's like six to you are not six to not if I'm five.
Well, I do or I to I, you know, maybe, maybe you're six to not if I'm five or I do or I to I you know
Maybe maybe you're six, but that's six that roster height. Yes boy
You know
So I look at somebody's roster height and then so they try to make us feel crazy like oh no
You're not five eleven. It's like no. I'm exactly five eleven
I have no reason to lie about my height.
As an adult, I have now grown to to love it.
But I came up in a generation that like there weren't the there wasn't the tall size. Right. So the worst thing about being tall without the tall sizes,
is this the pulling up your sleeve because your sleeves are too short?
Yes. You know, everything is just a little too short. You're always like you're expecting a flood, you know, exactly.
And I'm just sort of like, come on people, a couple of more incidents because the, the
littler ones can him their pants. That's it. I always told people when they told me they
were envious of my height, I would always say, well, careful what you wish for. Cause
I can't chop off my feet and make my pants fit,
but you could wear heels and have your pants fit.
Yes.
And I love a heel, right?
I do not shy away, especially in my adult life.
I do not shy away from a heel.
My girls don't either.
They're like, they've got to get over it.
Good.
So, oh, Sasha loves a big chunky heel and oh, Malia too.
They love their big chunky boots.
Good.
I do make it a point whenever I meet tall girls, especially younger girls, who,
who you can tell are just sort of like, they have the slight roll to the shoulders.
They're trying to look an inch or two shorter.
I'm like, stand up straight, stand up straight.
The other thing that's hard, like, stand up straight. Stand up straight. Stand up straight.
The other thing that's hard,
like especially when I see myself
in conversations with people,
I still have that because I'm trying to hear them.
Oh yes.
Yep.
So you're with, so you're now you're tall.
And people are talking.
You're a mile away.
There's a conversation going on down there.
Yep.
And you're like, I'm sorry, I can't hear.
It's not traveling up.
So I find myself in pictures.
I'm leaning over and I hate that, but I can't hear them down there.
I also find that oftentimes if I'm talking to someone shorter, I will physically take
a step back so that it doesn't feel like I'm still like a towering over.
I'm going to eat you alive.
Yes, exactly.
Fee fi fo fo.
Yes.
I cannot thank you enough for getting on today and chatting.
It has been such a pleasure.
Ah, the pleasure is all mine.
I am so excited.
You're doing this thing, really, truly.
And I'm here for you.
I think what you're doing and how you were showing up
in the world is just what we need right now.
So it is truly, truly a pleasure.
We will do this again, because we need to scratch
the surface of all that we talk about.
And just keep being you, truly.
Everyone can check you out.
You and Craig out on IMO.
It's available on YouTube or anywhere you get your podcasts.
I cannot wait to tune in.
Give me some tips when you hear, you know, let me know.
I'll tell you, I think everybody knows the other podcasts in our household.
I love a sibling podcast.
Because there's nothing like that connection you have with your siblings.
No one can give me shit like my brother.
That's it.
And that's what we need.
That's right, that's what we need.
Thank you so much.
Thank you and good luck.
Keep me posted.
I need it.
Number four, I wanna know who she is.
I can't wait. Thank you. I need it. Number four. I want to know who she is. Right? Can't wait.
Take care. Thank you so much again to Michelle Obama for joining me today. You can check out
her new podcast, IMO, every week on YouTube or wherever you get your podcasts. And you can
find even more clips on my YouTube channel on More Shit Monday. And that's a wrap on another
episode of Not going to lie.
I'll be back next Thursday with a brand new episode. Listen and subscribe. It's a miracle.
I can say any word. All of the blood in my body is going to my uterus and not my brain.
I'll be back next Thursday with a brand new episode. Listen and subscribe wherever you get
your podcasts. Follow the show on all social media at NGL with Kylie. Not going to lie is a
Wave Original brought to you by Liquid Death. Thank you guys again for tuning in.