SmartLess - "John Legend"
Episode Date: September 5, 2022Legend has it, we got an EGOT on the pod. John Legend joins us this week and we hum some nonsense together, talk crosswords, and get trained on proper photoshoot wet-downs. It’s legendary.P...lease, support us by supporting our sponsors!National Disclaimer: 21+ and present in AZ, CT, IA, IL, LA (permitted parishes only), MI, NJ, NY, PA, TN, WV, or WY. First online real money wager only. Refund issued as non-withdrawable free bets that expire 14 days after receipt. Restrictions apply. See terms at sportsbook.fanduel.com. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER or visit FanDuel.com/RG (IA, MI, NJ, PA, IL), 1-800-NEXT-STEP or text NEXTSTEP to 53342, 1-888-789-7777 or visit ccpg.org/chat (CT), 1-877-770-STOP (LA), 1-877-8-HOPENY or text HOPENY (467369) (NY), TN REDLINE 1-800-889-9789 (TN), 1-800-522-4700 (WY), or visit www.1800gambler.net (WV).See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
How about we do a song just by hitting our microphones, right, like a, okay, ready?
So I'm gonna, I'm gonna do, okay.
I'm like a rhythm thing.
Yeah, I'm gonna start a beat and then you guys fill it in.
Sean's gonna go second and Willie's gonna go third.
Here we go.
Okay.
I'm really cheesing myself out.
That's cringy.
So wait, we got to touch these moon rocks that were on the moon, like they're four billion
year old moon rocks.
I got to touch a couple moon rocks that weren't on the moon.
What do you mean?
Moon rocks that were on the moon.
On the moon.
Sorry, yeah.
Yeah, sorry.
Yeah, they were on the moon.
All those scientists must have loved you.
Yeah.
Like, oh, guys, it's so relaxing to have an actor around.
I know.
One plus one can, can equal anything.
I asked so many dumb, dumb questions to, I'm sure they were probably so over it, but we
got to go inside the, this vessel called the Orion.
It was, it's like, what is that called, a simulator that the astronauts train in before
they go to the moon.
They're gonna go to the moon in this thing.
This Orion thing.
Did I lose you guys?
Are you guys sleeping?
No, it's pretty great.
I mean, no, no, no.
That's, that's interesting.
I mean, I thought it was fascinating.
I am one of those people.
God, you get the pushback on this.
I am one of those people like, we got a lot of stuff going on here.
Why are we leaving the moon?
I know why we're going to the moon.
Where are we going?
We're going to the moon.
God damn, we got so much shit to fix over here.
But yeah, okay.
But we got to get ready for Mars.
We got to get ready for Mars.
And I know a lot of innovation comes from that.
Right.
So eventually that stuff will touch us here, but isn't it mostly kind of for morale and
mankind excellence and all that?
What, to go to the moon?
Yeah, I mean, the real practical applications to what we're, what we're doing up there.
I'm saying, I don't know.
I'm not doubting it.
I'm just, this is from a place of total smartness.
I think, yeah, there's, there's lots of things we've already discovered about the universe
going to the moon.
Sure.
I mean, we've got a lot of innovations.
As Jason said that, that he said to get, we get, touch this back here, a lot of stuff
that they innovate for the program.
Yeah.
And I think as soon as we really nail down this whole sort of, you know, mirrors to see
what yesterday actually looked like, I mean, we can really nail that down.
Listener, if you've got an extra hour to fall asleep, go ahead and listen to my theory.
What, what, what, what was it with Sean, Sean, we can, we've had ourselves from, from our
episode with Neil deGrasse Tyson, I think that that's what's happening right now.
We're seeing Jason back in that time, back in two years ago.
If I could find somebody intelligent enough to figure out a way to have the Hubble or
the, what's the new web, the web, the web, yeah, to like fire into a mirror that then
fires back into a mirror, into another, into another, into another.
We won't have to, we won't see all the way back to the big bang.
Like that, that seemed like that's the tough parts already done.
No, we could do that.
We could see Jack just into yesterday.
Jay, I thought I remember you telling me that when you were on Silver Spoons in your dressing
room, you used to fire into the mirror.
Is that not, am I misremembering?
Wait, no, Will, that's totally different, bro.
That was Aaron Gray related.
It was Lee.
He still, he still does that.
You can find him doing that occasionally.
Wait and really quick.
I just want to, the last thing I want to say is Sean to you, because you brought it up.
You, Sean texted me, I just want our listeners to know that you guys went on vacation.
After all this, Jason, you complained about, I never get to go on vacation and blah, blah,
blah.
You and Sean went on vacation without me.
Well, you were invited.
Yeah, yeah.
I think you were invited.
I wasn't really invited.
Really?
Yes, you were.
Yes, you always are.
You're always invited.
I'm taking a big drink.
No, I know.
I mean, I think you guys knew that I was out here at the beach.
Yeah.
You're still at the beach, right?
When do you come back from the nonsense?
Soon, boy, I was apprehended on the street a few times from, you know, I heard that you're
out here on Long Island and Bayman giving you shit for having a bunch of Range Rovers
in your driveway.
And then you do drive a GMC and I go, yeah, do you think we make this shit up, bro?
But you do park the Range Rover next to the GMC, right?
Wait.
You better know it's in California.
But well, I have to tell you something.
I'll tell you something.
Speaking of the beach, I went, the first day I got there, me and Jason and Scotty went
into the ocean.
This is in the Bahamas, not in Houston.
Right.
We went into the ocean.
We went into the ocean and I have just swim trunks on the widest person alive on the
planet Earth.
And this guy, Jason, has a big, thick, rimmed hat on glasses, a long-sleeved shirt, like
shorts down to his knees, covered, you look like you were a gardener in the middle of
the ocean.
No, it's the worst.
I've been to the beach with him before.
It's terrible.
Tramp stamp.
He's got a tattoo on the small of his back, but...
Oh, I never saw that.
Well, because you were closed.
It was covered.
It just simply says breathe.
But he's just wearing so much clothing in the ocean, right?
We had this photo, Sean, when we went from Mali's 40th and we all went with all the kids
down on this big vacation of four or five years ago, everybody, we're all outside.
They're like 12 of us.
And Jason, it looks like he's like in the Arctic.
I know.
Well, listen.
I'm going to fold.
Number one, I don't know if you guys have heard about sun cancer or UV rays or something.
There's a couple of articles I'm going to send you.
And then there's the other thing called dad bod that I don't think anybody really needs
to see dad bod.
No.
No one's got a worse dad bod than me.
And I was out with my shirt on.
Well, I'm going to send you a top.
Check your mail.
Will, I'm sending you a couple.
You still get mail there?
Guys.
We were keeping our guests too long.
All right.
Listen.
This is, this is incredible.
Our guest today is anything but smart less.
He's a spectacular, incredible talent.
I could listen to him sing for 20 hours a day.
He's such a smarty that he not only skipped one, but two grades growing up, starting high
school at 12 years old.
Good Lord.
Just like me.
Right when Jason was ending, ending my scholastic career.
That's enough.
His genius was not exclusive to academics.
He started playing piano at four years old, which paved the way for his eventual EGOT
status.
Yes.
He's another EGOT.
So for Tracy, EGOT is Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, and Tony.
He's won all of those.
What?
So previous jobs, which I love finding out about are like a wedding singer, a business
consultant.
So I'm going to ask him about that.
Legend has it that it was Kanye West who helped him get signed back in the day.
It's Uber Towns at Mr. Smarty Pants.
John Legend.
Oh.
Legend has it.
John Legend.
What the hell?
He's classing up the joint.
It's me.
Oh, he's got a cool shirt on too.
John.
Hi, everybody.
Well, hello.
Hi.
Hi, John Legend.
Look at you.
What's happening?
What is happening?
Look at him.
Where are you right now?
I'm at my office in Los Angeles.
Yeah.
Look, it looks clean and simple.
You don't look busy at work.
This is actually Chrissy's office.
My office is next door, which is basically a recording studio.
So she has, we bought a three bedroom house basically to be our workhouse.
And my recording studio is in the next room over and then this is her office.
But I often do.
Now, are there zoning issues with that, John?
Zoning issues with having an office in a house.
I've explored this before.
This is a don't ask, don't tell policy, even though I just told millions of people.
Yeah.
Let's have the address on that real quick.
Before forgiveness later, wait, before I dive too deep into this, John, I, because I'm,
I don't want to get like an hour into this.
How many feet back from the curb is the house?
Is that where you're going to?
No.
Okay.
So we're off of the zoning.
Okay.
Go ahead.
No, I want it just because I'm going to forget if this goes on too long.
Jesus Christ superstar.
You were, that was unbelievable.
That was incredible.
And it was totally live.
Totally live.
What was that?
Like two years ago, three years ago?
That was 20, it was 2019, I believe.
It was on NBC, I think, right?
It was on NBC with Sarah Bareilles as Mary Magdalene.
She was great too, man.
Yeah.
I mean, that show, to do that live like you did in front of all of America, that was,
it was, you were incredible.
It was just so great.
Thank you.
Didn't you win something for that?
We won the Emmy for our best live special.
That's so great.
That was my E that made me an Egot.
That's so cool.
What kind of preptice goes into something like, like how far, what is it, just months
of just the rehearsal?
When you're going to do it live TV, I mean, it's got to be intense.
Well, you know, we're musicians, so we do live performances all the time.
But doing a show like this is quite an endeavor and there's so many moving parts.
There's so much crew and production and everything that needs to happen, choreography.
Everything needs to go right and it was magical.
We rehearsed for a few months.
It aired live on Easter Sunday and I think we started working on it in January.
But then I had to go away and do a tour in Asia for a few weeks in between rehearsals.
And so I come back and we rehearsed for the final week or two.
But man, it was quite an endeavor, quite a great team and I love doing it.
You know what, when I was a musical director at this dinner theater in the suburb of Chicago,
a long story.
But anyway, we did Jesus Christ Superstar and on Easter, not making this up, on Easter
Sunday, one of the performances, the guy who played Judas, you know, where he hangs himself
in the middle of the thing, in the middle of the show.
Spoiler alert.
Well, there's this contraption, you know, that saves him from obviously doing that.
But it broke on Easter Sunday.
Oh no.
Wow.
Well, look into that.
So he in fact was resurrected.
He was resurrected.
Did you play Jesus Christ or the superstar?
I was in the piano.
I was in the piano.
I was in the piano.
Oh, you came out of the piano.
Well, like coming out of a cake, like coming out of the, you were in the piano.
Yeah, I was naked.
Or did you play the piano?
Another fun fact about that experience, Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice also both became
EGOTS because of that same Emmy.
Oh, wow.
Wow.
So we all, we all three got it the same day.
Oh, that's pretty wild.
How many, how many are there of you, the EGOTS?
17.
17.
Sean knows he's doing the research.
Yeah, Jennifer Hudson just joined the club.
She's the 17th.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Isn't that wild?
Will, where are you on the, on the list?
Do you have any, you've got, you've got your Oscar and your Tony.
I'm in the, I'm on the no gots.
Got zero.
I ain't got no gots.
Got none.
That's mine.
I ain't got no gots.
Now, John, with all of these things that you do at such an incredibly high level and
you're so in demand, how do you go about making your decisions about what to do, what
to do next, how to prioritize work, got this great family too and the money.
The money, of course.
Yeah.
It's all about the money.
Yeah, of course.
I got it.
No.
Honestly, I, I'm very fortunate.
I get to make choices.
And so I do stuff that I'm excited about, do stuff I'm passionate about, do stuff I
think I'll be really good at doing and they do have to pay me well.
So all of that comes into the decision.
But I would imagine that your interests change pretty quickly.
Like, how do you, how are you certainly with, with theater, you have to commit so far out
in advance, how do you ever get nervous that you're going to commit to start rehearsals
on a play in six months?
That's going to run 12 months and, but then all of a sudden something comes along in the
television world that works quicker, that might be at odds with that scheduling wise.
Like, does that ever give you, uh, audited about making choices?
Well, I haven't actually done Broadway.
I only did that live performance.
We did it, uh, Saturday and Sunday of Easter weekend and that was it.
So we just rehearsed and did the show, uh, that weekend and, uh, I didn't do like a long
run on Broadway, like a lot of artists and actors will do.
So I haven't had to make that decision yet.
Do you want to?
It would be a tough one, honestly, because it takes a lot of time, a lot of energy.
Yeah.
Um, and you can uncheck that money box.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, but, but also, you know, my, my kids go to school in Los Angeles and I would want
to be with them and it would be hard to make that decision.
Honestly.
Yeah.
How old are the kids?
My daughter's six and my son is four.
Oh my gosh.
Wow.
Oh yeah.
You're right in it, man.
Going back to at the beginning in the intro, when I said you skipped grades and you entered
high school at 12 years old, that's just crazy pants.
What did you, how did, did you feel like you missed out by skipping or did you want to
skip or were you pressured by your parents or teachers or?
Well, it was my mother that was definitely pushing it.
And I honestly wouldn't advise it for most kids and I think you do lose out socially
when you try to put a kid that's 12 and a group of 14 year olds.
I think it's, it's hard, you know?
Yeah.
And I was super shy.
But you know, music was my way of connecting with people and I think music kind of saved
me from being just completely antisocial and complete geek.
But honestly, it's tough and I don't think I would advise anyone to do it with their
kids.
I wouldn't do it with my kids either.
Right.
Was there a reason for that?
Like was there, was it going to help you sort of with your music?
Was it going to give you more opportunities earlier?
Was that part of it?
No.
My mom, I think it was almost like a badge of honor for her because she homeschooled
us for a while and she liked the idea that her son was so well prepared that he could
test out of, you know, two levels above where he was supposed to be.
Right.
And so I think it was almost like her proving the worth of her home teaching, uh, saying
when I came back to public school, I was two years ahead of my peers and I could be skipped
to eighth grade when I was supposed to be in sixth.
So I think honestly, that's what motivated it more than anything.
Where was that?
What part of the country was that?
I grew up in Springfield, Ohio, which is about 50 minutes west of Columbus.
And we will be right back.
And now back to the show.
So that was a real early declaration that you were making that it's going to be music
I'm all in and, uh, was there, did you feel any pressure like, well, God, I better keep
getting better and better and better and better because I'm like all in on this career and
I'm not, you know, trying to, yeah.
I was straddling, uh, for a long time because, you know, I was a really good student and
I, uh, went to Ivy League school after high school and I studied English as a major and
then went on to be a management consultant as Sean mentioned in my intro.
Yeah.
I want to know that.
And so I, I was doing other things that could be like backup plans, even though I thought
music really was the thing I wanted to do and wanted to commit to.
And I had been loving music and been making music since I was a kid.
But I always had, you know, a little bit of insurance, you know, with my academics and
with, you know, other jobs coming out of school, but I truly always wanted to do what I'm
doing right now.
Sean wrote an essay when I was 15, it was for a black history month and, uh, McDonald's
was the sponsor for the essay and, uh, the, the competition was the future black history
makers of tomorrow and it was an essay competition and they said, how you plan to make black
history.
And I said at age 15 that, uh, I was going to, uh, become a famous musician and I was
going to use my position as a musician to help my community.
That's amazing.
I knew that I wanted to do this, uh, but there were a lot of detours and backup plans that
I kept going along the way until it finally kind of all came together and it started to
come together when I started working with Kanye, when I started to get, uh, a lot of
collaborations with him and with the artists he was producing.
And, um, I finally got a record deal in 2004 after about six years of trying five years
after I graduated from, uh, Penn.
That's amazing.
And then Kanye, uh, first meet, what was, what was that process?
So he grew up in Chicago.
I grew up in Ohio and, um, my roommate in college, uh, grew up in Kansas city, Missouri,
but he was Kanye's cousin and, uh, so my roommate, DeVon, um, who I'm still very good
friends with and he's also a musician and really creative person and entrepreneur.
Anyway, I was playing gigs around New York, uh, and working as a management consultant
during the day.
And, uh, I would invite my friends out to my gigs and then DeVon started DJing with
my band.
And, uh, one time he invited his cousin to the show, his cousin Kanye had just moved
from Chicago, was living outside of New York, uh, across the, uh, the Hudson in Jersey.
And, um, he was like, I'm going to invite my cousin to the show.
You guys should meet and, uh, you guys should collaborate at some point.
And Kanye wasn't a big producer at this time.
He was just, uh, DeVon's cousin as far as I was concerned, but he, um, had just started
working with Jay-Z.
He just started working with folks in, uh, Rockefeller records, uh, like Memphis Bleak
and Beanie Siegel, all the artists that Jay had signed, um, you know, in that early time
of, uh, Rockefeller records.
And, um, he was starting to become known as an in-demand hip-hop producer and we started
working together and he was, uh, producing some of my demo songs and I would write with
him on his demo and, you know, my demo eventually became my debut album, Get Lifted.
And his eventually became his debut album, College Dropout.
And, uh, he has a lot to do with my success.
Wow.
It's amazing when you, when you find the thing that you want to do with your life and then
you just hang out with like-minded people, shit happens and stuff comes together.
I always say luck is when opportunity meets preparation, but you know, you got to put
yourself in positions to take advantage of it and, uh, part of putting yourself in that
position is all the rehearsal, all the prep, all the performances you did when only, you
know, 50 people were there, 100 people were there and then part of it is just, you know,
opening yourself up to meeting different people and, and, uh, connecting with different people.
And I started to do that, especially when I was living in New York and I was meeting
lots of folks who helped my career along and it finally came together.
Wow.
Do you, do you enjoy the, the lyric writing more than the music writing more than the
performing?
How would, how would you, how would you stack those things in-
I love writing.
Writing is fun.
I don't really separate the music and the lyric because it's so intertwined when I'm
writing.
We, uh, usually it's usually two or three of us sitting in a room just vibing and, uh,
I usually come up with a melody before I come up with a lyric.
And so when I write a, a, a melody, it's just me humming nonsense.
I call it my, uh, mumble track.
So I have a bunch of recordings on my phone and me mumbling nonsense.
Yeah, yeah.
So it's not like a guitar, not a piano, it's just you mumbling.
Well, it may be over a piano or over a guitar or over a track that a producer is trying
to find the words.
Yeah.
Just trying to find the flow.
So when I write ordinary people, I'm saying, and it doesn't make any sense yet, but I figure
out what it sounds like and what it might sound like.
Yeah.
I love that.
Exactly.
Sean.
Exactly.
And, uh, so I record this mumble track and then the mumbles kind of suggests different
tones and ideas and rhythms, and then eventually the lyric comes from that.
And that whole process usually takes me about three, four hours, uh, usually me and another
person.
Sometimes I do it by myself.
And then I'll record a demo in that, the end of that session.
And that's my work day.
You know, so you have the, I was, I'm cutting way to the end of this interview, but you
have this new album coming out called legend, which of course is like, of course it's called
like, why didn't we do an album called that?
Yeah.
It's right there in your name.
And it's, it's a, it's a, it's a double album and it's, I listen to every single track.
It's so great.
First of all,
Thank you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I didn't know they'd given to you yet.
So I'm,
Yeah.
It's secret secret.
I'm always excited that somebody's heard it because, uh, it's, I feel like it's been
my little secret for so long.
Yeah.
I, I, I'll tweet it.
I'll tweet it.
Well, no, yeah.
Sean, you already did that.
It's upload.
I listened to it just this morning.
Yeah.
Just rip.
It's like fire and nasty.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
And I just been selling it.
I just been selling them on lower Broadway at canal for the last half hour.
It's done well.
No one buys those anymore.
It's done really well, dude.
Well, thank you.
Yeah.
No, but I want to just talk about a couple of the songs because they're, they're so great.
You know, the, um, all she want to do is dance is going to be like a mega, mega, mega,
mega hit song.
Like,
I hope so.
I hummed it back as I was listening to it and I was like, oh, the key change is coming.
There's the key change.
It goes up.
You know, it's like,
I was listening to it because he was going, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,
blah, blah, blah, blah.
He was doing a mumbo check.
Yeah.
It's so good.
Every wedding will play that song with it.
But then I was listening to like a bunch of other, the other stuff and it's, some of
it's really kind of like sexy, cool, like, you know, uh, one, one of some songs about
sex.
Definitely.
Yeah.
A lot of songs about, like Splish Splash.
Some of your lyrics are, um, and I'm, I'm gay.
So I don't get this.
I'm going to make you wet the bed.
You said.
We just made some news right there.
Well, hello Sean.
Wait a minute.
As a gay, as a gay guy, I don't want to grow up wetting the bed.
So, but you say I'm going to, I'm going to make her wet the bed.
Well.
So, okay.
Yeah.
Anyway.
Will she get me in the other bed?
Wait, this way.
Do you have anything about the hole in the sheet?
I'm sorry.
It's a sex.
Sorry.
I don't know.
What's going on?
So the, the, the songs are great though.
John, when you, when you're not doing all these incredible things you do well, what
do you do not as well, but really enjoy filling your free time with?
You got like a tennis addiction.
You got like a cheesy TV show watching.
I have a, I love to do crosswords.
Oh yeah.
Me too.
I love to do crosswords.
I'm all over the New York Times crossword app, but I'm pretty good at it.
So I don't know if I'll say I don't do it as well because I do it pretty well.
Will's pretty, uh, pretty professional at Wordle and all that stuff.
You gotten into that yet?
I haven't gotten into Wordle.
All my friends are doing it, but I'm sticking with the crossword.
I know New York times bought Wordle too, but I'm sticking with the crossword.
Crossword is good.
The crossword is great.
New York time.
Wordle's okay.
It's pretty.
Wordle's just kind of, I do octordle, which is eight wordles at simultaneous.
What happened to the cordle?
Yeah.
And cordle.
I do cordle as well, but octordle is the real.
What's the one, uh, there's one with the name that tune kind of.
Oh yeah.
I heard about that.
Yeah.
I want to play that.
I'm bad at that.
I can't, I can only do Monday's crossword, uh, cause I'm, I'm less than bright.
What about you?
How far do you get?
I do it all week.
Every, every day.
Of course he does it every day.
Are you finishing them?
I'm finishing them.
Yes.
To completion.
I grew up on a, on a soundstage.
I'm, uh, I'm not.
I know.
I mean, look, if some of the answers were about the grip department or like, you know,
Oh yeah.
I had a set of C stand.
I need a four by floppy over here.
Yeah.
How to push your call time.
It's about patience though.
It's about patience.
You just got to keep at it.
John, I, I, I will say like the kind of to what Jason was saying.
I mean, you had, uh, in a way you had so many things that you could have done.
Like you're really educated.
You were like, talk to me about the consultancy.
Like you just kind of glossed over that.
Like, wait, what?
You had a whole other career.
What is that?
Well, so I graduated from Penn and 99 and Penn is a very business oriented kind of place.
We have the Wharton school there, which, uh, you know, is where our last president went
to school and, uh, lots of, uh, you know, future CEOs go to school there.
So it's got kind of like a pre-business kind of vibe at Penn, even if you don't go to
the business school.
So I went to the college of arts and sciences, majored in English, but a lot of my friends
were applying to all these, uh, uh, consultancies and, and, uh, finance jobs.
And you know, you feel like, well, if everyone else at school is doing this, maybe I should,
you know, at least check it out.
And so, uh, I started going to, you know, these like orientation meetings that, you know,
if you're interested in these jobs, some of the alums would come to the school and
talk to you about them.
And one of them, uh, was an event for, uh, black and brown students who might be interested
in consulting.
I sat down next to, uh, an alum who I knew pretty well and she was really smart and
engaging and told me about what she did.
And, uh, so I applied to, uh, Boston Consulting Group, which is where she worked.
And I got the job and they offered me 50 grand a year, which for me at that time was a lot
of money.
My dad was a, uh, uh, an assembly line worker.
My mom stayed at home.
So I literally was offered more in my first year coming out of school than my dad had
ever made in a year, uh, as an assembly line worker.
And so I'm like, man, I should probably take this job.
And I knew I wanted to do music, but, you know, it's like, I'm going to have to work
anyway.
I got loans to pay back.
I got rent to pay.
And, uh, I figured I might as well work in a job that pays me pretty well.
And, uh, I learned some things, you know, I met a lot of interesting people and, uh,
I thought I would only work there for like a year and I would get a record deal and that
would be that.
And I started there in 99 and I stayed there for three years and then I worked for our,
one of our pro bono clients for another year or so.
And then I finally was getting super close to getting a record deal and I started touring
with Kanye.
And that's when I finally felt like I didn't have to have a day job and, uh, was getting
enough money from your pro bono, right?
What is the deal with pro bono?
Yeah.
I don't know what anybody's saying.
My hearing is so terrible.
How tempting is it for you to, uh, to, and pardon my ignorance.
If you've already got this up and running.
Hard to do a long time ago.
Um, to create like, I mean, what about management consultant in your kingdom?
You know, which I'm sure you've got up and running now as well as perhaps, you know,
Kanye stuff and any of your other friends, like, are you calling these folks and saying,
Hey, I'm sure you've got a great business manager and a great label and all that other
stuff, but you know, we could kind of commingle here and one plus one could make three.
Like, does your brain still work in that lane?
I think it still does, but I truly enjoy being on the creative side more.
And so I have really good people that work with me.
I think what the, uh, management consulting did for me was prepare me, uh, to be good
at hiring people and, and bringing people into my world that I could trust.
I hold a pretty high standard for everybody that works with me and I think they're really
good at what they do.
But I think my standard was set higher by being in that setting with all these other
smart people and it helps me be a good client.
Honestly, a tough client, but it helps me, uh, it makes me a better client for all the
people that work for me because I asked the right questions and expect a lot from them.
And I really do focus on the creative.
I spend almost all my energy focused on writing songs, uh, creating art focused on my show.
And, um, and then I allow all the smart people around me to help me handle the business.
I'm still looking for them.
And now a word from our sponsor.
And now back to the show.
Going back to like singing live, like superstar touring.
I'm always fascinated by people like you who have this muscle, this, this voice of yours
that is so trained that you can sing night after night after night after night after
night and not damage it.
Like how do you have any kind of nightmare touring stories where something went wrong
or.
Yeah.
I mean, you're saying that I'm like, wow, well, I wish it was that, uh, easy to maintain
these things.
But my voice, it definitely fails me sometimes and, uh, I'm able to usually get through it.
Um, but there are definitely times when it's not as strong as I would like it to be.
It's part of your body.
So it's not, uh, you know, it's subject to all the frailties that human beings have.
Yeah.
Um, just like athletes have rough nights, just like they get sore, just like all of those
things.
Where, where you take the microphone and you just hand it out to the audience and they
finish you with lyrics for you.
Sometimes you're like, uh, I was doing that in Europe just now because I got a little
bit under the weather and you know, your body tells on you and your voice tells on you when
you're under the weather, when you're tired, when you're dehydrated, any of those things.
So it's a struggle every time.
Um, that means you have to take care of yourself.
Uh, I don't drink when I'm on tour.
I drink a lot of water, drink a lot of tea.
Um, and, uh, I have to watch my acid intake because acid reflux affects our voices.
Um, all of these things.
And then I have to get enough rest.
And if I don't get enough rest, my body tells on me, my voice tells on me too.
So all of these things, uh, require maintenance and, uh, and then a lot of good warming up
and cooling down before and after every show.
How much sleep are you getting a night, John?
What's your, what's your afternoon?
On tour, I usually sleep about six or seven at night and then I'll take a nap, uh, like
in the middle of the day, a siesta, uh, around, you know, two or three for a couple hours.
And then so total, I'll end up with like eight or nine hours of sleep a day.
Are you touring with the six and the four year old?
Uh, they were with me in Europe and in Egypt just now.
Um, and then they'll come out to my Vegas residency sometimes as well.
And they love it.
They love coming to my shows, uh, when we let them stay up late.
Well, how does your sleep love that?
You know, are they, they're, they work real cooperative with daddy getting seven or eight.
They don't care.
They jump right in.
They let me take a nap.
They do, uh, my wife and my, uh, and our nanny, uh, they, they keep them out of my room when
I'm taking a nap.
But, uh, you know, they really love music.
They love coming to my shows and they really respect what I do and try to honor that, uh, so far.
Yeah.
You got to get a lot of sleep if you're going to be people magazine sexiest man alive.
Snap.
Yeah.
You know, I've been trying to sleep my way into it.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
For a while.
You have to sleep with a lot of people.
You have to sleep with.
I don't know what you have to do, but I'm not, whatever it is, I'm not doing.
John, can you give him some phone numbers?
Yeah.
But I mean, that's, that's pretty, uh, when that happened, where you like, I mean, God,
you must have got, it's great, but you also must get ribbed by your friends and people,
you know,
It is, it is the ultimate double-edged sword because, uh, they're saying something very
nice about you and they're making this beautiful spread about you, but it just invites everyone
on the internet to say why you didn't deserve it.
Right.
Now I apologize.
I didn't see your spread for that, but do you have to do a bunch of real quote unquote
sexy shots for, for the sexiest man issue?
Yeah, like, you know, wet, wet shirts.
Oh no, like a lot of smoke in the eyes looks real hard looks and stuff.
Again, this is perfect for me.
It's hilarious.
You always look like there's a fire in the room, Will.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Look at that.
Get somebody to hose me down with a fire hose.
Are you giving me James Dean right now?
Will?
Yeah, there it is.
Yeah.
Only the high eyebrows, squinty eyes.
Oh my God.
You used to talk, Jason and I used to say that we'd go to like events and you'd see somebody
doing that and the thing like in the, in the, you know, in the step and repeat, we'd be
like, oh, look at this guy's got real smoke in the eyes.
Yeah, it looks real confused.
Yeah, look at that.
That's sexy.
That's what they like.
Was your wife there giving you shit just off camera?
Or was she, was she super supportive about it?
She had a few jokes about it, but she was genuinely proud.
And, you know, she ribs me plenty.
But I think she was genuinely proud.
And like I said, you know, it gives the internet license to just, you know, take shots and
tell you why, why, why you didn't deserve it.
And so I just stayed off the internet for a few days.
Not a boy.
And it was a successful strategy.
I didn't need to see all that.
You frame this cover and I don't need confirmation on that.
I know it's framed.
Yeah, yeah.
It's here in our office.
So we have a bunch of magazine covers hanging up in the office.
So it's kind of like our, our work hall of fame.
We've got our Vanity Fair cover or Chrissy's Glamour cover and all of our cover.
She has like 10 times more than me, but at least I have people sexist man.
Which could be worth 10.
I think that's worth 10.
John, back to like the, the, the, the music part and the, and the album.
I know you collaborate with a bunch of people.
Are there, are there people that you have yet to collaborate with that you've
always dreamed of?
Is there any kind of one or two top people at the, at the top of the list?
Well, I love Kendrick Lamar.
Two people who recently put out albums that I love Kendrick and Beyonce.
So I would love to collaborate with both of them and put out great albums recently
that I've been listening to.
Yeah.
Do you read reviews by the way of your albums or songs?
Yeah, I do.
Sometimes I don't read all of them, but I, I read a decent amount and you know,
I'm always curious to see what people think about it.
And sometimes I feel like sometimes I disagree with them,
but sometimes I also feel like they don't get it.
Like some like, cause I'll say things.
It sounds like they just don't get it.
They don't connect with the material and they don't understand what I was trying to do.
But hey, it's always interesting to see what they say.
And I don't let it get to me too much, but I'm always curious.
So wait, speaking of things that have always gotten positive reviews,
you got this gig on The Voice, which is like, first of all, how did you land the gig?
And tell me about some crazy, like the craziest auditions you've seen.
Well, you know, The Voice is like a plum gig in our business because you get to,
they keep you in LA, which if you live here and you have a family here,
it's like an easy gig to have just drive up to Universal when you have to drive up there.
And you get paid essentially like you would be on tour, but you're home and you get to use your kids.
So it's, it's like really a good gig.
And it's fun.
You get to be around other musicians.
You get to be inspiring all these younger artists.
And it's truly a fun job.
And I guested on the show.
We have guest advisors on the show.
I was on Adam's team helping advise his team and an opening came up and they,
I think they liked when I was a guest advisor and offered me the job.
And I did it for one season.
They asked me back and now I've done seven seasons in a row.
Wow.
My seventh season in a row.
And I don't see it stopping anytime soon.
I really like doing it.
I really enjoy it.
I really enjoy working with the young artists.
That's rewarding.
And it's a fun show.
Yeah.
It is great.
You're great on it.
What about producing television?
Is that something that's interesting to you?
Yeah.
Well, that's how I got Miami from Jesus Christ Superstar.
We were producers on that show and then I have a production company called Get Lifted Film Company.
We've done documentaries.
We've done television series.
We did one called Underground, which was particularly good.
And when we were really proud of it, it was about the Underground Railroad.
We've done feature films.
Our biggest film we did was also on Netflix called Jingle Jangle.
It was a holiday film featuring our Forest Whitaker and Felicia Rashad and some others.
And it was a Christmas musical basically about a toy maker, kind of a Willy Wonka type toy maker.
And yeah, we've done some really cool stuff.
A lot of things that were music related, but some things that weren't as well.
Have you scored films at all and would you want to?
I've written songs for film, but I haven't actually scored a film.
So I wrote Glory for Selma with Common.
And then I've written a bunch of songs for other films too.
And I wrote a song for that Jingle Jangle film that we did.
And I'll be writing more film stuff and Broadway stuff in the future.
So all of that is fun to me.
I love writing and I love writing with an assignment too, I think.
So that's why I like film and TV and Broadway because when you have some direction,
it's kind of fun to have that assignment and some direction in your writing.
What about when the kids start getting a little bit deeper roots into school
and into their social rhythm and all that stuff?
How do you think that's going to affect your ability to get out there on the road and tour a bunch?
Are you going to homeschool them like you were and just take them out with you all the time?
No, I don't think we'll homeschool them and we'll just kind of figure out the timing.
I think there's a way to pace touring so it's not too imposing.
Yeah, like the kids went with me on this summer tour.
And like I said, I have the voice so it limits the amount of time I can tour,
but it replaces touring with another gig that I really like.
And so as long as I have that, then I won't have to tour as much.
But once I start touring again more, I'll definitely pace it in a way that makes sense.
I really enjoy being a dad and a husband and so I try to make time for that
and don't let work overcome it too much.
I love that. Every time I've seen you perform or in interviews,
you're always so nice and genuine and like, you know, amenable.
When do you hit people, John? What part of your day?
That's what I want to know.
I try to do it off camera.
That's smart, man.
Very smart.
Really smart.
What pisses you off?
Yeah, what do you hate?
Oh, the things I get mad about, well, a lot of it, I'm very into politics
so I get pissed off about politics a lot and I get very engaged when it comes to politics
so I'm pretty passionate about that stuff.
And when I see people who harm other people,
especially people who have less and have less power and fewer resources,
I hate when people abuse their power and honestly, that pisses me off.
What's the craziest thing on your rider when you tour?
I have nothing crazy on there. It's like simple stuff.
Come on, come on.
Now, John, have you ever, go ahead.
Gif, Sean, is a purple M&M answer.
I don't have an answer. I don't have a good one.
We have snacks, we have salted roasted almonds.
I ate the same meal before every show.
Which is rotisserie chicken and veggies.
Roasted chicken, yeah.
And veggies.
I'm very boring.
Jason's got gas x.
Jason, what is it? Gas x?
I have some antacids in there.
Yeah, but I fry it up.
I mean, I saute it.
Now, would you ever, would you ever, I'm sure you've been asked this before.
I apologize, I don't know the answer.
Would you ever consider running for some sort of an office?
I won't.
I, you know, I get somebody, one of the neocards, what's his name?
Bill Crystal tweeted that the other day.
And no, definitely not.
I want to be a part of the forward party, which is what they're creating,
which is Democrats and Republicans have come together to start this third party.
And they just forward you things.
They forward you emails with funny chain mail and jokes.
Well, Sean loves an email.
Listen, nobody loves an email.
I was thinking about when you.
Let's give Sean's email address right now.
John, you were talking about your job.
John, when you were talking about that job, when you were working consulting,
I was thinking like, God, that seems like a nightmare.
But Sean would love it because he loves getting emails and responding quickly.
He loves forwards.
Oh, he loves being in an office environment.
He fucking, right?
Sean, am I lying?
I like, I like admin.
I like admin.
I love admin.
He loves admin.
Johnny Legend, we've taken.
You sound like you'd make a good executive assistant.
Yeah, I'm not about it.
We've taken way too much of your time.
Thank you for being here.
You are a nice man.
John the legend.
Thank you guys.
Thanks for having me.
Thank you, man.
And the album is so good.
It's called legend.
I can't wait for everybody to hear it.
It's so, so good.
Thank you.
I appreciate it.
Well, keep out it.
Don't work too, too hard.
And I think hashtag legend 2024.
I think we've made it official.
It's official.
Yeah.
Jason's looking for an outsider here.
All right.
Go get it.
See you, man.
All right, John.
Take care, everybody.
Thank you very much.
Take care, buddy.
Bye-bye.
Bye-bye.
How about that guy?
John Legend.
Listen, this guy's a legend.
Okay.
I mean, it's right there in the name.
It's so smart to build it in your name.
It's so smart.
I forget to ask him.
Do you think that's his real name?
Like Alicia Keys?
Is Alicia Keys and she plays piano?
This is not.
That's not his real name.
You know what it is.
That's hair style.
Did you know that?
No.
No.
Dude, his real name is John Baxter.
Is that true?
No, Sean.
Fuck.
I believed you.
I know you did, ain't you?
John Baxter.
Just lay down.
Just elevate your feet above your heart.
Yeah.
No.
You guys, check out his album if you can.
I totally will.
I can't believe it.
He's just one of those guys.
Like he's doing everything.
He's doing everything.
He's doing everything.
He's doing everything.
He's doing everything.
He's doing everything.
He's doing all those guys.
Like everything he's talking about, again, just so busy and prolific and just doing stuff
and putting out records and doing the show and doing this.
And I'm like, I'm so tired listening to him.
I'm like, how do you do it?
I know.
He's a young man.
He's a young man.
I ran into him at Sundance, the Sundance Film Festival years ago.
And he's like, hey, you have a production company.
How did you do that?
And I was like, let me just start one, right?
And we were talking so many years ago and here he is.
And he was like, cool, and then he went and did it and started and has all these shows
and stuff.
Yeah.
And now I'm telling you, how did you do that?
Exactly.
By the way, it's the best idea, right?
I mean, to just do that, to be curious like that, and go, hey, you, you did something
that I think that I want to do.
How did you do that?
How did you do that?
Right.
I love that.
I love that.
Which is better than, is better than like what you do, Will, which is you're just, bye,
curious.
Oh my God.
We got it so fast.
Bye, curious.
We used the same one over and over.
We got to get to the ads.
Let's get to the ads because I got a hard out.
Let's go.
I just loved that from the sidelines.
That was so lame.
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