That Was Us - Brother Bonding Gone Wrong | "Brothers" (S2E5) with special guest Caitlin Thompson
Episode Date: December 3, 2024Join us as we recap "Brothers," the episode that shows us the inner workings of not only Randall and Kevin’s brotherly bond (or lack thereof) but Jack’s complicated relationship with, surprise, hi...s own brother! We'll delve into Jack's complex relationship with his father, the discovery of his brother Nicky, and the lingering impact of their childhood trauma. We'll also discuss Kevin's turn towards painkillers, the heartwarming breakthrough between Randall and Deja, and Ka-Toby sharing the excitement of Kate’s pregnancy together. And that's not all! The wonderful Caitlin Thompson, who plays Madison, joins us to share the inside scoop on how her character came to be on the show. That Was Us is produced by Rabbit Grin Productions. Follow That Was Us on YouTube, Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, Threads, and X! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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On today's episode of That Was Us, we will be discussing season two, episode five, brothers.
Kate drops a bombshell on Toby, Kevin and Randall attended charity fundraiser for Sophie's Hospital,
and Jack takes the boys on a camping trip, leaving Rebecca to deal with some unexpected
news.
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How's it going, everybody?
Hello, hello.
Hello, we're back.
Okay, so we've been off for a while.
Yeah, there was a short maternity leave.
Short maternity leave.
So this is our first episode with Mandy Moore
as the mother of three.
Mandy Moore, how are you?
I'm great, guys.
I'm so happy to see your face as I missed you.
You look very bright-eyed and bushy-tail
to have a baby at the crib.
Oh, you're so kind.
Are you fooling us?
Is this another example of the...
outstanding acting that is many more.
I mean,
I'm pretty tired, but I'm just,
you've got to fake it till you make it, right?
I heard that.
You just have to keep throwing back to you, so
it keeps you engaged, because if we get too
engaged, you and I, we look over, and she's
like, hit forehead on the microphone.
This is quite comfortable.
Yeah, the couch, too comfortable.
I don't want to get that comfortable.
Yeah, we need to drop the temperature in here a little bit.
But I got, yeah, I got the big three at home.
I got my own little big three.
Yeah.
How have they taken to the baby?
They're great.
They're great.
They're great.
They love her.
So much.
They want to pet her a lot.
Yeah.
That's what they say.
Can I pet baby sister?
I'm like,
she's not the dog.
But yes,
you can,
you can't have her.
It's like,
mind the soft spot,
big dog.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
They still have that fuzz.
Yeah.
I'm so happy to be back
with you guys
and happy to have the excuse
to like jump back
into watching the show.
Yes.
Wow.
And we like jump back in
with a real dynamite episode.
Both feed in.
So this is entitled Brothers, right?
And we're back with John and Glenn.
Back with John and Glenn.
The pilots, the Super Bowl,
some really, like, seminal episodes of the show.
Yeah, and we're having a good time.
And we're starting off in the past with Jack is going to take the boys on a camping trip.
Yes.
Right?
They've been sort of, like, at each other's throats a little bit.
And not even sort of at each other's throats.
I would say that, like, Kev's feelings towards Randall are just like, I've kind of had enough.
They're really settling into their distaste.
And less Randall for Kevin, obviously.
It's really just like, it's deeply steeped in Kevin, though.
You see like a bit of like Randall trying to figure out how to be with his brother.
Yeah. But he is Randall and he is a lot. I think it's important to say that like,
Randall's not perfect or anything like that. Like Randall is a big personality and he kind
of needs a lot of things. And sometimes Kev's like, you're giving, you're doing the most.
And I need you to bring it just a bit, right?
So the girls are going to have a day out with themselves.
Yeah, like go get, do their nails, watch a movie.
And you get a phone call from the, I don't know, what is the nursing care facility for Stanley Pearson.
And it sounds like he's about to pass away.
And he's calling to find his son.
And you're like, oh, he's gone.
So you send a message out to the woods saying that like, listen, I've just heard your dad is not doing well.
You may want to come see him, et cetera, but he's out there with his boys impervious.
Do you guys remember growing up at a time now without cell phones where we are all, like, not reachable?
Yeah, I do.
Immediately and like having to leave messages on answering machines.
Yeah, you called a ranger station and left a message on a reel-to-reel tape.
That's true.
I called multiple times
to a landline in the middle of the woods
I do sort of secretly
long for that time
where you weren't immediately reachable
all the time
but in this particular case it would have been nice
sure and something else that I clocked
the Wagoner coming in
like the Wagoner has it made an appearance
before it has with the older kids
with the teens and stuff but I feel like this is
the first maybe
introduction with like the younger kids or where it just I I clocked it in a way and I was like oh wow
yeah like we're this is it becomes such a family member now for sure like it was in the thanksgiving
episode it was yes yes yes but it's like oh this is this is the family car there's like a comfort
to seeing that car and what it sort of signifies for the family as well as like again clocking the
house with the Pearson's and the sort of shift the change of houses that we had yeah um
It might have not been the first appearance necessarily,
but it was something that I was like,
oh, yeah, that this house is, yeah,
it was just a real marker in time for me.
Yeah.
So we go to the campground with the boys
before, obviously, Jack has been made aware of his father,
because eventually a ranger does find them
and tells them, your wife is looking for you
and puts them on in contact via the, like,
what is it, like his little like Ranger thing is.
Yeah, she's on the phone
and someone's holding a radio up to the phone.
Correct.
And he's talking into the radio.
Yes, yes, yes.
Yeah, yeah.
And the boys are just not having it.
Kevin collapses the tent on Randall.
He won't let go of his game boy.
I mean, it's just...
I mean, I think Jack says something about, like, why is this funny to you?
Or is that funny to you?
And he goes, if I said, yes, would you be mad?
He said, you be good to your brother.
Like, he sort of says this message over and over again.
Like, you should be good to your brother.
It would be so easy for you to just be nice to him.
him, right? And at one point, and because this will tie into Kev's story, they're in the tent,
and he's like, why aren't you doing it? And he's like, I don't know, right? He's like,
you got to have a reason. Like, there's no reason for you to be mean to. It was like, I don't
know. And he said, you made me go into the tent. And so I went into the tent. You didn't say I have
to talk about it. So can I just stay here in the tent? And Jack was like, fine. But it was just
sort of setting up this sort of idea that like Kev doesn't process things. Doesn't know what he's
doesn't know how to feel, doesn't know how to express it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Which is why a lot of us get into acting.
And Kevin in particular, you know what I'm saying?
No joke.
I was telling Rachel the other day, I'm like, I think originally I got into acting because I didn't know what any emotions looked like.
And I was like, I'm going to try these on and see, see how they feel.
Wow.
Yeah?
Like a, like a 14, 15 year old trying on all these like basic emotions.
Yeah.
Wow.
I love that.
That's amazing.
So then there's this moment that happens because he told him to be off his Game Boy, but of course
he just goes back to the Game Boy.
And then later on, well, I should say first, I think you do reach Jack, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
We do via the walkie-talkie, the radio from the Ranger.
And Milo Ventimilia, I think just with like his listening was really, you got this
sense of, like, so much was going on inside of him, and he didn't say very much, right?
And you're like, Jack, I think he's going to go and everything. Do you want to come?
Or do you want me to say anything to him?
You've called him after you've already gone to the facility.
Yes.
And this is a big reveal for Jack's dad that Jack has a wife and a family.
Right.
So it was also a big reveal for Jack that you have now met.
His father.
Right.
Yeah.
There's even more, I should do both of those things parallel.
You're absolutely right.
Because you go to say hi, this Stanley, whatever, like I'm Jack's wife or whatnot.
And he clocks Kate and he says, is that my granddaughter.
Yeah.
Right?
And you were like, oh, I didn't know she was in here, what have you, because he's clearly not doing well.
And then so you fast forward to that moment of like, do you want me to tell him anything?
And he's just like...
You see the wheels turning.
The wheels are turning hard.
hard like he was doing some active thinking this is again to to your point of this analog world
of landlines no internet no facebook where a man can grow old and end up on his deathbed having
no reference as to what his son has been up to for the last eight to 10 years right like
no way to check in no way to like you know face social media there's no community
Yeah, yeah, yeah, and you could do that.
And ostensibly, he could have passed away without ever being in touch with, like, his son ever again and knowing that he had a family.
It was just, like, so happened that I guess maybe he was an emergency contact or something that he was able to, you know, be reached.
Which is what Jack says.
That man has been dead to me for a long time.
Yeah.
It's fascinating because it's like I feel like Rebecca has a working knowledge of.
of their relationship being complicated
and Stanley being emotionally abusive
and physically abusive to Jack's mom
and that sort of framework.
But again, Jack being a man of a different generation,
I feel like there's so much
that's kept sort of secret close to the vest.
It's just even alluded to
and him saying so little in response
to do you want me to tell him anything
and him just saying, no, like he's been dead a long time.
Like there's not a lot of elaborating.
So I just was curious as Rebecca, like, in that scene, I'm like, how much does she really know about them and about their relationship and what happened?
And because to me it was just, I sort of had to operate under the guise of like, Jack, that was sort of a no-fly zone.
Like, I don't talk about my dad.
I know he, like, lives in town, but I have nothing to do with him.
He's, like, we don't really go there.
So here's my question to you as an actor that I was curious about.
What do you think it was in Rebecca that?
that made her show up in his stead?
Like what was the sense of responsibility, curiosity, da-da-da-da-da
that went into it?
All of that.
I think responsibility, curiosity, being sort of the stand-in for Jack,
like someone should, like if someone is passing away,
like I think she just was sort of like,
this is the obligation, this is what you do,
and Jack's not here, and I don't want to make the wrong choice.
And so it seems like, it seems,
like the easiest decision to go there
to sort of suss out the situation,
see what's what, you know,
and report back to him
or try to get in touch with him to let him know
what was going on.
It, I think it felt worse
to sort of just let the situation
wither without taking action.
Yeah, yeah.
Hot take, who in your life
has been dead to you for a long time?
Hot take.
Hot take, anyone?
Any takers?
Any takers want to put that on a podcast?
No.
No?
No.
No one, no one.
Sorry, internet, I tried.
That's the only note I had on this episode.
Wait, to moving forward, you dummies.
There is, we see this moment of Kev in the tent, and he finds Randall's journal,
because Randall's always writing stuff down, et cetera.
And in Randall's journal, he says, like, I can't remember the specifics,
but like, try not to ask Kevin too many questions, right?
Heartbreaking.
It makes me emotional to think about it.
Like, Randall just wanted to connect.
He was trying his level best to be everything his brother needed and not be too much.
It's like he had this.
He has knowledge of his being of the most.
Exactly.
He had an awareness of it.
And it just, like, still to be nine or ten or however old he was and to write that down.
This type of heartbreak is,
already happening in in for bear and and and I came home last night late and this morning I was
looking around and I saw this little scrap of paper and it's the first handwritten note that he
has written himself and it's and it's a happy happy birthday message to a friend in his class
with a bunch of candles and it I could barely make out happy birthday you know it's a four year old
sure but it's a thing like I was like
oh, this is a thing.
Like, it was left here for a reason.
And this little girl didn't want it.
Didn't want it.
And she has formed a little girl squad, which is natural.
It's a natural, you know, developmental thing of like, you know, whatever it is.
And poor bear, all he wants is to be a part of the girl squad.
And Rachel was relating to me like he was really, really sad about it.
And I'm just like, how long does, this is going to go on for a long time, this heartbreak?
Because Bear's probably already over it.
And now I'm talking about it on a podcast.
Sure, sure, sure.
And I'm about to cry.
There are moments for me of being the most sometimes.
My son, my oldest son told Ryan and I on our podcast that, like, you know, it's hard being around people who always want to be the center of attention.
I just, I listen to that, just listen to that episode.
Andrew said that?
Yeah, they interviewed, they interviewed the boys on the podcast.
The podcast is called, we don't always agree.
It is fantastic, and it is the real deal.
Oh, I can't wait to hear this.
I'm listening to it.
I'm like, hey.
And at one point, even, uh, uh, uh, uh, Rye says to you, Sterling, you can be a lot.
That's the pot calling the kettle, right there.
And sometimes I just need some.
Like, yeah, and so yeah, that's an interesting parallel.
And so there's this moments, these moments with Andrew, like we're teenage boys, 13,
and you're always trying to find these moments to connect and how's life?
What's going on?
Da-da-da-da.
Cool.
You know, whatever.
I found the hot take for you guys, for all parents.
When your kids become physically active, after exertion, something opens up.
Oh, yeah.
And they'll just like, you just get close and be like, so what was that?
Oh, wow.
Tell me.
And they'll just let it go.
And so you have to learn a little bit of patience of, like, before they'll be sort of tight-lipped.
And then let's run them around real quick.
And then all of a sudden, they'll talk.
Oh, I love that.
Yeah, yeah.
Do you, thinking about this episode and brothers, and you have two boys.
Yes.
I have two boys, but they're much younger.
And so we haven't quite seen this sort of behavior yet.
But do they have that sort of, like, camaraderie and, like, do you notice the sort of, I guess, like, can you relate to, like, what?
Kevin and Randall or even though they're five years apart.
It's similar, but different because they're the power dynamic of Kevin and Randall being
sort of the same age and sort of who is next in line is always sort of the dynamic in that relationship
as well. Andrew knows who's next in line and so does Amari and they have respect for that
hierarchy or whatnot. It's just there are times in which they love each other in a way that is
recognizable to society at large as loving.
And then there's ways in which they love each other
that are not as recognizable.
Sure.
You recognize it.
I recognize it.
Absolutely.
And part of it is just big brothers do stuff to little brothers.
It's part of it.
Yeah.
You know?
And Kevin is the big brother, more or less.
He is the big brother in this particular relationship.
Absolutely.
And I think that that power dynamic was established long ago.
And it's the way that it is,
like for the entirety of their lives.
So, okay, so the interesting thing about this episode
is it's one of the, we do it a few times, time-wise,
but like we have another step back in time
to young Jack, that's right, right?
Because we sort of see the boys in the end
nestled in their dad's arms and they're howling at the moon
and they're having a good time and you see they're reaching
some sort of connectivity.
So flashback to young Jack,
and I wanna notice young boy's name
because he's the cutest so-and-so,
so-and-so and the kid who plays young Jack?
Obrador's.
He's adorable.
Yeah.
As soon as I see that kid on the face, I was like, I buy that.
Oh, that's a young Milo, yeah.
For sure.
Just cute as can be.
Yeah.
So he's in the car with his dad, and they're about to go fishing.
Looking forward to this fishing trip, his dad asked her, you thirsty?
He goes, no, he's like, just kind of want to, you know, let's go fishing.
He's like, well, I am.
So they pull in.
And there's this sort of recognition on young Jack.
He's like, hmm, I don't know if he's.
going to leave this spot because he pulls into a bar, what not,
grabs himself a beer.
And then we push forward in the episode
and you just hear him saying to himself, please come back.
Is it please come back, please come up?
You know, just like, come on out.
And you just see dad, Stanley, sitting there at the bar,
having his beers impervious to the fact
that he's got his kid in the car with him, right?
And I say kid, because up until that point,
and this was one, this was.
This was a moment for me where I was like,
A big reveal.
Oh, I forgot.
Yeah.
Right?
Yeah.
Where we find out that Jack's little brother is in the back of the car having taken a nap.
Yeah.
And he wakes up.
And he wakes up.
And he goes, it's okay, Nicky.
I got you.
You know what I'm not going anywhere.
I'm not going anywhere.
And you're like, oh, I thought it was about Kev and Randall, right?
But then we go back to the storyline and we see Jack taking a box out of the closet.
what have you. And he's looking through photographs and he sees a picture from Vietnam and you see him, young Jack, you know, with his hat on or whatnot. And you see somebody with glasses on sitting down next to him. Same style of glasses as the kid in the car. Same style of glasses as the kid in the car. And on his name tag, we see the word Pearson. And you're like, this dude has a brother that you took 23 episodes to tell us about? Yeah. Yeah.
I was like, when Fogerman like sort of pitches us
to the beginning of the season or whatnot,
and then you remember it to say it was like,
and so Jack has a brother, I was like,
how you gonna pull this off, dog?
Yeah.
He got a brother that we ain't never seen.
And then he does it, he's like, you son of a gun.
Yeah.
He did it again.
He did it again.
A character who is with us for the rest of the show.
Yeah, that's right.
In Griffin Dunn.
Michael Angerano.
Michael Angerano.
And of course, neither one of them have been cast yet.
No.
So the man in the photo.
Yeah, and it doesn't really look like anybody,
but he's got his head down enough with his glasses.
But it also sort of introduces this thing about Jack
and about...
Secrets.
Secrets.
And about what being a brother means or should be.
Yes, should mean.
You know, so that his investment in his two boys
obviously has some sort of parallel to him and his own life.
Absolutely, because like you said,
23 episodes into the show.
Brother has never been uttered, we've never met him before.
Clearly, they're not in each other's lives or not in any meaningful way.
So what does that look like? Where is he?
Yeah, lots of questions arrived.
Lots of questions.
It's just, it's another, it's an amazing thing that this show does about,
about every decision that we make, every stance that we take is a culmination of everything
that has happened to us up to this moment.
Yes.
And the way that Dan kind of retroactively reveals
why Jack has a certain stance on something,
or why Jack is doing something this way instead of that way,
or how Jack came to drink too much, you know what I mean?
Whatever the quote-unquote trauma is.
You're absolutely right.
It's just beautiful to watch unfold.
We'll be right back with more. That was us.
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two little things that I just want to mention.
Yes, ma'am. Because I feel like it's something that people took from this particular scene,
it's something that's mentioned later on in the course of the show. But just when Rebecca is talking
about parenthood to Kate and tells her that it's like being a mom, being a parent is like
a front of receipt to the best show on earth. Being a parent and like still like very newly
postpartum, I was just like, oh my God, that's so true. But it's something that's something that's
that's echoed later on in the show.
And I just, you know, it kind of reminds me a little bit of the, like, there's no
lemon sour enough that you can, you can't make something resembling lemonade.
And Rebecca telling Jack that she's a miracle after meeting Stanley, like, you are a miracle
that, like, you came from this man, you came, this life that was given to you, that somehow
you were, this husband and father now is just, like, beyond miraculous.
I loved that sort of, like, that Rebecca was able to clock that and take that away from
this experience and to be able to, you know, tell your person that is a really beautiful thing.
It's pretty remarkable.
I mean, I think, you know, we are who we are in large part either because of or in sort of
reaction to who our parents are.
There's things that you want to emulate and you're like, there's things that you want
to get as far away from as possible.
And as parents, I'm sure, we're all like, I hope they like most of me.
You know what I'm saying?
They may not like all of me or what have you, but hopefully when they can look back
This is like, oh, you know, I wanted to be closer to than further away from, you know what I'm saying?
And Jack did not have that experience with his dad.
But he wanted to be that for his kids so desperately.
And he was.
I think they both were, absolutely.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
So let's go to present day.
Yes.
With the same brothers.
We can go to the same brothers.
Yeah.
Because we're at Randall's house.
We come up on Kev, who is in the bathroom looking through the medicine cabinet.
Searching for pills.
for pills. Yeah, this is the first episode where Kevin starts to look a little gray.
Yeah. Starts to look a little dark under the eyes. A little shiny. You know what I'm saying? And he comes out of the bathroom and him and Randall have a delightful little conversation. I love Justin Hartley. I love everything about this dude.
He has re-injured his knee. He's re-injured his knee. Which at this point, we have, we have or have not, no, we have not yet seen the origination of the knee injury.
Yes, we don't know about the football accident yet.
But we know that on the Ron Howard film,
he has now blown up his knee and has re-investigated pain killers.
Exactly.
Anything to get through to finish the movie and keep moving forward in life.
I got to say, this storyline, and we'll do it.
This is like my quick PSA.
Yeah.
All three of us here have.
have been privileged enough to have been nominated for an Emmy, right?
And then Ron and Milo and Chrissy.
Gerald McCraney.
Gerald McCraney, right?
So we got a lot of recognition or whatnot.
There's two people who I feel like could have and should, did not, right?
Yeah.
Susan Coletchi Watson, Justin Hardley.
Yes.
Absolutely.
What Justin Harley does in this arc leading up to his,
episode.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's extraordinary.
Period.
Period.
Period.
Period.
Period.
Period.
Yes.
I mean, we were talking earlier today about future episodes, a couple, a couple, moving
forward in the season, his particular episode, episode one, number one or whatever.
But, yes, you're right.
This arc that Justin is taking us on as Kevin Pearson right now is just, it's flat out
extraordinary.
It's extraordinary.
Okay, so wait, we got to condense because I feel like we've waxed
poetically for a while now.
So they're going to go,
Kev's going to go to this gala for Sophie,
where he's going to be auctioned off
as a fundraiser for the hospital,
etc. And he,
Randall is telling him,
hey, be careful around Deja.
You know, she's adjusting to a new environment.
She's having a tough time, whatnot.
Don't talk about her hair.
Just sort of like, keep things cool.
So he's like, yeah, cool.
Kev goes downstairs.
He plays teasingly with Deja.
What's that?
Takes a piece of bacon off.
she adores him. Yeah. Like he instantly is able to connect with her in a way that
Randall's like... The too muchness of Randall and the charm of Kevin. Right, at odds with
each other completely. So he's talking about how he's got to go to the thing tonight. She's like,
can I go? And Randall's like, yeah, yeah, of course you can. Like, I'll take it and he's like,
do you think she should be going to this thing right now, sort of fancy things? Like, look,
she's expressing interest. We got to jump on it while we can. Like,
Randall just completely and totally excited about this whole thing.
He does this thing.
Him and Beth had this great conversation.
He's like, just be cool.
He's like, oh, that's Randall Cool Pearson.
That's my middle name.
She's like, oh, Lord, you're going to mess this all up.
She's like, cool means normal.
She's like, no, it doesn't.
Cool means cool.
And so they go out, you see him just talking to Dasia constantly just trying to find
any thread of something to connect to.
And she's like, bro.
That's not happening.
It's not about you right now.
I'm trying to go see the manning.
She loves the manning.
We make it to the gala, and you see, Kev is still not his best self right now, but he's still very charming to Deja.
She has a little bit of a look when he says, introduces her to his girlfriend, and she's like,
oh, she got a girl.
All right, all right, let me readjust my expectations right now.
They go to the auction part, and Sophie's very excitedly introducing Kev, who is nowhere.
where to be found.
Now where to be found.
Throughout the episode, he's been on the phone,
try to connect with his doctor.
I know I'm past my prescription allotment or whatnot,
but if you could really help me out, that would be great.
Trying to connect with past doctors to see if he can get something.
You start to feel the real desperation.
There's serious desperation that is setting in.
And while that's happening,
Deja is sort of being exposed to new things
and just sort of like having shrimp for the first time.
By the way, in Lyric for the first time,
when she was eating the shrimp, she's like,
oh, these shrimp is good.
Really?
She would be, like, any time we'd have breakfast or something,
and she's like, we got strawberries, oh, these strawberries, good.
So she was eating the strip, like it was like the jam, right?
Which was perfect for the character.
Then she tries to put the tail into her mouth, and Randall's like, whoa, careful.
You could choke on that, right?
And she sort of flinches for the second time that we've seen since she's been in the house, right?
And she gets up, goes to the bathroom.
Yeah.
So, again, we're sort of juxtaping.
opposing the more than too muchness of Randall
with like present day Randall trying to figure out
how to proceed in this particular moment.
Kev is unsuccessful in getting pills or whatnot,
but they're both standing outside of the women's bathroom,
just looking at the door.
Yeah, waiting for Deja to reemerge.
Two weird dudes that should not be standing outside
of the women's restroom and he's like, I'm gonna go in there.
He's like, I know.
And he says something about, Kev says to Randall,
You care too much.
You always have.
That's been your thing.
And I don't care enough.
And he's, I don't know if that's true.
He's like, yeah, dude, I just something about me is just not working the way that it's supposed to.
He's like, well, I'm going to go in there.
He's like, there may be women pooping in there.
I said, I know.
So to Randall's credit, he walks there and he just stands outside of the stall that he knows she's in.
He's like, you're just going to stand there the whole time.
He doesn't really say anything.
He just listens, which I thought was a really.
cool move for the writers to have shown the learning of somebody, like, yes, I walked in,
but I'm not going to try to, like, force you into anything.
I'm just going to be here, right?
And she tells this story about these fashion magazines that this woman had because she was butt-ugly,
and this young lady is very funny when she's saying it.
But, like, the magazines were a thing because her foster father could roll them up,
and they didn't leave a lot of marks.
And that's why you can't grab me like that.
And he just listens, and then she gets out, and they walk out of the bathroom, right?
Yeah.
He walks back into the ballroom and gets dressed down by Sophie, by Sophie.
So you embarrassed me, right?
And he talks about how I shouldn't have come.
Like, I'm sorry, I wanted to be here for you, but I'm really just tired.
And a couple of things that I noticed in this one, this is when his ease of lying is really sort of like, oh, he just lied.
Yeah.
Just to keep the piece.
You know what I mean?
And I was like, oh, that's not,
this should cost you something to just not tell the truth
to the person that you got back into your life, right?
And even when faced with the opportunity
to correct things, you know, opts out.
Yeah, and take accountability.
It was like, no, I'm just going to take the easy way out.
So then let's get it to a little bit of joy
because we need a little Kitobi in our lives.
And it starts, your arc starts off with her saying,
like, I have something to tell you, what have you.
and you're wondering what it is
that she's got to say or not
and she's, I'm pregnant.
And Chris, your expression of joy
of being a dad or whatnot
is a true delight.
You'll speak on it just a little bit.
I mean, I need to back up just a little bit
because there's an earlier moment of joy,
a realization of a lifelong dream
of getting to clear all of the things off my desk.
Oh, please.
Oh, it's brilliant.
It is, uh, Toby, she said, you know, Kate shows up and says, Toby, I need to talk to you in your office and he thinks they're about to have sex. So he walks in and just sweeps everything off the desk. And it was like, I was like, finally! I have told Rachel, I have told Rachel for my 50th birthday, what I want, what I actually want is for her to set up a dinner for me and like a friend and like a nice restaurant. And I want to stage a, uh, an altercation where I got.
I want I'm out of here.
And I just tip the, just wipe everything off the table.
I thought you're going to stay where you want to have sex with her.
That's better.
No, Mandy, you're right.
That's better.
Clear the table so you can do what you're going to do.
Have sex with her in a restaurant.
That's better.
Why didn't I think of that?
Oh, man.
That is better.
That is better.
No, I just, if you ever get it, just set up, fine.
Get some plastic stuff.
Put it on your kitchen table and then just.
sweep it off.
Wipe it up.
It's truly joy.
I got that sense
as an actor.
I was like,
he's been waiting for this
for some time.
When I saw that in the script,
I was like four years
of acting college,
all for this,
all for today.
Okay, so you cleared a table.
But also,
can we talk about the fact
that we saw where Toby works?
Yeah,
he said IT solutions.
I was like,
oh, this is generic enough,
but gives us some specificity.
And apparently he's the boss.
He was a boss.
He's true and innocent feeling.
Yeah, because they're like, we're going to have to justify these apartments they live in pretty quick here because Kate's not worked.
And how high up in the IT world is this guy?
Okay, he has his own office.
He can clear the desk.
And he feels comfortable clearing a desk.
That's the amount of money.
He's making six figures.
You said you wanted to talk.
That's the way they do it.
And all of the movies.
Adult entertainment, fine cinema that I watch.
Yeah.
It's not that.
I am.
And she reveals that she is pregnant.
Toby gets very, very excited, but is quickly tamped down by her saying, okay, keep it to yourself.
Yeah.
And he's like, uh, cricket.
So this is, so this is interesting.
And Mandy, you've just recently gone through, you know, having your third baby or whatnot, you know, and we know that complications can arise, especially within the first trimester.
So a lot of folks are told, you know, you know, until you make it to 13, you sort of just kind of keep it to yourself.
That's right.
You know what I'm saying?
And hearing Kerr Express, I remember because we were 34 with the first one and 39, and
like that term geriatric.
Like, are we that?
Oh, I didn't know.
And that's what it's called.
That turns out we are.
Geriatric pregnancy.
She's 37 years old, whatnot.
She knows that she's a plus size woman and that any number of things could transpire.
I don't need you getting too excited because if you get too excited, then you'll be too
disappointed.
So just kind of keep it at a minimum until the, you know,
child is here. You have experienced any of that at all? But probably different. I, we didn't
experience any of that. I will say, Rachel and I did have a bit of a conflict over the, over the
pregnancy reveal. Okay. To me. What happened? Wait, tell. Do you tell. It, so it's now kind of a
joke, so I can talk about it. Okay. Oh, God, oh God. But I found out that Rachel was pregnant.
with bear the first time around via text message when she sent me a photo of the pregnancy test
and i was sitting on an airplane on the way to a convention or something currently being talked at
by an elder elderly man with white wine breath okay who was just like so what do you do
and i and you're like looking at your phone and i'm like oh what
what do you mean a convention what kind of convention are you going to just what just
pinogrigio like wafting oh I'm like this is so exciting and the worst I just wanted to
be like would you shut up I just found out I'm going to be a dad I got to dance up and down the
aisle or to a to hooty and the blowfish or something um yeah I I had to get home and and be like
Yeah, I'm so excited. By the way, not the way to tell me.
Oh, I would have...
Save it for in-person.
At least.
At least.
I will say that there is something very interesting about your experience, Toby's, I would
say, and me, and I don't know if this is true.
Because we as dudes, as soon as I found out, I was like, overjoyed.
Yes.
Not thinking about that 13 weeks and the complications to go into or et cetera.
And so, like, when Ryan's like, listen.
I need you to keep it to yourself.
And I'm like, for real?
Like, I want to tell the world on a megaphone.
The world.
That was me too.
Yeah, dudes have to like sort of bring it down.
But then your bride to be in the show does something incredibly generous, right?
You guys go, is it a coffee shop?
A concert week.
She takes me to a coffee shop and says, okay, okay, fine.
You can tell one person in here.
Yeah, a stranger.
Just tell a stranger.
Because the stakes are so low, right?
You're not telling your feet.
or friends or other people that could potentially be disappointed, exactly.
It's a great plan, actually.
And Toby walks up to the barista and not only says, that's my guy, but asks him,
so can you put this song on, please?
Because it's Toby's happy song.
It also turns out to be kind of one of Sally's happy songs.
You feel that in the performance.
The hoodie and the Blowfish record was kind of a big deal for 12-year-old, 13-year-old Chris.
I love Tudy and the Blowfish.
I love you some Darius.
Oh, man, I got to meet Darius Rucker at like an award show.
Did you?
And it was another big deal for me.
It was a big deal.
So, okay, this is my question acting wise was how much was scripted?
Yeah, it's all like, how much fun room did you have to play?
So this episode was directed by John and Glenn, who were two of our veteran, maybe more mischievous director?
I would agree.
Very mischievous.
Yes.
And these are the two directors.
that when we started season two
told me, I don't know if they told
anybody else, but they were like,
just so you know, you guys are
about to have a long run.
You know these characters.
You do
what you want to do.
Great.
Directors are going to come, but
go ahead and
stretch your legs. Yeah. And
that's the wrong thing to tell
Chris Sullivan.
You're like,
Watch this.
Because watch me stretch.
And so I'm like, well, here's what's going to happen in this coffee shop then, John and Glenn.
I'm going to push it too far and you tell me when to stop.
Okay.
And so.
The slowmo of you like on the pole.
Like, I mean, it was.
The flash dance.
Yeah.
The flash dance.
Yeah, that was it.
Yeah, yeah.
So that was, was that you in the moment?
Yeah.
Yeah.
This is like, all right, let's do it.
Let's turn this music on.
And I was like, oh, look at this.
What about this bucket of water?
Anybody, it's like, we'll do it last.
We'll do it last.
So you at least had to wait, of course.
And sound came and took my mic and took all the electrical things off of me,
and then I dumped the water over my head, and that was that was wrapped for the day.
It was absolutely fantastic.
It was joyful.
And I've had moments like that.
I've definitely been up on a tabletop in a college cafeteria dancing and singing.
I love it.
Oh, wait, okay.
I just realized because what led to her was what led to her sharing this information,
Kate sharing this information was the OA meeting.
Yeah.
That's this episode, right?
Yes.
Thank you guys.
Okay.
Because that brings us to our special guests.
That does bring us to our special guests.
So in the OA meeting, we hear from Madison.
Yes.
Okay, I'm laughing two reasons.
First of all, Caitlin is so damn funny in her delivery of what's going on in her life.
And Chrissy slash Kate is so disgusted.
Yeah.
Yeah, by everything coming out of her mouth.
Whenever Kate is listening to Caitlin, no, to Madison, yes.
Is when you really see Chrissy's Florida come out.
Yeah.
She has Florida face.
And it's when she really gets, really gets sass.
She really does, yeah, I love it.
She's like, oh, wait a minute, Madison.
Like, a handsome guy, like, took you him somewhere and you had to smoke a cigarette and all this stuff.
Her head kind of gets going.
her arm gets up yeah there's like a look in her eye yes yes so they take that out into the parking
lot where it continues i want to remember i think i have they kind of say their peace yeah yeah
they say their peace the ironic part is that is that we understand we understand kate's perspective
but we also are beginning to like really understand like madison's perspective of like body
dysmorphia the things that she's actually going through are real problems that people deal with
when they're dealing with food consumption
and things like this.
Yes.
It's just opposite ends of that spectrum.
Very much.
Whether it's overeating or anorexia, bulimia,
whatever the, whatever the dysfunction is
in the relationship with food.
Yeah.
But they take it, they kind of resolve it in the meeting,
and then take it out into the parking lot.
Yeah.
Which is a real Florida move.
Yeah.
Feels, no offense, Florida, but it feels like.
Listen, I'm from Florida.
A lot of parking lot.
And I agree.
Too many arguments happening in parking lots.
Yeah.
They wind up having the slightest of Finderbenders.
They're sort of back into each other as they're coming out.
Madison's like, what's wrong with you?
You're crazy?
You're not seeing me?
And Chrissy's in tears.
And she's like, why are you crying?
Are you okay?
She's like, I'm just, I'm pregnant.
Yeah.
Right?
Sure.
And they actually wind up hugging it out and having like this moment.
Madison's reaction is so sweet.
She's just immediately like so happy for her, so excited.
And like all is forgotten about whatever they were sort of having.
an argument about it. And there's also this thing in the writers when I would go in every once in a while
and they're like, you guys have no friends. They're like, we need to find some friends. We need to get
some friends. Yeah. And I love this unlikely friendship because, you know, we see later on in this
season, like, Madison's actually, like, is someone that comes to the hospital. Like, she's there
for Kate. Like, I think this sort of, like, is slowly planting the seeds of them being more sort of
intertwined in each other's lives. Absolutely. Yeah. So, okay, on that note, I think we've
We've covered everything in the episode.
Yeah, let's talk to Kate.
We're going to bring Kate up, take a break.
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Gang, let's talk about your travel plans for the next couple of months.
What are you going to be doing?
Anything?
Back and forth to Toronto, man.
I'm the King of Toronto.
More importantly, I'm the king of Toronto Airbnbs.
Ooh.
I really want to go somewhere in the mountains.
I want to show the kids snow.
Somewhere that I can drive.
Absolutely.
Because we have three children now, and the idea of getting on an airplane seems a little daunting.
So a road trip.
I'm going to send you a link because we have a great Airbnb cabin in Lake Arrowhead.
Please, I'm serious.
I really would love that.
I will send you the link.
Okay.
I'm thinking about Nola.
Oh, a little New Orleans trip.
Why not?
Yes.
Why not?
I love it there.
You've earned it.
Yeah.
This has been a really big year.
for travel. For me personally, I've had projects everywhere. I get to, of course, record wonderful
spots with my Pearson family here in person and come home, but I'm excited to be in a place
where I can get comfortable. Of course, when I'm not at my actual home, I rely on Airbnb
to capture that, how would you say, feels like home feelings. And the privacy when staying
at an Airbnb is unparalleled. I love traveling and going places, but it can be tough to make
holiday memories and a home that doesn't really let you relax and get.
comfortable. And that's why we look forward to our Airbnb trips as a family because we can pick a
place that's right for us. Exactly. Amundo. Your home can also be the perfect place for someone else
to open presents or ring in the new year, especially if no one is using it. Utilizing your space
to start hosting through Airbnb could be the perfect way to make extra income this season and
help out with the other holiday-related expenses you have. Your home might be worth more than you think.
Find out how much at Airbnb.com slash host.
Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome to the That Was Us podcast, Caitlin Thompson.
Yay, Kate!
What's going on, sister?
Who you may know as Madison.
That is Madison.
Kate's dear friend, fiancé to my brother, Kevin, and just all-around good person.
Baby mama, too, you forgot that.
Oh, my mom, excuse me, baby mom of twins.
Yes.
Let me not glossed over the plot line, big plot point.
Kate, how are you doing today?
I'm good.
I just watched the episode this morning, so I feel like I'm in my feels.
It's fresh in your head.
You watch 205, so it's like it's in your bones right now.
It is.
I was like, wow, so much happened in that episode.
A lot of stuff.
Okay, so wait, so we're going to start off with you were in the pilot, obviously, and we
know the story of how you came to become involved with the show to a certain extent.
But maybe you can fill in our viewers and listeners on how you first became associated with
This Is Us.
You know, I did the age-old Hollywood thing and I slept with the producer.
Yeah, smart.
Hey, it works out sometimes.
Dan Fogelman's wife, ladies and gentlemen.
I did the same thing, not with the same producer, but the same, yeah.
Let me hear that story.
Maybe more interesting.
you know Ken Olin
yeah yeah oh my god
he's a tender and kind lover
let me ask you so like
he Dan wrote this thing a while ago
having it like as a movie and I know you're a writer too
I'm curious do you guys bounce things off of each other
do you let each other read what you guys are
working on or do you try to kind of keep that
siphoned off and separate like how do you guys do it
creatively as a couple
no for sure I think I mean just the nature
of him being down the hallway
and as a writer you're so isolated
so I think it's always nice to just have
that outside perspective
so I remember reading this
it was around
before we were engaged
you're about to get married and it was called
36 I believe
yeah it's called 36
I feel like it started
as a movie or something
I don't I don't remember
I just remember being blown away
obviously and I was like how did you pull this off
You read it and you're like, I didn't think you were this talented.
How did you get this?
I mean, I remember, like, other ones like crazy stupid love.
I remember reading and that, like, I read the first 13 pages.
But I feel like this one I kind of read it in its entirety.
But yeah, I mean, I just, it felt special from the beginning.
It was kind of like there was no doubt that this was something different and special.
And I just wanted more and more and more.
I was like, wait, this is it.
You know, it's like normally you're doing features with him.
And so, yeah, it was, so we definitely bounce ideas off each other and talk things through.
And I think through the whole process of him doing the show, you know, it's funny because
there's a couple episodes I haven't seen, but I've seen bits and pieces of it.
So I feel like I'd seen them.
But he always loves to show me things out of order.
Like, just look at this scene.
We did this cut the other day.
And I was like, no, I'll watch it.
Like, as an audience member in its entirety.
So sometimes it doesn't.
It doesn't work to its advantage for me.
Dan does get excited because he would do that throughout the course of the show, too.
He's like, oh, I got to show you the scene with Susan and Sterling.
And he'd, like, come to set and, like, whip out his phone or whatever.
Yeah.
He gets so excited.
And I love his giddiness.
But, like, the train episode, which I know I'm jumping ahead.
But, like, I haven't even seen that one because I've seen pieces of it.
I know it would destroy me.
And it was like, I can't bring myself to, like, actually sit down and watch it
because I've seen the gut-ranging moments already.
Oh, man.
Yeah, he gets excited and it's infectious.
Do you have more insight?
You certainly have more insight than I do about Madison's storyline.
And when it was, I don't know, when it was established that maybe she was going to become romantically involved with Kevin.
Like, how far out did Dan know that that's the way it was going?
You know, I think it evolved.
I mean, certainly from the pilot when I just had that little bit.
I didn't know.
I don't think he knew it was going to become that thing.
I think it was around the time that.
Kate, Chrissy's character was going to be pregnant and getting married. And I think the writer's
room was like, she needs a friend. Like none of these Pearson's have a friend. She needs a friend.
Right. She help her go through this big milestone in her life. And I think that's when the writers
started being, well, the natural person in her life. And the most interesting probably because
they were enemies. Yeah. Sure. Would be Madison. Which is what happens in this, in this episode.
we see the transition from, from, uh, foes to, to a blossoming friendship.
Yeah, like misunderstood for sure.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
She turned on a dime at Madison.
And she was like, oh, baby?
Yeah.
I have to say, too, like it, and it's comical in the way that it's presented and whatnot,
but Madison's presence in the group, whether you call it OA or, or what have you, like,
It sort of highlights to me, like, diet culture in terms of how, especially in a city like
Los Angeles, we equate health with thinness.
Yes.
Right?
You know, and that automatically we assume if a body type is not thin, then it's not healthy,
but that we also assume that a thin body type is healthy, right?
And so, like, your presence in the room is one that you're like, no, dude, I'm here.
This is part of the conversation.
Because I need help.
Yeah.
You know?
So I just want to know if you want to do it.
No, you know, definitely from the outside.
I get the judgment, but I think that's what the show did so well
is it brings in all these different perspectives and it, you know,
it flips the coin.
It's like it's not always what it appears.
And I think as the character of Madison grew, I mean, I always took her seriously
and I was watching the show.
And I think it was like kind of the first time I could watch it and kind of take myself
out of it.
Like I think it's been long enough now that I can kind of be like, okay, I'm not feeling
the same feel.
Like, you know, it's like you're just removed from it.
Sure.
And I was always just so, I mean, she's a.
She was a big character in this room of very grounded actors.
I mean, you guys all had your comedic moments and stuff,
but I was always a little self-conscious
because she just felt a little larger than life.
Yeah, we were all grounded in dramatic moments
with lighthearted moments scattered about.
And she is, for lack of a better, you know,
trope is presented as the joke in this end.
And so it's kind of a reverse.
She has to now establish herself as a serious.
you know, subject matter or a serious character or someone who's grounded in more than just
a gag.
I'm curious how, like, tell us about your interactions, like working with Chrissy, working
with Justin, because I feel like the two of them were sort of like your touchstones on
the show throughout the course of the series.
Yeah, I mean, they're both amazing and so welcoming, so talented, and just fun.
I think, like, the lightheartedness that they would bring to.
Like, Chrissy and I would always be laughing and, you know, telling jokes.
And Justin, you know, he's amazing where he can be like in one conversation and then they call action and he just flips in and starts to live with this part-quote monologue where he's like, okay, I can't do that.
I need like, I need to go over here and you just trap.
I need to put my music on.
Like, you do your thing.
But, you know, they were just, you know, so fun to play off of and so there for you and so present.
And I just feel so lucky that that was, you know, my experiences with them.
It really worked out great for all of us, didn't it?
We really lucked out.
Yeah, we really did luck out.
It turned into something.
It turned into something.
I still love that your own husband wrote your storyline with like this handsome, like one of the most like handsome winning talented people.
Some insider stuff.
Like Dan, as he was writing it, would joke to all of us.
He was like, I can't believe I'm doing this.
I cannot believe I'm doing this.
I am writing my wife.
into a romantic relationship with Justin Hartley.
Why am I doing this?
I mean, during later in the season, like, during COVID times,
he'd be watching at the monitor at home.
And it was always on.
Like, it would be, like, that was kind of just always on in our house.
Like, we'd always be hearing you guys doing your lines, rehearsing,
like, any room in the TV, because he would just come and check in.
And, like, sometimes he'd be watching a take, and he's like,
did you have to touch him there?
And I'd be like, are you kidding me?
Like, I was like, way to make me feel insecure.
me feel insecure i didn't script that many kisses i didn't it certainly is not scripted as a long
kiss it's scripted as a short kiss yeah yeah no he's just joking but i you know him and ken i was like
you guys please yeah oh yeah yeah ken ken was very helpful too in the in in appeasing everyone's
anxiety around the right he just knew the buttons to press yeah i i remember talking to you
just like at in uh base camp or whatnot and you talk about you know feeling a little nervous
what have you, which was always sort of surprising to me because you had such wonderful comedic
timing. And then when it came time to show like the more sincere, serious parts of Madison as well,
they seemed seamless and beautiful. Like I'm thinking specifically of the wedding that almost was
and the conversation between the two of you before like, you know what, you can't just be with me
because I look good on paper, you think that you're supposed to love me and you want your family to be
together. Like, do you actually love me? Like, you brought the pain in that stuff. So I'm,
and I say this as a fellow Thespian, because you're a writer, you're a creator, but like,
as an actor, you were so damn good. And I'm wondering, did you ever feel more settled while you
were doing it? Or did you always kind of feel like, oh, I hope that was okay? Like, did you find
a spot where you were like, not finding a bit of a group? Yeah, I mean, that scene, especially,
I did have this weird, it kind of freaked me out, like this calmness.
that came over me.
I just did feel really locked in in that moment.
But I think I did so much prep work
because I was so anxious.
It felt like this is my Super Bowl.
Like I need to land this moment for Madison.
And so I did so much prep work
and I had all these preparations queued up and triggers.
And it was interesting.
I remember I was struggling with,
like it was such, she was sacrificing so much in that moment.
Like you're really kissing goodbye
the idea of this perfect family that you could have
and whether it wouldn't be perfect or not,
because maybe love wasn't there.
It's a lot to throw away.
There was a lot at stake there.
And I remember I like to sometimes work with like an object.
And I had these earrings that Hala had given me.
And I like just created this like backstory for them.
I was like, what if these are the earrings my mother gave me
when she was leaving and said like they were from an old boyfriend?
And that was like her belief that she was leaving that there is true love.
And so I just became like really attached to the idea of these earrings.
And I think that kind of just broke something open from
because I'm holding them throughout the scene.
Yeah.
And it just kind of became a lifeline to like, this is hard for her to do,
but she believes that there's something more for her on the other side of it.
And you have to just push through and do what's in your heart to get to that other moment.
Oh, I love that.
That's kind of dope.
Yeah.
Shit worked.
Yeah, that's a great exercise.
I hope you kept those earrings.
It's not always great.
But in that moment, I did feel like I had tapped in to something that just felt really true for me.
I feel like the writers also have this uncanny ability,
like as the show goes on,
as they get to know us as actors and humans,
like they wrote for us in a way.
And so maybe there was also that part of it too.
You know, it's like as the series progressed,
it was sort of like the lines started to blur a little bit.
I mean, you felt it maybe more, like earlier than some of us.
It's just like, oh, wow, like it's so effortless,
So much of the work is done for you because of what's on the page that, yeah, just these little tweaks and these little tips and tricks that you can like bring to the office, for lack of a better word, like is what helps kind of like push it over the edge.
They're so great at finding those small moments that are so human and small sometimes that you can pass them by.
But I think in the big picture of the show, this show is all about those moments.
And I think that's a great takeaway for life.
But yeah, that was a big, a big scene.
I remember taking, I was like, I had a margarita after that.
I was like, I need to go home.
You earned it.
Yeah, Justin, like, showed me a picture of him drinking a beer,
and I sent him one up, like, I'm right there with you.
Help me in the timeline of things in terms of you becoming a mom
and Madison becoming a mom.
Like, which one happened first?
I was, I want to say, six months pregnant when Dan, I remember sitting in bed and he was like, tiptoeing in.
He's like, so, he's like, the writers are pitching this idea.
You know, he's like, I just want to know what you think.
And this is before COVID.
Yes, before COVID.
Okay.
Before I really, shit really hit the fan.
I, it was kind of like a conversation.
And I was scared.
I mean, honestly, it was.
I didn't, I mean, this show was already so established, and it was, you know, I didn't want to be the one to come in and, like, mess it up in some way, you know, and like, yeah, it was, it was a big, a big deal, but I, yeah, I was six months pregnant when I filmed the scene with Justin where I say I'm having a baby and, like, you don't need to be a part of it, but I'm having the baby.
And then, of course, then I had my son, and, and then I was wearing a belly. So I felt like I was pregnant for two years.
Wow. Wow. But, yeah, it was.
Dan, you actually could have planned this better.
You were in control of this.
It was, yeah.
I just remember strapping on that.
And I was like, I already did this.
I remember that she was really funny.
I remember seeing like a comment pop online when I was, I was pregnant, but I was
pregnant on the show.
And someone was like, wow, this actress is really going for it.
Like, she looks swollen and everything.
This actress is really going.
She must have had a salty lunch.
Like when she really admits, she bloated.
up.
This is a good segue.
How many times do you look at comments and, like, how many times do you get, like, a positive
sort of feedback from it versus not positive?
Too many.
It's, like, so 50-50 that I've just learned to, like, not.
It's one of those things, too, because it can be overwhelmingly positive.
But the one thing that is not so positive.
Sticks in your crawl.
Seared in your mind.
Yeah, negativity bias, man.
Yeah.
It'll kill you.
I remember back in the day before there was social media and people just got a chance to look at the comments on IMDB.
And I'd be like, wow, don't do that.
You don't need to comment.
Yeah, we're good.
We're good.
That's what I'm saying.
I was like, she's so committed.
That's good practice, though, to just don't, just don't read it.
If you don't read it, it doesn't exist.
You can't hurt you.
But no, she also lives.
She is Dan Fogelman's wife and Dan Fogelman in the middle of episodes.
It's like, oh, we're losing them.
He's like, reading the comments.
He's looking at Twitter, like, live.
Like, get off Twitter.
I think I lost him.
It's like, yeah, he's like a play-by-play in the moment.
It's like literally like there's like this in his heart is going like a new open.
Completely.
Completely.
So you probably do better than him, which is good.
I've learned.
I mean, I heard someone say like if you believe the good, you have to believe the bad.
And I was like, fair enough.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's true.
I don't have been strong enough to believe any of it.
I'm just going to.
Okay.
So my next question.
I'm going to give it to my partners over here.
You're incredibly good at a couple of things that I know of.
I'm sure there's more, but you're an incredibly accomplished writer.
You're a brilliant actor or whatnot.
Which one do you receive more fulfillment from?
And what do you try, like, artistically,
what path are you treading down most these days?
They're both very fulfilling.
I think I've always just loved being creative and storytelling.
And so I think any facet of this industry I find fulfilling.
I find fulfilling.
I mean, there's nothing better to me than being on set for 12 hours, but at the same time,
there's nothing better than like sitting at my computer for eight hours in, you know, writing
and having a great scene.
Yeah.
So I don't know.
I mean, right now, I think doors are opening with writing, so I'm kind of going that direction,
but if the right part comes along, of course, I would still love to act.
I mean, it's been a huge part of my life for so long.
It's been something I've worked for for so long.
But I feel like my acting helps my writing and my writing helps my acting.
So I don't feel like I have to choose necessarily.
No way.
It's just kind of a fun journey to go on.
And on that note, is there anything that people can see you in?
Anything you want to shout out?
Can people follow you on social media or like, you know what I mean?
Tune in for the Zoom.
I have a bunch of writing things in the works, but as I'm learning, it takes some time to put together.
So I have a couple of things that we're developing.
So exciting.
Well, if it helps your writing, you know, hold us in your mind.
You know, hold.
If you need to hear a voice.
If you need to hear a voice, if the character needs to sound a certain way.
Some of us are unemployed.
I'm, you know, yeah, if you just, if you need someone to read something for you.
Yeah, you just let us know.
So I want to get the dream team back together.
Yeah, please, anytime.
There you go.
I'm like fan fiction, alternate.
I mean, I love you guys.
You guys know that I would.
kill to work with any of you at any time in any capacity.
Like ways.
It goes both ways.
Like ways.
Pitch this.
We came up with this idea yesterday.
Pitch this to Dan while you guys are bouncing ideas around.
Is that the whole first season of Sterling's new show Paradise is just one of Randall's anxiety dreams.
And he wakes up and it's a prequel to the next season of this is us.
You wouldn't believe it.
We do it.
We do the Dallas.
We do the Dallas.
We can make it work.
It's all good.
Kate, thank you so much for making time to hang with us.
Hopefully you'll come back later as we get into more Madison-specific storylines or what
have you, but it's great to see you as always and tell your husband we said, hey.
Good to see you guys.
Good to see you too.
Yeah, thanks, Kate.
Thank you, Kate.
Thank you, Kate.
See, guys.
Bye.
favorite segment of the show.
You're talking about that emotional support hotline, baby.
We love a good callback.
I believe we have Heather who left us a voicemail.
Okay, cool.
If we could call her.
Well, let's listen to the voicemail first.
Yeah, of course, of course.
I'm just dialing up the number to make sure I got it in there so I don't accidentally call her voicemail again.
That's good.
That's good.
That's good.
Roll that.
Hi, this is Heather, and I'm so in love with your podcast and your show.
My callback is 19.
My short little synopsis is, my husband was alive during the first season of This Is Us,
and we love watching it together, just loved crying together and just family with three kids.
Tragically, he died five years ago today, actually.
And so the remaining seasons, I'm pretty sure of seasons two through six, I watched on my own
and just felt so much, just, I just felt validated and seen in the character of Rebecca.
And I'm rewatching it right now as I get ready as I prepared for this anniversary.
And it helped me so much with grief and parenting and life.
And I just love you all for that.
So I'd love to share that with you on your podcast.
And again, it's Heather.
Oh, my good gracious.
Let's call.
Good morning.
Heather, good morning.
Heather.
Hello.
Hi, I'm Andy, Kristen Sterling.
Hi, Heather.
You knew it was us.
Oh, my goodness.
Yes, yes.
Heather, we just listened to your voicemail.
And I think the three of us collectively are slightly gobsmacked.
But first of all, our most sincere condolences on your loss.
Thank you
And we are honored
If in some small way
We were able to help you
Through that process of grieving
Yeah
Sometimes we forget what we do
And that it's just a little TV show
But you can
Help us understand
Reflect back to us
Like what was it about watching the show
Especially your connection with Rebecca
That made you feel validated
And what you were going through
Oh my goodness
Well I'll try to
I feel a little overwhelmed right now.
It takes me back to all of those feelings.
But I think I mentioned in the voicemail.
Again, I called in, I think, two months ago,
it was just before the anniversary of Todd's accident.
And we were fans of the show together before his accident.
So I remember just watching this family.
We have three kids, like, just seeing all the things that, you know,
the family dynamics, the warmth, the fun dad that.
back was, which is so much like Todd was, that after he passed, after Todd passed, I just,
I just thought, oh my gosh, Rebecca is like, she's going to help me through this.
I mean, your whole show, but I felt seen and I just felt like all of the crazy emotions
I was having, the shock I was in, it felt safe to watch her specifically for me.
And so, Mandy, thank you so much. I just, I cheer up thinking about it.
Yeah. We're all in tears over here too. What strength you have to sort of persevere and keep putting one foot in front of the other. And as Sterling said, the fact that if we were in any way able to help walk you through an unimaginable time in your life, we are so honored to have been there for you. Yeah, I don't even know what to say.
Heather, how old are your youngens?
well now they are my youngest is 21 my oldest is 26 so at the time my my youngest was 16 which very similar to the Pearson kids so um you know just yeah um i i've tried to be there for them but honestly like i was in survival mode just the first year was a shock and uh you know it's um grace my youngest i've gotten her turned on to the show and you know she
She can appreciate it now, too.
I think it helped her to see teenagers grappling with this sudden, just instability in the life
and just an earthquake of the loss of, you know, what they had.
So it's helped my kiddos, too.
Wow.
Chris say something.
We're all just absorbing and digesting your story and your vulnerability and just the fact that you were able to, like, call
us on the anniversary and it's yeah just unbelievable well again i just i i'm so grateful that the show
exists and it it feels like a connection because todd and i did watch it together and um you know i did
i started rewatching the series the month of the um the anniversary of of his passing and i'm now on
season five yes so um it just yeah i i just relate so much and i'm sure there are a lot of people out there
that do. So, but the specific, the specificity of having a loss that was sudden and unexpected
too was a big part of that, um, just, um, validation and like, I, I just, yeah, um, felt
very seen and very comforted and, like, safe in watching your, the Pearson family.
Let me ask you something, Heather, because we're going to let you go in a second, but is there
anything on public record that you would like the world to know about Todd?
Yeah. Oh, wow. Thank you for asking that. Yes. He was just, I mean, and I still believe he is just always looking for the good in people. If you needed someone to root for you, he was that guy. And I know that he wants me and all of our kids and family and really everyone. I mean, just.
Everyone was a friend waiting to be discovered for him.
And so I tried to be like that.
I mean, I can't be nearly what he was.
But I think he would just encourage us all to look for that good and just assume the best in people and be there for them.
So that's what I would share.
Yeah.
That is beautiful.
What a legacy.
What a legacy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Heather, thank you for sharing.
you've messed up my non-existent makeup.
We all have to hear of you.
Thank you for that.
We love you and we're here for you.
So wishing you and your three young ones all the best.
And I feel the encouragement from Todd to seek out the best in people.
Yeah, what a great reminder for all of us.
For us, for the listeners.
Thank you so much, Heather.
Thank you for sharing your story.
Thank you for calling in.
We're so glad that we could be there.
with you and, you know, your journey of re-watching the show with us, it really, really means so much.
Thank you.
Oh, you all mean so much to me.
I love you too.
And just thank you for sharing your talents with the world.
So thank you.
Have a wonderful rest of the day, Heather.
You take care.
You too.
Take care.
Okay.
Bye-bye.
Bye.
That was the emotional support hotline.
Again, we delude ourselves into thinking that we're doing something for,
people. I guess we do, but it's all circular. What you give, you get back, right?
Truly, truly. Guys, thank you. Thank you to Heather again. Thanks to all of you for listening.
If you want to call into the Emotional Support Hotline, we would love to hear from you.
Our number is 412501-308. You could send us an email at That Was Uspod at gmail.com.
Let us know that you're liking the show or what you liked about the series when it was on.
questions, comments, concerns, all of it. We just, we would love to hear from you as we wipe away
the tears from that last call. Yes. All right. That's that episode. Thanks, friends. Thanks,
guys. So see you next time. See you next time. Bye. That was us.
All right, welcome back to the retread. It is brought to you by Peloton. Find your push,
find your power with Peloton. On this episode of the podcast, we discovered that I,
desperately enjoy dancing around
in public. Very much so. And pouring
buckets of water on myself. A bucket of water was a delight
for all of us. We also learned about Kevin
and Randall's sibling relationship.
Randall always proving to be a bit too
much. Kev pushing back
but now in their adult years it seems
as if they're finding more of a synchronicity
with one another. We also learned that maybe
your own children believe
you to be too much sometimes.
And we learned that Mandy has many people.
in her life who have been dead to her for a long time.
But she's unwilling to mention.
This has been the retread.
Brought to you by Peloton.
That Was Us is filmed at Rabbit Grin Studios and produced by Rabbit Grin Productions.
Music by Taylor Goldsmith and Griffin Goldsmith.
Da da da da da da-da-da-dum.
That was us.