The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Michael Bublé: "I Will NEVER Be Carefree Again!", Cancer Diagnosis, Dealing With Rejection & Being Mr Christmas!

Episode Date: December 21, 2023

Most people think of Michael Bublé as the soundtrack of Christmas, yet often overlooked is his unwavering dedication to his music, the personal challenges he’s faced and the mission he’s on. From... summers of catching and sorting salmon on his father’s arctic fishing boat, to earning his 10,000 hours performing songs in the clubs, malls and cruise ships of Canada. Michael has earned his success, including 5 Grammy wins, 15 Juno awards, 6 multi-platinum albums, and well over 14 billions streams worldwide. Bublé is a true family man, yet his journey has been marked by having to overcome severe adversity, including the cancer diagnosis of his eldest son. This year, Michael announced the launch of his whiskey brand, Fraser & Thompson Whiskey, created in partnership with longtime friend, award-winning Master Distiller and Blender, Paul Cirka. This is the real Michael Bublé, you just haven’t met him yet. Follow Michael: Instagram: https://bit.ly/48mwLOv Try Michael’s new Whisky available to buy here: https://bit.ly/48hntmW Follow me: https://beacons.ai/diaryofaceo

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Quick one. Just wanted to say a big thank you to three people very quickly. First people I want to say thank you to is all of you that listen to the show. Never in my wildest dreams is all I can say. Never in my wildest dreams did I think I'd start a podcast in my kitchen and that it would expand all over the world as it has done. And we've now opened our first studio in America, thanks to my very helpful team led by Jack on the production side of things. So thank you to Jack and the team for building out the new American studio. And thirdly to to Amazon Music, who when they heard that we were expanding to the United States, and I'd be recording a lot more over in the States, they put a massive billboard in Times Square for the show. So thank you so much, Amazon Music. Thank you to our team. And
Starting point is 00:00:37 thank you to all of you that listened to this show. Let's continue. Another summer day has come and gone away In Paris or Rome But I want to go home Cause this place sucks I should have, I should have, that should have been the lyric. Michael Bublé, smoothest singer in town. The king of Christmas. Have a holly jolly Christmas.
Starting point is 00:01:01 Everything I did was music. I would listen to Frank Sinatra, Bobby Darin, Dean Martin. I don't know why I just do. Amulate them and then I would steal it all. Because if you steal from one person, you're just a thief. But when you steal from everybody, it's research. But there's 10 years of clubs, 10 years of every agent saying the exact same thing. We will never sign you. But the reason I didn't stop in those 10 years was because if the right person sees me, I am one of the greatest entertainers on earth. I play 50,000 people,
Starting point is 00:01:33 and if there's one looking at their watch, I will play to that man. I'm not leaving here until I break you. And I'm feeling good. But in a moment. My son's cancer diagnosis was a sledgehammer to my reality. And I remember saying to myself, if we get out of this, if we get out of this, I'm living a different life.
Starting point is 00:02:01 And I feel like I'm at this point where I want to do something different. Michael, you're not going to quit music, are you? Michael, what do I need to know about your earliest context to understand the way that you are? Because you are a unique individual a unique individual personality wise talent wise your life is full of uniqueness so where is the what is the oven because I always think about humans like an oven yeah um you know they get cooked in this oven when they're young what is that oven what is that environment well the environment was probably having the most incredible family and everybody says says that. Everybody says, and of course, that's beautiful that people always think their family is the most special.
Starting point is 00:02:49 But if you met them, you'd like them all more than me. And then for me personally, I think being the first child who got way too much attention, probably got told like, you're amazing and you're good at everything. And, like, it's probably the reason I talk so much. But everything I am, everything I have, every decision I make is based on that family. Even deciding, you know, I want to be a singer.
Starting point is 00:03:22 This is what I'm going to do at 13, 14. You know, by the time I was 16, my grandfather was already taking me to nightclubs. And when I started playing in the nightclubs at 18, 19, they were full and I was raw, but they were full, full. And people were like, who is this kid? Like, why did, how did he fill up Babaloo's or how did he fill up the Purple Onion or how did he fill up, you know, this theater? Well, they didn't know, but it was my cousins and aunts and my grandparents and my mom calling all of our friends and saying, come to the club. So this was a strange family affair because we had no connections. I wish I had nepotism to lean on, but I didn't. And so instead it took all of these incredible people just loving me and going, yeah, let's go.
Starting point is 00:04:17 I mean, I was shocked. I was a fisherman. You know, my great-grandfather immigrated from Italy. He was a shipbuilder. My grandfather was a commercial sane salmon fisherman on a sane boat um that took him away a lot right your father yeah for sure for sure yeah which is something that we understood and uh it's interesting because um who knew that after leaving that life and having that thing where your father's gone quite a bit
Starting point is 00:04:47 would be the life that I ended up leading, you know, where I had to be gone quite a bit. And the only difference was I could say, dad, why are you leaving? And he would say, son, this is my, this is my job. This is how I put food on the table. This is how dad pays for our house and for the holidays that we go on and everything. And it changed for me after a certain amount of success because my kids would say, Poppy, why are you going? And I couldn't say, you know, it's to put food on the table, you know, because obviously it was, you know, we'd passed that point, got very lucky.
Starting point is 00:05:31 How do you answer that question? I answer it by, well, I don't just answer it with language. I answer it with action. So I have probably, I have probably made my tours, I would say financially, maybe one of the most irresponsible tours in all of touring. So I started a rule where I said, I will do three weeks on, two weeks off, two weeks on, two weeks off, so that I could come back. Or I would literally sit
Starting point is 00:06:05 with my wife and she's a tremendous actress you know and she has a great career and i i know how fulfilled she is by it and so i would say to her let's sit down at the beginning you and your manager pepo and me and my manager bruce and let's go through the calendar so when are you making those two films okay june july i'm done I come with you and it can't happen if I tour in a financially responsible way. It's so interesting to me because I'm coming into that phase of life now. I'm going to be starting a family soon and I'm going to be getting married. And it's interesting to hear from you about the trade-offs you have to make. And you have more experience in both sides of the cost and the benefit of those trade-offs. Did you miss your father growing up?
Starting point is 00:06:45 Oh, man, of course I missed my dad. I remember he used to... And you know, it's interesting, because I am so lucky to have been born when I was born, because my nights on tour away from them, like tonight, I mean, last night, for example, last night was doing a Zoom. And they put their iPad in the room and I sat with
Starting point is 00:07:07 them and I watched a Christmas movie and we, they ate popcorn and Poppy was there. I was just there. I was, you know, they were walking around and wrestling and they, it's really strange to say this, but I did this thing. Have you ever heard of Calm? Yeah. The Calm app? Yeah, I know the founder. to say this but uh i did this thing have you ever heard of calm yeah yeah the calm app yeah so yeah it's it's about like i so i used to listen to this calm app to go to sleep my wife hated it
Starting point is 00:07:30 and um i was i was on the graham norton show and matthew mcconaughey was a guest and i was so excited and graham was like why why are you so excited well everyone loves mcconaughey said oh no no no i i love it Because my wife would hate it. But every night, I'd listen. Ah, it's Matthew. Hey, hey, hey, I got a sleep story for you. And I would listen every night. And I was like, Matthew, you sleep with my wife and I?
Starting point is 00:07:56 I was like, I listened to your calm sleep story. And it became a, you know, he was a very good sport. And he thought it was funny. And then calm called. And they were like, hey, you want to do a sleep story? I was like, hell yeah, I want to do a sleep story. But I didn't know. So last night, that's every night's the same.
Starting point is 00:08:11 So we chill and then I put on Poppy's sleep story. Hi, this is Michael. And tonight in this sleep story, and the kids just go. That's so beautiful. So what I was saying about, you're asking about my father dude my dad used to carry a sock full of quarters and every two weeks he'd come into port and he'd wait in line at a payphone and then he'd call and then he used to oh man it makes me emotional but and i do the same thing now but he used to, he would leave notes and he'd hide them everywhere.
Starting point is 00:08:48 And so he'd be gone for like a month or something. And you'd go into a drawer to go get your pencils and then you'd see the note. And I remember being like seven, eight years old. And I don't know if you ever did this stuff or maybe I'm just a weird kid, but I remember like holding his clothes, being little and like, and just crying, you know, missing him so much. And this was the closest thing that I would get to him. And it's crazy that as life went on, I became, dude, I'm him.
Starting point is 00:09:25 Like, thank Jesus. Thank God I'm him. Like, thank Jesus. Thank God I'm him. But I turned out to be my dad. Your granddad played a huge role in your life, didn't he? Yes, sir. Grandpa Mitch. Grandpa Mitch, yeah. Huge, huge, massive.
Starting point is 00:09:36 As a matter of fact, yesterday, I did one of the probably scarier things that you can do in this entertainment business. I was asked to be a surprise guest, to sing a song as a tribute to Barry Gibb and the Bee Gees in his induction into the Kennedy Center Honors, which I think is, in my opinion, maybe, if not the pinnacle, one of the pinnacles of Americans celebrating culture. But weirdly enough, my grandpa, he passed away five years ago yesterday. Oh, wow. And so more than anything, I was standing backstage, and I could hear my introduction. And I was like, my mouth was dry.
Starting point is 00:10:28 And my heart, I could hear my heart beating in my ear. And I just took a big breath. And I said, wow, Grandpa, OK, this is us, man. This is us. And I always think about my kids and say, OK, be strong. Don't let your kids ever see you weak. Don't let your kids ever see you weak. Don't let your kids ever see you scared. And weirdly, it just brought this wonderful calm over me.
Starting point is 00:10:51 And it was really nice, man. Like I, it just brought me calm. And I went out there and I thought I killed it. I thought I was very charming. He was my hero, is my hero. At 13 years old, we were always best friends. I don't know why. You know, you know, dude, sometimes certain people, you connect and it's like you were made for each other. And that was my best buddy. We talked about hockey and we talked about music. And even at a young age, I was fascinated by the great American songbook. I was just, I didn't know how, I didn't understand.
Starting point is 00:11:34 And I remember being confused why I was the only one too. How could other people not understand that Nat King Cole is that unbelievable. What's wrong? How could they, how does someone age not hear Ella Fitzgerald and just shit a brick and realize that that is stupid? That's just too good. Or that that gorgeous orchestral arrangement of that song and those horns doing that thing and that swinging.
Starting point is 00:12:04 I know hip hop is great, but no, that beat that i just heard in that trace song that isn't close to being as fat as the one i just heard um backing up bobby darren in mac the knife like that's smoking i knew 13 years old oh dude even before that for music was, it wasn't even a question. It was, it was a defining part of my, the essence of me. Like I, everything I did was music, was just, you know, a fascination. And it's funny when many times parents will go like, my daughter is 14 and she's, and do you have advice? You know, she wants to be a singer. And I always, I have advice.
Starting point is 00:12:50 And it's like, listen to as much music, and all of it. Like, go across the board of every genre and download it and process it and steal all of it. Steal the best parts of all of it and you will find yourself. But another thing I always say is fantasize. Like, dude, that is, for me, I would fantasize about being on stage. I would fantasize about singing in front of the crowd. Every shower was another opportunity to go and fucking kill Madison Square Garden and, you know, know that the, you know, that that crowd in the shower was just loving. Madison Square Garden. Oh, whatever. You know, like, you know what I mean crowd in the shower was just loving. Madison Square Garden. Oh, you know, like, you know what I mean? Like I was 14. Absolutely. And like,
Starting point is 00:13:29 thank God there wasn't like the voice of American Idol. Cause if I was 13, I would have been in the shower saying like, Hey Simon, check this out. Did you sound good at that age? Do you have recordings? Yeah, man, I do. I do have recordings. Cause I'm wondering how much of your time it is. I have a recording when I'm 14, and it tripped me out because I sound, I don't know if it's good, but. Exactly the same? Exactly the same.
Starting point is 00:13:53 What? And I think it was like, it had to be you. I sound like that. I sound exactly like that. The same way. And what's weird is like, it wasn't like I put on an effect. That's how the voice sounded. And my buddies used to make fun of me.
Starting point is 00:14:11 One of my best friends, Brad, would be in the bus. And he'd go, there's Bublé singing with that fake voice again. There's Brad. And even today. And he's still one of my best, literally, one of my best friends. And we're drinking beer. And he's like, shut up, man. And he loves to sing too. And, uh, but, um. I couldn't believe how much your grandfather and your father and your family supported you. Oh yeah.
Starting point is 00:14:35 When I was reading that your grandfather would trade plumbing work for you to go and do singing lessons or you know auditions etc that's that's unusual because most parents would go oh my god my child's singing that's not a career no i know i know it was uncomfortable too because he loved me so much listen dude my grandpa did more than just trade his plumbing things he took me to auditions he would say when they used to hire me um to go work in the malls and he got me like these gigs where they would pay me 20 bucks an hour and then i would go to the mall and with a guitar player and i would like busk i guess it's busking is what it is right and i would go or outside i'd busk at gravel island or places and he would just sit and i loved it man i didn't
Starting point is 00:15:21 care who was listening where i I was. I did anything. What was the first song? The first time you performed in front of other people and got a reaction? The first song, weirdly, was, I think it was a Christmas song. Really? Well, it was because it was Christmas Eve.
Starting point is 00:15:35 We were coming home from, I've told this story many times, but we were coming home from my grandma and grandpa's on Capitol Hill. And I think it was like White Christmas or something. And my little sisters, I would have been 12, maybe 11, 12. My voice was just starting to change. And the girls were in the back.
Starting point is 00:15:58 My two sisters, my sisters are great, beautiful voices. And they were, I'm dreaming of a white great man. You know, with every great man card i write and i think from the back i went may your days be merry and bright and it was like the whole car went and i think that was the first time they were like what the that where did that just come from and uh what's interesting is i think if i really am honest with myself and i look back that bing crosby was the first because that was like that was the first record in that style and that played through the house at christmas that was my introduction to big band that was
Starting point is 00:16:43 my introduction to jazz that was my introduction to um band that was my introduction to jazz that was my introduction to um those that swinging feeling and then with that relationship with my granddad he used to we used to have a some a shag he had just like a green shag carpet and he had a record machine that he attached to a cassette machine. And we would sit down and we would just, I'm not kidding you, man, hours. I loved it. I loved it. And I used to go with those cassettes at a Walkman and I would just sit in bed and I would listen over and over.
Starting point is 00:17:19 And then I would listen to each of these singers and I would learn the song for Grandpa and Grandma so I could come over the next day and I could sing for them. And I'd sit at the table with them, you know. But I started to just steal. I mean, steal. Full-on steal. And I started to, like, almost impersonate each of them.
Starting point is 00:17:44 And I would listen to Frank Sinatra with the Pied Pipers. There was ways that he would sing, and I would try to emulate. So I would sit there, and then it would be like I was a record player. I'd come home, and Gramp would say, okay, what's today? Stormy weather. And I'd say, don't know why there's no sun up in the sky stormy weather I can't do it now but and then
Starting point is 00:18:09 the next day would be okay he'd go Dean Martin and I'd say I don't know why I love you like I do I don't know why I just do and I would emulate them.
Starting point is 00:18:26 God damn, I'd listen to the Mills Brothers. And when I'm saying all of this, you probably have no idea sometimes what I'm talking about. You see. Yeah, the way the Mills Brothers sing, there was this weird, I want to buy a paper doll that I could call my own A doll that other fella Or Nat.
Starting point is 00:18:46 Just the way he would open up and everything was so. The very thought of you. And I forget to do. And there was all these things that I would just like, oh, my God, I love that. And then I would steal it all. And I would try to emulate all of it. And then one day, you know, sitting with grandpa, I started realizing, okay, I'm starting to, wow, grandpa, I'm starting, this is the way I do it
Starting point is 00:19:11 now. Taking all those things and. And that's what creativity is, right? It is, man. And I met, I've told this story too, too many times, but I remember the first time I met Tony Bennett, I said, you know, Tony, I'm obviously, you know, I'm a huge fan. I've stolen so much from you and Bing and Frank and all of them. And he said, good. He said, because if you steal from one person, you're just a thief. But when you steal from everybody, it's research. And I thought that was amazing.
Starting point is 00:19:39 And I've told that story a million times too. But it was everything, man. Like Elvis was a big part of it. And, you know, just all of those things that I loved. But why was your grandfather doing that in hindsight? Why was, are you kidding me, dude? Yeah. Like, are you kidding me?
Starting point is 00:19:55 So it was better than crack. For who? For both of us. It's my happiness. It's my, it's my passion. It's my thing. And, you know, and like, I, I love, he would have died to know that his grandson was continuing the legacy of our heroes.
Starting point is 00:20:11 You know, cause he, if he was being honest, when I played Madison Square Garden for the first time and I said, did you think I'd get here? He said, oh no, no, definitely not. There's a clip of him on a documentary. He goes, no, I thought you'd be good you know maybe Vegas um but I just think it was because how could I we were this my grandpa was a plumber and we came we're fishermen we didn't know anybody we're never going to get we're never going to get to there we didn't even know we're from Vancouver you didn't even know anybody how are we going to get to there your story's not a straight line because you went and worked on those fishing boats as well. So it's not just you started singing at 30.
Starting point is 00:20:47 My story isn't even a straight line from fishing boats to Chuck E. Cheese to working at restaurants to singing. There's 10 years of clubs. There's 10 years of me moving to Toronto. There's 10 years of me going into every record company, not getting in the door. There's 10 years of every agent saying the exact same thing. Every manager, I thought they
Starting point is 00:21:08 had a fucking note that they would send each other. The note that said, you're really talented. You're a great young kid. We just don't know what to do with you. Over two months, dude, to a point where I was like, you know what? Okay, I'm 26. It's too late. And in this business, people can say, oh, 26. No, dude, it's late. If you haven't been signed or you haven't made a bunch of noise at 26, 27, I don't think it's right.
Starting point is 00:21:43 I think there should be late bloomers, but it isn't the usual. You know, like the record companies, they'll be like, mm be like, and so I was going to go back to Canada. I was gonna go back to Vancouver and I was thinking about going to SFU or Douglas and taking up journalism. So even then, once I was in Toronto, I got, I got, you know, connected to the prime minister of our country who their daughter was getting married. And she asked if I would sing at the wedding and because i'd given an independent cd to another guy at some corporate gig i'd done um and um they said i i was like yeah okay you know like what an honor you know and she was like you know david foster will be there and this, this producer who, and he's one of the biggest producers in the world, billions of, I mean, half a billion or a billion records, I think.
Starting point is 00:22:30 Okay. This is my chance. This is the shot for somebody to see me. But even then, after he saw me, this story didn't, it wasn't like, he didn't, David Foster didn't say, you, I found my guy. He said, come to LA and you're on my, he actually said, you're on my radar now, is what he said. Well, I didn't know that he had another 18 kids that were on his radar. You know, I was, you know, man, I got, I was good. I was gonna, I was in the atmosphere now.
Starting point is 00:23:00 You know, I was closer than I'd ever been to a real guy. 10 years in. 10 years in, that in they could make it like and i remember i think i have to say michael i think it's really very important not to brush past this 10 years because that is the no man's land that only passion could make someone wade through and that is where 99 of people quit and it's the bit that no one ever gets to see. So it's maybe the more important part of the journey, which is why does someone continue doing something for 10 years of their life
Starting point is 00:23:34 when there's no Madison Square Gardens, there's no million dollar checks and there's no fame and fortune? Like that's the, because it's a recurring theme on my show that these very very successful people they they did something which is objectively dumb which is like they gave up their amazing chance of being an academic and they went and played magic on a restaurant
Starting point is 00:23:56 card tables i know comedians you could have been a lawyer yep and now that you know it's funny i was going to tell you today like i've watched. I watch your show religiously and I was like, what if you just call yourself failure and why it's so great? Because it's like so many of the stories that are told across this table are, I failed, I failed. They said no over and over again and over again. And I just continued to go forward. These people seem like they had no choice though. And when I say no choice, I mean,
Starting point is 00:24:27 because of passion. You might listen to me, man. I'm going to say, it's going to sound like it directly. It's sort of, I don't want it to be condescending at all, but half of that 10 years gave me humility, gave me appreciation for when it would happen, I would be appreciative and I would still have humility and I would still be able to be present and aware enough of how lucky I was. But the reason that I didn't stop in those 10 years was because I knew I was the best in the world.
Starting point is 00:25:16 I mean, no doubt that if the right person sees me, I am one of the greatest entertainers on earth. And all you need to do is come into my room and you don't have to pay to see me. You can be there just to drink booze and get laid. But by the end of the night, you'll know. How do you know that's not delusion? No, no. You know what? I knew because every room I ever walked into, I was such a sensitive, insecure kid, really sensitive.
Starting point is 00:25:49 And I think that beautiful kindness and empathy that my family drove into me and my sisters is what made me that man on stage. You understand? Even now, man, I play 50,000 people and if there's one looking at their watch, I will play to that, man. And my mission, my mission, I love the rest of 49,999 of you, but you, I'm not leaving here until I break you. I'm not leaving here until, you know, you get me. I might not be your cup of tea. I might not be your favorite, but you'll walk away and you'll say, okay, the kid's better than, you know, he's, I get it. One of your kids comes to you and says, dad, I know. And they go, dad, dad, they go, now they go, dad, listen, they sing and it's terrible. And then they go, dad, I know. And
Starting point is 00:26:41 this is what I'm getting at as like, how do we know we're not just deluding ourselves? Yeah. Well, you know, it's interesting you I'm getting at. I was like, how do we know we're not just deluding ourselves? Yeah. Well, you know, it's interesting you say that because if that was just me sitting in my bathroom mirror and going, I'm amazing. Yeah, that's, I understand that. But it wasn't, it was 10 years of, I don't care if it was a shopping mall or a street corner
Starting point is 00:27:01 or a nightclub or a bar or a wedding or a funeral every room was the same every single room was the same so why wouldn't why wasn't the industry letting you in why would they I didn't do anything that was mainstream I mean I used to do it was like I had an indie record I would do indie festivals um it's so funny man I talk about it now it's like you know I'm so like mainstream whatever you want to call it, like where I could probably, you know, you know, but I was like an indie act. It was a full on indie act. It was like doing weird shit that no one else was doing. And, uh, um, I think it was just so outside even listen, David Foster, that David Foster producer guy I'm talking about. Um, funny. He doesn't remember it this way, but I remind him many times that, like, Dave, I said, when are we going to do this?
Starting point is 00:27:54 You're going to produce my record. And he said, in quotations, I will never produce your record, and we will never sign you. Never. He had a very sweet assistant named Neil, who's a beauty, the sweetest kid. And when I see him once, I mean, I would see him and he would laugh and he would go, dude, I remember that I would like say to you, just walk away because this isn't going to happen for you. You know, he's not, you're not, you're not the one. I remember he said to me, he got pissed with me because I again said to him, Hey man, come on, like sign me. And he was like, you need to get out. You need to go. He said like,
Starting point is 00:28:33 listen, dude, I told you you're on my radar. You and another 19 kids are, you know, it's just not happening. And it, and it's funny because the reason it happened when it came down to it was I was like, what do I need to do? Surely this is not impossible. And he went, okay, it's this much a track and six tracks minimum and money, money. And I was like, okay. And so this manager and I literally went back to Vancouver and she was an amazing woman. And I was like, okay. And so this manager and I literally went back to Vancouver, and she was an amazing woman, and she went door-to-door, bank-to-bank, and we found this incredible dude who underwrote, and we bought the money.
Starting point is 00:29:13 We brought the check. And I went to David's in Malibu and said, we said, we got it. Here's the money. David's a massive producer. I think it was $ hundred thousand a song. And I think for David, I remember sitting up, he had this room in Malibu and he had like all the Grammys all over his piano. And I remember we were like, we got it. And he was like, you got it? It was like, well, okay. You know? Okay. He said, but Warner will get the first right of refusal. And even that wasn't the end of the story.
Starting point is 00:29:46 We started making a demo. And we ended up going. He got Paul Anka. Do you know Paul Anka? No. OK. Well, Paul is. I'll remind you of who Paul Anka is if you don't know.
Starting point is 00:29:57 Paul, at 16 or maybe 15, had written a song called Put Your Head on My Shoulder. Put your head on my shoulder. Or Diana, I'm so young and you're so old. He wrote another song called Mile Away. And now the end is near. Huge, massive star. He was Justin Bieber, OK?
Starting point is 00:30:18 And he's still a huge star. He's still. But he got involved. And then he was like, you don't need that money. My guys will get the money. And for for whatever reason when we started making the record that deal somehow fell through and david was like it's over the money deal fell through yeah the money deal fell through and he was like and it didn't work out and somebody else will do this and i was like dude you know and there was a another producer number to get tikka he was another producer named Humberto Gattica. He was another massive producer, beautiful guy.
Starting point is 00:30:46 And he said, he took me into the car. I was destroyed because I was there. I was making the record. I was four songs into making a record. And then it was done. And David was like, I'm really sorry, Mike. It's just not going to happen. Why didn't you quit like Neil told you to?
Starting point is 00:31:03 Well, a big deal was uh umberto and he said uh he was a he's a chilean guy and he said hey buble man you need a he said you need a i drive you to your apartment and i was i was dead like i was i i had it i was there dude it was there in my hand it was there in my hand. It was there. And then it was gone. And he drove me home. And I remember he parked. I lived in Westwood.
Starting point is 00:31:30 I'd rented this little place in Westwood. And Humberto parked the car outside. And he looked at me and he said, okay, Miquelito. He said, David Foster is a strong guy, but he doesn't like confrontation at all. He said, here's what you're going to say to him. And he literally told me what to say. And about three days later, David had brought me and hired me to do something. I think it was for Kenny G and his wife at the time at an anniversary party. And I said, David, can I speak to you? And he said, like, okay. And I took David to this other little room beside the banquet hall
Starting point is 00:32:10 and literally regurgitated word for word, you know, what Umberto had told me to tell this guy. You know, David was my hero, right? David is a scary guy. When you're, you know, you look, wow, this is my. And basically the gist of the conversation was we have done something incredible. We have four or five songs here that are, you know, they're amazing.
Starting point is 00:32:34 Please give me one opportunity to go to Warner Brothers Records and to speak to the president and play my case. And if he doesn't want me, I will never, ever bother you again. You'll never hear from me again. You want me to show up and do stuff for you, I'll do it. But I'll never ask that question again. And he was like, okay. And I don't think he did love confrontation.
Starting point is 00:32:59 And I remember he called me about a day, two days later. And he said, let's see what a 26-year-old kid knows about the record business. And I went into Warner Records in Burbank, probably the scariest day of my life, of my life. And wood building, you know, look up on the wall, and it's Prince and Tom Petty and Madonna and red hot chili peppers and like, you know, holy shit, you know. And I sat in the meeting with Wally, Tom Wally is the president and he's like real good looking dude. Like, like imagine like Eric Stoltz or something, but,
Starting point is 00:33:41 you know, as that, you know as the executive and, you know, he sat down in the office and I think he said, well, why should we sign you? We have Sinatra on reprise. I think that's one of the first things he said. Sinatra on reprise, what does that mean? So reprise was a subsidiary of Warner that Frank had started. And they had Frank on the label.
Starting point is 00:34:05 You know, they had Sinatra on reprise, you know. And he said, why should we sign you? We have Frank. Must be like getting to the pearly gates and having one opportunity to get in. And I said, with all due respect, Mr. Wally, Frank's dead. You know, don't bury the music. I said, I will keep it alive. I love it.
Starting point is 00:34:27 I cherish it. I will break my ass for you. I will go out there and I will will this to be great. And he sat, he listened to the four demos. And then two days later, I had flown my grandfather down to LA. Because I mean, I had, it's funny when I walked out with David that day, I say, thank you, David, for putting your balls on the line for me like that. I said, so what do you think? And he looked at me and he said, I think you did a great job. But, Mike, I have no idea what that meant. Like, he had no idea. And he honestly, I don't think he had any concept when we walked out of those doors what Mr. Wally was going to say, you know.
Starting point is 00:35:08 And then two days later, I flew my grandfather down. I said, Grandpa, I can't do this. I need you, man. So he flew down to L.A. in that little Westwood apartment. And I was down on the treadmill. And the door sort of flung open. And he and the manager at the time, Bev, opened the door, and they were just crying.
Starting point is 00:35:33 I said, you know, come upstairs, come upstairs, come upstairs. And so we took the elevator up, and I grabbed the telephone and said, hello. And David said, hey, Mike, man. And I said, hi, David. And he said, hey, Mike, man, I want to welcome you to Warner Brothers Records. And I want you to know we have your back. And you're never going to have to worry again. And it was like, man, it was, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:35:57 And again, dude, it sounds like that's the end of the story. But that wasn't the end. Because the record came out. And it was awesome. But I believe I debuted at 198 on Billboard. And I had a manager named Bruce Allen. He was known as one of the greatest managers in the business and still is. And he said to me, kid, you're an American signed act, but you're not killing it. There's not, there's not a ton of interest. He said, would you consider going to Southeast Asia and Africa? And I was like, yeah, I'll go
Starting point is 00:36:33 anywhere you want. And I did, dude, I just started going to all the, and man, that's where it happened. I made it. And my first big hit was in the Philippines, South Africa. I started to do pretty good. I'd sold a couple million records. And my manager, Bruce, would call. And he would say, hey, kid, you want to go to Germany? I'd say, what's in Germany? Well, they got about eight journalists there. And you'd be singing in the Hyatt lobby doing a showcase.
Starting point is 00:37:02 And I guess there might've been a thought at even that point, maybe that's beneath. And I was like, no shit, man, go, yeah. And I did it, dude. I just went literally, man. I did that in all over Asia, Switzerland, Germany, Poland. Dude, you name the country and I showed up and did a showcase.
Starting point is 00:37:21 What age were you when you thought, shit, this is, you know know this is big now oh probably probably 30 20 29 so like it's happened late for me man like it this whole this whole thing happened late i was really for for what isn't the norm yeah man i i didn't know what i had my first taste of fame at maybe 28 that is so and it was in the philippines and i went to get sushi at a mall in manila and there was a security guy he was like don't go without me and i was like yeah sure and i went and went bought sushi and then all of a sudden I was like surrounded by all these beautiful Filipinos speaking Tagalog and asking for pictures and I
Starting point is 00:38:10 was like and uh I remember he was really pissed with me he was really upset that I hadn't taken him the security I was like why I don't need security and then he took me we went up to my room and I was like dude I'm sorry like that was crazy like I up to my room and I was like, dude, I'm sorry. Like that was crazy. Like I've never, this is crazy. I feel like a fucking backstreet boy or something, you know, like they were. And then he, I remember that he opened the curtain and this curtain opened and it was a building facing us. And the dude, the full building was just my face.
Starting point is 00:38:44 You're true. Yeah. And and i was like oh shit i understand now this is uh but dude it was so new you know when you've had to fight to get there for say 14 15 16 years whatever it is is there a part of you that is sort of innately scared of losing it in a way that someone who just got it like that might not appreciate yeah there was there for sure there was and does that result in work there is for all this there is for you i'm sure you sit and go like i'm kicking ass right now but you know what well you know why because naturally everything that goes up must come down no there's no there is no career i don't give it i don't care if you're a school teacher or you're a doctor. I mean, nothing just continues to go.
Starting point is 00:39:26 I mean, you have to understand that there are peaks and valleys and that there are times when you might not be the hottest, but those are the times when you continue to stay true to the brand. You don't panic. It's hard not to panic. Like I was talking about Paul Anka, but, you know, Paul is very sweet. Like he'll call me just out of the blue and he'll go like, hey, dude, you're the man. Don't trip.
Starting point is 00:39:53 You know, whatever you're feeling, if you're feeling it's up or down, just keep doing your thing, man. Be true to yourself. Don't panic. And it's beautiful. It's a beautiful, you know, and listen, for me, having four kids and an incredible, a wife that is my favorite human being in the whole planet, that made, it makes the process of that worry easier because, you know, it's funny, dude. I was terrified yesterday at that event.
Starting point is 00:40:22 Terrified, man. I want it to be great and scary to be in front of your peers. That's something you know is so important. And this morning I woke up and I was brushing my teeth and I was on FaceTime with my wife and the kids, you know. And she said, okay, how are you? How do you feel? And it was like I said, listen, Lou, I said, faith, number one, my family, number two, and my career, a really, you know, a distant third. And so for me, I'm blessed to really feel that because, of course, I get scared, man.
Starting point is 00:40:57 I don't want to lose it. And there's a million ways to lose it. But I also haven't put all of my eggs into that one basket. Has it always been as clear the priorities? No, man. No, of course not. Absolutely not. And by the way, there can be times where my false self allows that to change.
Starting point is 00:41:19 My false self? Yeah, my false self. I would say the ego. I should read more Eckhart Tolle and Power of Now. And he tells stories about the hockey team that I'm a part owner of, the Vancouver Giants. He talks about the ages, how substantial that is. But he is a big part of my life too, you know? And by the way, practicing to get to this place where it's really easy to let your fears and your, your false self give you these negative messages. And, and it was, it was helpful for me to understand that I could control that, you know, not, not allowing those negative things to get ahold of me. One of my sort of deep, I think, existential fears is that I'm not going to have my priorities in the right order and I'm going to find out too late.
Starting point is 00:42:12 I've said this a few times on this show. Yeah. I'm scared that as a guy who's like spent 12 years building businesses and pursuing success in whatever form, that life is going to tell me, Steve, at the moment when you needed to have your priorities in order, they weren't, or maybe you want to have a family or a wife or something, you know, what was it that changed, illuminated the true nature of what your priorities should be? I, I, listen, I, like I said to you before, this whole thing starts with family. And I, I, I have never been so out of touch because I have too good of a family. My mom and dad are just too beautiful people, and my grandparents.
Starting point is 00:42:54 Listen, I may not do it, but I know what the difference is between right and wrong and putting ego first. I don't want to get too deep into it because it's not that it is uncomfortable for me, but my son has his own life and his own story. My son's cancer diagnosis rocked my world. It pulled a curtain from over my eyes. And I don't want to get deeper into it, but I can tell you that I don't think that I had what you're talking about. I don't think I had context.
Starting point is 00:43:33 And that was a sledgehammer to my reality. And I will never be carefree again in my life. And that's okay. It is a privilege for me to exist. And that pain, the fear, the suffering that comes with those sort of things, I guess it's part of that beautiful, this life, you know. But if I wasn't clear, and I wasn't clear, I guess it's part of that beautiful, this life, you know? But if I wasn't clear and I wasn't clear, and it's interesting because when it actually happened,
Starting point is 00:44:13 I was going through, I think, a crisis. Like really, like the crisis that you're talking about. I don't think I had my priorities straight. I mean, I always, my family was always a love of, you know, I don't think I had my priorities straight. I mean, I always, my family was always a love of, you know, I don't think I was a terrible guy, but, dude, it was blinders. Career, you know, ambition. How do I become the baddest, biggest, best, you know, more ego, more power, more money, more. And on Halloween, however many years ago that was, dude, it's like life was lived with like
Starting point is 00:44:56 a curtain in front of me, filter gone. Filter gone. And I mean, in a moment, in one moment, gone. And I went, okay, this is it. This is life. This is, this is it. This is what's important. And that's when, that's when it's not like I thought about it. It didn't, there was no time to process it. It was, you have your priorities. This is what your priorities are. And this is what your priorities must be in order to be happy in your life. And it is.
Starting point is 00:45:51 I just can't imagine. I just can't imagine. Yeah, it's faith, family, and... A member of my family got diagnosed with a very similar illness. And I remember where I was and where I stood when I got that call. And again, I'd been running, you know, just in my own little world, hadn't called them in a while.
Starting point is 00:46:09 Yeah, yeah, yeah. Wasn't really in touch with them. And then in that exact moment, it made me realize the true reason why I do what I do. Like I, you know, and that my life should never have been so focused on self in such a way, if that makes sense. Yeah, of course. Absolutely. Absolutely. Dude, I remember being at CHLA.
Starting point is 00:46:30 I remember peeing in a stall. I know it sounds weird and it's not sexy, but I remember just sitting in the stall, standing there, you know. The children's hospital. Yes, sir. you know the children's hospital yes sir and and I remember closing my eyes and saying to myself if I get if we get out of this if we get out of this
Starting point is 00:46:58 I'm living a different life a better life and I did I made that promise to myself in like a moment. You know, I want to be kinder. I want to be more empathetic. I don't ever want to allow that ego and that false self to take over. I want to know how lucky I am. And dude, I'm a lucky man. Like, I, you know, I just look at my wife, like, you know, it's like, how how the how did that happen how did i get you know this incredible
Starting point is 00:47:26 human being who's the best of all of us you know to to sort of lead me through and and carry me through these things you know yeah yeah it's a it's a it's it's um I was just thinking about, goes back to what I was saying about how I don't want life to show me my priorities, especially as it relates to my romantic relationships where, you know, you can end up in divorce court or you lose something and you think, fuck, what are all these gold coins worth? No, no, no, but I have, dude, it's funny. You know, we've all had those moments too.
Starting point is 00:48:06 Like, listen, much younger, I had that moment where I was like, oh, dude, do you like you? Do you trust you? Do you respect you? And then I was like, if you don't, and you're expecting that person to, or any person to,
Starting point is 00:48:21 maybe you're asking too much. I hope we're allowed to look at ourselves in the mirror and man, it's so easy to lie to other people, but it's even easier to lie to yourself. You know? I'm harmful. Dude, it's so easy. And it's like, I hope everybody has the chance to figure your way to do it. I don't know what it is or how you get there.
Starting point is 00:48:42 If you need like medicine or mushrooms or whatever it is, but like to look in the mirror and to go, these are the things that I think I suck at. And, you know, and I hope I really do. I hope within us, there's a opportunity for all of us to have that self-diagnosis and honesty. And they go, yeah, I can do better than that. You know, I i on this podcast so many times i've
Starting point is 00:49:07 spoken to parents about about grief but i've never really shone a light on just the trauma of going through moments like that and really the like blast radius of of knock-on effects to that person's life that it can have implications implications to their mental health. Your son, Noah, isn't it Noah? Yeah, yeah. You've got four wonderful kids I hear. Yeah, yeah. Is doing great.
Starting point is 00:49:31 Ten years old? Ten years old. Ten years old. Yeah. But for all the priorities and the curtain that it pulled back, is there still a healing process there that needs to happen that you typically see similar to grief, if you know what I'm saying? Oh, no, no, no. Because you already, I think any parent,
Starting point is 00:49:49 I mean, I've now I've become, I've had such great relationships with so many parents and people have not just gone through this. I mean, listen, man, going through any kind of thing with like, you know, you're not going to get away without it, man. I don't know if you have already, but. I haven't had kids yet. No, I'm not talking about kids. I'm talking about your siblings or your mom and dad. We're all going to go... I mean, it's just a part of life. It takes a piece of us, you know? Like my grandpa, man. I miss my grandpa every day, but that's just... That's life. That's a part of life. And I don't know that any of us even have the capacity to deal with it. I think it's why, obviously, we move to faith. You know, something feels good about hoping that there's something more.
Starting point is 00:50:29 But men in their mental health, we don't talk about these things. No, dude, you must be soft. Don't be soft. And no crying. I'm guilty of this more than anyone, especially as like a CEO. And I've been a CEO since I was 18
Starting point is 00:50:38 and I had hundreds of employees. So I felt like I couldn't flinch. Yeah. But how do you, can I ask you, how do you, because you are a brand now, man. I know you're a beautiful, nice guy, human being, but dude, there's a brand. It's a brand.
Starting point is 00:50:52 And I know you have people on your team and I know you have a team that like, they come to you and say, we'd love you to do this. And your team goes, you can't do that. That is off brand. Yeah, yeah. How do you, how do you how do you are you able to because you're in the wave man you're that tidal wave is moving but you're inside it all you got all your
Starting point is 00:51:13 people on top and they can all kind of see how do you deal with it like what do you do can do you feel it do you think you're self-aware enough to know what the brand is or how to protect it or how to move it forward? I think it comes back to this point about authenticity. You know, you know, when something is you and when it's in line with you and you know, when you're kind of abandoning yourself, some signal inside of me goes, you know, you know, this isn't right. You know, especially if someone offers you a lot of money to do something. Yeah, sure. Oh God, I know that's not me. So fortune.
Starting point is 00:51:43 Go ahead. I was going to say, this shows a good example, which is a good question is what are the sponsors? The sponsors are companies that are in line with my values. So, you know, my Zoe, my, you know, the products that I, and also I'm a shareholder in those companies. They're a sponsor of the podcast and I'm in the team. That's a good example of it.
Starting point is 00:52:01 Whereas some brands aren't aligned. Yeah. I think what i meant even more than just brands is like you know i'm you don't understand i'm i'm i'm two different people right who's who's the other guy well the other guy is this is me i'm michael buble yeah um i'm an idiot who is i think sweet and um so you got him met a little bit well i know the other guy from stage that one that's that's a completely different dude that guy that's Michael Buble this I'm Mike uh fantasy football hockey loving idiot who you know um you know is a bigger idiot than you than I'm you're seeing here even I'm because I'm a
Starting point is 00:52:41 little bit more of the suit guy right oh fuck yeah man like bigger um i would say closer to michael scott from the office uh but dude every night i go and i put on this like this suit and then when i walk out on stage i become the guy that i always wanted to be he is so cool and teflon and he says all the right things and nothing can, nothing can, and I'm, I can be goofy, but you know, but there's this, there's an other, I mean. Can I meet him? Oh dude, you're going to meet him. You're going to meet him. I'm going to make sure that the whole world meets him. For 20 years,
Starting point is 00:53:22 I have done the same thing. It's been cyclical. Michael writes and makes a great record. And then I go and I promote it. I go to 40 countries and promote it. And then I go and tour for a year and a half. And for 20 years, it has been write it, promo it, tour it. And I feel like I'm at this point of my life and my career where I want to do something different. Listen, again, music will never, it will always be my happy place and my love. But I need time to do some other stuff, man. I need time to challenge myself and to wake up and go,
Starting point is 00:54:07 yeah, this is different and fun. And it's really, it's about being that other guy, not the suit guy. Being Mike. Being Mike, man. And doing that, whether that's in movies or television or whatever it is, it has to happen now. Why?
Starting point is 00:54:27 Because, dude, this is my favorite part of me. And I've never really, there was just, it was just too good. All the other stuff was so, because I love the other stuff. I love touring. I love, like, I love making money doing that. That's amazing, dude. What's the symptom telling you that you should do more of Mike and less of Michael? Well, just that I, honestly, truly, the excitement of doing something different, you know?
Starting point is 00:54:55 Like, yeah, it's time to, it's time to take that challenge. It's time to take that trip, you know? Like, and I know it's there the same way I kind of told you, like, that I had so much faith in, in, in knowing like, Hey man, I think I'm a pretty good voice and I can be good. I'm a good entertainer. Like I can, if I do this, I have the potential to really have fun doing that at a level I think I can, I can do. For the challenge as well, for the pursuit of, of. Yeah. It's fun to wake up and go like, you know what, instead of that same cycle, I'm at a level I think I can do. For the challenge as well, for the pursuit of... Yeah, it's fun to wake up and go like, you know what, instead of that same cycle,
Starting point is 00:55:29 I'm going to do the record, make the record, sell the record. A musical, again, will always be there, but I need to express myself in a different way for me, man. And it really isn't for them. It isn't for the audience, it's for me. It's like... But is there a moment where you you something happens because i'm trying to put this into like my world or whoever's listening as well
Starting point is 00:55:50 is there a moment where you wake up then you go i'm just a little bit less excited and it's just fallen below the level of excitement that i need to do this again no no no because man honestly genuinely um i love being out with i love making dude, dude, I just, the music is just, it fills me up with happiness, you know? So the second, I mean, I just did, I did like a corporate gig the other night with my boys. And this band has been with me for 20 years. They're my brothers, man. So I get up there and it's like, I'm home, you know? And it's like, it's fun.
Starting point is 00:56:24 It's fulfilling. It's everything. But dude, it's, I'm as fulfilled in acting, you know? When this tour started to wrap down and I was like, you know what? I want to have fun doing something a little different. Everyone can relate to that in their own context because when you have a comfort zone per se,
Starting point is 00:56:42 something you're really good at, and then you have the rewards also will align with the thing that you've developed mastery in. It's very easy to spend a decade doing or two decades doing that thing and wake up one day and go, shit, I'm a lawyer. Why am I a lawyer again?
Starting point is 00:56:54 Oh, because it paid really well and I'm good at it. But that doesn't necessarily mean it will make you happy, right? Totally. And I think the branding stuff, I definitely had an impact where all of a sudden, it wasn't, we want you to come and sing something. It was like, you know, we want you. We want Bublé. We want Bublé to do a bubbly commercial, or we want Bublé to show up and do an Asda commercial, or we want, you know,
Starting point is 00:57:18 we want you to be the face of our thing. We want you. And I was like, okay, well, what do I sing? And they were like, no, no, we don't want you to sing. We just, we want you. And I was like, okay, well, what do I sing? And they were like, no, no, we don't want you to sing. We just, we want you to be your idiot stuff. I mean, that Asda ad that I just did, I don't know if you've seen it. That was like getting to sit with Taika Waititi, who's one of my favorite directors and writers of all time. And to have him direct this thing. I mean, I was, I had so much fun and it wasn't singing. It was just, it was literally, you know, we had this talk about the concept and, and we were like, what if I'm this? I was like, what if I, he said to me like, dude, dude, what if you're the head of, you know,
Starting point is 00:57:58 quality control? And I was like, yes. And I think I know what exactly, but I'm an asshole who has no idea what I'm doing. But, you know, egotistically, I am, you know, and he understood exactly what I was going for. And we laughed. We had, it was three days of us just, you know, just laughing, laughing at ourselves, laughing. And that just, I was so happy. And it's like another reason why I'm like man this is my personality this is me where'd you go for support Michael when you're when you're struggling or when you're trying to figure out these sort of impasses in life is there
Starting point is 00:58:35 do you have you ever been to therapy do you speak to each other yeah I've been to therapy but I don't know I don't know what to say man I don't know if it i i don't know if it if it worked for me you know like it felt good to talk about stuff but then after about like four times i was like am i just am i bullshitting right now am i just telling her something just to fill up the hour because i sort of went through my big stuff. And the therapy doesn't feel like it worked very well. It doesn't for everybody. Hey, man, for me, listen, my relationship, again, with God,
Starting point is 00:59:14 and that brings me far more satisfaction. And so that, for me, and by the way, and like my wife, like being able to say to my wife, like, and I'm so honest with her. I'm like, Hey, dude, I'm not doing good with this thing. And, and, and she's like, well, still being an idiot, you know? My partners, I think that's part of the role of being a wonderful partner is that they, they call you. Oh God, I love you that you're opening it. Are we allowed to drink this? We are allowed to drink it if you want to drink it. God, my morning, my morning just got way better. I just found this on the phone. No, it didn't really. Um, Fraser and Thompson. Yes, sir. This is a whiskey brand that I'm holding in my hands that you have
Starting point is 00:59:58 built in a building with an incredible team of whiskey experts. I know nothing. They've told me that you're in, you're driving this business and incredibly involved which is oh yeah i mean like yeah i'm involved in in this this i'm you know but like what do i know about whiskey no i mean what do you know about fraser and thompson i mean i know i know that listen to me i know that if you don't know what you're doing, you hire and bring in the greatest people in the universe who literally hold your hand and tell you what to do. And you know that when you find a guy like Paul Serka, who is one of the greatest whiskey connoisseurs in the world, and then you ask him how big his brewery is and he tells you idiot it's called
Starting point is 01:00:46 a distillery not a brewery you realize that you don't know what you're talking about but this yeah is you you've worked with paul from alexa three years dude we would take three years i tell you what i worked three years because i wasn't going to be part of something that I didn't love. And the truth, man, we tried to reverse engineer a whiskey for people that may not love whiskey. And, you know, I know that there's highfalutin fancied dancey whiskeys that we can talk about the oakiness of the barrel. And they've been aged 47 years. And this isn't that. This is an approachable drink that, truthfully, I love. And as you're opening it, my mouth is going like.
Starting point is 01:01:40 And my wife loves it, and my friends all love it, and all the whiskey snobs I know like it, and I'm so proud of it, and Paul Circa. You don't know who that is, but he's a star. Oh, I read about him. Dude, three years, and we went, I was a pain in the ass, and I drove them all crazy. I've researched, I was researching photos of you and Paul
Starting point is 01:02:00 and seeing you down at the distillery, I nearly said brewery. Yeah, I know. Fraser and Thompson, where does the name come from? That's from my grandpa. Because when I was a kid, my grandpa used to take us up to camping and we would go to, in British Columbia, we have the Fraser River. It's like the muddy Fraser. And we have the mighty Thompson, which is glacier water.
Starting point is 01:02:21 And they come together in this beautiful confluence. And the truth is that it was in tribute to my grandfather. But better than that is they said to me, you know, we have the juice. Now we need a name. And, like, there was all these stupid ideas, like, and serenade in blue and all these musical things. And I was like, and every time I'd come up with a good one, like something I thought was, like, real cool and sophisticated, they'd was like, and every time I'd come up with a good one, like something I thought was like real cool
Starting point is 01:02:46 and sophisticated, they'd be like, that one's taken. And finally I was like, you know what? Why don't I just pay tribute to my grandpa who is my guy? And it's funny, man. If you look on the bottle, there's all these little hidden Easter eggs,
Starting point is 01:02:58 like his birthday's on there. 1927. Yes, sir. Born at the fork of two rivers, Fraser and Thompson. And doesn't it just sound so good it sounds the branding is you've nailed it because there's no you have because there's a story there and it's a very authentic story but the smell yeah you know what i really like i i actually
Starting point is 01:03:17 pour out a little bit of the bottle and then i take like this uh i take like brown sugar i mix it up and i put like brown sugar in there with vanilla and a little bit of bitters. And then I smash an orange and I just put it in the freezer. And it's weird because my wife was never a whiskey drinker. But again, that's what it was for. It was to make an approachable, delicious whiskey for everybody. And you know what I really like about it? We were talking about money.
Starting point is 01:03:43 So I was like really happy that we could come up with what it was i think it's like 35 40 bucks and i was like that is i was like that is great value because my dad as a fisherman he talks about value all the time because even in my ticket sales he's like if you know son if you just bring them if you give them value for their money they'll come back you know if they feel that they've been ripped off you'll never see them again so that was part of the whole thing are you scared no i can i drink it a little bit yeah because you keep touching it and i just have a glass we have a little ah here we go am i scared of getting wasted with you no no it's like a a reinvention isn't it it's a new mountain to climb building a a whiskey company so it is, uh, what's nice to talk about brand.
Starting point is 01:04:27 It's so me, dude. It's just like, uh, it's an easy thing. It's me. And again, you know how we were talking about the challenge of it. We were talking about the challenge. This isn't just me. This is a, this is my wife. We're partners.
Starting point is 01:04:43 This is my best friend, Ron, my dad, my manager, Bruce. We're all like, this is our thing. It was like part of that thing of going, what can we do that's fun and new? It would be really nice to make a gillion dollars too. I have a feeling it's going to do extremely well because it has all the core components of just a beautiful brand and product it's i mean it's gorgeous in every respect i'm sorry man i i don't even know what to say you know what i hate selling shit can i be honest with you i really do i feel itchy but it's i just hope people will go and however they need to do it get a free what you want to i want them to just try it i feel like if people just try it they'll go like blue play blue play you don't suck i actually one of the first things i did was called ryan reynolds
Starting point is 01:05:38 because this company is the same these my partners are the same as, as Ryan with his aviation gin. Right. And so I called Ryan and I was like, Ryan, do like, what do I do? And he was like, Mike, just have fun, dude. Like have fun. I was like, Ryan, but I don't know what I'm doing. And he was like, I didn't, he goes, you don't have to know. Let the, let the, let the other people that are helping make it and then let them know what they're doing. He said, just have to just be yourself and have fun. It's really, it's really it's really incredible so you know one of the things i always think about people that become really successful i always wonder if it's a curse in a way because you've been such a successful artist you've been i mean your christmas record was released in 2011 i'm so sorry about that and i'm so i'm told it is one of the best-selling albums of the 21st century.
Starting point is 01:06:26 Isn't that crazy? You know what's cute? Yesterday when I was on the bus, I was driving to the White House because of the Kennedy Standing Honors. My first time, you know. I think I was the only Canadian. And Sigourney Weaver was behind me
Starting point is 01:06:39 and I was sitting with Sheila Easton and there was all these fancy people on the bus. And I got on the bus and got to the White House. And the first thing that I heard was me going, have a jolly Christmas. It's the best time. And I was like, oh, shit. I am so sorry. Has that ever bothered you that you were so successful with that Christmas album that you hear yourself
Starting point is 01:07:05 every Christmas? No, at first, you know, it's funny, like about seven years into it, I was like, I was, cause you know, all I would get was calls it like, especially to come October. It was like, if you were a famous person with a movie or a, or a record, I was, you were calling me, like, I'm not even exaggerating. Like, it was, you know, and I would get so excited. It was like, oh, my God, you know, this, oh, my God, my hero's calling. Are they going to ask me to be in their film?
Starting point is 01:07:34 Are they going to do a duet? And it would be like, so we're doing a Christmas. And I'd be like, oh, shit. It's actually funny. Jack Whitehall, you know Jack? Yeah, yeah yeah yeah he called me the other day he's like Mike
Starting point is 01:07:46 I have this idea and I was like you're gonna say Christmas aren't you and he was like yes and I was like Jack I love dude
Starting point is 01:07:53 it's interesting we were talking about my son and that moment but that again was an epiphany moment for me where I was sitting in the hospital room
Starting point is 01:08:03 and I was like oh my God, I am now synonymous with this beautiful time of year where people don't treat each other like assholes. And there's kindness and goodness. And that's, this is, I get to be a part of this. And then people invite me into their homes at a time that is everything to them and their connection with the people they love and their memories. And then I started getting deeper. And I was like, oh, my God, oh, my God.
Starting point is 01:08:32 They're not going to, the people aren't going to remember shit when I die. They're not going to remember home or the duet or this whiskey. That is my favorite song. Excuse me. You know what I mean? But like it goes, you know what I mean? But I'm like, dude, 200 years from now when i am deader than dead you know people are going to be saying have a jolly jolly christmas i'm going to be there it's so cool it's so cool yeah i associate you with great memories good times
Starting point is 01:08:58 and i have to say home is my favorite song oh dude i love you thank you i've i mean we were i was in karaoke before you came an hour ago and i was like are you joking really no it's on video that's amazing i was i went go on youtube i went put on michael buble home and i had lyric video we're gonna do karaoke and there was four of us i was the only one singing and i can't sing yeah but i sang i know every word i know every word of that song thank you what's your favorite song? Of the Christmas stuff? No, no, no. Oh, of anything? Yeah. No, of songs that you sing and that you, yes, songs that you sing.
Starting point is 01:09:30 Songs that I sing? Of the standards? Either your own or someone else's. Oh my God, there's so many. Just one. It's impossible. Could you sing some home? It's impossible, man.
Starting point is 01:09:41 Could you sing some home for me? Home? Yeah. Oh, man. It's impossible. Could you sing some home for me? Home? Yeah. Oh, yeah. Another summer day has come and gone away. In Paris or Rome, but I want to go home. Because this place sucks. I should have that.
Starting point is 01:09:58 That should have been the lyric. I was, yeah. It's so weird, you know, like not to get too deep and too like weird, but I have this friend Dion and I do his, I love doing his accent, he's South African. And before I wrote that song, I remember he used to say, oh my God, Bochic. He's from South Africa.
Starting point is 01:10:18 He'd say, oh my God, you know what? The greatest artists in the world just open up their mind to the universe and they let the universe in. So when you're writing, just open up their mind to the universe, and they let the universe in. So when you're writing, just open up your mind to the universe. And I was in the shower, and I was like, you know what? I'm going to open my mind. It's so weird. But I was like, hmm, you know, enter. And I think, weirdly enough, for whatever reason,
Starting point is 01:10:42 I had like Canon and D in my head and I just went another summer day has come and gone away in Paris her own but I want to go home and the whole literally almost the whole I mean that almost the whole, I mean, that and the pre, boom, in two minutes. And I remember getting out of the shower with a towel. And in those days, we didn't have the iPhone or anything, right? I had like one of those little tape recorders. And I remember singing in a tape recorder and listening back and going, oh, no, no, I've most definitely stole this from somewhere.
Starting point is 01:11:20 I stole this from somewhere. And it was cool. And at that point, point too my record company they were like we don't want original songs you're the frank guy man you're gonna sing you do the standards and i was like no i think i can i write it's weird even as i got on to writing other songs i had the second record i wrote everything and hold on or lost one of the songs and and i remember the president of the label. We were at the video shoot for everything. And he said, man, I wish I would have known that you wanted original music
Starting point is 01:11:49 because we would have hired writers for you. And I was like, oh, my God, this is terrible. But it's weird, man. Like, you know, like, I live in a weird place artistically too, right? You know what I mean? I don't belong. I never did. I never did i never did like i go to those grammys and stuff and i would like look around and i was like i was not in the pop thing and i was not in a classical thing and i wasn't in a jazz thing and so many times i was like early on i was like, what am I? This is weird.
Starting point is 01:12:25 Like I'm doing standards and yet my, you know, I'm on the radio. It was weird. Still weird sometimes. I think about this when you say this and I go, but isn't not belonging how you end up doing these kind of numbers? Because if you were more of the same artistically, vocally, you wouldn't have all these Grammys and all the, you know, best-selling
Starting point is 01:12:45 six multi-platinum albums five grammy awards more billions of streams than i could possibly count stream myself a lot yeah but i go if you were if you were like everybody else you wouldn't have those achievements yeah i i don't know i wonder it just feels lonely like sometimes i look at like like i go to those award shows. Even last night at the Kennedy Center Honors, I felt like everybody knew each other. Like they kept like high-fiving. And then there was like this group of Broadway people that all know each other from the functions they do on Broadway. And there was like cool pop people.
Starting point is 01:13:18 And like, and then there was like me. And I was like, I saw Herbie Hancock. I was so excited. I love Herbie Hancock. But I didn't want to go in it. He was talking to Chita Rivera. And I was like, I saw Herbie Hancock. I was so excited. I love Herbie Hancock. And, but I didn't want to go in it. He was talking to Chita Rivera and I love her too. And I didn't want to be that guy that went in. But, um, you know what I mean? I don't know where I, I mean, maybe I'll never know where I really belong. But I'm trying to say that that's why you're so special. I don't know. I, even with what I do here, I absolutely don't feel like I belong anywhere I'm not a
Starting point is 01:13:45 journalist and I'm not qualified to do this yeah I go to they don't invite me to the award shows for journalists and media I'm not invited to them how how does that work I know I don't know we I don't know where we sit I don't even know what we are are we a podcast but it's on tv it's a this is on planes it's on chat yeah so you you do have that sense of like someone's going to come up to you and tap you go what are you doing yeah it's interesting because i feel like i if you ask me if someone asked me about you i would i would i would in a sentence be able to define what i what i feel is please give me this oh man i i honestly think watching you and watching this show like I have for years is a perfect mix of education and entertainment. I don't know how else to say it.
Starting point is 01:14:32 It's like really, it really is. It's both things. I'm often highly entertained by what's happening. But at the end, I feel like I was educated. I learned something, either something that is, you know, either ideas or philosophies, or sometimes it's literally, literally logistic science. You know what I mean? I can't tell you how weird that is to hear from you,
Starting point is 01:14:59 someone that I've looked up to since I was a kid at home in Plymouth all those years ago, watching my TV. Yeah. Four kids, Michael. I know. They come to you now, line up in front of you here and they go, daddy, listen, just need some advice on this thing called life. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:15:16 You know, you've lived a great life and it's twisted and turned and all those wonderful things. Daddy, what should we know about the nature of living a good life? I say, dude, they ask me. they don't ask me in that way yeah i was gonna say jesus christ they asked me and i said dude i'm telling you right now i have the same i have the same answer every time i say rich isn't what you think it is kid that word rich that your friends, rich sounds like money and stuff and things and Lamborghinis and tickets to go see Massey. That's not rich. Rich is having a strong faith. Rich is having a great family and loving your family.
Starting point is 01:15:56 Rich is having great friendships because those rich things they're talking about, the money, the people that I know that have the most stuff are the most miserable people that I know. And I don't know how else to explain it. Those are all, it's lovely. Listen, it's easy to say, right? It's easy for somebody watching this podcast to go like, well, that's easy for you to say, Bublé, you got a bunch of stuff, but it doesn't take long to realize that life has nothing to do with stuff and we're all sitting on that deathbed we're all going to die every single one of us and nobody looks back and says shit i wish i collected more stuff what would you regret if that was this if today was that day nothing my friend not a thing not one, not one thing, not one thing. I have lived a beautiful life. And I have been so blessed.
Starting point is 01:16:49 I don't even think it was like I made this, thank God, you know, I got a great family. I got beautiful, you know, my wife is the best thing I ever loved me. And I got kids, I look at my four kids. I mean, I was scared to have the fourth one. I was like, oh my God, I'm not, how are we? And then now I look at this little girl, Cielo, and I think like, wow, how could I ever, how did I live without her? Like
Starting point is 01:17:08 this, like this gorgeous little fat, little beautiful personality, like a wife, I, you know, not a thing. I, I, and I say, it's funny. I said it to my wife many times, you know, God forbid, you know, it's my time. I've said it many times. I would just know that I am completely satisfied. I have lived a full and beautiful life and that I have no regrets. Except that I didn't drink more of this whiskey faster. Your story is so incredible. The thing that, I mean, the perseverance at the heart of your story and where you come from and the fantasizing about the life that you now lead, all of those things are so unbelievably inspiring because there's so many people out there that are, you know, they're Michael at 14. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:18:01 Maybe they're Michael at four, you know, maybe they are that fantasizing Michael that was 14, but maybe they're 44 and they four you know maybe they are that fantasizing michael that was 14 but maybe they're 44 and they're still holding out hope that maybe those dreams that ballet dancing in the hills of peru or that playing the piano or starting that business um is it too late for them and no dude this is gonna sound so cheesy but um dude it is i say this to people all the time. I just did a masterclass thing for these beautiful kids, these underprivileged kids, basically. It was in Orange County and they didn't have music programs in their school.
Starting point is 01:18:35 And the first thing I said to all of them was, I talked about Neil deGrasse Tyson. And I said, you know, the greatest scientist on the planet will tell you that nothing cannot make something. Something cannot come from nothing. I mean, I don't care how many times they run the experiment. Something cannot come from nothing.
Starting point is 01:18:55 It cannot exist. Yet somehow, you magical little beasts walk into a room with absolutely nothing, and you walk out with something. You are defying gravity. You are, you're magicians. And listen, we will be crushed in relationships. Our partners will break our hearts. We will have businesses that fail. We'll have doors shut on us. They'll say no to us a million times. But if you're lucky enough to have something like music or a passion that you really fall in love with, it will never hurt you. It will never leave you. You know, it'll stay loyal to you. And to me, it's a, it's a massive gift. And it's funny,
Starting point is 01:19:37 it's going to sound like a really strange transition, but I love TikTok. And my wife said to me, go on TikTok. I said like, I'm too famous to go on TikTok. And she was like, you, you are TikTok. She was like, you will love it. And I was like, no, I'm not going to love it. And then I did my stupid TikTok. And I, you know, I did a dumb, whatever it was, the first TikTok. And then like, I started to like, I was like, oh, you can go, it's not just about making the TikTok, which I, cause I'm an idiot. It was fun. It was about, oh, wow, you can go through TikTok. And then the addiction began and the addiction wasn't, wasn't about seeing stupid TikToks. The addiction was finding those people you're talking about. And that was like, oh my God. Like, like if I, I don't know where my phone,
Starting point is 01:20:33 here's my phone, it's in my butt. I could go on to TikTok and can I just, may I do this? Look it up. This is going to be weird, but okay. Here's a good example. There's a girl named Julia Michelle Voice. That's what she goes under. I think she was making TikToks from like her,
Starting point is 01:20:49 maybe her parents' house or something. I don't want to, but like I heard her voice and I was like, oh my God, she has a beautiful voice. Like, and I never would have, you know, in the way that our structure of business used to exist. And the record labels and stuff. Dude, I never would have heard her. And then there's a girl named Useless Farm
Starting point is 01:21:08 who works on a farm where she has emus that attack her. And Adam Rose, who is an actor who is, anyway, I deeply love that I can go on TikTok and it's exactly what you're talking about, where I see these people and I'm like, oh my God, you are tremendous. People need to know. And it's funny because now with some of them, it's happening. And it's exactly what we were talking about where it was just inevitable, Mr. Anderson. People were going to find out because they're really good.
Starting point is 01:21:48 You know what I mean? It's just... But life just tells you to fucking get your shit together and go get a real job. I know, but I think it might be, in this business, it might be changing a little bit with platforms like TikTok,
Starting point is 01:22:00 where, you know, I know it sounds so goofy, but like, dude, I love that there's a community. And you know, I love even more that I write them. You write to them. Yeah, man, I do. I write to them as me. I do every day. I love, oh my God, dude, that is hilarious. People making fun of me. Like, can I show you one that I just saw that just- People think it's your like agent or something that's your social media manager. Let's see if this can work. I'm not great with this. We'll just do an interlude while I sing.
Starting point is 01:22:29 Maybe surrounded by a million people I... Just feel all alone. I want to go home. Let me go home. I don't want to sing because people are listening. Let me go home. Because I want to dance even though I feel fat in these pants. I couldn't remember the rhyme. I'm so sorry that this is. Here it is. I found it.
Starting point is 01:22:58 You never have to apologize. Okay. Sometimes once in a while, like I find stuff like this and I go like, they're geniuses, like truly geniuses. So the tatting says, when you change, when you change the radio station at the wrong time. Santa Claus is coming. All over your face. That was a long lead up but dude i see that and i go like someone like thought of that and then shared it and it was like i think
Starting point is 01:23:38 i don't even know hundreds of millions of times people have watched that that's crazy i think it's crazy i think it's beautiful and I love that I wrote the guy. I said, this is the mashup that I didn't know I needed. God, imagine getting a message from Michael Bublé when you've made something so ridiculous. That's what the coolest part of that TikTok is, is that it isn't about you. No one gives a shit about me.
Starting point is 01:23:58 And by the way, I don't even belong on TikTok and no celebrity really does. I think the only way you belong on TikTok is if you understand what TikTok is. And TikTok is about a community of creators and like supporting and laughing and being inspired. It's the platform that you spent 14, 15 years fighting for, which, you know what I mean?
Starting point is 01:24:19 Before we had social media, there was people like you just singing at restaurants and singing here, there and everywhere, just knocking on doors, pulling someone into a back room in a banquet and now you don't need to go and no you know attack david in a back room no i think it's funny because it started like i remember bieber justin talking to justin about how how you know what i mean or even ed even ed um it was uh you know it wasn't tikt, but it was. YouTube and Bebo. Exactly.
Starting point is 01:24:46 Yeah, back in the day. That's where it first all just is. It's so different now, man. And it's like, but it's still fundamentally the same business too, where if you can, it's all about live business. If you can do the job of putting people in seats and to entertain them live, because what's really weird is like even talking with my record company, it like oh they just we just signed this act it's great and i go like oh cool like where can i go see them and they go oh no they don't they don't tour no they don't
Starting point is 01:25:15 they've never ever played outside of their bedroom they've never been in front of people and you go like what different but just what it is and this is not just about music look at me i use the same platforms to build a show yeah and i do you know what's crazy no one knows this i went no one knows this story i went to a big radio station in the uk before i started this podcast and i begged them to give me um an audition i went down there for two hours they know who they are i wouldn't name them because it was either Sky or it was one or it was BBC. I won't say which one it was. You won't say, okay.
Starting point is 01:25:48 And I went there and I did. Capital? Somebody. I knew, I knew, I knew. And I went in there. I sat in there and the guy wasn't paying attention to me pretty much at all. I sat in there. My audition started.
Starting point is 01:26:00 The guy that's meant to be judging my audition takes a phone call, walks out, doesn't come back. I'm in there for two hours doing these fake phone calls. I leave the radio station. This was only like three years, three, four years ago. I leave the radio station. I never hear anything.
Starting point is 01:26:13 No feedback. No, you did well. You did badly. You were crap. Nothing. Never hear anything. So started a podcast myself,
Starting point is 01:26:20 which did well. Yeah. And then, yeah, like a year ago, the same radio station sent me an email saying hey i would love you to come in and do like a little guest thing to promote your book and i responded i said i'm still waiting to hear my feedback to the guy and they were like
Starting point is 01:26:34 and they conducted this in like internal investigation to find out why nobody ever got back to me so they really did yeah they really did because they sent me an email asking me to come back and do some like guest appearance i said, I was like, I came, they were asking me to do a guest show or whatever. And I said, I came in and did an audition and I still haven't heard back. And it's been almost two years now. But we have these platforms where we can do it ourselves. Whether you're a podcaster, a singer. That's what I think I find so cool about it is that there's no more, the gatekeeper.
Starting point is 01:27:02 Is gone. Is gone. That one guy who, why the hell, why was he the gatekeeper? What did he have? And now it's like, no, no, no. Now nobody likes you but the people. Like the people get to choose. Right?
Starting point is 01:27:14 And there's no, honestly, sometimes like I'll watch something and there's no, even there's no rhyme or reason. It just, it resonates, man. And you go like, oh, okay. Well, that's the people have spoken. That's a vote, isn't it? Yeah. Michael, thank man. And you go like, oh, okay. Well, that's the people have spoken. That's a vote, isn't it? Yeah. Michael, thank you.
Starting point is 01:27:29 Thank you. We're done? We're done. Okay, fine. Now I'm ready for my second cup. I'm feeling really, I'm starting to feel really good and loose. I've got one last question for you.
Starting point is 01:27:39 Oh, yeah, go, yeah. We have a closing tradition where the last guest leaves a question for the next guest, not knowing who they're going to be leaving it for. Interesting. The question that's been left is, what was your last big fork in the road decision? And how did you make it? It's coming, right?
Starting point is 01:27:56 Literally, it's coming. I would say within weeks. And I will make it by speaking to, number one, first thing, I'll speak to my wife. And then I'll speak to all the people that I trust. And I will weigh what everyone says. And then they'll help me make the decision. It's coming. Michael, you're not going to quit music, are you?
Starting point is 01:28:21 No. No, I'm not. Never. It's impossible. That's like saying, are you going to stop breathing,'re gonna stop breathing dude no no no i like to breathe and music is is my breath i can't i can't stop give me a little bit of concern that's all when you say oh no no don't let it be like it's a good thing oh okay it's just a big you know just a big decision interesting yeah we shall wait and we shall see yeah michael
Starting point is 01:28:47 thank you so much where do i leave my question for the next guest in the book oh i'm so excited i've got so many thank you so much do you need a podcast to listen to next? We've discovered that people who liked this episode also tend to absolutely love another recent episode we've done, so I've linked that episode in the description below. I know you'll enjoy it.

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