The Interview - Miley Cyrus Told Us to Ask Her Anything [Re-Run]
Episode Date: January 3, 2026To ring in the new year, we're sharing one of our favorites from last year. This episode originally published on May 31, 2025. The Grammy-winning singer talked about overcoming child stardom, acceptin...g her parents and being in control.
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Hi, it's Lulu. We're off this week. Happy New Year, by the way, but we'll be back with a new episode next week. In the meantime, we're bringing you one of my favorite conversations from last year, my interview with Miley Cyrus. Since we spoke, Miley got engaged to musician Max Miranda, who helped write and produce her latest album, Something Beautiful. The album's nominated for Grammy next month. Enjoy the conversation and we'll see you next week with a new episode of The Interview.
From the New York Times, this is the interview.
I'm Lulu Garcia Navarro.
Miley Cyrus has spent almost her entire life in the limelight.
When she was only 13, she debuted as Disney Channel's Hannah Montana.
She played a regular girl by day who had a secret life as a pop star by night.
The role made her into a household name with a string of hits,
like this one, Party in the USA.
After the play in my song,
and I know I'm going to be okay.
Yeah.
After the show ended,
she became a fully fledged pop star
in her own right.
She gave us the breakup anthem
of the decade
with her song,
Wrecking Ball.
And now in her 30s,
her mega hit flowers
spent weeks on top of the charts
and won her first Grammy.
She just released her ninth album, something beautiful.
It's ambitious and personal, and it's also her first visual album.
The lead single is End of the World.
Miley and I spoke in person in New York when she was in town for the Met Gala.
And we went to some unexpected places, talking about her close relationships with her mom Tish and her godmother, Dolly Parton, a revelation she had while undergoing trauma therapy, and how she's learned to protect herself in a world that is still fascinated by everything she does.
Here's my conversation with Miley Cyrus.
How was the Metgala?
Metgala?
Met Gallas, you know, where you're kind of, I'm sitting with strangers.
I sat this year with Cartier because I was wearing Alia who does not have a table.
Okay.
So I was kind of the misfit, which I'm always okay with.
I'm used to that.
It was fine.
But it's just an interesting situation because everything that makes you comfortable is taken from you.
You know, it's a, I think they should add you get a plus one for your stylist.
Because you're like, you know.
That's why people, I guess, go with their designer sometimes.
Right, because they, totally.
And my designer is dead.
So who are you sitting with then?
I sat with a bunch of people that I didn't really know.
But I always make friends there.
I really like John Batiste.
I thought he was, like, so cool.
I love him.
And he was my most memorable, like, guest because I just sat and talked to him forever.
He's super awesome.
He, like, sat down.
The first thing he asked me was, what's your favorite key to sing in?
No one's ever asked me before.
And he goes, I'm guessing it's a G or a C.
but I think F would probably be your ceiling
and he sat down and said that right away
I'm like, you're my friend.
I like you.
And what is your favorite key?
He was right, G&C.
Uh-huh.
All right.
We're going to talk a little bit about the past.
It's going to talk a little bit about
obviously your new music.
So we're just going to wander
if at any point you feel whatever,
you want to take a break, by all means.
I appreciate it.
I feel good.
Okay, good.
I like being in this room.
This room's good.
Oh, we like it.
Yeah.
All right.
I've got a pretty good compass of like where I feel
at home now. And so just being able to sit in a space where you feel really safe, always you get
more clarity and more honesty. And that's what I'm always looking for. You know, I've interviewed
you before. You look really familiar to me. No, we never saw each other because I was at NPR.
The voice. I was a new host back then. I hadn't done a lot of celebrity interviews.
And you came on and said, ask me anything, anything at all. No holds barred. And I had no
idea what to do with that. I literally just froze and thought, I don't know what to ask
Miley Cyrus if she's saying, ask me anything. And I was wondering, as I've watched you kind of
evolve, if you would say something like that now, starting an interview. It depends what I'm
with. I think I would say something like that now, but with, you know, maybe just paying a little
closer attention. But yeah, you could ask me anything because now I learn that I'm in control,
which is probably why I said it to you then.
The worst that happens is I just leave the room
and say, you know, I'll be right back
and then just don't come back.
I'd love for you to explain what that means for you now.
When you have this idea of being control
and being safe and understanding what your own boundaries are
and how you interact with people, you know.
Because it's animalistic.
It's like, you know, everything will change the moment that anyone
or any animal is unsafe.
It's like we all have our different kind of tellers.
Mine is like all in the three.
which makes so much sense. It's where I feel everything. I can feel like, you know, a tightness or
a shortness of breath or I can feel kind of like my skin change of when I feel, you know,
that I'm not completely safe. And, you know, I've given myself a mantra, don't run, you know,
because I can, I don't want to leave situations that make me uncomfortable because that's what life
is, you know, we've got to be comfortable being uncomfortable. But I also am, you know,
I'm the mother to myself. I mother me.
How does that play out, you mother?
I mean, I love that.
I've never really heard that.
Because my mom no longer travels with me because I'm 33 years old and it was getting ridiculous.
And now she's like an adult and I'm an adult.
And it was really important for me to, you know, I never want to say detach from my mom because we're so close.
I mean, I'll get tears in my eyes even talking about her.
I just love her so much.
But I at one point.
Close we're talking about Tish.
Yes, Tish, my mom, she's everything.
I, you know, had to learn that, you know, there might be.
And if nature plays its course in the way that it does, I will be an individual
without my mom at some point in my lifetime.
And that used to just completely paralyze me and fear.
And so I guess the reason I said, I mother me is because I don't have my mom with me
the way that I used to.
And now I just go, what was it about her that made everything better?
and it was safety again because I knew any situation that I was in that I didn't feel safe in,
my mom would get me out of it and or make it better, figure out what it is that was making me
feel that way and her helped me adjust it. And so now I just imagined what soothed me so much
about her and then I just do it for myself. You know, you have been famous forever, it feels
like. And these past few years have been absolutely huge for you. Last year, you won your first
Grammy for your song Flowers off your last album. And you exuded so much joy and so much
gratitude at that moment. And so I'm wondering why winning meant so much. So I think I never
admitted to myself how much it hurt me to not always be recognized for my work.
And, you know, I've had a lot of songs that, Flowers isn't my only big song.
I've had other big songs, but it was the time that I got recognized for it.
And I think I've hidden behind it didn't matter because then every time it happens annually, it would have hurt.
And so when I finally did get recognized, again, it was just like an extra layer of that bandage over something that I didn't even know really hurt me.
And, you know, now I have enough understanding to say, like, I don't need to win, but like anyone, I want to.
Why do you think it took so long?
I think when you do things your own way, you're always respectfully a little bit ahead because I like to open the door.
You know, it's nice when someone opens it for you, but I kind of like to be in front and open the door myself.
And I think women that are loud and, you know, open with their sexuality.
And I don't want to hide behind that.
But I do think something of my, I think there's a couple of things.
Let's go back.
I think from starting from being on Disney, you already have something that you kind of have to
overcome, which I've never understood needing to overcome Disney or being Hannah Montana
because Hannah Montana was like a singer.
and I was never nominated for Best New Artist,
which was totally cool with me.
But at one point, I just think I kind of was the best new artist.
And if it wasn't the best,
it was the most impactful to a certain generation
that there should be some sort of recognition for that
and also the amount of work that I was putting in was so heavy.
So I think with the Grammys,
it was like overcoming Disney, overcoming the character,
and then when I left the character behind, like,
all the way behind
Like it was like
Okay cut
I am officially like so me
that I think
I just went so many steps ahead
really fast
and I don't think
that everyone could completely
keep up
but then also
female rebellion
has always been something
that takes a little while
for critics
and for you know
sophisticated shows
to totally take that woman seriously
There's a lot there to unpack
That was breathless
but sorry
No no it was just like it's
No, there's just like, there's a lot there.
I mean, I'm really interested with the idea of having to overcome your Hannah Montana days
in the sense of being considered a real artist, right?
Yeah, that's what I think it kind of was.
Yeah, that somehow the machinery of Disney and how it's, you know, been the place that a lot of people have come from.
But there were other Disney artists that got dominated in that categories, but they, I believe,
I don't know who else before that, but the Jonas Brothers.
but it was boys.
And so they didn't have like a character to shed.
But because I wore a wig and I was a pop star, you know, I remember being brokenhearted because
the Jonas Brothers, I believe, got asked to perform with Stevie Wonder.
And, you know, I never got an opportunity like that as a young girl when my show had
been on air for years before.
And I had had everyone on that show with Dolly Parton.
We've had Vicki Lawrence who, like, taught me so many amazing things.
it actually was the greatest blessing, though, that those awards never happened because I was recognized all the time by millions of people that were really, you know, their identities were being formed by me. There's a part of them that's like a little part of me. And so it's like I love that people became my, you know, my reward is that people loved me and that felt good. But, you know, of course, every year, you know, never having my name called and I was just working.
so hard. And I did feel like there was, you know, not necessarily saying I am owed it or
I deserve it, but it just felt like what am I not doing? Where's the math? Because I feel like if
we're doing the equation, feel like it equals some sort of, you know, just validation, physical
validation. All right. I want to talk about the new album, something beautiful. I've always had a bit
trouble pinning your music down because you are always experimenting in this way that's innovative.
You go through different genres, different types of music. And so I'd love to know what you're
trying to do with this album. I have a hard time pinning myself down too. And I wouldn't say that
all my albums are even necessarily reflective of what I would say or who I would say I am as
an artist or a musician, sometimes my albums, you know, are experimentation for me and they end up
being shared. And so with something beautiful, I wanted to, you know, reclaim and reimagine the
word beautiful and what it means to me. Some of the most beautiful moments in my life, you know,
I am also a very emotional. I get, I cry about everything. So I'm fine. You know, but when I think
about, you know, being born, the first person that I saw was my grandma. And it gets me emotional.
And, you know, my mom was adopted. And so being able to be put into her arms and immediately
it just, it's deep. It's like way before me. You know, there's so much there. And when I think
about these moments in my life being handed to her when I was first born. And then, you know,
when she passed away, both of those moments were so beautiful.
me. And one of them is really joyous and one of them is really painful, but they're equally
beautiful. That's why I think I've made this album is just to reclaim what beauty is. Because I think
birth is beautiful. I think death is beautiful. I think we've been taught to that like rage or
hatefulness, you know, there's not a beauty in it. But it lets you know you're alive. You're feeling
something. And a big believer in rage. You have to get it out. I had physical pain in my body for
years, and I realized it's because I didn't let myself be angry. A lot of women, I think, that I've
known that go, man, I have hip pain or have joint pain. And then I watch them in their lives, you know,
yes, please, thank you. You know, my mom does this. She could order a baked potato. A cake could come,
and she'll say, thank you so much. You know, she's always polite. And she had all these headaches all
the time. And I told her, I was like, Mom, you got to get real mad. So I think rage and anger is something that
we should let ourselves feel, but it's just, you know, keep it to yourself, you know, you use it.
That's what I want to do with the things that make me, you know, angry.
When was the last time you felt rage?
The last time I felt rage.
I think, you know what?
Again, I get way too emotional, but true rage is I think probably to do with my mom, you know, or my sister.
It's like the way that it's not rage.
Rage. Real rage. You know what? I can actually know when. It's real rage was after I made an album, Plastic Hearts, and I felt myself getting caught into an idea of me, like this tornado of the idea of me, and I fell for it, and I got inside of it. And when I actually landed and came back down, I realized the vortex I had been in.
and when I looked around and thought of the people
that I had placed in my life to keep me safe
and they didn't, I had rage.
Because I actually, I don't need anyone to commit
to taking care of me, but don't say you will.
I understand that this is sensitive, so forgive me,
and you can just move on.
But obviously this was the period after your divorce.
And so...
Weirdly, I'm not talking about him.
Okay, that's what I'm just,
because sometimes I think people talk about things
but they're not talking about it,
And I'm just trying to...
No, mine is more...
Just, like, actually in my industry, you know, I have a full new creative team around me, who I have in the studio, who I create music with now.
And I think this is why my last two albums are the ones where you can hear me the cleanest and the clearest.
What is a Miley Cyrus song?
If you had to say, you know...
There's like two.
There's two.
I heard that there's only two or three genres.
there's normal people that make normal music for like normal people.
Then there's weird people, and we all know that kind of music,
that make weird music for weird people.
And then there's weird people that have learned how to make normal music
and kind of normal people that know how to make weird music.
And there's only normal and weird, and that's kind of it.
So I think I make normal music, and I also make weird music.
So, like, Flowers is kind of like normal music, meaning you can understand it.
You know, you don't have to question, you know, anything.
thing. After you listen to it, you can just simply enjoy it. And then I like to make weird
music, which is like a song on something beautiful, like Prelude or the title track, something
beautiful that just makes you question a little bit more. So I think Miley's songs are either
normal music or weird music. You know, I don't love the middle. The lead single off of
something beautiful is called The End of the World. And you've talked about how it's a song
you wrote for your mom in a hard moment. Can you tell me about writing it? Yeah. So that was
completely ridiculous. Like I said, me and my mom are very close, but it is ridiculous at some
points because she went on a vacation to Italy without me for one week. And it felt like the end
of the world to the both of us. She called me... That's what the song's about? That was what it was
about. I had never had my mom leave the country without me before. And again, too old, maybe to feel
that way, but that's how I feel. And my mom called me and she said, I don't know why, but I just,
I want to cry today. Like, I forgot where they were. Some are gorgeous. And she's like, I just
I'm looking out my window and there's nothing out there for me because, like, you're back home.
And the first lyric is, today you woke up and you told me that you wanted to cry.
That was my mom.
You sang the song at the Chateau Marmont and you got really emotional during it.
What was going on there?
My mom was right in the front row.
And, you know, there's a part, it does it to me now.
There's a lyric that says, you've been thinking about the future like,
it's already yours and to me that was just like a lyric about kind of not only mortality but also
just yeah that that that every day isn't promised to us so worrying about the future that may
never come is so pointless but then me thinking about a future without her just breaks my heart
so that's that lyric gets me every time um you're also releasing a film to go with the album
um and that's a first for you why did you want to make a film you know it's a visual album and the reason
I chose to do it was because I wanted to do one thing extremely well. You know, my stepdad asked me
me the other day, why are you the only one without a makeup line? I was like, because I don't,
there's not my passion. He goes, that's the right answer. And it made so much sense. It's like,
I don't have a makeup line because I'm not a makeup artist. And some people operate differently,
you know, and dollies always says, you do you and I'll do me together, will be us. This woman has
cupcakes, you know, Perfew. Dollywood, amusement parks. And amusement parks.
all the things, I've never felt like that was really for me.
And I've always admired that she can and wants, I mean, it's like a deep passion of her.
She absolutely adores it.
To me, it's me by a piano writing songs and telling my stories and then creating a gorgeous visual and support of that.
That's what I love to do.
It brings to mind a question that I've always had, which is you started your career as an actor and a singer, obviously.
but you, other than a few brief acting gigs, really kind of left that behind. Why?
Well, it's actually really interesting because I got Hannah Montana because I was a singer.
So I was singing in Nashville. There was a little place at our mall where you could go and make demos.
This is Nashville for you. You know, Nashville is like, we don't have a build-a-bear.
We have, like, build a country music star. So I used to go to the mall and make my demos and write my songs.
and they were looking for someone that could, you know, really sing, not just record kids' music,
but actually have music being the heart of the show.
So I got known as being an actress, but I actually hadn't acted in anything.
I had been in a big being commercial with Leanne Womack, and I had two lines in a Tim Burton movie one time.
I was not an actress.
And so I, you know, became an actress so I could bring that part to life.
and then I've just never really found the role for me
because I think I am such a character in myself
that to find something that can absorb me completely
is really challenging.
And I challenge every writer and director out there
to bring it to me because I would love to.
I just need, I either want to be myself
because I'm really good at that
or I want to throw me away
because I'm actually pretty good at that too.
I'm not good in the middle.
I want to take you,
You, we've touched on this, but your sort of upbringing.
Obviously, your dad was Billy Ray Cyrus.
And is.
And is.
He's living.
He's living.
Yeah, he's living.
Yeah.
Indeed.
I was curious about Little Miley.
When did you realize that you had this talent that you could really sing?
Not just sing, sing, but sing.
Well, even more than that, people used to pay attention to me in weird ways that I noticed that, like,
when I would go somewhere, like, not everyone was being kind of, like, looked at or treated the way that I was.
I used to have this thing when my mom.
My mom was, like, a total shopaholic when I was a kid.
She would take me to the mall, which is the worst place for a kid with, like, a bad attention span.
And my favorite thing to do would to be going into the front of the stores and pretend I was a mannequin.
And I would hold it for so long.
I would not budge.
And I would get crowds of people around staring at me because I was just, like, milking it so hard.
hard. And I think they were like, how long is this little girl going to like keep up the bit? And I would
just do the bit. And so I, you know, I definitely noticed that like people kind of, you know,
there was something magnetic between me and other people. And I don't say they were magnetized to me.
I was actually like magnet. We were to each other. But then with the singing, you know, I, I would just
always sing on stage. And I didn't know if people were just cheering because I was, you know, like little and
It was cute for me to come out and do like Elvis songs or whatever.
But I guess I never really thought like, oh, I can really sing.
I just know that people were reacting and so that's what I was going off of.
I wasn't thinking about is this good or bad.
I was just watching people light up and going like, yeah, that's what I want.
I want you to react to me.
I heard you mentioned briefly in a recent interview with David Letterman that you were bullied in middle school before you left for Hollywood and Hannah Montana.
And, you know, I'm the mother of a 12-year-old girl.
Ouch, I feel for her.
Yeah, middle school is terrible.
And I'm wondering what you took away from that period of your life,
where all of a sudden you go off to have like this amazing success,
but, you know, you had this really painful time.
Like, why was that happening?
I don't know if there was a reason, you know,
that I was like specifically chosen to be bullied.
I think a lot of what did it for me.
in middle school was the attention that I had on me because of my dad and just, you know,
people like, I guess putting on to me that I thought that I was, you know, special in this other
way. And so it wasn't about, I don't think what hurt them was that I was special, but it was that
it just made them feel not special. And I also, you know, as outgoing as I was, middle school was
kind of a shy time for me. I kind of shut down at that time just because, you know, bullying just
takes so much from you. You just don't want attention. And so I, I kind of like wanted to be
under the radar when I was in middle school. I chilled out. You know, and I was like in elementary
school, I liked all the attention. But then once I got to middle school, I didn't like it so much
because this people got too mean, too cruel. And I didn't, you know, I didn't like have all the
boyfriends or anything like that.
Like, I just, I just, there's like four guys I'm thinking of that I'm like, you.
Like, I really liked so many guys and, like, they just weren't really liking me back quite as much.
And then it was like, I just wasn't, I wasn't the most, like, popular girl in school.
So you end up going to Hollywood and you do Hannah Montana.
And it's interesting that we've been talking a little bit about getting over Disney
because I had another former Disney star who's now an actor, Jenna Ortega.
tell me that she can always tell in a room
who is the child actor
that there's like a certain noticeable precociousness
she said people just treat you as if you're an adult
and that it kind of warps you
do you think that that resonates?
I was just literally still thinking about middle school
I'm really hoping in the comments of this interview
someone goes, Miley's lying, she was really popular in school
and I'm going to be like oh my God I was popular
Maybe I was.
I feel like I wasn't, that's what I was really totally spacing out when you were saying that.
I could tell that you were like not with me at all.
Because I was really hoping that someone will go like, you're just trying to say you weren't popular.
You totally were.
I really hoped that I was.
But I don't think I was.
But maybe I was.
But my point about that with the child acting, it actually correlates to that because I don't know how she feels about it.
I've never actually got to speak to her.
I would totally love to.
I think people that grew up in the same position would be really sick to do like a roundtable.
I think you should all be in a group chat.
Totally.
Ariana says that there should be, you know, the therapy for child actors, which I totally agree.
Like, there should be a weekly, you know, check-in.
There should be, like, a better system of community because I don't know her.
I would definitely love to.
I think that I've done, you know, so there's only me, nothing to do with what she said.
Of course.
I've been, you know, doing very consistent, you know, therapy since I was 17 or 18 years old.
And so I think I've cleared up a lot of the feelings that I had about being, you know, like a child star.
And so now I don't notice it so much because I don't notice it in me.
It's always about us.
You know, I realize that anything that you're paying attention to, usually it's just a reflection of something else that you feel.
So I feel so cleaned up.
Like I cleaned so much of any of that old stuff that I held on to that now when I walk into a room, I don't really notice it.
I guess the only thing that I would say is I do notice.
people are working too hard.
To answer that question, to challenge myself on what I just said,
maybe I actually do notice because when I just, you know,
I met Sabrina Carpenter a couple of times.
And every time I see her, I have the urge to tell her, you know,
ask her if she's okay.
Like, are you doing good?
Like, are you getting enough sleep?
Because I'll see her, you know, she's like performing in Ireland.
And then the next day she's doing like a show in Kansas.
And I'm like, I don't know how that could be physically okay, you know,
because I was in that situation.
So maybe I do notice more and I kind of have the thing of just wanting to make sure everyone's feeling good because I just, you know, I know what it feels like to fry yourself and I just don't want anyone to get fried.
But I like all the new girls.
I think they're all very, you know, unique and are very found.
That's what I like to see.
I like people that are that have found themselves because I don't know if I had myself totally figured out yet.
Speaking of, you know, a lot of young stars have had to find themselves in the, you know, in the same.
the limelight and yours was a similar journey.
There was a lot of scrutiny, a lot of discussion.
When you look back at that period, 2013, when you were, you know, on stage with Robin Fick
and getting a lot of criticism for twerking at the VMAs.
All you have to say is 2013.
I know where we're going.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, I mean, I guess I'm wondering while you were shedding your Disney persona and becoming
an adult in the public eye, when you look back at that period, what do you see?
I see adults not acting like it.
That's what I see because I would never look at someone that's 18, 19, 20, 21 years old and judge them as an adult because they're not yet.
You know, at one point I think there was even a petition.
It was like millions of moms against Miley or something.
I would never be.
But it's true.
Did you sign the petition?
Is that what made you laugh?
I'm just messing with you.
Oh, my God.
You look like you're like, that was me.
Isn't that crazy?
This like petition, I'm going, well, now it seems very soft if you look at culture today.
You know, because I, like, in 2013, maybe it felt really shocking.
But at the end of it, when you watch it back, it really wasn't that wild.
I mean, I was dressed as a teddy bear.
And when you look at culture now, you know, young people, they sing about sex all the time.
So it's like, and by the way, they sing about sex way before I did too.
So that's the thing.
But, you know, for me, I think what I see is, you know, what I see in myself is, you know, being bold and courageous and, like, having the guts.
And I see myself being authentic to me.
That's what I was doing.
In the same vein, you've said that you'll never be able to live down the image of you swinging naked on a wrecking ball, which, but.
I don't need to live it down.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Which you did in the music video for the song.
Sheenade O'Connor wrote an open letter to you
after the wrecking ball video was released
and I just...
I responded in a way that I would never as an adult
but that was also an adult
talking to a young person.
Yeah, I mean, she wrote,
The music business doesn't give a shit about you
or any of us.
They will prostitute you for all your worth
and cleverly make you think
that it's what you wanted.
That sounds again like something
that's, you know, the more sophisticated you are,
you can kind of start to notice
that when we say, I know that I say things, and I think, you know, at the end of it, we both,
let me retract that.
The way I would say it is that feels like her experience, you know, being reflected onto me.
But that's not my experience.
My experience was not that the music industry didn't care about me, you know.
Yeah, that's what I was wondering, if, like, looking back, those words have a different resonance
now or you just see them differently?
No, I still don't feel that way.
But I also came from a very different upbringing where I've known fame since the moment that I was born.
I've never known anything else.
And so I think I was really well prepared in a way that someone, you, it's really hard to train yourself to know what to expect, everything that fame can bring.
But I already had the handbook because they did the same thing to my dad, you know, so I and to Dolly and to everyone around me, you know.
Dolly is a great example of that.
And so I felt that, you know, you know what I think it is, I understand the business I'm in.
I'm in the music industry.
I'm in the record business.
So when I sign a contract, they're buying, you know, records that they wish to sell.
So I understand that I am setting myself up to become merchandise.
I'm committed to them that I want to not only bring success for myself, but to them also.
So I just understand the music industry.
And at one point in my life, I look forward to just being an artist, untied, untethered.
At some point, I'll get to do that.
I guess I was thinking also of Cheneid because you did her song,
Nothing Compares to You on S&L 50 this past February.
And considering the history, I was wondering why you chose her song.
Again, well, it was actually Lauren Michael's request.
Lauren asked me to do nothing compares to you.
And it was originally Mark Ronson's idea.
who was kind of creative directing the music.
And so that was initially, you know, didn't come from me.
But I thought it was a great idea because I think we all had, again,
talking about those band-aids on heartaches and wounds.
Of course, this, you know, interaction that I had with Chenade, you know,
bums me out because I really respect her as a person, as an artist.
And so it was my way of, you know, paying my respects.
I find, you know, the relationship between female pop stars to be really interesting and often very fraught.
Divas.
Is that what you think is happening?
I mean, I'm probably on my end.
I, you know, I don't mind the word diva.
Maybe I'm a little diva.
I don't mind the word either.
It's kind of cool.
Yeah.
It's like, yeah, you know, it's a fantasy.
You can be a diva.
You don't have to even be famous to be a diva.
Just be a diva.
Diva does not mean difficult for no reason.
Do you think you're difficult?
Not for no reason.
I'm difficult, but not for no reason.
I was just surprised that you have said that you don't feel part of the cohort of singers of your, you know, sort of generation and age group.
Not that I think, again, everyone needs to have a group chat, but that you've sort of held yourself apart in a certain way.
And I was wondering, like, why you think that is.
I don't think it's so much of a conscious choice.
I think for me, I'm my personal.
sona or like my, the public's idea of me, you know, is on in some way. But in my own time,
I am very off. I like no makeup, my hair up messy, don't even have to, I don't even look
in the mirror in my own time. And it's not that I haven't found it because I haven't looked
very hard. I'm sure, like, you know, girls in my community are going like, well, that's me
too. And you haven't reached out. It's like, no, I haven't. I haven't looked very
hard. So no, I haven't found it, but I haven't really looked. I like doing my two worlds. Maybe it's
something like subconsciously from the show. Like from Hannah Montana where I think like my
famous person has one life and then like as a regular person, I have another life. I think maybe like
subconsciously it programmed me, not even joking to think that like, like, you know, who I am
at home and like who I am as a performer are like kind of two separate identities and actually
they are. It's almost like the superhero cape. It's definitely a superhero cape, but it's
drag. You know, that's how rude. That's why when RuPaul like started coming into culture,
I was like, I get this. This is what I do also. It's like the minute I put on a gown, I'm somebody
else, you know. You talked about how close you are with your mom. You know, she obviously
managed you. Your grandmother was like the head of your fan club. You had these really strong
female sort of lineage. I don't know the story.
though, about how Queen Dolly became your godmother.
It was actually because of Hannah Montana because she played my aunt on the show.
But I've known her since I was a little girl because my dad did music with her when I was just a baby.
And so then I hadn't seen her since I was, you know, very young.
And we got really tight during the Hannah Montana time.
You know, I think she looked at a little girl in a blonde wig and was like, I see you.
And there was something just very, you know, it was just divine and kismet.
Like we just, we're not blood, but we're family, you know, truly.
She said kind of, you know, when we first started getting very close, it was like, you know, I never felt this kind of like a daughter.
You know, she's really held me like a daughter.
And so she was the godmother you chose.
Yeah.
And she chose me, really.
Right.
You know, we chose each other.
Like she walked in and she just like, she don't have baby.
pink robe and like smelled like baby powder like you know her whole thing her whole face the hair
the way the whole thing and everyone was like kind of in awe of her and i remember thinking that i
didn't feel that i actually felt because when you see her at first it's just so incredible that like
you're kind of taken aback by just how much power she holds but i just felt instead of seeing
myself like retract in like all of her i just felt myself going forward and just feeling really
safe. And it also felt like I can do this for the rest of my life and I can be happy because
she just is so happy and has so much joy. And you see the, you know, you see the like celebrities
that don't have joy in their life. And she's someone else that, you know, obviously had a super
private relationship and a private life. And it was just something I always admired more than
the way that she looks or the way that she performs. I admired her, you know, her staying true
to herself and being at home with her husband, Carl, who she just lost, and having a real
life and having a lot of love in it. I do wonder at this point what it's like for you to have
grown up so famous and to also be part of this famous family. Because in the past few years,
you know, your mom remarried and that caused some rifts in your family. Your dad has a new
relationship with Elizabeth Hurley. And all this stuff gets picked apart sort of endlessly
in the media, on social media. And it must be.
complicated to have all that stuff play out publicly. Yeah, the thing I like about the new
way that the world works is that everything is so fast, it's forgotten really quickly. Like,
if you remember, like, in the 90s, like when something happened in a tabloid, remember how it would
just happen for like a year? And now it's just gone. And so that's the one thing that I like about it,
is that how fast social media moves now, it just eats everything, you know? So something may seem
really important for a couple hours, but then there's a meme that goes viral, you know, somebody
like scats at Walmart or something and that becomes the next thing. So, you know, it's difficult for
us because anything that's happening in the public, you know, it's just, it can be embarrassing,
you know, for the person that's experiencing it. You know, not so much for me. I try to just be
more compassionate to my parents because I hate that for them and I mostly hate it for my siblings
that have chosen to not be in this industry because they didn't choose that kind of highlight on
themselves. But for me, I've gotten so used to it that I'm like, if this is the symptom of this
is that sometimes we deal with these, you know, embarrassing or difficult, you know, like public
opinions, then that's something I'm willing to take to have the life that we have, but it doesn't
make it any easier, you know, mostly what makes me, you know, sad about it is for, is for them,
you know, because like I said, I feel pretty strong and I've taken so much on the
chin. I feel like I've I've stayed strong without ever getting too calloused or too, you know,
I'm pretty open for and vulnerable for how much I've been through. But yeah, just, you know,
no one likes to wake up to that. So it sucks, but it's worth it. Yeah. Are you still
estranged from your dad? Are you? No, we've all, you know, I think timing is everything.
You know, there's been enough bridges now of time to get us all reconnected.
And I think for me, as I've gotten older, respecting my parents as individuals instead of
his parents, again, because, you know, my mom's really loved my dad for her whole life.
And I think being married to someone in the music industry and not being a part of it is obviously
really hard.
And so I think, you know, I took on some of my mom's hurt as my own because it hurt her kind of more
than it hurt me as an adult.
And so I owned a lot of her pain as mine,
but now that my mom is, like, so in love with my stepdad, Dom,
who I'm also just completely adore.
And now that my dad, I see him finding happiness outside of that too,
I can love them both as individuals instead of as a kind of, you know,
a parental pairing.
I'm being an adult about it, you know.
At first it's hard because the little kid in you reacts
before the adult and you can go, yes, that's your dad, but that's just another person that
deserves to, you know, be in his bliss and to be happy. So my adult self has caught up.
My child self has caught up. You've talked some about therapy. And it's just something I just
wanted to ask you because you've discussed doing EMDR and I did EMDR. Love it. Save my life.
And I'm just wondering about that, what it did for you, how it helped you.
Because it's a very specific type of therapy that really is to do with trauma.
Yeah. You're going to get me. That's sweet. The tag on my T said, take a moment just for you. So I got to answer this question, but it's for me. The first thing that happened was I was guided to seat myself on a train. Did you do it this way where you watch it pass you by? And it's so weird because it's like watching a movie in your mind. But it's different than dreaming. You know, you're kind of more in yourself.
but still in another place of consciousness
that's really hard to describe
unless you've been in that hypnotic state.
And like I see myself sit down on the train
and he says, just watch your movie.
Like watch your life like a movie
and watch it pass you by through the windows.
And I see all these times just like, you know,
like just like frames of these moments like a film.
And I, he goes,
what's the feeling of anxiety that comes up for you
when you're performing?
And I never even thought about it before.
but in my hypnotic place said,
I just want them to love me so bad.
And he said, when was the first time you felt that way?
And then suddenly the train stopped moving forward
and it started going backwards.
And I saw myself, it sounds so trippy,
but this is medical.
This is real.
It is real.
It is real.
I saw myself in the womb of my biological grandmother
because my mom was adopted
and I heard my mom's biological parents.
talking about putting her up for adoption.
And I felt myself being inside of her womb as my mother hearing them speaking about giving her away.
And my mom thinking, I just want them to want me.
I want them to love me so bad.
And then when's the next time you felt that way?
Fast forward, I see my mom being handed to my grandmother who adopted her, who's my everything,
Loretta.
That's my mammy.
That's, she's my, she was the one that did the meeting grades.
So handing to her, and then I, just like that, I see myself being handed to my grandmother too as a baby.
So I realized both as opposed.
My mom had a really intense, very dangerous pregnancy with me.
So I wasn't actually handed to my mom.
I was handed to my grandma.
So I saw myself being handed to the same woman that my mom was handed to.
And I felt our unison right away.
And he's like, keep going, keep going.
And I found myself on a mountaintop in a place that I had experienced a lot.
lot of trauma in the snow in Montana. It was just like a moment that was just a really intense
kind of like, I guess just being surrounded by nature. You know, it really puts you in your
place. And I saw myself there as a little girl in a coat that I used to love, this like little
red coat with a red beret. And I saw all these people that had brought me so much peace and
love all of a sudden show up. So my dog that died a couple years ago, my grandma, my mom,
Oh, it'll get me.
My boyfriend that I have now, and they all grabbed me by the hands.
And we started playing Ring Around the Rosie.
And I came out of it, and I've never had stage fright again, ever.
Wow.
I don't have stage fright anymore.
Now, I did more sessions because there was so much more under that.
But I think the thing that I had of I want them to love me so bad, it wasn't mine.
It was my mom's.
And I think maybe it pained me for her to carry it, so I've been carrying it for her.
I do that sometimes.
So that's something I'm working on.
After the break, Miley and I speak again about what her fame has done to her family.
I think it would be, you know, delusional for any of us to think that that doesn't add a level of complication to our already complicated dynamic.
Hi, it's Miley.
Hi, it's Lulu.
Hi, Lulu. How are you?
I'm really good. How are you?
Very good. Good to talk to you, too. Are you home?
Yes, I'm so happy. I was gone a while, so just getting back in my bed is just bliss. I'm so happy.
Yeah, heaven. I feel you.
Yeah.
It was just Mother's Day.
I was thinking about you and Tish.
I was wondering what you all did.
We did, you know, we're very kind of simple.
So we didn't do much.
We cooked breakfast.
You know, me and my sister brought my mom flowers and just sat in the kitchen and caught up.
Somehow I got the duty of cooking breakfast for six people.
So there was that.
Are you a good cook?
I can do the simple things. You know what? I'm country enough that my seasoning is appropriate.
It's like, you know, enough salt on anything is good.
You know, when you were talking about your mom and your relationship with your mom, you talked about holding this emotional baggage.
And I think the phrase you used was owning her pain. And it made me wonder about your dad. And if you ever felt the same about your dad, because you've talked before about his rough childhood, about his own upbringing.
bringing his own struggles.
Definitely.
I have a lot of grace for him.
My dad grew up in severe poverty, you know, not always having indoor bathrooms.
And he had rarely, if at all, gone to the dentist by the time he actually met my mom.
You know, no doctor's appointments.
You know, he was raised in a super small town in Kentucky.
I spent some of my life in Nashville, but most of it was in L.A.
in Toluca Lake and a safe neighborhood, you know, and I just can't even compare our upbringings
in any way, shape, or form. You know, I think I might have mentioned my granddad, maybe I didn't,
was a Democratic state legislator. And so he, in every way, was a politician. And in that way,
was a showman, too. And so my dad had, you know, some, like, polarities in his life, too,
because when he was with his dad, he was living a completely different life than when he was
with his mom. And his mom, you know, they grew up, they all pretty much shared one living space. And
again, they didn't always, you know, didn't have, you know, the clean essentials and had a really
hard time in school. So I definitely, you know, have a really compassionate place in my heart for my
dad's upbringing that I can't really quite understand. And by the way, if at any point you don't
want to answer any of this, just tell me. I appreciate that. Because I know that this is sensitive.
The reason I sort of wonder about this is, you know, you worked so much with your dad and then you sort of surpassed him in success.
And I wondered if you ever thought he felt competitive or eclipsed by that.
That's, I think, has added a level of complexity, you know, within my family for sure.
And, you know, like you said, I think it would be hard.
hard for anybody, you know, with a dream to see somebody else, you know, achieving theirs in a way
that you see for yourself. But I do think that kind of, you know, love conquered all in that sense
of he can still find the pride in me, but I think it would be, you know, delusional for any of us
to think that that doesn't add a level of complication to our already complicated dynamic.
Have you felt guilty about it?
I got rid of my guilt and shame in EMDR.
That was a big part of that.
So at times in my life, I think I've just felt, you know, guilt and shame was a driver for me a lot.
Like, I had a hard time accepting that I could suffer because of how blessed I am.
I don't think it's actually really played too much of a part between me and my dad because I have to have the faith that, you know, like any dad, he would want this for me.
Something we didn't talk about last time is sobriety.
You've talked about how you needed to get sober to protect your vocal cords.
I'm a fellow sober person.
Yeah, it's been about two and a half years.
I know there was discussion in your family about your dad's sobriety.
Did you ever talk to him about that, about your own journey and about if it could help him or not?
I think he has a bit of a harder, you know, harder.
time completely uh enjoying being sober you know i i kind of enjoy it i think my dad is somebody that's
like that would be real nice right now um my dad always calls it he calls it a good bad habit things that make
you feel good but they're bad um so i think for him you know i grew up in a different generation
where you know my dad grew up in you know between like you know the 60s and the 80s it wasn't normal
for you to have your psychiatrist on speed dial. So I think my dad just didn't really have the support
and I think, you know, above all the steps, I think support and sobriety has got to be a top tier
of importance. So you never talked to him about it? We don't avoid it, but it's just not, you know,
not really something that's our table talk. You know, I think me and my dad like to talk about
music and movies and, you know, it's not something that's ever been our focus, but probably
should be. We probably should talk about that at some point. You know, we ended our last conversation
talking about your experience with EMDR. And you were basically describing how you work through
intergenerational trauma in your sessions. And it did make me wonder, given all that, is being
apparent something you're interested in? It's not something I'm focused on. I, you know,
for being such an opinionated kind of sure person. This is an element in my life that I've always been
pretty not super attached to like a yes or no answer. So I think I was telling you, you know,
I was talking to my stepdad and he said, why are you the only celebrity without a makeup line?
And I said, because I'm not passionate about it. And he said, that's the right answer.
I feel that way about like motherhood. It's just never been something that I've been overly,
you know, passionate about. And it's a lot of.
responsibility and it's a lot of devotion and energy. And I don't think, you know, if you're not
passionate about that, I don't know how you do sleepless nights and 18 years of what my mom
dealt with. And when I say 18 years, I mean 33 because I'm still a baby. So I just, I've never felt
the burn, you know, and I think for me, like the burn is everything. Last question. As we were
discussing how meaningful your Grammy win was. It made me wonder about your relationship to mainstream
success. I mean, how important is that to you? Because you had this whole discussion about
weird music and how you like weird music and how you like popular music. And sometimes those two
things are intention. Well, actually, I think it's winding down my attachment to mainstream
success. I kind of feel like this album, um, it's not,
Definitely not a last lap, you know. I'm definitely not going 180 in my career necessarily right now. But I think it's, you know, potentially the last time I'll do it exactly this way. I'm taking a big bet on this one. You know, I'm all in. But I don't think I'll put myself in a position that I add this much pressure to myself. Again, I think I've on this one, because of the level of
commitment. There's a lot of pressure and a lot of things are going to change about that for me
towards the end and the beginning of next year. I mean, that's really kind of my focus of using this
year to kind of wind that idea that I've had of myself down. And, you know, there's a song
on the album called Reborn and it's kind of about this. And I feel like next year for me is going to be
kind of this like rebirth of how I, you know, how I do things and how I look at my career.
But, yeah, I feel like this for me is I'm starting to wind down on the pressure and not do it like that again.
That's Miley Cyrus.
Something Beautiful is out now.
This conversation was produced by Wyatt Orm.
It was edited by Annabelle Bacon, mixing by Sophia Landman, original music by Rowan Nemistow, Dan Powell and Marion Lazzano.
Photography by Philip Montgomery, our senior brother.
Brooker is Priya Matthew, and Seth Kelly is our senior producer.
Our executive producer is Alison Benedict.
Special thanks to Rory Walsh, Renan Borelli, Jeffrey Miranda, Nick Pitman,
Maddie Masie Mastiello, Jake Silverstein, Paula Schumann, and Sam Dolnik.
If you like what you're hearing, follow or subscribe to the interview wherever you get your
podcasts.
And just a reminder, we have a new YouTube channel where you can watch this interview and
many others.
Subscribe at YouTube.com slash at the interview podcast.
I'm Lulu Garcia Navarro and this is the interview from the New York Times.
