The School of Greatness - 781 Topher Grace: Make Your Opportunity and Multiply It
Episode Date: April 8, 2019LEARN TO EMBRACE FAILURE. We often hold onto words. When someone gives us negative feedback, we can let it consume our minds. It’s not healthy. You can’t stop yourself from being offended by what ...someone says. But you can listen and be open to learning. Every time you mess up you’re making yourself better. On today’s episode of The School of Greatness, I talk about making the most of opportunities and learning how to listen with one of the most successful actors of our time: Topher Grace. Topher Grace is known for playing Eric Forman in the hit sitcom That 70’s Show, Venom in Sam Raimi's film Spider-Man 3, and many more. He is also the host of a new podcast called Minor Adventures with Topher Grace. As an actor, Topher constantly receives feedback on his work. While he hasn’t always agreed and his ego can sometimes get in the way, he has learned to work collaboratively. Topher started working at a very young age, but he has been able to sustain his career by constantly evolving. So get ready to learn how Topher Grace made the most of sudden fame on Episode 781. Some Questions I Ask: What was the greatest lesson you learned in the first season of That 70’s Show? (17:30) How can someone handle getting a great opportunity with grace? (21:00) Who has been the most brilliant person you’ve worked with? (27:00) What is life like as a father being an actor? (37:00) What’s the greatest challenge being married with a new child? (44:00) In This Episode You Will Learn: How Topher landed his role on That 70’s Show (3:00) The best way to handle criticism (23:00) Topher’s experience playing a white supremacist in BLacKkKlansman (32:00) How Topher views failure (52:30) Why it’s better to try even if it doesn’t work out (58:00)
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This is episode number 781 with Topher Grace.
Welcome to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes, a former pro athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur.
And each week we bring you an inspiring person or message
to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today.
Now let the class begin.
William Shakespeare said, this above all, to thine own self be true. Welcome to this episode. We've got Topher Grace in the house. I just went on his show that he launched,
and it was an incredible
adventure. And so we're bringing him on to share his story. And for those that don't know who
Topher is, he became famous for that 70s show. He played Eric Foreman in the Fox sitcom, that 70s
show, which took over the TV world for a number of seasons. Then he went on to play in Spider-Man 3. He was in many
other movies as well. He was an interstellar. And recently in Spike Lee's film, Black Klansman,
which if you haven't seen that, extremely powerful and inspiring as well. His other roles, he's been
in Traffic, Mona Lisa Smile, Valentine's Day, Take Me Home Tonight, The Big Wedding, War Machine,
been in traffic and Mona Lisa Smile, Valentine's Day, Take Me Home Tonight, The Big Wedding,
War Machine, and Under the Silver Lake. Lots of other stuff. This guy's been around for a while now doing some incredible work. And in this interview, we talk about the biggest lessons
Topher learned on that 70s show. What it was like being a young kid rising to fame so quickly with
his first acting job. Pretty crazy and how he got that job. We talk about
how his parents kept him grounded, being young and successful when everyone wanted a piece of them.
The power of listening on and offset when he learned to actually listen deeper and not get
into his head too much. And we discuss what Topher is still insecure about after over a decade in TV and the film industry.
Powerful interview.
Make sure to share it with your friends.
Let me know what you think over on Instagram at Lewis Howes.
And as always, you can watch the full video interview over on YouTube.com slash Lewis Howes as well.
Big thank you to our sponsors.
And I'm excited about today's episode with the one and only Topher Grace.
Welcome back to the School of Greatness podcast.
We've got the legendary Topher Grace in the house, man.
Good to see you, man.
So good to see you, man.
Doing well?
Yeah, really well.
And I'm sure you're about to say this, but we had an incredible experience together,
so it's good to see you post that experience.
Yes, we had an amazing journey, an adventure, a minor adventure.
A minor, not a big adventure.
A minor adventure.
A minor adventure, yeah.
Topher's got a new podcast out called Minor Adventures.
That's what it's called, right? Minor Adventures?
Yeah.
You create a magical experience for people.
Well, I don't know if this is what you want to go into right off the bat,
but I didn't know you then.
Yeah, we just met like two minutes before we did this.
It was like going on some date or something, and you'd been...
Sim asked me to do this thing.
He's like, hey, I'm launching this new thing.
I don't know if it's going to work or not.
It could be like the most incredible thing or a bust.
And boy, did it work.
Do you know Matt Nathanson is covering that song?
Wait a minute. What?
Yeah.
Okay.
So every episode.
Tell them what happened.
Tell them what happened.
Every episode.
We'd only done it twice before when you came on.
And I was so thrilled to have you, you know, knowing of you but not knowing you.
That's kind of one of the fun things about having a podcast.
And every guest who comes in, like you, has no idea what they're going to do.
I mean, you can vouch for that.
You had no idea what you're going to do that day.
I know you didn't because the look on your face when we announced what we were going to do was kind of like, what?
So we talked for about 10 minutes.
And then Sam announces what adventure we're going to do.
And it's been, you know, we hooked someone up to lie detector tests.
We did Reiki.
We did telemarketing on one of them.
It was hilarious.
You made phone calls.
We just did beatboxing with Chrissy Metz.
We tried to pair people with things you might not think about.
And with you, we got the best pop songwriter in the world.
She'd written for Beyonce and a lot of great artists.
And she came in and we wrote a song.
And it was bad at first.
And then she made it good.
And then she made it good.
You helped. Actually, you came up with what the whole song was kind of going to be about. And then she made it good. And then she made it good. You helped.
Actually, you came up with what the whole song
was kind of going to be about.
And then there was this moment.
I just heard it, so you're at a disadvantage
because you haven't heard it yet.
But we found it, right?
It was like this magical moment
where all of a sudden it was a real song.
And then they liked it so much
that they had Matt Nathanson,
who I'm a huge fan of.
I can't believe you haven't heard it yet.
I should have brought it on the show.
Who is this guy?
Matt Nathanson is a pop song singer and writer.
I'm sure I've heard his stuff.
Oh, you've heard his stuff.
I mean, due to rights issues, I'm sure I can't sing it right now.
But soon you'll know his number one hit single.
What's the name of it?
Wait, I don't remember it.
Even If I Fall.
Even If I Fall.
Which sounds like a Lewis Howes title for a song.
There you go.
But you really were so game.
Even If I Fall, we were talking about overcoming challenges and adversity in your life.
Well, first, you and I were talking about it.
And then when she came in the room, she wanted something that was personal.
And so we kind of referenced what we had been talking about.
And then I just heard it.
There's a moment where you kind of come up with a really important part of it.
And then I came up with what rhymed and she was basically doing all of it.
Let's be honest.
I mean,
she's an amazing songwriter.
We're just throwing out ideas.
We're just grabbing them and making them a real thing.
And then it got good.
Like we had that moment where we all went,
Oh,
and I,
I'm so glad.
I'm so glad I'm doing a podcast so you can capture moments like that.
And you'll love it when you hear it.
It's really fun, yeah.
So on the episode, you play it.
Well, yes, yeah.
The end of the, you have to go through the whole thing.
So you hear us kind of find it.
Then she plays a kind of a loose version of it at the end.
And then they wrote a whole thing.
And this guy recorded a...
I mean, I hope in two weeks this is number
one on the billboard.
By the way, remember we gave up our songwriting.
Did we? I thought we split it four ways.
I thought we split the credits.
I'll just say this on air here.
We felt
so guilty that we said
if you get someone to record it,
please, give them all the
money but uh we're gonna really regret that okay yeah i want a million dollars soon so the song is
good it's actually really good dude i don't think i well you know because i have these pauses where
i then haven't heard the show for a while and we're recording new shows so when it yeah when
i heard it i thought it was good when she was singing it kind of acoustic and then when i heard
dude i wish I could just
I should have brought it today
and just played it
for you
I would love to have
watched your face
like listen
yeah
we'll listen to it
so we did this whole experience
we did like a mini interview
I was actually interviewing you
a lot on the episode
well that was the annoying thing
Lewis
is that I am three episodes
into my own podcast
first podcast
and I'm starting to talk about
like where I grew up and what my difficulties were and challenges and overcoming them and I was like oh my god am three episodes into my own podcast. First podcast. And I'm starting to talk about like
where I grew up and what my difficulties were and challenges and overcoming them. And I was like,
oh my God, I've been hypnotized by Lewis. I mean, I've heard you do this to people,
but you did it to me. You did it to me, yeah. But I think we had the editor cut most of that
out because I remember saying in the thing, well, I see what you did here. Cut this out. Yeah,
you try, you're trying to turn it on me. Yeah, it was fun though, man. And you were,
and a lot of what you were talking about in your life was then in the song.
Do you remember Sim said at the beginning, like, he said, let's write the anthem for L.A.
Like, there's no anthem for L.A.
And then we just tore him down immediately.
We're like, no, we want to write something that's like really, you know, real.
Something, anthem for L.A.
Yeah, because he's thinking like New York anthem.
Yeah, well, I mean, it's a good idea to make money.
Yeah, exactly.
So, amazing, man.
Well, I'm excited for you.
The show's going to be amazing. I'm excited to hear this pop,
this hit number one song.
But you've had an incredible journey,
because you kind of came into fame as a teen star.
And I remember you told me,
I think when we met, that you had
zero jobs before that
or maybe did like one play
or wasn't it something like small?
Well I'd never acted before
I'd worked at Suncoast Video
at the Stanford Mall
worked at Dunkin Donuts
so that was kind of
the extent of my
15, 16, 17?
Oh yeah
and I mean like
my mom had to drive me
because I didn't have
my driver's license
and then I had a really weird
thing happen to me
which is
I haven't told this story in a long time.
I had to tell it all to America
at the beginning of when I started on Semi Show,
which is I was in a high school play.
I was, not that I'm the athlete turned entertainer
that you are.
I was on the varsity tennis team at the school,
sporting school in New Hampshire.
And I-
Which is what, like 300 students or something?
I mean, not even.
Making varsity
is like you just
have to be one of
the 12 best people
at tennis
and I sprained my ankle
and I had these
little parts
in the school play
you know
past school plays
they'd done
so I tried out
for the
like for the lead
and I got it
it was a big
kind of scandal
because I wasn't
like a drama kid
some of the drama
geeks at the school
said we were gonna
not do the show and it won't have a drama kid. Some of the drama geeks at the school said we were going to not do the show
and it won't have a...
Yeah, boycott it.
And they got over that.
And then, I mean, they're still probably mad about it
because these producers who were the parents
of the girl who made the sets
were these big time Hollywood producers.
I mean, they were just like my friend Lindsay's parents.
Right, right.
But they called me.
I was going to school at USC,
so I got out here to USC the next year,
and I guess they'd been developing that 70s show,
and they called me and said,
would you like to come try out for...
I'd just been rejected from the film school.
It's the only reason I went to USC.
I'd been rejected three times.
So I just kind of had no idea what I was doing with my life.
And I'd never auditioned for anything
outside of, like, school plays.
So you did does one school
play and and her parents my actor friends hate when I tell this story but the head of Fox at
the time you know I did a lot of like mini kind of audition they said okay we're going to the
president of Fox this is your final audition for the 70s show yeah yeah and they so they said bring
a picture and resume because this
is a real audition today i said like so like okay wait what do you mean like what's a pic and resume
i said oh it's like a photo of you so they know who it is and on the back you have a resume of
like you know all your jobs yeah i said okay cool and i showed up dunkin donuts no no first of all
yeah the back was literally dunkin donuts and Suncoast video in the one part I
played in that play. And the front was
a picture like that of me and my friends at Six Flags.
No way. I didn't know what they meant.
It's like a headshot of like, you know.
So I was, I think that they were so
shocked that I got the part. Like it was so,
they were looking for a real nerdy kid.
And that was what they got.
And they got you. Yeah, I wasn't acting nerdy.
Wow.
So you'd done one play.
Your friend who was at the school or in the play, I guess,
her parents, they saw it or something?
Yeah, they saw it. I knew them, and I knew they wrote Wayne's World and Tommy Boy,
and, you know, it was huge movies at the time,
and Third Rock from the Sun, which they wrote,
had just won a Golden Globe.
So we all knew they were watching the show.
And we thought, oh, my, this is amazing.
But I don't think in my wildest, I think my wildest dreams, I would have been like a PA for them during a summer.
Maybe I would have asked them after freshman year, like, hey.
But then I remember when she called, Bonnie of Bonnie and Terry Turner, who were, you know, just, by the way, they ran Saturday Night Live at one point,
like, very talented.
She called me, but I didn't know it would be my friend's mom.
So I was at school and just in my dorm.
At USC.
I think I was, like, a little high, and she said, like,
hey, it's Bonnie.
And I was like, oh.
Did we, like, go out?
Or, like, who are you?
Wow.
And she was like, no, uh, it's Lindsay's mom.
I was like, oh shit, I got detention. Like I, you know, I, uh, what'd I do? I was like putting out
the whatever. And then, uh, she's like, no, no, we want you to, and this is before the show existed.
So she had to kind of explain what the show was about. A couple of years ago, I bumped into
one of the producers on it and they said, yeah, we had auditioned like a thousand kids.
Like it wasn't like they were thinking of me.
Yeah, they went through everyone in LA and I guess,
I did know when I went to the audition that everyone was too cool.
They were all professional nerds.
They had like product in their hair.
They had like a little bit of makeup on or something.
Yeah, they'd be doing their lines.
Yeah, like who you'd hire to play a nerd.
I was actually a nerd who couldn't get laid in college at that moment.
But these kids were reading the script.
They're all reading the script in the hallway, and they're kind of like,
you know, Donna, I'm such a loser.
And I was like, oh, I got this.
Because I have real experience.
I am a loser.
Yeah, I am a loser.
So you did the, what was it like, your audition?
Were you nervous? Oh, God. More nervous than I've ever been for anything, because I had a feeling,
I mean, I just knew it would be a life changer if I got, even if it only went for 10 episodes
and was canceled or something, it would be totally life-changing for me. But then after I got it,
I was, I wouldn't say depressed, but I was really,
like if you haven't dreamed that big,
or anything near that scale,
and then it just happens like that.
I mean, I left the room and they said,
all right, you're going to be on after The Simpsons and before The X-Files.
I was like, oh my God.
How many auditions did you have to do?
I did like 12 mini auditions
where they just wanted to see that I could repeat
what I'd done the last time or
come up with something new and then this one big audition was the real one with like some of the
other cast members or was it just you no the only person who got cast that day was Mila who was 14
at the time like crazy but it was uh it's funny I remember everything that happened that year
and that's it like I remember anything remember anything after it. Really? Because everything, my learning trajectory
was so inverted that first year.
It was so hard.
I remember in the pilot, the director said,
great job on that scene,
but you didn't face any of the cameras.
Like I was that new to it.
I didn't know like how to, I didn't know anything.
So that first year was like the most intense experience
of my life and then it got easier, you know.
Yeah, of course.
Wow, so when there was the 12th audition,
the final one where they were like,
okay, this is it and we're gonna make a decision after this,
how did they tell you?
Oh, they came out and they said,
hey, we're taking you to dinner
because you got the part.
And then over dinner they were telling, I mean, I was in like a sleepwalking state, but came out and they said, hey, we're taking you to dinner because you got the part. And then over dinner, they were telling me I was in like a sleepwalking state.
But I remember they said, you got it.
And then the funny thing is I went back to school.
It was spring break.
So I hadn't gone back to back home.
I'm from Connecticut.
But I hadn't gone there because I had this audition.
Spring break, everyone's gone.
So this dorm of like 1,000 people was empty. And I just walked through it. And I had no one, spring break, everyone's gone, so this dorm of like a thousand people was empty.
And I just walked through it and I had no one to tell.
I told like one Korean student who was there,
because he couldn't go home, I think he knew English,
but I was like, I'm gonna be the lead of a show.
And he was like, oh.
Like I'm not even sure still to this day
if he understood me, or even if he did,
like he probably thought I was insane or something.
But, and then what happened is I started to have headaches because I had like two
months until we started working on it and I started just feeling don't take any you know I'm not asking
for pity it was just an interesting thing where I was I knew I was very lucky but I started it was
just a weird place to be to have never dreamed of anything like that ever happening and then to
know you're gonna to do it.
And it wasn't until, I actually went home just randomly.
I went home for a week and skipped school.
I was so kind of messed up about it.
And then when we started working on it, on the pilot, the first day we started working, I felt better.
I thought, oh, this is going to be really hard.
Like, it just felt like you won the lottery, and it's like you're too lucky or something, you know?
Then you're like, oh, this is real work.
This is 16, 20-hour days.
It's worse for me because I've never memorized a line, you know, really.
Like I've never done it in front of people.
I've never been on a set before.
So once I realized how hard it was going to be, I felt better, if that makes sense.
Because why?
Because you realized it wasn't going to be this lucky thing.
You had to work for it?
Yeah, it felt unfair.
It felt a little, I don't know, like I get why a lot of people who win the lottery have, like, problems.
Because they didn't work for it.
Yeah.
I think that's right.
Yeah.
I never really thought about it,
but I think you just feel like someone gifted you something.
And then, boy, did we really earn it,
because we really did it for the next seven, eight years.
Seven, eight years.
How many?
Was it eight seasons?
It was eight seasons, 200 episodes.
So it was really, it was like, I look back on it now,
it was really the most beautiful thing doing that show.
Because we were kind of the age of the kids when it started.
And then we were having these experiences at the same time
that I'm sure I know Wilmer was on here.
It was the same way.
Like we'd, I'd go, I was such good friends with Wilmer.
I'd go home and sleep
over at his house and he was in high school yeah and like and then we'd you know come back or we'd
go you know someone's to go see a movie together and we we just came from working all day together
it was just a beautiful just a great experience and that it was our first made it so sweet you
know all of you were kind of like newbies i guess well i guess maybe ashton and did some stuff but
laura had never acted Ashton never acted.
They modeled.
Yeah.
And Wilmer could barely speak English.
And Mila and Danny had acted a little bit.
Yeah.
What was the greatest lesson that you learned in that first season?
Oh, my God.
Lewis.
I mean, oh, my God.
It's lessons on top of lessons.
I mean, I guess it was mostly teamwork stuff. I wasn't in
sports, so I didn't have your understanding of, but true teamwork, not just kind of like,
hey, listen to what everyone says, but like really like we're in a crunch right now.
Who do I pass the ball to that's going to score? And that's why I think that show did so well is
because, I mean, there are a lot of reasons, but that cast really gelled fast and we all knew how to, like, this is Ashton's strength or this is Laura's strength,
that kind of thing. Yeah. Wow. What would you say is the biggest lesson from the whole eight-year
experience? Like, if you look back on all the seasons, all the things you learned, what was
the most important thing that you took away? Just the other night, I was in a tense conversation with my wife.
It wasn't a fight because I was wrong, but I really was wrong.
And I think I learned to say I'm wrong.
Over the eight seasons?
Yeah.
I think a lot of people don't, that's a skill that we don't pay a lot of attention to,
but that's another teamwork thing
and we have a kid now and like i remember the first time most of my stuff was with laura prepon
right i worked with everyone but she's amazing actress an amazing person and she's on orange is
the new black now i mean she's an incredible success and i remember in like the fifth or sixth episode, we had, I mean, it wasn't like a fight.
It was just like I thought we should do the joke one way, she thought another way.
She said, okay, let's do it your way.
And the middle of the run through, you kind of like rehearse to then run through it in front of the writers and the network and stuff.
I did, this is a first.
It's funny, you're saying be real, but the truth is I've never told a story before.
I did what her idea of the scene was because in the moment I was like, wait, she's right.
I'm wrong.
Do you know what I mean?
Like my idea of how this scene.
So I did it.
It was this kind of dance scene we were doing.
Did she know you were going to do her way?
No, but she went with it because she's such a rock star.
And then I was only 19 then, but I was like, well, I've never said this before.
I kind of went to her dressing room.
I was like, hey, you were right.
There's not a lot of like when you're a student in school, there's not a lot of times you have to.
I'm sure it's better if you say I was wrong, but I don't think there's no classes for that.
You know, and a lot of your work in high school is like very individual.
And certainly in the plays, I thought I was right,
maybe not admitting to myself a couple times
that I was wrong.
And I said to Laura like, you were right, I'm sorry.
Like that kind of, and I really meant it.
And she was like, sure, there's no way she remembers this.
But it was amazing for me.
And then over the seven years,
it's quick, like making that process quicker
like uh you know immediately like before it becomes a thing you know what i mean saying
i actually you're right wow just shaving down your ego i guess right yeah not dragging it on
yeah how do you keep yourself grounded while you guys were just blowing up you know individually
as a show as a group of you know, how did you stay, or did you
not? Everyone handled that pretty differently, but I have great parents, and I had been to
boarding school, so I already was in the process of going home all the time, and it was kind of
the same schedule. You know, you have the summers off, you have like winter break off, and so I had
a very real place. They were in the same house since I was born So it always felt like I could go out to the real world and then kind of come back in and they're they're great
They're really great my parents and they really
That work I think is done
Before the thing happens to the person. Yeah
How do you think people can should handle when a big break happens?
When when they win the lottery or something happens,
or they get a big press hit, or they get a huge client that maybe they couldn't even dream of,
like where you were at? How can someone take a step back and handle that or approach that with
grace moving forward so that they don't blow the opportunity? It sounds like you didn't blow it,
but you had a lot of headaches and stress. I would have loved to have been better too. I mean, I certainly made every mistake there was
to make, but I think like, one thing I hated, I remember at the time was people would say,
don't change. You don't know what that means, especially when you're 19. Cause you're like,
I want to change. Like I, I hate my life. You know what I mean? Like I hate, uh, like I,
I didn't hate my life, but I wanted to do so many different things. And when people are telling you not to change, you also, that's an impossible
thing to do. It's probably bad to not change. They're saying like, kind of stay grounded. I
didn't know what that meant. What do I think? Gosh, I think he's probably making every mistake.
I sadly don't know if there's a way to... It's messing up and fumbling along the way
so you can learn the lessons you need.
Yeah, I think that's why I said the most valuable lesson
was saying you were wrong.
I'll give you a great example of that.
All these lessons I live with every day
because I'm still doing the same job
is the director, David Treanor,
he directed every episode of that show,
which is very rare for a sitcom director to do all 200 episodes. And he's a wonderful human. He started on Broadway. So he
comes from a really working with actors place. Some of these TV directors, they're coming at
it from more of a visual place, but he's coming at it from an acting place. And like I said,
I was so green in terms of just communicating with actors. And like I said, I mean, I was so green
in terms of just communicating with actors.
I'd say like, you know, in my mind,
I thought you were going to do that differently.
That's like not something you can say as an actor
to an actor on set.
It's like, no, no, I saw it differently in my head.
It's like, you know, illegal.
But we were all starting and we were all,
he was very patient with us that first season.
I think in episode like seven or eight, like really early on,
came up to me and said like, can you do this scene faster?
You know, it needs to be quick.
And I get an even nicer way of saying like,
I think Eric would be, you know, more wanting to get there.
But I understood the message was like faster.
Like we got to get to the commercial.
And I was mad because I really liked the way i was doing it
it really stepped on my ego like i didn't even season yeah i didn't even look at like oh i don't
mean my ego like i had a huge ego i mean more like just it personally hurt my feelings like i had a
opinion on the scene as you always if you're an actor i think of any consequence it's because
you're you have a a uh idea for the scene point of view yeah point it's because you have a idea for the scene.
Point of view.
Yeah, point of view.
But, you know, you're not the boss.
You're hired to do that.
So I was mad.
I eventually did it faster, but I was really grumbling about it.
I think when I saw it, I didn't even pay attention to whether it was actually better or not.
I was just, like, really feeling mad about it.
And then, like, I want to say two years later,
because we were still on the show, it was now season three,
I was having a dream and I woke up, like, early one morning
and I was like, was he right about that?
I mean, this is like...
Wow, two years later.
I was still working with him all the time.
And I was like, and I noticed how brilliant the guy was.
And I was like, well, I don't know if he was right.
Maybe we both had good points.
Maybe, like, then half a year after that, I was like, no, he was right. You know what I mean?
Like I was really wrong about that. And so that was now like two and a half years later. And what
I realized I needed to do was when a director comes up to you, have that exact conversation
that I had with myself, which is you can't stop yourself from being offended. That's, you know, if I came in here and said like, ah, why did you put books here?
Why did you, it's kind of a lame studio. You can't like help yourself from being like, well,
I spent a lot of time on this studio. But what you have to do in a period of, it's getting from
two years into three seconds is to say like, okay, let me listen. Let me open myself. Let me,
you know, so I've tried to take that process. And now when like Spike Lee or Chris Nolan
or one of these directors comes up to me,
I still have the same,
by the way, if anyone comes up to you
and says anything's wrong about you,
you kind of like want to put up a wall.
And so that is an example of something
that I've taken with me where.
That's a powerful skill
because most people can hold on to words
or something that someone
says or doesn't say, an acknowledgement or a non-acknowledgement, and hold on to it for
years like you said, or months, or days, or hours.
It can consume their minds so much where they aren't incapable of taking action on their
dreams or doing better.
I wasn't every minute of every day thinking about that scene.
You've dealt with this, and I think actors probably deal with this the most because they're constantly getting critiqued or judged or having to say, no, redo the scene, I'm assuming.
So how do you teach other people to deal with those emotions where they don't hold on to something, but they take the feedback quickly?
They say, okay, this feels whatever, but I'm going to move forward.
I don't know how to tell someone else to listen.
Like, it's impossible.
It's like really only there's one person you can control.
But I will say the people who don't listen, especially on something as collaborative as a film set or a TV set, the punishment is theirs.
You know, like even if they think they're standing up for their thing, if you don't know how to listen, it only hurts you.
Who's been the most brilliant person you've worked with actor
producer director or just in general in entertainment we did an episode of my podcast
with lewis house exactly that changed the game for me i moved i gave away all my belongings
no um was there an actor that you were just like wow i've never experienced someone so brilliant
whether it be a scene or consistently or a director or you're just like...
I'm going to give you a couple people.
With directors, for me, it was definitely David Treanor,
who directed 70's Show.
And early on, my first film was Traffic.
And Steven Soderbergh was someone I was a huge fan of then.
He'd just done Out of Sight and Aaron Brockovich and stuff.
And then he was doing Traffic.
To be able to work with him, I didn't even know how to appreciate that cause it was my first film.
But in retrospect,
I look back and he also holds the camera.
So he's right there with you.
But,
uh,
Paul Weitz is an amazing director that I worked with who you've seen his stuff
like about a boy and,
um,
in good company.
And he's amazing.
I did a play with him in New York.
Wow.
Another amazing experience.
And Spike Lee,
who I mentioned,
Chris Nolan,
and that's been like my,
David Michaud
is a really great director.
More and more,
I'm working with
just directors
that I really love.
So the list gets more,
hopefully I can add
more and more to that list.
And actors,
Adam Driver
was in Black Klansman.
I got some stuff with him
and I thought he was just...
That guy's brilliant.
He was in Girls, wasn't he?
For two seasons.
Yeah, yeah.
He's in the Star Wars movies now
but he's also like...
Him and John David Washington
in that movie were like...
There were one or two scenes
I had with...
It was the three of us
and I was like,
well, this is a really fun day.
I mean, it was very heavy
subject matter
but just bouncing off actors like that is just so much fun.
What is it about those actors that make them so unique?
That you're like, wow, this has got a talent that's even beyond.
I had a thing looking at Adam a couple times where I was like,
this isn't fair.
His vessel is so much better.
He's got this deep voice.
He's got a way of delivering lines. this isn't fair. Like his vessel is so much better. See, it's deep voice and this like,
he's got a,
like a way of delivering lines.
And if I wanted to copy,
I couldn't.
You know, what else was really great for me and very informative to work with was,
uh,
Dennis Quaid.
I actually have done four things with him.
Wow.
And,
uh,
he's,
uh,
he was in traffic,
but then we did this movie in good company.
And then we did this movie a couple of ago called Truth with Cate Blanchett.
And that was another set where I was just like, Robert Redford was in that.
So we'd be in scenes sometimes, all of us, and I'd go like, screw it.
We were at dinner sometimes, and I was like, holy crap.
I can't believe I went.
Yeah, exactly.
But I think I always knew it was working with great people
because I've been in great ensembles,
but it's more and more what I'm obsessed with,
just getting around good people.
I don't even care if the movie does that well.
Yeah.
I just want to experience the journey.
What makes those people so great, do you think?
These few people you've talked about, these actors.
Oh, what's the thread?
Man, I think it's that they don't care about the money.
Wow, interesting. They care about the art,
the craft. All these directors and actors, all of them, when you are doing something for money,
it takes on, it's a different thing. And it just keeps kind of, I don't know, metastasizing. You know what I mean? It just keeps getting more about that. And if you kind of say, like, I lost money
doing Black Klansman.
You lost money because you were an executive producer?
No, no, no, no.
The film made money.
I wish I had a piece of it.
But no, they said,
we don't know if you're right for this.
They'd never seen me do that kind of role.
So I said, let me go in and read for Spike personally.
And then when I got it,
they said, oh, we'd love to have you,
but it's a local hire,
meaning you have to be from New York
so they don't have to fly you out.
And I said, oh, no, I'll fly myself.
And so when you're making decisions
from that point of view, but it's all ego.
You know, kind of if you go, oh, my God, I didn't get paid.
I had to go in and audition.
I've been in the business front.
You could not have that experience.
There are a lot of different ways
you could talk yourself out of it, you know?
So you felt like you got a pay cut. You you know you had to do things you had to drive
yourself to work whatever per se yeah but that's not hard i don't know you gotta you gotta live
that life way before uh-huh you know like i remember everyone had there was a period of time
i was on this movie i was looking around everyone had an assistant i was like why do we need an
assistant for my life is so boring like. Do you know what I mean?
Like, going to get the, when you're out of work, you know, as an actor, which is the majority of the time, like, you can go get your own dry cleaning.
Yeah, you have a lot of free time.
One time I had an assistant because it was my contract for, I was producing a movie.
And I was like, can you dial so-and-so?
And she's like, where?
And I was like, I'll do it.
You know, like, I couldn't figure out, like, it was like a waste of time to educate them.
There are jobs where you need an assistant, but this is not one of them. But I can see where
people start to detach from like, well, now I got to pay for my assistant. So I got to do this
project. And then it goes, you know, the wrong way. Wow. So what was that experience like for
you being like this white supremacist in a time of our, you know, country and world where it's
very sensitive?
Well, it's two very different things.
Playing the character and doing the research for the character
was just like near depression.
Wow.
Because I really wanted to come correct for Spike, and I did it.
I read his autobiography, which is basically his version of Mein Kampf.
And then I was watching these interviews with him.
And my wife was, we just had our kid at that point.
She was like, you need to take it in the basement.
Like, first of all, don't run those lines like around us.
But also like, you're just like depressed.
When we started shooting it, it was more fun
because I said it was so many great people to work with.
But the research was depressing.
The doing it
and also the idea of working with
Spike on something
that at that very
moment was, Charlottesville had
just happened. They added that stuff about Charlottesville
at the end later.
So you're watching the news every day. You're so
frustrated as we all are. And then you
And you're the one who's giving the lines. It's like the bad guy.
Well that's, but yes. That's like the bad guy. Well, that's... Yes.
That's when Spike would kind of come up
and be like, don't worry. I know we shot all just clan rally
stuff this week, but
this isn't what the film is going to be like.
I got you. Just to...
As an artist,
you're an actor. People shouldn't be
listening to what you're saying. They really shouldn't.
You know what I mean? I don't think there's an actor
out there that I'm like, yeah, I want to listen
to his opinion on politics.
But we all have opinions.
And to go work with someone like Spike,
who people should listen to,
and to be able to say something.
I remember when the trailer came out,
we improvised a thing.
I mean, I went up to Spike and I said,
hey, what if we worked in America first?
Because it kind of happened recently.
And he said, yeah, that's great. So during the toast, I say, America first.
And then that was the end of the trailer. Yeah, I'm giving a speech
and I lead a toast. Everyone starts chanting it after me
and I was like, oh, this is going to play in the theater. And then when it was at the end of the trailer,
I was like, is Trump going to see this? I mean, I know
he watches TV, you know?
Right, right.
And so it was a very cathartic experience.
It was very tough, but it was very cathartic
to be able to have all this frustration
and kind of be able to, you know,
it's Spike who's saying something,
but I get to help him say something I really believed in.
So that was a moment where you had your own opinion
and the director said, yeah, I like your opinion.
We did a lot of rehearsals too.
I think that might've come out of rehearsals
and it's something not a lot of directors do.
But John David, that was his first starring role.
We were in these rehearsals, and I was like, oh, this is going to go great.
This guy's amazing.
Wow.
That's incredible, man.
Now, what is that like for your personal life when you play a character that is this evil character in a very sensitive, touchy subject.
Not like the bad guy in some Star Wars movie.
Well, if you're playing the Joker, you can do a little bit of like,
well, maybe I kind of see his point of view because in my made-up story,
his father was abusive to him or whatever.
In this, it's like I couldn't find that thing.
The more I read and did research on him, and it was a lot,
I couldn't find that thing that made me sympathize with him.
So what I did was I just played kind of pure evil, but totally covered up.
And that's how he is, too, in my opinion.
It's like it all looks very easy to digest.
And then the deeper you go, the more... And hopefully that's what it feels like it all looks very um easy to digest and then the deeper you go the more
and hopefully that's what it feels like in the movie like the more you get to know the character
this guy how do you i mean where did you feel any attacks personally in your personal life like
did people come up to you and say i said that to spike when i was cast i said are you know man like
i ride the subway sometimes like and he said no no don't worry like uh I think it's
John Turturro or someone said that to him on Do The Right Thing and he said no no you're with me
like like don't worry about it and it's true the thing I wasn't scared about was black people
thinking I was racist I think I was scared about was white racists thinking I was racist
huh and someone you know kind of looking at me and going you get it really and i haven't had
any of that but i don't really hang out with any of those people but i would like chilling yeah
so i don't know but uh interesting i'm uh i i was nervous when it came out and i was glad that the
film was i saw it at can for the first time when it premiered and i remember we were doing it i
would say to spike like i mean i hope we get this, but it's so much humor
on top of something that's so heavy. Like, can this work as a movie? And to his credit,
I turned to him and can, I was like, I have never seen anything like this. And it did work. And I
just, I couldn't believe it. It's a beautiful movie, man. It's great. Yeah, it's very good.
Now, what is life like? What was life like pre-marriage and baby as an actor, thriving in Hollywood,
and now you have a one-and-a-half-year-old married?
And what is life like now as a father, being an actor, starting a podcast,
doing these projects?
How do you handle it emotionally, physically, spiritually, everything?
Well, it's amazing i mean it's everything everyone tells you and you don't listen yeah beforehand and you wait
as long as you can yeah i did i literally did but uh i think yeah it does get worse but it gets so
much better that it's worth the ride and uh and my daughter is now at this age that's you know
unbelievable uh i would say the podcast if i go project by project the podcast is the most fun and my daughter is now at this age that's unbelievable.
I would say the podcast, if I go project by project,
the podcast is the most fun because it's five minutes from my house.
And I have a reason to leave once a week.
And what's great is the nature of it is it's not just,
you know, like you got to hear my life story.
It's probably boring to you.
But like when you came on, we got to talk about like,
you know, I'd never written a song. And then similarly, I've never been hooked up to a lie detector test or I've certainly never done beatboxing. So it's like all these adventures.
Everyone who has a new kid should definitely have a podcast where they have a different expert
coming. It's like a liberal arts education for a 40 yearyear-old or something. There you go. So that's really fun.
And there's kind of nothing hard about that.
And I'm home two hours later with my kid.
I'll tell you, I'm in this, there's an adaptation of The Hot Zone coming out on Nat Geo,
which is one of my favorite books from the 90s.
And I'm in it, and there's a scene where I had to cry.
And the real difference I noticed was beforehand I'd have a little trouble crying sometimes.
I had to work myself up.
After the job.
Oh, man, it was like I couldn't.
It's a very emotional scene.
Really?
Yeah, and I just, like, so fast.
I just went there because you're just, I don't know,
you're just more loaded up.
You didn't know that chamber existed for you, you know?
Do you feel like you're a better actor then?
Well, I'm certainly better better crying actor yeah if you want me to be uh less emotional maybe that's hard now but uh no i think it's good for now you can always scale it back you know what
i mean but to find a new kind of cylinder it's good yeah do you feel like you're creating uh
you're gonna do you feel more urgent to be a working
actor or you kind of like i've had my time and if something comes cool but i want to be a father and
oh yeah i think or is it like it would be hard to find the actor who's a dad actually that's
probably not true you probably could find it it's just you wouldn't like that guy who's like
get me on location right i'm like part of the reason that I'm excited to have a podcast and hopefully we monetize it at some point is because I would love to, you know, take one movie a year off the docket.
Really?
Yeah.
I mean, who doesn't want an office job?
When you're younger, you're thinking, how can I be an actor and be in movies?
And now I'm like, how do I just stay home?
Really?
Yeah.
One, even before we had a kid, you crave the schedule.
The ground that is the routine.
There's no schedule.
I'll have like two months where I don't work and then a month where I'm getting up at 4.30 every morning.
And, you know, it's like I'm all over the place.
Every project is so different.
I'd love to just have a company I go into and just work at.
Yeah, especially having a kid.
You have the opposite life of most people.
You do too probably, exactly but most people don't want to go to an office and like
work every day they want to have like the flexibility and freedom and be on creative
projects and well it's funny you just you did that for 20 years yeah i grew up my dad would come home
at you know 6 p.m every day and i think that was good for me and it was good for him you know
yeah the routine is powerful.
Whenever I'm traveling too much,
I feel like I'm off my workout schedule, my...
But you probably got,
like if you have a problem,
you're like, okay, let's sit down,
let's fix it, right?
Exactly.
Like, okay, so how's this going to be my new schedule
and I'm going to do...
That's like what most,
you wouldn't know this,
but most humans just let it kind of go.
Sure, sure.
And then they kind of go,
my life's crap right now
like i gotta figure it out but uh i hope in terms of i think what your original question was which
was um you know do i seek out projects as much no but a little bit that's having a kid a little
bit of that is kind of feeling confident that like i'll probably work again so the right products
will come to you
yeah there was a time 10 years ago where you go like come on but I you know what's funny I realized
I didn't have to do that it just was you know I was young you know the anxiety of it yeah yeah
because there's a lot of actors who I think we might have talked about this briefly on
on your show there's a lot of actors who they might be huge hits and then for three four five
years get nothing because
they've been casted as a specific role or whatever and they just can't even get auditions yeah look
i i uh i entered the business in a really unfair way i i've worked hard to uh earn it in retrospect
you know what i mean by yeah i mean hopefully but it's still probably nothing compared to someone
who has to enter from the ground and so i have great respect for people who you know really have
to grind it out and trying to earn it now what would you say is your biggest insecurity my penis
is too big too big yeah and it's like do I get the surgery or right um no uh my biggest insecurity or fear or well it wouldn't have anything to do with work
anymore you know like and that's another thing about having a kid and really when i met my wife
you start feeling you're in a family that uh it would be like i don't know like the polar ice
caps are melting like when she's an adult there there's not gonna be any polar ice caps that's
not right right and I can do nothing.
Except maybe be in Spike Lee's movie about climate change.
Maybe you can do a little something.
But yeah, it's all kind of family stuff.
And also being a new dad is like,
you just think of every worst case scenario.
Yeah.
Save yourself, man.
You're not married, right? That sucks, man, no.
Just don't be in it.
You're like, why did I do this?
I care so much about this human.
Yeah.
It's unbalanced, you know, but it's too late now.
What's the greatest lesson you learned from your daughter so far?
It would be something involving patience.
She's not that old, so like.
Learn about yourself through her.
Well, yesterday was my day.
I take Tuesdays.
That's all me.
And, oh, man, it's long. I mean,
it's like, no one tells you, uh, how kind of boring it is at the beginning. I mean,
she can't even talk yet. So like we're spending all day together. She's kind of like hitting a
pillow and I'm like, this was a good five minutes and we got to fill up, you know, 12 more hours.
Patience. Patience is what she's talking about. You know? Yeah. I guess also like you don't,
I hate to be cliched because it's what everyone says,
but you didn't know you could love someone that much.
You know, it's like, but everything I'm saying, everyone's said before, you know.
But it's true, huh?
Oh, yeah.
I mean, yeah.
She looks like me.
It's totally self-centered.
She looks like me.
I'm like, this is beautiful.
What's been the greatest challenge being married in the relationship while having a new child?
You know, it's funny.
Everyone said, like, it's the sleep.
And I was like, man, I've done all-nighters on film.
Like, I've done a whole movie that was all-nighters.
You know what I mean?
I'll just kind of figure it out.
And it's not that.
It's like all-nighters with this incredible amount of stress.
And so it's just, I would say it's kind of a sleep and my wife's a rock star I mean like
I've really married up so she she's a great parent I am a good co-parent with her but she is in like
a born amazing parent and and she's also a rock star everything everything she does. So I've just been trying to kind of, you know, bend the knee.
You know, like in Game of Thrones, you know what I mean?
Like I bend the knee to you.
And she's – but that's part of any business, right?
Like I feel that way with Sim on this podcast.
Yeah.
Sim has already made one of the great podcasts of the early podcasty world, podcast sphere.
And I did have a point where I worked with people that I was friends with more on movies and producing and stuff.
And I realized I do want to work with friends if they're the best at what they do.
That's not always the case with your friends.
And so I didn't know Sim.
I mean, I'd met him once years ago, and then I went on Anna's podcast, and he said, I want to take you
out to lunch. And I was kind of open to it. I said, sure. I thought it was like to hang out
or something. He said, I want to do your podcast, because I guess it had gotten like a lot of
downloads or something. And I said, well, I don't want to have a podcast. And then I thought the idea, he was so passionate about it as Sim is, and he's so, he's at the forefront of this new
thing that I thought, you know, I'd like to work with him on this. And it's really him. Like he
came up with that format of the adventures. Like I couldn't have come up with, I don't know what my
bad idea for a podcast would have been with me. But someone once told me, you've got to feel, if you have a partner,
you both have to feel like you're fleecing each other at all times.
Fleecing each other?
Yeah, like taking advantage of each other.
I'm winning being married to my wife, and she just doesn't know it.
I'm sneakily, and it's the same thing with Sim.
I just show up and do my thing.
And if he feels that way about me and my wife feels that way about me,
then it's, you know.
Then worse.
Yeah, I'm sure my wife will be thrilled
that I compared her to Sim Sarna.
In all endeavors.
Right, right, exactly.
This is great.
Do you remember what I made you talk about
when you came on mine?
I was like, do other motivational speakers,
do you hate them?
It didn't make our podcast, so don't worry about it.
But it was like, you turn on Facebook,
everyone's like living their best life and whatever, but you actually did it.
But like, I mean, people are watching this thing right now, but these people, it's got like 34 likes and probably half of it's their family.
And I was so obsessed with like, what does that feel like to be, what a weird time we live in.
No one could do what you do normally 10 years ago, but now everyone's talking on
their phone and telling them, you've got to stick with your dream.
I'm like, you don't even have your life together.
I don't mean you.
I mean the person who's-
Everyone's trying to be a coach of something, and that's why I've tried to take a different
angle and not be necessarily a coach, even though people come to me for coaching and
mentorship or whatever, but I try to be a facilitator. A facilitator of ideas and say,
I'm going on an adventure, kind of like you.
Here's what I've discovered for myself. Here's the lesson
I learned. Because you can do that.
The other thing, you can't really, you can't
tell someone, do this. You'll be better,
right? I mean, but you can say, like, talk about
yourself. Right, exactly. Here's how I learned
because I was chasing my dream doing this. This is what
I learned, and here's something you can try.
It bugs the shit out of you, right?
Come on.
Like, you're watching these people.
And also, one, you're going, I could do this so much better.
And two, you're saying you're doing it wrong.
It doesn't bug me because it allows me to rise to the top.
That's smart.
You know what I mean?
It's like, okay, everyone's looking for answers or looking for solutions.
And it allows my platform to continue to rise.
I feel like that when I watch just a terrible movie.
With bad acting. I go like, oh, this isn't so hard. I also look at like, I want people to succeed.
Like if their dream is to be a coach or to be this or that, like I want you to figure it out one day because I want to collaborate with people who are rising. Sure. So I look at, you know, it's just
like, I don't know if you see someone who's a bad actor when you're starting out, but then they worked on it for 10 years and now it's like
their career took off.
I don't want those people to take it.
I want, especially people who are 40 year old male, white.
Right.
Nerdies.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I want those people to fail miserably and there's kind of only one spot left.
It forces you to get better though.
That is true.
If there's competition, it forces you to say, you know what?
Good.
I'm going to learn how to be better.
I'm going to learn how to grow,
how to invest more in my resources and my time,
how to have a different, unique opinion
so that I stand out.
Do you know who's the best actor to watch talk?
I mean, I don't really like watching actors talk,
so I'm even wary.
Opinion out of the screen.
Outside of the screen is Ethan Hawke.
I just straight up YouTube videos of him
giving interviews.
He's always saying stuff that's really important about the craft or outside of the craft.
And he told this story about River Phoenix because they were in The Explorers together.
Do you remember that movie?
No.
It was in the 80s.
They were like kid actors in it.
Like who knew they were both going to blow up so hard?
Like it was just, they were two kids in a movie with these three boys who've gone out of space or whatever.
And he decided to go to boarding school
and this is before
Dead Poets Society or any of this stuff and just decided to be
a real kid. River Phoenix
became everything. He was the coolest guy
in Hollywood all of a sudden and
you gotta hear him tell this story but
River Phoenix was in like a Rolling Stone interview
where he's on the cover and he's talking about reading Catcher in the Rye
and Ethan Hawke's like, you didn't read it.
I read it and I told you what it was.
You know, he's so, he said it was an agony of jealousy of River.
Wow.
And he said when he died, it just like exploded him.
Like he went like, I was wrong.
Like that guy was making me better the whole time.
Like I wouldn't have been in Dead Poets Society.
I wouldn't, he like wouldn't be doing what he's doing today if he didn't have that.
Competition or that other.
I don't even know
if it was just competition.
It was like he also respected him
on a certain level
and thought he was great.
And I just went,
oh, that's so great
he told that story
because I do think you're right.
Ultimately, people you respect
give you,
I had that in tennis.
If you play someone worse than you,
you lose to them.
You play someone better
and you get better, you know?
You know, LeBron James
wants competition
because it's going to
make him score more points and be one of the
greatest of all time as opposed to, oh, I only need
20 points in this game to win. This is the difference
between you and these guys on Facebook.
This is what I'm saying. You actually came from doing something where
when you say that, I go, oh,
you know, you've been on the field. You'd rather
play against the best and win and you're like,
man, I gave my all and it worked as
opposed to like, oh, that was an easy season, we won the championship because we didn't play anyone.
I know you're right.
I mean, in the way that moviemaking is like sports, I agree with you.
It's like, if there was a hundred bad movies, and you were the only good one, and you're
like, oh, we're going to win every award, cool, feels good, but it's like, no one.
Well, back that up, actually.
Do you mean the Academy Award?
Yeah.
Or any other way.
I'll take that. Yeah, I guess, huh. Do you mean the Academy Award? Yeah. Or any other way. I'll take that.
Yeah, I guess.
But you know what I mean.
It's like you'd rather win knowing, like, man, there were four other great nominations.
But I think what's even better is that they make you better.
It's not just that, like, you kind of can feel the competition is actually the wrong word.
It's got a negative.
Yeah, not competition, but just other quality work.
Yeah.
Other people doing great work that make you want to do great art as well.
Yeah.
Here's more of a personal question for you.
Hypothetical.
Imagine this is your last day.
Oof.
And it's not going to happen, but it's just… Why did I come to your podcast?
It's like I went from my family and my…
I've got to get out of here.
Imagine in a year or a couple of years, it's one of your last days,
and your daughter isn't able to speak yet.
So I guess it's coming up in a few months.
And you can leave her with one lesson that you can record on a video
or you can say over audio that this would be a lesson that she can learn.
Right, because she's the age now where I'm like, chair.
Right, right.
Chair.
That would be the right lesson. When she's 16, 18, 21,
she can open this lesson
and listen to it, watch it.
She can take it in.
What would you say to your daughter
on how to experience her life?
You know, it's funny.
It's something I talked about
on Anna's podcast
because it was a movie I did with Anna.
I had had enough successful things that I got to produce a movie, and it failed so hard.
It was number 11 out of 10, opening weekend.
I mean, it was just like, and it wasn't for lack of me trying.
It was for lack of me knowing anything about how to do something like that.
And I cared so much about it.
And I was so, I knew that it got held for a little bit, which is very painful.
And in that time, I felt like I had then digested the lessons, but it was kind of too late.
Do you know what I mean?
So I knew there was learning going on.
But when it came out, I was just devastated.
So I knew there was learning going on, but when it came out, I was just devastated.
And then a couple months later, like from that time on, my life has been,
my working life has been unbelievable because it taught me so much.
Even after you failed so miserably.
Well, I would say that.
I mean, everyone has a different version of the story, but failure is the most wonderful teacher.
It's nothing to be ashamed of. It's like all the current successes I'm having
are because of trying to go deeper in a thing that I didn't understand. And there's no way,
I'm watching my daughter right now. You know, she didn't start walking until she fell on the floor
like a thousand times. So, you know, I'm sure it hurt. She can't even talk about it. She's learning
to try to talk. And it's the same thing. I was really, I didn't even understand what the job of actor was until I got out of it as a producer and
saw there were all these other elements. And every right move that I make now is because I made a
wrong move then. And it was great talking to Ana about it because, by the way, I like the movie
still. It wasn't like it was a terrible film. It just kind of, gosh, you go back to each experience and you say,
I mean, who doesn't do this past a certain age?
If only I could change that.
If only I could change that.
But that's what the future is about, is being able to change it, right?
So what would you say to her?
I'd say failure.
Yeah, just don't be.
You know, at the time, I had so many wins in a row.
Yeah.
And you get addicted to that feeling.
But it's actually, I tried to do this mathematically once.
It's like when you're feeling challenged, you're actually going up the mountain.
And when you're going down the mountain, you feel amazing.
Like there's no challenge.
You're just sliding right down it.
You know, so like it's so much fun.
But then you look up a year later and you go, oh, I didn't do anything of any consequence consequence or whatever but uh every time you're messing up I felt it the whole time I was doing 70 show I'd
learn how to the best way to do an interview and that's only from doing like I went on Leno and I
couldn't speak I was so nervous you know I mean it's like and then they were like that was a
terrible interview and then you could figure it out and you know it's so I just the, I just, the whole thing, I guarantee you,
this is the thing to do, to look at other people who are crazy successful, who you want to be like
and go, oh, they messed up. You know, they've done it all wrong too. Maybe they were not as
famous as I was when they were messing it up. But I think like, that to me is my, it's just,
think like that to me is my it's just i so embrace failure now when i fail i know i'm i'm i'm uh my status is rising which i think a lot of people think when they're failing they're going down
it's really kind of when you're succeeding that you're not growing right you're not growing you
might be hitting a stride but you're not no it's just the act of just succeeding the work is when
you're working and it's challenging and
then it has success that's great that work was great but you know i just went to 200 parties
for black klansman that doesn't help anything right you know what i mean like just having fun
you're just like maybe helps the movie's chances at being nominated or something but it's truly
when you're just what i've noticed for me i'm so bad at it, this is how it feels to me, is that when you're dealing with obstacles and you're even
failing against them, but then you're learning how to do it better, that's when you're actually
climbing. It's just painful. Yeah, I hear you. Man, this is called the three truths, this question.
But I got to think of my Lewis Howes metaphor for climbing.
Something with rock climbing, or can you give me one?
So you rock climb, it's painful, it hurts you or whatever,
but that's how you have the muscles at the end.
Whatever, I don't know.
This is called the three truths.
I ask this question at the end for everyone.
So you kind of shared one already,
but maybe you'll have a different three here.
So imagine this is your second death.
Wow, okay.
What is this podcast called, actually?
Am I dead now?
You've got to go through pain, remember?
I'm in some kind of purgatory
where you just interview me
until we see if I get into heaven or something.
So imagine this is your last day.
You're 100 and something years old.
You live as long as you want to live.
You achieve everything.
80's good.
Okay, 80's good. You achieve all the things you want to achieve. You have the life of your dreams.
You go through failures, ups and downs, but it's the final day. And you look back and you say,
I don't regret anything I did at all. Great life. And you get to leave behind three truths,
three things you know to be true from all your experiences, all your lessons, all your
ups and downs that you would share with the world, not just your daughter, but with the
world. What would you say are your three lessons or three truths to the world? Oh, man. Well,
yeah, the failure would be one. That would be if you are getting that penis reduction surgery,
if you are getting that penis reduction surgery,
research the doctor.
That's all I'll say.
No, the other two would be,
oh man, I'm not, you know,
I'm not anyone that someone should listen to.
But just what do you feel from your life experiences that makes sense for you?
I would say, yeah, maybe one that's in tandem
with that failure thing is being up for anything.
I noticed that when you came on our podcast because we were talking about sports and then we were talking about being an orator kind of.
And then someone came in and said, we're going to write a pop song.
And you didn't miss a beat.
I thought you were maybe going to go, I was kind of hoping to be honest, that you were going to be like, I can't do this.
Because you want a guy who's confident.
But you jumped right in, man. And you told me a story when we were talking so i think i knew it
was gonna be like that where you did the musical in high school yeah and if there's a yeah yeah
that's like i didn't do it but i jumped in i was scared of football but i didn't play football i
was doing the musical so like i think that quality which i learned maybe later in life i wish i'd had
it has to do with failure, but I think
it's a slightly different thing. It's like just jumping
and even if I fall,
hit single,
coming out on iTunes, and they're out now.
It's...
That is true. It's like it's worse
to not have... Tried.
To try. It's worse to not have tried than to never try
at all or something. That's one of the lyrics, dude!
That's one of the lyrics! Man, I can't wait.
I can't wait for you to hear this.
I love that you still know the lyrics.
That's how good it is, man.
So catchy.
How memorable it is that we wrote it and we remember it.
But like...
It was like three months ago or something, right?
It was a while ago.
I really believe in that.
I've had a couple of instances where some director will say,
like, you know, we want him to fly out here to try out for it,
but, you know, don't waste the trip.
You know, it's who knows.
I can't promise you the role or whatever.
And I think, man, get on that plane.
Go.
You never know.
Yeah.
You never know.
But it's so much easier said than done.
My dad used to say that to me all the time.
Like, ask her out.
You know, ask her to prom.
What's the worst that can happen?
What happened?
She rejected me in front of all my friends.
But I even think that made me stronger so
i think that's and then my other one would be three truths oh man
just dance like no one's watching uh it would be uh uh i think there's some there's a balance of
real world and fake world it doesn't just have to to be Hollywood, although Hollywood is a much more pronounced,
like you really can tell like what is the red carpet
or what is you at home in sweats.
But I think everyone has a version of,
you know, kind of this curated work life thing
in this home where you feel comfortable.
And I think you have to be tipping,
the very least tipping in the direction of home.
I heard this thing on Charlie Rose once years ago where he was interviewing Andre Agassi. And he said, hey,
I'm going to ask you a question. What's the best day of your life? But first, I'm going
to play the same question I asked Pete Sampras on my show last month. So they turned to the
monitor and Pete Sampras said...
When I beat Agassi or what?
No, it was just kind of like tied match set, whatever.
Do you know what I mean?
With Agassi, overtime, you know, whatever.
And, you know, beautiful day, maybe Wimbledon, you know, that kind of thing.
And then it came back to Agassi and he said, oh, that's really kind.
Like, wow.
And he said, well, what would be your best day?
And he was like, I probably had like a barbecue with my family.
Like it wasn't about tennis at all.
It was great. And it just showed the difference between those two players right
sampras was you know kind of a real robot about it agassi was more of an artist and i do believe
that your personal stuff is tied to whatever your professional wants or dreams are kind of can't
happen without that balance wow that's pretty interesting yeah i think i've heard that truth
before that's powerful did you say it or something no I don't think I've heard that truth before.
That's powerful.
Did you say it or something?
No, I don't think I've heard that.
Oh, you don't think you've heard it.
Oh, I thought you said, I think I've heard it before.
No, I don't think I've heard that before.
I housed your book last night, man.
No, that's good.
Now, yeah, I think I would say page 82.
No, I think that's powerful.
I want to acknowledge you for a moment
for constantly showing up and reinventing yourself
because I think it's hard to be a star in one show
and then continue to reinvent and do other challenging projects
and try to do that in this space.
I've seen a lot of actors who haven't been able to do that,
and you've been doing it for 20 years.
Someone asked me on the red carpet of Black Samson Theory,
did you ever see yourself playing the Grand Wizard of the KKK
back when you were doing the 70s show?
And I was like, what?
Why would I have been daydreaming about if I could ever play the exact opposite?
But it's powerful, man, because you're willing to take risks.
You're willing to take the jump.
You're willing to fail.
And I acknowledge you for that, man.
I acknowledge you for being a powerful father, a great leader for your family and everything that you do.
And taking the risk for the podcast.
So congrats on that as well. Thank you, dude. And thank you for, by the way, I was,
just so your audience knows, I was two episodes in before you. Yeah. Really nervous.
People had vouched for you and I was aware of you, but you don't know what someone's actually
going to show up with that kind of energy. And we should give you a cut of that show because you
were so great. The adventure went so great. It our first like great one and like that's good just thank you
for coming on me and i went downhill after that no i'm just kidding no well weirdly i kind of it
could but it's when you see that something it's just like doing a show or movies if you see it
can start working then that becomes the roadmap of like how do we do this kind of thing yeah so
kind of led the way for the i won't tell you what the first two episodes were, if they're airing, right?
Great.
Well, make sure you guys check out the podcast.
It's called Minor Adventures, Topher Grace.
And where can we connect with you online?
I'm not too active on social media, but I guess follow Minor Adventures.
Minor Adventures?
They'll tell you when.
On Instagram or Twitter or wherever it's at?
I'm so bad at this part.
Okay.
But you're on Instagram, right?
Yeah. Yes. Once I got married, I was like, I'm going to do this part. You're on Instagram, right? Yeah, I, yes.
Once I got married, I was like,
I'm going to do two photos a week.
That's a promise.
Okay, cool.
So you're reminding me I have to post a photo
at some point this week.
Okay, perfect.
And is there a website for you as well or?
No, I'm sorry.
Just social media, check out the podcast,
subscribe to it.
My final question then is,
what is your definition of greatness?
Give me other answers real quick.
I'll give you mine. It is to discover the unique talents and gifts within you
and use those gifts to pursue your dreams and in the pursuit of your dreams,
make the maximum impact on people around you.
Yeah, that sounds pretty thought out.
I don't think I'm going to have something that quick.
Here's what I'll say.
I was just in a conversation with Val right now.
So this is, at this point in my life, what I'm trying to do.
Ten years ago, it was like trying to get a date with, you know, whoever.
Get a girl to like you.
That was great.
That's the motivator that brings you.
But I would say right now I'm trying to not focus on an idea of what I think I should be.
Maybe that comes with being 40 or something.
You know, when you're younger, maybe you think like I should be, like wouldn't it be great if I was this?
Or just not having any, because I feel more confident than I did in my 20s.
And I want to like, then the perfect example is the podcast or something strange like that that I wouldn't have thought I was going to do.
And just saying, hey, if I've identified these qualities
you're talking about, you know, that are good,
I can go, yeah, that might work.
And just being confident, remaining really open.
Because you can't, I mean, if I said to my agent,
I want to do an action comedy,
they'd go, okay, we'll ring you up
when one of those comes together.
You know, but to just stay open and
say you know i'm gonna work with the people i mean like like the david duke thing like i you know
three days before that i didn't know i was gonna be doing that so yeah i think i would just just
to remain open and confident what your things are that's cool go for my man appreciate it brother
thank you and there you have it, my friends.
I hope you enjoyed this episode with Torfer Grace.
Make sure to check out his podcast, Adventure, as well, that I just went on and we recorded
the song and go listen to it.
It's pretty cool.
It's really exciting, actually, to see what we created in a short amount of time.
If you enjoyed this, share it with your friends, lewishouse.com slash 781. Share it out,
spread the message of inspiration and greatness far and wide to make an impact on the lives around
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Leave us a review.
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to more people.
Remember that you are a incredible, beautiful, one of a kind individual.
There's no one who's ever going to be like you ever again.
You are here for a reason,
and I hope you remember that. You've got an opportunity to do something special with your
life. You've got different moments where you can maximize the gifts and the talents that you were
born with. You can discover new talents and gifts. You can learn a new skill. You can master it and
then apply that by giving value to other people with your talent.
You can make magic in your life if you choose to work at it.
You've just got to be willing to step up and have the confidence in yourself.
I hope this podcast, The School of Greatness, has given you different tools and inspiration
and confidence to allow you to take the leap of faith into the unknown, the leap of faith
into the scary, the leap of faith into the scary,
messy times of life. Because once you get through those scary, messy times, there is incredible
beauty on the other side. I love you so very much. And you know what time it is. It's time to go out
there and do something great. Let's go. Bye.