The Skinny Confidential Him & Her Podcast - Chris Harrison & Lauren Zima - The Real Bachelor Story & Life After
Episode Date: March 20, 2024#675: Today, we're sitting down with Chris Harrison, former host of multiple Bachelor franchise reality TV shows, and Lauren Zima, comedian, journalist, and former TV host for Entertainment Tonight. W...e have a conversation about everything that happens behind the scenes of reality dating shows, how reality TV has evolved since the very first season of The Bachelor, and the original idea behind the show. We delve into their love story, how they began their careers, and the loss behind the art of true journalism. To Watch the Show click HERE To connect with Chris Harrison click HERE To connect with Lauren Zima click HERE To connect with Lauryn Bosstick click HERE To connect with Michael Bosstick click HERE Read More on The Skinny Confidential HERE For Detailed Show Notes visit TSCPODCAST.COM To Call the Him & Her Hotline call: 1-833-SKINNYS (754-6697) This episode is brought to you by The Skinny Confidential This episode is brought to you by Beis Beis has thought of everything you could ever want in a piece of luggage...360 degree gliding wheels, a cushioned handle, built-in weight indicator, washable bags for your dirty clothes, and all the interior pockets you need to keep organized. Go to beistravel.com/skinny for 15% off your first purchase. This episode is brought to you by Sun Bum Visit sunbum.com and use code SKINNY15 at checkout for 15% off your first purchase. This episode is brought to you by Cymbiotika Cymbiotika is a health supplement company, designing sophisticated organic formulations that are scientifically proven to increase vitality and longevity by filling nutritional gaps that result from our modern day diet. Receive 15% off your purchase at cymbiotika.com/SKINNY This episode is brought to you by Squarespace From websites and online stores to marketing tools and analytics, Squarespace is the all-in-one platform to build a beautiful online presence and run your business. Go to squarespace.com/skinny for a free trial & use code SKINNY for 10% off your first purchase of a website domain. This episode is brought to you by LMNT LMNT is a tasty electrolyte drink that has everything you need and nothing you don't. It contains a science-backed electrolyte ratio: 1000mg sodium, 200mg potassium, and 60mg magnesium. Get a free sample pack with any purchase at drinkLMNT.com/SKINNY Produced by Dear Media
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She's a lifestyle blogger extraordinaire. Fantastic. And he's a serial entrepreneur.
A very smart cookie. And now Lauren Everts and Michael Bostic are bringing you along for the
ride. Get ready for some major realness. Welcome to the skinny confidential him and her.
If you're just searching for that fame thing, whether you're an influencer or whatever,
if you're not like creating something you're trying to share, it doesn't work or it feels
really empty really fast and it can't sustain itself. But that was, you know, yeah, the
working towards not fame, but success,
I think connected us really early on. I love what I do. I've always loved what I've done. But
yeah, I mean, starting out, I slept on the floor of the sports office because I would work the
Friday night high school football show. And then I would spend the night and I had four sportscasts
starting at 6 a.m. I would edit, produce, write my own shows, do the shows, do your own makeup.
You know, as soon as weather came on, you knew you had five minutes before you were on.
And that was life.
And it was awesome.
But flash forward 30 years and I'm doing The Bachelor, the biggest, you know, network show.
It's as high as you can possibly get.
I'm sleeping in a closet.
Today, we're sitting down with Chris Harrison, former host of multiple Bachelor franchise reality TV shows, and his wife,
Lauren Zima. She's a comedian, journalist, and former TV host for Entertainment Tonight.
We go all over the place. So we talk about what happens behind the scenes of reality dating shows,
how reality TV has evolved since the first season of The Bachelor, and the original idea behind the
show. We talk about how
to win The Bachelor, the evolution, how Chris got started in TV, how Chris and Lauren met,
and her career evolution with journalism. Fun fact, we did a swap on their podcast. So Michael
and I were interviewed by them on After the Final Rose podcast. Go check that out. On that note,
Chris Harrison and Lauren Zima,
welcome to the Him and Her Show. This is the skinny confidential Him and Her.
This is going to be the most unforgettable, amazing, captivating podcast yet. I have Chris Harrison here and his lovely wife, Lauren Zima. Welcome to the show. Thank you.
You left out dramatic. Oh, dramatic. Can you do it? Actually, can you enter the podcast?
This will be the most dramatic podcast ever. Which is also the name of our podcast. So it's
a really helpful plug. That was a nice, easy plug. Thank you guys. Four people are here. One
will be leaving brokenhearted. Oh God. In the back of a limo, crying.
Let's make that come true.
Let's deliver on one of your lines for once
and someone be in tears by the end of this.
Let me tell you something about my wife.
She firmly believes, without a doubt,
that she could go on The Bachelorette
and win the entire thing.
It's a game.
What are you winning?
It wouldn't be about, for me, winning guy i just i think there's a full strategy so like at the end you would just
you'd get that proposal and you just drop the ring and just walk off like in your face
i won this thing no i would have i would have bethany frankel situation like i would have
like my water that we're gonna launch like they got the bethany clause nowkel situation like i would have like my water that we're gonna launch like
or like you know remember shane lamas had like the huge sunglasses yeah remember she used to
wear those huge sunglasses and when she was wearing them when i was little i'd be like
she's gotta launch a sunglass line like i'd be content marketing for the bigger picture you were
doing this as a child oh that i loved branding she actually believes that she can edge out all
the other women so what's the strategy the strategy is you can't pop your puss the first night okay
but you can't pop your puss in real life too can i get it can i ask the judges can i get a
definition of what that is i just putting it all out there i mean that's the name of your new
reality show that you're coming back with. It's called Pop the Puss.
Popping the Puss is getting too excited too quick.
Yeah.
You want to fly under the radar, but here is the caveat to your dreams.
Producers, we're going to get to the bottom of Lauren.
We're going to push you. If you are playing the game and you're not playing it the way we want, we're going to push you. And if you're not, if you are playing the game and you're not
playing it the way we want, we're going to make life very difficult on you. And they've been doing
this for a long time. We're going, we're undefeated. I'm game. I'm game. I still think if
you will lean in, I'll lean into, no, I would definitely lean into using the producers to the
advantage and doing what they needed. Right. You would be good.
I think you're savvy enough.
I think that people get too stuck in the mud and the drama and the minutia.
You got to have big vision.
I think what you just said is smart that you would align with the producers.
I think when people try to break apart.
The smart ones do.
It doesn't work out well.
But wait, Michael, you just said, did you just ask how many women think they they could and i want to know that too like how many people went on the show how many everybody
who's ever been on a reality show ever thinks they're gonna come off like the hero like oh
i'll never be that person i'll never do this i'll never do this i'll never be seen as this type of
person and you will i don't need to be the hero. I'll be the villain. You'll be the villain.
Okay.
I'll be what it takes.
The villain's not going to win though, probably.
Okay.
But then maybe that I'll be like, I won't be, I don't need to be the hero.
That's like the sweet girl.
The thing is you want to be good enough TV.
Okay.
You're right.
Fly under the radar.
Don't pop the puss night one.
But at some point you got to pop a little.
Pull that clip, Carson.
And yeah, you work with the producers. But at some point you got to pop a little. Pull that clip, Carson.
Yeah, you work with the producers.
Don't try and be an enemy of the state and try and fight the system because the system will always win because it's their show.
Yeah.
The editors, the producers are always going to have final say.
Who's someone who fought against the producers?
Kelly Flanagan from Peter Weber's season comes to mind for me.
She was always, remember how she just laid down?
Like she just took naps. She just was not, I don't think she, I can't remember what Kelly's story of coming onto the show was, but I remember thinking, I don't know why she's here, you know?
Juan Pablo kind of bucked the system and the system turned against him.
So what happened there? How did that go?
It was the first time that they turned against a lead and they decided we're just going to not make him the golden boy. We're going to just show him as he is. And it didn't come off well. You want the bachelor bachelorette to be seen as perfect. This person that everyone in the Americas will be willing to leave everything to fall in love with.
As the show evolved, did you guys need to, or did they need to start kind of moving away
from that picture perfect vision to keep it interesting?
Or was it?
Well, they had to because we stopped being able to cast those people, right?
The idea of the show was Andrew Firestone.
Where in the world will you have the opportunity?
Heir to an American fortune.
Right.
Aaron Berge even, who was one of our earlier who owned a bank, even to the point of Chris souls farmer, you know, he's this very
successful farmer in Iowa. And if it weren't for the show, you would not, you know, this guy
wouldn't find love. He's a, it was the diamond in the rough. That was the idea of this fairy tale.
At some point, I don't know, know just casting wise we stopped casting quality people
of that ilk where it was no longer the diamond in the rough and it was like he's an influencer
who hasn't really worked in six years he's in tech and uh his name is michael boss with his
parents he does a podcast yeah and i'm like oh, the, the fairy tale. He's in sales.
Yeah. It was, it was harder and harder to sell this fairy tale. And I've talked to people that
have been on the show since I have left and they're like, yeah, you know, he doesn't have a
job and there's not much to offer. And why am I putting myself out there for this? And so now
you just have these influencers that are on for someone who's
unemployed and it's not that attractive. And they just want followers.
Right. Can you educate me? Because I am maybe not as well-versed as all of you on this.
The early shows, the early days, how many of those relationships actually stayed and stable and
made it? Not many.
Not many. Trista.
Trista. Yeah. Tristan Ryan.
We,
a boy,
we hung our hat on Tristan Ryan.
And then we got to Sean Lowe and we're like,
finally,
we have someone to hang our hat on with Sean Lowe.
Um,
and he was another good one where he was still in that golden age of just
had a great guy,
girly,
true conservative faith-based dude that football player.
Yeah.
Football player from Kansas state.
And,
and so
that those those relationships we weren't great at fostering you know we had a great show idea
the producers like okay we got this great show and they did it was a phenomenal groundbreaking
concept for television and it changed the genre but what we weren't great at is being therapists
we weren't we weren't creating a great environment for people
to stay in love. The idea of the show was fall in love. And then the show ended and we're like,
well, we need to facilitate these relationships and help them stay together. And we weren't great
at that in the beginning. We got better over time. I want to go back before all of this.
We just were on you guys' podcast and you talked about how,
when you were a little boy,
you were narrating your brothers playing sports,
annoying as shit.
You wanted to be the host at the talent show.
I would love for you each to tell your stories of how you guys got
interested in hosting separately and doing what you're doing before all of
the,
the glamor.
We came about it very different ways, which we talk. We doing before all of the glamour.
We came about it very different ways, which we talked, we just had this conversation the other day because I don't know if my path makes sense anymore. The way I used to tell people to get in
this business is I went through the local news world. I went to college, played soccer. I was
a good soccer player. Not great. I was good. Got a scholarship. And when I was in school, I found
mass comm and media and TV. And I had a guy there reach out to me and say, Hey, I'm looking for
someone to do play-by-play for the basketball team. I went to Oklahoma city university,
really small NAI school in Oklahoma city. And I started doing play-by-play for my basketball team
and just, I don't do drugs, but it was like drugs. As soon as that hit my veins, I'm like,
this is what I meant to do.
I no longer cared about soccer.
I no longer cared about that path.
And this is all I really wanted to do.
And I became a sportscaster for KWTV in Oklahoma city, the local CBS affiliate.
I was a weekend morning guy.
Then I became the third guy on the team, the reporter.
Then I took over the weekend, the number two spot.
And I was working my way up
and just wanted to move back home to Dallas,
which is where I'm from, and be a sportscaster.
And I was on the road to doing that
when I got a call to move out to LA
and start up a horse racing network for all things.
And when I got to LA, this whole world opened up
and I was so green and so naive.
And I think I always say,
desperation is the world's
worst cologne when you're desperate and you're in Hollywood, you, you reek of it, right? You,
you have this desperate, like, I want to be an actor. And I, I had a good gig. I was making what
I thought was a crap ton of money doing this horse racing thing. So I just started auditioning for
stuff. I was doing TV shows. I did movies. I was having
so much fun. And I think because a, I wasn't desperate and I was a fresh face. I started
getting hired for all kinds of stuff. And I did game show, did a home and garden show called
designers challenge that did really well. Did a, you know, mall, a mall of a mat. Was it mall
masters at mall of America and Minneapolis did that. So did a bunch of stuff. And then the
bachelor came around and I got that gig.
And I was like, but it wasn't The Bachelor.
It was just a reality show.
No one had heard of reality TV.
Survivor had just started when I got the gig.
And you look back on it and you think,
oh my God, that was groundbreaking.
It was not at the time.
But I will tell you as a little girl,
I remember tuning into the first season of The Bachelor.
Remind me who the first one was.
Alex Michelle.
Alex Michelle.
Yes.
You may have not even tuned into the first one.
No, I did.
A lot of people think.
I did.
I did.
Yeah.
I did.
I can picture it.
And I remember that the show was really avant-garde.
And I don't know how I knew that as a little girl, but there was a-
Well, because what else besides Survivor was similar to that?
Nothing.
Survivor was a game show. Survivor was groundbreaking, but it came out of Eco Challenge, which was a- Well, because what else besides Survivor was similar to that? Nothing. Survivor was a game show.
Survivor was groundbreaking, but it came out of Eco Challenge, which was a brilliant show
that was on Discovery or something like that.
Burnett had done, and then he got Survivor on the air.
He shopped it around town.
Of course, the famous story is no one wanted it, and he paid for it himself, which is why
he made a buttload of money because he owned, it was a timeshare, right?
And so he owned the advertising. And so Survivor was on, but it was a game show that we could all
understand, right? It was groundbreaking, but understandable because it was a game.
The Bachelor was no longer a game. There was nothing on the line. We weren't offering you
a million dollars. We offered you nothing, in fact. The whole catch was, it was like Seinfeld.
The show's about nothing. You were at the end left was it was like Seinfeld. The show's about nothing.
You were at the end left with, are you going to choose love? And that's it. Camera stop,
game over. You got a ring. Yeah, but there's no house. There's no million dollars. There's no,
I guess you're right. There's love. Yeah, that's it. People love love. Is that important enough? And the answer was yes. We all have an insatiable appetite for love. You're right. You were asking
that question and the answer was yes. Everybody like that insatiable appetite for love you're right you were asking that question and the answer was yes everybody like that's everybody's ultimate goal right is true love
i want to get back to to that chapter but i want to hear lauren about how you got into what you
were doing yeah i i think i was the kind of the turning point of what he's talking about like
this local news thing not being a path anymore. Like I studied journalism in school. He and I both did. I went to Mizzou, great journalism
school at University of Missouri. And we I was in school being brought up to learn like you're
going to start in a really small market and local news and then you might get to like a Dallas or
Chicago or then L.A. and New York. And it's this path. But then kind of by the time I graduated,
that was when the recession hit. And that was when like online video was starting like 2009 and everything was changing.
And when I graduated, I got offered a weekend anchor gig and I turned it down, which felt kind
of crazy. But I was like, I don't want to, I was young. I didn't have responsibilities to anyone.
And I thought, I don't want to make this local news choice. And luckily at that time, I could do it and it was fine. So instead, I took
an internship at Variety in LA. And then from there, I actually realized I didn't really love
LA as much as I thought I would. So I took this startup job back in the Midwest at a company
called Newsy, which was being very avant-garde and
doing only online news video. And then long story short, Entertainment Tonight, which was an older
school brand, came to Newsy trying to figure out how we were making all this online news video
and offered me a job on the spot. And then I moved back to LA and started working at Entertainment
Tonight. I was looking at the date, but you asked me like the listener, and a lot of our listeners
are under the age of 25. And I say that because, and I'm going to tell the story about Lauren and correct
me if I'm wrong. She studied television broadcasting. And I remember when we first
started dating 2008, 2009, 10, around that area. I remember her getting up early and going to news
stations because you had to like go and guest and do things for those stations.
It's a lot of work.
Anyways, to get a chance to be able to be put on a show or television.
And the reason I bring this up is I don't think people realize how fortunate we are now
to live in a time where you can get on this and potentially get the same amount of eyeballs,
if not way, way more without having the gatekeepers of a news station to get you out there.
The only thing is one thing I really admire about Lauren and I went through the same path. if not way, way more without having the gatekeepers of a news station to get you out there.
The only thing is one thing I really admire about Lauren and I went through the same path and I think it's lost today. It's a lost art is how to be a host, how to be an anchor,
how to be a journalist. You know, we approach things very differently than I know a lot of
people do. And look, one of the jokes on my show, every year, all I created was 25 to 30 people who
wanted my job and thought they could do my job as well, if not better.
And I think time has now proven that's not the case.
And so people didn't work at it.
They didn't have the talent and the skill set.
They just saw what we were doing.
They see what you guys are doing like, oh, that sounds fun. I want to do that.
I think it's a job that can look really easy. Nobody looks at a neurosurgeon and thinks,
oh, I could do that. But this is a job where you can make it look really easy if you're good at it,
and he made it look really easy.
The most powerful people, though, do make things look effortless. There's an art to
making things look effortless. Yeah, an art to making things look effortless.
Yeah, I think it's worth remembering anytime you see,
I believe this about everything,
any successful field when you look at the people on the top of their game,
there are probably some areas where it is easy to talk on a podcast.
It is not easy to get to the top of the podcast.
It's a different thing.
And whenever I see that, I'm like,
there is some skill here that people are being naive about.
I think one thing that connected us right from the beginning, like our first date and probably
even before we were dating, when I was just interviewing him, we had a mutual respect for
each other. We didn't know it at the time, but neither of us got into this business wanting to
be famous. We both studied and we both wanted
to be successful. And I think we both wanted to be good storytellers. If you're just searching
for that fame thing, whether you're an influencer or whatever, if you're not like creating something
you're trying to share or create a business as you guys have both done so well, it doesn't work
or it feels really empty really fast and it can't sustain itself. But that was,
you know, yeah, the working towards not fame, but success, I think connected us really early on.
Can you guys talk to me about the minutiae of what you've built? Meaning like, talk to me about
like having to do your own makeup or waking up at 3 a.m. because you have to host something like
people. I want to hear like the nitty gritty of what it's taken to get to the levels that you're at. Yeah, I did my own makeup
on entertainment tonight for several years and people couldn't believe that. But I did my own
makeup for a while because I was technically a digital correspondent. And then I moved up to a
union job and then I had to like union rules. I had to get makeup. So that was like a big deal
for me. And I yeah, I mean, but
yeah, crazy hours, like your life's not your own and there's a million harder jobs out there. I'm
not curing cancer, but like one thing that we almost, I mean, we talk a lot about how the
pandemic really like helped us have a relationship because before that, I think our hours were so
crazy. I don't think we would have had time to like actually date each other. Yeah. I mean,
it's, I love what I do. I've always loved what I date each other. Yeah. I mean, it's, I love what I do.
I've always loved what I've done, but yeah, I mean, starting out, I slept on the floor
of the sports office cause I would work the Friday night high school football show.
And then I would spend the night and I had four sports cast starting at 6 AM and you
would spend the night and get up and I would edit, produce, write my own shows, do the
shows, do your own makeup.
You know, as soon as weather came on,
you knew you had five minutes before you were on and that was life and it was awesome.
But flash forward 30 years and I'm doing The Bachelor, the biggest network show,
it's as high as you can possibly get. I'm sleeping in a closet. I would get dressed in a van in
Thailand. It's not like, oh my God, you now fly around on a private jet and you have the best.
Trust me, if they can save $4, they're going to save $4 and you're going to get dressed in a van.
So it's like people always laugh at the bachelor mansion. They asked me, it's like,
was this really the master closet upstairs where you would sleep and get just like, yeah,
I would just grab a pillow and go crawl in the corner.
The mansion is so much smaller than you think it is.
Like that's the glamorous life.
And it was funny.
I think Spade or somebody took over, you know, when the first year I was, I didn't do Paradise
and they thought they were going to get a big celebrity to do the show.
And Spade went down there and I had some people talk to him and he was like, F this man.
He's like, who works like this?
I'm like, yeah, the conditions suck.
We're up all night and you know, all night until eight or nine in the morning.
And then you're two hours later, you got to be back.
And so you're not sleeping.
You're not eating right.
You're away from your family.
And again, like Lauren said, we're not digging ditches.
I've done that before.
And that sucks.
But at the same time, it's never as the real work is never as glamorous, but the people
on our show and the people probably you guys talk to sometimes
they think it'll just be fun. I just want to do the fun stuff. And it's like, okay. And look,
there's some rewarding stuff and I love what we do, but it's hard work and it's hard to make it
look good. You have to work at it. What is the off camera process? What does that look like
when you're not filming? And I guess maybe not doing the quote unquote fun stuff. I mean, honestly, like Bachelor, it's a lonely existence. It was
really lonely. What are you doing when you're not filming? Nothing. You're on the road alone.
You know? So we, I would, I would try to entertain myself. Like I would go to soccer. I'm a big
soccer fan. I'd go to soccer games around the world, or I'd go to like, you know, play golf
or do something. I'm in Africa, you know, during Brad Womack season.
So I'm going to go on a safari, but you know, the first safari alone, it was like two of us,
you know, or I'd go with him, my hair and makeup team, you know, it's like, or wardrobe, Carrie and Gina. And, you know, you're like, you see an elephant,
knock a tree over to get the worms underneath. And your first thing is, oh, and you're reaching
for your kids. Cause you want your kid, you know, and you know, you're FaceTiming your kids back home at weird hours because they're up eating breakfast
and you're just a little picture on the table.
And so there's some weird, lonely times.
I spent a lot of years alone traveling around the world.
And again, I'm not saying what was me.
I had a great life and it gave me a wonderful life and it changed my kids' lives.
But at the same time, that stuff's hard.
I would go days
without speaking English to anybody because you're just traveling because the crew would go alone.
And I would try and stay to see my kids play soccer or lacrosse or a play or something. And
I would travel alone and you just get dropped off in the wilderness somewhere and you're just
waiting to be picked up to shoot. And it's really weird. It's a weird life.
Do you spend any time with the contestants when you're not filming or is it isolated where you're not really interacting
with them? Not really hanging out with them. No, I mean, cause they're in the bubble and you want
them to stay in the bubble. And that was our job is to create that environment and keep them in
that mindset. And I could, they really hated me being around cause I would break that bubble and
give them kind of sign of life and hope and give them, you know, we, Ben Higgins talks, I there's, I could list like Ben Higgins, Bob Guinea,
Andrew Firestone, all these bachelors have said to me since we've all become friends, they've said
the only reason I made it through the show was because of Chris. They're like, he was like the
friend I needed. Like Ben Higgins always tells the story of when Chris came to visit him in his
hotel room. And I think Ben was like ready to quit the show.
We were in the Bahamas at a house.
And you like watched a game with him or something.
And he said it mentally brought him back.
I mean, I'm telling his story here, but.
Yeah.
We just sat down to watch a football game.
Like we just hang out.
He's like, thank God.
But you hung out with the leads a little bit.
I did.
I would hang out with the leads, the bachelor, the bachelorette.
I would see a lot more.
The, the say contestants, the 25 or 30, I would not see them because they would use me as a
trigger, sometimes good, sometimes bad, sometimes emotional. So they wanted to like, when you saw
me, you're like, oh shit, something's about to happen. You know, I would sometimes roll
the proverbial grenade in the room of like blowing things up. So they were very careful about,
they didn't want to normalize me. So it was really funny. A lot of times the
bachelor, the bachelorette or the contestants would fly separately. So I would be on one of
those flights. Sometimes I flew with the lead. Sometimes I would fly with the contestants,
depending on our schedule. And oftentimes when I was with the contestants, they would all of a
sudden just see me in a hat in the airport and they're like, shit, you're just normal. You're
just real. And we'd have these conversations and I'd get to know them. Um, and
I, I enjoyed getting to know them. I often said it wasn't until later after the show, when I would
see them at charity events or whatever, where we would become good friends because I was used as a
host and as a mechanism when I was taping the show. So it was really interesting.
I have an upcoming trip that I'm packing for and I scoured the internet for packing cubes.
And finally I came across base. I mean, I've used base many times. I actually have their cosmetic bag that I use for all my skincare when I travel. And then I have one of their
luggage pieces too, but I had forgotten that they have packing cubes and they have the best ones. First of all,
they're absolutely beautiful. The ones that I like are in olive and beige. I went with the
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of this stuff that you've seen, what would you tell yourself? What do you wish you did differently?
Are you happy with everything? Career-wise or bachelor-wise?
For both of you with your both of your careers.
I think that, you know, really like sitting here talking to you guys has made me realize like I
need to go kind of back to that decision I made when I decided to not do the weekend anchor thing
and to do the online thing again, like to keep embracing the change, you know, and sometimes
it's a little hard because you feel like the change is happening so fast around you. But yeah, there were like,
like I kind of wish I'd really leaned into like YouTube earlier, done some of these things earlier.
And I think it's really important. Like I always give this advice to say yes, like say yes to
everything, especially when you're, you're in your twenties and still figuring out who you are.
And I think I did that, but like, I'm kind of wanting to remind myself about it now. Like, keep going, keep like
leaning to all the new things are happening because sometimes the new things scare me.
Gary Vee, I think is like such a good person to look to because he's always like yelling at you
and being like, like he told everyone to get on TikTok like seven years ago. And he's like,
I fucking told you to get on TikTok. And I'm like, he's right. Like if we had all gotten on TikTok seven years ago,
that would look different.
He's like so like good at adapting.
So that is really good advice.
Yes.
I don't think I would change anything.
I think I would tell myself,
I would love to have the hindsight to know
your show will have the longevity it's had.
You're going to be on air for 18, 19 years.
That's crazy.
Because it doesn't happen.
That's a long time.
It doesn't happen in our business.
And so I played scared.
And it was probably a good thing.
The people I've met that I really admire in this business,
the Joan Rivers of the world,
the people that had that longevity,
they also played scared.
When you say play scared, what do you mean by that?
They always assumed everything was going away. They played to the man. Yeah. You just, well, you just, you, you had this fear that
tomorrow it could all be taken away. You wake up and you're just like, you know, the ratings are
gone. Like, you know, that I just always had the belief. It was never promised to you. Next week
was never promised to you. I would wake up and I would get the ratings on Thursday morning or
Tuesday mornings when we moved to Mondays.
And I just remember being, you know, used to call a line. They would have every network had a number and I would get up in the morning at 6.30 in the morning, I would get the fast nationals
and I'm writing them all down. I mean, every week I had, I kept the papers for forever.
I know the ratings forever. I still do this because now it's online. I get the ratings every day.
What's the best season that's ever done the best show the single show was the end of aaron bergey season the finale did 33 million
viewers and he married what uh what is the girl i forget the girl they didn't get married they got
engaged and then but the biggest overall season was that we went from aaron bergey to trista season
yeah and that was from start to finish the highest ratings.
You know why?
I think it's because we got, didn't we get to know Trista on another season before?
Yeah.
She came out of Alex Michelle season one.
That's, that's, that's the season.
That's what I knew.
I was like, how am I not remembering Trista?
And that was really rare because we never, you know, we weren't doing that back then.
Alex Michelle, Aaron Bergey, Bob Guinea was kind of our first repeat because he came off
The Bachelorette with Trista Wren.
Right.
And he was kind of that lovable, and Bob will kill me, but he was this kind of heavy, overweight
guy.
And he was mad because he's like, well, my foot was in a boot.
I played football at Michigan State and I was heavy because I was in a boot.
And then he came back.
He was like lovable dad bod.
Yeah.
But he had dad bod.
He's like, I don't have a dad bod.
F you guys, I'm all fit.
But so Bob was the first repeat guy, but he had dad bod. He's like, I don't have a dad bod. F you guys, I'm all fit.
But so Bob was the first repeat guy, but Trista was from that first season.
But yeah, if I could tell myself, hey, dude, relax.
You're going to have longevity.
You can have this show.
You're going to go for 18, 19 years. But I probably would have said no to stuff that I really jumped on.
I probably wouldn't have done, and I know you guys won't even remember this, TV Guide.
I did a daily show for them. I executive produced and hosted the red carpet shows for the Grammys,
Oscars, and all that stuff. And I did that because I always assumed The Bachelor was
waning and it would go away. And at one point, we kind of were canceled. Lloyd Braun, who was
president of ABC, this was around Dr. Travis Stork when we went to Paris. The reason we went
to Paris that season
was we said, F it, the show's canceled. We're off the air. Let's go spend every dime we have
and let's go live in Paris. And we did. And we thought the show was going to be dead.
Travis Stork season did good. Then we came back with Dr. Naval doctor. Um, why am I blanking on
him anyway? So we did this officer and a gentleman season with this
naval doctor and it did very well. And all of a sudden we were back and we're like, crap,
here we go again. Wait, what's the guy that's on the doctors, Travis?
Travis Stewart. Okay. Okay. So it was after that. It was a naval guy.
Yeah. The season after. Will you tell us who it was, Carson?
That's going to kill me. Yeah. Andrew Baldwin.
Andrew Baldwin, Dr. Andy Baldwin. Yeah. Right. Is he on the doctors too?
He was a swimmer at Duke. He was a naval doctor. It was great. It was a Andrew Baldwin. Dr. Andy Baldwin. Right. Is he on the doctors too? He was a swimmer at Duke.
No.
He was a Naval doctor.
It was great.
It was a phenomenal season.
So we did that.
And best thing I remember about that season, I don't know why this sticks out.
We had him drive up in this amazing sports car.
It was like a silver Lamborghini or something.
And we shot it in just above Hollywood.
And we were on this hill.
And he got out of the car looking all studly.
And he got out. And I guess he forgot to set the brake. And so he got out of the car looking all studly and he got out and
I guess he forgot to set the brake. And so he got out in the car, just started rolling backwards
and big Polly. If anyone remembers big Polly, he was the guy, um, who was, he would come and get
the suitcases from time to time. He was the grim Reaper and he would like, literally was holding
the car from like sliding down the driveway. Um, but Andy Baldwin did well and that resurrected
the show. I do think in this business,
you have to be okay with big ups and downs and no, it doesn't mean it's over. Like, you know,
we live in this, everything's really fast now, but like, I think about Robert Downey Jr. That
man's career was like, no one would hire him in the nineties because he'd had all these addiction
issues and been in and out of jail and no one would hire him. No one would insure him.
And then he became Iron Man.
And it's like, now we all love him.
And we get a two minute award show speech from him and we're all.
Look at Rob Lowe.
Yeah.
I mean, that's, I mean, I don't know if you guys are old enough to know the scandal.
Go Google Rob Lowe and his scandals.
And now he's one of the most beloved kind of middle-aged figures.
And you guys think John Stamos is handsome? I read Rob Lowe's book too. Rob, you can come on the podcast if you want.
Look into his eyes. I dare you.
Rob Lowe can come on the podcast. It's an open invite.
I told this story. This was back when I was single and I went on a date and I would escape LA.
With Rob Lowe.
And I went up, I wish I would date Rob Lowe in a heartbeat. No, I was in Montecito
because I would get out of LA because I didn't want to be seen in this. I had a blind date with this woman who lived in Montecito.
And I met Rob Lowe because he had an ABC show at the time.
Because he lives up there. Yeah.
Yeah. And we were friendly and enough. Like if we saw each other, you'd give each other the bro
hug. And so he sees me from across the room and we kind of do the bro nod, you know, and he gets
up and I was like, oh, like, don't
walk over here.
Like the last thing a dude wants next to me is Rob Lowe.
It's like, yeah.
I'm like, I don't want, like, I don't want my date to see Rob Lowe.
Yeah.
Like Patrick Dempsey walking over.
I'm like, dude, stay away.
Yeah.
No, I don't blame you.
How do you think I look now?
You're looking great.
But like Rob Lowe is like Rob Lowe is Rob Lowe.
I just felt like the rest of the dinner, she's like, oh.
But you're not Rob Lowe.
Yeah.
And he's right there.
Yeah, he's right there.
How did you guys meet amongst all of this?
You said you met five years ago or you started dating five years ago?
We started dating a little over five years ago.
But had known each other professionally for a couple years before that.
Like a couple years.
I was on Entertainment Tonight and I covered The Bachelor.
And by the way, here's the thing.
I think I actually had Becca Tilly, God lover, said to me at our wedding,
oh my God, Lauren, you like made every girl's dream come true.
Like you grew up watching The Bachelor and then you married the host.
And I was like, I did not grow up watching The Bachelor.
I was a housewives girl. I still am am and the only reason i started covering the bachelor was because
when i got to entertainment tonight and this is a say yes thing no one was covering it and i said
well i i can cover it like i can watch the show and figure it out and cover it so i knew nothing
about the show and there is as he's sitting here talking there's all this bachelor history like you
grew up what i don't know any of these people.
I started watching it, I think with Chris Souza season, maybe.
Or maybe Caitlin Bristow's, I don't know.
So I interviewed him for three years or so.
And I was married.
He was dating someone else.
And we only ever saw each other on red carpets.
And that's the only conversation we'd ever had.
And then we both became single.
Then I did an interview with him and I was like was he flirting with me were you oh yeah wait but be honest
you heard it here first was there a spark the first time you guys met no nothing no she you
know and not to be a dick we were both so quickly like like, no, absolutely not fully uninterested. I don't mean
to treat people like this, but when you're doing the show, thousands of interviews. I've done
thousands and thousands of interviews about the show. It's like rinse and repeat. Yeah.
But I will say, I knew she was different only as a journalist and I really respected her.
I remember looking forward to her interviews because when you do thousands of interviews, 99% of them are just so, like you said, rinse and repeat. They don't challenge you. They don't listen. They're just asking these questions on the paper and they're moving on. And you're just saying, regardless of what they ask, you're giving the answer that you want to give and you're moving on. Lauren would listen and push you and really call back to stuff you've said.
I'm like, so I knew I had to be on my game when Lauren Zima came from Entertainment Tonight. And
I really enjoyed those interviews from journalist to journalist, because that was my background too.
And I'm like, oh, this girl's good. But I knew nothing of her. And as soon as we were done,
you have a handler who's next, next, next, and you're just kind of moving on.
And so I never saw her for who she is until there was one day and we were at the studio.
I took a break and she came out of the green room where we kept all the animals. No, all the
journalists would watch the show and I was on stage. So I came out and I was getting a tea and
she was coming out and I didn't know why, but I found out later it was so hopefully we might run into each
other because we'd had a couple flirty moments before that, but it was really the first time
I looked at her, looked at her and I was like, oh damn, like shit. Like why have I not seen this
before? Why, you know, but I didn't have those eyes on because I was either married or dating somebody,
and I just wasn't paying attention in that way, just being professional. And all of a sudden,
I'm like, she's hot. And then, yeah, okay. And we started talking.
I interviewed him. I thought he was a little flirty. And then truly,
I was at this next taping, and I said to myself, okay, God, if he was flirting with me, I said, I'm going to go,
this is a nine hour taping. I'm going to go get a coffee at craft services right now.
And if he happens to be there at this exact moment, then we're supposed to talk like something's
supposed to happen here. And he just happened to be there. And so then we had our first real conversation
off of a red carpet.
And then I'll be honest, I slid into his DMs.
I was like, hey, so good to see you the other day.
Yeah, I'm a big believer in open the door
and if they walk through, keep going.
I don't, like, I think it's unfair
when people put the onus on other people
to make the first move all the time.
I think women do it with men.
Like, I'm not saying chase them, but I think open the door. Let them know that there is an
opening. Yes. And then if he doesn't walk through, don't go through the door yourself. Keep going
down the hallway. But if he walks through, okay. She said, hashtag send nudes. And I said,
that's so adorable. No, and you know what? Timing, Lauren and I talk about this all the time.
Timing is everything. I was at a place in my life, so was she, but I was at a place in my life, my kids were old enough, because when I got divorced, I really dove into my kids and being a dad and making sure they were taken care of. And then my profession was such a huge part of my life. I had these two boxes and that was it. I really wanted to be a good dad and I wanted to be really good at hosting and I wanted to crush it professionally. And I was doing both very well. I didn't have time for
that third box of myself. I knew I would, I think I knew I would get there. And so I dated and,
but I didn't really commit. And she, we ran into each other just kind of that perfect time of
the bachelor was kind of on cruise control.
I knew I was killing it there. That's fine. The kids were old. They were really good people.
They were both driving. They're in high school, pretty self-sufficient, doing good there.
I have time for myself now and I'm kind of lonely. I'm ready to put myself out there
because you do. If you are single, you have to be willing to put yourself out there and truly be vulnerable
and date. And so when she reached out, I was eager and it was great timing because I was
open to that. He was so deeply lonely. Well, and I always respected, I looked forward to our
interviews too, because he was so good at doing an interview. Like I knew I would get my headlines
from him and my great soundbites from him. But I think our love story is, like, I give the advice a lot
that be open. Like, you don't know where this person's going to come from. Like,
I have a friend who's single, and I think she writes people off on that first look a lot,
you know? Oh, we have one of those friends. She's really big on first impressions or,
if there isn't the chemistry right away. He's not 6'3".
Yeah.
I'm like, we knew each other for like four years.
I mean, you guys have a similar story of you were, you know, knew each other and then went
apart and then came back.
You don't know where that person is going to come from.
Also, be open to not being with your type.
Yes.
I think there's like this thing where it's like, oh, that's not my type.
Maybe you don't know what
your type is and maybe your type has evolved. I think people put looks so high on the list.
There's no way that if you had written down my stats and you gave it to Lauren Zima-
Kind of a blondes guy.
That she would have dated me. Older? No, older. I wouldn't have been. If you had said, okay,
if we'd stopped back then and said, okay, Lauren, type of guy you know, I like, I wouldn't have been, if you had said, okay, if we'd stopped
back then and said, okay, Lauren type of guy, you're going to date. You probably wouldn't have
said 50 year old father of two. Well, that's true. But I was always very open. I'm, I just am like a,
truly it's probably because like my dad died when I was younger and a very young age, I was,
I realized you don't know what life's going to throw at you. So I just was always like, because we don't know what's coming, stay open to whatever. But yeah, I mean, I realized you don't know what life's going to throw at you. So I just was always
like, because we don't know what's coming, stay open to whatever. But yeah, I mean, I have a
friend who it's the same thing. She will like, it's like, if he's not a Christian doctor who
she met at church, I'm like, this is not a Hallmark movie. And you're closing yourself
off from a lot of potential. You've narrowed it down to 0.001% of the population. Who the fuck is your friend, Sarah Palin?
It's a really good question.
I'm only dating people up in Alaska.
I will tell you, she is a 37-year-old virgin. So there's a lot going on there.
But you probably didn't. Did you always want hair this slicked back, Lauren?
I love his hairline. I tell him it looks like a mix between Teresa Giudice and Spock.
Not Spock. What's the
fucking thing in the Star Wars
with the hair? The Widow's Peak?
No, the Widow's Peak is the thing that
curves down. Oh, the Klingon look?
No, I'm talking about what's the character
in Star Wars with the
hair? Chewbacca? The one that has hair
on his face? Chewbacca?
No, but you know,
call me old-fashioned, but this is why, and on this show I've talked about, I am not a fan of any of these dating apps.
We both have young sisters and I get that this is, you know, people feel very pressured
to date and meet people in this way.
But to your points you're making, I think people are first,
delusional in many cases. And second, when you have applications that are all about the aesthetic
first, and you can quickly, ooh, that eyebrows off or that, no, I didn't like that hair. He's
not tall enough for this. You're missing potentially so much about what you actually,
when you get in a relationship relationship are really going to want.
If you sit on a date and I'm looking at Lauren and I'm like,
yeah,
I can,
I can already be scrolling.
I'm already thinking about the next date.
I have a question.
Would you advise someone to,
where do you think people would have more success in love on a dating app or
going on a reality dating show?
I'm not going to poopoo on dating apps.
I don't think, I would say definitely not a dating show only because the percentages
are so low.
Maybe the intentions are off too.
Well, one girl, one guy, you know, it's just, yeah, there's a lot to deal with.
But yeah, it's a numbers game.
I'm a firm believer that, look, dating apps work.
We know a lot of people who have met on dating apps.
It's how quickly can you get off of that like when when even when lz dm'd me i got it out of
there as quick as i could and i'm like let's go out let's go have a coffee let's go have a drink
we went to soho and malibu hey and it was we figured it would seem normal because it was like
why is the lady from entertainment tonight with the host
of the bachelor? But if you're at Soho house, it's like, oh, it's not weird. They're just probably
met up or talking or business or whatever. So that was our first date. She didn't love it because
I talked too much. And then I later said, you asked me too many questions, Barbara Walters.
And because she's an interviewer. We went into interview mode.
I started interviewing him and he started doing what he does and what he is doing right now, which he talks for a living and he's supposed to give answers and talk and do all those things.
And yeah, I left the date.
Interestingly, and I don't know what this says about me, but I didn't really like him, but I did go in for a kiss at the end of the night.
And I think it's because I thought, well, but let's see
if there's... Total fox. You're like,
I want on my resume that I
kissed
Chris Harrison. I kissed it.
So we were in the parking lot
at Soho House, and I really liked her. I was like, really
fascinated. What an idiot. I had dated
a lot, been on a lot of dates, and I'm like,
I didn't... It wasn't like, oh my god,
I'm going to marry this girl, but I could tell this was different. I could tell she was different.
I was feeling different. And she, we got in the parking lot and I knew
in the business world, this would be difficult for her. Not for me.
Why?
Because she is a journalist and she's-
There were some ethical questions about us dating.
She's not covering the White House and sleeping with the president, but at the same time
she is covering the bachelor and she's supposed to have kind of a journalistic integrity. And
I said, look, this, you know, it's not the craziest thing in the world, but it won't.
I think it was more, I said to him, this is, well, and this is a bigger risk for me than it is for
you. This is going to look like I'm trying to get ahead in my career. You're already very established. You're 17 years ahead of me in this career thing. I'm like just starting.
And I was afraid of how would it look like, how will it affect my career that I've aligned myself
with him and with this brand that's already so established when like, I'm still figuring out a
lot of what I'm doing. Well, and the sexist double standard of who in Hollywood is going to give me
a hard time for dating a hot young woman. Right. Who's going to give her a hard
time for, you know, sleeping with the guy that she's interviewed. Did people give you a hard
time? Well, I mean, again, I think it was helpful that like I had to talk to my boss about it. Yeah.
And we talked through it and I, they were ultimately okay with it. Again, I think it's helpful.
It was entertainment news.
Like I was covering this reality show.
It wasn't like whether people's water is contaminated in the Midwest, you know, no lives were at
stake, but.
It's not like a case in Georgia where you're prosecuting the president, former president
of the United States.
Yeah, that's true.
I did, relevant.
Um, I did have to like sometimes say to people and I, you know,
I don't like, like truly I would, I, we did have to do a separation of church and state.
And I would tell him, I also, I enjoyed covering the show. I was like, I don't want to know the
spoiler. Like, don't tell me I want to cover it as I'm, as I'm covering it. And sometimes I would
stop him mid conversation. Cause he was about to slip on something. I'm like, no, I don't,
I don't want to know that. because I wanted to maintain that boundary. But yeah, then we were at Soho House parking lot
and I said, because of all this, I'm like, do you want to do this? And I'm like, you need to
think about this if we want to have more dates and be seen. And that's when she laid one on me
and she kissed me in the parking lot at Soho House. God, I don't remember the kiss being the
answer to that question. That was really dumb of me in retrospect. That was a really bold, quick answer to that question.
Did your relationship take a lot of momentum quickly or was it a slow build?
No, it took momentum quickly.
A lot of momentum quickly.
Yeah, we.
I think we both knew who we were.
We had both been divorced.
So when you find somebody you click with at that age, like I was 30.
Like no bullshit.
Yeah, you just knew what you want.
Well, we quickly found out we had good chemistry.
From the kiss.
Truly, the reason I kissed him was because I was like, I'm not totally sure about his
personality, but physically, will we connect?
Maybe we'll just hook up.
I think I thought that to myself in my head really quick.
But then on the second date, and I'm a big advocate of give people a second date,
everything changed.
I think we both relaxed a little bit. First dates are weird, right?
It's so weird. It's like a job interview. It's a little tense, even though we knew each other a little and everything changed. And yeah, the momentum happened quickly. We also talked about
everything for like the next 30 years of our life on our first date. We talked about moving to Texas,
which we just did two years ago. But on the first date. We talked about moving to Texas, which we just did two years ago,
but on the first date,
it was like,
do you want kids?
Do you want to,
and I wouldn't recommend that if you're 22,
but if you're older,
like why waste time?
Talk about the big stuff.
What's your safety word?
How did you guys both have successful divorces?
I don't know if we did.
Well,
you did.
Is that an oxymoron,
a successful divorce?
I think in the scheme of divorces.
Yeah, no, I, we had very different mean, you do. Is that an oxymoron, a successful divorce? I think in the scheme of divorces. Yeah, no.
We had very different situations, very different divorces.
Obviously, I had kids in the mix.
Mine, I would say, is very amicable to the point where Lauren and she are friendly and
will text.
That's cool.
We always put the kids first.
Really cool.
I will give this for my ex.
She's a good mom.
She puts the kids first and i will give this for my ex she's a good mom she puts the kids first and if
you always have that as your goal you swallow a lot of pride you're not going to win everything
you know don't if you can take yourself out of it which look we we still have our issues and our
problems there's a reason we got divorced but all of us have committed and she's remarried too and
her husband does the same and I give him
kudos. The kids are first. And so we're going to see her this weekend because our son plays lacrosse
up at TCU. So we'll go see him play and it's mom's weekend. So we'll see her and it's fine.
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Quick break to talk about element. Do you find yourself in the middle of the day feeling sluggish,
tired, a little out of it? Do you feel your workouts aren't as impactful as you would like
them to be? Do you just feel a little bit out of it or that you catch that kind of afternoon slump
out of nowhere?
It's likely because you are not hydrating properly.
We've all heard about drinking a glass of water today.
What's likely happening to most people is they do not have the proper electrolyte ratio
in their water, which is why we love Element so much.
Element comes in all these individualized packs that Lauren and I carry every day, and
they have all of your electrolyte needs covered with 1,000 milligrams
of sodium, 200 milligrams of potassium, and 60 milligrams of magnesium. It contains enough
electrolytes to move the needle toward each of these electrolyte goals. You're also guaranteed
to find an Element flavor you love. They have so many different ones. One of my favorite ones is
mango chili, but they have a bunch of other ones, like I've said. And the way that Lauren and I use
this is every single morning when we go to the gym, we'll dump a packet of Element in there, go through
our workout. And then if we feel a little sluggish or tired in the middle of the day, or maybe during
that afternoon stretch, when we're trying to get the last bit of work done, we'll take a little
bit then. What I've noticed since taking Element is I'm way more awake. I have way more clarity.
I never feel dehydrated. I'm sleeping much better and I don't get nearly as many
headaches as I used to. I'm someone who's suffered from headaches for years. And ever
since I started taking Element, they've pretty much gone completely away. Of course, Element
just came up with a fantastic offer for us. Just go to drinkelement.com slash skinny to get a free
sample pack with any purchase. Again, that is drinkelement.com slash skinny to get a free sample pack with any purchase.
Enjoy.
Did you guys talk about like, I mean, where you two are now?
We're in very similar positions.
You work together a lot.
You live together.
You guys have two kids together.
How early on were you talking about like what you wanted your life to look like?
I'm very hesitant to talk.
I know that our story is not so common in the sense that
we've known each other now longer than more than half of our entire time we've been alive, right?
12 and now we're 36. But yeah, I think what makes Lauren and I work together is we're very open and
aligned in what we both have ambition in life for even like not on the even on the business stuff
but how we want to have kids and where we want to move and we always talked about like okay we're
gonna have a life where we bounce around like maybe it's LA maybe it's Texas maybe it's somewhere
else we I think a lot of the stuff is easy the other stuff is easy to figure out over time
if you're just aligned on like life's ambitions and what you actually want you know as parents
or as entrepreneurs or as a couple
and we spend a lot of time making sure that we're talking about that a lot i think you got to talk
about the big stuff like our friends i have friends who are she's in a tough spot right now
because she and her husband are married have a kid but they don't know where they want to live
and they're in disagreement about that and i'm like did you guys talk about it before she's like
i think we talked about like what our lives might look like but didn't get as specific
as where we wanted to live but what's interesting for you guys is you change like obviously i'm not
even talking sixth grade obviously you changed from that but even when y'all got back together
post-college yeah different y'all are different than you are when in your mid to late 30s i mean
you've grown up and it's hard you luckily you guys have been able to somehow form this amazing relationship around creating businesses and you've gone on the same
path as opposed to, oh, Lauren's going this way and Michael's going to go this way. I mean,
y'all are very fortunate in that way as you've been able to grow together.
We have both probably changed even since we left California individually. I mean,
before Lauren got here, I mean, I don't think she had a steak in her entire life.
Now she's a big meat eater out here. But anyways, small things.
My bowl of meat.
We've always been aligned on values and supported each other in the changes on those values. And
even like, I'll give you an example. We work together and we tell couples all the time,
maybe you start a venture together and your idea is like, hey, I want to have this small thing with
five or six people. And that's all I want. mom and pop. And the other person's like, well,
I want to go build the spaceship. You may think you want to work together, but if you're not
aligned on where you want that vision to go, that's also a problem, right? And so we get like
really detailed. And whenever we talk about big decisions, like, okay, does Texas make sense? Why?
What would it look like? Would you be happy there? Would I be happy? Vice versa.
I have a transition that I have to ask you
that I have not heard you answer.
Was there relief in leaving The Bachelor?
Yeah.
Isn't it kind of like you did it for 19 years.
There's got to be like, oh,
like you almost like take your pants off.
Do you know what I mean?
Like you take your bra off. Your tits hang out. You're like, I did off. Do you know what I mean? Take your bra off.
Yeah, you take your bra off.
You let your tits hang out.
You're like, I did it.
I can check it.
I did it the best I could.
There's got to be a relief.
I was ready to pop my puss.
Is that the correct term?
I don't think that's using it correctly.
I think you're doing it right.
No, there definitely was a relief in that when you've done it for so long. And also I've always loved being innovative and creating and trying new things and pushing myself and, and it had become repetitive and
yeah, it's hard to reinvent something like my favorite times surrounding the bachelor
were in the early days when you didn't know what a rose ceremony was.
There was no such thing. We were creating it. We were creating the terminology and the words.
You'd go in and say something and you're like, oh my God, that was really stupid.
Take that out. Let's try it this way. Those were the fun days of you're building something.
We had long since moved away from that. It was fun when we started Paradise because it got to create something again or Winter Games or when you got to do new endeavors. I love the live shows because,
again, those were always new and invigorating. So the show for me over that many years,
I always called it Dazed and Confused where I kept getting older. They stayed the same age because it was the same group of 20-somethings came in and were doing it over and over.
So yeah, mentally, emotionally, and I think professionally,
a bit of a relief to kind of like change course.
Yeah, take the bra off and hang my tits out.
Hang your tits out.
The world evolved too, and it sometimes feels like a lot of these shows,
and this is my opinion, placate to what society is feeling.
So one day society is right, one day it's left, one day it's here, one day it's there.
And it feels like sometimes that these big corporations are placating to whatever the narrative is at the moment.
And that's exhausting.
That's why I have my own podcast.
Well, and when a show is created in 2001, 2002-
It's going to be different.
How much has the world changed, right? I mean, again, there was this innocence and naivete of
reality TV. I mean, there was no such thing as a blog back then, much less Facebook. Then you get
to Twitter. Then you get to influencers. So the world has changed so much, but when your concept and the formula hasn't changed,
it's hard to keep up. Like for example, the rose ceremony used to be such a big deal.
We would spend so much money on the cocktail party and the rose ceremony. And you realize now,
20 years later, that's not moving the needle and you're tied to these things that are instruments of the show. So it's very difficult to evolve when, you know, you're known for something.
It's like, say you're McDonald's. That's what we were. We're the McDonald's of reality TV,
and you're known for this. And it's like, but we can't do this anymore. We got to kind of ebb and
flow and change with the times. Well, and you're dealing with hard, like to your point, I mean,
I'm speaking for you, but these are just things I've heard you say. It's you were I know they were you were some
producers were really trying to innovate, but you're dealing with really big corporations
who are really thinking about money as their bottom line. And it's really hard to innovate
and change. And he and I both have like there's also something in this business when you're in
a situation like that, like you're putting you, like this isn't an actor playing a role.
It's like you're Chris Harrison on this thing, or I'm Lauren Zima on Entertainment Tonight.
And you're putting you out there, all the risk of you like being yourself, yet you are
beholden to what all these voices behind you are telling you to say, making you say.
You're under a contract.
Your social media is under a contract.
So yeah, like owning and doing your own podcast
is a much better route.
I imagine with what you guys are doing now with your show
and honestly doing this,
like I don't think creators realize,
and I say creators broadly,
it could be influencers, whatever you want to call it,
like realize how fortunate they are
to be able to produce stuff without,
like there's, you guys walked in there is no approval there's
nobody else behind there's nobody's telling me what we can and can't do there's nobody saying
eliminates the politics yeah like whatever's going on politically or socially like i don't care like
i just do my thing and some like it some don't but like that the internet has basically democratized
and made it possible for us to do whatever you realize you're you lauren brings up a good point
that you at first you feel like,
oh, they love me, they love me,
and they're pushing you forward.
And you realize, I was the face and the voice
of The Bachelor for 20 years.
I did all the interviews.
Because everybody changes, right?
The Bachelor leaves, there's new contestants,
or whatever.
You're The Bachelor.
You're The Constant.
When I hear you talk, it's like, that's, this,
you're the brand.
So what happened early on is, say, there there's and it could have been something benign but something controversial happens send out chris harrison well as things grew more controversy some stuff
was very controversial on and off camera send out chris harrison send out chris harrison what you
realize later because you don't think about it at the time, is you're being used for your face and your voice and your likeness. And I was told many times,
hey, go put that smile on and let's put that Chris Harrison out there. Go do the dance.
Make things right. Go save it. And you realize your name is on the line here. And they're not.
They're back at the office. Their name's never going to
be in print. And so if things go well, thanks, buddy. You did a great job. If things don't go
well, you're on your own. And you realize you look behind you and you're like, oh crap,
nobody's standing behind me anymore. Before you go, how are you both creating
your own future on your own terms without someone doing what they do. I think we're both really
excited and happy about work right now in a way we hadn't been in a while. And again, we're both
so thankful for every... We had very cool jobs. We had very cool, very glamorous jobs at the end of
the day. But now we feel really reinvigorated. Liberated, probably. Yeah. No, I feel like I had
one of the greatest runs ever. And honestly,
if I got hit by a bus tomorrow, I got away with murder. I mean, I feel like I won the lottery a
thousand times over. I've loved everything from sports casting to game shows to Miss America to
the Bachelor Bachelorette franchise. It's been a dream. So now the cool thing is being where I am with this amazing woman I love, it's more important to me who I work with and where we're going as opposed to that old fire and that, again, the desperation of, I just need to work. And what's next? What's next? Now I get to sit back and relax, let my boobs hang out, as you guys would say. Now I get to choose. And we can say no,
but it's more important of like, what's that next step with us? And we do have some very exciting
stuff coming up. Our next step is going to be amazing. And we get to do it together.
I wish we could announce it now.
Okay. You don't have to announce it now, but tell us where we can listen to the podcast,
find your social media. So when you do announce it, okay you don't have to announce it now but tell us where we can listen to the podcast find your social media so when you do announce it we know onlyfans.com uh no
bachelor voice uh we're obviously instagram chris b harrison and lauren zima she was he is
let's talk he made i don't know how you didn't get at chris harrison originally but he is at
chris b harrison i'll tell you the story. Greg Grunberg, actor.
He was on, really good friends with J.J. Abrams.
He's been on all these Alias and Lost and all these movies and the show Heroes and all that.
We were friends because he was on a show called Alias on ABC.
And he told me about this thing called Twitter.
And it was brand new.
And he's like, dude, you got to get on Twitter.
And I was like, what?
You're really aging yourself right now.
So I was one of the first people on, but Chris, shockingly enough, there's other Chris Harrisons
in the world.
I was like, I didn't know what a handle was or why it was important.
So I just, my middle initial B, Chris B. Harrison.
Not thinking it sounds like crispy Harrison.
That's what I thought you said in the beginning.
That's why I paused to clarify. The producers on the bachelor started calling me crispy say crispy
at least you didn't do at bachelor chris like at bravo andy or i didn't know so i just yeah that
would have sucked considering i left so i'm at lauren zima he's at chris b harrison but we host
the most dramatic podcast ever and uh on where all podcasts are found wherever that is in the ether
but we've been
doing that together and it's been fun but there are much bigger uh things ahead for us can i ask
you a quick question before we go i know we're running out of time but you said that you thought
you could win the bachelor yeah did you ever think about chris sorry i know you could i think by the
way i think you could do did you ever think about being in the hot seat and him grilling you?
And what should he ask you to grill you?
We should have started with this.
With what Chris would ask me?
Yes.
Well, I would become friends with Chris.
I would manipulate a friendship in some way.
I know you would be kept away from me,
but I would charm Chris.
No, people found a way.
Like I formed friendships.
And by the way, I formed friendships with people and I 100% looked 100 looked after them at this point i honestly don't doubt the thing she so i
just if she says she's gonna win i just said i agree how long do you think it would take me to
make you cry that's the thing that's why i think i would win i would take all emotion you don't win
without crying you have okay i'll do a fake cry if the producers want me to i'll do a fake cry
i would do a fake cry no problem i can fake cry. I'll do a fake cry. I would do a fake cry, no problem. I could fake cry.
Put a little onion in my eye.
I think in under 10 minutes, I could get to you.
I don't think so, Chris.
You should come back and we should just time her on 10 minutes and see.
Really?
I need a more intimate relationship in the interview.
Let's put some rose petals around.
I know how to make her cry.
No, I don't mean sexual.
I just mean like we got to be close.
You want to make her cry.
Wait till she's like in a little bit of a deep sleep and wake her up and start being
loud and chaotic and she will cry.
Take off her mouth patch.
When he turns the lights on in the morning without asking me, no fucking way.
Thank you guys for having us.
Chris and Lauren, thank you for coming on.
You guys go follow them and go listen to their podcast because they truly have the two best
voices.
Chris's voice for me is just nostalgic and calming
and reminds me of my childhood.
And I mean, to me,
you are The Bachelor.
And then Lauren's voice
is kind of like sexy and raspy.
You guys got great voice for podcasts.
I'm like when Phoebe is sick
on that episode of Friends.
Perfect.
I love a little cold.
It gives you like a little...
And you have to listen now
because you guys will be on
the most dramatic podcast ever.
Yeah, we were on the show.
Everybody go listen.
Lauren, Crispy, thank you for coming on. Good to have new friends in austin texas for sure austin texas two things before you go you can watch us now on youtube so you can go
on youtube search the skinny confidential and watch our entire episodes on your computer or tv
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it's a him and her tip of the day, five days a week. And the tips are very specific, as you can
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Thank you so much for listening and we'll see you next time.