The Skinny Confidential Him & Her Podcast - Kimora Lee Simmons on Power, Presence, and How to Be Unstoppable in Life, Love, and Legacy

Episode Date: June 26, 2025

#860: Join us as we sit down with Kimora Lee Simmons – multifaceted entrepreneur, fashion designer, model, & television personality, renowned for her influential role in shaping urban fashion & pop ...culture. From walking iconic runways like Chanel at a young age, starring in hit reality TV shows, founding the legendary Baby Phat brand, & shaping the next era of models – Kimora is a true trailblazer in the industry. In this episode, Kimora shares insights on her early runway experiences, the power of resilience, founding Baby Phat & key lessons learned, the lasting legacy of 2000s culture in today's fashion, & how she continues to empower the next generation – including her children!    To Watch the Show click HERE   For Detailed Show Notes visit TSCPODCAST.COM   To connect with Kimora Lee Simmons click HERE   To connect with Lauryn Bosstick click HERE   To connect with Michael Bosstick click HERE   Read More on The Skinny Confidential HERE   Head to our ShopMy page HERE and LTK page HERE to find all of the products mentioned in each episode.   Get your burning questions featured on the show! Leave the Him & Her Show a voicemail at +1 (512) 537-7194.   This episode is sponsored by The Skinny Confidential  Your daily routine done better – with The Skinny Confidential Caffeinated Sunscreen. Subscribe today at https://shopskinnyconfidential.com and get it delivered right to your door – because great skin doesn’t take days off!   This episode is sponsored by Cymbiotika  Go to http://Cymbiotika.com/TSC to get 20% off plus free shipping.   This episode is sponsored by Astral House Marg Summer is here. Time to stock up! Go to http://astraltequila.com to find Astral near you - and don’t forget the limes! Please Enjoy Responsibly. ASTRAL Tequila. 40% Alcohol per Volume. Diageo , New York, NY.   This episode is sponsored by Spritz Society  Spritz Society is now available everywhere! Head to http://spritzsociety.com to find a store near you.   This episode is sponsored by LMNT Get yours at http://DrinkLMNT.com/SKINNY.    This episode is sponsored by Fora Travel So whether you’re looking to plan a trip or build a business planning trips - visit http://foratravel.com/skinny and let them know you came from SKINNY to learn what it means to travel, upgraded.   This episode is sponsored by Boll & Branch Feel the difference an extraordinary night’s sleep can make with Boll & Branch. Get 15% off, plus free shipping on your first set of sheets, at http://BollAndBranch.com/skinny.   Produced by Dear Media

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Starting point is 00:00:00 The following podcast is a Dear Media production. Kim and her. Kimora Lee Simmons, welcome to the show. Kimora is discussing her modeling career, which started at 13 with Chanel in Paris, her entrepreneurial journey, founding and reacquiring the baby fat fashion brand, and her emphasis on empowering young women. She was so honest in this episode and open and just candid. She even talks about insights on bullying in the modeling industry and her parenting strategies, and she talks about her success. It's not every day that someone comes on and they're super open on a mic and she is. On that note,
Starting point is 00:01:01 Kamora Lee Simmons, welcome to the show. This is the skinny confidential him and her. I have wanted you on the podcast. I feel like for six years, I'm so happy that you're here. You never returned our calls. We were calling. No, no, that's not true. I never got any because literally when I came in, I said, why wouldn't you just call me? I think you're busy.
Starting point is 00:01:27 I am, but I still would have seen it. And then, then I would have responded and said hi. And then I would have like passed you to the, we could have done this like much quicker. We could have done it while we were getting pellicure scrubs. I need to go though. You're doing better than me. I'm doing, I'm doing good with the pellic your scrubs and Michael loves getting head at pellic your True true only on special occasions We get the best head they do you guys if you haven't tried the head spot pellic here. You're missing out It's really nice. It's Japanese technology
Starting point is 00:01:57 The last it's the best It's literally the best for the nervous system ever and for your the health of your hair and the follicle and all that. It's quite technical. It's crazy when they look at the camera stuff. Kind of creepy, right? Yeah, for sure. Especially if you, some of, I've seen some that are like, people have buildup that must be like, I don't know, years.
Starting point is 00:02:15 They were showing me the buildup of others and so they're going to do it for me. Okay. Don't make her sick as a, I was like, if I have that buildup, I'm going to be very self-contained. But can I just say you guys, like for those who don't know what we're talking about, just a quick thing, right? It's like kind of like technology. So it's a camera that takes this ultra microscopic images of your hair shaft and just people out there, you guys, sometimes a little dish soap goes a long way, a little apple cider
Starting point is 00:02:42 vinegar in your every once a month, a little rinse guys. Like you have to keep the quality of your cuticle and hair shaft. You have to keep that like clean. It's a great tip. And we know because we see it on the cellular level. It's like so odd. It's crazy. We just mentioned shafts and head in the same sentence and people were getting other ideas. Well you said head spa. Head spa. I mean, it's a lot of ideas to get there.
Starting point is 00:03:07 Everyone who's wondering, so I am friends with Anna of Pellicure. You guys are partners. And she has been telling me that you have to come on the show and how entrepreneurial you are and how you have all these endeavors and motherhood and all these things for a long time.
Starting point is 00:03:23 So finally you're in here. I think she's like, kind of like my manager. Yeah. And I don't know if people like do this, but I'm gonna say like, shout out to Anna. I don't know if you say that, but I'm gonna say that because I honestly feel like, and just I've known her for so many years.
Starting point is 00:03:39 And this is my partner that I'm talking about, but I've known her for so many years and I love her. And you don't always have partnerships like that. Like a lot of times you probably don't like the people. I've also had like headaches with people and so I feel like how I met her, she came with like so much Kimura knowledge and isms and you know and so I've just kind of gotten to see that over the years and she works like she's my manager. Go here, do this, call this one.
Starting point is 00:04:07 You have to do this, you have to say this. She's bossy. Yeah, very much so. She's kind of me and Michael's manager too in a different way. You don't want to cross her. No, we love him. You definitely don't, which is also what I love about her. People will call me and sometimes it's like,
Starting point is 00:04:20 oh my God, your partner. And I'll be like, what happened? And right away I can go to, and what did you do? Because I know what kind of person she is and so she's very like no bullshit Wait, can you say bullshit? Yeah, can you say anything? Anything you don't really were talking about sex if that's okay Oh, we weren't we weren't we were talking about the head spa, but we can talk about anything we want. Okay, great I don't have anything to rip, too much. I mean, no.
Starting point is 00:04:45 We'll see, let's see where we go. I'm not sure. Let us warm you up. No, I'm just kidding. Okay, so I heard here that you went from St. Louis to Paris at 13 and you were walking for Chanel at 13 years old, is that true? Yes, that's true.
Starting point is 00:05:00 How does that happen? So I was in St. Louis, Missouri, which I always explain to people is like the middle of the United States. It's like next to like I don't know Chicago Maybe it's like a big city that you know, but other than that, it's kind of landlocked and it's like we have like the Missouri River the Missouri Maybe the Mississippi River touches. I'm not quite sure about that But it's like it's giving cows and rural. And, you know, this is where I grew up.
Starting point is 00:05:27 So I looked for what was there, like very, very different, very, very unusual. There weren't really mixes of people. It was like very much a stark line, like black or white. Is black or white? That's it. And if maybe you were mixed with black and white, that was something.
Starting point is 00:05:41 So like Mariah Carey would be like exotic. Okay. So me, I was like a total misfit, just looking weird and looking strange, and I never, never like fit in. And my mom signed me up for these classes to give you like confidence and stand up straight and you know, how to enter a room and have self-confidence. And there I met someone that was like, you know, you could really, her name was Meg, you could really like make something of yourself in this type of business or photography or modeling or runway like you should give it a try. And so I did that locally in St. Louis.
Starting point is 00:06:16 So it was like Purina dog chow or like Tarjay ads or something like, you know, like it was in the Sunday Mail or something like that. And then I went to a seminar in Kansas City. And there was all, it was like a legit thing. And you never know in fashion if it's legit or not. You're going to these seminars, you're taking your kids money. You guys, it's the biggest scam in the world, so be careful. But this one was legit.
Starting point is 00:06:44 And there were so many agents from all over the world. And I met one, his name was Etienne and he's from Maryland Gautier. Anybody who's in fashion knows Maryland still to this day. She's a big agency in Paris. And the next thing I know, they whisked me off to Paris. They talked to my mom and they were like, she could really do this. I went to Paris. My first casting was Chanel.
Starting point is 00:07:06 And I landed the job. That's a good first casting. And that was it. Wow. Were you really, really tall when you were young? I was the same as I am now. So I'm six feet tall. I've been six feet tall since like 13.
Starting point is 00:07:19 Yeah, my son Kenzo is 15 and he's six foot eight. Whoa. So he can say like, I've been six foot eight since like 14, like 15. Yeah. I've been this height forever. That's cool. Six four and heels. He's six eight?
Starting point is 00:07:33 Weird, right? It's like a weird, I think it's a weird Asian gene. Oh, wow. I think I got it. I think I got it for my mom. She has it. I think so. So when you go to Paris at 13 years old,
Starting point is 00:07:45 are you with your family? Are you staying there for a long time? What happens? No, I was alone because my mom worked for social security. So she worked for the government. She couldn't leave. It's very nine to five. You're not allowed to leave.
Starting point is 00:08:00 You're not allowed this, that, and the third. I was an only child. So I had to, as by myself, I was homesick, I was running up $5,000 a month phone bills. Back then it's like a collect call, or like you actually have to make a call, it's not Wi-Fi you're paying by the minute. I would run up phone bills, and that's all I ever wanted
Starting point is 00:08:17 to do with my money that I would make was like talk to my mom. I was like, so long. That's wild. How long did you stay there for? So I stayed for some months at a time, like off and on. I had all my books. I went to, you know, I had a tutor. I had a tutor. Sometimes she would travel with me, sometimes not.
Starting point is 00:08:37 But I had all my work and all my books. My luggage, in fact, was mostly textbooks. Heavy, heavy textbooks. And I would travel with these books. A lot like Ioki nowadays, with her books and her heavy, heavy textbooks and I would travel with these books a lot like Ioke nowadays With her books and her heavy heavy books in her luggage and paying the extra fees for all these books Were you very smart as well as I was pretty smart. I was pretty smart. I've always yeah, you've always been really smart pretty smart I would say so it's like a home school program or it's part of the school program You know, no, it's part of the school program and I had my books and I did my studies and I had a tutor.
Starting point is 00:09:06 So like you can't give yourself a test. You need a proxy or a registered tutor to give you that. So I had someone I worked with that was like authorized by the school. And what adult figures were there with you? If your parents, were they? I was by myself. I went to live in a model apartment. Like I said, I did have my tutor sometimes on the road with me, but not like a lot.
Starting point is 00:09:26 That's kind of crazy for a 13-year-old to do that. When I went to Chanel, the first person that Karl Agrafeld put me with was Naomi Campbell. He was like, here's another girl who's left, you know, her mom early. I think if I was 13, Naomi was probably like maybe 19, 20, something like that. Were the other models nice? Yeah. Rarely were they nice. They were terrible.
Starting point is 00:09:51 Not Naomi, but it was terrible. They were terrible. How did you deal with that at 13 years old? I think I was just kind of young and I think I was a little bit naive. And I think I just kind of ignored it. I don't know. They were older than me so they kind of seemed like old and bitter and that's a reason like
Starting point is 00:10:10 now to this day I will never be mean to like a young girl or a young model or an aspiring hopeful something or I would never be that you know ex-wife that like you can come home with a 20 year old. I don't have anything to say about that. Not home to my home, but you can go to your home and I'm not going to be like dogging her because she's 20, I won't do that because I was that girl. So what are the things that they would do? Oh, just be terribly, terribly mean.
Starting point is 00:10:38 Like I think anything you've ever heard of in a documentary or in a book has happened, like crack the back, like hit your heel, like around here so when you walk your heel, like you can bend the heel. Bam. So you're like on the, you know, or like just take your clothes, take your stuff, steal your stuff, push you over, shove you out of the way, talk about you.
Starting point is 00:11:01 And so what would you do when that stuff would happen? You were just, you just kind of took it? Yeah. I don't even think it would always come to me or you don't that stuff would happen? You were just, you just kind of took it? Yeah. I don't even think it would always come to me or you don't know or be like, gosh, my heel broke. Like who did that? You know, you don't necessarily know.
Starting point is 00:11:14 What makes you want to continue modeling after doing all these collect calls home and having this cattiness? Was it just in you? I think when I went to have a job like Chanel be my first job, so I got the job at Chanel and then I kind of stayed at Chanel. That's what people don't exactly understand. So back then it was called like a cabine girl where like all of the clothes for the haute couture was made on my body for these clients.
Starting point is 00:11:41 And these clients are like princess of Monaco, queen of this, queen of that. And you're standing there while they're making the clothes on you and you're holding her cheese plate for her to get her cheese and you're looking like you're keeping that cheese you're not gonna fit this and they're literally making the clothes on you it was me and like three or four other girls. So you just wanted to keep doing it there was like a fire in you? So I went to work every day it's like a contract so I went to work that's. It's like a contract. So I went to work. That's why I say I go home every so many months. So you couldn't just break it?
Starting point is 00:12:08 No, no, no, no, no. I had to go there every day. I went to 31 Rue Cambon, which anyone knows is Chanel, Coco Chanel's house. And the atelier is on one floor, her apartment's on another, the offices are on another. It's like her whole townhouse. And I was homesick but like Don't forget what I said about in the beginning like st. Louis, Missouri They weren't very nice to me and that what am I gonna do tip cows in the evening?
Starting point is 00:12:33 I've never tipped a cow. However, my friends have like the proximity. I can't do it is tipping a cow milking it No, no It's like literally pushing it over when they're standing when they're standing there and sleeping and then like they run out in the night and they push cows and they do this weird shit. I never have done that. You know what she said to me? She goes the other day, she goes, listen, I think we need to get a barn with some like chickens. Me too. And I'm like, who the hell is taking care of this Lauren? We will. I want my dream. If I could show you like any of my manifestation boards or any of my stuff, it's always about a barn and a greenhouse. And I want all these animals and even now I rescue animals, but I want to be able to
Starting point is 00:13:10 rescue all kinds of animals and not have to obviously kill them or get rid of them. I just want them to be able to live with me. And right now my house is like that. I said if you- I will too. On a barn? Yeah. I want to.
Starting point is 00:13:22 If she takes on the barn and the organization and the cleaning of the barn and the taking care of the animals, I could be on board, but I don't know if that... Well, what did you do? I'm not doing that. Were you the farmer? No, I'm not the farmer. You want me to milk you? I know.
Starting point is 00:13:32 Anytime. Wow. I feel like we're not at that stage of like... But then what are you contributing? I'm not contributing. He doesn't want to contribute. No. Then why would you live there?
Starting point is 00:13:43 I wouldn't. That's what I'm saying. Yeah, well, don't. We're there? I wouldn't. That's what I'm saying. Yeah, well don't. Oh, we're on our own? Yeah. That's what I'm saying. Oh, okay. You know what I would contribute? Are we a cute place?
Starting point is 00:13:51 I would contribute if it was, like if I could show up to the farm. You're not going to be a farmer? You're such a cute farmer. Maybe later in life. Well, thank you. You could farm naked. Because you have kids. So do you get farm visitation?
Starting point is 00:14:00 Yeah, I would get the visitation. You can have some eggs. But you're not interested. My mom, I love horses and all the things. I just know- Which eggs? These are all very romantic things, but they're a lot of work. My mom had horses.
Starting point is 00:14:11 My dad, it's a whole thing. My dad grew up on a farm. So you're kind of a farm and stable person, so you know about it and you don't really love it. I'm like, let me show up to the ranch for a week. We're more enamored by this illusion. I want some raw milk and some eggs. I'd like to be able to leave it and not worry about it.
Starting point is 00:14:26 I want to be able to leave it too and travel and do things. I want to be able, you know, I could have like farm hands if somebody would come and work with me and help me. But I think it takes time to build up to that. You can't just be like, I'm getting a farm and I have farm hands. Well, some people can. Everybody watch Yellowstone.
Starting point is 00:14:40 And I was like, hey, did you, the one lesson people didn't take from Yellowstone, I'm like, did you notice all those grown men that lived in like the side barn and bunks together? Like those are the guys that are taking care of the ranch. The other guy's just sitting up there drinking whiskey. I would do it though myself. Some of it. A lot of it.
Starting point is 00:14:54 I believe her. I believe her. Oh my gosh, I would have like over the knee, rubber boots. I would love to see this with you. Just one day we'll go to a farm and I'll watch this whole thing. One thing about me is I like to change my personality. As you're in your one piece, Gucci. This is just today. Tomorrow I'm a Gemini. This is two pieces.
Starting point is 00:15:09 And tomorrow I'll be in my pajamas with my gut hanging out with no makeup. So sorry, like I'm set up. Not a gut, it's a baby. A baby. Did you have context of how crazy it was to be modeling in a Chanel runway show and going to 30, you said 31 Rue? Campone. Okay, did you have context when you were young
Starting point is 00:15:28 or did you not know how gnarly that is? So, okay, we were kind of talking about that before and I think I got off topic, which I'll probably do a thousand times, that's my ADD. But I don't think I knew it, I think I was taking it all in as I was going. It was very fantastical and like lights, camera action. The runways are like, you know,
Starting point is 00:15:47 the runways are probably like some of them, like five feet tall, a lot of feet wide. So, you know, you're very elevated and it's lights. And I think I love it. And just the music was so good and it was so loud and it drowns out everything when you're walking. And I don't know, I kind of love it. And don't forget, it was like a rock or a hard place that's where I was do you want to
Starting point is 00:16:07 go to st. Louis and be picked on or would you rather be in Paris at 31 Rue Cambon with supermodels picking on you take your pick because you're gonna get picked on so I just kind of took it and I stayed to myself and I I'm an only child don't forget so I was kind of okay. I'm really independent. I was a latchkey kid I can let myself in not gonna lose my key. It's around my neck Not today though to me It's so surprising that you that you were picked on because when I see you now you seem so confident like Like I was picked on so how did that start to happen where you gained confidence to not be picked on?
Starting point is 00:16:44 So how did that start to happen where you gained confidence to not be picked on? It never happened until I was an adult and I started doing my own thing and then I went, I became a model. But even then people were picking on me. So then I had to figure out how to get out of modeling. And for me that was with fashion. So I started a line at a very young, I started Baby Fat at a very young age. So I think just my young adulthood is, and by then now I'm married and I had Mingi. And, you know, I think it was like, I don't think I ever got over it. Probably to this day, which is why I advocate so much for young girls
Starting point is 00:17:18 and young women. Right now, before I came in here, I was literally on a conference call with a lawyer because someone's picking on my kid in the modeling industry. Like, it's a problem. So I advocate for young women. And even when I was always doing my shows and baby fat shows in the 90s and 2000, you
Starting point is 00:17:36 know, I would never treat a model like that. Some of the things I went through and some of the people that we know that still to this day are very famous editors and such and they just their behavior is a little different. I would never do that. I would I embrace that. I know that these young women are someone's kids. I have my own kids.
Starting point is 00:17:55 I it was just terrible. So I'm the opposite. I like I try to take girls that look different. I try to take girls of all shapes and sizes. Like, I love you if you're super thin and I love you if you come with all the junk in your trunk. I've had girls come to me crying and saying like, this is my last casting. My agency said my boobs are too big and that's what made me hire her. Jessica White was one of those girls. You remember her? I have like so many stories. Chrissy Teigen told me I gave her her first
Starting point is 00:18:24 job. Like, I have so many stories in the industry of just, I would not be many stories. Chrissy Teigen told me I gave her her first job. Like I have so many stories in the industry of just, I would not be that person. And I think that's why so much maybe goodness has been afforded to me. I think it's like kind of a blessing, kind of a karma. I think so. Do you think it's worse now or when you were younger
Starting point is 00:18:41 in terms of bullying? I thought it was worse when I was younger. I thought it had died down. I know obviously of lots of stories from Ming and Aoki, but only now seeing like, for example, what's going on with Mingi, I realized, oh gosh, it's, you know, I even told you that I realized, oh wow, I'm shocked someone would be doing that
Starting point is 00:19:00 to my daughter, to me and to this young girl that that's crazy. So I'm realizing it's going on still now. How are you gonna help her to figure it out and solve it? Like what do you tell, what's the advice that you tell her that she's getting bullied? What do you say? It's very tough. I try to say like, I try to use things as like as learning lessons. So you know, you have to advocate for yourself and you have to
Starting point is 00:19:26 like read the fine print when someone tried to sneak you on a contract and put something in there. You know, they're young girls and so I say like how do that's happened or did you look at this or did you, you know, and she'll say like well it wasn't meant to be that way, it was meant to be this way or the person said this but they didn't write that and so, you know, you wedge yourself into situations. You have kids, they wedge themselves in the situations but I try to use it as like a learning a learning a life lesson for them the boy is so ridiculous too it's so much easier to be nice mmm then to bully it also is
Starting point is 00:19:59 think so but I don't think other people think that I feel like they're like mean or they're like grumpy or they're cantankerous Or they're angry or I do think a lot of times it's not even like about you, right? It's not about me. I think it's just that's how you were. Yeah, or you you had something going on on your own On your own time in your own head. I think I think it's like a confidence in an insecurity issue Typically people are lashing out like that are battling a lot of insecurity. It's something right? Exactly. I think they're battling something and having grown up with that doesn't really phase me. In our world, if you're a super confident, happy person, you would never be engaged in that
Starting point is 00:20:34 behavior. It's the people that do that. There's something that they're an issue that they're already trying to work through. I agree. So I told my kids, first of all, I tell my kids to stay out of the comments and Stay off of the internet read if you go looking for shit on the internet You're gonna find it like if you go looking through your man's phone for something or your woman's phone You're gonna find what you're looking for if you go looking for shit You're gonna find shit. So I first of all tell them to stay away now do kids stay away. Absolutely not
Starting point is 00:21:01 So then when they come crying about the things that didn't stay away from I say like show me that what's going on and they show it to me and I'm looking at the name I'm about to say I'm looking at the name there's no followers or there's some you know look at their page like look at this stuff and quickly I say do you see what this is this is probably like a 90 year old man I don't know what who is this person It's a faceless person. I always say this behind a screen or, you know, like we call them like keyboard gangsters.
Starting point is 00:21:32 Who is this person and who are you? And you hopefully would have raised your kids or, you know, you would have put a little something in your friend's back, battery pack, right? Like who, do you know yourself? Cause we really don't know these people. R2D2 at whatever, whatever. Like look at the names even. I don't even know what it is.
Starting point is 00:21:52 R2D2. Do you know who R2D2 is, Lauren? Yeah. Do you? Yeah. Okay, good. It's a Star Wars person. Yeah, I know. I don't know which one. One of the metallic ones. He's an astromech droid.
Starting point is 00:22:00 Is he the gold one or the little one? He's a blue and white. Michael and Star Wars comments, he knows it all. You have 30 minutes? No, I'm just kidding. No. My birthday is May 4th. May the 4th be with you. When, after working with Chanel, what was your next big endeavor?
Starting point is 00:22:20 So then I went on after probably a couple of years and I started doing like modeling all over because now you're not in a contract. and I think when you leave after having like years job with Chanel and being the face and being like the muse for Karl Lagerfeld you can get probably any job so then I got all of the job you know all of the runway jobs and all of the things and by now I'm cooking I'm like a model but then I was remembering that people were always so mean. So how do I get out of here? Like, what's the closest exit?
Starting point is 00:22:48 And I thought it was so funny that you would get paid all this money and like all these people come to look at you. It was always so strange to me because I grew up the girl that everyone said was so ugly. So that's weird. Now you're here to look at me and then you're paying money to get in or you're buying these clothes. It was just so odd to me. And it made me realize. So if you broke your leg tomorrow at school, you know, or you got chopped off by a bus, I don't know, God forbid something happened.
Starting point is 00:23:14 No one's going to want you anymore. It's like over that quick. So by now, this is like, how old am I? 15 with these messages, 16, 17, 18. And I had to think of something else to do because I couldn't stomach being in an industry like how old am I? 15 with these messages, 16, 17, 18. And I had to think of something else to do because I couldn't stomach being in an industry that was like so built on like the fluff of like how you look alone.
Starting point is 00:23:35 And that's the whole thing about sex cells and beauty cells. Like now I know, but keep in mind, I was navigating this as a kid. So I'm figuring this out on my own. And I'm figuring out it's not really a place I want to live to be that young and to realize that is crazy I I remember when I was like 21 bartending and I had a Guy friend of mine be like you can't lead with your looks you need to find something else and you almost realized that at 15 it's like you have to create value in something other than your looks because it's fleeting yeah looks. Looks change. It will change and like I said you could be who knows if this pregnant. Another thing that was
Starting point is 00:24:09 the thing I had all my kids on the runway walk down the runway so I could be big small I don't have the pressures of being I'm not a Hollywood actress I'm not you know so I'm a business person I can look how I want to look. You're an entrepreneur. It sounds like it like literally 16 years old. You figured that out, but you didn't maybe have the word. For sure. It could have even been an accountant. It could have been a bookkeeper. It could have been something else because I was
Starting point is 00:24:33 watching my money and like down to the FedEx and counting my stuff. So I don't really know what the word was, but I was something that I didn't want it to be model. How many of the women that you kind of started with still like had longevity in the career and like stayed? Oh, many, many, many. And how many kind of fell off?
Starting point is 00:24:51 Is it like, what's the, I guess I'm asking, since I'm not familiar with the modeling world outside of talking to some people that have done it. What is like the ratio of people and the longevity, you know, once you start to compare to when you kind of get thrown out, like do most people stay for long periods or is it a lot of people? You mean of girls that I discovered? Like that I work with?
Starting point is 00:25:08 No, that you work with. Girls that I came up with? Yeah. Like how many of them actually have long careers? No one in the modeling industry, I don't think, has done what I've done. I can't name one. That is not a surprise. But I'm wondering like...
Starting point is 00:25:18 I mean, there are a few. Hold on. There are a few. But like, let's talk about who they are. I can name, I know them off the top of my head. Like Heidi Klum. Yeah. Yeah. So she didn't do what I do, meaning she's not making clothes.
Starting point is 00:25:29 She's not creating a lifestyle for young people and multi generations of people, different. She's more of a producer, a TV person. She does what she does, but not really a brand. Okay. She does have a brand, but it's a brand that, many people have that brand. And she took it, I think, like top model for Germany or something like that.
Starting point is 00:25:48 Tyra, Tyra created top model. But that, and that is her brand, but it's not really selling clothes or something like that. I don't know that there are girls. Now, Heidi had a bunch of kids, so I count that, but it's not a lot of girls that had like, you were a model and then you had a family and you were married and you had lots of kids and then you
Starting point is 00:26:08 had multiple different successful businesses. I really don't know who that person is. Yeah, so I guess in the reverse of that, I was asking like, what happens to the majority of people that don't. What happens to the ones that. I don't know. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:26:19 Naomi is still is working, but she's as a model. That's different. I get, some of them are still there, but the rest of them, I think they maybe went on or maybe they're married or maybe they're moms or maybe they do have businesses. I'm sure quite many of them do. I just don't know what they are or I haven't seen them anymore or it's like a class reunion. You guys see me. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:26:40 All right. All right. Got it. Got it. All right. All right. Got it. Got it. I want to have a class reunion by the way because I'm wondering where all these people are. She wants a class reunion. Line up. Back then I would never ever go. I was like oh I'm on the cover of this magazine send that that's enough or oh I did this send that that's enough but now I actually want to know where people are and it's only because I
Starting point is 00:27:04 remember the few the few nice friends I had not like for to find the bullies. I wouldn't even necessarily remember them like that I want to find the friends that I had I'm sure the bullies are not feeling great. What is the first? entrepreneurial thing that you did What age I think it was? you did what age? I think it was off on my own modeling at 13. And after that, it was probably starting a brand, starting Baby Fat, and I was probably 21.
Starting point is 00:27:33 I'm not exactly sure, but it's young. How do you have that idea at 21? What sparked that idea? How did you find the name? How did you get the brand? Remember I said, how the hell do I get out of here? Where's the exit door? So I'm looking for an exit.
Starting point is 00:27:44 And by then I would have been married or at least like engaged. And my then fiance husband had a clothing line for men and wanted to do one for women and came out with all of these crazy clothes that look like men's clothes on women. And I was like, we don't want that. And every time I would come in and be like,
Starting point is 00:28:06 we don't want that, like, ugh. What did he say when you said that? And he would be like, yeah, you're right. Like, what do you want? And so I just started taking the stuff and turning it around and giving girls what they wanted. And so it just, I launched a line. I started the women's counterpart
Starting point is 00:28:23 to the men's line at that time. Did it take off right away? Yes and no. It did in the sense that I had a lot of model friends, and so I would put the girls in like a baby tee like this. This is like a classic piece. And so now you have all the cute girls wearing your stuff and you're just giving it to them, which is one thing I say right now about to people when they say, how do you like make it as an entrepreneur? You know, how do I get my product out there?
Starting point is 00:28:48 I'm like, just get it out there. Just give it to your friend. Like loan it to them. Give it to them. Put yourself in the fashion show at the local high school, right? Make stuff for someone's red carpet appearance. Get yourself out there. If it's on the other side of the microphone, get someplace where you're interviewing your
Starting point is 00:29:04 friends, talking to someone, meet someone at the Starbucks and interview them. Whatever it is that you want to do, get yourself there. It's free. It's interesting because you were doing at 21 what people do now in a different way. We call it user-generated content where like I'll gift someone an ice roller and then hoping like maybe they'll use it on social media and like a really seamless way. You were doing that before this was even a thing with your model friends and just hoping that they would wear it or talk for sure. I realize now that I was doing a lot of things then that were the
Starting point is 00:29:38 first. Yes. And there was no social media. There was no social media. All of the marketing was ourself. You know, we had to figure that out and do it ourself. We created a whole kind of licensing model that you use your name and create a product. And then came a lot of other artists that had brands and, you know, rappers and musicians that would go to do TV and a lot of cross pollination of your name and your likeness. We kind of taught, and your likeness. We kind of taught like built that model and now I see girls are like oh my god I have my
Starting point is 00:30:08 first you know fragrance or I have like a skincare line that's inclusive of all kinds of skin or I have a makeup line that has all these colors and every all these shades and everyone's so excited and I love it and then I think like oh my god I did that. Yeah. Already 20 years ago. That's it's wild. I don't even feel old enough to say that, but I can say that. And these people who are doing it now were my friends then. We've always been friends kind of in the business,
Starting point is 00:30:32 friendlies, I'll call them. Everyone always asked me if I had to pick one product from Symbiotica, what it would be. And I have to say, and this is kind of across the board, I would go with their liposomal glutathione. I love this glutathione, it's my favorite. I think it absorbs the fastest, like it has the fastest nutrient absorption I've ever seen.
Starting point is 00:30:56 I can notice it right away. I like the citrus berry flavor. It comes in a little packet. I throw it in my purse, it's so easy. If you're unfamiliar with glutathione, it's all about glowing skin, anti-aging, and gut health benefits, which helps support bloating and digestion.
Starting point is 00:31:12 And I need all the help that I can get with this pregnancy and digestion. If you're gonna pick another product from Symbiotica, I would tell you to get their liposomal vitamin C. How I drink this is I just put it in my water in the morning, all I mix in, my beauty salt, put it in my water and froth it up, maybe add some lemon and I'm good to go. And vitamin C, especially theirs, is so good for collagen production and glowing skin and antioxidants. And it's an immunity booster. I have been
Starting point is 00:31:39 a fan of this brand forever. It's one of my favorite brands that we work with. I take their supplements all the time and I gift them. Taking Symbiotica supplements is one of the easiest ways I've found to stay consistent with my health goals even during a busy summer. Go to symbiotica.com slash TSC today you get 20% off plus free shipping. That's C-Y-M-B-I-O-T-I-K-A.com slash T-S-C. You get 20% off plus free shipping. Hello everybody. Let's take a quick break in this show to talk about what's quickly become one of my favorite things of the summer, and that is a straw tequila. Right now in front of me, I have Astral's Anejo. I have their Blanco tequila, and I have my personal favorite, their Reposado.
Starting point is 00:32:25 Estral is my go-to tequila for margaritas at home, and it doesn't just taste good, it does good too. Every bottle of Estral Tequila helps build homes for families in need in Jalisco, Mexico, and after making the tequila, they upcycle leftover agave fibers into adobe bricks used to build homes in their community. How cool is that?
Starting point is 00:32:44 So when you're sipping a Marg, you're also supporting a great cause. Drink Margs, do good. What could be better? A straw is an award-winning tequila that tastes good. And like I've said many times on this show, if I'm out and I'm choosing to drink, tequila is my drink of choice.
Starting point is 00:32:57 I have it in a margarita. One thing that's also become quickly, one of my favorite drinks is a tequila old fashioned. A lot of people think you can only do that with whiskey, but you can do that with tequila as well. Try it with the Anejo. You won't look back, you won't regret it. Little bit of an orange slice, really good.
Starting point is 00:33:11 So if you're thinking about having a night out or maybe a little bit of day fun, try a straw. It is quickly emerging as one of the greatest tequilas out there, one of my favorite tequilas, and I highly recommend you try it as well. Housemarque summer is here, time to stock up. Go to www.astraltequla.com to find a straw near you. And don't forget the limes. Please enjoy responsibly a straw
Starting point is 00:33:32 tequila, 40% alcohol per volume. Diageo, New York, New York. All right. I am craving Spritz Society, specifically the pink lemonade flavor. I had the opportunity of doing a skinny confidential flavor with Spritz Society, you may have heard of them. It's an award-winning can cocktail brand founded by my girlies, Claudia and Jackie from the Toast Podcast. So why I wanted to do a collab with this brand specifically is of course I love Claudia and Jackie,
Starting point is 00:34:04 but also it's made with real white wine, real cane sugar, and six ingredients or less so there's no artificial flavors, there's no fake sugars, it's just clean simple delicious cocktails. No BS. You should also know that each can only has 120 calories. How I like to drink this is I'll do a wine glass with a bunch of crushed ice in it. I'll pour the pink lemonade on top. It's so refreshing. I can't wait. Like I said, I'm getting there to have one guys. And then I'll do a sprig of basil on top with a straw and it's so delicious. It's the perfect summer cocktail. If pink lemonade is not your jam, they have lemon
Starting point is 00:34:45 iced tea by Craig Conover from Southern Charm. They also have a pickle flavor and a peach flavor. They've really like nailed the flavors and that shouldn't surprise you because they're the toast. On that note, you guys can head to spritzsociety.com to find a store near you and don't forget to follow at spritz on Instagram. They're always dropping exciting new flavors and throwing fun events. Spritz Society, summer starts here. When your ex-husband who's successful on his own and he's so successful, but then he sees his wife
Starting point is 00:35:18 becoming so successful with her line, was that a trip or was he like, I'm gonna give you all the business tips and advice or were you like on your own? So yes and no But what people sometimes forget and sometimes they remember is I was already Successful when I met him in my way in fashion right and he was already successful as a music and hip-hop mogul and founder, you know, like kind of a
Starting point is 00:35:41 Father to successful people coming together, you just got more successful. And I was much younger. Yeah. So actually. How old were you when you got married? Relativeness. I was like, I don't know, 21, young. I was like 16 when I met.
Starting point is 00:35:55 Did you like him right away? I was young and he's like 20 years older than me. So that's a new, that's a whole other. Michael's parents are the same. Your parents? Yeah. Yeah, 18 years. They're still together. Yeah, we're like 18 years.
Starting point is 00:36:05 That's like a normal thing. I mean, it's not normal now. My second husband will be 18 years older. Your next one? Yeah. When you're not moving to the farm, the farmer. Well, the farm is probably what's gonna break us, to be honest.
Starting point is 00:36:16 See, so then now we already know. She'll go 18 up, I'll go 18 down. Oh yeah, that's how it goes. We'll call it a 36 year gap, we'll split it that way. You know what, I care about the brain. Yeah. So. The mind.
Starting point is 00:36:27 I got enough brains around me. Guys don't always want that. They want them girls to shut up. I don't really know. I do like to be around women with big brains and big personalities. That's very true, Michael. Yeah, I feel like you're putting you.
Starting point is 00:36:39 I thought you were going to say big breasts. Maybe my ADD brain too. I will lose a lot of interest if I don't have a little bit of a sparring thing. You know like Frank Sinatra. I think so too. I think well that's because that's what I have to offer. So that's how I look at life. How I frame it. But I do know I have plenty of friends that don't want someone that's so intelligent in a partner. They don't want your opinions.
Starting point is 00:36:57 I don't want someone with their brains rattling around like an old ping-pong ball in there. I need it to be like stuck in there securely. Yeah, I meet ping-pong girls. Frank Sinatra said it shouldn't be a staring contest. True. Oh. That's a good quote. That's what he said. I know a lot of guys that want a staring contest. Huh?
Starting point is 00:37:15 They want them just to... I think that's like fun for a minute. And then you're like, okay, what are we doing? You might- We know what it's fun for. Yeah, but then you, but then let's skip the whole preamble of the getting in the car And they're going to the dinner and they're doing the whole thing
Starting point is 00:37:27 It's just like well because we're just gonna sit there and look at each other You know might as well just want to jump in might as well just get to it if we're not gonna talk about anything That's oh my gosh, hi, uh in desk court You know what you have to be chivalrous. Is that dead? You don't know But i'm saying I think we tell us we beautiful? It would be hard for him to be... It would be hard for you if you need some brain between the years. I would prefer not to split up because I know I'd be an absolute disaster at this point,
Starting point is 00:37:55 any kind of date. I wouldn't know where to begin, like, in one way. I would just be totally... If I had to go and start all over and do the whole thing. All he has to do is write at Lauren's ex in his bio. That's true. I would create a dating profile and I would use a bunch of pictures of her. That's true. I'd be like, I'm the ex and then that would be my trap.
Starting point is 00:38:11 Because they want to go to Christmas with us. That's true. You know what I mean? So my first baby daddy used to always say when we were friendly, he would say, I get so much P word because of you. And don't do that. Don't laugh like that. You're going to have Braxton Hicks right now.
Starting point is 00:38:29 I'm going to start cramping down low. I get so much pussy because of you. He would say that. And I would say that's right. And I'm glad you know that because you're my bitch. I would say that. Well, it is true. I think he'll tell a different story, but this is I think guys is a true a lot of pussy from
Starting point is 00:38:46 Who they date before for sure sorry? a lot of girls Over there have come and gone thinking that they can replicate That situation but not knowing or being aware of what I brought to the situation what I brought is not what you bring honey So therefore it's a little different. It's a staring contest. I'm going to say after meeting you, it's going to be hard to replicate.
Starting point is 00:39:10 Good luck. It's been hard for most. It's going to be hard. It's going to be hard. That's what I'm saying. Like, just like, maybe not give me the headache. Just let me just kind of just stay in the lane that I'm going. I almost like want you to go see what's out there
Starting point is 00:39:22 for like a couple weeks and like go see what's out there for a couple weeks and go see what's out there. No, that is how break babies come about. No. A lot of extra baggage could come from that. You have to be careful. That's what we just had Dr. Drew on and he told us that he has never seen a three-way couple or three-way situation workout ever in all his years. Again, the long term.
Starting point is 00:39:46 I know Drew, Dr. Drew, and I like Drew, but I don't agree with that, but I'm not a doctor, but I don't agree with that because I know plenty of people that have very nice, successful relationships and it works. And I know plenty of people that you all would know. And every person in this room would know like the most famous people in the world and they have decent relationships. And I think it's because maybe. With three people in the world and they have decent relationships. And I think it's because maybe...
Starting point is 00:40:06 With three people in the relationship? At least. Oh. And the reason I think it's okay... Well, hold on. Are you talking about a throuple like living in the house with these people or a person that kind of goes in and out like how you said, go two weeks. I know people that do that or bring other people in and they're fine.
Starting point is 00:40:19 No, he was talking about like a throuple where there's like the guy tries to be with two people. Are you sure? I've seen it. I've seen it. And it works. Absolutely. Sometimes I think it's because one or other of the other of the person in the relationship, the relationship is so uneven, not weighted the same. And so I think one or the other person maybe feels like they kind of have to do that or
Starting point is 00:40:40 kind of have to give into these wishes. I know a lot of women, young girls, that like get into that because they kind of feel like they had to to keep the sky or to keep it fresh. They felt like pressure. So then if that's true, where are they going? They're not going anywhere, really. So it ends up working is what you're saying. So it can end up working. I know very happy relationships where it works. I wish I could give you guys all the names in the tea. What do their names rhyme with? No.
Starting point is 00:41:07 No. No. I can't. You can't do that. Because I'm not even good at that. I'll say the name. I'll be, I'll be screwed. What are the initials?
Starting point is 00:41:15 No. All right. Let's move it along. You know what? Though she does know a lot of really, really famous people and I could see how maybe for really, really famous people, there's certain exceptions. I think we're not really famous. Let's move it along.
Starting point is 00:41:23 Or guess what else? I've even had situations happen where I have friends and my friends, guys or girls are like dating whoever, a guy or a girl, and they'll say, like, okay, I'll give you one example. One of my friends said he was dating a guy. He said he was dating this girl and he was like, oh my God, I was dating this girl and in her phone, like whatever we went out and she was talking to another guy so-and-so who's like a very famous guy, we all know
Starting point is 00:41:52 this person, these people. And so she was talking to them and I think she was in a relationship with them. So my date or my thing with her didn't really work out. And I realized that because they're my friends. And so I realized that they're living like an alternative life. So there's been cases where I didn't even know you were doing that, but I learned it because someone else was saying they lost their girl or their guy to this other situation. So I'm like, oh, I see how people are living. Okay.
Starting point is 00:42:21 And I don't say anything when I see them. If they didn't tell me, I'm not going to say anything. Is it called a swinger Is that a swing? It's kind of a swinger or kind of a throuple or kind of a threesome or kind of a menage a trois I don't know. It's got some different names an arrangement No, maybe like an agreement a situation ship Didn't somebody say that? I mean, listen-
Starting point is 00:42:45 Or something like that. To each its own, I feel like- It seems like a lot to manage. It could also be called an affair. It could also be called a lot of things. We don't know where it falls on the spectrum. Okay. But there's a spectrum, and I know both sides.
Starting point is 00:42:57 I know some on the end where it ruins their life, and I know other ones that they're like thriving. Good for the ones that are thriving. What is the time, and we're taking a tangent again, what is the time in your company, Baby Fat, where it like hit? What happened? What was something that rocked the company? Or was it not an opinion? Something good?
Starting point is 00:43:20 Yeah, like, or was it like a really slow build exponentially? Or was it like something that someone wore? Oh, so I don't think it was, no, it wasn't what someone wore because it was a lot of people wearing a lot of things. It was a time and it was a movement and it's one of the best movements of our time, which was the late 90s and the early 2000s to this day people are dressing Wearing like I literally have pulled out a bag to wear today. This is like an old chanel bag This has got to be at least 20 years old you guys anybody who really knows their brands and their chanel knows this bag It's old as matusala my point is We're still chasing that
Starting point is 00:44:01 2000s vibe the late 90s. So it was a movement. And I think what the movement was is a couple of things. But I think I was speaking to women, young women, single women, married women, women. And I was giving them, first of all, a lot of fashion because I was from all the high fashion runways. I'm giving you a lot of fashion and insight and style and flair for a buck. For a dollar, right? My jacket is not like Chanel, one of my favorites. It's not a Chanel jacket.
Starting point is 00:44:34 But I'm giving you kind of style and flair and design. So the girls felt like they were getting something. You maybe didn't get that Chanel, but you could get that baby fat jean. It's like a lifestyle. Maybe you couldn't afford this fancy watch, but you could get that sneaker, right? It's a lifestyle. And so I think that's why it kind of took off like wildfire and to this day It's like a time that we love like think of the time that we came from right? It's like Jay-Z and Beyonce It's like I don't know think of think of that time. It was like super cool. Oh, I remember it.
Starting point is 00:45:05 To this day, it's still the good music, it's still the good clothes. It's still that Moschino belt. That Moschino belt that you have on, you could have bought it today and you very easily could have bought it not 20 years ago because you don't look old enough, but someone could have gotten that belt 20 or 30 years ago. The chunky, the letter, the way the letters are, the block letters, like come on, we know it, it's a time. And I came up in that time. So that was one thing. I gave them a lot of fashion. But the other thing I think is I gave women a voice. I gave them an independence. I gave them something that they could like aspire to or like I was kind of like their girlfriend, everyone's homegirl. I
Starting point is 00:45:44 gave them something else to look forward to and look up to about themselves that maybe they didn't have before on their own I also think like I used to watch your show and how many years ago was your show a lot okay I used to watch it and I remember being like younger and watching it and being like, that's a strong, I didn't have the word entrepreneur. I didn't have that word yet. Yeah, me either. But that's what I was a strong blank. You were on like one of the like sort of, I don't want to say first entrepreneurs, but you were in it's like a mogul. I would say like a mommy model mogul. That was my thing. And I got it's so funny that you say, didn't know that word. I don't know the word.
Starting point is 00:46:28 Like did you know the word entrepreneur? I think I learned it quickly just from being in like International fashion circles and certainly from being in the music industry and you know, I think I've learned a lot I've learned to emulate a lot. I grabbed like the bits and pieces That were fabulous. What do you run with the company? Do you run the logistics, the operations? Are you picking all the fabrics? What is your... Today?
Starting point is 00:46:56 Yes. Everything. So we, I built the company many years ago. Then we sold the company. And then recently I bought the company back. So it's kind of like a rebranding. I didn't know that. So you bought it back. Okay. And then recently I bought the company back. So it's kind of like a rebranding. I didn't know that. So you bought it back. Yeah. So like since like COVID. Okay. I remember how long did you have the company when you sold it? I don't know. I don't know. Maybe
Starting point is 00:47:17 I don't know. 10 years, 15 years. Were you happy when you sold it or did you miss it? 12 years. Oh, I was so sad. That was another thing I learned about business. You build things up to sell them and get rid of them. The best, the worst thing that you could do, sorry, is to be emotionally attached to something great that you built and not be able to let it go and hold on to it long after it, you know, the value has peaked. Okay.
Starting point is 00:47:42 I've learned that. And I've also learned when you get rid of a company or a brand or if you sell your the name of this show you can still go on to do other things because the value is in you too. Not the two of you, not only the name. So if the two of you did this under that name, the two of you can do this under another name. I learned that. So once you leave or sell it, you don't want to try to come back and get it again. So what happened? You come back and get it again So because it's expensive I went back many many years later on it And then came this resurgence of y2k and you know now you have like the ice spices of the world
Starting point is 00:48:15 You have Rihanna bought the whole baby fat past collection She brought all the archives or vintage archive whatever shed someone going good So like look at all the cool girls now that are still embracing Y2K. It's a thing still. It's in the pink that we wear, the lip gloss that we wear, the way that we style our hair, the Jordans that we wear. It's, you know, look at Paris Hilton. She's, I see her a lot.
Starting point is 00:48:39 She's still embracing it. Like it's a movement. So when you look back on everything, how you sold it, and then you sold it and then you bought it back you like the way that panned out. I'm asking for my own self with my own brand I just I'm curious like you like how you got rid of it you took fresh energy. It was very tough I think when you get rid of a company I stayed on then as an executive and creative director it's very tough
Starting point is 00:49:00 because now you work for someone else right you work for yourself but you work for someone else and when people come in I find that the name of the game for them is like to make the most money For the least amount of you know input, right? Whereas you were trying to give them all the quality and all the things and all the you know Do the business the right way? So I've noticed that when people sell their things it Tends to shift or sometimes decline
Starting point is 00:49:26 or the marketing is a little bit different. So you have to get your footing is what I'm saying. And then if you want it back and you can get it back, fine. Like I did do that many years later, but usually you don't want to go back and get it back. You want to do it again. Are you happy now with getting it back? Are you like loving it? I'm happy now, but I said it's been like through some COVID toughness. And so it's just now starting to pick up and turn around and to be profitable, I guess, if you would.
Starting point is 00:49:53 It's been a journey because you're putting everything in yourself and you're, you know, it's, Baby Fat is a legacy, you know, brand, meaning I did it when I was a kid and now my kids are here doing it and my kids will have it and maybe even their kids, you know, it's when you think of brands like that, it's one of them. Like if you think, I don't know, Ralph Lauren's been around for a long time.
Starting point is 00:50:10 Tommy Hilfiger, Donna Karen. I've been around a long time. So it has many iterations. How were you managing? Like a cat. Like a cat. Like a baby fat cat. And if you guys are watching YouTube, she has a cat on her shirt.
Starting point is 00:50:24 So get excited. Go get excited. It's a pink baby fat cat. And Hello Kitty, our daughter loves Hello Kitty. Yeah our daughter loves Hello Kitty. Anything Hello Kitty. When you were building your brand and you were a mother, what did that look like? How did you deal with all the different things you were doing and you were doing a reality show? So I just was telling somebody this the other day. I didn't know at the time that I was doing it what all I was doing. I didn't know that. I just thought it was normal. So I would bring my girls. I had two little girls because my boys didn't come till later. I had two little girls. I think that was maybe easier for me because they were like, like me under me. I'm doing makeup. They're playing with the makeup. I'm trying on clothes. They're playing in the clothes. I'm wearing heels, they're playing in the heels. I think for me it worked.
Starting point is 00:51:07 And they went everywhere with me. Like go to work with me, they would have a playroom or a playpen in my office. It was like take your kid to work day every day. Like how right now you are sitting here and pregnant, you have kids at home, you have kids here, it's fine. I didn't know that I was doing something, I only was just trying to do something.
Starting point is 00:51:24 I didn't know until later, and also when you start to see your counterparts and what they're doing or not doing that you start to realize it. You're just normally going through the stresses of your normal day. You don't realize you're doing something entrepreneurial or you don't realize then that working women don't usually have time for family and are not afforded and allowed to stop and have a family. You don't realize that. You don't realize a lot of the shit that I've realized after the fact. It sounds like your whole career has been just like, you throw yourself in and you're almost naive about it
Starting point is 00:51:57 and you just make it work. I throw myself in. I'm naive about the goodness of it. Like I might not know the success or the impact until later. But when I'm throwing myself in, I'm kind of carrying a village with me, which is like a village of, like I said, women, young women, single women, divorcees. When I was younger, they were young girls like me, they were moms, they were young moms like I was. So it's, I feel like I always have like the city on my back.
Starting point is 00:52:30 Like the girls are kind of with me. So I'm also fighting for them. I'm building something, I'm teaching them something, I'm showing them something, I'm giving them something else. Another lifestyle, a way of life, something to aspire to. I think for me, it's always about like building. How are your kids so smart? I don't know. This is, I've heard this from multiple
Starting point is 00:52:48 people. I think it comes from the mom. All the mom. What? I think that's scientifically proven. Yeah. Really? Yeah. I think so. You can look it up. Yeah. It's a scientifically proven thing that the intelligence comes from the mom. How are they, have they always been smart like this since they were little or is it something that you noticed later on? Too smart. They're too smart when they're young. No one told me, is this true that they're like genius level smart?
Starting point is 00:53:12 Is this really true or is it true that- This is what I've heard. So they're all, my kids are geniuses. Like she's not being funny you guys. Like when they were younger, Ming and Aoki, that's the first two, they went to Merman. Merman is the only gifted school certified in, I think, California or LA. So you have to actually take an IQ test and rank at a certain number above. Like you can't pay your way in.
Starting point is 00:53:33 No, no, no. It's an IQ based thing. Okay. So all of my kids have taken this test and scored off the charts and the two younger ones actually went to Merman, which we love. And then one of them went to Harvard? Is this correct at a young age or something? So Ioki, she's 22 now.
Starting point is 00:53:48 She graduated Harvard at 20, 20, I think, or 21. Oh, they're really geniuses. Michael, I'm telling you. I tried to tell them this. And she got in at 15. Harvard, I'm not in loud, 50 feet within Harvard. They're like, don't even come near us. Wait, how does she even know to apply to Harvard at 15 years old?
Starting point is 00:54:03 Because they went to Merman. So I think it's like a kind of a... What do they do in Merman? Like what do they... It's a gifted school. It's kind of a prep school. So you definitely are allowed to like push to the maximum of your creativity or the maximum of your intelligence.
Starting point is 00:54:16 There's no such thing as like you're this age and you're in this grade. If you can do, you know, a billion more math levels up, go for it. They don't like throttle you back and say, hey, you're good. No, no, no. Our system is set up very much like you're this age, you're in this grade, that's how it has to be. You call it school, how old are you?
Starting point is 00:54:32 Okay, we put them in this class. They don't care that some are below that level and some are above that. And you're either in the middle or you're struggling or you're bored. That's how it is in the classroom. How did you know though to put them in the school? Like where did you see like, wait, my kids are gifted?
Starting point is 00:54:49 So I learned it only when they were in elementary school and and certainly for Aoki because she started even younger. Min graduated as well from NYU but she was on normal time. She didn't go like three or four years early. But I think it was because my kids sometimes were struggling in school. Yeah. And almost like a little bit bullied because like you're off reading your textbooks at playtime. You don't really have friends.
Starting point is 00:55:17 Your goals and your interests are kind of not what they're doing at the school. What they think is cool, you don't think is cool. You're studying history, they're playing with toys. You know what I mean? So it's, I started to see that because they would get kind of not what they're doing at the school, what they think is cool, you don't think is cool. You're studying history, they're playing with toys, you know what I mean? So it's, I started to see that because they would get kind of bullied and I would do research and actually my littlest wolf, he's 10, his dad, also my husband, another husband, when I met him said, do you see, you know, how the girls are in school and the troubles they have? Do you know that gifted kids are oftentimes treated
Starting point is 00:55:49 or kind of ostracized or kind of, so you should test them for being gifted. And I did, and they were off the charts. And so then I switched to trying to find an institution of learning, Merman, that kind of catered to my kids and their like differences. Certainly for Aoki, cause again, she was the younger one. She started younger on this journey.
Starting point is 00:56:07 But as a mom, you want to go where, if your kids are great at doing Legos, you're going to want to find a Lego school or an engineering something. You just try to put them in the atmosphere where they can thrive. Did they thrive right when they got in? For sure. All the other kids, when they graduated Merman, they're going on to grad grad school even our college level our kids were going to high school level These kids were skipping that and going to college and Yoki could have too
Starting point is 00:56:33 But I didn't want her to do that because like you can't even get a job Well, she did she go to Harvard the school at 15 or she takes you got yet. No. No, she went to school four years She got in at 15. So I think you get accepted, right? And then you go that, that, that fall or whatever. So I think she was her birthday is in August. So she probably was 16 when she went, but she got in at 15. And then being models too, right?
Starting point is 00:56:58 Both model, both went to school, both have graduated. And then what? No. And now we're trying to figure it out. And do they like modeling as much as they like academics? Nobody. They, okay. So Yoki loves her academics.
Starting point is 00:57:14 Okay. Mingi not so much, even though she's super smart as well and got really good grades, but I don't think they, I don't know if they love the process as much. Modeling. I don't know if they love the process as much. Modeling, Yoki wanted it so bad. And I think it's probably proven because the people can be a little bit different and shallow and whatever.
Starting point is 00:57:34 So I think that has proven difficult for her. Whereas Mingi didn't want it as much and kind of found herself stumbling into it and is doing well. Both are doing well. Yoki was on the cover of September Vogue, September Teen Vogue. Can you show us a picture of this that's so cool what I mean Wow but I think it just does different testing me for merman I
Starting point is 00:57:56 well I think I have a theory that Michael's gifted and I haven't talked about it on the podcast oh you have to have to. And there's this book. Your son? Or you? No, wait, do you have a son? Yes. Your son? No. Oh, you? I think he's gifted.
Starting point is 00:58:12 She's like, uh, I don't think so. Okay, no, I don't know the picture. I don't choose that, but this is the... That's amazing. This is her Vogue cover. So cool. I don't know why she's looking down and up at the camera like that. That's amazing.
Starting point is 00:58:24 And it was supposed to be, I think, like a little ode to Chanel. I think she's like looking down and up. That's amazing. And it was supposed to be I think like a little ode to Chanel I think she's wearing Chanel and I think it's like a Chanel look so it's like an ode to me and Chanel So it was kind of like very sweet like and the pictures get is it weird to see your your children modeling for you? Very yeah For me not so much because we've done everything as a family They've come out on the runway with me? For me, not so much. For me, not so much because we've done everything as a family. They've come out on the runway with me. And so for me, not so much, but to see you go out in the world and subject yourself to a casting where they're going to look at you and make you strip down and jump in circles
Starting point is 00:58:56 and clap your hands five times and then look at you and say, oh, you're too fat. And you're the size of a string bean or you're too ugly. It's a lot. And to have to hear those things about yourself, whatever you thought you were, you're not. And it's tough. So I think as a mom, I didn't really want that for them, but too late now they've been, they're in it.
Starting point is 00:59:15 I know, but maybe they'll probably do other things with it. There's so many things to do now. Definitely, I don't think that you go into modeling to like stay into modeling. I don't think so. And I feel like Yoki is like Obviously super bright. She's worked in the mayor's office. I feel like she's a politician Her degree she has a double major at Harvard. So one is political science and the other is
Starting point is 00:59:39 History, so I feel like she's a politician She's gonna have to marry someone who's real smart. Not gonna be able to be a staring contest for sure. We can't have a staring contest. No, we can't have a staring contest. She doesn't want a staring contest. And Mingi's like a spoiled princess, and I feel like her thing is more business.
Starting point is 00:59:58 I can see her getting an MBA. I can see Yoki being a lawyer. And what about your sons? So they're younger. Wolfie's 10, and I have about your sons? So they're younger. Wolfie's 10 and I have Kenzo and Gary. They're 15. Okay.
Starting point is 01:00:09 They're twins. Not twins, but people always think they're twins. But Gary was adopted from Jamaica. Okay. A personal adoption. So we are all family and friends. But they're both 15. They're both 15.
Starting point is 01:00:19 So two 15 and 10. Two freshmen. Yeah. They're both freshmen in high school and they're amazing in sports. Gary plays football and Kenzo plays basketball. And Kenzo, he's a freshman, but he's on varsity. And he's 6'8". And he's 6'8".
Starting point is 01:00:35 And they just won the D1 championship for varsity ball. I mean, all he has to do is walk up and go like this. And he's the youngest one on the team and he's the tallest one in the school. See, I had the reverse problem. I got there and I was playing football, like 115 pounds. And he's the youngest one on the team, and he's the tallest one in the school. See, I had the reverse problem. I got there and I was playing football, I was like 115 pounds. Michael was 4'1".
Starting point is 01:00:49 And some guy that was like 6'10", 300 pounds, just literally didn't even try to tackle me. He just literally stepped over me and crushed me into the floor. And I was like, I'm out. Yeah, football, I find, you have to be really strong and really tough. It's a lot of concussions going on.
Starting point is 01:01:02 Well, what could, I mean, I was in there. You might be gifted though. We'll get you tested at Merman. No, Lauren's on this big thing where it's like she- No, he is. This is what happens. Well, it's just a psych, it's just a psych test or an IQ test. It's not at Merman, but it's for Merman. But any doctor, like a psychiatrist or a psychologist, yeah.
Starting point is 01:01:18 So I was driving the other day. No, I was not. This is true. I was driving the other day and I had a premonition literally come from nowhere saying Michael's gifted About him and then it said Michael's gifted again, and then it said pull over and Google gifted I'm not lying. I'm very intuitive when I'm pregnant. I think so I've a clear point Well, I will say clearly so I went home and I started googling all about it And he hits and I don't know about his IQ
Starting point is 01:01:46 But he hits every single thing it says like he it's not just a like a happenstance Well, she was my chance. She was telling all her friends that maybe something was off with me No, I wasn't one of my friends something can seem a little off That's why when you were saying how smart are your kids and I was like they are as smart as they drive me crazy Yeah, they were not saying nice things about me being off. They were, it wasn't like these were not complimentary. I was like, I don't know. They're not saying complimentary things.
Starting point is 01:02:10 Yeah. I was like, I don't think, um. It's like a double-edged sword. When you read the list of gifted things though, you, it resonated you. Well, to be, to be, well, okay. Like what? To be clear though, it's not about an, it was not about an IQ thing as much as it's about a thought process thing.
Starting point is 01:02:25 And the way that like, um, somebody organizes their thought process compared to somebody. I can see that. Yeah. That's all kind of a part of it. Rapid deep learning. High cognitive capacity, huge, highly developed reasoning. They're huge readers.
Starting point is 01:02:42 He reads probably an hour to two hours a day. Curious, strong moral compass, but there's negatives too. There's perfectionism and he has the perfectionism going on. Well, I'm quarter Japanese, that's part of it. Yes. Self-criticism, it's part Japanese. That's also a... You're part Japanese, of course.
Starting point is 01:03:00 I'm Japanese Korean. My grandma was full Japanese. My Asian is Japanese Korean. I'm quarter, my mom's half Japanese. I don't, I didn't get a lot of the traits. My sisters was full. I'm quartered. My mom's half Japanese I don't I don't get a lot of the traits. My sisters have the hair I don't he you could see it cuz I have guys in my family that look like you if I show you my she passed My grandma's name was Michiko Michiko and she was a tiny Japanese woman. Oh, yeah people would see me like who the hell is that? That's my grandma. Yeah. Yours is just a little watered down
Starting point is 01:03:24 Yeah, it's a lot of happen. I have Wolfie Wolfie looks a lot like you. Yeah, just a little watered down. That's a good way to put it. Yeah. Wait, look at my son Yeah, let's see your son There's a potential for difficulties in social settings Which he had when we were young. I don't know. There's this book. I'm sure that you've heard about it It's called the gifted. I think it's called The Gifted Doll. Look at how crazy this is. So the little one is Wolfie and the big one is Kenzo.
Starting point is 01:03:49 Oh my gosh, you guys. Crazy, right? Is this like on social media? Have you ever posted them? Oh yeah, I posted them. Not this particular picture. This was at Wolf's party the other day, but I posted them, yeah.
Starting point is 01:04:03 The world knows them. Kenzo was on my show before. He was born on the show. Oh, that is so cute. They're like your men. And his hair is dyed there, so it'd be a little bit darker. Who needs a boyfriend? I have my son.
Starting point is 01:04:14 I don't, like, I'm good. I'm gonna just have him live with me. Someone just told me I was in love with Kenzo. I mean, that's okay. The boy you're gonna raise is gonna be soft as hell. She sings him this song where he's gonna live with us forever, I'm like, no, he's not. No, I say he's living with his mom for the rest of his life.
Starting point is 01:04:28 No one but his mom. He loves his mom. You wanna know who's gonna get bullied? You wanna know who's gonna get bullied? You wanna know who's gonna get bullied? Or son, if you don't cut that shit. Well, you have to have a balance, I think so. Cause Kenzo is balanced.
Starting point is 01:04:41 He's into his sports. He's on the team. He has his teammates. He's a very good boy. He's not like, you said soft. He's into his sports. He's on the team. You know, he has his teammates. He's a very good boy. He's not like you said, soft. He's not soft, but he's very kind and sweet and smart. And I love him so much. So it's about.
Starting point is 01:04:54 You know what, when you're six foot 15, you don't have to be. You don't have to be on. Seven foot. Of course he's not soft when he's six foot eight. I had to teach him the opposite then though. I had to kind of speak to that. Like, I... And I probably shouldn't do this as a parent.
Starting point is 01:05:11 It's probably like some kind of discriminatory, but I had to say things to him coming up. Obviously, this was only in the last... Past few years, because you're not that tall as a baby. But the past few years, I would find myself saying like, you can't just, don't act like that. You're too big to act like that. Stop screaming and having this tantrum like that. Look at you, people from far away think that you're an adult.
Starting point is 01:05:32 So I probably have done some of these things that you shouldn't do. You shouldn't say, look at you, look at how you're acting or don't cry, you shouldn't say that to a boy. Oh, gentle parenting says you can't say anything now. Oh, girl, I'm from St. Louis. I am not gentle parenting. My kids got their ass beat. They've also handed me my ass, not physically, says you can't say anything now. Oh, girl. I'm from St. Louis. I am not gentle parodying.
Starting point is 01:05:45 My kids got their ass beat. They've also handed me my ass, not physically, but I'm saying they've kicked my ass too. I'm cursing, I'm screaming, I'm throwing things. I'm not like, I'm not, you're not gonna have a black eye, but you're gonna be grounded and have gotten an ass whooping. Like what you need. How do you manage to raise children that are confident and not spoiled because you have? They're spoiled. Okay but it's...
Starting point is 01:06:09 They're spoiled to me. I think all of us think maybe that our kids are super spoiled and a little bit entitled to us as the parents I'm saying right? Yeah. They are entitled to just their access to you. They feel like you can do it, you can handle it, you can solve it. My mom, you just got done saying he's never gonna leave, he's gonna live with his mom. Yeah. So that comes with my mom can do it. You can handle it. You can solve it. My mom you just got done saying he's never gonna leave He's gonna live with his mom. Yeah, so that comes with my mom can do it. My mom's gonna handle it my mom and dad Yeah, and so then as they're older you're like hello. You're like the broke bestie the broke bestie The number one trait I'm gonna get in my kids is resilience by the way, you're gonna live with me for the rest of your life I'm like we do have to teach our kids resilience
Starting point is 01:06:47 I think some of that a lot of that has gone out the window over the decades agreed. They're not they this workforce this generation They're very different. It is very different. I included like I'll go ahead and just bundle all the kids up now yours are younger and Minor my I'm talking about, you know that 25 year old, 20-something year old, it's tough. That's what I'm hearing. Generationally, like if you hire them. They don't act like how I acted when I was younger. They don't want it like how I want it. I find sometimes like I can't even hire someone great to help me. They don't want to do it. They don't want to come to work. They don't want to speak. And that, like we're all over the place on our podcasts,
Starting point is 01:07:25 but sometimes I say these things because I want people to pick up these bites and like don't do that. Like you have to want it. You have to want something more than I want it for you, people, you have to want something for yourself. You have to study, you have to put into the work, in the work, you have to show up.
Starting point is 01:07:42 You have to do these things. Your parents can't do it, your friends can't to do these things. Your parents can't do it. Your friends can't do it. Your friend's parents can't do it. It's not going to be handed to you on a platter, even though you may think it, some people are kind of silver platter kind of people and some are not. It's the platter is not there really. You have to kind of get in and do the work and get your hands dirty. You've got to have grit.
Starting point is 01:08:04 Quick break to talk about element. One of the things that drove me nuts prior to learning about element and proper electrolyte ratios and getting hydrated properly was the amount of water I would drink that would not solve the issue that I was trying to solve which is dehydration. I used to suffer from all these migraines. I would get this midday slump. I would get tired and it's because I was drinking a ton of water but I was not getting the proper electrolyte mix. This is why Element is such a game changer. Element is a zero sugar electrolyte drink mix and sparkling electrolytic born from the growing body of research revealing
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Starting point is 01:13:00 before I got my glam done, and it lays so nicely under like a foundation or a concealer. But here's the thing that I like the most about it. So when I'm off work and when I don't have to do podcasts or Instagrams or content, or I just can just be comfortable, I can wear this caffeinated sunscreen and I still get a really nice tint and a protection and it looks like my skin is all one even tone, which is nice without all the makeup. It's not like a foundation. It's like the caffeine tightens your skin. It gives you a nice even tone and it just gives you a little bit of color.
Starting point is 01:13:42 So what I like about this sunscreen is the versatility. So you can wear it when you're off and you're running around and you're running errands and wear it with nothing over it, or you can wear it like I'm wearing today right now with foundation and concealer over it. So it works both ways. I will wear this when I'm going to the gym in the morning
Starting point is 01:14:00 and just wear it throughout the day with nothing else, or I will wear it with a full look. I created this sunscreen because I couldn't find a mineral based sunscreen with caffeine in it. Caffeine tightens the skin, it shrinks the pores and I just like how it lays on the skin and I mixed it with a mineral sunscreen and then we made it SPF 40. So it's a real treat. I think that you guys will absolutely love it. It just comes out in a pump, fits in your handbag, and it can go through the airport. You can shop this at shopskinnyconfidential.com and it's the caffeinated SPF. Also, if you're like me and you go through sunscreen quickly, you can subscribe and the sunscreen will get delivered straight to your
Starting point is 01:14:43 door so you don't have to worry about it. That's shopskinnyconfidential.com. We've had three people, maybe four on the podcast this week that have all said what you're saying, which is you're not going to be able to do it. Like you're not going to have an exceptional life working two days a week. Don't expect an exceptional life working two days a week for Don't expect an exceptional life working two days a week for a couple hours a day. Rick Caruso was on right before you. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 01:15:09 And he was just going off on this. About, you know. I bet he would, I'm sure he would. Well, he's like, you gotta get in the office. You gotta work. You gotta do something. And that's why I always encourage kids to get an education.
Starting point is 01:15:19 Even if it's not a formal education, get out there and learn something, study something, be an understudy, help someone. When we came up, when I came up, I'm older than you guys, but when we came up, and I'm that person that's like, back in my day, you know, you would work for free. You would prove yourself and hope to get a job. You would come in as an intern and hope one day to run the company. And you can.
Starting point is 01:15:43 That's what dreams were made of. That's the American dream. Nowadays it might be a different American dream but when I came up it was a different American dream. You could work for yourself. You could pull yourself up. You could make something of yourself. You could create these opportunities from nothing. Yeah it's like running, we're doing the show, but running this business. I always, people come in and the first thing's like, okay I'm gonna just do a little of this. How do I make money? How do I make money? And it's weird for me because Lauren and I started this show,
Starting point is 01:16:10 and we didn't make a dime for years. And we were working other jobs and doing other things while we were doing this thing, for nothing, right? It was just like, you have to put the groundwork in. I put my own money in it, I own my own time, I'm building, I'm failing, getting back up. It's this attitude where people, I mean, listen, don't even just take this,
Starting point is 01:16:28 but any creative endeavor, they wanna know how much money first before they take the chance. Like, so let me get this straight. You wanna be able to work on your own terms, on your own schedule, live the life you wanna live. Yes, they don't even wanna come to work. But you wanna be paid for it first before you decide.
Starting point is 01:16:40 Like, it's just not, it's not realistic. I agree. And you know what I think also did it? I think in a lot of ways, this was just like not a good time. COVID. So that means I'm talking about recent years, not just 10 years ago or, you know. Well, I think that was a time
Starting point is 01:16:55 because then you started working at home and then I saw things change. I saw things because I was one of them because I had reacquired my brand. I saw people fall off because they could not translate or transfer their business to online. They could not talk to people like how you guys can communicate with people over this thing. They didn't know how to translate their brand to these social media platforms and being on the phone and taking your conference calls
Starting point is 01:17:21 or maybe doing a podcast from your house. They didn't, they didn't get it. So I saw people just like die off and I saw other people that were adaptable. And then we saw other people that just. That's a good quality to be adaptable. I'm also a little empathetic now over the, as the years have passed to people that started their first job or got out of college and started their career in those circumstances and thought that those were the real circumstances. Guess what? Oh yeah. There are kids that those were the real circumstances. No, that sucks.
Starting point is 01:17:45 But guess what? Oh yeah, they're kids that couldn't go in the classroom. It's horrible. Or like they start a job and it's like, hey, you just work from your house and do what you want. Do what you want. Show up in your pajamas. But that was their reality.
Starting point is 01:17:56 Like, but this is what work is supposed to be like when many of us who had never worked that way, there was a huge adjustment. I'm like, that is nothing like what it's really been like. And you know what? Like I've never showed up to work in my pajamas. Oh, don't even get Michael started. When we came up, Is this a Japanese thing? Maybe.
Starting point is 01:18:12 You guys go off. We used to have something like, what is it called? Free dress Friday or casual Friday? Yeah, that tells you that you're supposed to be. Casual Friday is like, you know, you're maybe like in like a shirt. Now it's like a fashion show. show casual Friday now is for these kids Dressy. Yeah, I don't think I've known him for 600 years I've seen you guys known each other since we were 12. Oh shit. I know You're working the farm buddy
Starting point is 01:18:43 Like an electrical fence around you. You're not getting out of here ever. At the end of the day, I really do have no say. You're 100% right. You know, you have to watch what you say on podcasts. Because like how I said, I'm going to put the fence around you, you're never going to get out. They'll play this back some long time from now.
Starting point is 01:18:57 And like Sage C, she said then that she was going to do that. And now she's kidnapped someone else currently. And look, she was, that's how life is. I've never seen you ever since you were 12 years old show Up in I don't even want looking sloppy. He's always like yeah very anal about being put together I love that me on the other hand, but you're very put together now. I'm not saying that I don't I'm not put together I mean, I'm not saying that I don't like I'm not slouchy sometimes, but I'm saying at work I am never slouchy when I need to show up and and and make a difference or show up and put my back, putting your best foot forward is not in a fuzzy slipper you guys. That is one thing
Starting point is 01:19:37 with my grandma. Like it doesn't have to be some fancy expensive thing we're talking about here. Just make it clean, put it together, be presentable. Feel something about yourself kids. What do you feel for yourself in your fuzzy slippers and your plaid pajama pants? Yeah, if I, there's so many of those in my house. My grandmother, like if you weren't on point and like not Japanese grandmas will not play that. No, no, no. Like my sister's trying to do that. She would not just like say like, Hey, what's going on? It wasn't a nice delivery. It was like... But also culturally, they're meticulous.
Starting point is 01:20:07 I mean, they're very regimented and even rigid, they might say, culturally, I think that's a thing. You know what she did when she passed away? Literally that same day, she went and got her hair done, dialed in, just went to sleep. How's that? I love it. I think that might be me. Like fully just got her hair done. Not now though, I'm not ready now, but one day.
Starting point is 01:20:20 And I will write, I'm gonna write out my own stuff, my own will and everything. I'm gonna do that. I love that. Because I'm gonna write out my own stuff my own like will and everything I'm gonna do that I love that because I'm gonna tell the kids it I don't want it. I don't want to be on a t-shirt She was more fucking make a t-shirt of me. You don't want I want my you know how people make t-shirts He's sure like there's halos around. It was like a concert t-shirt. I know what she's talking about He's had a black people do that. Okay, it's t-shirt. We do that Not so much the Asian side, but you know, don't make a t-shirt of me.
Starting point is 01:20:46 I want full hair and makeup. If I'm sick and even a little bit starting to decline, I need a contract that my kids know I need to like maintain a little bit. Oh, you're saying a t-shirt with your face on it. When you pass away, sometimes people wanna make these things. Do you want Anna to give you a a polyureth scrub before?
Starting point is 01:21:04 Maybe. I don't need a scrub. A head spa? Maybe. I want hair and makeup and nails. So do I. If you're deceased, you don't need the scrub because then the skin... Who's in charge of that? We got to...
Starting point is 01:21:16 I'm going to write it down. That's what I'm saying. You have to write it in your will. Now I know that sounds a little bit morbid to people, but again, I'm saying this for a reason, I'm saying it because I want people to know that you have to think about planning or what happens if you're gone or if you have children. You have to think about it. You can't be the type that's like, oh, I don't want to think about it.
Starting point is 01:21:32 Nothing's ever going to happen. It will. Well, one thing for sure is that we're not going to be here forever. So you want to look good. You want your affairs to be looked after. More importantly, you want your affairs, your business to be. You want your kids to be OK after. More importantly, you want your affairs, your business to be, you want your kids to be okay. You want them to have some lessons, maybe a little coins
Starting point is 01:21:50 that you left behind, maybe, I don't know. At this point- Organize yourself. Go out to bid your last days in the sweatsuit, and that's what you go out in. I won't do that. At this point, what does it take to date you? Oh my God.
Starting point is 01:21:59 Like how do you even find a contender? So I did say this thing thing like I would say I want to date someone that has more than me And I realize that's tough like money wise or everything wise everything wise financially business Like you but then I started to learn that was a lot So then I changed to that eliminates It does eliminate some there's no I changed to have what I have. Okay. Equal to me. Okay. But I don't really like equal and I'm not like a 50-50 person. I want to be kind of totally looked after and taken care of and having said that I am the highest maintenance person for myself. I maintain myself and all of my children and my family. So what I'm asking of someone else I do for myself and I am
Starting point is 01:22:49 happy to continue doing it for the rest of my days. I'm not asking for something that I don't have. That's really self-aware by the way a lot of people they want a 10 but they're not a 10. Yeah no. You if you're gonna... And I don't even mean by looks. No, I'm not talking about looks. Okay, okay, cuz I don't need to be a tenor like if you're if if you're self-aware And you're like I'm an eight then go for an eight But if you're a ten and you're you sound like you're a ten in every area You're gonna be off in their numbers their math. This is all wrong Well, what if you think you're a my friend you are a four okay?
Starting point is 01:23:23 Let's take you with two teeth in there crooked What are you gonna do? 10 and you're looking what you're saying is for a 10 because you're a 10 and that's what you're giving off in my mind In my mind I am I think so you can't always I think I am you should think you are I don't know what other people might think right some people might be like I'm a 10 We think we are do you think she's a ten? Yeah? How else am I gonna answer that she kick you under the table Michael the ten yeah, I feel like you guys are equally Evenly yoked oh he might be a 95
Starting point is 01:23:58 This is a ten I think you're good for 95 but I'm gonna have to say 9.5. I'm gonna have to go with yeah You know honestly, I think I'm eight and I'm gonna have to say nine point five. I'm gonna have to go with yeah, you know honestly. I think I'm eight I'm gonna be an eight No, this is just self deprecation I don't love that You're getting ready to go too low. You know good and damn well you're not an eight I think like like a like a Brad Pitt's like a nine nine and a half That's hit is it?
Starting point is 01:24:19 No, no, no, no, but I'm saying like yeah, yeah, that's what I'm saying Oh, you don't think I'm a ten? Ten is a platonic idea Yeah, ten is not You don't think I'm saying like yeah, that's what I'm saying Yeah, 10 is not Okay, but that doesn't mean no no no, but here You have to gauge it though if he doesn't have 10s in his life that might mean the maximum for you is a nine Nine because a nine is the maximum for him That feels like scarcity mindset only 10 in my book is Tom Cruise Tom Cruise is a ten you look like Tom Cruise Oh gosh, no, okay. Not you set that up. No, no Tom Cruise is
Starting point is 01:24:57 Vertically not in looks not I make this argument all the time Tom Cruise is a ten because There is no higher than you can go in the celebrity world think about it who's higher I'm saying in terms of everything Kevin Costner no I think Kevin Costner's sorry no way think about it okay if you're out and you're running about Sean Connery Sean Connery was he's dead but he would okay you have you want only people that are the debate's settle the debate. Okay. I've thought about this a lot. If you are out and about, and you're out and you're just running around town,
Starting point is 01:25:30 Tom Cruise is the white whale. You don't see him out and about running around. Plus, he's still relevant. Plus, his movies are all good. And you can name 40 of them. Michael, I feel like you have a crush on Tom. You're just saying this because we said you look like Tom exactly. What is the one projecting at white? If you see Kevin Kosh, that's a good sighting, but that's not a Tom Cruise sighting. Think about it.
Starting point is 01:25:48 Think about it. If I saw Elton John, now I'm in a whole other category, but I'm going to say the same thing. I'm going to be excited. That's a lavender marriage. You're going to be excited, but you're not going to be shocked. Yeah, we would be shocked. I'd be shocked if I saw Elton John.
Starting point is 01:26:05 That scarcity mindset. He just saying Tom never really leaves the house and doesn't walk around to get Starbucks. What about Eddie Murphy? I don't know. I think he thinks he's like Tom Cruise or something. I'm just saying nobody's been able to really, you know, people say, oh, what about like... I feel a little Tom Cruise thing coming from you. A little Ryan Gosling. Could it be Ryan Gosling? Christian Bale. No, not on a looks deal.
Starting point is 01:26:25 Oh, that's a good one. Yeah. Not on a looks deal. I'm just talking about- Should we know who your celebrity crush is? Uh, it's not Christian Bale. Okay, no. Not that type.
Starting point is 01:26:34 Yeah, I like Tony Soprano. I like the illusion of Tony Soprano. I definitely would have married him. See? I definitely could have been like a Sopranita or whatever that's called. The head of the family. I don't know Don't you like that's a little sopra the power?
Starting point is 01:26:50 Soprano I need to understand the missus at this point in your life what your list is tough. Yeah, I don't know you don't know What does someone have to do to get your attention? I don't know. I thought we could put it out into the ether. I should this is bad. This is bad I should I know I'm real I is bad. I should. I know. I'm real. I feel bad. My friends are going to be like, what were you thinking? Small. Okay, I'm going to put it out into the ether. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:27:11 You guys have to give me some choices that I can say yes or no. Do they need to be, do you want them public? Not public people. That's a good one. I don't really want public, but I don't mind. And that's only because I've had all my marriages, which is most of my relationships have been quite public. I think if I were picking for you, I would say a little bit more private.
Starting point is 01:27:29 Younger or older? I would think both. I am definitely at that age where I will, it can go either way. You could have the daddy and the son. Don't get it twisted. I feel that. I feel it could go either way. And that's not even being funny.
Starting point is 01:27:43 That's just being normal age group, normal age group. I feel like if it's the sun though, the sun's gotta be really smart and evolved. And they're not. Yeah. And that's why you said Tony Soprano. Yeah, I get it, I get it. I like the power of that.
Starting point is 01:27:55 Same, but I tried to marry that and look what happened. It backfired on me. Yeah, well, maybe I don't know. I don't know. Or maybe it was like a little too cocky. I don't know, maybe there's an ego that comes along with that. This power that we're talking about that we're looking for. I don't know. I don't know maybe it was like a little too cocky You know, I don't maybe there's an ego that comes along with that this power that we're talking about that we're looking for Yeah, I don't know and I feel like guys are equally looking for beauty as Much as women let's say would look for power. I don't know if guys are looking for like a powerful bad bitch
Starting point is 01:28:19 I don't know I think that certain I think ones that are quietly confident are looking for a powerful bad bitch Because you are that and I'm that and we're that so we're gonna have to think that but I don't know if it's always true You have your husband thinks that about you, but in life. I don't know that I think you might be right It's hard to find a guy that's comfortable with a woman Who's extremely strong and has her own and look where we are right now in our time. I'm not sure. It's giving barefoot and pregnant vibes again.
Starting point is 01:28:48 Oh, yes. They don't want you to be independent, bad bitch. They don't, I don't know. Or maybe they do, but they don't. Maybe they're kind of attracted to it, but they seriously hate it. I have issues. I have traumas, honey.
Starting point is 01:28:58 I could lay all this out for you. I've seen a lot of things. And not even just personally for myself, but my friends, I've seen things. Yeah, it is not easy to be in the position that you're in like you're so strong and and you're so powerful and you. But I can be very I have a soft side. I believe it. And I don't think I'm like strong like this like in bed. No I think I'm like what is it submissive. Yeah I get that I actually get that I was telling someone the other day I'm like. Not is it submissive? Yeah, I get that. I actually get that. I was telling someone the other day.
Starting point is 01:29:27 Not submissive like a starfish. No, no, no. No one thinks you're a starfish. Okay, thank you. Let me just clarify. Do you guys know what that is? Do you know what starfish is? No one in this room was measuring starfish. You just lay there. I'm not just laying there. No one's measuring starfish. Don't worry.
Starting point is 01:29:39 Oh, like in the bed. Is she a starfish? No! Oh my god! I was asking him! Jay-Z! Okay, let me know. Go ahead. Am I a starfish? No! I'm a starfish. Oh my God, I was asking him! Jay-Z! Okay, let me know. Go ahead, am I a starfish? No, no, no, no. You're answering for him!
Starting point is 01:29:48 No, I asked, go ahead. She's like Cirque du Soleil. Not right now! Oh! This is Cirque du Soleil. Okay, I approve, we like that. We're gonna know each other pretty well here. I'm proud of you.
Starting point is 01:29:57 But I don't, I agree. Go you. I have masculine energy when I'm at work, but when I'm home with my husband, I wanna be submissive too, I get what you're saying. Same. Because honestly though again if you study this the spectrum right give yourself a little line there we all mankind humankind we're all on this spectrum of you know feminine masculine super soft super strong we're all on the scale. Everybody. I don't
Starting point is 01:30:27 care what you like or don't like or what you think someone else is. Trust me. We're all on that scale. It just, it's kind of like politics. Which end and there's somewhere in the middle. Your sexuality and your strength and your powerful vibes, that is all on a scale as well. So having said that, I am very manly. I'm very fucking manly. No, I can see you being soft. I think you have to be able to tap into both sides. Yeah. But not manly in the sense of like, like I said, in bed, I would be more submissive.
Starting point is 01:30:58 I'm not doing any weird tricks. I'm not doing any- As long as you guys are not carrying us around, then we're good. That'd be terrible. I'm not carrying anybody around and I'm very tall. I could talk to you for hours. I'm so confused that you don't have a podcast. You need a podcast today. Like I'll come when you're sick. I'll come with you. That's why we came. Or no, you're the one that's going to have a baby. Yeah, great. You guys can podcast together. Would you allow me to come and like talk with your husband you know what actually that might be pretty funny when I leave you different people and we could act like it's like the him and her show still I would honestly it's him and her friend you guys do four episodes together interview like people you would do it interesting I would do it I think that's why our manager Anna sent us here I think this is really what's what's
Starting point is 01:31:44 funny right about a new co-host for a while you should I'm a little excited Our manager, Anna, sent us here. I think this is really what's happening. That'd be funny, right? If I had a new co-host for a while. You should, I was saying- You're getting a little excited about this. Your co-host is this co-host for the rest of her life. I'm good, I'm good. Do you know what she told me the other day?
Starting point is 01:31:55 She goes, I'm gonna stop for a while and you just like do a few shows. I said do four shows without me. I don't wanna just- Why don't you guys put together- No, you need a sidekick or someone. Or like, you need, I need I think that energy a girl You should have her on for four episodes. I bet she has amazing ideas for guests We're gonna talk after this anyway, because you're a natural. Okay, you told me you were gonna talk
Starting point is 01:32:13 We should we should we talk about okay, so we have a plan everyone who lives in LA go to pellic here Get a scrub get a head spa. I'm telling you. It's my absolute favorite place to go Where can everyone find what you're working on what you're doing all the things baby fat. Tell us where I'm working you it's my absolute favorite place to go. Where can everyone find what you're working on, what you're doing, all the things, baby fat? Tell us where to go. So I'm working on baby fat, I guess online. Yeah, babyfat.com, right? Some stores, but mostly like down online.
Starting point is 01:32:35 I have an energy drink called Celsius. That's like a really popular energy drink. Wait, what? I have an energy drink. The whole office is surviving off these Celsiuses. Wait, what do you mean you have an energy drink? I own this energy drink. We know, Celsius. I have an energy drink. The whole office is surviving off these Celsiuses. Wait, what do you mean you have an energy drink? I own this energy drink. We know, Celsius.
Starting point is 01:32:47 I'm an investor. I'm part of this company that owns Celsius. That was a good investment. Oh, that old small one. She's all, I have an, she's all. But now. I have a restaurant called McDonald's. No, but now it's so crazy
Starting point is 01:33:01 because that was one of the best investments I had ever made. That's another thing we didn't talk about, but invest your money, you guys, even if it's a dollar, invest it safe. But the only way I think you can really grow your money is to invest. And it's been one of the veins of my existence because it's been kind of a point of contention with others around me lately. If you Google it, you'll know what I mean. But it's been like one of the best things of my life
Starting point is 01:33:25 and also one of the, not Celsius, but just having it has caused some problems for me. But yeah. Celsius is a big deal. Yeah. Everyone drinks that. It's a big deal. I rang the bell on the NASDAQ.
Starting point is 01:33:35 Did I ring the bell with Celsius? I think so, right? Good for you. So where can everyone find your Instagram? They probably already follow you. My Instagram is Kimoralee Simmons. And Ming's Instagram is Minglee Simmons you. Um, my Instagram is Kimora Lee Simmons. And Ming's Instagram is Ming Lee Simmons and Ioki's Instagram is Ioki Lee Simmons. And then I have Kenzo and Gary.
Starting point is 01:33:52 That's really cute that you pimp your kids out. Thank you for doing this. Because they'd be like, why did you say yours and not mine? It's cute. Kenzo's I don't know. Kenzo KLH or something. And Gary's is a very weird word, weird name. We have covered a lot of ground.
Starting point is 01:34:06 Thank you, Kimora. Thank you.

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