The Wonder of Stevie - Introducing IMO with Michelle Obama and Craig Robinson
Episode Date: March 12, 2025Introducing a new show hosted by the incomparable Michelle Obama and her big brother Craig Robinson, called IMO. If you loved hearing Michelle recall her years sifting through her grandfather...’s record collection, playing his Stevie Wonder albums over and over…Then you will be thrilled to hear Michelle and Craig reminisce on growing up together. On IMO, they’ll bring their candid perspectives to the everyday questions shaping our lives, relationships and the world around us. Each week, they’re joined by a guest to tackle real questions from real folks just like you, offering practical advice, personal storytelling, and plenty of laughs. Topics range from dating and relationships, to family and faith. In this episode, Michelle and Craig share stories about being there for each other throughout their lives, from first crushes and fraught college years, to landing at the White House, to losing their mom. For six decades they’ve been each others’ most trusted counsel—and now, they want to be that counsel for you.You can find more episodes of IMO at imopod.com.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hey, Wonder of Stevie fans.
I'm dropping into your feeds with something special.
It's the next great show from higher ground, hosted by the incomparable Michelle Obama
and her big brother, Craig Robinson, and it's called IMO.
If you loved hearing Michelle recall her years sifting through her grandfather's record
collection, playing his Stevie Wonder albums over and over, then you will be thrilled to
hear Michelle and Craig reminisce
on growing up together.
On IMO, they bring their candid perspectives to everyday questions shaping our lives, relationships,
and the world around us.
Each week, they're joined by a guest to tackle real questions from real folks just
like you, offering practical advice, personal storytelling, and plenty of laughs.
Topics range from dating and relationships
to family and faith. In this episode, Michelle and Craig share stories about being there
for each other throughout their lives, from first crushes and fraught college years, to
landing at the White House, to losing their mom. For six decades, they've been each other's
most trusted counsel, and now they to be that counsel for you.
Okay.
Here comes the episode.
You can find more episodes of IMO wherever you get podcasts.
A lot of people have questions they want to know, especially when they see somebody
of note with a platform who, you know, by every measure looks successful.
The first question is how?
I think this podcast, first and foremost, gives us an opportunity to hear from folks.
You know, we're going to be taking, you know, questions from listeners who are going through
some things and just need a little advice. They want to hear from people in conversations.
And folks are looking for a place where they can just, they can hear stories, you know? I mean,
what I realize is like, by sharing some of these stories, you know, it always taps into something
from somebody else. People, you know, they want to hear some honest kind of conversation
about how people are working it through. And we don't have all the answers, you know. I mean,
this show isn't about us being experts at anything other than the lives that we've lived.
But what we do have are a lot of opinions. Hence the name. In my opinion, IMO.
This episode is brought to you by Rivian and Pine Saul.
Well, I'm Craig Robinson and you all know my sister, Michelle Obama, and we're doing this podcast
together and it's really exciting to be working with you on this project.
Some people react like, you're doing a podcast with your brother.
Why would you do that?
I know, really.
But our dynamic is so, in my view, unique. I think there are plenty of siblings who have great relationships, but I think when we think
back to where that came from, I think about just the physical closeness that we had.
I mean, we weren't wealthy and dad was working class.
We lived in the same apartment our whole lives
and had to grow into that.
And as a result, you and me,
we were physically close growing up.
Remember when we used to share a bedroom?
Of course, that was our life growing up.
We shared the same room until you went to high school,
right? That's right.
Well, let's first just recall how small the apartment we lived in.
You know, it seemed like it was huge,
but it was essentially two bedrooms, right?
No, it was one bedroom.
Well, that little offshoot bedroom that mom and dad stayed in,
you would consider that a bedroom.
But that was the only bedroom.
The room we were in was actually the living room. And
the living room that we, what we called the living room was actually the dining room.
Huh, okay. All right. So that's how small it was. We had to turn it into something else.
But the biggest room was always ours. And we were little, little, like baby littles.
Like five and three.
The twin beds were head to head with like an end table in between.
And we had matching spreads.
That mom made.
That mom made.
She sewed them.
They were these big, bold stripes and the twin beds were up against the wall and she
had the concept of creating like these little padding boards.
Yes.
You know, she was so crafty.
So she created these foam pads that she hung along the side to make them decorative, but
to also provide us with a little cushion against the wall, which was, we thought was so cool.
I remember you had a bed guard because you were so little.
Yeah, I sort of remember that, yeah.
You still probably should have been in a crib.
Maybe so, but yeah, I do remember you guys would tell me I'd fall out of the bed, start
crying, get put back in the bed and I wouldn't remember anything about it.
You wouldn't remember any of it.
And everybody else would be wide awake and you'd be snoring.
I didn't snore.
Now you make it stuff. But then from there, we went to, and I'm trying to remember what age when our grandfather
Southside built us this T.
Partition wall.
Partition wall.
So then we had our own bedrooms in that same room. So it went from a one room,
one big room into three small rooms. Your bedroom was on the right, mine was on the
left. And then we had a common area in the front where mom, once again, crafty, built
us desks on each side where we could do our homework.
Yeah. I mean, you talk that, that was some poverty crafting, right?
That's like Martha Stewart on a budget.
But that wall was just, we were still sleeping head to head, but just on the other side of
a wall.
And it was special to me because that's, I feel like that's where our real relationship began because it's like
we would talk for hours. We'd go to bed, we're supposed to be asleep and we'd stay up all
night just talking through that little partition.
We thought it was all night, but because we had to go to bed at 730, it was probably like
830.
But we talked till about 10 o'clock and mom would finally come in there.
If you all don't go to bed, go to sleep.
But it was really sweet because I remember being able to talk to you even at that young
age about anything, what happened during the day, the little drama in the outside world,
and just laughing all night long about nothing, making up silly games.
It started that young.
Well, what's really ironic is that we were talking about how small our place was. Growing up our house, yeah.
And then look where we're doing this taping in this big, beautiful Airbnb.
Polatial Airbnb.
Got a little more room here.
I know, who would have thought we'd be able to be in a snazzy place like this?
You know, this podcast is going to be about you and I trying to let people in on some of the lessons that
we learned as kids and growing up and from mom and dad, but also from different teachers
and coaches and things we've learned along the way.
And let me ask you this, what is one of the lessons that you learned from mom and dad
that really sticks out to you?
Well, when I think about what we're talking about now, our relationship as brother and
sister, why, you know, we're so excited about doing this podcast, not because we love to
talk and we love, we got lots of opinions, but especially since mom passed,
this is a joint project that you and me have.
And I think it's the first time we've actually worked together
and helping people to understand
where does that foundation come from
where you and I feel so comfortable with each other
and we have our whole lives where we can not only work together, but share what has helped
to make us close?
I think about not just our bedroom space in that little bitty first apartment on Euclid
Avenue, but I think about the kitchen table. Because the kitchen was the other gathering place.
And in our house, you know, we as young people
with our parents, what they did for us was they invited us
to sit with them at the table and talk.
And I think very early on, because our parents had
the wisdom to understand how wise kids could be
and how important their voices were and how much fun it was to not just have kids just
seen and not heard.
In our household, our parents wanted to not just see us, but they wanted to hear us.
They wanted to hear our ideas.
They wanted to hear our ideas. They wanted to hear our opinions. I
think that our parents offered us both the first table where we gained confidence in
our voices, where we felt like who we were, what we thought, how we felt was important.
And not because it was important to the rest of the world,
but it was important to them.
And I think that's a piece of wisdom in terms of parenting
that I try to share, I try to implement in my own life.
But our parents wanted to hear from us.
They loved our thoughts and ideas,
and they encouraged us to say what was on our mind,
do it respectfully for sure.
But that, you know, a lot of kids don't grow up like that.
They sure don't.
And, you know, I'm always asked how mom and dad came
to be the type of parents that they were that would be the
type to let their kids come into the kitchen table and share in the conversation rather
than being lectured to. And I always remember mom always, when we would always ask mom,
how do you know something? She was like, well, I don't know everything. I don't know what
to tell you. Yeah. Yeah. She was never afraid to tell us when she wasn't sure.
When she wasn't sure. And she said, let me think about it and get back to you.
And that was one of the most powerful things as a parent.
You're not supposed to know everything. You don't have to know everything. And it's
better to say you don't know than to make up something or lie or get yourself
caught in a position where your kids come back to you and say, you gave me bad advice.
And a lot of parents think that a part of being the parent is to be the one with all
the knowledge, with all the answers. And because our
parents didn't do that, it also gave us permission and taught us that like in life, you are in a
learning process all the time. And it's okay to be wrong and it's okay to stumble. Mom and dad were also very good talking to us,
not just about their successes, but about their failures.
What they did wrong, what they got wrong in life.
And I see that time and time again,
parents feel like they need a shield of all knowingness
in order for their kids to respect them
or in order to keep them safe.
It's like, let me not share with you how I messed up a few times.
And I never felt the pressure of their judgment or their expectation in our lives.
And it's funny you say that because this reminds me of my favorite lesson from them. When you talk about there's never any judgment, the only time
mom and dad would really be upset with us is if we said, well, so-and-so said, I should
be doing this. And how about that word so-and-so? That was a Robinson term.
Who are these so-and-so?
Who's so-and-so? Yeah, it's just- So-and-so? That was a Robinson term. Who are these so-and-so? Who's so-and-so? Yeah, it's just-
So-and-so?
Is that a name?
So-and-so was always a little trifling.
That's all I remember about so-and-so.
So-and-so was trouble.
If you hung out with so-and-so, you were going to get in trouble.
That's the only way you were going to ruin your life is following in behind so-and-so.
And mom would be so-and-so. And mom would be so, we'd meet so-and-so.
Well, but my point is, if you ever came in the house and said one of your friends, somebody
outside of the family said, you should do something or you should be something or how
about let's try this and you followed in behind them.
And that was your rationale?
That is when you caught it.
Not thinking for yourself.
Not thinking for yourself and having enough confidence in your decision making process
to make decisions for yourself and not because somebody wanted you to.
Well, I wanted to wear bell bottom jeans because everybody else is wearing them.
That was the way to not get your bell bottom jeans. If you could come up with a reason why
you wanted them, then you'd have some bell bottom jeans. But if you said,
I'm not doing this because of somebody out in the streets, as dad would say, you out here listening
to these guys. So-and-so out in the streets. So-and-so in the streets.
Forget it.
Well, that, you know, you also make me think that, you know, another thing that I think
Mom and Dad were so wise about was because in order for them to push us to use our own
judgment, they empowered us to make decisions and be responsible very early in life.
And that meant think for yourself.
But in order to do that, they had to sort of hand us our lives pretty young.
And I'm not saying that they went off to work and left us alone, but I've said this before,
you know, very early on, mom was like, you're going to kindergarten now,
here's an alarm clock, here's how to set it,
set it, get yourself up.
Because as she said, you're going to school for you,
not for me.
She's like, I had my education,
and I don't believe that if you care about yours,
that you need your mom to be waking you up every morning.
So from the time we
started kindergarten, you know, now she was up. It wasn't like she was sleeping in. She
was just listening to hear us get ourselves up, get ourselves up, start getting dressed.
When we got a little older, even start our own breakfast. And in the era of helicopter parenting, where people are waking up their kids, even
calling them from college, mom and dad were the opposite of that. Because, and in doing
so, they were telling us, I trust you, even at five or seven, you have the capability
of like taking care of yourself. You know, and you know I love you,
but I got to get you ready for the life you're going to have as an adult.
And that means that if you can't even wake yourself up
and get yourself to kindergarten,
you know, that's how mom and dad would think about it.
So they showed us that we were capable.
And guess what happened?
We rose to that expectation.
It was like, I probably to this day, I don't do late.
Oh, not in the Robinson household.
No.
We don't do-
On time is late, early is on time.
Early is on time.
That's Frazier Robinson.
This is a guy who was, for him to be on time, he had to prepare because it was hard for
him to get around and get dressed.
Because our dad had a disability, yeah.
The fact that he had a disability didn't make him have an excuse for anything, particularly
being late. So much so mom used
to be mad at him because he would get ready so early.
He'd keep pushing the time of departure for a family outing. It's like, well, we're going
to leave at three and he'd sit in there at two going, where is everybody? And it's like,
you said three.
And I would get ready early just to keep them company.
Well, Barack, he had to adjust to what on time was for me.
Because he was on that island time.
Well, but I've got this husband who's like,
when it's time to leave, it's three o'clock,
he's getting up and going to the bathroom.
And I was like, dude, dude, like three o'clock departure
means you've done all that.
It's like, don't start looking for your glasses
at the three o'clock departure.
But he's improved over 30 years of marriage.
But that was, you know, that was a, you must adjust.
And Malia and Sasha, if they're doing anything with me,
they are early.
So they've learned how to snap to it.
But that was, you know, those kind of lessons from parents when
you think you're helping your kid, you know, because you're worried about them failing,
you don't want them to be late. You don't want them to get a not so great grade on their
project that you start stepping in and facilitating way more and not letting kids hit bumps,
you're delaying their, I think their ability to understand
that their lives are theirs.
And you also are sending them a subliminal message
that they're not capable.
That they're not good enough, right.
Yeah. Right.
Right.
Mom and dad didn't do that to us.
No.
But I started thinking too, I was just thinking of another story, we're flip-flopping around,
but when I think about our relationship, you know, the other thing that I liked and I try
to do with my kids is like, we were close. We were close physically, emotionally, all of that, but we were not codependent.
And we weren't allowed to be.
Because you were a nurturer, you were a natural on your own, a worrier, a guardian, you took
on just temperamentally extra worries
and responsibilities.
That's right.
Mom understood that she couldn't in any way imply to you
that you were responsible for me.
Cause you would have taken that on
and gone off the deep end with it.
Right.
Right.
I would have been your caretaker
rather than your brother.
Yeah. In grammar school. And would have been your caretaker rather than your brother.
In grammar school.
And I think that's another thing sometimes parents do with siblings.
You make one responsible for the other.
Now you've got a kid trying to be a parent.
And that leads to nothing but resentment on both parts. If you were trying to parent me,
that would have replaced the special relationship
that is my brother, which is something very different.
I didn't need a father, I didn't need a mother.
I needed a big brother.
And so you were fully free to be that for me
and I wasn't your burden.
Well, you know, another story I think about is how mom and dad trained us to work hard.
Do you remember the chores?
Oh yeah, we had chores very early on. Very early on. and dad trained us to work hard. Do you remember the chores?
Oh yeah, we had chores very early on.
Very early on.
That's another thing I think, you know,
one of the best things that our parents did for us is-
Real work.
Real work around the house.
And what I mean by real work is I had,
my chores were to clean the bathroom.
I cleaned the bathroom. What are you talking about?
We alternated.
We alternated weeks.
Okay. Because I loved cleaning the bathroom.
And I didn't, but I had to do it. Mom wanted us both to know how to have a clean bathroom.
But my every weekend job was cleaning those stairs.
Oh, that's right.
Yeah.
We had 14 stairs, notice I remember how many there were.
Yeah, you had to.
Yeah.
That went from our apartment down to our great-aunt Robbie's apartment.
And this is what I remember about Saturday morning.
You remember that tin pot that we used to have?
We had a tin pot, a pot now that used to be on the stove, which was now used for cleaning,
and you put a little soap, dish soap in it, and then you put pine salt in it.
Ooh, not like pine salt.
And there was nothing like that smell.
Like when you came home from school and mom had been mopping and you could smell the pine
sauce, it was usually Monday because she had laundry on Monday.
You come home from school and it smells like, ah, new house.
And I have to say that I to still to this day, when I'm mopping, if we don't have that pine oil smell.
That's it.
That's it, isn't it?
That's it.
And here we are in adulthood and they're a partner of ours on this podcast.
You know, an appropriate partner.
How about it?
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And this show in and of itself is just bringing me down memory lane.
But let's talk about some times when we had to actually, since you were talking about
looking out for each other, we had to lean on each other for advice. And I'll start because I remember talking to you before I talked to mom about going into coaching.
Oh, yeah, that's right.
And I want to tell you a story about when I leaned on you. about going into coaching. Oh yeah, that's right.
And I want to tell you a story about when I leaned on you and I want to tell a story
about when I didn't lean on you.
When I leaned on you, I was, well, I should tell the story chronologically because when
I didn't lean on you happened before I leaned on you.
Just in this example was when I was going through my first divorce, my only divorce.
And I didn't tell you about it.
And the reason I didn't tell my sister about it or my mom or anybody close to me.
Or just the challenges you guys were facing? We're facing was because I know my sister and I said, if I tell her about this, she's
never going to get over it.
And if we ever got back together, it wasn't going to be good for my first wife.
So I was trying to hold off telling everybody. But the first person I did tell was Mish, and she was so mad that I hadn't told her
and so disappointed that I vowed that I would never not tell her, hold anything from you,
because I had never done that ever and haven't done it since.
Well, because it was also interesting because I could see that something was going on,
that there was a disconnect because we were close.
I mean, we had our periods in life where we would come together, be apart,
you know, life would bring us together.
We wound up going to the same college.
We didn't go to the same high school because you went to an all-boys school and I went to a magnet high school.
And Whitney Young wasn't open.
It wasn't. You probably would have gone, but it was a brand new school.
And because you were a student athlete, you needed a good solid basketball program and
they hadn't developed it at Whitney Young. So we weren't in the same high school. And that was a good thing because
we had times in our lives when we were in the same school, sort of in the same orbit,
and then we weren't. And then I followed you to Princeton, where you were two years ahead
of me and big man on campus there too, because he was all Ivy on the basketball team and all this sort
of stuff. So everybody knew Craig. I was always Craig Robinson's little sister. I'm really
enjoying the payback of Craig Robinson now being Michelle Obama's brother.
Boy, times have changed.
But I grew up as Craig's little sister. I's like, oh, you Craig's little sister.
I was like, yeah, yeah.
But I do other things too.
It's more fun being Michelle Obama's big brother.
Much more fun.
But even in those moments when we were in the same orbit, we were close, but again,
in the same way, not overly dependent.
We had our own friends.
We had, you know, you know if I was dating
somebody because that was the other thing. Dating like big men on campus in college.
I think you scared off a lot of potential.
You would have had way more dates. You have way more dates once I graduated.
Yes, I did. I think people didn't want to piss off Craig.
And it wasn't like I was trying to mark any territory or anything.
It was just, you know, when you just walk around, people get nervous.
And then you graduate, then you go off and you play basketball.
You have a whole nother experience.
You moved to Manchester, England and play in Europe for a couple of years.
And so you're coming and going going and then you get married.
And I was very close with you and your first wife.
We were not inseparable, but it was a close family.
We did things together.
And then Avery was born and we were always right there.
We were very tight knit family.
And then I met Barack and, you know, then we got married and we bought a condo right
down the street from your condo.
Like three buildings down.
Three buildings down in Hyde Park in Chicago.
So that was a period when we were around each other a lot.
And when you see your brother and you think his or your sibling or somebody you care about
and you think everything is good,
you know, and you're rooting for them and then you learn that things are falling apart
because you think you.
I thought I saw some things that were red flags, but I would always be like, how you
doing?
And your reply would be, we're great.
We're good.
Fine.
Fine.
You know, and after that, once it all unraveled, I said,
your definition of fine, I was like,
don't ever tell me that you're good,
because I'm not going to trust that, you know?
Because it would have been like,
even though you think I wouldn't have been able to handle it,
I would have gotten myself together to give you sound advice
and be able to stay neutral.
But I felt like the dude I depend on the most,
who I could tell anything,
didn't feel like he could come to me
when he was dealing with something really hard in his life,
which is his marriage falling apart.
That was a mistake.
That was a mistake and I've learned since then.
But I talk about you all the time to people because now that you're an icon, people are
like, what's your sister like?
I was like, listen, this woman used to take care of me from the time she went all the
way back to when you used to play the piano for me before games. Yes, people, before my high school basketball games, my elementary
school sister would play the piano so I could take a nap. And you'd play, even after I went
to sleep, you kept playing, teaching me how to dance.
Oh, yes. You needed help.
Before I would go to the prom.
Because he was just, he was on the court and he hadn't learned like some basic moves.
So it's like, dude, your first dance, you got to.
So we put on the record player and I gave you a couple moves that you are still doing to this day.
I still do these moves to this day.
That's all you got. It's good though. It's staying in the pocket.
Staying there. But what I think about when I think about us relying on each other, when I made the
move from corporate America to become a coach, and the reason that was such a big deal was,
I was a bond trader, salesperson in investment banking and finance and big time job, really
good living.
And I was contemplating stopping that to go be an assistant coach on a basketball team.
It's basically saying I'm going to go from being a millionaire to working for nothing,
which seemed to be our overall MO, both you and me.
But yeah, that was a big leap to walk away from a very secure, lucrative career and pursue
something that you love.
And you talked about how my love for teaching, like I always thought I was going to be a
teacher.
I never thought I would be a coach or an investment banker or even a basketball player.
I thought I'd be a teacher or a cop or a fireman.
That was what we were exposed to.
And you talked about how much you knew I loved teaching, I loved helping kids.
And then you threw out what dad would say.
Because dad had passed by then.
He had passed by then. He had passed by then.
And you said, he would say, if you could find something that you'd love to do, you're not
working a day in your life.
And that gave me the courage to go into my partners that I worked with and tell them,
hey, I'm hanging it up and I'm going to be a coach.
And everybody thought I was having a nervous breakdown
because this was after the divorce stuff.
It's like he's having a crisis.
Yeah, yeah.
But even in that, I don't think you realize
that you gave me the courage to do the same thing eventually,
that you gave me the courage to do the same thing eventually,
because watching you make some major changes in your life and walk away from what people said you were supposed to do
rather than looking internally
and really figuring out who you were.
I was going through the same thing
because I was working at a
corporate law firm, you know, making great money. You know, you imagine our parents,
mom, working class people, I mean, we were earning more than both of our parents' salaries
combined starting out in our first second years, you know, really making the most of
this amazing education that our parents helped us acquire,
doing what we were supposed to do,
going to the best schools and getting the corporate jobs
and owning the cars.
I had a Saab, you had that red Porsche.
I mean, we were the black successful people
and so were all the people that we were surrounded by.
But no one told us that some of those pursuits could be soul-sucking, you know?
Because first of all, our parents didn't know.
It's like, you're a lawyer? A corporate lawyer? That's great.
You know, you're in finance and that's what all the fat cats want to do.
But it was interesting how both of us entered those careers,
were successful, but it was interesting how both of us entered those careers were successful,
but something was missing.
And when I saw you make that leap with kids and alimony and all the responsibility, it
made me stop and think about who I wanted to be and whether I was pursuing what I thought I was supposed
to pursue or whether I was being true to what I cared about.
And Barack came into the picture and he was, as I call a swerver, never really even thought
about the need to pursue some high powered career, even though he was Harvard educated,
blah, blah, blah.
It was all about what were we giving back?
What were we doing?
So you helped me make that leap.
And it's a scary leap to walk away with debt because we still had student loan debt and
walk away from guaranteed money and basically start over in brand new careers.
But that's the beauty of having a big brother who's paving the way.
Yeah. And, you know, in more recent times, I mean, it feels like I can call and talk to you about anything.
I mean, you know, we talk about the kids. Now, see, I have the younger
kids now.
Well, now you're on marriage number two.
I'm on marriage number two and I'm a charter member of the ODC, the old dad's club.
Yeah.
And...
Although you look good.
I do. I do. I do. But, you know, just being able to call you up and have an opportunity to gain from your wisdom, it's
just really...
Now that I got a little, huh?
It's nice.
It's nice.
Well, I couldn't have gotten through eight years in the White House without my big brother. That's another sort of unusual aspect to our lives, our relationship was this whole, you
know, being married to the president of the United States thing that none of us kind of
banked on.
I mean, we knew Barack was smart and, you know, ambitious, but, you know, I think.
But you talked me into supporting his run.
I did.
And he was smart enough to know that he needed to come to you and sell you on the idea.
So tell folks, what did he say and what you said to me?
So...
Because I was definitely like, no way, this is crazy.
We've done enough crazy stuff.
That's right.
That's right. That's right. And you know, everything happens so fast because Barack
went from a state senator to a US senator. And next thing you know, people were saying,
this guy should run for president. And you were like, uh-uh, no, not doing it. You had
grown up with Frazier Robinson. You wanted your girls to have sort of a similar
upbringing with the father who would come home from work and play catch and take them
to the park and do all these things.
And Barack came to me and he's like, you know, I can't convince your sister to go along with
this.
And I'm like, whoa, we'll go along with what?
And it's like, I think I'm going to run for president.
And I was like, what?
I wouldn't go along with it.
And I said to him, I said, listen, what you have to do is, first of all, let me talk to
her. You don't talk to her, let me talk to her.
You don't talk to her, let me talk to her.
No, it wasn't that.
I said, if we can get mom on this, our mom, Marion Robbins said, we can get her on board
for this, which she was not on board for it, we might have
a chance of getting Miesha on.
And then I said, let me talk to Miesha.
And that's when I came and talked to you and just gave you your advice that you had given
me back pretty much about following your passion and doing the things you love, but I think the thing that pushed it over the top was I convinced you to not
penalize him for being really good at what he does.
And that would be like a guy who is fighting to get to the NBA and he makes it and because
the travel is messed up, his wife says, no, I don't want
you to do it. And it's just what wouldn't be fair. And I talked to you and mom at the
same time and both of you sat there reasonably mad and said I was right. And then I said
to everybody in our family that this is like not a that this is not just you all doing it.
This means all of us are doing it because of the scrutiny you guys would be under, the
work you're going to have to do, it's going to take a village to do this whole thing.
And that was pretty much the discussion that we had that got this whole thing started.
And that meant that you put your money
where your mouth was.
I mean, over the course of the campaign,
the mini campaigns, our time in the White House,
I could count on you to be there when I needed you.
Yeah.
I mean, you campaigned with us, you campaigned for us.
If anything got tight, if I was feeling a certain way, my team, especially
Mel, my chief of staff who's been with me forever, she knew who to call. Melissa loves
you more than I do. It's like a lot of times Melissa will be like, I meet Greg and she'd
call you. And I come running.
And it was always a breath of fresh air.
I mean, there's just something about having your foundation in check, like being able
to touch base with home in the middle of something hard and scary and uncertain.
And you did that.
And did that for the girls because they needed their uncle and their
cousins and I wanted them to...
Avery and Leslie, sadly, Austin and Erin were so young, poor things.
They were there, but they don't remember any of it.
They're like, why didn't we go to that White House?
It's like you were there.
Dude, you were there.
You were just four.
You know what? They remember the turkey were there. Dude, you were there. You were just four.
You know what? They remember the turkey pardoning. That was the last thing. They got, every year we'd have the turkey pardoning. And that was the one thing that
the girls would do at Barack was go stand next to him when he pardoned this turkey.
And it was cute when they were little, but as they got older, you could see on their faces in the shots of them thinking,
I would just poke my eyes out.
Just right now, just get me out of here.
I'm standing with my father telling these stupid jokes,
next to a turkey.
So by the time we got to the last year,
the last turkey pardoning, they were done.
They were just like, I'm out.
I'm not going.
So in subs, Austin and Aaron, who were, how old were they at the time?
Oh, shoot.
Six and four maybe?
Perfect turkey pardoning age.
They were like, call me up.
I'm in coach.
I'm ready.
I'm ready to stand next to Uncle Barack." And they loved his stupid jokes.
They laughed at his jokes.
He felt like a new man. He's like, I got a new crew in.
They were fascinated. While their daughters were like,
you are sad, Dad. Austin and Erin came in.
So they remember that because that was like the last chance when they started having memories.
Of course, nothing was better than having Thanksgiving dinner at the White House.
Yeah.
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Member FDIC, equal housing opportunity.
member FDIC, equal housing opportunity. You know, it just, we started talking about this at the outset, why we're doing this show.
You know, post White House and writing the books and doing book tours, you know, we just,
I, you know, speaking at leadership conferences, things you do as a coach, you
realize that what we have, even in our lack of resources, you know, in our household growing
up, we had people who would share their opinions, give us advice. We had mentors and we were used to mentoring
and being mentored.
And I realized that a lot of people don't have that.
They don't have a safe place to come sometimes
where they feel comfortable being vulnerable
and asking hard questions
or they don't have people in their lives they trust.
They are lone wolves or maybe they have contentious relationships where they are estranged from
the people they could rely on. So a lot of people out there are looking for guidance.
A lot of people have questions they want to know, especially when they see somebody
of note with a platform who, you know, by every measure looks successful.
The first question is, how?
How do you do this?
Tell me more.
So I can only access so many people through books or at tours or at limited leadership conferences.
So I think this podcast, first and foremost, gives us an opportunity to hear from folks.
We're going to be taking questions from listeners who are going through some things and just
need a little advice.
They want to hear from people in conversations.
And folks are looking for a place where they can just,
they can hear stories, you know?
I mean, what I realize is like,
by sharing some of these stories,
it always taps into something from somebody else.
People, you know, they wanna hear some honest kind of conversation about how
people are working it through. And we don't have all the answers, you know. I mean, this show isn't
about us being experts at anything other than the lives that we've lived. But what we do have are a
lot of opinions. Hence the name. In my opinion, IMO.
And what better person to do this with than my big brother, who, you know, I know how you think, I know why you think it.
You were funny as all get out. I trust you implicitly.
But I am also excited that we're going to involve other people around
our table, that we've got friends and other leaders out there and people we've met over
the scope of our lifetimes who have their own podcasts or living their own lives who
are going to come in and engage because we have our opinions, but so do a lot of other
people. And I hope the show encourages people to have conversations about what they're afraid about.
Don't do what the one time you didn't lean on me at a time when you needed it because
you were afraid of what I would think.
We want to encourage listeners.
That's what we need in this time. We need kitchen tables where we can just sit down
and share opinions, share experiences.
That's where the wisdom comes from.
So I'm excited to be engaged
in some of those conversations with you.
How are you thinking about this?
I couldn't agree with you more. I have over these years, and we talked about this a little earlier
about being our parents, before there was the term lifetime learners, right? That's what they were.
And it's been so helpful for me in my adult life and in our adult lives.
I just want to be able to share what we can with folks who weren't as fortunate to have
Frazier and Marion Robinson as parents.
And then I have just watched you grow into this person who has a platform where people, you touch people.
People listen to you and it's just an honor to be sitting here next to you and being able
to share that with the rest of the world.
And hopefully it'll be fun.
It'll be fun because we may not have all the answers, but we got plenty of opinions.
We sure do.
We sure do.
Well, it's going to be a joy to have an excuse to hang with my big brother.
So we want you to hang with us tough.
And feel free to engage with us.
Subscribe, follow us on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Audible,
and wherever you get your podcast, look us up and send us some questions.
We'd love to get questions from you folks and try and answer them.
I plan on learning something too in this.
For sure.
Like learners.
Like we hope to learn from our guests.
We hope to learn from our listeners.
And I can't wait until we start getting feedback from people to hear what's missing.
What more can we talk about?
What areas can we touch on?
But again, we are not the experts.
This is just our opinion and everybody's got one.
And it's important.
You know, it's important to have an opinion in life and put it out there.
So I'm excited.
So am I.
It'll be a lot of fun.
Thank you for coming on this journey with me, Quague.
Thanks for having me.
Yeah.