We're Out of Time - Margaret Cho Gets Real on Addiction, Sobriety & the Dark Side of Comedy

Episode Date: March 17, 2026

On this episode of We’re Out Of Time, Richard Taite sits down with legendary comedian, actor, and activist Margaret Cho for a raw and unfiltered conversation about addiction, relapse, and survival.M...argaret opens up about her decades-long journey with substance abuse, including relapsing after seven years of sobriety and the dangerous mindset that can come with addiction. She speaks candidly about the realities of drug use, the dark humor that often surrounds it, and why so many comedians struggle with substance abuse behind the scenes.The two also explore the connection between comedy and neurodivergence, the loneliness of life on the road, and how the industry can unintentionally fuel addictive behaviors. Margaret shares her perspective on modern culture, navigating outrage in comedy, and how she continues to push boundaries while staying authentic to herself.They also dive into emerging conversations around GLP-1 medications and their potential role in impulse control, as well as Margaret’s personal experience using them to manage binge eating disorder.In the end, Margaret reflects on what she’s most proud of today—and it’s not the fame or success. It’s the fact that she’s still here. Margaret Cho’s story is a powerful reminder that survival itself can be the greatest accomplishment.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 The way that I drive drunk and high, and I tend to always drive to a violent man's house. Wait, wait, wait, you're a lesbian. Why are you driving to a violent man's house? I don't even like dick, but I end up, like, getting hooked up with these, like, crazy guys who are going to kill me for being a lesbian. If someone has a problem with substance use disorder, please call one call placement. That's 8888-8-1-1581. And if we can't help you, we'll make a referral to someone who can. One Call Placement is affiliated with Carreira Treatment, Wellness, and Spa, and One Method Treatment Centers. Today's guest is someone who has spent decades making people laugh while also speaking honestly about some of life's toughest struggles. Margaret Cho is a legendary comedian, actor, and activist whose fearless stand-up has pushed boundaries and open doors in entertainment.
Starting point is 00:01:10 From her groundbreaking sitcom, All-American Girl to her films, powerful comedy tours, and add. advocacy work. She's currently on the road with her new stand-up tour, Choligarchy. So, Margaret, thank you for coming on the show today. We've been trying to get you on for, we've been trying to get you on for a year. Yeah. Right? You were touring, right? Yes. Yes. Tell me about what you've been doing over the last year. I've been on the road. I have a show. I'm on the road with called Tolegarchy and I've been doing that. I've also been shooting a television show in Atlanta called Will Trent, which is a really cool show where I'm a therapist, actually.
Starting point is 00:01:54 So it's a very different for me to for once be the authority on mental health on there. So I do that. And yeah, traveling a lot, but it's really good. I think that's hysterical. Yeah. You're going to be a, that is a, that is a, that is a, that is a, that is a, that is a, that is a, good idea. That I love. You as a therapist? Yeah. Oh, that's a winner. It's very different. And it's for me, I mean, it's just, I think because I've been in therapy for so long,
Starting point is 00:02:27 that it's easy for me to switch, switch it up and play the therapist. No, for sure. Yeah. For sure. So I don't know if you know this, but I think about 15, 20, years ago, we met in an AA meeting at the cabin. Right? Used to go to cabin all the time, right? Right. Yes. Yes.
Starting point is 00:02:50 Right. So, you know, I know you talk about your sobriety, right? Yes. How long are you sober now? This time around, I have, God willing, I'll have 10 years in May. But I've been around AA since 1996, 96, 97. 97. That's when I got, that's when I started going to A in 96, 97.
Starting point is 00:03:18 So we're in the same thing. Thank you to Aunt for introducing us. Okay. He's a good friend of mine. I know you're close with him. So thank you, aunt. I was watching before we did this. I was watching your best of video.
Starting point is 00:03:37 Okay. Which is hysterical, by the way. You're hysterical. Thank you. And I'm not judging. I'm just reporting, as you know. Okay. But who are your favorite comics?
Starting point is 00:03:51 I love Maria Bamford. I love Tignotaro. I think I really will always have a, be indebted to Joan Rivers, who is my good friend and my mentor. You know, yeah, those are probably my favorites. at the moment. Those people are just so phenomenal. But yeah, I'm a big fan of comedy. Joan Rivers scared me. She's scary. She's a scary woman. I mean, she ain't scary.
Starting point is 00:04:25 Aretha Franklin's scary. Arita Franklin was scariest woman I ever met. Oh, gosh, I never got to meet Aretha. I would have loved to, although I definitely would have been scared. I'm such a fan of hers. You don't even understand the gravity of it. I walk into her house. because I'm friends with her son. And she comes out in this gown with feathers and a boa. And, you know, just like it was real. It was real.
Starting point is 00:04:55 And there was no messing around. She didn't have any ear for any nonsense. She wasn't having it. I was scared to death of her. Just scared to death. Joan Rivers was a lot like that, but not as scary because it was a little funny. Right. And Joan was, you know, she had a shyness to her.
Starting point is 00:05:11 She had a shy, all of it was really made up. Like her persona on stage was actually very, it was, of course, authentic to her, but that also wasn't how she naturally was in person. She was a shy, kind of like very warm, very loving kind of maternal presence, which was so shocking later when I realized that was the real her, very different. Right. Well, all you'd have to do is see her around Melissa and then you'd see the real. Yeah, the warmth, the warmth and the, also the kind of like really caring side that wasn't
Starting point is 00:05:53 crass at all. That wasn't, you know, full of like barbs and full of vitriol. That wasn't her. She was just a very maternal loving mommy. Yeah, she was. But I love the other shit. That was my favorite. I mean, she was, she was so fun.
Starting point is 00:06:12 What do you think about who your favorite political commentary comics? I think right now I'm really, I'm really into John Oliver. I think he's just brilliant. And I learn a lot from what he decides to report on. So I really, I really appreciate him. Of course, I love The Daily Show. They're just really spot-on. on and all of the different correspondents on there.
Starting point is 00:06:41 There's just really special, especially John Stewart, who was my old boss. I used to open for him. And girls would go crazy. They would run out to our car and like jump on our car. I mean, they were trying to break into the car to get to him because they were just so mad about him. And this is in the 90s, you know,
Starting point is 00:07:00 so it was like Beatlemania. I was really scared sometimes going around with him. But what a wonderful, just political. commentary, really smart. Just love what he's doing. Like stand-up wise, I love Mark Marin. I think he's really astute. He's just like we have the similar political beliefs.
Starting point is 00:07:22 And I really vibe with him. I've always loved his comedy. So yeah, there's a lot of people. I love John Oliver. People wouldn't necessarily think that he did an episode. I love him. He's not just a comedian. He's an activist.
Starting point is 00:07:38 he did one thing that was the most beautiful thing. There were a bunch of people who were just encumbered with medical debt, right? And so he was going to pay off all their medical debts. But he went a step further. He was mindful about it. And he says, wait a minute. If I do that, they're going to get stuck for the taxes. They're going to be in more trouble than they were with the medical debt.
Starting point is 00:08:07 So he went out, I don't forgot what he did, but he worked it out so that not only could he pay off the debt, but they wouldn't be responsible for the taxes. And so I just love him. He's incredible. He does so much stuff like that kind of behind the scenes that it's not about it's not about the comedy of it. It's really just about the ethics of it. And, you know, I just love that also the education of it. Like just learning so much about what's going on. That's, I think what is such an important function of comedy is to, explain the world to us. And for sure. That's right. And, and you know, you didn't mention Billmore. Bill is great too.
Starting point is 00:08:47 Bill and I don't agree a lot. I'm a, fan of him personally. I've gone to Hawaii with him on his private plane. Like, it's the only time I've ever been on a private plane is with Belmar. And I've spent time,
Starting point is 00:09:04 a lot of time with him. He's a good guy. We disagree a lot. But that's okay. You know, I think he's very smart. It's only okay if we're not in our feeds constantly being hammered with, you know, one side of the deal. But I learned about politics from comedy. And that's what brought me in, right?
Starting point is 00:09:34 And I learned it from Bill Moore. So when I was on that show, it was like I could barely speak. Oh, wow. Right? Because I was like, I just love him. He's great. Right. He's the best.
Starting point is 00:09:48 I just want to know where Bill gets it wrong, where Bill Maher gets it wrong. And I'll tell you why I say this, because he's evolved. Yeah. Okay. He's evolved to the center. Right. And he used to be on the left. And he's evolved to the center.
Starting point is 00:10:06 and that's why you disagree. And I get it. But what about his take, his takes, are you having the most trouble? It's the general idea that we've gotten too woke and that we are lending too much of an ear to disenfranchised communities or we're lending too much of an ear to these minority issues that are, in essence, too woke. I don't think that's true. I don't think you could ever be too woke. I don't think you could ever stop paying attention to communities that need to be heard.
Starting point is 00:10:42 And so that in that in a very general way is that. And that's our divide. But I also appreciate his ideas of common sense and wanting to be rational and wanting to pretty much unite everybody. I think independents are interested in uniting people. And in their own individuality, like they listen to everybody. They would rather have an unbiased take and form their own conclusions. So that part, I appreciate.
Starting point is 00:11:13 Yeah, absolutely. And I love that you said that. And communities that are underserved need their basic needs met, just like anyone needs met. That's just the way it works. We're only as strong as our weakest link. You know, we saw the encampments on the street. I grew up in L.A.
Starting point is 00:11:32 You grew up in L.A. I grew up in San Francisco. So it's worse there, actually. Okay. It's worse. It's worse. But it wasn't always that way. And we see the encampments. We're like, what, what's going on here? This is not, this is not America. This is not, we can't do this to our people. Right. Right. So I get that. So I'm all about helping out the little guy. That would be great. You've always been very honest in your comedy about your life. When did you realize sharing those experience could actually help people? Well, I think, you know what? It comes from,
Starting point is 00:12:05 Richard Pryor, when Richard Pryor was so open about his, when he set himself on fire, you know, on a crack binge. Like, and the nakedness of that, the sheer bravery of that and the beauty of that was just for me a lifelong lesson of, wow, you know, and when I first saw that I was too young to even understand, I hadn't been done drugs yet, I hadn't understood, but I could see the vulnerability. and I could see the beauty in it. And it took me a lifetime kind of to understand.
Starting point is 00:12:38 Now I have a much greater understanding of it and much more appreciation of it. But I think, yeah, like he led by example. You know, Richard was an extraordinary ambassador of vulnerability. And not only for drugs, but for race, for masculinity in general. You know, there was so much power in what he did because he revealed his heart and his frailty. So that to me was strength. And so then I think, you know, later, some of these, you know, and drug addiction is kind of funny, you know, because it, it falls the mighty. Like, it really will destroy the strongest individuals. And so that in itself is a
Starting point is 00:13:27 kind of hilarious thing. It's only hilarious when they come out the other side. they share about it and everybody's laughing. While you're going through it, it comes to us. It's painful. But also you laugh at yourself while you're going through it. You laugh at the sickness of it. And you have to laugh to survive sometimes. So I think, yeah, I find drug addiction actually to be a really intensely funny subject when you can laugh, when you survived and can laugh.
Starting point is 00:13:58 And then, you know, now being sober and hopefully I will stay sober. for the rest of my life. I'm hoping that may not be the case, but I would, today I would like to be. You know, you keep on laughing at it to get other people interested. You tell these stories and people get more interested in sobriety. You said you have 10 years. So do you want to share how you relapsed? What caused that? I was just frustrated with sobriety. and then I had not really done the program in the way that I should have. And then I got and so some arguments with people who I was walking this path with. You know, and I just thought, I don't want to do this.
Starting point is 00:14:46 And I bought a house and I had gotten married and I had been sober for like seven years. And I was like, I don't want to do this anymore. I don't want to do this anymore. And then I went to a party and somebody handed me a jamba juice thing filled with psilocybin mushrooms. I just drank the whole thing out of just like, who... And it was so weird, but I didn't die. And then I was like, hey, you know, they said, if you go out, you'll die. Well, obviously they were lying.
Starting point is 00:15:11 And so then I got a bunch of friends who were also people who would just kind of relapse to. And we were like, we didn't die. We didn't die. They've been lying this whole time. And we kind of formed our own little anti-fellowship. And just, and nothing really bad happened for a while because we didn't have, we didn't, we weren't hardcore ivy drug users yet yet i think fennel in ventral is like the worst it's the worst possible
Starting point is 00:15:39 thing that could have happened to us as drug addicts and to have something that reverses that it's like a miracle of course it's a pain to be narcan i mean i don't want ever i'm so glad that i never had to be narcan because thinking about being high and then suddenly dope sick makes me so crazy like i would rather die. I really think I would rather die than be narcan. I would just a hard. Okay. I need to explain that to the viewers because we're the only people on the face of the earth that would say that. Yeah. Like you have to be a recovering drug addict alcoholic to say some sick shit like that. I'd rather be dead. Okay. Then woken up from my high abruptly. To wake up dope sick well when I'm having a good time. Because people, I think when they're dying at
Starting point is 00:16:25 least it's like at least they're high you know like I mean and that's such it I'm that's very it's that's so cynical and that is like the drag addict in me but that's what I I just feel so bad for anybody who gets Narcan. Do you know do you know what I tell people feels the best and lay people don't understand this will understand it but lay people don't understand it. What feels the best to an intravenous heroin user is to get as close to death as humanly possible without dying. That feels the best. So that way when they're all blue, right, and their hearts almost stopped and they survive it, right? That's why the first thing they say is, where's my needle?
Starting point is 00:17:12 I need another hit. Yeah. Okay. And then everybody in the room's like freaked out because they're all, you know, they're all straight now. they they're their highs ruined and they're all white okay it's just ridiculous so yeah i'd still rather be woken up what were you what were you would you relapse on well i relapsed dot well i was it was like a slow like you know the the boiling frog that's right you turn up the heat but it's just first okay weeds legal so did a bit of that in the y2k thing weeds legal so um then it's like
Starting point is 00:17:46 oh, you can get pills from anywhere online, that sort of thing. And then I was doing a lot of benzodiazepids. Opioids or benzos? Opioids and benzos, which is a deadly combination. I like the Trinity of opioids, benzos, and a muscle relaxer. I don't know what that is. That's the sort of the Las Vegas cocktail. It's a soma with a Norco and a Xanax and a bottle of red wine. And that's just keep that coming. bad combination. But yeah, and then you do enough of that. And it leads you right to, I mean, I never did.
Starting point is 00:18:24 I'm so grateful that I never got there. I never did IV drugs. I never got there. But close enough, which you're snorting. You're snorting oxy. Oh, you weren't smoking it. You were snorting. Oxies.
Starting point is 00:18:40 It's close enough. Close enough. Okay. You said before that a lot of, of comedians are neurodivergent in some way. Why do you think comedy attracts those kinds of minds? Because it's the way that we can control our societal interaction. So if you're a comedian, you're just going to be in the front and just be able to say everything. And nobody has the right to interrupt you, unless they're a heckler or whatever, then they get what they get. But you have
Starting point is 00:19:08 the social contract. Everybody has to listen. And that's so tantalizing for a neurodivergent person because you have control over society then and you have the sort of the interaction where everybody's agreed okay we're going to listen to you and we're going to like what you say so I feel like that is so attractive to somebody who has some something on the spectrum going on and for me definitely I love that that is such an excellent answer I didn't even look at it that way okay so when I was a kid there were not there was nothing nothing off limits. Okay.
Starting point is 00:19:46 You could do a riff and not have a problem. Okay. Today, everyone is uptight and they miss the comedy of it. They take everything so literally because everybody's a goddamn Karen. Okay. How do you deal with that? That must be so upsetting. It is.
Starting point is 00:20:10 But it's also, you know, you have to be clever enough. to override that. You have to be smart enough to kind of combat that. There's ways to do it. People do it. It's about skill and it's about really thinking things through. But yeah, of course, it's the outrage machine. You know, people want to take things out of context and they want to get offended and it's definitely worse now than it ever has been. But that's really, it's a test. It's a test. of your own ability to override that. But there are certain comedians that just don't give a fuck, and they're going to do their own thing.
Starting point is 00:20:56 And those are the guys that I just revere, right? Like, who would be, like Ricky Jervais. He gives no, none, zero. Okay? There's something so freeing about that, where you can sit there and just be, like anything give it to me okay it's like air to breathe everybody's been like you know uh walking around on eggshells give it to me right uh who's another one bill burr i love bill right he love he's great
Starting point is 00:21:32 he can override that oh outrage a machine like bill is so clever and so skilled that it's less that he doesn't care it's more that he's so smart that he can get through any kind of defense thing that, you know, people have any kind of outrage, defensiveness. He's, he's, he's really like a ninja. It's, it's pretty. Do you know, do you know what just came up for me? Do you know who you were just in that moment? You were Tom Brady on television giving play by play on the play that just happened. And unless you were here, you know, I wouldn't have had that that point of view. And that was beautiful how you just did that. You just broke that down. Your new tour Chologarky brings you back into political comedy. What inspired that? Oh, well,
Starting point is 00:22:28 it's also about being in menopause. So it's about the physical change in my body and also how it applies to the actual change that we've experienced in our country. You did a show. On menopause? Yes. Right now it's about menopause and it's about how crazy that is to have this physical change and to be a completely different body. So it's the juxtaposition of the two things. The whole thing about how physically we change and it's so weird because you never think
Starting point is 00:23:04 that's going to happen. Oh, God. The hot flashes? Yeah. No, it's like it's just, it's so weird. And so you, because you, you think your body's going to be there your whole life and it's really not. So it's a, it's a, it's a lot about that too. So I think it's really important. Along with Jimmy Shin,
Starting point is 00:23:22 I've had a few other comedians on the show, Jay Moore, David Cockner, Nick Thune. Love those guys. Who've all loved them, right? Really good, really good people. Yeah. Had a great time with all of them. Nick Thune is probably one of the funniest people I've ever met. Yeah, he's a, he's a beautiful person. He's amazing. Beautiful person. Yeah, he's amazing. Beautiful. And Jimmy's the best time ever.
Starting point is 00:23:47 They've all talked about addiction. Why do you think substance abuse shows up so often in the comedy world? Because we have too much time to do nothing. Because if you're a comic, you like really only work like an hour a day, even if you're like the best. And then the rest of the time you're traveling and then kind of in a hotel room by yourself for like 23 hours. and with all that money and all that time, it's just a recipe for addiction. Like, you could do whatever the fuck you want.
Starting point is 00:24:22 And even if you go on stage, people love it. It's really an addiction that's easier than a rock star too. Because with a rock star, you have to actually have a physical body that can perform, like sing and stuff like that. So your body is the instrument or you have to play. That's even harder.
Starting point is 00:24:43 But like if you're a comedian, you could always talk. So it's really crazy. It's a profession that is perfect for an addict lifestyle. Yeah. The, you know, we were talking about Narcan and we were talking about, and, you know, the Narcan works on. What it doesn't work on is something called. Oh, yeah, yeah. And when you mix the zine with the narcan, I'm sorry, with all, you have something called Trank, T-R-A-N-Q.
Starting point is 00:25:22 The reason I bring this up is Andy Dick, who's been trying to get sober further. I can't even count how many treatment centers this guy's been to. I saw a video of him yesterday where he was slumped over, okay, like a zombie. And my producer said, this is full. And I said, I don't think so. I think he was doing drink. And she said, well, he doesn't shoot drugs. And I said, it doesn't matter.
Starting point is 00:25:57 Let me tell you how I think it happened. What I think happened was he had fentany that he was smoking along with, but the ful had been in it beforehand. And that's why he almost died. Yeah. What happened was, I think, what happened was is he got the Narcan. They Narcan them, right? And they're like, well, why did he live if Trank, if it doesn't work with Trank?
Starting point is 00:26:34 And the answer is very simple. It saved him because it worked on the festival, but he was still sedated by. Yeah. So the reason I bring it up is, you know this kid? Yeah. I did drugs with him. I feel so. Everybody did drugs with him because he's never stopped doing drugs.
Starting point is 00:26:59 And I've been sober with him too. You know. Okay. Yeah. He's had bouts as variety. Do me a favor. Do me a favor. Have this kid call me.
Starting point is 00:27:09 Okay. I will take care of him. Yeah. And we'll deal with this. Yeah, he needs you because he just, he just has got to get, he's got to get his head right. Like it's just, it's been too long now, you know. And he doesn't know how to live in the world. He doesn't know how.
Starting point is 00:27:28 He can't get out of it. He's stuck in it. He just doesn't know what he doesn't know. Okay. It's like, it's like when you're blind, you never, your mom never, my mom never took me to get my eyes checked, right? So at 35, I'm driving. I'm getting out of my car to look at the street.
Starting point is 00:27:44 sign and then I'm getting back in the car. So my sponsor says to me, you got to go get your eyes checked. I'm like, you're out of your mind. There's nothing wrong with my eyes. Now, my father had glasses as thick as the bottoms of Coke bottles, okay? But all of a sudden, my eyes are fine. Okay? So I just refuse to believe it. So I take the car into, you know, a place to get the windshield replaced because the windshield's dirty. It's old. It's got to be the windshield, right? So the guy won't change the windshield. So I step on top of the car and I kick in windshield in. And I said, well, now I need a windshield. I'm going to go next door and get some coffee. Would you like a coffee? The guy's like, yeah, I'll take a coffee. Come back. The windshield's fine. I still can't see anything.
Starting point is 00:28:30 Right? So I go to pep boys and I have them put these lights on. They're like tennis court lights. Everybody's brighting me. Everybody hates me, whatever. So finally I go to the doctor. Okay. and I get my eyes checked. And the guy goes, how long you've been walking around blind? And he put glasses on me and I saw something totally different. You don't know what you don't know. Right? There's a lot of conversation right now about GLP1 medications.
Starting point is 00:29:01 We're seeing it reduce cravings for alcohol and drugs. True. Yeah. What do you think about that and have you taken them? I have taken them. I think they're great. I think they're really amazing. for curbing impulse, like, for like impulse, like impulse eating.
Starting point is 00:29:19 I have a binge eating disorder. So for me, it's actually been quite a lifesaver. I think that they are just perfect for any kind of impulse control, you know, that we're sort of looking at. I mean, I think, you know, people really criticize it, but I love them. I'm really grateful for them. You know, it even works with smoking because I was smoking cigars all day long. I never didn't have a cigar in my mouth.
Starting point is 00:29:54 Now, if I can smoke, I smoke two cigars a day and I don't even finish it. Okay. I mean, I still enjoy it, but it just doesn't even enter my thought process. Yeah. Right. And so it's, it's, you know, it's working really well with drugs and alcohol. And I'm, so why did you get on it? It was really to just stop the food noise.
Starting point is 00:30:18 And it was less about losing weight, but just getting, because the way that I have a binge eating disorder, like, I'll eat to the point of my mouth is sore. Like, I'm like not eating, like, it's not out of hunger or a need to satiate. Like, it's a kind of like wild inner hunger that doesn't make any sense. That's not about. It's self-soothing. It's what you're doing. And it's, you know, definitely a very destructive habit.
Starting point is 00:30:47 And so I think, yeah, it's been incredibly helpful. I really love GLP Wens. Yeah, I do too. I'm very, I'm very sveled. Okay. Looking back on everything you've been through, the highs and the lows, what are you most proud of today? I'm most proud that I'm still alive.
Starting point is 00:31:11 Like, that's such a miracle. Like, the way that I do drugs and the way that I drink alcohol and combined with the way that I drive is so crazy that it's... Wait a minute. No, no, no. I'm not, I don't have an ear for that. The way that I drive drunk and high and I tend to always drive to a violent man's house, I'm so amazed that I'm alive because...
Starting point is 00:31:34 Wait, wait, wait, wait, you're a lesbian. Why are you driving to a violent man's house? I don't even like Dick, but I end up, like, getting hooked up with these, like, crazy guys who are going to kill me for being a lesbian. So it's like I am so crazy when I am in my addiction that I am amazed that I'm alive. So every day, like, I'm so proud that I'm living. I'm so proud that when I was out there using and drinking and doing whatever, I didn't die. I was hoping you would say something to the effect that, you know, I started with nothing.
Starting point is 00:32:07 and I have accomplished something in my life that I'm very proud of. I mean, you're a big deal. You're not, right? I mean, that's a good, I mean, you fucking did it. You were a in hope to die, drug addict, just full of shame and feeling like a piece of shit. And now you did it, man. How does that feel? Great. But it's also about staying in this mindset, staying in this place of like, well, now don't do it again.
Starting point is 00:32:46 Like now don't get to a place where I feel so comfortable and so good, maybe I can have a drink. No, I can't ever get that relaxed. Like I said, I was watching this video beforehand. And you said something about, you went on a riff. It was hysterical. Something about you love gay men. They're the best. A gay man with a with a, with a.
Starting point is 00:33:08 The little girl is the best. They're going to Justin Bieber together. They're doing all this nonsense. And then I think I heard you say something like, but they're all getting older and I need a younger gay man. Somebody. Okay. Well, you're on the show and I like to bear gifts. And so I'd like to give you my gay man.
Starting point is 00:33:27 Oh, wonderful. Hi. Margaret Toe, I love you. Okay. Hi. I love you. Good to meet you. I'm sorry I'm the young gay you're supposed to get.
Starting point is 00:33:38 I think it's great. Younger than me. You deserve a Ferrari gay. I'm like a Buick gay. No, I think you're a Ferrari gay. I think we're going to have a good time. Good. Awesome.
Starting point is 00:33:49 The day he met Shaka Khan, he almost had a seizure. I would do. I love her. I would totally. I agree. I don't know how I would react. I've never actually seen her in person. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:34:02 I would be like so I would, I get crazy about the divas. Yeah, yeah. She was a dazzling doll for sure. I love it. Well, I can't wait to meet you in person and we can we can talk about our divas all night. I will introduce the two of you. Okay. You're both sober. You've both gone to the cabin a lot of times. And Michael has, Michael is a professional case manager. So we'll give, we'll list that in the, where, what's your place again? The heart consultants, and I'm a licensed marriage and family therapist as well. Oh, how nice. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:34:45 No, he's your guy. That's beautiful. He's your, he's your this. Oh, perfect. So when you get like that, he brings you back. Awesome. Thank you. He's your guy.
Starting point is 00:34:56 Okay. Love it. All right. Mikey, I love you. Love you too. Thanks, Richie. Bye, Margaret. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:35:01 Bye. God, I love it when he calls me, Richie. I just love that. Like everybody called me Richie when I was a kid and now they called me Richard because I'm a man. It's like stupid. All right. Margaret, thank you for your time and coming on my show today. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:35:19 I really appreciate it. Is there anything I left unsaid, anything you want to promote or that, you know, you're working on? Well, people want to come see me on my show. They can go to Margaret Show.com. That's where you get tickets and to see where I'm at. So you can check me out. What a blessing. It took a year to get you here.
Starting point is 00:35:38 Okay. It was worth the wait. And I appreciate you immensely. Thank you so much. I appreciate you. This is wonderful. See you next Tuesday. There it is.
Starting point is 00:35:49 We're out of time. Please subscribe on YouTube. Click the thumbs up and leave a comment. Please subscribe on Apple Podcast and Spotify and leave a rating and a review. And share the We're Out of Time podcast with others you know who will get value out of it. See you next Tuesday.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.