What Now? with Trevor Noah - For Kids or Anyone Who’s Ever Been a Kid [VIDEO]
Episode Date: October 17, 2024With the release of Trevor’s new children’s book “Into the Uncut Grass”, Trevor sits down with some actual kids, plus Christiana and Josh, to discuss what being a kid is like from their perspe...ctive, what adults often get wrong about being a child, and whether it really takes a village to raise them right. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Who do you think cries more? Kids or adults?
Adults!
Let's have a vote. Okay, Kana you say?
Adults!
Charlie?
Kids.
Babies.
Babies! Oh, Juniper the Contrarian! Okay, throwing in babies, Matteo?
It would have to be both, cause like, parents cry when somebody dies yeah and then kids cry
when they lose something okay okay I see I'll see baby babies big damn babies we
started off going off to adults my mom said you couldn't say what? D-A-M-E. Oh, dam. D-A-M-N. Oh, D-A-M-N.
Oh, D-A-M-N.
Okay, I won't say it either then.
Okay.
Yeah.
So when I'm saying it, I'm talking about the thing they build in a river to stop water
from going somewhere.
That's a dam.
That's a damn. That's a damn.
This is What Now with Trevor Noah.
And so, for today's episode, I wanted to have a conversation with you about children. But not like children through the lens of an expert and not children through the lens of an
adult. No, this is one of the, this is a topic that I love because I don't think anybody's truly
an expert in it, even though some people say they are. Right. And it's like kids, parents,
and how we perceive their realities. And the reason I say nobody's really an expert is because people often talk about parenting.
I mean, you know this better than anyone is a parent, Christiana.
Like everyone's like, this is a good parent, this is how you should parent,
this is what you should parent, parent, parent, parent, parent.
But I always think to myself, we don't often think about like kid, like kid up.
Does that make sense?
We don't often think about like kid, like kid up. Does that make sense?
Being a kid is really weird because in your world, you have a life, you have priorities,
you have like your own like schedule even.
And then there's this other human being who just happens to be bigger than you,
who basically tells you that your shit is nothing.
Have you like, my favorite thing, have you ever seen like a little small child
doing something with like a box?
Right, like just like a box, a cardboard box.
And they're folding it, then they unfold it, then they squash it, then they unsquash it,
and they move it around, then they put things in it, then they take things out of it,
then they drag it around the room, then they, and then you come in, you're like,
yo, we gotta go, you know, we gotta go somewhere.
And the kid is like, I'm working.
Have you ever seen the kid's face?
The kid always has a look like, yo, I'm in the middle.
And it's funny how I always think to myself, it's funny how as adults, we think the kid's
doing nothing.
But I often think, what if we were in like the office typing up emails, dear sirs and
mams, to whom it may concern, please revert ASAP.
Imagine if while you were doing that, a giant came into your office
and then like lifted you up from your chair and was just like,
we're time to go.
And you'd be like, no, time to go.
And that's how it must feel for them.
Yeah, definitely.
Do you know what I mean?
But it's time to go.
Yeah, you see, I see that.
You're a mom.
It's time to go.
When do you think you became a mom?
Like became a mom mom?
I was always someone's mother.
I have three little sisters.
No, but there's like a different shift.
I'm sure there is.
Cause I know you remember this.
I knew you before you were a mom.
You've always been caring, responsible, all of that stuff.
And I want to know when you became a mom.
Oh, definitely when I took Obi home from the hospital
and I exclusively, exclusively breastfed, as you all know,
because I always talk about breastfeeding.
And then I was like, I I always talk about breastfeeding.
And then I was like, I'm this child's life source. I was like, like, his nutrition depends on me.
And that was like, no one has ever depended on me to be fed. It was just so stressful. But I just remember just waking up and I'm like, I need to feed him.
Because he liked to sleep. He's never been a big eater.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And that was a, I was just like, I need to, I was thinking just more about nourishing his body than like his spirit.
It was very primordial. I felt like a woman in a cave. You know what I mean?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And that was like the shift. And now my headspace is so much of my kids all the time.
I've never, you know what I never considered though, in a difference between men and women, yet you're
like, in a weird way with a man, obviously your presence is still important, but I'm
saying to your, you are actually the irreplaceable part of your child's...
Yeah. of your child's... Yeah, like if I had a bad cheeseburger,
it doesn't affect me.
That's what I mean.
Do you know what I mean?
It's like if you start eating poorly,
that affects your child.
Yeah, your supply can't work out too much.
As a dad, as long as you...
You could do crack.
You could do crack.
Yes.
You can't do crack.
No, I can't. And as long as you blow the crack smoke out the window the child may not
even know they could have a fully yeah a fully normal cuz how many people think
that their dad is like normal Jimmy because you think everything is normal
because you your frame of reference for everything is so small and it gets wider
as you get older yeah but like my dad would get excited to do like a dad thing, like a milestone thing. Cause I think sometimes
as men, that's the only time that we're like, yes, I'm important right now. Right now is
when I'm dad and like, and we need this moment. And so I went up to my dad and my tooth was
loose and he hops up. He's like, so excited so excited hops up and he goes and he leaves
the room runs out of the room grabs some string right and then grabs some string
and ties one side of the string to my tooth and ties one side of the string to my
door but he's not talking to me so he's not he's not explaining anything he's like be
still and then runs in the door and everything and then he looks at me and
he nods as if we've had a conversation.
This man nods and be like, and it's time, right?
And so then he nods, slams the door,
but he didn't measure, so it's just too much string.
So we just watched the door slam.
And I was like, string hanging out of my mouth.
I was like, was something supposed to happen?
He was like, ah, oof, okay, mm.
Let me, uh-oh.
And then he went to the bathroom,
because then he knew he could surprise me now,
because now I know what the thing would be.
But you still didn't know what the thing was.
I didn't know what the thing was supposed to be,
but I put it together when he was like, oh.
Oh, damn.
So then he's like, I walked to the bathroom,
and then he helped me get my tooth out.
But I was just like, in my mind, my dad has a plan and he knows what he's doing.
And then he does it and then I don't, I just trust it.
And then he slams the door and I'm like, maybe he doesn't have plans.
Like maybe that's one of the weirdest moments I think for a child is when you for the
first time think that your parent doesn't have their shit together.
It's the falling out of the boat.
You figured that out as a child.
Oh, definitely.
Oh my God, that's very early.
That's, you did as well.
No, no, no.
You didn't?
No, I didn't.
I saw my parents as people very late in my life.
I think I really deified them.
I was like, oh, they're so wonderful.
They weren't perfect parents.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But they were always like, mom and dad. And then as I came into adulthood, I was like,
oh, they're people and maybe therapy wouldn't be a bad thing.
Wait, so how old do you think you were when you first were like, oh, these are people who
make mistakes and things?
They just always had it together.
No, but I'm saying how old do you think you were? Were you like in your teens?
Were you in your?
Oh, it was in my early 20s.
In your 20s?
Yeah, early 20s.
Let me tell you something.
I remember the, not even the first time, this is one of the many times I was driving with
my mom.
This wasn't her fault, by the way, but still I was driving with my mom and we're in the
car, we're coming back from a church service late at night,
and we're almost home, like 10 minutes from the house, but it's like been an hour drive.
And I'll never forget, I can like close my eyes and imagine the road. You know, it's
a long dark road, and there's one traffic light, so we're crossing over, right? So normally
you'd wait for oncoming traffic, but it's like midnight, there's nothing.
We see a car in the distance. We're approaching the intersection, we see a car in the distance.
I'm looking out the passenger window of the car, I see the other car. It has its indicator
on its blinker. So it's going to turn into the slip road, so it won't come to us essentially.
It means it's going to go in the direction we're also going to go, right? But I see that it's coming straight. My mom clearly is like
looking at the blinker. I see it's coming straight, she's looking at the blinker, I
see it's coming straight. And I'm sitting there in the passenger seat and I was like,
I think that car's coming straight for us. And I just sat there quietly and I was like,
hmm, I don't think she sees it. And then I sat there and then And I just sat there quietly and I was like, I don't think she sees it.
And then I sat there and then I literally just sat there and I braced myself and the
car came straight and we turned and then it just wham and took off the whole front of
our car. And like in an accident, you don't really know what's happened. Like your car
spinning around and you know, it's a whole thing. And then we came to a stop and she
checks on me and we're fine. Really, we were really lucky and then when when we were all like calm and everything I said
to my mom was like oh I saw that and she's like you saw what I was like I saw that car was going
to hit us and she said why she's like why didn't you say anything I was like because you know how
to drive I don't know how to drive and she's like but you know how to see don't you know how to see
I was like yeah I know how to see she's like you must say something and I was like, but you know how to see. She's like, don't you know how to see? I was like, yeah, I know how to see.
She's like, you must say something.
And I was like, okay.
But that was like the final one.
Because this was now just in driving territory.
I had seen my mom forget things.
I had seen my mom like, so from, I would say from like the age of maybe like five or six,
I was like, okay, this is a human being who's in charge, but they don't always like have the,
like they don't have the superpower thing.
I even saw it with teachers.
I remember once.
I always thought teachers were idiots.
Oh, okay, you thought teachers were idiots.
Oh yeah, cause I thought, I was like, I'm smart.
And that's probably why they didn't like me.
But I was like, no, I'm, I'm,
you know more stuff just cause you're older.
But I was like, I have more brain power.
I figured that out.
I think my parents were just very competent.
So they did disappoint me, obviously, but they were just very, they were very competent.
But then, you know, when you look at your childhood in retrospect, you have those moments,
you're like, oh, maybe that wasn't the best decision.
Yeah.
I was talking to Esther Perel about this one day.
We're talking about like traumas and childhoods and you know, the psychology.
And it's really amazing how no matter how you raise your kid, there will always be the
lack that was created.
And as a kid, there will always be.
So there are some people who are in therapy, because their parents gave them too much freedom.
They could do whatever they wanted.
And so they never felt protected,
or they never felt like there was structure,
or they never felt, but then there are some people
in therapy because they're like,
my parents like, they gave me a rigid schedule,
and I couldn't do what I wanted,
and I had to be home at a certain time,
and it made me wonder, I was like,
is there a single kid out there who's just like,
yeah, this is going well,
and if your kid thinks it's going well,
are you still a good parent?
I don't know. I feel like it's a, it's so much like gambling. It's like, like a, you
have the kid and you are taking a gamble that you can raise a good person. So not a killer,
right? And then you're playing craps. So you just throw the dice down and the dice are
going to bounce and they're going to bounce. They're going to bounce. So you just throw the dice down and the dice are gonna bounce and they're gonna bounce
they're gonna bounce and you could call some of the bouncing trauma but the bounce is also how you
get your end result. And then when you look at the thing that's when everybody's like ah good parent or like ah crap crap.
But sometimes I'm like you know have you ever met some parents because, like, I think the kid is the kid.
Like, you just, this thing arrives in your life.
This is how I found, and they are the way they are.
Born this way, as Lady Gaga says.
This blows my mind.
I don't mean it like...
I hear every parent say this.
Is it the hardware?
I don't know, no, no.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, the hardware.
No, you're right, the hardware.
They just, and you're like, oh, you just like this.
Like, I can try and pull you away from it.
And this is good and the bad,
like their strengths and weaknesses.
There's just stuff encoded in you.
And like, so you have that element of it.
And there's some parents who like actually do
an amazing job, but the kid just turns out badly.
And then there's people who don't do that much
and the kid turns out pretty amazing.
It's pretty well.
And so I don't get, I think you can like love them, give them a good education, like make
sure there's no hunger.
But then after that you just...
Yeah, but I'm saying, okay, so this is fascinating because you're a parent.
We're speaking as former kids.
Which I think actually, I think childhood is the most important experience.
Like when I, I don't just take advice from parents.
Yes.
Because everyone has had the experience of being a child. And I think that is valuable. I hate parents that
are like, oh, I only care about, you can't tell me anything, you're not a mum. So I'm
like, so you don't think someone having once being a child is valuable?
That's what I mean.
Yeah.
So this is a different episode. Every now and again, I like to get up to some mischief in the world. Christiana
always accuses me of doing something. And in this case, yes, I was doing something.
I wrote a children's book. It's something I've always wanted to do because I love children's
books and I loved them and I still read them, by the way. I think they're like the best
books. The other ones have too many words and too few pictures. I wrote a children's book and I thought for this episode,
let's talk about kids, but not just talk about them,
let's talk to them.
So I sat down with a group of kids
who are experts at being children, by the way,
I don't know if people know this,
they are the real experts of being children.
We're gonna continue this conversation
right after this short break.
We're going to continue this conversation right after this short break. Welcome to the podcast. Welcome, Nola. Welcome, Eden. Welcome, Mateo. Welcome, Juniper. Welcome, Charlie and welcome, Kena. Let's start with you, Eden. How long have you been a child for?
Seven years.
Seven years, wow.
That's like a real professional.
How long do you plan to be like a child?
Do you have like a long-term goal?
100 years.
100 years, I like that, I like that.
So like, so I started writing this kid's book.
My first instinct was talk to like adults and talk to, you know, experts and more, because,
like, the book is really about, like, how a child sees their relationship with their
parents and vice versa and the internal monologues they have, because that's what I had as a
kid and I think every child does.
But then I was like, no, I'm just going to talk to kids.
Like I got a full panel of children to have conversations with.
And can I tell you, these little things are pretty genius.
They came in with some insights, they came in with some ideas, and Josh and Christiana,
I know you got to watch us hanging out together. And I was shocked at how much, like, information
we don't give children. Does this make sense? Like, you'll be shocked at how many kids are sort of
just, like, left in the dark about everything.
So I'll talk to kids that go, hey, do you know what your parents do for a living?
And they're like, what does a living mean?
Actually, let's talk about jobs.
Let's talk about jobs.
So I would love to know.
Wait, wait, let's go down the line.
So Charlie, do you know, wow, what's happening here, Nola?
She's being cuckoo head.
No you just got hot and then you were like all right so wait wait Nola so pay attention
I want to know about jobs so we're gonna go down the line so let's go Nola do you know
do you know what parents do at jobs do you know what adults do? This? What's this? What we're doing now?
Yeah. So you think they like hang out on a couch and then talk about life? Yeah. Huh.
Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Even what do you think people do at a job? I'm just saying scientists.
Is my mom is a scientist? Like what does she teach? She's a scientist. She teaches it.
So she stands at the front of the classroom.
Oh, so you guys know teachers, so you know what she does.
Yes.
Yeah.
Okay, Mateo, what do you think adults do at their jobs?
I know my dad.
You know those like people that are on the computers
at the airport?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's what my dad does.
Oh, dope, he's one of those guys.
Oh, I've seen those people at airports.
You would see like the kids, like for instance,
if I say like, what do your parents do for a living?
The majority of them put their fingers up to their faces
and then mimed typing, but like depressed typing.
Okay, so let me ask you,
what do you think adults do at work?
Oh, wham, wham.
What is that?
Doing boring stuff and typing out of something.
They're drinking coffee and typing like, yeah.
None of them were like smiling and being like, oh my,
you know what I mean?
It's just like everyone had like a, ah.
Yeah.
You know, it's like, you would think like their parents were
like in a chicken coop for humans pecking away at keys.
Severance.
Yeah, it really was.
It's like that's what, And I was like, wow.
Like, I don't know, like Josh, like when you were a kid,
what did you think of your parents that you now...
Like, because we get to an age where it starts to sort of consolidate,
like this information.
Yeah.
What did you think of your parents?
Like, you're like, I've met your mom, but like what did you think of your mom?
I mean, it's tough because I... The things I thought about my mom when I was a
little I still think about my mom in a really sincere way like I see how
she isn't always the most patient in life but she's very patient with people
she's very loving and generous and so, I look at my mom as this, when I was a kid, this infallible version of generosity and like understanding.
And now as an adult, I look at her as this very fallible version of generosity and understanding.
So it's like none of the, I feel like I saw my mom for who she was and all the qualities that she possesses.
But I just didn't have the right interpretation of them
because I didn't have enough like world experience
to understand what was happening.
So like, I remember there was somebody,
my mom gave someone a ride one time or something like that.
And all I could think in my head was like,
why was this weird person in our car?
Because we, and then you,
because you tell me not to talk to strangers
and then you pick the weirdest stranger
off the street to give a ride somewhere.
And it's still to this day, my mom is very like,
be careful when you go here, watch your stuff,
all this stuff like that.
But then there'll be these moments that are just these like,
I don't know, I guess moments of inspiration where that thing supersedes almost every lesson
that I'm taught to a certain degree. You know? I don't think anyone will dispute that being a
parent is a hard job. But it's weird that if something is a hard job, wouldn't it mean that
like most people wouldn't be good at it?
Yeah.
Oh, interesting.
But then we see the defensiveness of parents or people around parents or what my parenting
or what you tell my child, what that means about me that you as a stranger reprimand
my child.
And so then we end up in this place that I think we've been in for a while, where your entire childhood is the extent of your parents' awareness and experiences.
Yeah.
And if no one else is allowed in, because it's supposed to take a village,
but the village isn't welcome.
If all of a sudden the village is, don't tell my child to buy...
Literally, when your child's wrong, too.
I've watched it in stores where a kid's tearing something up,
and somebody that works at the store is like, hey, hey, put that down.
It's like, no, talk to me, don't talk to my child.
And it's like, well, you don't have the presence of mind
to tell your child to stop tearing.
So I was like, why don't I just go to the source?
And so I think that that is what's shaping all of my,
I'm like almost recontextualizing
a lot of what growing up was
because I was from a family and I had a mom
That would let another adult tell me what I was doing wrong
You know, I mean because my mom would let's say there's some random lady
And like just some old woman at the mall and it's like hey
Don't run with your shoes untied blah blah. She would look at that woman say thank you
Yeah, you know, I mean as opposed to thank you. Yeah. You know what I mean? As opposed to like, I got this.
You know what I mean?
And I think that I got this is like, it's a small thing,
but I think it's messing a lot of people up.
I think going from being like community driven,
because I remember I had a big community growing up,
and I was actually thinking about it today before I was coming here.
There used to be these grandmas in church that would look after me, Sister Barbara,
Sister Cathy, Mommy Igay.
These women looked after me when I was a kid, me and my sisters.
So I was surrounded by aunties and uncles who actually weren't genetically related to
me, who could also discipline me, but felt they had a stake in my life.
And my son has less of that for different reasons,
like my husband's family's in New York, a lot of my family's in London, we live in LA. But this
isn't just specific to people who live apart from their families. Like that village thing has
diminished. Like Josh, you talk about your aunt a lot. You know what I mean? It's like, that's rare
with millennials raising kids. And because now it's just become the nuclear family,
you, your spouse, or maybe you're a single parent,
maybe a nanny, like it's very...
Nanny is very privileged, or it's the daycare worker.
You become really defensive of your choices.
Because if your child fails, it's an indictment on you, on your little
system. Whereas like, I grew up in a culture where if a child was doing badly, it was a
community shame. Do you know? It was like, everybody, like my dad is like, you bear the
name of Imbakwe when you leave the family. It wasn't just like, it was just like, you're
part of a thing.
Yeah, the collective has failed. back way when you leave the house. It wasn't just like, it was just like, you're part of a thing. It was a church community, it was, you know, an ethnic community, but it was like, yeah,
and if there was a celebration, that's why weddings were so big. If someone's getting
married, everyone shows up because like our child is getting married, but that doesn't exist in the
same way. And I think a lot of that defensiveness comes from like, but I'm the only one doing this thing. Yes, exactly.
And if you're, if when my child misbehaves, I feel like I have failed, it doesn't feel like
we have failed. And there's something to collective failure or collective success
that kind of takes the pressure off, even if it's raising children.
Yeah. I've been trying to figure this out,
but I need your help for this. Trying to understand why grownups
don't seem to understand kids.
Okay?
I need your, like, what do you think it is?
Okay, Nola, yes.
Because grownups are boring and kids are fun.
So kids are fun, and grownups are boring.
You think that's why they can't figure kids out.
Yeah.
It's just sitting around.
If you want to get chocolate, just say no.
And then boring.
That is boring.
And chocolate is fun.
Chocolate is fun.
Kaina, like what do you think or what do you wish adults understood more about the life
of a child or a younger person?
I feel like, especially parents do a really good job. I feel like there's two types of adults. There's parents and then people without kids. And then parents, I feel like sometimes
they need to live their dreams to their kids. So they don't live in the moment and they go see
the future. So everything right now in your life has to be like perfect.
Like you can't be out late.
You have to...
There's so many rules to like protect you for the future so they don't live in the moment.
And I feel like adults without kids who hang out with kids are like way more chill because
I guess they're not like your responsibility, but I wish like adults in general could just
like take a breath and
just be like, let kids go because what happens happens.
And like they figured it out and they turned out fine.
Well, I mean, some adults have turned out the best, but like mostly adults like turned
out fine.
So I think they, I wish they could just understand to like take a step back and like let me be responsible for myself because I have
like all the key factors to do it. So when I was sitting down with the kids
for this episode every child felt like they were being held back by their
parents and their parents ability or inability to cater to their like play
needs or their, you know,
what was illuminating for me was watching young people process the world through a very logical lens, by the way.
They were like, oh man, my parents, these people are tired.
These people are like, they're tired, like they're always like, thinking about the future
and like, they don't like, chill and they don't hang out and they're not fun and unanimously kids were like, these people don't understand us. Just all the kids,
all the kids were, all the kids felt taken care of. All the kids, like none of the kids
there was like, ah, I think my parent is like, you know, really a terrible parent. They're
not doing a good job of, but they all were like, man, this person doesn't understand me.
But I wonder, like, when you were a kid,
did you feel like your parents understood you?
Did your parents get you?
Or what was the thing that they got of you?
That's a really interesting question.
So, the first thing I will say is that, like, my dad
is very, very intelligent, very astute man.
And he would always debate with me.
Oh.
Yeah, we're like intellectual sparring partners.
Like my mom is always like, stop, I can't take it anymore.
But I would be, I always remember like, and it would be my, also my uncle Moses is someone else.
But I would speak to, obviously they're men, but I was a child and I would, and they
would go at it with me, like, and I was a real like contrarian and kind of polemicist
and they would just go at it with me. And I think my dad saw I had something and he valued
what I had to say, even though he always came in on the other side. I think he, so he's
he's told his whole thing. If I say it's black, he says it's white. And then we like debate
from there. And he's still like, you're wrong. And then, but it's black, he says it's white. And then we like debate from there and he's still like, you're wrong.
But it's like, and in hindsight, that was a really valuable thing.
I think especially, it was actually a radical thing.
My dad has four daughters, but like in my culture, I think girl children are valued
less, but like he never saw me as less than because I was a girl.
If I probably, the problem was he probably raised me like a man and that's why I'm like
this way. But it was just like he, that sparring, when I went out into the
world, I was like, I know my ideas have value, but like I just, I felt very misunderstood.
But my mom told me a story recently, she said that, and my dad never told me this, but it's
through the perspective of my dad, I play piano, I used to do exams, and I think I was like six years old, I had
a piano exam, and my dad was watching me through a window, and he went home and told my mom,
he was like, the girl puts too much pressure on herself. And he said he saw it and it scared
him, because he was like, she's only six, why is this piano exam have so much stakes?
Mind you, I think it had stakes because of how they were raising me.
By the way, but like she came home and he was like, I just saw something in her that it kind
of scared me because like you can't carry that intensity through life. Did he correct it? No.
He would just like go be intense. But you know, so sometimes you hear stories in your adulthood
that you're like, oh, you did see me, you did understand me.
Yeah.
But maybe, you know, in that time, you don't have the language, you know, like, it
was just like, oh, that's, that's who they are.
And sometimes now I'm thinking, oh, it's not that they didn't understand me.
It's just that they didn't have the tools and they were in a time, they were in a
time that were like, how do we digest this trait of my child that is probably a
little abnormal, maybe we should get her some help.
And that's actually just back to what you said, because I actually, as a mother, I know
I'm not enough.
And I've come to, I'm at peace with that.
I do not contain all the things that these children need, but I may be able to push them
in towards the person who has it all. I mean, that's part of why I wouldn't be a stay at home mother, because I but I may be able to push them in towards the person who has it
all. I mean, that's part of why I wouldn't be a stay at home mother, because I know I'd
be doing them a disservice from where I stand.
You're compensating for the village essentially.
Yeah, and I'm like, I don't have enough. I can't.
Yes, that would be like the village elders.
Yeah, exactly. And so now I'm like, so, and I think if more parents were like, I'm actually not enough.
How do I connect to people? Because Trevor, you give me parenting advice, Josh, you give me parenting
advice. You guys don't have kids, but it's always like, remember the other day when you were like,
oh, no, Obi needs to be driving. Oh, yeah.
I was like, oh, and I went back to Lewis, I was like, Trevor says he should be driving. He was
like, what? Yeah. And then I spoke through your logic behind it.
And he was, Lewis was like, oh, that's a good idea.
You know what I mean?
But it takes a humility to be like,
actually my friend who has no kids
has more insight into my kid in this area
than I have, because I'm so close to it.
And I think if more parents were able to just say,
I'm not enough, what do you think Josh?
What do you think Trevor?
It'd be good for our kids, but we just don't do that.
Josh McPhean It is also got to be very difficult. I know
that I am not a parent, so I have not felt this like, at least as what has been described to me,
as this like life altering experience of like having the kid and then the kid being a part of
you and you seeing parts of yourself and the kid and everything. So I understand that when there's a little bit of a whatever, whether
you want to call it problem or deficiency within the child, whether it's a behavior
thing or just like anything, even in the body and so that I understand the denial that some
parents even go into. But I think that like to what you're saying, it's like a really
great example is a lot of the fighters that I follow
basically got into trouble in school for fighting, but not fighting in a malicious way.
Yeah.
They just want to fight, and they're like, hey, let's fight. And so, you know, they would get into
trouble in this way that could have so easily been solved by the parent instead of being like,
no, my son's not going to be a fighter. Like you might say, you got a instead of being like, no, my son's not gonna be a fighter.
Like you might say, you got a lot of extra energy and you clearly like wrestling with
your friends.
Yeah.
Why don't we get you in wrestling?
And now all of a sudden there's like not only not a problem, it's like this person does
better.
So here's one thing I'll say to that that I've realized.
And I know this is a lot of people will hear this and go, ah, you can say that because you don't have kids and because,
but I do believe my imagination allows me to think of what isn't and therefore it could
be. I don't think, and I know this is a very broad statement, I don't think there is anything
that a child is doing that is wrong. It's just we have not created the space for it in their lives.
Do you know what I mean?
Like anything, like to your point of like wrestling, think of it.
Your kid is like always like fighting with other kids at school.
And to your point, not malicious fighting, we're not talking about teenagers with like
issues now.
Take that child, put them in a fighting thing, and all of a sudden you've given them structure.
Now they are a quote unquote fighter, and it's correct. They're doing the exact same thing,
but now you have given them a, do you know what I mean? Or like when I was young, I used
to like dismantling things, which a parent I can understand goes like, Mike, this kid
unscrewed the TV. It is terrible. Unless you put me in an electronics class and now I'm like, you know, assembling
circuit boards and I'm working. All of a sudden, your purpose is to assemble and dismantle and
now you're looking at parts and you're putting things together and you're experimenting.
And I know it's a broad statement because I'm gonna be like, oh, well, what if they do this?
I think most things, genuinely, most, most, most things can be catered to if you get to the roots
of what the child is trying to do. And that's what I mean by, you know, to borrow the phrase, like,
you know, parents just don't understand. It's like, yeah, the kid is not, nine times out of ten,
kids are not trying to do a malicious thing to anyone in the family. They're not trying
to dismantle your house. They're just, like,'re just curious and they're trying to do some shit. Don't go anywhere, because we got more What Now after this.
Can I sit down now?
Yeah, sit on the floor. It's going to make you comfortable.
You can sit on the floor. You can sit anywhere.
No, no, no. My house is ruined. No, I can sit on the floor. You can sit anywhere. No, no, no, right? My husband ruined.
No, I mean, this is what happens in society, Matei.
You do something crazy, and then like things.
Okay, okay.
But then we can't see you.
You can't see me.
No, I mean, but the people can't see you.
So now you're like just gone.
They can, this can, this can.
I guess if you sort of like, okay, we'll imagine you.
When they were asked about how do you,
if you could change one thing about the world,
what would you do?
I don't know, you expect them to be like more popcorn
or like you can have dessert for breakfast.
And then they had very adult responses.
So I have like a really important question
to ask all of you and this is about the world.
If you could change anything about the world, what would you change?
So, Kana, what would you change?
World hunger.
Oh wow, okay.
Because I feel like that's their biggest problem.
Like obviously there's like a war and stuff.
But like I feel like everyone needs a good meal
and then they'll be happy because if everyone's hangry
then like nothing's gonna work.
You know, you say that and it's probably true.
You find a lot of wars are fought because people are hangry
and like I don't know about you but if I don't eat
I could start a war.
So end world hunger.
Okay, Charlie, what would you change about the world?
So, end world hunger. Okay, Charlie, what would you change about the world?
I think I would like change, make it so that everyone's full, but also like some people
don't have a home and we wouldn't necessarily give them a home, but just like a place to
stay where they would be safe from, I don't know.
Oh, I love this.
Okay, okay.
So, end world hunger and then give everyone a place to stay. Juniper,
what would you do?
I think that like, you know, like monopoly or like life or something, you know how like
you start with enough money to survive?
Yes.
I think that everybody should be able to like, at least they can choose how they spend their
money, they can choose how it is. But there's so many people who like work super hard and they don't like, they just
don't, it's like hard, it's too hard.
So I think that everybody should at least start with enough money to live that way and
they can choose how they want to earn their money.
Like, but at least they should be able to have money.
Like, like I know I'm just
talking a lot about money but I feel like that's how the world is like based
off of right now. It is, you're not wrong. So like in life we should give
everyone a little money so they can start playing the game and it gives them
a chance. Okay. Life is a game and there's no way to win it but you can survive in it.
Oh damn that's deep. Wow. Not damn. River that's deep. Wow River that's deep. Wow. Not damn. River, that's deep. Wow. River, that's deep.
I'm so glad you brought that up because I was proud even though I didn't know these
kids that way. I was proud of what they were saying, but I was sad. I was really, really
sad because I was hoping for just crazy. You know what I mean? I was hoping for, you know, what could you do?
And we did get like one like later on, like after, but it's almost like we had to solve
the world's problems and then we could get to, all right, the world is made of candy
and let's have free cheese.
And then last but definitely not least, what would you change about the world?
More cheese.
More cheese.
Oh my gosh.
What kind of cheese?
Hard cheese, soft cheese? Soft cheese?
Cheddar cheese! Just more cheese? Yeah! But what would you do with the extra cheese?
Eat it! All of it? Yeah! Do you think that there's not enough cheese in the world?
Yeah! Huh! You know when Nolo was like, I had free cheese, but it's only because I said to Nolo you can't repeat anything But I was just like
Do we pause and think to ourselves?
What it says about our society that
Children like we took them out like, you know, six years old to like eight nine years old and all these
Their number when you say what would you change about the world?
They say oh man
I think I would give people a place to live because too many
people sleep on the street and I would give people food because they're hungry.
And I would give people, and I'm like, wow, you are, you are not spared.
You know, you're not living in like a, just like a child's world, if that makes sense.
Yeah.
And it was also, I don't know, I I don't know how this will sound out loud, but like
a firm belief I've always had is that there are no such things as grownups.
It's just that like kids get more responsibilities and like have a harsher.
I can actually buy into that idea.
And I think that only a kid would be like, why are we even doing this thing? And sometimes we look at that,
and just like with the jobs thing,
and the money thing, you can be like,
oh, they just don't get it.
But every once in a while, it's a very good question.
And it's a question that sometimes finally ends up
in the halls of Congress.
Guys, why are we even doing this thing?
And so it's like people put so much innocence
on being a child, but
I think there's a real amount of perspective you get from not being glued down yet.
Yeah, definitely.
You're just not, you're almost like, I mean, I told you.
It's like an honest perspective.
Yeah, I told you, like even into my late teens, I think that was when I had my most like,
maybe even my most astute perspectives,
even without having been well read or anything yet,
I was just like, oh, but this doesn't like make sense.
You now have this thing of like,
I'm gonna stay imagining
and I'm also gonna stay a little bit freer.
I think that that's like,
that's kind of what I saw in some of those kids
with their answers being like very worldly and astute.
That I'm like, oh, if you could stay in a way, if you could stay the way that you are now,
then I know we always put it on the next generation, but it's like,
that's actually the sort of mindset and attitudes that change the world.
Because eventually you get so bogged down and stuck in the mud in a way,
that now somebody brings up
Okay, let's let's open up this housing in LA and you're like, ah, I just got this house
You sound like me
I've joined a like a neighborhood watch group
Oh wow
Oh Christiana, oh no
On whatsapp Oh no Yeah Oh, wow. Oh, Cristiana, oh no.
On WhatsApp. Oh no.
Life comes at you fast. You become a nimby.
And now it's time for a new segment, Creativity Over Coffee, brought to you by Starbucks.
Cristiana, you probably drink more coffee than anybody I know.
You love coffee.
I couldn't live without it, honestly.
As a mother.
It's funny, I like coffee for the communal side.
It's like the standing around, you know, thinking of ideas, chatting together.
I feel you.
Yeah.
What are some of the ideas for the show?
Like, I mean, look, on the show, the idea of having kids on,
I mean, should have terrified us, by the way,
because you know better than anyone,
like six kids sitting together on a couch is a terrible idea.
But it was actually great.
It was like a fun idea, chatting to kids,
learning about their points of view.
And I don't know, I think ideas like that you can only come up with when you're
sort of in like a flow state.
Do you know what I mean?
Coffee puts me in the flow.
Oh really?
Yeah.
I start my day with cold brew.
I love cold brew.
Black and strong, just like me.
I love that.
I absolutely love that.
You know, that's how I met my husband.
No ways.
Yes, I'm not even joking. He DM'd me on Twitter and was like, oh, I see you're in LA too.
We should meet for coffee. And I was like, what's this weird guy wanting to ask me out
for coffee? But I'll do it because it was coffee. And he seemed interested. And here
we are. Here we are.
He brought you in with the coffee.
Now I have his children. I'm not even joking!
Well, that's the end of our coffee break.
But hopefully you're inspired.
To connect and come up with some creative ideas.
Or a marriage.
It's a great day for coffee.
It's a great day for Starbucks.
That wasn't how it was like in the 1700s.
It wasn't like that.
I was there and it wasn't like that.
You were there?
You weren't in a time machine?
I am old and alive.
Wait, everybody, is this true?
Is this true?
It is true.
Yeah.
I was there in the 1700s.
Yeah.
My dad was there.
But a lot of us were there.
I don't know if this is as much of an African thing as it is a southern thing, so I just wanted to...
Which, by the way, is the same thing.
It is very much the same thing.
It's so close.
Can I tell you, sorry to cut you off.
No, you're good.
That's one of my favorite things, is how much I...
When I meet people from the south, I feel like we had the exact same childhood.
I feel like... And I mean, we don't wanna go to the dark reason why.
So we're not gonna go there.
But like literally when you talk about your mom,
I'm like, ah, that's my mom.
When you talk about your parents,
I'm like, yeah, that's my parents.
Like, yeah, but carry on.
Well, basically there's a thing
that a lot of Southern people have
that I wonder who the person is for y'all
because I've been told by a lot of people,
I have a grandfather I never met, right? Passed away before I was born. And so, it's not as
if I could have been nurtured by him or grown up around him, but so many people in my life
have told me I remind them of him, and it's almost like his spirit a little bit.
Yeah, we completely have that.
And I'm wondering who you get told is like your spirit person.
So my parents are hyper-Christian.
Okay.
So they've moved away from the reading culture, which is a big thing in like, Igbo culture,
like, you know, and Yoruba culture.
There's like names that signify like the name, one of my closest friend, her name is Yohande,
which means the mother has returned and it is normally a name you give to somebody when they died, a grandmother died, and then the child that was born is a girl. You know,
so there's names like that. I think Iyabo is the other name that's like that. So I do,
like, the law of the culture is that people believe in reincarnations, but my parents
never said that about me. However, Obi is so much like my father. There's things he does that scares me. Like the other day, he was walking through the supermarket
and he had his hands behind his back.
Doing the old man walk.
And I was like, I was like, oh my god, it scared the shit out of me. And I had to take a picture.
I was like, what? And then there's a way he sits sometimes
and the way he places his hand.
And of course he's around my dad,
they speak on FaceTime all the time,
but the actual mannerisms.
And I was like, oh, I gave birth to my father.
Especially if there's something you couldn't have taught.
Couldn't have taught.
But he just was walking around
and he was looking around in the way that my dad does
and looking down.
And I took a picture and my dad was like, he said something, in Ibo blood is obara.
And we're just talking about the power of blood in that way.
So I'd say my son very much, I look at him and I see my father, but myself, I don't know. Trevor.
No, I had that.
So I was always told, like, people would say that to me about my grandfather.
They would say, like, they'd literally say, you guys do the same thing, and, you know,
and you like walk in a room.
And this terrified me because we found out my grandfather was bipolar at the end of his
life.
So now I was like, oh, you don't understand how many psychologists I've seen
where I'm like, are you sure?
Are you sure, sure?
They're like, no, you're not.
I was like, all right, we're gonna keep checking.
But yeah, I had that where people would say,
it's the same, they go like,
you just seem like a flash from the past.
They go, you know, like the walk,
and I didn't spend a lot of time with him,
but they go, the walk is like his,
and you know, the way you love telling people jokes,
and the way you get, you love causing chaos
in a conversation and all, they're like,
it's like we're watching it happen again.
And what mesmerized people was the fact
that we didn't spend time together.
Like I spent all my time with my grandmother.
Her and I are completely different.
You know, we were like completely different people, vibes, everything.
It's just, you know, I have a lot of personality traits from my dad,
which my mom has told me about.
And ironically, again, I spent very little time with him.
And these are like personality things that adults would have with each other.
It's not like a child would pick up from a parent.
Mom's just like, oh, man, that's your dad, you know?
So it is fascinating to see that and to see like a parent. Yeah, mom's just like, Oh, man, that's your dad, you know, so it is it is fascinating to see that. And to see like a, you know, a pass down slash a, you know,
yeah, which I like, I don't know. So before we before we go, so before we go, there's two
important things that I that I that I really need your help figuring out. What do you think adults
struggle with understanding about kids?
What do you wish they understood?
Okay, yes, Judipa?
Okay, so I think that like adults sometimes don't understand like kids' feelings and
like the way that like popularity at school and like when like something happened like my mom was just
like read and I was like no and like in other things too like I found out that I
didn't get into something that I really like worked for and then they were like
go read a book and I was like that's it's kind of like more than that oh but
like parents are also it can be very understanding but other times like even
as early as like the next morning you can times, even as early as the next morning,
you can go to sleep and then the next morning it feels like they don't understand you at all.
Okay, so if I'm hearing what you're saying, you would love to live in a world where parents
spend a little more time trying to understand what their kids are going through, because
maybe for them they make it seem like it's a small thing and they sort of get over it quickly, but then kids might still be dealing with it.
Exactly.
Yeah, I think that was probably my favorite thing about hanging out with these kids was,
it made me realize that kids are a lot more perceptive than we think.
And if we use that as a resource, genuinely, I don't even mean this in like a man man world,
you could like build a better world. Like even as a parent, kids can tell you things about yourself
that you need to work on. It's amazing how they will in the same way, funny enough, animal training,
dog trainers will tell you there's no such thing as a bad dog, there's only a bad owner. I think
kids tell you who you are, whether you like it or not. They'll just tell you. I wonder
how many parents ask their kids, hey, what do you think I could work on? What do you
think I could spend a little more time? Where do you see my failings? Like, where do you,
you know, because you're a parent, right? Your job is to raise this child, and yet you never ask the child who you are raising how they think you're doing.
Which to me sounds like a crazy...
We should bring end of year reviews.
We should.
Like end of year, just be like to your kids, so, what did I do well this year?
Yeah.
What do you think I do well?
Yeah.
What did you like about me?
It's hard, I don't even don't know what my kids would say, but
And I think they would surprise you yeah, I think you'd be surprised at how
Lenient children are in a way that parents aren't
Yeah
I think parents take for granted that kids see in them
Things that they don't even see in themselves and kids see in the world things that we don't
See in the world and if you if you ask them when they're still like all up under you like I know until I was like
Maybe 10 I was like all up under my mom wanted to be with my mom. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah
It's like you ask a question like that. There's no agenda behind it
It's like it's literally like I wanted the best for my mom
But the way that like a child wants what's
best for you in such earnest is like earth shattering, shaking to your soul.
Even kids that aren't my kids, but my friend's kids will be like, have you been and I've
missed you so much.
The way a child says they miss you is like, what?
You were thinking about, you don't even know what week it is.
Like, this is just the summer and you're like, I've missed you so much.
And it's like, if we gave them a chance, like genuinely, I would encourage everyone who's a parent, just try it.
Just like try it. Just go sit with your kid and be like, hey, how do you think we could improve this household?
And don't get me wrong, one of their suggestions is going to be more ice cream.
Of course, there's always going to be ice cream.
Yeah. So I think asking questions like that is like...
Yeah, that could be world-changing.
Yeah, we should do it.
Well, this was fun. This was fun.
Let's go make kids, Josh.
I'm good, because this is the thing.
No, no, no, let's go do it.
We're gonna go make kids.
We're gonna go make kids and we're gonna have a lot of fun,
because it seems easy to me.
Seems easy raising them, seems easy understanding them. I didn't say any of this, just so that... We're gonna do it. We're gonna go make kids. We're gonna go make kids and we're gonna have a lot of fun. Because it seems easy to me. It seems easy raising them. It seems easy understanding them.
I didn't say any of this.
We're gonna do it.
I think we need the wives first.
We're gonna do it.
People listening, I didn't say.
We're gonna do it.
Just stop.
You heard it here first.
Josh and Trevor are gonna go out and make some kids.
I don't know why you put my name first.
And raise them.
This is my app. Blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah.
No fun.
Alright, well thank you so much.
Kana, thank you for coming.
Nola, thank you for coming.
Charlie, thank you for coming.
Juniper, thank you for coming.
Matteo, thank you for coming.
Eden, thank you so much for coming.
I will make sure to tell the adults everything you've said.
And let's try to change the world. Thank you everybody
What now with Trevor Noah is produced by Spotify studios in partnership with day zero productions
The show is executive produced by Trevinoa,
Sanaz Yamin, and Jody Avigan.
Our senior producer is Jess Hackl,
Claire Slaughter is our producer.
Music, mixing, and mastering by Hannes Brown.
Special thanks to all of our kid experts and their parents
for helping to make this episode such a fun one.
My new book, Into the Uncut Grass, is available now
wherever you get your books and audio books.
Thank you so much for listening.
Join us next Thursday for another episode of What Now?
["What Now?" by The New York Times plays out.]