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Eva Longoria

Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard XX

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[0] Welcome, welcome, welcome to armchair expert.

[1] I'm Dan Rather, and I'm joined.

[2] It's so weird when you're sitting side saddle.

[3] I know.

[4] We don't do the intros side by side.

[5] We don't.

[6] We do them across the way.

[7] You're always on the couch.

[8] Yep, but not today.

[9] No way.

[10] We're turning it on its head or its side.

[11] We have a very fun guest today.

[12] Eva Longoria.

[13] Did that make you uncomfortable?

[14] A little.

[15] Eva Longoria.

[16] Eva Longoria is an actor, a producer, and a director, Desperate Housewives, Devious Maids, And she has a movie out right now called Flaming and Hot, which is a super inspirational and cool story.

[17] She directed it.

[18] She directed it.

[19] Yeah.

[20] And it's about Richard Montienez.

[21] She tells me how to pronounce it.

[22] And I'm not doing it correctly.

[23] But the gentleman who created Flaming and Hot Cheetos.

[24] Fascinating story.

[25] And then she's just so cool.

[26] She is.

[27] She's really fun.

[28] This is a bouncy one.

[29] It's a bouncy fun, high energy one.

[30] Please enjoy Eva Longoria.

[31] We're exactly the same way.

[32] I don't know if you had put that together.

[33] Yes, ma 'am.

[34] I'm three months older than you.

[35] You should be released.

[36] Wow.

[37] Thank God somebody's older than me. What about March 15?

[38] Oh, thank you.

[39] March 15.

[40] March 15.

[41] January 2nd.

[42] Okay.

[43] Three months.

[44] I just met somebody.

[45] Will I am.

[46] That's it.

[47] Exactly.

[48] March 15, 1975.

[49] And do you find that you're at all similar?

[50] Yes.

[51] I mean, musically, obviously.

[52] Very.

[53] Other than that.

[54] Obviously.

[55] Back in the day, in my wild days, you know, pre -children.

[56] Like, children?

[57] Well, I have three stepchildren.

[58] Oh, you did?

[59] Okay, okay, okay.

[60] And then I have one son.

[61] Your hair's so long and beautiful.

[62] Oh, honey, it's not mine, but they're...

[63] Oh, great.

[64] I love it.

[65] I love it.

[66] I'm trying to get it out.

[67] I'm not this girl.

[68] I'm like, sleeping.

[69] I'm like, I just need to...

[70] Can somebody come get these things out of my head?

[71] My hairstylist, because we have all these events coming up.

[72] Thank you so much.

[73] He's like, we have to keep them in.

[74] Do you want anything in it?

[75] No, I'm perfect.

[76] Black is good.

[77] Okay, I'm black too.

[78] I mean, I am.

[79] You win.

[80] No, I do wish it.

[81] Love these.

[82] These are comfy.

[83] Oh, good.

[84] How old are you?

[85] Baby.

[86] Yeah, you're a baby.

[87] You're a child.

[88] Isn't he fucking cute?

[89] Yeah.

[90] People don't get to see Wabiwob, but he's so cute.

[91] I took him to Las Vegas this weekend.

[92] We pull him out as like a special.

[93] Do you know he was kind of getting the Charlie treatment in Vegas.

[94] Some girls found love with him and invited him to a strip club, and he had to tell him I'm a married man. I don't want to go to that.

[95] Oh, are you married?

[96] Yeah.

[97] He just gets two little kids.

[98] What?

[99] I know.

[100] You're a baby.

[101] He locked it down so young.

[102] You have the same look on your face, and we're the same age.

[103] You had the same look at 30.

[104] I mean, how old are we?

[105] You're like, you're like, what?

[106] You should be.

[107] Yeah, you're living it up.

[108] You don't want to know what I was doing at 35.

[109] I was divorced twice.

[110] No kids.

[111] I feel like my assistant and my social media girl, they're babies.

[112] And they don't go out.

[113] The young people don't do anything, right?

[114] They don't do anything.

[115] There's real data.

[116] They don't have sex either.

[117] That's not good for our...

[118] It's not good.

[119] No. I think it's a lot of people get validation off social media and they feel connected and then they don't need to really go do anything.

[120] I mean, it's bad.

[121] All my assistants are cool and hip and they dress nice.

[122] And I'm like, where are you wearing this to?

[123] Other than my house.

[124] Yeah, to you.

[125] It's for you.

[126] And you only.

[127] This should not be wasted on me. Yeah.

[128] And they're like, I know.

[129] This must be a 1975 thing.

[130] because this is me too, right.

[131] Monica will tell you.

[132] Everyone, I'm like, why aren't you guys out being young and having fun?

[133] Like, why aren't you meaning what's going on?

[134] Like, let's go.

[135] I really want people to get out there.

[136] I do too.

[137] My stepdaughter, she's 27 now, but she was coming to college to L .A. She's from Mexico City.

[138] And I was like, this is going to be amazing.

[139] Oh, my God.

[140] I would have killed to go out of the country for college.

[141] You know what I mean?

[142] Just like, can you imagine?

[143] A Paris or something?

[144] Yes, what?

[145] Spain?

[146] What?

[147] I want to go.

[148] And so I told her, you're going to have the best.

[149] And then she got a boyfriend right before she left in Mexico.

[150] So she was, like, going back and forth.

[151] I was like, why would you do that?

[152] She ended up marrying him and he's lovely.

[153] He's a lovely human being.

[154] I was like, this is it.

[155] You're going to sleep your way through.

[156] Yes.

[157] You're going to Baskin -Robbins.

[158] You can sample all 31 flavors.

[159] You've got years to do this.

[160] Yes.

[161] So I was like, oh, why would you get a boyfriend and be all settled down?

[162] But then at what age do you think it switches over into?

[163] Well, it's time.

[164] Okay, great.

[165] Sounds like a good time to settle down.

[166] Lots of time left.

[167] How old are you?

[168] 36.

[169] Okay, you're a baby too.

[170] But don't you think 50's young?

[171] Well, certainly now that I'm banging on its back door, yeah.

[172] Well, twofold.

[173] Well, 40 for sure is young, though.

[174] Oh, yes, absolutely.

[175] You could probably run a marathon if you were inclined.

[176] Yeah, I started playing paddle tennis about 10 years ago, not pickleball.

[177] Oh.

[178] What is the difference?

[179] Well, the ball.

[180] Oh, okay.

[181] The rackets.

[182] The court.

[183] The whole game.

[184] So a lot of the stuff.

[185] frankly never again.

[186] Do you have a chip on your shoulder that pickleball is so popular now?

[187] I don't.

[188] I own a pickleball team.

[189] Oh, well, then fuck it.

[190] I do.

[191] So great.

[192] You can't beat them, join them.

[193] But I will say, paddle is like a sport.

[194] Okay.

[195] But literally three years ago, I was like, I think I'm micro pro.

[196] Wow.

[197] Of course.

[198] And I'm horrible.

[199] But in my head, I think I'm young enough to do that.

[200] My husband's like, have you seen video of yourself?

[201] That's like Kristen, every time we watch the Olympics.

[202] I could totally do that.

[203] She thinks she can be in the Olympics.

[204] like for real.

[205] And I can't wrap my head around this.

[206] Yeah, but I really believe that.

[207] I believe that too.

[208] That's why you're sitting where you're at.

[209] I mean, it is part of the recipe.

[210] You have to be naively optimistic in some weird way.

[211] Delusional.

[212] It's called delusion.

[213] You have to be fucking delusional.

[214] I think about it all the time.

[215] You guys have the embers.

[216] You're fancy.

[217] We make up for the wires with the embers.

[218] Think of us as like a boutique hotel where you know it's a shitty hotel, but we've got enough accoutrema to make you think it's nice.

[219] There's incense.

[220] Yeah.

[221] We got some candles.

[222] But you know what else to do?

[223] I'm delusional in my optimism.

[224] I have body dysmorphia the other way.

[225] I think I love amazing.

[226] Oh, incredible.

[227] Good.

[228] That's not, hold on.

[229] Hold on.

[230] Yeah, but is that not body dysmorphic?

[231] No, because you look incredible.

[232] No, no, no. I'm saying like, I go in a red carpet of my, this dress with peacock feathers, isn't this stunning?

[233] And then I see the red carpet photos and I'm like, why the fuck am I wearing peacock feather or whatever it is?

[234] It literally is really bad.

[235] I remember I squeezed myself into something a month after pregnancy because I I was like, I look good.

[236] And then I look back at the pictures.

[237] I was like, why would I wear that?

[238] I really thought I looked good.

[239] But I think the thing, you did look good.

[240] Maybe now looking back, you have a different opinion.

[241] I've never seen you not look good.

[242] I think I can solve it, though.

[243] I think it's like what she thought she looked like.

[244] And then what objectively she sees she looks like.

[245] How is it objective?

[246] It's all coming from her the whole time.

[247] You're right.

[248] She is the single data set.

[249] No, I think a lot of people, there was a consensus that it was not good.

[250] There you go.

[251] We had children.

[252] I was 38 with the first one came.

[253] And relative to other people with 10 -year -olds, I'm kind of old.

[254] But I'm like, not a second too soon.

[255] I'm delighted I delayed.

[256] Yeah, me too.

[257] Right?

[258] Mine was 43.

[259] Aren't you just delighted that you chose it that way?

[260] Because us coming up in this industry at that time was so much hustle.

[261] I remember submitting myself with backstage West.

[262] Oh, God, yeah.

[263] Going to people's weird apartments and talking to a strange man. If only people knew what Thomas guides were, you had to be all in for your own success.

[264] And when you have children, you have to be all in on them.

[265] And so I love that I'm not the center of my universe.

[266] People go, how's your life change?

[267] Isn't it crazy having a kid?

[268] And I go, it's amazing because I get to say no to everything.

[269] Yes, it's a built in no. It's a built in.

[270] He's got a fever.

[271] It's like you have the flu for 18 years.

[272] You can always just say, I would love to, but I don't want to get everyone sick.

[273] Yeah.

[274] COVID scared to school.

[275] Uh -huh.

[276] Uh -huh.

[277] I think my life was simplified when I had him not like, it's so complicated now.

[278] Because you are no longer this inner universe.

[279] 40 years of my life, it was about me. I completely exhausted it.

[280] I cannot think anymore about what's right for me, what's right for me. And then I had Santi and then I was like, oh, this is awesome.

[281] What's his name?

[282] Santiago, Santi.

[283] Oh, I like that.

[284] Well, he get confused with Santi Claus.

[285] Right now he's going by Santi Kike because his name is Santiago Andrique and the short nickname for Andrique is Kike.

[286] So he goes, I'm Santi Kike.

[287] And somebody said that today.

[288] You're like, you're Santa Claus?

[289] And he goes, no. But he was like, could I be?

[290] Is that an option?

[291] Yes, exactly.

[292] If you're confusing me for him, maybe that's an option.

[293] We haven't even talked about Santa Claus.

[294] Several different times we've stepped in it where people got very upset.

[295] Like one is we didn't bathe our kids a lot.

[296] When they're babies, we did.

[297] But then as soon as they hit like six or seven, a couple times a week's great.

[298] Until they stink.

[299] That was a big hoopla.

[300] People were disgusted with them.

[301] didn't Mila and Ashton say the same thing?

[302] That's where it came from.

[303] We were talking to Mila on the podcast.

[304] But another thing is this, which is Santa Claus.

[305] We got to that age.

[306] Yeah.

[307] Roll it out for her.

[308] You know, St. Nick's going to come by.

[309] He's huge.

[310] He's going to come down the chimney.

[311] And I was just looking at her face.

[312] And even at three, she was like, oh, this doesn't jive with what I know about physics and the size of the world and people.

[313] And so told her the one lie.

[314] And then over the next week and a half, just question after question, post.

[315] choking holes in this.

[316] Oh, yeah.

[317] And now I'm like 50 first lie on Wednesday.

[318] I don't like this.

[319] I don't like that I'm gasoline.

[320] I don't like that the best part of her person, you know, her inquisitiveness in her going, this doesn't feel right.

[321] And I was like, fuck it, we're not doing this.

[322] So we didn't do it.

[323] And guess what?

[324] Christmas is just as fun as at our house as it was when I was a kid.

[325] I'm in that now.

[326] Like, do I do the powdered footsteps on the, we don't even have a chimney.

[327] Like, we don't even have a fireplace.

[328] Do I build a fireplace?

[329] But you know what's so funny about girls?

[330] I have a boy, which I'm so thankful.

[331] But girls, it's hard because you want her to question everything.

[332] Especially a man telling her something.

[333] Yeah.

[334] Raising a girl when you're like, okay, simmer down and sit down and be a good girl and stay in line.

[335] That's not the woman you want her to be.

[336] No. So you have to like, yes, you call bullshit and I see your bullshit.

[337] Yes, yes.

[338] You just folded your hand.

[339] You know, it had no impact.

[340] We're all going to be together.

[341] You're not in school and you get a shitload of presents.

[342] Still magical.

[343] How is that a bummer?

[344] Yeah.

[345] Do you know James Purfoy, amazing actor?

[346] We shot this thing together.

[347] We were talking about Christmas and he said, I did the whole thing.

[348] There's a place where do you go?

[349] Not an Iceland or Norway or somewhere you go.

[350] You get off the plane.

[351] A sled picks you up with reindeer.

[352] Yeah.

[353] Reindeer takes you to your little cottage.

[354] You go across the lake.

[355] The elves are making cookies.

[356] There's a house.

[357] The smoke is coming out.

[358] There's Mrs. Claus.

[359] She welcomes you in.

[360] I want to go there.

[361] I want to go.

[362] I want to go.

[363] I want to take some.

[364] And then you go into the room and there's Mr. Claude.

[365] They must have 28 of these, you know what I mean?

[366] Because I have to service all these families.

[367] But there's Mr. Claus.

[368] You imagine the dining hall there?

[369] Yeah, right.

[370] 28 Santa's.

[371] Fining shots.

[372] Drinking some spiked egg knog.

[373] Anyway, he did the whole thing.

[374] And he goes, so now my son is like 13.

[375] He knows Santa's not real.

[376] But he goes, the other day, I was just listening to him, talk to his friends.

[377] And he goes, you know Santa's not real.

[378] Meaning the guy at the mall, that's not Santa.

[379] And that guy's not Santa.

[380] He goes, I've met him.

[381] Oh.

[382] And then James, yeah, and James turned on going, oh, my God, this lie I told him at five.

[383] Yes.

[384] He's never bought the commercialization of it.

[385] No, that's not real.

[386] Yes.

[387] Because I met the real guy.

[388] Oh, my God.

[389] And he had to, like, sit him down at 13 and go like, no, no. Although that place was real.

[390] The people there were in character, like going to Disneyland.

[391] Yes.

[392] Santa hasn't come up.

[393] Isn't weird?

[394] He's five.

[395] He just turned five.

[396] Oh, well, this is probably the year because he's in preschool and stuff now.

[397] Well, I was thinking of doing the shelf on the elf on the shelf.

[398] Okay, so we started that.

[399] Okay, disaster.

[400] You're not going to like running this goes.

[401] Well, I don't know where you're at.

[402] You went to Catholic school growing up and this and that.

[403] But I started also seeing the parallel of how you're laying the groundwork for another thing.

[404] So elf on the shelf's perfect.

[405] He's a little guy and he's magic.

[406] And if you touch him, he can't be an elf anymore.

[407] You ruin his elfness if you touch him.

[408] That's built in.

[409] That's built in the box?

[410] Yeah, it's like original sin is built into it.

[411] And like the shame.

[412] and then every little kid touches it.

[413] How could they not?

[414] Like, you're putting a fucking cute little stuff to animal that's magic.

[415] So, of course they're going to touch it.

[416] And then they're riddled with guilt.

[417] They're going to hell, basically.

[418] They've killed this elf.

[419] I'm like, why are we doing?

[420] It's a slippery slope.

[421] It is.

[422] And I feel like it's all dislaying the foundation to go like, yeah, I know.

[423] It's crazy.

[424] The world's 3 ,000 years old, but that's how it is.

[425] We don't know what to say about these dinosaur bones.

[426] I know, but it's so funny because when Santi was four.

[427] Yeah, so maybe a year ago.

[428] He was asking me something, but mom, why?

[429] But mom, why?

[430] And it never ended.

[431] And I said, because God made it like that.

[432] Yeah, yeah.

[433] And we're in the car and he goes, who's God?

[434] And I literally was like, oh, my God.

[435] Has he never come up?

[436] Have I not mentioned him?

[437] And then I felt as a horrible Catholic.

[438] I was like, oh, God, I forgot to mention God.

[439] Slipped your mind for four years.

[440] He was going to my mind before you.

[441] Because he goes, who's that?

[442] And I was like, oh.

[443] Oh, my gosh.

[444] Also, what a question.

[445] So you live in the neighborhood?

[446] No, and so then I go, well, he.

[447] Yes, he am.

[448] maybe she they and I had to Google give a Google of how to explain because I wanted it right not in dogma or spooky as George Carlin would say spooky language I wanted it to be almost where he goes oh got it and there was a kid his age he went viral because he explained what God was and he goes well God is energy basically it's in everything he explained it so well so I just played the video for him.

[449] Oh, perfect.

[450] I'm a YouTube parent.

[451] You outsourced it to an eight -year -old.

[452] Yeah.

[453] I was like, here you go.

[454] And he said it so great.

[455] I got to give a shout out to that.

[456] But he says profound stuff.

[457] What if he became your new spiritual leader at this year -year -old?

[458] Yeah, what if he is God?

[459] Yes.

[460] And so the other day I said something, and Santi goes, well, God did that because he's the energy source.

[461] He had such a smart answer for it.

[462] And I said, exactly.

[463] I just said simply, a lot of people believe in God.

[464] A lot of people don't.

[465] I don't, but a lot of people do.

[466] Yeah.

[467] You're free to do either.

[468] So that was all easy for me, but then we got to the, and then what's happening, and you're going to die, and I'm going to die crying.

[469] You know, you get to that age where they recognize you're going to die and then they recognize they're going to die.

[470] Crying, crying, crying, there's nothing to be said.

[471] It's a tragedy.

[472] We die.

[473] It's heartbreaking.

[474] There's no silver lining to it.

[475] But it's sitting right there.

[476] All I got to say is, but in heaven we'll all see each other.

[477] It's so tempting because I could comfort this very scary reality.

[478] That's the most tempted I've ever been to perpetuate the thing that I personally just don't believe is real.

[479] But boy, it was so tempting.

[480] But then it just passed.

[481] Then we were on to the next thing.

[482] Well, I've had to use the heaven thing because we've had pets die.

[483] Okay, great.

[484] As we all know, they go to heaven.

[485] Or the pet cemetery, which seems scarier.

[486] No, Popeye, our dog died suddenly, and he doesn't understand where he went.

[487] Right.

[488] So even me saying, we just buried a member, you were there.

[489] And he's like, no, but where is he?

[490] He really was talking about his soul or whatever.

[491] So then I was like, you know, he's in heaven with Judy Garvey.

[492] Because my son loves Judy Garland.

[493] Betty White.

[494] He likes somewhere over the rainbow.

[495] So he watches this video and he goes, where is she?

[496] And I said, well, she's no longer here.

[497] She's not here.

[498] Where?

[499] What's her location?

[500] Yes.

[501] Do we have eyes on?

[502] She's a share her location on the iPhone.

[503] It's snowballed.

[504] Do we have eyes on?

[505] On Judy Garland.

[506] So then we're watching Judy Garland.

[507] I said, well, she's in heaven.

[508] And then it led to Elvis Presley.

[509] And he goes, where was he?

[510] And I said, he's in heaven as well.

[511] And literally every video that kept, coming up of songs that he liked was dead people.

[512] So when you get to listen.

[513] It's a snowball.

[514] I know it is.

[515] And then inevitably, he's going to go, where's Michael Jackson?

[516] Or where's Jeffrey Epstein?

[517] And you're going to go.

[518] Well, that seems easy to say he's in hell.

[519] But Mike Jackson.

[520] Oh, more of a middle ground.

[521] That's a touch why he might not be having is a conversation you do not want to have.

[522] So our friend was driving in the car with his three daughters.

[523] And Michael Jackson was on the radio and he kind of painted himself into a corner.

[524] He just let out, it's complicated.

[525] Something about it's complicated.

[526] And then one of the daughters in back goes, what did he do?

[527] Yeah, he said he did some bad stuff.

[528] He did some bad stuff.

[529] And then she's like, well, what did he do?

[530] And he's like, I really don't want to talk about it in the car right now.

[531] Maybe we'll sit down and we'll go through it.

[532] Beat, beat, beat.

[533] Did he smoke cigarettes?

[534] The worst thing possible.

[535] It was the worst.

[536] Couldn't even be talked about in the car.

[537] We'd have to get home and discuss it.

[538] I was like, the way young people think about smoking is so comical to me. Having grown up inside of a fucking ashtray, with my parents and the windows up and the cigarettes, everywhere, the airplane.

[539] Were you a smoker?

[540] I was.

[541] Yeah, me too.

[542] I loved it.

[543] In fact, when we met...

[544] Did we share a cigarette?

[545] I had just quit.

[546] Oh, yeah.

[547] I've been quit for 16 or 17 years now.

[548] I quit 10 years ago.

[549] But I smoked for like five years because I dated a Spaniard.

[550] Oh, yeah.

[551] He was a chimney.

[552] And I would be an occasional.

[553] And then I met my husband now.

[554] And he said, I'll never forget that first lunch we had.

[555] You must have smoked 12 cigarettes.

[556] Oh, you're kidding.

[557] For lunch.

[558] And then maybe I was dating him a month.

[559] And I was like, I don't want to smoke anymore.

[560] And I quit.

[561] Wow.

[562] That's it.

[563] You have a very non -addictive personality.

[564] You do.

[565] It's just a blessing.

[566] My wife's that way.

[567] When I met her, she smoked, like at night with her friends.

[568] And then a couple months went by.

[569] And I said, wow, you kind of effortlessly quit.

[570] She goes, I didn't quit.

[571] And I go, you haven't.

[572] smoked in like two months.

[573] Yeah.

[574] Had no recollection.

[575] Assume she still smoked.

[576] I can't imagine that.

[577] But my son, he must have seen this on the interweb.

[578] So about smoking.

[579] And he said, like, I want to smoke.

[580] And I was like, absolutely not.

[581] You will die.

[582] He said he wanted to.

[583] Yeah, he was, I want to smoke.

[584] And he's four, right?

[585] And I was like, no, absolutely not.

[586] You will die.

[587] He goes, why?

[588] And I said, it's toxic.

[589] And it kills you slowly and you will die.

[590] Like, I wanted to be very clear about it.

[591] And you will not go to happen with Judy Garland.

[592] You will not be with Judy Garland.

[593] smokers.

[594] So then we go to Spain and I'm shooting in Spain where everybody smokes.

[595] And he's walking on the street and he goes, excuse me, sir, that's toxic and you're going to die.

[596] Oh, wow.

[597] And then he goes to the next person and the next person.

[598] Well, he's saving their lives.

[599] I was like, oh my gosh.

[600] I'm so sorry.

[601] I kept apologizing to people.

[602] I'm like, I don't know where he got that.

[603] I vote, maybe this is personal, but do you believe in heaven?

[604] I do because I'm culturally Catholic.

[605] Yeah.

[606] I usually have a very big rosary on.

[607] I literally realized I forgot to put it on today.

[608] No, I grew up very Catholic.

[609] And I'm still practicing Catholic.

[610] But, yeah, it's complicated now, especially because I'm a huge scientist in my head.

[611] Right.

[612] So the new telescope and we can see the beginning of time a billion years ago, not 3 ,000 years ago.

[613] I'm a historian and I love facts.

[614] We just had the man who has the NASA grant to study for exoplanets around stars to establish some truth of life.

[615] You had a real guest on.

[616] That's our Thursday, our smarty pants guests.

[617] Oh.

[618] He said.

[619] What?

[620] Well, you know, there's like three or 400 billion stars in just our galaxy.

[621] Yeah.

[622] Our galaxy is one of many, many billions of galaxy.

[623] So he said there are a trillion billion stars.

[624] Try to think about that.

[625] Think that math.

[626] And that one in five of them have planets on them that could sustain life.

[627] Oh.

[628] So one fifth of a trillion billion.

[629] But how far is that from us?

[630] Ten light years away is one of them, 100 light years, you know, scattered throughout everywhere.

[631] So that's really hard to make peace with the notion that there's probably a couple hundred cabillion life forms.

[632] somewhere in the universe when did he create those when did him do that yeah when did she do that even that it starts breaking down so quickly well also then you apply a gender stereotype which i have from the era i grew up in which is i don't think it is a she because look at this place yeah it's so cutthroat and fucking the strongest dumbest person wins that can't be a she design that's gotta be a fucking me design like let's give the big boys all the power yeah what but Deepak Chopra is a different.

[633] I'm going to just drop that name on this couch.

[634] Deepak Chopra.

[635] Now, I've known him for many years.

[636] He actually has debates of like religion and God or spirituality and science.

[637] And he's written several books about it.

[638] His conclusion is they coexist.

[639] Yeah.

[640] Yeah, we had another great guy, Neil Thieson, who's a physicist and fucking oncologist, everything.

[641] Very spiritual.

[642] Yeah.

[643] And he's made peace in some weird way.

[644] I was buying him pretty deep.

[645] Yeah, made sense.

[646] I got pretty deep.

[647] I was like, wow, you got me. As close to that as I can experience.

[648] I want to know if you have it in your heart and in your chest, the only thing I can feel that definitely feels supernatural is the child parent experience.

[649] What's supernatural about it?

[650] It's so much bigger and weirder than science.

[651] Yeah.

[652] And she's existed forever and yet hasn't.

[653] There's something to me that is fully outside of the world of academia I came from.

[654] And that's maybe the only thing in life.

[655] So do you have that feeling?

[656] in many different areas.

[657] Love.

[658] I'm also a Buddhist.

[659] Also, there's past life.

[660] Of course, we've been here many times.

[661] We call the thing when you're into the stars or science?

[662] Astrology.

[663] Astrology?

[664] Astrologist.

[665] Astronomy is the real thing.

[666] Astrology's the...

[667] It's the...

[668] Cookey thing.

[669] Yeah, yeah.

[670] With much respect, I said that.

[671] Yeah, I love it.

[672] Yes, I'm of high seas rising.

[673] I love all of it.

[674] I am a theologian.

[675] Like, I'm like, ooh, what do you believe?

[676] Oh, I want that.

[677] I like the buffet style.

[678] I'm going to take past lives from you, and I'm going to take hell and hell Heaven for me. Santa Claus from y 'all.

[679] Santa Claus from you guys and Easter Bunny.

[680] But the past lives thing, I will have so many deja vues with my son.

[681] Or he'll say something.

[682] Like, well, when I was a doctor.

[683] He'll say it.

[684] He'll say it.

[685] He'll say it.

[686] Yeah.

[687] Mom, I was a doctor.

[688] And I said, when?

[689] And he goes, before.

[690] Then I'm like, really?

[691] Or he just looks at me and he touches my face and he just holds me like my husband would.

[692] Right.

[693] Like a wise person.

[694] Yes, looking through time.

[695] Yeah, I've known this face for an eternity.

[696] That gives me goosebumps.

[697] Yeah.

[698] I'm not comfortable just calling it love because I've certainly loved partners tremendously.

[699] And I love my mother and my siblings.

[700] Yeah, but this is a different kind of love.

[701] This is a different thing.

[702] It transcends all those things for me. Well, it's like people go, would you ever murder somebody?

[703] You go, no. And you're like, if something happened to your child, yes.

[704] Yeah, everyone.

[705] Yes, zero thought about it.

[706] I know.

[707] The things I have agreed.

[708] We have a friend who has terrible questions all the time.

[709] Yeah, it's like, would you kill this country to save your child?

[710] I'm like, yes, I know it's amoral, but I would.

[711] Yeah.

[712] I don't know what to tell you.

[713] I know.

[714] Anywho, Corpus Christi.

[715] Miss Corpus Christi, 1990.

[716] Yes, I know this about you.

[717] Very esteemed honor.

[718] You and Matthew McConaughey.

[719] Little Mr. Texas, although it turns out he wasn't.

[720] Do you know this story about him?

[721] No. He grew up believing he had won Little Mr. Texas, and he was in the newspaper.

[722] His whole life, his mother would introduce him.

[723] You know, he was Little Mr. Texas when he was six years old.

[724] He found the newspaper clipping, and he looked closer at the pitcher, and it says clearly, runner -up, Matthew McConaughey.

[725] He did not win Little Mr. Texas, but he grew up believing he was Little Mr. Texas.

[726] And it made him him.

[727] Yes.

[728] Good for you.

[729] But I got to tell you one funny thing, Corpus Christi, my best friend Aaron Weekly and I, 1993, going into Christmas break, we're going to take a road trip.

[730] We don't know where we're going to go.

[731] Talk about the Thomas Guide.

[732] Got out the Rand McNally, huge map I had in my car.

[733] Look in the back and there are all these tables and it would do average temperature of a city in December.

[734] We literally just went down it in Corpus Christi was the highest average temperature on Christmas.

[735] So we got in the car and we drove to Corpus Christi.

[736] And we got there.

[737] This is 1993.

[738] Oh my God.

[739] I was graduating high school.

[740] Me too.

[741] You too.

[742] You too.

[743] Us too.

[744] And we got there and we were like, huh, some business buildings.

[745] I remember sitting in the middle of the town, no stores, no restaurants.

[746] And we were like, what the fuck are we going to do now?

[747] And then we discovered that.

[748] Padre Island was right across the way.

[749] And we ended up being there for like six days.

[750] Yeah.

[751] Pazra Island's great.

[752] What was Corpus Christi like 75 to 93?

[753] I grew up on a ranch outside of Corpus.

[754] So I would go to school and then our whole summers and almost every weekend we were on the ranch.

[755] So it was really almost 50 -50 with pigs and chicken things on the ranch and then we would go to school and Corpus Christi.

[756] What did Mom and Dad do?

[757] They're Tejano.

[758] This is worth exploring.

[759] Tejano, yes.

[760] Tejano.

[761] So they're original people that settled inside of Texas when it was Mexico.

[762] We never crossed the border.

[763] The border crossed us.

[764] Wow.

[765] Post -Mexican -American War.

[766] And their family had 4 ,000 acres on the Rio Grande that was taken once the lines were drawn.

[767] Oh, wow.

[768] Much of that land was taken from land barons and just going, nah, and you're gone.

[769] Okay, so what did mom and dad do?

[770] My mom was a special education teacher.

[771] Okay.

[772] And your sister also was special needs?

[773] Yes, because my sister's special needs.

[774] Oh, that's how it started.

[775] Yeah, my mom would go to school with her every day and just sit and was, like, terrified.

[776] She's like, I might as well be making $26 an hour.

[777] I might as well be making $9 an hour.

[778] Yeah.

[779] How horrible.

[780] Teachers are paid.

[781] And my mom would go every day with her and the teacher said, you should apply to be a teacher's aide.

[782] And every time my sister moved up a grade, she would move up with her.

[783] So she was always in the same class as my special needs sister.

[784] And then she got her associate's degree to become a teacher.

[785] So my mom went to night school and then became a teacher.

[786] So she was a special education teacher for 30 years.

[787] Oh, my gosh.

[788] Wow, wow, wow.

[789] And then my dad, he worked for the Army base and Corpus Christi.

[790] Corpus Christi is big military.

[791] The neat thing about Padre Island is there's federal beach and there's state beach.

[792] They're right next to each other.

[793] And one of them you can stay for like nine days.

[794] Yeah.

[795] You can just camp on the beach and you can drive your car on the beach.

[796] Very cool.

[797] Yeah.

[798] And many of the people we were bumping into were military people that were either on a leave and they were just bouncing back and forth from the state beach to the federal beach.

[799] But yes, tons and tons of.

[800] And you can carry a gun.

[801] Yeah, sure.

[802] If you say you have those jellyfish attack, you're ready to go.

[803] So he was Army Corps of Engineers type?

[804] My dad's smart.

[805] And my mom's a teacher, so we were a very academic family.

[806] And you're the youngest of four.

[807] I'm the youngest of four.

[808] I'm the disappointment.

[809] Tell me, I don't know what your role.

[810] I heard you say that on Vogue Beauty Secrets.

[811] I watch that.

[812] I love that.

[813] You could even say addicted, yeah.

[814] Yeah.

[815] That's your thing.

[816] You say that on there and you say you're the black sheep, and I was like, I can't.

[817] Yeah.

[818] I mean, my sisters look like you.

[819] Yeah.

[820] They're six, too, and heavily tattooed, big nose.

[821] Beard.

[822] Yeah, covering up arguably a weak chin.

[823] No, I grew up as the ugly dark one, La Prieta Faya, because they look alike.

[824] They were all blonde when they were born.

[825] And they have like really light eyes or light skin.

[826] And then I came out like a chocolate chip.

[827] I was like black hair, dark skin.

[828] You're very Latino looking.

[829] I'm super Latino.

[830] They're not.

[831] They're not.

[832] And are your parents?

[833] Was it rumored?

[834] I don't look like anybody.

[835] Huh.

[836] But they look alike.

[837] Was there a Latino teacher at the school?

[838] I ended up doing that DNA.

[839] Dr. Gates show.

[840] And I was like, Mom, just tell me now because it's coming out.

[841] And she's like, will you stop?

[842] Because my whole life, I was like, I know I was adopted or.

[843] You had some fun.

[844] Yeah.

[845] And she's like, really, really.

[846] Like, come on.

[847] You black sheep.

[848] I sat down and they're rolling.

[849] And he has this book of all the, all the stuff that they're about to tell you, but they want it on camera.

[850] And he's like, you are going to be so surprised.

[851] Oh, my God.

[852] Oh, I can't wait.

[853] Okay.

[854] Is her mic okay?

[855] Are we good?

[856] Or Dimmy Mark?

[857] Did we mark it, right?

[858] And then he's saying that, and I go, I'm so sorry, hold on.

[859] Am I my father's daughter?

[860] And he goes, yeah.

[861] I go, oh, okay, you're not going to tell me that on camera.

[862] Take your time now.

[863] Okay, but oh my God, I lived for one second, thought he was going to go, and your father's not your father.

[864] Well, you know that happened to Carrie Washington.

[865] Yes, I just did her book tour and I interviewed her.

[866] So we laugh about it because the same thing as she was going to do that show.

[867] And she did not know her father wasn't her father.

[868] And I was like, oh, it's so funny, I was going to use that show to out my mom.

[869] I was like, oh, I got you now, lady.

[870] Got you over a barrel.

[871] You're not a saint.

[872] One thing that was shocking about that Gates situation is that you're 70 % European.

[873] With the Tejano -ness, I would have thought it would have been less, right?

[874] Me too.

[875] My whole life, I'm like, Mexican.

[876] I'm such a proud Mexican -American.

[877] Of course.

[878] And that's what was the shocking thing, was he was like, you are mostly Spaniard still.

[879] And I was like, what?

[880] I'm the colonizer.

[881] Yes, conquistador.

[882] You're the first enemy.

[883] But, you know, I live half the time in Spain now, and I have a house in Spain, and I have a show in Spain.

[884] So I really feel Spanish as well.

[885] So I'm like, I am home.

[886] We live in Mexico City.

[887] And so I'm like, this is my land.

[888] And I'm a patriotic American.

[889] And in L .A., you drive around.

[890] You're like, yeah.

[891] Yeah, and I live in Beverly Hills.

[892] Where in Spain?

[893] I live in Marbella.

[894] Where's Marbella?

[895] Marbella.

[896] It's in Andalusia, which is Malaga, Cordoba, Sevia.

[897] It's like the South.

[898] It's gorgeous.

[899] I'm learning that I'm very ignorant.

[900] Spanish Geography.

[901] I used to be so bad.

[902] I never knew where anything was, specifically in the United States.

[903] I'm like, where is North Dakota?

[904] Is that up, down?

[905] Is that to the right?

[906] There's a clue with the north, but yeah.

[907] But no, that's it.

[908] I one time I was so bad, I go, I'm so bad at geology.

[909] And my friend goes, you really are.

[910] You really are bad.

[911] You really, really are terrible.

[912] But now I'm better.

[913] Mostly because my son is amazing.

[914] He's like, Mom, did you know blah, blah, blah is in Africa and this country.

[915] And our stewardess one time was from Romania.

[916] goes, oh, that's next to blah, blah, blah.

[917] Oh, he knew where Romania was.

[918] He knew the bordering states of Romania, not just Romania's over here.

[919] He was like, oh, so you're next to this and that.

[920] Well, dad has to be bright.

[921] I'm just deducing that from his role in his professional life.

[922] My baby daddy.

[923] Yes, is very smart.

[924] He's successful.

[925] Yes, he's the president of Televisa.

[926] He was.

[927] He was.

[928] But you can't come to occupy that role and be a dumb dumb.

[929] Yeah, no, he's very smart.

[930] Is that what got you horniest for him?

[931] What's his most attractive quality?

[932] His most attractive quality is he's the kindest human being you will ever meet.

[933] Meet him right now and you'd fall in low.

[934] You're like, yeah, I love him.

[935] I love him more than you.

[936] So I realize I'm not that nice.

[937] Well, but this is what I was just going to drill into.

[938] Kind, it wouldn't be in my top four things I was looking for in most of my life.

[939] Kind sounds boring.

[940] I'm a little bit of an arousal junkie.

[941] So was kind, do you think that was an age thing for you?

[942] That you would have put kind as number.

[943] Did you always go for kind?

[944] I actually, yeah, kind and talented.

[945] People go, you don't even have a type because they would think of everybody I've been with and nobody looks like, yeah.

[946] And I was like, no, I think the common denominators, everybody have been with had an amazing talent.

[947] Like I was with a composer and then I was with, you know, an athlete.

[948] I really admire talent and brains.

[949] You pointed at me. Yes, and brains.

[950] Which may feel so good.

[951] I don't know if you're just like acknowledging I said brains or you're implying I have, but I like that no matter what.

[952] Stay tuned for more armchair expert If you dare I do think age though makes kindness more of a I do too I'm now coming to the point where I feel like that's a quality I admire Yeah well you know it's like when a friend tries to set you up And like he's so nice Yeah no thanks So he's ugly And my husband thank God is so handsome And nice But I think nice We've talked about this before but I think nice and kind is different.

[953] I think kind is deep within.

[954] Yeah.

[955] In your soul.

[956] Good person.

[957] You can be a sociopath and be nice.

[958] Most of them are.

[959] Yes.

[960] Nice is a very superficial thing.

[961] And I think kindness is a deeper thing.

[962] I agree.

[963] Everybody asks me that.

[964] I always say kind about my husband because it is something so deep in who he is as a human being.

[965] He's an amazing son to his mom.

[966] If my son can be half the son, my husband is, to his mom, the way he speaks to his mother.

[967] He calls her every morning.

[968] He calls her every night.

[969] He sees her all the time.

[970] Me too.

[971] I'm not that way.

[972] I'm like, Mom, I talked to you last month.

[973] Why don't he talk to you again?

[974] Oh, my God.

[975] But now that they're getting older, and now I'm like, I need to talk to my mom more.

[976] And he's a great sibling.

[977] He's an amazing dad.

[978] That kindness is a huge umbrella trait that leaks into so much.

[979] The way he does business with people, the way he shows up in our marriage.

[980] Yeah.

[981] It's all connected.

[982] This is dicey, but I'm just going to be brutally honest.

[983] So I remember hearing that Selma Hayek had married a man and that he was the richest man in France.

[984] And then I made stupid assumptions about that.

[985] Oh, on her?

[986] Maybe like, of course, you got a billionaire.

[987] That's a great retirement plan, you know.

[988] And then I met him.

[989] Have you met?

[990] I love Francois.

[991] Francois is so attractive in fucking appealing.

[992] And the same thing, warm.

[993] and generous and kind and sexy as fuck like in a photo when I'd see it I was like I'm not sure was around them and was like oh I'm so stupid this guy's so attractive and hot yeah when she tells a story too she didn't roll over and was like ooh a billionaire she was like wait so your dad's money so you have your dad's money yes but what do you do that's like she really ran him up and down the flag bowl yeah she drilled him and like okay but what do you do and he's like no I run this company yeah and I'm doing it very well And it's growing exponentially.

[994] And she's an amazing human being.

[995] So you go, okay.

[996] There's some fun overlap with you guys.

[997] Thank you.

[998] Yeah, yeah.

[999] And all the most wonderful ways.

[1000] She's one of my favorite human beings on the planet.

[1001] I like Francois because she chose him, right?

[1002] Like I go, okay, that makes sense.

[1003] I liked Obama because I met Michelle Obama.

[1004] And I go, okay.

[1005] Well, if you chose him.

[1006] That is the greatest judge of character.

[1007] I'm glad you're pointing that out.

[1008] I'm pretty critical of rich older dudes who get someone who's just along for the ride is going to look pretty.

[1009] I'm like, that's it for you?

[1010] That's what keeps you entertained.

[1011] That makes me think you're boring as fuck if you can do that.

[1012] But I asked somebody that one time, I said, come on.

[1013] What are you guys talking about?

[1014] And he's like, we're not.

[1015] We're fucking.

[1016] And he says, I don't seek that in a partner.

[1017] I have that stimulation from my friends, from my business partners.

[1018] He's not looking to that person to be challenged.

[1019] To carry that torch.

[1020] I guess that's fine.

[1021] Everything's fine.

[1022] If you know that, then great.

[1023] I want to be very clear.

[1024] up for anybody who's happy there's also people that want the role of not talking i don't know that's fine everything's fine for everybody i just personally cannot me too no i couldn't even are you this way at all i could either have one night stands or i could be with you for many many years there's no room for the middle ground oh yeah that was probably in my youth for sure of like are we getting married or i just know really quick if i can spend years with you or not i can't do this thing where it's like it's pretty obvious we're not going to be together for a while but i'm just going to hang for six months It's very uncomfortable.

[1025] I can't do not smart.

[1026] That's Monica's.

[1027] I was on a couple dates, yeah, and I'm like...

[1028] It's hard when they're so pretty, but then it's hard to talk to them.

[1029] But not even, like, there are pretty people that know how to leverage that, which makes them smart.

[1030] Yeah, that's true.

[1031] Which I go, I appreciate that.

[1032] You got game.

[1033] You're leveraging, like, I'm not smart, so I'm going to leverage this.

[1034] And then there's guys that are pretty and don't know it and are dumb and they don't even how to leverage it.

[1035] You know what I mean?

[1036] And I'm like, look what you're working with.

[1037] Yeah, let's do something here.

[1038] Come on.

[1039] Kind of like you're smart.

[1040] assistant.

[1041] Let's get on the town with this shit.

[1042] That's a great outfit.

[1043] Get that outfit out there.

[1044] Let's get over to Starbucks or something.

[1045] Staying in line for a while.

[1046] Starbucks.

[1047] You really have not dated in a while.

[1048] I couldn't think of the name of Earth Cafe, but now I've got it.

[1049] Year one.

[1050] Okay, yeah, yeah, sure.

[1051] Why don't you go get a Haley Bieber smoothie, meet somebody for God's sakes.

[1052] Get a couple numbers.

[1053] Yeah, but I do think, what is it, youth has wasted on the young?

[1054] Yes.

[1055] I love that saying.

[1056] I want my 20 -year -old body, but I want my 50 -year -old brain.

[1057] Yeah.

[1058] I do want to know a little bit about Corpus Christi.

[1059] You're the Black Sheep of the family.

[1060] I don't know what the role of a fourth born.

[1061] That's a paradigm I'm not familiar with.

[1062] What are you?

[1063] One of what?

[1064] I'm the middle of three.

[1065] Big age guests.

[1066] Are you middle child?

[1067] I'm middle child.

[1068] No, but do you have that middle?

[1069] Big time.

[1070] What ones?

[1071] I guess.

[1072] Right.

[1073] I don't know.

[1074] Isn't it like nobody's paying attention to me?

[1075] Oh, for certain I was like lost in the shuffle and then we moved to Hollywood to get the attention.

[1076] I was so duly owed in my childhood.

[1077] But also kind of a peacemaker, like a arbitrator between stressed out people.

[1078] There was a baby and a teenager in the house.

[1079] So it's like, of course there was no fucking room for you.

[1080] Yeah, understandably.

[1081] Me, I was like an afterthought.

[1082] So my mom would be like, oh, yeah, where did you go?

[1083] Which is funny because I took one of those personality tests.

[1084] Is it the enograms or something?

[1085] Oh, aniograms?

[1086] Yes.

[1087] So there's nine personalities.

[1088] And you're all of them, but you're primarily one of them.

[1089] I was like cheerleader or overachiever.

[1090] Like I was in between these two.

[1091] And it said, you probably think you're in between these two because Because you're an overachiever and want to be more than one.

[1092] Oh, that's genius.

[1093] But I'm reading this thing, and it said, I self -love.

[1094] I'm very independent.

[1095] And I was like, yes, I am.

[1096] Oh, my God, I am.

[1097] I really don't need your validation.

[1098] I don't need attention.

[1099] I'm an actor, right?

[1100] Yeah, yeah.

[1101] It literally says, you must have had a sick sibling in your household.

[1102] Right.

[1103] Because you go, oh, mom and dad's attention goes to my older sister, and you can take two routes.

[1104] One is, why not me?

[1105] I want attention.

[1106] When some kids have a sibling with cancer and they go, well, I want cancer.

[1107] Why does she get to have cancer?

[1108] It's like that kind of mentality that you don't understand that.

[1109] You don't want that.

[1110] I don't want the mental disability.

[1111] I want the attention.

[1112] The love and love that she's getting.

[1113] Why does she get everything?

[1114] You want the focus.

[1115] Right.

[1116] So you could go that route or you go, oh, okay, mom and dad's busy.

[1117] I'm going to self -love.

[1118] And that's the route I happen to take.

[1119] I don't know why.

[1120] People ask me like, how did you come up with that?

[1121] I didn't.

[1122] It just happened.

[1123] I don't know.

[1124] I like this explanation a lot.

[1125] If I'm understanding you correctly, the two options on the table, I think, one is you're a victim.

[1126] Yes.

[1127] And the other one is maybe you recognize this circumstance.

[1128] In my case, I think it was like, well, I go to this place for six hours a day, and I seem to be very popular there.

[1129] Like, I get all the attention there because I'm just loud and I make jokes.

[1130] Yeah.

[1131] I love it.

[1132] I never felt like a victim from it.

[1133] No. You are a gangster.

[1134] I've only been around you a couple times.

[1135] We got to work together for a day in New Mexico.

[1136] I was delighted that you remembered when you walked in.

[1137] I was like, oh, she remembers.

[1138] I was so excited.

[1139] I was like, I'm going to be in a Dex Shepherd movie.

[1140] Yes, I did.

[1141] Not a Dane Cook movie.

[1142] No, no, no. Jack Sheppard movie.

[1143] And it was because my friend Jessica Simpson was in the film.

[1144] And she's like, well, you come do this cameo.

[1145] And I was like, with Tex Shepherd?

[1146] Oh, how flattering.

[1147] I know that news did not get to me until just now.

[1148] You would have thought Jessica could have passed that along to me. I was so excited.

[1149] And I was like, only one day you guys don't need me for more.

[1150] You're guys like, no, it's just a flashback.

[1151] It's like a little.

[1152] Oh, I had a very fun day.

[1153] And then I was cut out of the movie.

[1154] Oh, no. And then they cut me out of the movie.

[1155] I do want to talk about what you did direct with my dear friend Michael Pena.

[1156] Oh, yes, Chips.

[1157] Isn't he fucking brilliant?

[1158] That movie's amazing.

[1159] Thank you.

[1160] You don't understand the slow mo of the penis, hitting you in the fate, like all of it.

[1161] It's my kind of funny.

[1162] That's what I always say.

[1163] When people go, do you like so and so?

[1164] I was like, I don't like his movies.

[1165] That's not my kind of funny.

[1166] You are my kind of funny.

[1167] Wow.

[1168] Michael's my kind of funny.

[1169] Yes.

[1170] What he is great at, and which I love, is he plays everything dead serious, which is, for me, the way comedy should always be played.

[1171] 100%.

[1172] He should be sincere, never end on the joke, and Pena can do it all.

[1173] Yeah.

[1174] He's so good.

[1175] That's just because he's such a good actor.

[1176] But he understands funny, too, right?

[1177] Like, he also understands what he needs to do to set up the other guy.

[1178] That's right.

[1179] Michael and I did a dramatic movie together, very dramatic.

[1180] I'm a comedy actress.

[1181] He's mostly comedy.

[1182] We show the director who's like, could.

[1183] Great.

[1184] I have you two.

[1185] We were like, no, we can do this.

[1186] We really can't.

[1187] Stop laughing.

[1188] Stop laughing.

[1189] But he's so good.

[1190] I love Michael.

[1191] But that's also the error.

[1192] I loved.

[1193] Because it wasn't spoof, but it was like an homage to chips.

[1194] Yeah, yeah.

[1195] And Eric Estrada.

[1196] And he was so fun.

[1197] Come on.

[1198] He was so fun.

[1199] But back to 05 or 06.

[1200] Oh, I know for sure because I found the photos.

[1201] Oh, did you?

[1202] Yeah, yeah.

[1203] I'm going to send that.

[1204] I'm going to show them to you.

[1205] Oh, I was a baby.

[1206] This is almost 20 years ago.

[1207] First I'm going to show Monica.

[1208] Let me see this.

[1209] Where did you get these, by the way?

[1210] It's not like we had iPhones.

[1211] Listen, my very first digital camera.

[1212] I got to take the whole thing.

[1213] So I got that movie.

[1214] They paid me so much money to do that movie.

[1215] I hadn't made a ton of money yet.

[1216] Look at my tits.

[1217] I know they're enormous in this photo.

[1218] But you know what?

[1219] It was the bra because they told me we need you like va -va -va -boom.

[1220] So they gave me one of those like big water.

[1221] Scroll to the left or right.

[1222] You're going to find more of us.

[1223] Oh, my God.

[1224] Was it, Dame, look like that in that photo?

[1225] What's that guy's name?

[1226] Greg Coolidge.

[1227] The director.

[1228] Yes, I knew that.

[1229] It looks like Jess.

[1230] Sure.

[1231] From far away.

[1232] Yeah.

[1233] What a look.

[1234] What a look.

[1235] Those are rough.

[1236] When I pulled them up, you looked exactly how you looked in my memory.

[1237] But when I saw me, I was like, oh, Jesus.

[1238] I do not want to show these pictures.

[1239] You look so little.

[1240] That is not you.

[1241] I know.

[1242] How weird is that?

[1243] You look like a nerdy.

[1244] Guy in high school.

[1245] It's not a great hairdo for me, the character.

[1246] Yeah, was this.

[1247] And the bleached on and the bushed bangs.

[1248] And the, what is it the Caesar?

[1249] Caesar.

[1250] Yeah, not a great look.

[1251] George Clooney.

[1252] He made it famous.

[1253] You trying to be George Clooney?

[1254] Well, I was trying to be a turd.

[1255] I play a douchebag in the movie, so I was trying to look as bad as I could, and I achieve my goal.

[1256] You don't look bad.

[1257] You just don't look like you.

[1258] Yes, you look like a 12 -year -old version of you.

[1259] Yeah.

[1260] Yeah, it's not great.

[1261] Oh, my God, I love those.

[1262] Oh, I want those.

[1263] Can I have them?

[1264] Yeah, of course.

[1265] I'll send those to you.

[1266] You look the same.

[1267] Yeah, you do.

[1268] You really do.

[1269] You look exactly the same.

[1270] I remember, you know, Dane was a big deal in that moment.

[1271] You were such a big deal.

[1272] I was a big deal.

[1273] No. Jessica was a huge.

[1274] Jessica was huge.

[1275] I stayed at her house when I was shooting that.

[1276] In Santa Fe or in Albuquerque?

[1277] I don't remember where that had been shot.

[1278] Okay.

[1279] It was in New Mexico.

[1280] We started in Santa Fe, which was lovely.

[1281] No, it was definitely Albuquerque.

[1282] Okay.

[1283] I would have remembered Santa Fe.

[1284] Well, it's lovely.

[1285] It's lovely.

[1286] You know, being specific.

[1287] It's like Adobe.

[1288] Exactly.

[1289] Good food.

[1290] Albuquerque looks like L .A. I've shot two movies.

[1291] I shot Flaming Hot in Abercrody.

[1292] Oh, you did?

[1293] Yeah.

[1294] Okay.

[1295] I have two questions about Desperate Housewise and then we're on to talk about Flaming Hot.

[1296] Okay.

[1297] One is, first of all, I was on that universe a lot with Parenthood for six years.

[1298] Oh, yes, you were.

[1299] And we did our Halloween scene on that street.

[1300] And it was all like.

[1301] Steria Lane.

[1302] Yes, it's still very alive there.

[1303] It's very iconic now.

[1304] I see it in every movie commercial.

[1305] I go, but you cannot disguise that street.

[1306] Yes.

[1307] And now people know they know, but they don't know they know it.

[1308] Yeah, it's pretty cool.

[1309] It's like, John Chavolta, I think, has a Citibank commercial right now.

[1310] And I'm like, that's Wasterey Lane.

[1311] Oh, you just past my house.

[1312] Yep, that's me. My curiosity now.

[1313] like way after the fact is the rumored gossipy stuff that no one got along.

[1314] How much of it was factual and how much we would now see is just like this narrative about women that there's like no way these women could get along.

[1315] I remember even back then it was a narrative about women.

[1316] Because there was all these shows with men on the air and nobody was like, they're fighting.

[1317] Exactly.

[1318] What is it?

[1319] Dylan McDermott's fighting.

[1320] Like I don't know what shows were on.

[1321] But I was a baby too.

[1322] Like Felicity and Marcia and Terry had all had hit shows.

[1323] This was like another.

[1324] hit show.

[1325] They had Melrose Place and Lois and Clark and Sports Night and I remember when we were asked to be on Oprah and I was like, we're going to be on Oprah.

[1326] Like I could have died that day and all three were like, I've been on.

[1327] I was like, oh, I mean, yeah, yeah, it's totally cool.

[1328] Like, yeah, it's not a big deal.

[1329] Yeah, it's not a big deal.

[1330] But meaning like they all had such a better handle on fame on that narrative.

[1331] I'm like, you guys are saying we're fighting.

[1332] They're like, well, that's just a narrative that they do on women because we're over 40 in a television show.

[1333] And I was like, yeah.

[1334] I wasn't even that smart to understand that.

[1335] That feels comforting.

[1336] If everyone's kind of in on it, I would just think, everyone shut the fuck up.

[1337] Why are they saying?

[1338] Like, I could imagine being hurt about it.

[1339] Oh, hurt, no. Also, we were working so hard.

[1340] Anything that happened outside the show, we were like, what?

[1341] We could never come up for air to really get outside of ourselves.

[1342] We were only on the set.

[1343] Because you're doing, what, 24 a year?

[1344] 24 years for a decade, basically.

[1345] And so we had six weeks off.

[1346] And you'd do a movie or something.

[1347] And I couldn't do a movie.

[1348] I maybe did three movies, the whole whole desperate outskirts, yours being one of them.

[1349] Yeah, yeah.

[1350] But I remember that noise being outside of us, we were in such a bubble with our crew and each other.

[1351] We can only talk to each other about like, doesn't this suck?

[1352] Yeah, of course.

[1353] She can't really complain.

[1354] Right.

[1355] But I remember going to, I don't know if it was me in Felicity or me and Nicolette, but we had to go to London for press because the show was a global phenomenon.

[1356] I just read this, 120 million global viewers.

[1357] Yeah.

[1358] That's bigger than the Super Bowl.

[1359] Yeah, it's crazy.

[1360] Insane.

[1361] Just the United States was 30 million.

[1362] There's no show on now.

[1363] No, and I feel like we were one of the last hits out of Hitsville TV.

[1364] After that, streaming came, and then that was the end of that era.

[1365] But I remember going to London, and we're pulling up to our hotel, and there's fans for blocks, but like, oh, I wonder what's happening here.

[1366] Is there a concert happening?

[1367] And then we get to the hotel, and it's like, I asked the driver, I was like, oh, my God, who's here?

[1368] And he goes, you.

[1369] Who's here?

[1370] No, no, I mean, is it like you too?

[1371] Madonna.

[1372] There's 007 inside.

[1373] Somebody's in this hotel that these people are trying to get to.

[1374] And he was so confused that I was confused.

[1375] Yeah.

[1376] Because I tell you, I didn't understand it.

[1377] So all that stuff of we're fighting, even like number one show, you're amazing.

[1378] Good and bad didn't penetrate because we were working and I was exhausted.

[1379] We worked 18 hour days.

[1380] We would have photo shoots on the weekends.

[1381] The machine was just running.

[1382] And Marsha would say that every time we'd have a hiatus and we'd come back to our first table reach, she's like, plug us in because you have no control of your school.

[1383] schedule.

[1384] You can't go to the gynaecologist.

[1385] You can't go to the dentist.

[1386] It's hard.

[1387] She's like, you're plugged in for 11 months and then they unplug you and you can kind of, uh.

[1388] But people ask me that a lot are like, were you guys really fighting?

[1389] I was like, God, I forgot that was a thing.

[1390] It was a thing.

[1391] It was a big thing.

[1392] Yeah.

[1393] I don't think I was savvy enough though at the time to recognize, oh, this is what they do every time.

[1394] To women.

[1395] When women of a certain age as well.

[1396] But I remember when I hosted S &L and Tina Faye, we spoofed it where she's like, let's spoof.

[1397] you guys fighting and blah.

[1398] I was like, okay, that'd be funny.

[1399] It was a thing because it made a skit.

[1400] Yes.

[1401] And SNL, then you know you were in pop culture.

[1402] Yeah.

[1403] Yeah, it's like the ultimate.

[1404] You've arrived.

[1405] Yes.

[1406] Probably a blessing that you were so inundated, though, because that would have been so weird for you to have felt all of it, the extreme fame so fast.

[1407] Yeah.

[1408] Also, I moved to Hollywood four years.

[1409] And I'd been working and working and working and working.

[1410] And I touched every rung of the ladder.

[1411] I was an extra.

[1412] I was like, I just want to be an extra.

[1413] I want to be on a set.

[1414] I had one line and I had two lines and I had five lines and I was a co -star.

[1415] It wasn't like I was spotted at Starbucks.

[1416] By the time I had that audition, I was like, I'm the only one.

[1417] Well, you had already done Young and the Restless for two or three years.

[1418] Three years, yeah.

[1419] Okay, two of my favorite things.

[1420] One is, maybe this is apocry or it's real, but your first time on TV, was it on Beverly Hills 90210?

[1421] First line.

[1422] Okay, but listen, growing up, we're the same age.

[1423] I fucking loved 902 -0.

[1424] Oh, are you kidding?

[1425] You were in Texas watching it, and then you walked in, and you were in it.

[1426] With Luke Perry.

[1427] Is that maybe, that's about as good as it can get.

[1428] I can move home now.

[1429] I was on 90210 .10.

[1430] With Luke Perry.

[1431] With Luke Perry.

[1432] I had one line.

[1433] Do you remember it?

[1434] No. I'll find it on YouTube.

[1435] Oh, honey, I barely remember my name.

[1436] He's like, is so -and -so on that plane?

[1437] I go, honey, I don't even know my name or something like that.

[1438] Oh.

[1439] So you had a little attitude.

[1440] But I remember Tori Spelling directed that episode.

[1441] Oh, no kidding.

[1442] I also remember, I was like, oh, you can direct.

[1443] I remember actually that entering my head of like, but she's an actor and that you could be a multi -hyphenate.

[1444] It's funny because that was the only thing I had done for like the whole year.

[1445] And then I was asked to be in a celebrity bowling tournament or something.

[1446] Me and Wilmer Valderrama.

[1447] Wonderful.

[1448] Yes.

[1449] He's so nice and calm.

[1450] I just started that 70s show.

[1451] And so we're there at this celebrity.

[1452] All I have on my resume is 90210.

[1453] And the guy who introduced us, you know, introduce Wilmer.

[1454] He goes, Wilmer, Doug La Mama.

[1455] Oh, my God.

[1456] Oh, my God.

[1457] And then me, he goes in Eva LaM Gloria from 90 ,210.

[1458] Oh, that's great.

[1459] I said, $902 .10.

[1460] Sorry, I think it's 902 .10.

[1461] I think people know it as 90210.

[1462] From 90, 210, please welcome.

[1463] Eva, bling, blow, I don't know why it just hit me that it's weird.

[1464] We say 90210 instead of 90210.

[1465] Oh.

[1466] Why do we do that?

[1467] Well, like, how do you say the actual, how do you say your business managers?

[1468] Right, 90212.

[1469] Because I remember 902102.

[1470] I don't live at my business manager.

[1471] So the only way I actually remember that zip code is from the show.

[1472] From the show.

[1473] And I just go, oh, wait, I'll be in London and they need my billing address.

[1474] And I go, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, la. 902.

[1475] They go, oh, 902 .1.

[1476] Like, even they, like, it's not just an American thing.

[1477] It's a global thing.

[1478] Yes.

[1479] But, yeah, so that was my first speaking role.

[1480] And I was very excited about it.

[1481] The other thing I've had a few guests on that have done soap operas.

[1482] The notion of shooting 30 pages a day or whatever it is is so funny to me. me. What is it life?

[1483] Hard.

[1484] For the rest of your career, at least you can memorize dialogue.

[1485] Oh, I'm so good at dialogue.

[1486] Do you think because of that?

[1487] Oh, yeah, 100%.

[1488] Although you cannot say being on a soap is a great training ground because they get very offended.

[1489] Okay.

[1490] And I don't mean no, I'm sparing you the cancellation from daytime fan.

[1491] But I will say, I think I started with the hardest genre, not just because of 30 pages a day, because the acting required to deliver that much dialogue and scenes and work daily, you're going to cry, now you're going to go have sex, but now you're going to go slap this person.

[1492] People are like, oh, I got it so silly.

[1493] It's not.

[1494] It's so hard.

[1495] And so then I went from that to Desperate Housewives, which was, oh, we're doing three pages today, like what?

[1496] Walk in the Park to doing sitcom.

[1497] I feel like I did start.

[1498] Daytime television is the hardest genre you can do.

[1499] It takes really talented people to stay in it.

[1500] Absolutely.

[1501] The endurance of it.

[1502] The endurance and the blocking and the speed.

[1503] We're going to block here.

[1504] You're going to go there.

[1505] Okay.

[1506] Are we ready?

[1507] Five, four, three.

[1508] Wow.

[1509] I would argue as well, and again, I'm on thin ice here, potentially be offensive what I'm about to say.

[1510] But I think it's true that those programs, the star of the show is the show, above all other genres.

[1511] What I mean by that is, you're going to have to do some things that are kind of crazy that if you were in a drama with fucking whoever directing and you had days you'd go like man I just don't relate to this and you'd have to figure out how you relate to it and find a way in but this it's coming so hot and fast that I think you could learn to just commit and that's a valuable skill to learn like I'm not going to connect with double crossing my best friend to murder her husband and you know I don't even know where to find purchase with that but I can fucking commit and I feel like that's a really good skill to pick up early on.

[1512] Not only that.

[1513] Divas of daytime are men.

[1514] Oh, interesting.

[1515] This is stereotypical, if there are such things as divas.

[1516] But they're like, oh, divas of primetime are women, but divas of daytime men.

[1517] Oh, wow.

[1518] Like, they're the ones like, where's my coffee?

[1519] Oh.

[1520] Okay, a lot of cool things about that show.

[1521] Again, I didn't know about 120 million global viewers.

[1522] Also, most episodes of a female lead cast ever.

[1523] No. When you guys ended, you had beat Charmed for the very most amount of episodes ever done with a female cast.

[1524] Wow.

[1525] Yeah, that's cool.

[1526] Oh, I love Charmed.

[1527] I think.

[1528] Yeah, me too.

[1529] I think that's amazing and how many are there?

[1530] There aren't that many.

[1531] Of how many?

[1532] But 180 episodes is a time.

[1533] No, it's incredible.

[1534] It's more of a comment on society.

[1535] But when you say it too, Desperasters was amazing and I'm so thankful and grateful for it, but I refuse to believe that my greatest success is behind me. Right.

[1536] Like when you say that, when you go, look at this.

[1537] You did this so long ago.

[1538] And I was like, right, but wait to you see what I'm doing next.

[1539] And I don't know what it is.

[1540] Yeah, yeah, yeah.

[1541] Also, how you measure success changes, too.

[1542] But I hear those things, and I don't know, though.

[1543] You know what I mean?

[1544] Like, I'm like, did we do 180?

[1545] This is a very interesting potential revulet for us to put our boats in.

[1546] Okay.

[1547] So for me, I came out on punked.

[1548] It was a quote, reality show.

[1549] When I started doing movies and stuff, the interviewers would always go like, well, what's it like to act now?

[1550] And I was always so offended by that.

[1551] I'm like, well, the highest form of acting was me convincing these people this thing really happened.

[1552] You know, I was so defensive.

[1553] And also a reality show, reality show, oh, he's a reality show.

[1554] oldy show guy who got to do blah, blah, blah.

[1555] I ran from that show, embarrassingly so, because I love Coutcher, and it gave me everything.

[1556] I bet maybe four or five years ago I started going, fucking, hey, I'm proud that I was on that show.

[1557] Like, that was hard.

[1558] We launched it.

[1559] I did a good job.

[1560] I'm fucking proud.

[1561] But it took me 15 years away from it to actually be able to be grateful and proud.

[1562] I'm wondering for you what the experience is.

[1563] Because, again, yeah, punk always comes up for me. That's so long ago.

[1564] Idiocracy is so long ago.

[1565] Oh, I love videography.

[1566] They have this weird life of their own, right?

[1567] Where it's like, for a while you just want to shut the fuck up about it.

[1568] I don't want to hear about it.

[1569] No, I've never been that way.

[1570] I love being called Gabby in an airport.

[1571] But I have a friend of mine, a Māori, who was on prison break, and he played Sukre.

[1572] So we'll be, you know, in London or Paris.

[1573] People go, Sukre.

[1574] And he goes, oh.

[1575] And I go, you've got to be grateful that they know who that is, that they know who you are.

[1576] He's turned a corner.

[1577] Now he likes it.

[1578] He's like, you know what it is nice.

[1579] But I've always been that way.

[1580] I've always been so grateful when people go, there's going to be a reboot.

[1581] And I was like, I hope so.

[1582] I'll be the first one to show up.

[1583] I'm already on Mr. Mysterio Lane.

[1584] And I was grateful in the moment.

[1585] I was like, you guys, isn't this cool?

[1586] There's fucking tuna sandwiches at crafty.

[1587] Yeah, yeah.

[1588] That somebody's making.

[1589] Yeah.

[1590] Like they didn't come pre -wrapped.

[1591] Yeah.

[1592] That comes from being the extra and then the co -star.

[1593] You tasted every piece of it.

[1594] Yeah.

[1595] I was just happy to work.

[1596] Didn't you also, you got your master's during this period?

[1597] During Desperate Arts.

[1598] Yes.

[1599] Chicano Studies.

[1600] How on earth.

[1601] knowing the schedule we just heard.

[1602] Well, this was in year six maybe.

[1603] So we were kind of a well -oiled machine.

[1604] We still worked 18 -hour days, but I was like, I have to do night school Tuesdays and Thursdays.

[1605] So I would do night school.

[1606] Okay.

[1607] During Desperate Houseways.

[1608] And I drive out to Northridge.

[1609] And what was it like to be on that show at its height and then rolling into class?

[1610] Were people so fucked up?

[1611] Yeah.

[1612] Well, I felt like the alien.

[1613] I wasn't the novelty.

[1614] It was like they were all 22 -year -olds so fresh in their academic journey.

[1615] They were like, we should lay Oedipus theory, I would palm this and let's see what happens.

[1616] And I'm like, what is Eidipus theory?

[1617] Because it was so fresh for them.

[1618] And so far for me, you know, I was only 30 -something.

[1619] I was still young, but I remember feeling old.

[1620] And they were so smart.

[1621] You were 33 when you graduated.

[1622] 30, let's see, 75, 25, 25, 38 when you graduated.

[1623] So you probably started at 35, your master's.

[1624] I mean, for me, I was like, I was so young.

[1625] That was your age.

[1626] And I loved it, though.

[1627] But I didn't mean to get my master's.

[1628] I accidentally got my master's.

[1629] in the sense of, like, I wanted to learn more about my political activism.

[1630] And so I was like, but why is it that?

[1631] Or what happened with the immigration policies?

[1632] A friend of mine gave me a book, and I read the book called Occupied America.

[1633] And it was like, oh, my God.

[1634] And I look in the back.

[1635] So I was like, I would love to meet this author.

[1636] I just want to call and have coffee with him.

[1637] And he was at Northridge.

[1638] And I was like, oh, my gosh, I'm going to go sit and have coffee with him.

[1639] And he convinced me to take, like, Chicano 101.

[1640] He was like, just take like a basis overview of what this discipline is.

[1641] And I was like, okay, great.

[1642] took that I loved it then he's like you should take this other class it's Chicana feminism and I was like oh my god yes and so I took that class and then I took another class and finally the college was like you must enroll okay they're like enough of this you can't just keep taking classes stop flirting with us you gotta ask us out and then I was like oh my god and then I had to take the master's test what is it the G -mat I don't remember what it was yeah to get into a master's class and I was like oh my god all of it was like gone from my brain and I had to read Because you already had a degree in kinesiology.

[1643] Just really quick.

[1644] What was your goal when you majored in?

[1645] I wanted to be a physical therapist.

[1646] My dream was to work for the Dallas Cowboys.

[1647] I wanted to be a sports trainer.

[1648] Cut to my college year and I'm just taping ankles at college for football players.

[1649] And I was like, I don't know if this is what I imagine.

[1650] And never used it since.

[1651] Do you think, though, that that base knowledge, as you've lived through every conceivable fad of working out, Having an actual scientific knowledge of how the body moves, you could go, that's bullshit.

[1652] Or, yeah, that doesn't work for my body.

[1653] I was a trainer.

[1654] I was an aerobics instructor in college.

[1655] I had 18 jobs.

[1656] It definitely benefits me as you get older.

[1657] My hips are tight or, you know, whatever it is.

[1658] It definitely comes in.

[1659] What is your primary exercise?

[1660] Weight training.

[1661] Oh, I hear you.

[1662] Heavy weights.

[1663] And then I bounce.

[1664] Do you read Peter Attia's book?

[1665] Outlive?

[1666] No. I know who he is.

[1667] Okay, yeah, great book.

[1668] I'm into the cold plunging.

[1669] Same.

[1670] Yay.

[1671] Love it.

[1672] I know.

[1673] You're just awake all day.

[1674] You're just like this.

[1675] Hi.

[1676] Yeah.

[1677] I'm ready.

[1678] Also, it clears your thinking up in three minutes.

[1679] Did you read Iceman?

[1680] I've read Iceman.

[1681] I didn't read Iceman.

[1682] I'm into biohacking.

[1683] You like Huberman?

[1684] I love Huberman.

[1685] Oh my God.

[1686] I love his podcast.

[1687] I love Gary from 10x.

[1688] I listen to him a lot.

[1689] He's like another great biohacker.

[1690] My thing is not about getting old.

[1691] We're all going to get old.

[1692] I don't want to age badly.

[1693] I want to be agile.

[1694] I want to get up.

[1695] I want to play with my kids.

[1696] I want my joints not to hurt.

[1697] I don't care for have a wrinkle.

[1698] That's not what I'm trying to hack into.

[1699] I'm trying to hack into being efficient.

[1700] Having the lifestyle you want to have.

[1701] Right.

[1702] I want to travel.

[1703] I want to climb a pyramid.

[1704] So you'll love the Aetia book.

[1705] He starts with all of his patients by saying, what do you want to do in the last 10 years of your life?

[1706] So let's list those goals.

[1707] It doesn't matter.

[1708] Whatever your goals are.

[1709] There's not hierarchy.

[1710] Could be walked for three miles on the beach with your grandkids.

[1711] And then he breaks down how much VO2 max you need for that.

[1712] How much strength you need to do that.

[1713] And then you work backwards.

[1714] You can go, Well, you declined 8 % a decade.

[1715] So if you want to be able to have this oxygen output with this amount of strength, then today you have to be able to deadlift twice your weight and have grip strength of this.

[1716] Yeah.

[1717] Are you weight training mostly?

[1718] Yeah, I love it.

[1719] I know it too.

[1720] He says specifically for women, we should be weight training.

[1721] Because of osteoporosis.

[1722] Nothing changes your body except heavy weight, like Pilates for 10 years.

[1723] Great maintenance.

[1724] But also the very common chronic diseases.

[1725] that women will get, osteoporosis being one of them, the very best solution to that is heavy weight training.

[1726] Yeah, they used to be a runner, and I would have bad knees, and my trainer's like, we've got to strengthen your quads.

[1727] And so once I just started doing heavy lifting, my quad strengthened, my knee problem went away.

[1728] Exactly same.

[1729] I was like, what?

[1730] And lower back.

[1731] No body issues now that I specifically legs.

[1732] Yeah, I have a penis elbow now, which is crazy.

[1733] Oh, congratulations.

[1734] From your pickle bowl?

[1735] Thanks for my paddle.

[1736] From my paddle tennis.

[1737] Okay.

[1738] Stay tuned.

[1739] for more armchair expert, if you dare.

[1740] So we're in an interesting situation, and we can cut this part out, but you know, this might shock you.

[1741] We are in addition.

[1742] You are not your father's daughter.

[1743] I've got some updated info from Gates.

[1744] Dr. Springer, Jerry Springer.

[1745] Bring them in, Rob!

[1746] The most Mexican -looking dude you've ever seen rolls.

[1747] and poncho on and the whole nine it's eric estrata yes it's estrada we interviewed richard when the story came out the flame and hot story oh richard montaniers yes i was afraid to pronounce his last name incorrectly you can say montaignees montaniers montaignees i can say that montaignees montaignez yeah okay richard montaignees so we interviewed him years ago you did here yes it was over zoom it must It also had been maybe COVID -y.

[1748] And we loved him.

[1749] He's great.

[1750] He's such a sweet person.

[1751] And his story is so interesting aside from the...

[1752] From the Cheetos.

[1753] Yes.

[1754] How he grew up in Riverside area.

[1755] Almost the day after we recorded with him, there was this LA Times piece that his story wasn't potentially true.

[1756] And we were just like really stuck between, we didn't know what to do.

[1757] Like we loved this guy, but we didn't know, like this LA Times is saying that's not true.

[1758] We didn't know what to do.

[1759] And it's one of the only episodes we didn't ever air.

[1760] Didn't, and I would say if it had been now, we would have aired it, knowing us.

[1761] I think we would have aired it.

[1762] And then maybe at the intro said, hey, this exists.

[1763] We don't really know anything else, but we loved this person in this interview.

[1764] But then we were like, oh, maybe we should wait and see if it is true or it isn't true and we never got more info.

[1765] So it would be some resolution.

[1766] Yeah.

[1767] So it's always like, we'll release it when we have that.

[1768] Well, there was, though.

[1769] Pepsi put out a statement.

[1770] Okay.

[1771] Can you clarify for it?

[1772] Yeah.

[1773] Yeah, because, you know, Pepsi owns Frito Lay and this chemist had come out saying he didn't invent Flaming Hot.

[1774] I did.

[1775] And we're like, right.

[1776] That can also be true.

[1777] In his book and in the movie, we never say he's the food chemist that worked in a food lab and mixed mouth to dextrin with gluca muckus and whatever else is in that.

[1778] But his story and journey, the Flaming Hot Cheeto in his life is like the least interesting thing about him.

[1779] His book is really great.

[1780] He shouldn't be alive.

[1781] Much less successful.

[1782] He's an incredibly impressive person.

[1783] Yeah, and he's not educated.

[1784] And he's super smart.

[1785] And he's so funny and witty and he's super scary and tat it all up and like gangbanger could shank you.

[1786] All the things.

[1787] So complex.

[1788] And he always says that.

[1789] He goes, I'm the smartest, uneducated bottle you'll ever meet.

[1790] Because he's really smart.

[1791] But you can tell he's not educated.

[1792] And so I remember I got sent the script.

[1793] And it read kind of like a documentary.

[1794] It was like he did this.

[1795] He did this.

[1796] And I cried four times.

[1797] Oh my God.

[1798] There's a story here.

[1799] And then I went down a rabbit hole of his YouTube videos because he's a motivational speaker now and he does TED Talks.

[1800] Yeah.

[1801] He worked at Pepsi for 40 years.

[1802] So when the LA Times article came out, I'm like, you don't work at a company for 40 years and somebody debunks your entire legacy there.

[1803] He's in training videos.

[1804] Pepsi flew him all over the world to tell his story.

[1805] Within the week, Pepsi came out and said, we value Richard 1 ,000%.

[1806] Obviously a product is made of teams of people.

[1807] I was trying to read between the lines.

[1808] and just go, like, are they taking this position so they don't owe him $1 billion?

[1809] That's very conceivable.

[1810] They don't owe the other person a billion dollars.

[1811] They don't know anybody.

[1812] Yes.

[1813] They're like, we don't want to get sued.

[1814] Yes.

[1815] Everything was to be risk adverse.

[1816] But it seemed like when I was making a case for it has to be true, is he wouldn't have climbed the ladder there.

[1817] Well, that's a very significant happening.

[1818] An executive at PepsiCo.

[1819] And just retired two years ago.

[1820] We were prepping the movie.

[1821] He was still working.

[1822] Oh, no kidding.

[1823] Yeah.

[1824] Okay, so really quick, because we didn't release the, episode and I'm talking, yeah.

[1825] We might need to talk about it.

[1826] Yeah, yeah, maybe we will.

[1827] But it's an incredible story.

[1828] Because it's an incredible story.

[1829] It's about this guy who's been caught in the cycle of poverty his whole life.

[1830] His grandpa was a gangbanger.

[1831] His dad's a gangbanger.

[1832] He's a gangbanger.

[1833] He was stealing drugs since he was eight and then used it 12, literally later in life.

[1834] Yeah, yeah, yeah.

[1835] And Judy.

[1836] But he was just so impressive.

[1837] And I wanted to put the movie in his voice and his perspective.

[1838] And that really gave us so much creative liberty.

[1839] the whole movie's his perspective.

[1840] There's fantasy sequences.

[1841] He told me a story.

[1842] He's like, man, I remember I was mopping and a guy spit his gum right in front of my mock just on the floor.

[1843] Little that guy, I know, I could kill him with my hands right now.

[1844] He goes, but I didn't.

[1845] I had to mind my gangster.

[1846] So when we're writing the film, and I go, but what if you did kick his ass in the movie, like in your head?

[1847] And so a lot of the movies, like what he thought happened in his head.

[1848] And it was in the 70s and 80s.

[1849] So Fridolet at the time was also different companies.

[1850] There was West Coast Fridolet and Midwest Fridolet.

[1851] And so they had a product in the Midwest that they were working on a spicy potato chip.

[1852] And then at the same time, Richard was over here saying, you should pay attention to the Hispanic market.

[1853] So his gift wasn't that he did the recipe.

[1854] His gift was that he is known as the godfather of Latino marketing.

[1855] He was the first person in corporate America to go, maybe you should market differently to Hispanics than you do to black people than you do to white people.

[1856] That position of multicultural marketing, Pepsi and Friedelay was a first company to have that position.

[1857] Which is very late.

[1858] Yeah.

[1859] And they were like, what?

[1860] And so that's what his genius was, his grassroots marketing, his ability to use his Mexicanness as his superpower.

[1861] Like, I know what my people like.

[1862] I'm telling you, if we offer a product for them, for us, we'd show up.

[1863] We'd give you our money.

[1864] And that's what the movie is about.

[1865] Be seen.

[1866] We matter too.

[1867] And what happens when opportunity is not distributed equally.

[1868] Everybody's talented.

[1869] You can be talented.

[1870] Do you be talented?

[1871] But do you get the opportunity?

[1872] Do we have the infrastructure of opportunity in every neighborhood, in every culture?

[1873] No, we don't.

[1874] And so his whole life people told him, no, that job is not for you.

[1875] And no, no, no, that opportunity isn't for somebody who looks like you or sounds like you.

[1876] And he dared to ask, why not me?

[1877] Why can't a good idea come from somebody who looks like me and sounds like me?

[1878] Yeah.

[1879] It reminds me too of Salma's story when she came from Mexico.

[1880] And she was like, Why aren't they putting us as stars and things?

[1881] We're a huge percentage of the population.

[1882] And we show up for each other.

[1883] How are they missing this as a business?

[1884] Fuck my own philanthropic desire and social justice desire.

[1885] Just as business people, you guys are really asleep on this.

[1886] Yeah.

[1887] It's not a moral imperative.

[1888] Right.

[1889] You're bad business for it.

[1890] Yeah.

[1891] It's an economic imperative.

[1892] Yeah.

[1893] Watch it with your kids.

[1894] Oh, wonderful.

[1895] I can watch it with the kids.

[1896] Do they eat Flaming Hot Cheetos?

[1897] Oh, yeah, yeah.

[1898] So they'll love it.

[1899] I don't trust anyone who doesn't like Flaming Hot Cheetos.

[1900] By the way, the first time I ate a regular Cheeto, I thought something was wrong with my bag.

[1901] I was like, I got a dud.

[1902] I got a dud.

[1903] And my friend was like, that's regular.

[1904] And I go, they make regular?

[1905] No flavor?

[1906] I had no idea why they would make anything but a flamingo.

[1907] Oh, that's wonderful.

[1908] My best friend, Aaron Weekly, he was eating them so much that in his work trick, he had a box of rubber surgical gloves.

[1909] And he would put him on to eat his flaming hot chitos while he drove.

[1910] Because his fingers were perpetually orange.

[1911] Well, you'll love the movie.

[1912] There's a beat about that.

[1913] But it's so good.

[1914] You won the South by Southwest audience award.

[1915] That's so great.

[1916] And we won a lot of things.

[1917] Yeah.

[1918] And it's described as a very rocky -esque story.

[1919] It is.

[1920] And also, tonally, you'll get it.

[1921] Because it was hard to nail this tone.

[1922] I didn't want to do a movie about the Flaming Hot Cheeto.

[1923] That does not interest me. I don't think it's going to interest anybody else.

[1924] But I want to do a story about this guy.

[1925] This man is so interesting.

[1926] So I knew it had a lot of heart, but it's super funny.

[1927] It's comedy with heart.

[1928] So tonally, it's its own.

[1929] animal but he was around came a couple of times his grandkids are in the movie towards the end we were shooting the ending scene where there's this applauding happening at the factory and he was behind the monitors him and judy were back there and he just has his head down he's crying and judy's rubbing his back and i was like are you okay is he okay and she goes this part never happened and that's what he was crying about oh he didn't get that nobody ever said thank you and i said well this is the ending he deserves so he He loves the film.

[1930] And it's a love story also.

[1931] In the heart of the movie is a love story between him and Judy, who grew up together.

[1932] They were dealing drugs so young.

[1933] And her house was like the drug house.

[1934] That's where people would go.

[1935] Money would be exchanged.

[1936] And then I remember sitting too with him early on when we were writing the script.

[1937] And I said, so tell me, why did you choose to be in a gang?

[1938] And he looked at me like I had two heads.

[1939] Right.

[1940] Like a choice was made.

[1941] When you got to the fork in the road and he said, uni this way, gang life this way.

[1942] You choose this life.

[1943] It's like survival.

[1944] If you're not with it, you're dead.

[1945] Yeah.

[1946] And I was like, that was a dumb question.

[1947] Next one.

[1948] How did you get so handsome?

[1949] Let's give this back on a positive.

[1950] Oh, my God.

[1951] I was like, yeah, so it is about that.

[1952] We humanized a lot of issues that my community faces, Mexican -Americanism and with stereotypes, and we push back on those in the film.

[1953] Yeah.

[1954] That's really cool.

[1955] There's not the wave of support to recognize Latinos, that there is with other groups.

[1956] There's not.

[1957] In fact, there was a study where they did the movies from 2003 to 17, something like that, the top movies, and there's been almost zero growth.

[1958] Zero growth in what we're making.

[1959] Representation.

[1960] And representation.

[1961] Huge growth in market.

[1962] In population and market.

[1963] We're the biggest movie -going audience by far.

[1964] We're like 29 % of ticket buyers.

[1965] No shit.

[1966] Yeah.

[1967] So we way over index.

[1968] Isn't that so crazy?

[1969] The black audience is also very, very movie -going.

[1970] And we've known that forever.

[1971] So you have these two groups of people that love going to the movies and they get served the least amount of movies.

[1972] Yeah, they don't see themselves reflected back on screen for sure.

[1973] And not only that, it's not about putting a Latino in a movie.

[1974] It's not about putting a Latino in Marvel.

[1975] It should be stories from our perspective.

[1976] Yes.

[1977] Stories told by us and not for us, but by us for everyone.

[1978] Yes.

[1979] You know, and that's what Flaming Hot is.

[1980] Hip -hop is their story.

[1981] But guess what?

[1982] We all love it.

[1983] Not only do we love it, we need it.

[1984] We actually need it as a society to understand what's going on around us in other cultures.

[1985] Otherwise, we're just in our bubbles.

[1986] Yeah.

[1987] Well, and that's the thing about representation is when people see us on screen, it educates them about our community.

[1988] Oh, that's how they are.

[1989] And if all they see is negative portrayals and they're going to be like, oh, those people are dangerous.

[1990] But more importantly, it teaches our own community about us.

[1991] That's the dangerous part is if we only see ourselves as a narco or as a drug dealer on screen.

[1992] and we're like, okay, so that's all I can be.

[1993] Yeah.

[1994] It's almost like the choice that he's saying I didn't have.

[1995] Likewise, I've talked about this a bunch with Pena.

[1996] Pena's like he played drug dealer number eight, then he made up to drug dealer number seven, and his whole career was hoping to get to drug dealer number one or Kingpin, right?

[1997] That's a reality for him in 95 coming to the city to act.

[1998] That was what the trajectory was if you were lucky.

[1999] Yeah.

[2000] Did you meet Michael on the movie?

[2001] It seems like you guys would have so much in common.

[2002] I had met him once or twice around.

[2003] I remember, though, I basically asked him to go to lunch with me, and I told him I'm making this movie, and I told him I pitched it with him already attached, which is true.

[2004] I knew he had to be punch from the get.

[2005] And then I just had to woo him, like, I had to really win him over.

[2006] So you had directed 13 episodes of television at the point you did the feature.

[2007] Did that make you feel super confident going in the feature?

[2008] Or do you feel like it was its own new animal?

[2009] No, no, especially the ambitious schedule we had.

[2010] on Flaming Hot.

[2011] Thank God.

[2012] I was a TV director.

[2013] How many days did you have?

[2014] 30.

[2015] 30 days.

[2016] You got to go.

[2017] You got to go.

[2018] 108 sets.

[2019] I don't know how many locations.

[2020] It's all locations.

[2021] We only did locations.

[2022] And so the speed in which we shot, I don't think anybody who's like, I'm a film director.

[2023] Where's second unit?

[2024] It was like, second unit.

[2025] This is it.

[2026] This is the unit.

[2027] There's a unit.

[2028] You're talking to the unit.

[2029] And so I do well too under pressure and scrappiness.

[2030] Like you got two walls.

[2031] The sun's going down.

[2032] We got one camera.

[2033] We only have this much left on the card.

[2034] and go.

[2035] You're like, great.

[2036] I want to figure it out.

[2037] I love that.

[2038] And I think it produces magic.

[2039] Okay.

[2040] I wonder if you have this, which is if I'm somewhere as an actor, I want to get out of there.

[2041] Yep.

[2042] If I'm there as a director, I wish the day had 45 hours.

[2043] Oh, no. I'm like, and I'm like, and you still want to go home as a director too.

[2044] Now, look, I'm not one that does a trillion takes, but I love doing the shit.

[2045] And I want at a scene.

[2046] I'm so energized by directing.

[2047] I'm not super energized by acting.

[2048] I guess that's my Definitely energized as directing.

[2049] And I want to cover things.

[2050] I need an insert and I need to get this real quick.

[2051] Because I know the edit in my head.

[2052] I really see it.

[2053] I'm not one of like, let's figure it out in the edit.

[2054] I know what I need.

[2055] And I know what I don't.

[2056] That's why I'm quick to get out is because I'm like, we don't need that.

[2057] Yes, this will never make the edit.

[2058] Should you get outside and maybe an exterior?

[2059] Nope, I'm not going to use it.

[2060] I don't want to be out there.

[2061] Emotionally, I don't want to be outside of this house.

[2062] So why would I shoot outside of this house?

[2063] And once in a while, because I do rule my sets.

[2064] with best idea wins.

[2065] So I'm not like, no, if somebody says, what about this or that?

[2066] And if it goes to my vision, I'm like, great idea.

[2067] Let's shoot it.

[2068] Let's do that.

[2069] But for the most part, I know what I need and I know what I don't.

[2070] You're not very indulgent in a great way.

[2071] Yes, which I feel like a lot of these films today, these directors.

[2072] Yes, I know.

[2073] You're watching like a 46 second crane shot and you're like, this stopped being interesting 25 seconds ago, but you were in love with the shot and we got to see the whole thing.

[2074] Also, what I think is great about directing is it's almost an endless game where there's a problem every 15 minutes and you get to solve it.

[2075] So, like, if you're a decisive person who loves making decisions and I love that, in fact, it's more fun when you find out, oh, I wanted to do these nine things.

[2076] We're only going to get to do four.

[2077] I got to prioritize right now.

[2078] I like even that part.

[2079] I love that part.

[2080] The first couple of times I was directing, I was like, Jesus, one person comes and asks me a question.

[2081] Like, I was exhausted by people.

[2082] And then a director's like, literally that is your job.

[2083] To be asked questions.

[2084] To be asked questions and decide.

[2085] Finally, I did their like teacup or a mug mug.

[2086] I don't need to discuss this.

[2087] Red or blue?

[2088] Saucer or tea plate?

[2089] Don't bring me that.

[2090] But with Fleming Hot, my entire crew that was with me, they were like, you're the most decisive director.

[2091] All of them.

[2092] My sound guy.

[2093] Everybody was like, wow, you really know what you want.

[2094] And I said, I do.

[2095] And I don't know if I'll have that clarity on every movie.

[2096] Right.

[2097] It was this particular movie that I knew that was no, and this is yes.

[2098] And if I didn't know it, I am so comfortable with, let's have 12 brains on this.

[2099] There's a shot in the movie of a time lapse, and we couldn't figure it out in the sense of like, I don't want it to be 10 years later in a Chiron.

[2100] I want to see those 10 years.

[2101] I want to see this happen.

[2102] I want to use these kind of graphics.

[2103] What does that camera move?

[2104] And we would all just sit and think, and my DP would show me things.

[2105] And then his DP group would send us things.

[2106] I was like, no, that's not it.

[2107] I knew what it wasn't.

[2108] Like in my head, I was like, that's not it.

[2109] He would show me something.

[2110] Or he goes, what about if we did this lens?

[2111] I go, put it on.

[2112] I need to see.

[2113] I don't abstractly know what you're talking about.

[2114] Show me. Shoot that thing right there and show me what you're going to do.

[2115] And he would do it.

[2116] And I go, no, it's not that.

[2117] And then finally we land and I love it.

[2118] Film critics who watch the thing.

[2119] They're like, that time lapse.

[2120] And I go, right?

[2121] We work so hard on it.

[2122] Yeah.

[2123] So what are you going to direct next?

[2124] I don't know.

[2125] I'm reading now.

[2126] You are.

[2127] I'm reading everything.

[2128] But you must get this too.

[2129] People go, what was the hardest thing for you becoming actor, director?

[2130] Was it like, you're so pretty or you're a woman or, you know, what was my obstacle?

[2131] And I was like that I'm a dumb actor because I think everybody goes, well, all actors can direct.

[2132] No, no, no, no, do, do, no. Yeah, a lot of people aren't in a great way.

[2133] Some of the best actors I've ever seen.

[2134] They're not interested at all in how the sausage is being made.

[2135] I'm just insanely curious.

[2136] I'm like, what's that machine do?

[2137] Me too.

[2138] What's a 17 versus 35?

[2139] I feel safer if I know how everything works, maybe.

[2140] Me too.

[2141] I'm super curious.

[2142] I was curious when I was an extra.

[2143] When I was on set and extra, I go, what's checking the gate?

[2144] What does that mean?

[2145] Yeah.

[2146] Oh, well, you know, the film and I go, what is it?

[2147] And they're like, can somebody take this extra back to holding?

[2148] Give them a film one -on -one class real quick.

[2149] We need to cross me. I want to do it.

[2150] They go, oh, could you come closer?

[2151] I go, why?

[2152] What does that do?

[2153] If I get closer to you, what does that do?

[2154] No, your business.

[2155] Just get closer.

[2156] Yeah.

[2157] You're so extra, extra.

[2158] That was the annoying extra.

[2159] But I did use Desperate Alsards as my film school.

[2160] And that I was able to really learn lenses and learn.

[2161] lighting.

[2162] Mark Cherry was my mentor in comedy and comedy directing.

[2163] And he was, don't move on the joke.

[2164] Say the joke and go.

[2165] Or go and say the joke, but don't say the joke on the move.

[2166] He had all these rules that I've carried with me. A lot of people who watch the movie go, I totally see desperate eyesize in your film.

[2167] And I was like, really?

[2168] Which is the greatest compliment ever.

[2169] Well, Eva, I loved you.

[2170] You loved me then.

[2171] 18 years ago, 17 years ago.

[2172] And I love you today.

[2173] You're so fun.

[2174] Yeah, very fun.

[2175] Thank you.

[2176] I can very much see you as a director.

[2177] It's very obvious while you're doing that.

[2178] I'd feel very safe in your hands.

[2179] Like you said, the clarity and the decisiveness is like great.

[2180] That's all you really want.

[2181] Someone who's just like, oh, let's try.

[2182] It's like, oh my God, will I ever leave?

[2183] Yeah.

[2184] It's scary.

[2185] I'd feel that way with photographers too when I have to go do a photo shoot and they're like, I don't know if we have it.

[2186] I was like, you don't know.

[2187] You don't know yet?

[2188] We had it for the first five clicks.

[2189] It's like, click, click, click, that one felt great.

[2190] That one feels great.

[2191] Should we do it again?

[2192] But maybe this time smirk instead of smart, maybe?

[2193] And I'm like, I think you got it.

[2194] I don't like anybody that's not secure in their craft.

[2195] Yeah, I agree.

[2196] Photosheets are my number one most hated thing of the entire experience of show business.

[2197] And it's so bad that I now start them by saying to everyone, I'm sorry, you're going to see me at my worst.

[2198] I'm insecure.

[2199] I don't want to be in any photos.

[2200] And so to do hundreds of them, it's just going to bring up my worst.

[2201] And I just am apologizing ahead of time.

[2202] I don't know what else to do.

[2203] I can't get myself to enjoy.

[2204] I remember Tom Cruise was on the cover of something and it was like water and rain and his hair and he looked great and somebody goes that was one shot he goes pour the water and they go click and it was like cover of GQ right I was like that is amazing that photo is amazing they go it was one shot or something like that and I said yeah why would a guy stand there going pour more water you can't make my hair move in a different way with more fans I'm like hang on do it again do it again because my arm's better like this okay do it again do it again how does this look right here But I can't imagine it for guys.

[2205] But photos in particular, not my favorite either.

[2206] Yeah.

[2207] Now I know why people go, they're such divas.

[2208] They're requesting their own photographer.

[2209] I'm like, yeah, because he'll get it in four minutes.

[2210] Yeah.

[2211] It's between an hour and four hours.

[2212] Yeah, that's a big difference.

[2213] It's a big difference in my life.

[2214] And when the world is picking apart the picture and we'll post stuff and say stuff, I need to trust you.

[2215] Yeah.

[2216] Yeah.

[2217] But Tony Shalub's in my film.

[2218] You're going to love him.

[2219] Was it so fun to direct him?

[2220] Yeah.

[2221] Yeah, but he was completely that.

[2222] He trusted me completely, and I'd never met him before, spoke to him on the phone a couple times.

[2223] He came in the last three days because he has not a lot to shoot.

[2224] And he had hard stuff to do, you'll see in the movie.

[2225] Funny stuff, but he did the scene and we're laughing behind the camera.

[2226] And I come out and set, and he goes, how was it?

[2227] I go, it was great.

[2228] And he goes, what am I saying?

[2229] And I was laughing because I was like, he just said what he said in Spanish because he trusted me. I trust this is going to be good.

[2230] And it's the two best scenes of the movie are these scenes he did.

[2231] And just his complete trust, it melted my heart.

[2232] I was like, I can't like you trust me. You just nailed exactly what it is.

[2233] The amount of gratitude as a director you have when you have something and they go beyond what you had ever dreamed of.

[2234] And then you throw things at them and then they're making that better than was in your head.

[2235] The gratitude you have and then also knowing they're fucking trusting me. I'm yelling out to this person, say blah, blah, that's crazy.

[2236] And when they do it, there's something very special about the trust.

[2237] But I feel that about the prop guy.

[2238] Like, he brought me two different props.

[2239] And one was just so funny that I had never thought of.

[2240] And I go, you made that so much better.

[2241] People love being validated and applauded.

[2242] And I felt like that with my production designers.

[2243] I go, I don't know what it is, but it needs to feel like this.

[2244] And they go, oh, this.

[2245] I go, yeah.

[2246] Or with the camera, I go, I need to go, joop.

[2247] And then it stops on the line.

[2248] So what is the zoop lens?

[2249] Right, right.

[2250] And they go, oh, this.

[2251] you want to hide the zoom and the push.

[2252] Sure.

[2253] Let's do that.

[2254] Yeah.

[2255] Sounds great.

[2256] Sounds amazing.

[2257] Show it to me. The whole filmmaking process is trust.

[2258] It's like a whole big trust fall.

[2259] Yes.

[2260] You wonder how these directors who are monsters, but they get great movies.

[2261] It's kind of disheartening to me. Every time I hear one of these stories about like a miserable experience and then it was great, I'm like, I don't have it in me to make it miserable.

[2262] I know.

[2263] I agree.

[2264] Or I think that with actors, when bad behavior is rewarded.

[2265] Yeah.

[2266] They just keep getting bigger and bigger as a star.

[2267] And I'm like, you know what happens?

[2268] We've seen it.

[2269] It works until it doesn't, until you have your failure, which we all have.

[2270] It's impossible to navigate this without having failures.

[2271] You don't get a second chance.

[2272] That's the only justice that kind of exists in our world, which is these people who are infamously assholes.

[2273] As soon as they're on a downward slope, there's no goodwill.

[2274] They don't ever come back.

[2275] Yeah.

[2276] It kind of catches up with you, unless you are magic and you never have a failure, which seems impossible.

[2277] Yeah.

[2278] Your kindness.

[2279] Kindness will carry you through those bad times.

[2280] Yeah.

[2281] Thanks for having me. Oh, my God.

[2282] It was a really, really fun seeing you.

[2283] It almost makes me sad that I haven't seen you in between.

[2284] I know.

[2285] It makes me sad that we're not friends.

[2286] I know, me too.

[2287] And let's exchange numbers and we'll be friends.

[2288] And I'll blow you up.

[2289] Yeah.

[2290] And I'm going to send you those great pictures of myself.

[2291] I'm going to cut myself out of them and then send them to you.

[2292] Stick around for the fact check.

[2293] Because they're human, they make lots of mistakes.

[2294] I. Hi.

[2295] How was your thanks, friends, give up?

[2296] Great.

[2297] It was.

[2298] Did you get all the meals cooked in time?

[2299] I did, but I had a big panic.

[2300] Oh, tell me. I love a panic.

[2301] I know.

[2302] I got home at four was the cook time to start.

[2303] Uh -huh.

[2304] And that's for an eight o 'clock eating.

[2305] Mm -hmm.

[2306] Because the turkey had to cook for three hours, and I had to bump the time up for the stuffing to go in.

[2307] Right.

[2308] And the mashed potatoes.

[2309] The potato.

[2310] Potatoes.

[2311] baked potatoes you know i had watched this Thanksgiving special so many times and how many times is so many times a lot okay uh so three yeah i mean i also had to rewatch parts you're ducking in and out of it for certain areas okay allison had said on the video multiple times i think the turkey the turkey cooks for three hours mm -hmm you take the foil off for the last hour Okay, get that crispy skin on top, yeah.

[2312] But I thought she meant the last hour of the three.

[2313] But she meant three covered one uncovered.

[2314] So when I got home and I was reading the recipe, I panicked.

[2315] Right.

[2316] What are we going to do?

[2317] Eat at nine?

[2318] Like adding another hour?

[2319] I can't.

[2320] No. So I didn't know what to do.

[2321] And then luckily, I have her phone number.

[2322] Oh, wow.

[2323] I know.

[2324] What a hack.

[2325] It's so lucky.

[2326] It's so special and lucky.

[2327] So you gave her, you shouted her, you gave her.

[2328] I said, help.

[2329] Okay, you gave her a help.

[2330] Yeah.

[2331] Uh -huh.

[2332] And I said, I hate myself for bothering you, but I am so scared right now.

[2333] I was like she's a doctor.

[2334] Yeah.

[2335] Help.

[2336] I know I should have made an appointment, but I'm really struggling.

[2337] And what did she have to say?

[2338] She helped me out.

[2339] What did she say?

[2340] She said, knock up the heat a little bit?

[2341] Yep.

[2342] She said, I could bump the heat.

[2343] And then she asked.

[2344] how big the turkey was and I said well I did quarters because that was her that's her recipe and she was like oh you did quarters okay actually it's okay you won't need that extra hour oh wonderful and she told me exactly what to do and then add the stuffing at this time then you take it out and it's just really helpful thank god thank you Allison thank you Allison congratulations on getting married yes just found this out so exciting she finally did it She did it.

[2345] I just met a girl for coffee and...

[2346] Oh my God, you've already been on an errand?

[2347] Yeah.

[2348] What on earth?

[2349] I know.

[2350] And...

[2351] What was it for?

[2352] Another date?

[2353] No. Sally knows her.

[2354] It was just like a connection thing.

[2355] She wanted to ask me some questions.

[2356] But really, we just chat.

[2357] She was really sweet.

[2358] But she knows Allison's husband.

[2359] Ding, ding, ding.

[2360] Congratulations, Allison.

[2361] I know.

[2362] What's the husband do?

[2363] I don't know.

[2364] Oh, well.

[2365] Wow.

[2366] Knows her, though.

[2367] Knows her.

[2368] He has friends.

[2369] It was just a sim moment.

[2370] Yeah, I'll say.

[2371] Ding, ding, ding, duck, do you think you guys are going on a second date?

[2372] I have so many second dates.

[2373] I know.

[2374] I'm sure you're getting harder to schedule.

[2375] It's getting impacted.

[2376] It's an impacted major.

[2377] You're an impacted major.

[2378] It's so interesting doing this.

[2379] Doing dating.

[2380] Yeah.

[2381] Doing dating is weird.

[2382] And especially...

[2383] That'd be a good show.

[2384] for somebody doing dating you can have that yeah doing dating no you can't have it okay it's ours we'll see yeah we're keeping it for now yeah until it gets dusty then you can have it are your evenings mixed with texting back and forth with two different people and then trying to keep it straight no no no no it's not that it's more that it's really hard to not compare yes of course and the comparisons go back Both persons go down?

[2385] Well, this girl that I was just having this breakfast with, she was asking me how I felt about doing that.

[2386] And she said, she personally doesn't like it because she feels like together they're one person.

[2387] Of course, yes.

[2388] Together, it's perfect.

[2389] Well, also, like, someone inevitably has a quality you really like.

[2390] Yeah.

[2391] And you're aware of that the other person doesn't have that.

[2392] Whereas you wouldn't be aware of that.

[2393] You would just kind of be into whatever quality you liked of theirs.

[2394] Exactly.

[2395] Wildry.

[2396] How many days did you go on with Kristen before you decided you were going to be exclusive with her?

[2397] Well, this is well known, but it accelerated a little faster than I was comfortable because I was seeing other person.

[2398] Not other people, but other person.

[2399] Other rowmakers.

[2400] And it was virtually at the same time than I met both.

[2401] Yeah.

[2402] And then I didn't not pick Kristen.

[2403] It just had gotten to a point where I could tell she thought we were exclusive.

[2404] Right.

[2405] To which I had to say, like, I'm not at the same spot.

[2406] Yeah.

[2407] That was.

[2408] Yeah, how many dates in?

[2409] Well, that was probably two months into.

[2410] But you guys hung out a lot.

[2411] Yeah, a couple days a week.

[2412] How are you doing that?

[2413] How are you doing a couple days a week and then how many days with the row?

[2414] Yeah, a couple days.

[2415] Wow, you're busy.

[2416] See, I don't have that kind of time.

[2417] I'm trying to think.

[2418] Yeah, I was unemployed.

[2419] Yeah.

[2420] I was promoting a movie.

[2421] Baby mama was about to come out.

[2422] Right.

[2423] That's it.

[2424] I was, I had a lot of time.

[2425] Would you have like a lunch?

[2426] Would you have like a lunch with one and a dinner with another?

[2427] I don't think like that.

[2428] Breakfast and dinner?

[2429] Oh, geez.

[2430] I'm curious.

[2431] Dinner with one and breakfast with a different one.

[2432] What if you had to leave?

[2433] What if you guys had sex and then you slept over?

[2434] And then you left to go to breakfast with the other.

[2435] Oh, yeah, yeah.

[2436] You did that?

[2437] No, I'm not saying I did it.

[2438] 16 years ago, I can't actually truly.

[2439] Try.

[2440] Why?

[2441] So, wait, so you went on lots of dates with both before you made that decision.

[2442] Or you're saying.

[2443] Well, what's interesting is it would appear that I had picked one over the other, but I didn't.

[2444] I just felt really unethical about acting like I was exclusive.

[2445] And I say, I'm not there.

[2446] Yeah, you said that.

[2447] And I feel like we probably need to slow down, which was in essence, a breakup.

[2448] Yeah.

[2449] But it's not because I was like, oh, now I'm, you know, I've chosen.

[2450] It's just this person doesn't feel like they're there.

[2451] I have no ethical dilemma about this.

[2452] One person, this other person I have.

[2453] Kristen, you felt like was all in.

[2454] And you weren't.

[2455] And so you had to tell her.

[2456] It was just really quick.

[2457] Yeah.

[2458] And you had to tell her.

[2459] And I had just gotten out of a very.

[2460] intense, two intense relationship.

[2461] And then so it just escalated kind of quicker than I was anticipating.

[2462] Yeah.

[2463] How'd you end up back there?

[2464] Now that it was basically like, it feels like I've picked this person.

[2465] I was like, this isn't my pick.

[2466] And then you couldn't stop thinking about Kristen.

[2467] Yeah, I saw I saw a picture of her somewhere doing something silly.

[2468] She's doing something very silly.

[2469] I can't remember the exact photo with some very Kristen photo.

[2470] That was on the front of a magazine while I was in New York buying dip.

[2471] And I was like, oh yeah, that looks fun.

[2472] Well, that's fun.

[2473] So, yeah, it's stressful dating multiple people in a way.

[2474] Okay, so the dinner was made.

[2475] The dinner was made.

[2476] And it was really good.

[2477] It was a full Thanksgiving.

[2478] And did your guests laugh and have merriment and fellowship?

[2479] They did.

[2480] Yeah.

[2481] They did.

[2482] It was.

[2483] Did anyone, did you guys give things?

[2484] or anything?

[2485] Yeah, we gave thanks.

[2486] It was really nice.

[2487] What else?

[2488] Just, it was just lovely.

[2489] I mean, trying to think if there were any major highlights other than the merriment.

[2490] Yeah, and tasty food.

[2491] The fellowship and the giving thing.

[2492] The gustatory explosions.

[2493] Yeah, it was fun.

[2494] It was good.

[2495] Okay, update on couples therapy.

[2496] So I finished last night.

[2497] The whole thing or season three?

[2498] Season three.

[2499] Okay.

[2500] By the way, thought I want to run by you.

[2501] But first of all, What a great season.

[2502] And you're right.

[2503] The guy that I couldn't stand had some really nice moments.

[2504] Yeah.

[2505] And it was a reminder, like, if you have, oh, God, if you can just find ultimate patience.

[2506] I know.

[2507] You know, it's encouraging to stay optimistic about people.

[2508] Yes.

[2509] It's really hard to.

[2510] That's the main takeaway.

[2511] There's other people that I have a lot of tolerance for their particular ism.

[2512] His is very step -day.

[2513] There is some guess, you know, for me, it was very like, fuck this guy.

[2514] Yeah.

[2515] But I ended up finding him very strong.

[2516] Well, knowing why someone is the way they are just at least provides compassion.

[2517] It doesn't mean they should be a fucking gaslighter like he was.

[2518] Right, or that you can't have boundaries.

[2519] Yeah.

[2520] But it's still just like, oh, people are not picking this.

[2521] And you were right.

[2522] The guy didn't like her advisor.

[2523] Yeah.

[2524] He got me back a little bit and she kind of acknowledged some stuff.

[2525] You were just being protective of Orna.

[2526] I was.

[2527] I was.

[2528] I love Orna.

[2529] I don't like anyone.

[2530] telling her, she's not doing a perfect job because she's perfect.

[2531] She never brushes her hair and you love it.

[2532] Oh, she never brushes her hair.

[2533] I love it.

[2534] Okay, what were you going to say?

[2535] I don't know how this works out, but obviously there's that really profound moment about the Israeli -Palestine conflict.

[2536] Yeah.

[2537] And so then I started wondering, like, what happened?

[2538] Why are there two seasons in one?

[2539] Yeah.

[2540] And is it that they had recorded that?

[2541] They're sitting on it.

[2542] They're planning on releasing it down the road.

[2543] But then Hamas attacks.

[2544] And they're like, oh, we got to get this out right now so people know this hell happened before.

[2545] But how?

[2546] I don't know what the timeline of when they dropped season three with all these.

[2547] You did?

[2548] What is it?

[2549] May. Oh, so that doesn't make it.

[2550] I mean, there's always, there's always conflict.

[2551] Yeah.

[2552] But that was a really profoundly beautiful moment between all them.

[2553] I know.

[2554] Yeah, so in the third season, second half, there's a couple, a lesbian couple, and one of the girls is, and they're young.

[2555] One of the girls is from the West Bank.

[2556] and her family had to flee because of bombings, and Orna is Israeli.

[2557] Yeah.

[2558] So at the very beginning of the season, they state that.

[2559] Yeah, they lightly acknowledge it.

[2560] Yes.

[2561] But there's not really too much of a deep dive.

[2562] But then by the end of the season, which is, I guess, 10 weeks later or something, it seems they do 10 sessions or whatever, there had been some bombing in the West Bank.

[2563] Yeah.

[2564] And so the Palestinian girl was very, very upset.

[2565] Yeah.

[2566] And then feeling what was so human about it is it's not that her feelings were in question about Orna.

[2567] It's that she felt like she might be betraying all the people she loves and that love her by even being friends with her.

[2568] Yeah.

[2569] And by trusting her.

[2570] Yes.

[2571] And I was like, oh, yeah, that's such an interesting pressure.

[2572] Yeah.

[2573] that both people are feeling, am I betraying?

[2574] It even happened when Chad came in, Chad Sanders, and he was like, I'm nervous to get along with you because I don't want to seem like, you know.

[2575] I'm like hanging out with, I'm on the white guy too.

[2576] Yeah, yeah, yes, and pandering to this white dude.

[2577] He's like, it's weird.

[2578] It's like it's almost scary to get along with you so well.

[2579] Yeah.

[2580] Yeah, I get that.

[2581] It's like yet another layer of the sadness of marginalized groups, which is you're not just suffering from the oppression of the hegemonic group.

[2582] There's also all these bizarre internal pressures of purity and loyalty.

[2583] Yeah.

[2584] That I imagine, I wouldn't know personally, but I imagine you can end up feeling lonelier than anyone in that your group seems to not approve of you and the oppressor doesn't approve.

[2585] Exactly.

[2586] Yeah.

[2587] Yeah.

[2588] It's heartbreaking.

[2589] Anyway, okay.

[2590] That couple, the Palestinian girl and her girlfriend, are one of my favorites of the whole series.

[2591] A thousand percent.

[2592] I love them.

[2593] I almost wish for them, I'm like, guys just be together.

[2594] But I also recognize, and I think this happens a lot with people.

[2595] They should have just met 10 years later.

[2596] If they just met 10 years later, it would totally have worked.

[2597] they're so young and it's just too soon for either of them to you're right and the sad truth about life is you can love someone profoundly and deeply and not be the right match it's like the hardest pill to swallow yeah but it's real yeah they're so fucking cute and they get along so they love each other so much it's it's beautiful yeah I opened my computer for facts, but I don't have any.

[2598] Oh, fun.

[2599] Because we recorded it yesterday afternoon and I don't have it yet.

[2600] Well, we can just reflect on how fun she was.

[2601] So fun.

[2602] She's so great, isn't she?

[2603] Yeah, that was lovely.

[2604] I was saying how much I enjoyed having her at dinner.

[2605] And Kristen told this great story about being somewhere like with SAG and the president of SAG.

[2606] Yeah, it was a Times Up meeting.

[2607] Okay.

[2608] Were you there?

[2609] I wonder if you remember it the same way as her.

[2610] But someone's starting to make some lofty opening ceremony statement that was going to go on.

[2611] And she said that Eva just went, okay, we all got to get home to our kids.

[2612] So what were we saying and what are we not saying?

[2613] And what is blah, blah, blah.

[2614] Yeah.

[2615] Just kind of fuck all this pleasantry stuff.

[2616] Let's get on with the real shit.

[2617] I don't remember it personally, but it makes sense.

[2618] It feels very.

[2619] Yeah.

[2620] I love that.

[2621] Very efficient.

[2622] Uh -huh.

[2623] Love it.

[2624] Surprise she's on a Capricorn.

[2625] To me, she presents as a Capricorn.

[2626] I don't even believe in it.

[2627] What is she?

[2628] She's March 15th.

[2629] Pisces.

[2630] Pisces.

[2631] What is a Pisces?

[2632] And is Delta Pisces?

[2633] No. Well, she's March 27th.

[2634] That's seven.

[2635] You mean Lincoln.

[2636] Lincoln, I'm sorry.

[2637] Oh, my God.

[2638] Oh, my God.

[2639] It looked up Lincoln.

[2640] Resend nude pitcher to Bryce.

[2641] Lincoln is an Ares.

[2642] She's an Aries.

[2643] Okay.

[2644] So tell me about Pisces.

[2645] Can you read me?

[2646] Liz is a Pisces.

[2647] Oh, Pisces.

[2648] And she's a quintessential Pisces.

[2649] Apex Pisces?

[2650] Yes.

[2651] Let's look at Co -Star.

[2652] Okay.

[2653] Because I love Co -Star.

[2654] That's your trusted source.

[2655] Pisces traits.

[2656] Somehow both five and 50 years old at once.

[2657] Okay.

[2658] Yeah, that makes sense.

[2659] She's playful, but wise.

[2660] Yeah.

[2661] Thinks everything is a sign.

[2662] Can't remember if they dreamt it or it actually happened.

[2663] Oh, is that Liz?

[2664] Liz is all of these.

[2665] Yeah, she's apex Pisces.

[2666] Excessively romantic.

[2667] Oh.

[2668] Prone to fantasy.

[2669] Oh.

[2670] No boundaries.

[2671] Oh, let's party.

[2672] Wow, wow, wow.

[2673] A Rihanna is a Piscese.

[2674] Sure.

[2675] That seems obvious now that I know the description.

[2676] Oh, should I read Best Careers?

[2677] Sure.

[2678] Volunteer therapist.

[2679] Why volunteer therapist?

[2680] Because they shouldn't get paid.

[2681] Oh, my God.

[2682] Okay, see, these are like, these are like gurus.

[2683] Amateur poet, sad clown, orb of light, vapor.

[2684] Vapor.

[2685] Yeah.

[2686] Oh, wow.

[2687] Okay.

[2688] And Lincoln.

[2689] Pescar, Pisces.

[2690] Oh, yeah.

[2691] Okay.

[2692] Aries.

[2693] I think this matches up.

[2694] Okay.

[2695] Oh, my God.

[2696] They told me this story, by the way.

[2697] They went to the park yesterday, the Hanson Girls and the Shepherd girls with Ryan.

[2698] Uh -huh.

[2699] And there was like a gaggle, I guess, of like five, seven -year -old boys.

[2700] and they like came up and they were yelling and they're like and they overheard him and one of the boys was like let's get these monkeys and cut their dicks off oh my god seven years old and one of the seven year olds called one of them the N -word and then they all scared around and they went sat on a bench and the four girls went over as a team like linked arms and went over as like stop saying those things we're not going to be we're not going to let you guys play if you're going to talk like that they had they told He totally confronted them as a team.

[2701] Aw.

[2702] And then one of the little boys was like, your daughter's threatening to chase me or something.

[2703] And Ryan goes, yeah, but were you saying mean words?

[2704] And he goes, yeah, but.

[2705] I'm sorry, he couldn't lie.

[2706] But anyways, then Ryan went over.

[2707] I was proud of Ryan.

[2708] He went over to the parents and said, I would want to know if my kid said this.

[2709] I want you to know your kid just said this.

[2710] Ryan to me is a impeccable parent Yeah, valiant He's really good Yes That's awesome Yeah, yeah Okay, Aries The symbol is a ram The traits Are No filter Gets angry Then forgets why they were angry Thinks everything is a game They can win We'll do anything on a dare and easily bored.

[2711] Only two of those sound familiar.

[2712] She certainly doesn't have the first few.

[2713] Yeah.

[2714] Best Career stunt double.

[2715] Which is perfect.

[2716] Part -time punk.

[2717] Pro wrestler.

[2718] Petty Thief.

[2719] And cereal box mascot.

[2720] Oh, wow.

[2721] These are fun.

[2722] They're playful.

[2723] Let's find yours.

[2724] Okay.

[2725] Let's find yours.

[2726] Let's do yours.

[2727] No, let's do yours.

[2728] This kind of works because she likes.

[2729] astrology she said yeah exactly we talked about it for a second also you just said i'm surprised she's not a capricorn which means you're you're starting to embody it more yeah you know what it was is she felt very direct yeah but i'm saying you are starting to embody that it's a thing well certainly you know who i feel it a lot with is erika yeah i think like erika and i have a very similar vibe and i think it's why Charlie likes me so much is it feels very kind of similar.

[2730] I think.

[2731] I mean, who knows?

[2732] Maybe he likes me because I'm also tall.

[2733] It could be anything.

[2734] Maybe he doesn't like me too.

[2735] That's also, I'm sure.

[2736] Okay.

[2737] Okay, Capricorn.

[2738] The sea goat.

[2739] Ooh.

[2740] A sea goat.

[2741] That's a simple.

[2742] That's a damp, wet goat.

[2743] No one wants a wet goat.

[2744] Okay, ready?

[2745] Yeah.

[2746] Full grown adult since age six, the responsible friend, motivated by duty takes a while to warm up to people that's not you represses any emotion that gets in the way of success yeah these are good these are spot on Michelle Obama I would say I would say back to the with men yeah like you know me I don't want I don't want new people at my house I don't like new people but you are friendly I come to embrace them yes yes there's like realms in which I'm fine with it But in my house, I really don't like it.

[2747] Yeah.

[2748] I get over it, but like just when any dude walks in the house that I don't know, I immediately am like, I don't want him here.

[2749] Yeah, I get that.

[2750] Okay, best careers, accountant, lawyer, landlord.

[2751] Oh.

[2752] Cisophis.

[2753] Oh, wow, Cisophis.

[2754] An elementary school hall monitor.

[2755] Oh, sure, sheriff, a .k .a. sheriff.

[2756] Yeah.

[2757] Okay, let's do mine.

[2758] Let's do yours.

[2759] Leo?

[2760] No. Libra.

[2761] Virgo.

[2762] Vergo.

[2763] Double Virgo.

[2764] Double V. I'm a double V. MCO.

[2765] I'm an extra V. I have an extra V. Okay.

[2766] Symbol the Virgin.

[2767] Oh, wow.

[2768] I'm on the cusp though.

[2769] Hold on.

[2770] No, that's simple.

[2771] Okay.

[2772] Okay, ready?

[2773] Needs to feel useful.

[2774] Mm -hmm.

[2775] Has a quick fix for everything.

[2776] Judgmental, but with good intention.

[2777] Egyptians.

[2778] Exceptional spatial awareness.

[2779] That is not me. A million ideas per second.

[2780] Oh.

[2781] Okay.

[2782] Do you have a million ideas per second?

[2783] I mean...

[2784] Do you have a million thoughts for a second?

[2785] A million thoughts.

[2786] And there's a lot of ideas in there.

[2787] Mixed in.

[2788] Okay.

[2789] Best careers.

[2790] Hot librarian.

[2791] Oh.

[2792] For the Virgin, no less.

[2793] Tupperware for other people's messes.

[2794] Walking Encyclopedia.

[2795] human GPS, not me, one person welcome committee.

[2796] What does that mean one person welcome committee?

[2797] I think it means host.

[2798] Oh, one person welcome committee.

[2799] Like a welcome committee normally is multiple people.

[2800] I'm not even sure I know what a welcome committee is.

[2801] When would?

[2802] It's like at an event or something.

[2803] They're the welcomers, yeah.

[2804] Oh, okay.

[2805] So you're a one person welcomeer.

[2806] Yeah.

[2807] I guess that means you're very inclusive?

[2808] It means, no, I think it's like host, but you don't want other people helping.

[2809] Oh, right, one man show.

[2810] All the credit.

[2811] Well, all the duties and all the credit.

[2812] I like all the credit.

[2813] You notice when I am cooking and people go, can I help?

[2814] And I'm like, of course not.

[2815] Yeah, you never like that.

[2816] And I'm going to do the dishes and I'm going to do, you know, it's got to be the whole soup to nuts thing.

[2817] Oh, there's a whole thing.

[2818] Oh, like a book?

[2819] Yeah.

[2820] Oh, my gosh.

[2821] a book.

[2822] Okay, should I read, should I read the book on what is the personality of a Virgo?

[2823] I mean, we kind of did that, but this is more intense.

[2824] But now I want to go back and read the book on Capricorn.

[2825] What makes Virgo's happy?

[2826] No, I'm sick with you.

[2827] Okay.

[2828] It feels braggy when you read it about yourself.

[2829] Oh, does it?

[2830] Okay, what type of person is a Virgo?

[2831] Virgoes are generally very modest.

[2832] They want to feel acknowledged for their contributions, but they don't need grandiose gestures of appreciation to feel valuable.

[2833] They are little geniuses.

[2834] They notice the details.

[2835] Virgo knows when their toothbrush has been moved even a centimeter.

[2836] Virgos are insecure about the fact that they're not perfect.

[2837] They're aware that their actions have consequences, but that they can at times be responsible for their own suffering.

[2838] This is why you'll often hear them saying things like, it's my fault, and I did this to myself.

[2839] Fergos are the literal embodiment of the medieval philosopher who lives in a sterile cell never opening the door for fear that people will catch a glimpse of the mess inside their motto is quote In order to save myself from myself I must first destroy myself What they want is a pure clean existence they need to be the best to feel worthy of their existence they can be so obsessed with their own image of perfection that they lose touch with their true impulses They repressed their feelings by locking them away in order to achieve a state of impassivity.

[2840] They can come off as far more rational than they really are.

[2841] Their feelings are generally a great mystery to them.

[2842] They feel so many things so deeply, but they usually don't know how to talk about it.

[2843] The only way they can express the ineffable is through dry sarcasm.

[2844] Some are parts are real.

[2845] Okay, hold on, I can't read your book?

[2846] Yeah, yeah.

[2847] This was the point that my astronomer.

[2848] teacher made you remember this great story where he invited an astronomer and he gave readings and the things got handed out in the wrong order and everyone read them like yeah this is oh right and then the person was like wait wait no you were supposed to and then everyone shuffled them down and then everyone's like yeah this is me that's such a good there is something to be said of like any list of adjectives you'll you'll try to connect you'll think of like you can think of 10 examples of when you were like that which is not to say it's the prevailing mode of operative I think it is, though.

[2849] Like, when I look at everyone's, I do think I'm mostly that, and I'm doubles.

[2850] Triple V. Okay, I'm going to read yours.

[2851] Capricorns are masters of discipline, the ringing of the hands, the constant reminders, the exacting structure, the ever -increasing goals, the tidal wave of self -criticism that lasts forever.

[2852] They are the ultimate perfectionists.

[2853] They said that about Burgos, too.

[2854] They can be so absorbed in their own internal monologue that it becomes important.

[2855] possible to get them to look away from themselves.

[2856] Carpricorns are often called...

[2857] Narcissus.