-I'm Clayton Neckard, in 2022, I was the lead of ABC's The Bachelor.
-But here's the thing, bachelor fans hated him.
-If I could press a button and rewind it all I would. -That's when his life took a disturbing turn. A one-night stand would end in a courtroom. -The media is here. This case has gone viral. -The dating contract.
-A great a date mean, but I'm also so suing you. -This is unlike anything I've ever seen before. -I'm Stephanie Young, listen to Love Trap on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. -Hi, it's Show Interesting, host of the Spirer Joder podcast.
Or we talk about astrology, natal charts, and how to step into your most vibrant life. And today, I'm talking with my dear friend, Crystal Williams.
“-It can change you in the best way possible.”
Dance with the change, dance with the breakdowns, the embodiment of Pisces in tuition, with Capricorn Power Moves. -You're so I'm like delusionally proud of my chart. Listen to the Spirer Joder podcast,
starting on February 24th on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to your podcasts. -Next Monday, our 2026 iHeart Podcast Awards are happening live in South by Southwest. -Just the biggest night in Pod Past week. -We'll honor the very best in Pod Casting from the past year,
and celebrate the most innovative talent and creators in the industry. -And the winner is... -Creativity, knowledge, and passion. We'll all be on full display. -Thank you so much, iHeart Radio.
-Thank you to all the other nominees. -You guys are awesome. -Watch live next Monday at 8 p.m. Eastern 5 p.m. Pacific Free. Itfeeps.com, or The Veeps app. -I'm Nancy Glass, host of the burden of guilt season 2 podcast.
This is a story about a horrendous lie that destroyed two families.
“Late one night, Bobby Gumpride became the victim”
of a random crime. The perpetrator was sentenced to 99 years until a confession changed everything. -I was a monster. -Listen to burden of guilt season 2
on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. -Ago Wota is your host for the 2026 iHeart Podcast Awards. Live at South by Southwest. -Hello, what's anybody there?
-Race by a single mom. -Ago may have a few father-related issues. -Are we supposed to talk about your day? -Her podcast, "Thanks Dad" is full of funny, heartfelt conversations with actors,
including fellow Estinella Lums, comedians, musicians, and more. About life and their wonderfully complicated relationships with their fathers. -I think and hope that's a good thing.
-Get to know Ago. Follow "Thanks Dad" with "Ago Wota"
“and start listening on the free iHeart Radio app today.”
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[music playing] [music playing] -Well, hello, teeny beaters. Nope, it's not it, it's still workshopping our names. We will get there at some point, I promise.
But more importantly, in the meanwhile, this is Teen Beat with me, Danielle Fishall. It's a podcast where I invite interesting people to sit down and chat about their upbringings, the glorious and the awkward,
all in an attempt to pay me back for the years I spent on television as a literal kid. It's an easy concept. I gave you my childhood. It's time we hear yours.
And this week, I'm hanging out with a reality television superstar who's here not only to talk about his formative years, but this session will also double as a conduit between his generation and mine, with the goal of making me cooler by the end of this episode.
28 years old, six foot five, this Queensland Australia native burst onto the scene in 2018 as the standout star of New Zealand's hit reality dating show, Heartbreak Island, leaving with a $100,000 prize
and a newly recognizable name in branding. He then sidesteped the success onto 2021's British dating game show, Too Hot to Handle, and MTV's "Match Me If You Can." A prime example of celebrity
in the always changing media landscape of today
he continued to make the unscripted rounds from Flora's lava to Amazing Raced Australia to Perfect Match, eventually landing on the 30 second season of Dancing With The Stars, where he helped usher in a new era for the show,
one that has continued to game momentum ever since. Then, he made the once impossible transition into traditional acting, appearing in last year's The Wrong Paris alongside Miranda Cosgrove,
and the upcoming horrified
With Ron Perlman, Busy Phillips, and Jim Rash.
And now, he's about to raise the ante with his own reality dating show. Let's marry Harry on Netflix,
“executive produced by Alex Cooper of Call Her Daddy fame,”
with the goal of guiding the serial data toward a committed long-term relationship. He has his own podcast on the unwell network called Boyfriend Material, but today he's here on Teen Beat,
because I have to assume somewhere underneath this hot guy facade is an awkward, torquy teenager. You know what? This probably not.
He's probably always been cool.
Anyway, welcome to the show, Harry Jowsie. That was the coolest intro I've ever had. Really? Yeah, the signature most reality TV superstar.
Superstar. No, never said that. Really? It's usually reality TV star. Well, I've got the super now.
Superstar. Yeah. Supermodel. Superstar. You really like, did you research?
Yeah. Yeah. I felt really happy. I felt really happy. Yeah.
This is the biggest. This is a serious building, as you call that. Yeah. That's so cool. I feel really official.
Well, you should. And you're very cool. You should. You should feel cool. Wow.
What do I do now? It's a fun. Am I right?
Have you always been cool?
No, no. I was terrible. I was such a little, yeah, little sausage. Okay.
I'm going to need some more explanation about that. What's a little sausage? I just feel like sausages like a universal word. And I just sat for everything. Okay.
“Um, so what does it mean in terms of what you were like as a child?”
You're a little sausage. Can I swear? You sure can. Okay, cool. Because I was a little shit.
Okay. Got it. Yeah. That makes sense to me. Yeah.
A little sausage. I need it. You say a little shit. I get it. Okay, cool.
Yeah. No. I usually say sausage for like anything bad. It's growing up. Like I was.
I grew up in Central Queensland, Australia. And this small town called Japan. And the closest city is Rockhampton, which is the beef capital of Australia. So some might say the sausage capital. The sausage capital.
Yeah. A lot of me going around over there. Um, the funny thing is they growing up in a place like that. You know, in school, you have like different classes, right? Like New Zealand when I went to school in New Zealand.
There was rugby class. Where I grew up? There was like bull riding class. Wow. I never did it.
Because I'm too tall to ride a bull. And I was just a height requirement. I don't think so. Oh, you're just making that up. Just letting everyone know I'm tall.
I love that. Yeah. Again, I mentioned it in the intro piece. We need to lock that in as many times as possible. Guys, six, five.
Um, but yes, it's like bull riding class. And then, um, one of my nephews. He grew up in Byron Bay. And there's a surfing class. It's just really cool.
I don't know if they do that in America. Absolutely not. We should do it. No, there's bowling. I took bowling.
Yeah. I called it. Yeah, yeah. Who's serious? I needed like a one unit class.
Why did you do this? I needed a one unit class. And I got a bit like bowling. Really, too. I thought.
Are you good at it? Yeah, I mean, I can be. I was that semester. Wow. Yeah.
How do you get greater than that? Like, how many? You just show up. You just show up. And you actually, you know, look,
listen to the thing. They tell you what all the dots mean. And do we know? Yeah. Can you remember?
You know, it's like. So the pins are, you know, you do kind of determine your own. You want to keep your arm really straight. And so depending on where the pins are out there. You actually want to go the opposite direction.
Like, if you've got a pin to your right side, you want to go more left. Then more right. God. Yeah, so anyway. Just take my cool.
Yeah, that's very technical. But I want to. I want to come back to being a little shit. Yeah. Oh, my group. I was just a very naughty kid growing up.
“I think the first time I got suspended was in grade two.”
Oh, for what? I think I threw a desk at teacher. That's not a little thing. I think it was that. That's not.
I definitely do that at some point. I thought you were going to say throwing a paper airplane. No. And then you said throwing a desk at a teacher. Or should you be in jail?
Oh, 100% I and I have been. Oh, wow. I think I was it was either a chair or desk. But I was very little.
It was my first ever memory of school.
I don't like the teacher clearly. Mm-hmm. And then me and my friend. I think it was Cody. We want to go together with both very naughty.
It was farmer's day school. Very rural school. And yet, wasn't really going well at that? Doesn't seem like it. No.
What had they done? The teacher or the terrible teacher? I'm the worst teacher ever. I'm definitely the victim. I can see where this is coming from.
No, I don't remember. I just think I was just like a kid. I was not very good at following rules. But also like. Yeah.
We had a big problem with that school anyway. Mm-hmm. So it was about time that we left.
Um.
So it happened for a reason. Yeah, you were just trying to get your family out of there. Yeah, out of the trenches. Yeah. No, we had to be honest.
We did have a really bad running with them. So I grew up with my parents. Not wanting us to believe in any religion. Yep. So they had religion force in them growing up.
So they're like, when you guys are kids, we just want you to believe in whatever you want to believe in.
“And then when you turn 18, that's what we focus on.”
So like, you just do whatever you want. So back when I was at school. Super young. Religion was like, it was kind of mandatory. Yeah.
Like part of the curriculum. Yeah, yeah. So there was one class. And I remember this. One class with like, oh, you have to sing him.
Mm-hmm. And I was like, oh, my family doesn't want me to do that. And I got kicked out of the class. And this was. I think this was before after.
I think this was before the desk operation. Okay. So maybe they've trying to do more. More desktop. Yeah.
Maybe. Give me angry. But so I got kicked out of class. And it turned into a whole thing in the news. Um, because I went outside and I was like, oh, what I do.
So I told my parents like, have a school. It was a terrible. Okay, that is school. Because I didn't want to sing these hymns. And obviously my parents were like, well,
you shouldn't be forced to do something. Yeah. That we don't believe in.
“So then yeah, it ended up my, I think my parents wrote a letter to the headmaster.”
And then escalated ended up in the news. We actually had to leave the country because we started getting stalled. And we had, uh, we were had all these Christmas cards. Flood our dress. Flood our dress.
And then a horrible threats on us. Like horrible crazy threats on my mom say, I remember this. And I shouldn't have read it. But I remember this one card said I was going to put dead rats in my mom. See, a lie.
A lot more detailed than that. I shouldn't have read it. But we ended up leaving the country. We went to Bali, which is a pretty good place to escape to. This is beautiful.
And I remember we came back and there's, uh, this news network would occur in a fair. They went on our flight. They're like, yo, um, my mom was like, oh, I've seen you in TV. And the guy was like, she's like, why are you coming to you, Poon? So go to interview the jowsies.
Like, we want to get them on the news and tell this out of the story. Um, it was like, oh, that's us, that's Harry. And then it turned into a whole thing.
And I remember it was the first time I was on TV.
Wow. Yeah. But we had the, the, the prime minister of Australia, John Howard. Think he spoke on it, which is pretty cool. Yeah.
Um, we're not, like, good reason. It's like, it wasn't a TV proud of us pretty wild. And then, um, we got dogs by the local news channel too. They came to our address to, to our, they literally just showed up. And I remember because I was like, oh, that is all these kids.
Oh, dad, there's all these chemicals in our driveway. And my dad just walked outside naked. He's like, (beep) He said get out of here.
This is pretty proud of what he's got. Yeah. Of that scary. And they left. And they said the jazies didn't want to be on camera.
And they paned to our address in the number. And where it was. So that's our, that thing that was before, that was before we left. So we obviously, we left. Um, obviously now I would religion.
I've got a way different perspective on it after losing my dad. Um, I was like, I should probably believe in something, like, it's nice. And I'm also 28. So I've started trying to figure out what my path is with religion. So all that to say is that, um,
It was all that drama for no reason. Because now I believe in something. Well, I think I was kind of what your parents were fighting for the right for. Yes. Was for you to become an adult and figure it out on your own.
Yeah. So it's not a nice. It's nice. Yeah, because I just remember being a kid. And I was like,
I wish I believed in something because that always be afraid of death.
You know, scared me as it scares everyone. And I'll wake up in the middle of the night. Oh my god, I don't know what to do. Like be crying. And we are just wish even if they didn't believe it.
Or even if it's a bit of a lie. Or even if like, God, it's just so nice to believe in something. To believe in something. Yeah.
So I think now that that's where I'm thinking about having a family is like, Oh, I kind of want to just have like a soft. Mm-hmm. This is what we believe in anyway. So that was that was the first kind of trouble growing up.
Growing up. I really got to be honest when I started this. I started this questioning and you said you threw a desk at a teacher. I did not expect the story to end up with me actually believing that you were the victim. And it was like, wow, that didn't really.
You have it. You are a very persuasive storyteller because I actually think that teacher Broadway deserve it. I don't know.
“I remember that was just a first memory of how to be naughty at school.”
And then I remember I left that school after all the religion stuff. And I went to a different school. And you put in the same school. And that was cool. I remember that was a lot of fun, but we were still.
Me and my brother were getting bullied about the, uh, got a religion stuff. It would be so wild. A kid's would, kids would, kids would sort of mean. But it was like very formative.
Was, um, did you guys describe yourself as atheist or not? Because of not being exactly. So just non-denominational. Yeah. We don't even know.
Like that was the thing that people were like, oh, you're this. I don't even know. I don't know. And that was kind of nice.
But um, did we always get bullied about like Christmas?
Oh, what are you going to do in Christmas?
Because you didn't celebrate any holidays then either.
No, we didn't. Um, but my mom was kind of cheeky. So obviously after Christmas is boxing day. Mm-hmm. So she would go get all the sales and she'd be like, we're doing new years.
Celebration instead. Which was nice. Yeah. So we would, uh, I was, I tell everyone we got more presents. But I don't think we did because my mom just wanted to get the deal.
Right. She just wanted to say it. Maybe she doesn't believe in religion. Yeah. And that was the whole sort of thing.
That was for our kids. Um, because I have a similar feeling in the sense that I really don't want to push my own beliefs onto that of my kids. Yeah. So I tell them that everyone believes something different. Yeah.
No one knows for sure.
And here's what mommy believes.
Yeah. But you can decide if you believe the same thing or if you believe something different. Yeah. There's a little bit of a grounding foundation of yes, I believe the same thing mommy or at least just putting them putting the thought in their mind that I want them to be critical thinkers. Yeah.
And that they can pick and choose some of the things that ring true for them. And these are the things that I believe, but I don't know either. Yeah. Like I'm not right. And if this just because I believe something different than what your friend believes doesn't make them wrong.
Um, so. And it's a nice question. Yeah.
“So I realize that's what I'm grateful for with my parents is that it's so open for me to figure it out and ask questions.”
Yeah. Because I would and I think I see you see a lot of that with people that are kind of like this is how it has to be. They they get stuck in that and then they grow older and they're like, like a lot of my friends are ex-moment. Yeah. They grow older and they're like, oh, I don't know if that's right.
I don't know if I believe in that fully or maybe I somewhat believe in it, but I don't. And because they were kind of stuck in that way, they kind of once it unravels it really unravels. Yeah. So that's where I get a bit worried about and I'm again grateful with my parents so that I can question everything. Yeah.
But yeah. Anyway, go kicked out of the schools. Then go kicked out of the school and. Oh, I don't. You don't seem like a trouble maker.
Me? Come on.
No, I remember the first time I got suspended.
My dad said to me because we grew in the country. I said, you know, we're going to do this again. You have to go and pick up every rock and every stick on our property. And that was the worst thing ever because we lived on a farm. Right.
So it was just rocks and sticks everywhere. It was all rocks and sticks. Right. Yeah. So that was and that was for the whole weekend.
Yeah. I feel like that was your dad's version of like wax on wax off. Yeah. Yeah. And you know what it didn't work because I was just planning it again.
Yeah. Was that for a fight club?
“I know you've been pretty vocal about your teenage fight clubs.”
Yeah. Were you like a fish-roll? Did someone keep in minutes or anything? No, no. You know how we call them towel fights.
So you wrap your hands in towels. And you punch the shit out of each other until the towel's full off. Oh. And that's a round done. Or until you like want to start.
Okay. And I wasn't. I thought it was good at it. I wasn't very good. Did you always win?
Uh, this one time. I. Most of the times I was pretty good. This one time wasn't that good. This big.
This big guy. Bigger than you. You're 65. It was pretty large. It was large and in charge.
He bounced my head off a wall and it was the first time I was like, "Oh, go out.
I got pretty dizzy." And I ripped the towels off. I said, "F*** this. I'm going to get him." Yeah.
And then everyone helped me back. But then I dated his sister. So I was a real winner. So you're the real winner. Yeah.
Yeah. He need our, like, we, it's crazy. I'm much, we haven't comments. I was a lot of hosts. Yeah.
Taoists. Of course. Yeah. Is that the worst injury you had as a kid? Did you ever get hurt worse?
I got a knee reconstruction in 17 because I was playing rugby. Okay. Yeah. And I had that popped out. I thought I was pretty good.
Not very good. But yeah. I played to a play rugby in Australia. And I got tackled from behind. And the guy pulled my chin and then my knee kind of fell off my leg.
And that was kind of cool. Because when you stand up, you know, full of adrenaline. My knee kept slipping off my leg. And I was like, "What's wrong with me?" Okay.
But it was still together. And then my dad was like, "You're a beautiful seat. Go back out there." Yeah. You're dead.
Your dad has some, I love him. Yeah. He was a funny guy. He was very funny. He was very funny.
He was like, "You look like out there with your knee falling off your leg." Yeah.
“I think because it wasn't like a crazy hit.”
Like it wasn't like that. He didn't know. Well, he didn't know. Moment. It was just like, and also I was built like in a sparrugist.
Like I was so skinny and long. I had no reason. And like my legs should have broken a lot sooner. Um, so it wasn't very good. But then, so I went to school in Australia.
Go kicked out of school in Australia. Then my parents were like, "We're just going to send you to a different country." And then I went to school in New Zealand. They were like, "They're rugby." Yeah.
And I was the worst. I was on the worst team at school and on the bench for them. Okay. Like they would just put me on for ten minutes at the end of the game. Like, "Oh, I should probably run."
How old is your brother? I think he's 31. Okay. So he's three years older than you? Two and a half.
Two and a half.
Two and a half.
Did he also have to go to New Zealand?
No. No, he was perfect at school. Okay.
“So they sent you a loan to another country?”
Yep. Cool. And then, you know what? I got kicked out of that school, too. I delivered a ten for two weeks.
You, what? You're delivered a ten? Yeah. For two weeks. That's good.
Was that your punishment? Um, no. In my parents, like, we spent so much money on you for boarding school. Like, since I was 14, I was in boarding school. And so like, "Oh, yeah.
We spent so much money in boarding school for you." And this was your final year at school. All right.
And there's only two weeks left as well.
Two weeks left. Two weeks left. You didn't have to go to the sister college and the streak. I didn't have to do it. But it was funny.
And if one of our friends didn't get caught by the police and snitching everyone, we would go away. We would've gotten away with it. If not for those meddling kids. That's what we're saying.
Yeah.
“You know, so it's kind of not really my fault.”
I see. Gosh, I really feel very bad for you. It's horrible. Honestly. It's horrible to break it.
Were you always told? Did you like sprout overnight? Or... Yeah. My family's quite tall.
My mom's six foot. Yeah. Like me. Exactly. You walked in and you were like, "Oh, my gosh.
You're so cool." I told my mom doing it. This is so tall. Yeah. I think my brother's six.
Two. And then my dad was six. And then he started shrinking. You're the tallest in the family. I have to be.
Yeah. Yeah. And then I were four sisters. And they're quite little. Yeah.
A little and fun. Great. Yeah. Yeah. [music playing]
I'm Clayton Nackard.
“And in 2022, I was the lead of ABC's The Bachelor.”
Unfortunately, it didn't go according to plan.
He became the first bachelor to ever have his final rose rejected.
The internet turned on him. If I could press a button and rewind it all I would. But what happened to Clayton after the show? Made even bigger headlines. It began as a one night stand and ended in a courtroom with Clayton
at the center of a very strange paternity scandal. The media is here. This case has gone viral. The dating contract. Agreed to date me.
But I'm also suing you. We're such far. This is unlike anything I've ever seen before. I'm Stephanie Young. This is Love Trapped.
This season, an epic battle of he said she said, and the search for accountability in a sea of lies. I have done nothing to get pregnant by the f**k. Brassler. Listen to Love Trapped on the iHeart Radio app.
Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Hi. This is Joe Interesting. Host of the spare daughter podcast. Where we talk about astrology,
natal charts and how to step into your most vibrant life. And I just sat down with a mini driver. The Irish traveler said when I was 16, you're going to have a terrible time with men. After storyteller and unapologetic aquarium visionary.
Aquarius is all about freedom loving and different perspectives. And I find a lot of people with strong placements and Aquarius, like our misunderstood. A son and Venus in Aquarius in her 7th house. Spark her unconventional approach to partnership.
He really has taught me to embrace people seeping in different rooms in different houses and different places. But just an embracing of the isness of it. If you're navigating your own transformation or just want to chart side view into how a leading artist integrates astrology,
creativity and real life. This episode is a must listen. Listen to this your daughter podcast. Starting on February 24th on the iHeart Radio app. Apple podcasts or wherever you listen to your podcast.
In the middle of the night, Sasuke woke in a haze. Her husband Mike was on his laptop. What was on his screen would change Sasuke's life forever. I said I need you to tell me exactly what you're doing.
And immediately the mask came off. You're supposed to be safe. That's your home. That's your husband. So keep this secret for so many years.
He's like a seasoned pro. This is a story about the end of a marriage. But it's also the story of one woman who was done living in the dark. Your dangerous person who prays un vulnerable and trusting people. You're trying to make a love and good.
Listen to betrayal season five on the iHeart Radio app. Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Next Monday, our 2026 iHeart podcast awards are happening live in South by Southwest. Just the biggest night in podcast. We'll honor the very best in podcasting from the past year and celebrate the most innovative talent and creators in the industry.
The winner is.
Creativity, knowledge and passion will all be unfolded display. Thank you so much, iHeart Radio. Thank you to all the other nominees, you guys are awesome. Watch live next Monday at 8 p.m. Eastern 5 p.m. Pacific Free at feeps.com or the feeps app. I'm Nancy Glass, host of the burden of guilt season two podcast.
This is a story about a horrendous lie that destroyed two families. Late one night, Bobby Gumpride became the victim of a random crime. He pulls the gun. He tells me to lie down on the ground. He identified Termine Hudson as the perpetrator. Termine was sentenced to 99 years.
And like Laura, this can't be real. I thought it was a mistaken identity. The best lie is partial truth. For 22 years only two people knew the truth. Until a confession changed everything. I was a monster.
Listen to burden of guilt season two on the iHeart Radio app. Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
When did you first notice girls and when did they first start noticing you?
Jenny, I was 14 and that was who I was my virginity to love so much. At 14? Yeah, because all my friends were doing it. That's why we got it. Yeah, and I'm like, is it fun?
What is it? It's kind of weird. Okay. Yeah, the first girl I noticed, I think I was 10.
“Oh my, oh, this is because there was an image in, remember that?”
Really good with names. You are good with an image. I remember because my her parents were from a different town. And my dad was, I think helping build their shed. And then like, oh, we're going to come stay on the farm for a little bit whenever else.
And I was like, oh, this is, is this my first girlfriend? Right. Maybe not. But then as I remember at 10 and 14, all my friends were like telling me about like losing their virginity. Uh-huh.
For the first time with their girlfriends and I was like, oh, what do we do?
Who do I go for? And then Jenny used my friends cousin. She's like, oh, do it. Be your girlfriend or. Oh, I have sex.
Yeah, and she had a boyfriend in two years, so she knew what was going on. Okay. She knew the, the laser. She knew the ropes. Yeah, and so that was the first time.
And I remember I was like, this is weird. Yeah. This is interesting. I was like, I didn't expect it to feel like this. And then she was like, go out there.
“And then come back to me after you get a few more questions.”
And I'll tell you if you go, better. I was like, it was not that bad. She was so, like, she was a woman of the world. Yeah, she was cool. Yeah.
Yeah. I mean, I was like obsessed with that too. It's cool.
And everyone would always yell at me.
Like, I'm forced to go. I love you Jenny. Right. They would always yell at me. It was really obvious that you loved her.
It's my queen. Yeah. I don't know why she's at Nash. But we have to leave. Who knows?
Love us so much. You've never bothered to look her up. See if you can find her on social media. No way. No.
I just keep name dropping her at everyone. Just everywhere you go. Yes. You've never been tattooed on you. I actually did.
No. I was like, wow. No, I don't know. No, I don't know. No, I don't.
I'm not that crazy. Where do you go on dates in New Zealand? What's the dating scene like? Oh, it was pretty bad.
“That's why I ended up on these dating shows.”
Okay. What do we do? We're on that options. To be honest, until recent, it wasn't very good at being a data. Okay.
So they say, well, I've realized that if you want something, you have to put an effort. If you want something good, you're going to put an extra effort. Yeah. So when I was younger, I would be like, dinner, park, go for a walk, whatever. But when I was at school in New Zealand, pretty much just like, I love doing stuff
in the daytime. I love daytime activities or going and doing something together. Yeah. But now I'm being more active. We're trying to plan better dates and be better data.
What's a good date for you now? Like, if you were going to plan a great date. You want to hear the craziest one? Yeah. Fly the Catalina Island on a helicopter.
Get dinner and then fly back. Wow. Because I thought that was like, it's really intense. That is pretty intense. What if it's a bad first date?
And then you've got like a helicopter ride and a, like, More than romantic. Pretty good Instagram stories. That's true. Okay.
So it's good. I throughout the whole date. I had written, pre-written, um, Comments for, I was really excited to see this person. Okay.
And every, like, seeing like every 30 minutes or so or 20 minutes,
I would give her a piece of paper and I'd be like, I think you're so amazing.
And then at the end of it, I was like, I think you should be going to go for it. Yeah. So I had like 10 or so written out and I kept giving it to her. And I was like, oh, I should, this is, this makes me feel good. Because it's intentional.
That's nice. Yeah. And you got to think about really what you wanted to say. Yeah. Instead of just trying to come up with them on the spot.
And it makes you feel special. Yeah. And that's the main part.
That's the most important part.
Mm. So let's go back to, let's say you're 16. And you start looking for brand deals. Not that that was a thing when you were 16. But let's say that it was.
“What are some of the products you hope reach out to you?”
Links, the odorant, which like our acts. You guys have acts of it. Yeah, which it is. That's the one. Yeah.
So it's rebranded. Links in Australia. Okay. L1 and X. And love them.
Okay. And call gate toothpaste. Ooh. You've always been a call gate guy. No.
I hate them so much now. But back then you loved it. Yeah. And I used to have the yellow teeth. But I just, yeah.
And mouthwash. I was a big listener in mouthwash guy. Okay. Yeah.
But then apparently that's also not good for you.
I know. I know. Is anything good for us? No. Yeah.
Whatever you currently are using. It's bad for you. Whatever you used to use is now better for you. Whatever. And then five years it'll change again.
Yeah. Actually back then I had braces and blocks and rubber bands. Some. Yeah. Maybe teeth stuff would have been cool.
Okay. Yeah. Did you have a favorite food or snack? No. I was like the size of a horse.
So I just eat everything. And when I was 16, I was just. I couldn't eat enough food as well. But you said you were built like in a spare guess, which is the opposite of a horse. So when did you go from a spare guess to horse?
Uh, I think when I was like 22. Okay. When I started to fill out.
“But yeah, back then I was more like a flamingo, I think.”
Okay. Skinny legs and just a pop belly. Hot. It was a unique look. Do you have a favorite reality TV show?
You have not appeared on? I just finished traders. Have you been watching traders? I have seen traders. What are you doing?
Have you done it? No. I've not done it. And I think I would be terrible at it. Would you want to be a faithful or a trader?
Trader for sure. Trader. I would get caught out right away. You think so? For sure.
I'm so bad at lie. No. It's on the other shows where I kiss it go. And I lie about it. Yeah.
I don't think I'm watching it. I'm like, this guy's stupid. You can see it. You can see what I'm lying. No way.
No. No way. Me.
I would never kiss that girl.
No. And then I'm like, I'm exaggerating. Tell them to pull up the replay. This is TV show, right? They're like, this guy's a f*** idiot.
It's like the other way.
“So me as a trader go, don't we didn't kill that person?”
But we, I didn't mean we, I didn't mean we. Literally. I was just, but I was just, I beat up a set for that because if I had a few of them on my podcast. And I just, like the whole experience would be cool. Yeah.
No one didn't trust me. Let's marry her. It was my retirement one. Okay. I want to get to that in a second.
I do. I do want to talk about your crossover into traditional movies. Mmm. Real acting you're doing now. Yeah.
What do you like more? Do you like being yourself on reality TV or a heightened version of yourself on reality TV? Or do you prefer something that's scripted where you get to play a character? I love acting because everyone has the, I guess the main essence of it is, it's someone's dream and their idea. And I love being a part of someone's dream.
I love being like, oh my god, I got to be an accessory. Like, because you know how it is. It takes forever to get a thought to film. Oh yes. I got a thought in front of the consumer.
And like, so many corporate meetings and then who's the right person for this position? And then rewrites the script. Like, there's just so much stuff that goes into it. And just like, well, no same reality TV isn't like that. But when everyone's on set, everyone knows the game plan.
Everyone's read the script, everyone's so excited about it. And I know what they need in the scene. Right. And I just love that. I love that idea.
And I love that like, think reality TV is a little bit more like unraveled. Like, it's just, you could be filming 20 hours a day. You could be all over the place. You don't know what the scene is going to give you. You don't know if you've got to hit or not hit.
But like, when you're on set, like, you can feel the vibe when it, when it, on a script it's set. So the movies I have done, like, I just really love that. And I just love seeing people like, really nail it. Like, you're not seeing it.
Wow. And you love obviously like, you just said that collaborative. We're all it. We're all on the same team. We're all going for the same goal.
And now we're just going to talk out what the best avenue is to get there. So cool. Yeah. What is that reality TV? It's like, you don't even know how the story line is.
Get jungle kiss that go on and lie about it. Right. Right. And are they that direct? No, it's my brain.
Okay. Right. They are thinking like, let's see if he'll get drunken kiss that girl and then lie about it.
Then they'll have a show.
And he'll do it every time.
Every time. Every time. You gotta get, you gotta get that guy. You gotta get that guy.
“The worst thing is whenever I bought a show and I hear a producer or someone's, hey,”
this is getting boring. I'm back. One second. Hold on. Let me have a hold on.
Can we get a fireball show? What are we going to do? No, that's the, because I'm, I'm just like, I remember. Like, earlier shows, like, I would just be a menace. Like, I would go into something.
Like, because obviously there's different couples, right? I'd take something out of someone's bag and put it in someone else's bag. Like, they're going to fight. And then I go, like, because everyone's over. I'm a producer's dream.
Yeah. I'm just, take away all the bad producers or responsibility from them. And you do it for free. Yeah, for free. It's so stupid.
I remember every match was like, one, no, no. No one was doing anything. And I was so drunk. So I just like, got all the mayonnaise and walk around. I'm like feeding, like, feeding everyone mayonnaise.
You have to eat it. It's so good. Never made the cut. It was just so weird. But you know it.
It was an experience that you'll have. Everyone there. Everyone now had a tummy full of mayonnaise. Yeah. And they will get to tell everyone.
Harry loves feeding people mayonnaise when he gets drunk. Yeah. Yeah. I'd like to pitch you a movie. Okay.
That's good. It's pretty earnest. I'm serious. I want you to do a three amigos reboot with Rob Ralphs and Dylan Ephron. Wow.
That would be cool. But they're really nice guys. So it's sweet. Yeah. So we're seeing Martin and Martin George.
And then you could be Chevy James. Perfect. Yeah. Yeah. I really love Dylan.
I have him at Rob. Maybe I have. I'm not sure. But Dylan is the best guy ever. I know.
He's so sweet. I know. What's going on? I love him more. Yeah.
Just the nicest. The most true like salt of the earth. It's like no surprise to the then he and Robert Irwin connected. Because it's again, another guy. You're just like sweet.
Is there a single bed? Or even just a bit of a bone? I don't think so. No bones. No bones.
They're made of mayonnaise.
It's it's just incredible.
Let's go. How do we get that? I've heard. Listen. Now that I've said it, I've got a manifesto for you.
I know you got to meet Tom Cruise during his mission impossible press. Wow. Was he your guy? Like who were your celebrities growing up? Justin Bieber always.
Okay. No. Yeah. He's he's just a cool guy. Yeah.
I don't cruise obviously. Wow. Like I think. And Brad Pitt. Oh.
Yeah. I know.
“I think it's like it's when you meet people like that.”
Like maybe different. But I was like, I don't know what to do with my hands. I got to know what to look like. I met Tom and I was like. We've got a mutual friend.
Right. And he was like. Okay. I was like I've done Pilates with Glenn Powell one time. And he was like.
He's done Pilates with Glenn. And then I'm like okay. Okay. Who did he say that to? She's like looked at the.
There was so many people and looked at the crowd. And I was like. Okay. I'm so sorry. I'm so sorry.
Mr. Cruz. I did a picture of you. Can we just think about it? Could you send me your cake? Yeah.
You're really cake. I want me on the cake list. Please. Yeah. What's the cake list?
Tom Cruise. Everybody who works with. He then the following year. Yes. sends them a cake.
Everyone. He remembers everybody's names. He sends them like a person. It's a Christmas gift. He sends them.
I think it's a sweet late. No. It's not a sweet lady Jane. It's a woodland Hills cake. Don's bakery.
It's famous. And people who get it now. It's like, you know, Hollywood lore. Oh, or you on the Tom Cruise list to get the cake. And now with social media, people who get them will open them up and cut into
them and take bites. I'm going to lie. I'm going to buy one from this place. Okay. Thanks.
Don't do it. Great. Perfect. What are you putting on the list? with Glenn Palo once, not sure how we got a cake.
- Yeah, that's it. I'm just gonna lie to that guy, thanks so much. - Thank you, I really appreciate it. - You gotta make, Mr. Possible, the next one, I'm in it, I'm in the lead.
(laughing) - I'm in the lead, yeah, I'm in the lead. - Not Tom, no. - No, Tom, yeah, I'm stepping in. I was replaced with that.
He sees the potential out of this one really awkward interview. Interaction. - Did you have any celebrity crushes growing up? - God, yeah.
“- Oh, I think obviously, Angel Angel Angel Lee.”
- I mean, come on. - Come on. - Who didn't have a crush on Angel Angel Angel Lee? - Yeah, Mr. Mrs. Smith, I think that was, I mean, I need a love for my chocolate shop.
(laughing) Did I go to reality, they need to. Maybe it's them too. They (beep) - That's, we can blame them.
- Yeah. - We can totally blame the two of them. - Yeah, Mr. Smith, if it wasn't for that, I wouldn't be on reality.
- You would never have been.
- Love life would've been perfect. (laughing) - Yeah, I think, yeah, it's literally, that's for you. (upbeat music) - I'm Clayton Nackard, and in 2022,
I was the lead of ABC's The Bachelor.
- Unfortunately, it didn't go according to plan.
He became the first bachelor
to ever have his final rose rejected. The internet turned on him. - If I could press a button and rewind it all I would. - But what happened to Clayton after the show? - It made even bigger headlines.
It began as a one night stand, and ended in a courtroom, with Clayton at the center of a very strange paternity scandal. - The media is here. This case has gone viral.
- The dating contract. - Agreed to date me, but I'm also suing you. - We're such smart. - This is unlike anything I've ever seen before. - I'm Stephanie Young.
This is Love Trapped. This season, an epic battle of he said she said, and the search for accountability in a sea of lies.
“- How you done nothing to get pregnant by the **** Brassler?”
- Listen to Love Trapped on the I-Heart Radio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. - Hi, this is Joe Interestine, host of the spare daughter podcast, where we talk about astrology, natal charts, and have a step into your most vibrant life.
- And I just sat down with a mini driver. The Irish traveler said when I was 16, you're going to have a terrible tie with men. (laughing) - After storyteller and unapologetic aquarium visionary.
Aquarius is all about freedom loving and different perspectives. And I find a lot of people with strong placements in Aquarius are misunderstood. A son and Venus in Aquarius in her seventh house,
spark her unconventional approach to partnership. He really has taught me to embrace people sleeping in different rooms of different houses in different places,
but just an embracing of the isness of it.
- If you're navigating your own transformation or just want a chart-side view
“into how a leading artist integrates astrology,”
creativity, and real life, this episode is a must listen. Listen to the spare daughter podcast, starting on February 24th on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcasts. - In the middle of the night,
Sasuke awoke in a haze. Her husband Mike was on his laptop. What was on his screen would change Sasuke's life forever. - I said I need you to tell me exactly what you're doing and immediately the mask came off.
- You're supposed to be safe. That's your home. That's your husband. So keep this secret for so many years. He's like a seasoned pro.
- This is a story about the end of a marriage, but it's also the story of one woman who was done living in the dark. - Your dangerous person who prays on a vulnerable and trusting people.
You're trying to make a love and good. - Listen to betrayal season five on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. - Next Monday, our 2026 I-Heart Podcast Awards are happening live in South by Southwest.
- We'll honor the very best in podcasting from the past year and celebrate the most innovative talent and creators in the industry. - And the winner is... - Creativity, knowledge and passion.
We'll all be on full display. - Thank you so much. I-Heart Radio. Thank you to all the other nominees. You guys are awesome.
- Watch live next Monday at APMEastern 5PM Pacific Free. - At feeps.com or the feeps app. - Aigo Wona is your host for the 2026 I-Heart Podcast Awards. Live at South by Southwest. - Hello, what's anybody there?
- Race by a single mom. Aigo may have a few father-related issues. - Are we supposed to talk about your dad? - Her podcast, thanks dad, is full of funny, heartfelt conversations with actors,
including fellow Estinella Lums, comedians, musicians, and more. About life and their wonderfully complicated relationships with their fathers. - I think and hope that's a good thing. - Get to know Aigo.
- Follow thanks dad with Aigo Wona and start listening on the free I-Heart Radio app today. (upbeat music) - Do you have any cool young suggestions for me? Before we started this podcast,
we talked about your pants that are dirty on purpose. You paid extra money for this dirt. That could be something. What could I do as a mid 40s, mom of two? - What could I do to be cooler?
- You didn't strike me in someone who's dirty. - Thank you. - Let's cut out the dirty pants. - You didn't need to do that.
“- I think your question, you've got a podcast.”
- Yeah, it's very cool. - The coolest thing you could have ever done. - Okay, I thought we love hearts. - And we love them. - I know how to do the young gen Z version of it, isn't it?
- It's hard.
You can do it with all of them.
- Remember this? - I don't think that's right. - I think.
“- Yeah, I think it's something with the pinkies.”
- This one. - Am I getting old? What's good? - Yeah, exactly what? - But I'm matching it with you.
- Oh, we do together, see? - Am I? Did I just age myself? How do you stuff? - I'm so happy you're old.
- Yeah, I am. I'm the oldest person in life. I don't know, I feel like health and wellness is really in two, so. - Okay.
- Heptides. - Oh. What do you say? - B-157.
- I'm thinking the glimax.
- I don't know. - Do you know how to do this one? - No. - The glimax and N-A-D. So glimax.
- I know about all about N-A-D. I had N-A-D shot not that long ago and it bruised the back of my arm. - Okay, the gym in a day? - No, I do need to feel it.
“But I don't, I think I bruised like a peach.”
- No, you do. - Yeah. - It's nice and sensitive. - It's sweet. - Just a little, you know.
- Yeah, you are. - I think the glimax is GHKCU and M-P-P-157. - And it's something else, but it's time to be really good at good for your skin. - Yes. - I just want people to know, not that I'm anti-your health and wellness thing.
But for people who I had cancer in 2024 and peptides, one of the reasons they're so good for your skin is that they promote cell turnover. One of the things you don't want if you have cancer is those cells to turn over and multiply. - I had three times.
- You had what three times? - Skin cancer. - Okay. - So, what I'm saying is peptides right now are kind of all the rage, but they're not for everyone. So, worth possibly talking to your dermatologist to say, is there potential for my skin cancer
cells to be regenerating? - I love lying to her. - You just love... - Yeah, you know, I lied to my therapist, I don't like to my oncologist. [laughter]
- Okay. - You know what? - Pick and choose the doctors you lied to, friend. - Okay, it's a good boy. [laughter]
- You don't even have to tell me the name, it would just, what's the oldest person you've ever had slide into your DMs? - Oh.
“- Oh, I don't know, I was like, hey, 70s, 80s, I think?”
- I forgets you. - Well, that's what this thought is, it's got the average, the average audience to age is 60. - I believe. - Maybe it's changed now. But when I was on the show, there was 60, and after that, I had some, some freaky
older ladies. - Hmm, in your DM. - What are you going to say, you're a sausage, you know? - Me? [laughter]
- I was going to say apple pie, but I don't know why I said it, freaky, you know, I've just shut up. - I am about ready to wrap up my ballroom career with a few final dates on the Dancing with the Stars Live Tour, and you competed, and also hit the road, did you have this much fun on the show as I have been having, which is, it measures all amounts of fun in case
you were. - You haven't had the best time on it? - That time of my life. - I wanted to die. - Did you?
- No, it was the best experience ever. - Okay. - So rewarding and amazing.
I just never danced in my life.
- Same. - And I'm like, "Well, you're a little and easy to move, no?" - Yeah, I can do. - Can you just swing me with me? - I'm good.
- Yeah. - I'm a tree. And one of the judges, like one of the extra judges one day, he was like, "Oh, you're, if you're a tree trunk, you don't know what's going on." - And like, out, I was like, "I'm trying."
- Right. - Second off, you're correct. So when I was on tour, I came out as a tree, and it was really fun. But no, I had the best time, everyone was really lovely, and then they weren't. - Yeah.
Because you know, cool with the next season comes around, say everyone's up talking to you. - Well, yeah. I mean, also, you know what that schedule is like when the next season comes around. - Oh, they locked in. - Boy, you have no time for anything.
I was a little surprised by how much of my life it absorbed. - Yeah, you deletes every plan and everything that you have, yeah, the next season came around the show. And I realized a lot of the people were not text me back or I'm following me, and actually the biggest thing that upsets me the most, biggest thing that upsets me the most is when
my dad had passed, no one text me. And I was really close to them, no one had texted me apart from Sasha. And I was like, "Okay." - That's Sasha. - So I was like, "Oh, I don't know if you guys are really my friends or it was horrible."
- Right. That was a very telling moment for you. - Yeah, and also, I think that hardest thing was like, I was trying my best with all the noise and everything, but I just think I'm kind of glad that I'm not friends with any of them.
- Mm-hmm. - Because of when my dad had passed, that was like, I was like, "There's one of them, I was trying to do the gym with them every day, and I'm like, "Oh, and I told him that my dad was sick." And there was a lot of them.
And I knew that they knew that time was gone. And I think that was the thing that (beep) was like, "Oh, okay." - There's no denying he knew, right? - Yeah, no denying that, and you could have texted or anything like that. But when I posted the photo, like, in my dad's passed, they just like it.
I'm like, "I would have moved mountains.
Like, if it was you, I would have been there.
“So I think that's why I'm like, "I'm kind of glad that that chapter."”
- It's behind you. - Yeah. I don't know if you really real people, but it's all good because I think when you're in that show and I've spoken to other people that want to show, it's just such a bubble. And you see, it's such a bubble and nothing else matters.
And I think like when you're a dancer and you're on that show, that's like you made the NFL. - Yeah. - 'Cause like a lot of that other pros that like leave the show, they're kind of like, they're outcasts and everybody talks about them.
So, do it weird, anyway. I'm probably gonna get trouble with that, but... - No. - Okay.
- You've mentioned a couple of times about your dad passing, so obviously something
that still deeply affects you and you were close to your dad. You've had great stories in this podcast that you got to do. Do you want to talk a little more about your dad? Is there anything in particular you want to say? - Oh, I just, like, grief is so fun and I love thinking about my dad.
I love getting an opportunity to talk about, like, last one, like, last love ones. Because that was the hardest thing I've ever experienced is watching him take his last breath. But that was such a beautiful thing to be a part of.
“And I think you learn a lot about your environment and your people and who really cares.”
And who's really there when you're going through something. So humanizing and something so like traumatic. I'm just, like, I was just so grateful that I was there to be there and experience that. But, like, there's so much drama around that too, like, family is so silly and sassy. - Yes.
- And like, there's no, it was, like, kind of funny. - Yeah. - How can you get, when someone goes, but I just love... Yeah, I just, I love being able to talk about him because he's, he's my whole personality. You know, like, my dad was, we were going to grown up.
He's the biggest, like, in front of mom. He's flirting with the waitress. He's teaching me how to tip.
I remember we would be, first time I ever tip because tipping is not a thing in Australia.
- Okay. - But if someone's really good, my dad would be, like, he's some cash. You go to shake their hand and you go to cash. - Oh. - And I'm like, okay, that's cool.
Because like, you don't want the other people to see it because then they'll think that they get some. I'm like, okay. It's like, only the good one. - Only the good one. - Yeah, yeah, but I love, like, I just love thinking about that stuff.
Because it's all fleeting, right? And I guess that's when my journey with religion is going now because I remember seeing that with him, because he went through with this, this is the dying. And that was the scariest thing, but the most beautiful thing on the planet because you get to know that he's, this is the, like, he gets to choose.
And you get to be there, you spend every day with him, and that was really cool. But wow. - Wow. - Yeah, I was just like, obviously every relationship and every relationship with your parents is up and down, and there are so many, like, two or three years right in total because he struggled
with alcohol. - Mm-hmm. - And we had just a very rocky relationship. But as, as anyone does, like, no, no relationship. - Absolutely.
- But I, I just, I'm so grateful that we got to, we got to know and I got to look back and just all those hard days and all the happy days, just be grateful because it's my dad. - Yeah.
“It's really nice that you were there, too, for those, those last moments I really think”
are like, just one of the, like, points of life. - Yeah. It's so, like, it's so, well, I remember Alex Warren was talking about it when his parents had passed that, like, he was in the hospital and his whole world is just, like, flipped on his head.
And it's the hardest thing he's ever gone through. And he walks outside, and- - The world is, is he all just moving? - Yeah, people are driving past, no one cares. And that's where I felt like, I remember, because he had a drink and he went to sleep. Anyway, I was like, oh, because my sister, Sarah, she said, "Hold his feet.
You'll get a little magic powers." When he goes over, some sitting there holding his feet and it takes his last breath. And my bow was like, "Wow, this is really (beep) up." This is the hardest thing I ever thought. I can't be in this room.
So I went outside and went and cried in a bush and I'm like, "Look, I'm like, no one. No one cares about what just (beep) happened." I'm like, this is- - It's a very isolating, flowing. - Yeah. - But then I, this, yeah, it's same thing, like I just, look at older people that reach out,
like there was friends that, like, I'll fight in New Zealand right now. - Yeah. - I was like, "Oh, I'll literally do anything that you need or I'll be there, whatever else." And then there was a lot of friends that didn't, couldn't even text or call what it was. And it's not like I needed it.
Like, "I'm good and I had my sisters." But God, it's nice to just know who's there because that's not funny. It's like, "Well, but I was gonna say about their text, but..."
- You can let that slide.
- Yeah.
- You can let that one go.
- Yeah. - Yeah, no, I agree with you. - Grief and death, though, does everybody responds very differently. Some people really like, "I don't know what to say and that not knowing what to say, paralyzes you and certainly there are other people who are just assholes and are just, like,
gonna be callous and not care." But also for other people, it can, I don't know what to say. I don't want to, do I call, and if I call am I interrupting, and I, you know, everyone, they can make people wear it.
“- And death is so scary, and I think the only thing, because now I guess the spokesperson for”
Dead Dead Club with all my friends, so I've had a few friends now who have lost parents. And my best advice to anyone, if they have a friend that's lost someone or whatever else, is just them knowing that you're there is super important. So, like, the greatest thing, the greatest gift that I let was that, I don't want people
calling me all the time, I don't want to, I want to, on a good day, like if someone's blowing
my phone up, it's horrible, but on those moments, if you text your friend like, "Hey, I'm gonna about you." - I'm gonna about you. - What do you need them here? - Love you so much.
- Like, that, wow, if I had that from half the people that I'm angry at, I would have been in a different story, and I still would have tried to help. - Yeah. - Yeah, so anyway. - Thank you for sharing all of this with me, that was very special.
So let's talk very briefly about, let's marry Harry, executive produced by Alex Cooper for Netflix, outside of assuming you just picked Sia at the end, we don't know anything about it, what can you tell us? - So Sia does get picked at the end. - Surprise!
- Surprise! - No, you know what's funny is, she texted me, and she went by and we say this. She takes me, she goes, "If they're all done, Harry just let me know, I'll come save the day." She's awesome, she's so funny, we have such a good relationship.
She's like, "Just let me know if you know I have a good time and I'll come save the day." Okay, cool, but it is, that was one of the hardest things I've ever done, a lot of stuff for my dad, it's going to be in there. - Okay. - It was really like, I guess, vulnerable and it opens me up more than I've ever been
“open up on a show before, and I think also it's different this time because I have to”
be anyone but myself. - Yeah. - I don't have to compete with the other guys for screen time or I don't have to hide stuff in people's rooms, but there's obviously a lot of drama, way to my drama, a lot of sleepless nights.
I'm pretty pretty chaotic show, amazing cast, like the most beautiful cast on the planet,
ever to exist, most of the incredible stories, most incredible people, and I just think that it's going to be such a wild ride for everyone to come on. - There's a lot of cringe moments of show that I've done, and a lot of embarrassing things that I've done. - Yes, yeah, I'll say I'm going to be watching through my fingers.
- Now that you're at this phase of life where you are ready to settle down, do you hate watching old reality clips of Young F. Boy Harry? - I'm to it. - It's nice to look back at me like, "Oh, I don't want to be like that anymore." - Right.
- But also, like my whole dating life has been on TV since I was 19. - Yeah. - So there's a lot of, a lot of silly decisions. - Of course. But yeah, now I'm glad it's wrapped up.
- Okay. - Good. - When you get Harry Jowsey, you don't just let him leave that easy. He's going to stick around for a bonus episode where we will listen to one of your voicemails. It'll premiere this Friday on the dedicated team beat feed, just search team beat wherever
you get your podcasts. That way, every new episode just shows up when they're released. Plus, I want you to share your own tales of childhood cringe with the podcast. Court of Voice memo, recalling the most embarrassing story from your teens, and then email it to [email protected], and the next thing you know, Harry Jowsey will be commenting
on it. It's that easy. - Teenbeet is an eye-heart podcast produced and hosted by Daniel Fischel, executive producers, Jensen Carp and Amy Sugarman, executive and charge of production, Daniel Romo, producer and editor Tara Sue Box.
The theme song is by Mark Hoppiss. - Yes. That. Mark Hoppiss. - I'm Clayton Nekord, and 2022, I was the lead of ABC's The Bachelor.
“- But here's the thing, Bachelor fans hated him.”
- If I could press a button and rewind it all, I would. - That's when his life took a disturbing turn. A one-night stand would end in a courtroom. - The media is here. This case has gone viral.
- The dating contract.
- Agreed to date me, but I'm also suing you.
- This is unlike anything I've ever seen before.
- I'm Stephanie Young. Listen to love trapped on the I-Hart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. - Hi. It's Show Interesting, host of the Spirit Jotter Podcast. Or we talk about astrology, natal charts, and how to step into your most vibrant life.
And today, I'm talking with my dear friend, Crystal Williams.
“- It can change you in the best way possible.”
Dance with the change, dance with the breakdowns, the embodiment of Pisces in tuition,
with Capricorn power moves. - You're so I'm like delusionally proud of my chart. Listen to the Spirit Jotter Podcast, starting on February 24th. On the I-Hart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcasts. - Next Monday, our 2026 I-Hart Podcast Awards are happening live in South by Southwest.
- Since the biggest night in Pisces, we'll honor the very best in podcasting from the past year,
“and celebrate the most innovative talent and creators in the industry.”
- And the winner is...
- Creativity, knowledge, and passion will all be on full display.
- Thank you so much, I-Hart Radio. Thank you to all the other nominees, you guys are awesome. - Watch live next Monday at 8pm Eastern 5pm Pacific Free at feeps.com, or the Veeps app. - I'm Nancy Glass, host of the Bergen of Guild Season 2 podcast. This is a story about a horrendous lie that destroyed two families.
“Late one night, Bobby Gumpride became the victim of a random crime.”
The perpetrator was sentenced to 99 years until a confession changed everything. - I was a monster. - Listen to Bergen of Guild Season 2 on the I-Hart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. - Ango Wona is your host for the 2026 I-Hart Podcast Awards.
Live at South by Southwest. - Hello, is anybody there? - Race by a single mom. - Ango may have a few father-related issues. - Are we supposed to talk about your dad?
- Her podcast, thanks dad, is full of funny, heart-felt conversations with actors, including fellow SNL alums, comedians, musicians, and more, about life, and they're wonderfully complicated relationships with their fathers. - I think and hope that's a good thing. Get to know Ango, follow thanks dad with Ango Wona,
and start listening on the free I-Hart Radio app today. - This is an I-Hart Podcast. Guaranteed Human.



