SmartLess
SmartLess

"Amy Adams"

2h ago57:2312,199 words
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Harmonize to a deep cut from the Indigo Girls: it’s Amy Adams. Telepathy, Army Dads, emergency medical responses, and cracking the code of neutrality. Call us from the White House bathroom… it’s a spa...

Transcript

EN

(upbeat music)

- And three, two, one. - Cold open. - It's podcast time, everybody. - Mm-hmm. - Welcome.

Welcome, your live on podcast time. We're cold opening. - Yeah, we're ready. - We're getting ready to do our little show. I hope you stick around for that instead of just this.

- Yeah, you get ready to the list and we'll get ready to talk. Ready, set, go. Welcome to Sparrowless. (upbeat music)

- Sparrowless. (upbeat music) (sighs) - I'm going full tilt this morning. It's a smart list.

It's one of our OG original ones. - Sparrowless. You're like your cool dad this morning. - Did I tell you I was still the other day?

I've never wanted to out of the house, obviously,

for everyone. - Okay, so you know what people do know that? - Well, also, it's got our faces on the back. - Yeah, you know what I'm like. - So, you know what I'm like.

I want to be like, hey, Johnny wearing his merch. So, the other day wearing the house, went to do my little walk that you guys know, and forgot that I had it on. And then my shirt, and I had to wear it to go

and I went to Whole Foods. And I realized as I was getting out of the car, did you have to wear it? Because if you took it off, you'd be just in a swaying. - Well, I'd taken my t-shirt off

because it was gone. It was so soaked in sweats, I worked out so hard 'cause if you want, let me walk you through the workout. - Well, 'cause you're in the heavy hands,

you strap on the heavy hands and the heavy ankles, right?

- Yeah, the velcro. - And I got the big visor that comes down in front and then I got the look. No, 'cause I'm wearing the weight vest as we know. - So, you're shirtless with a hoodie on.

- So, anyway, shirtless with a hoodie on, and then I'm in line. - Smartless hoodie on, Ian. - Smartless hoodie. - And I'm in Whole Foods.

- And I'm just trying to do it in somebody you niche. - No, I got a guy, forget the news name.

He's always does like, getty images photos at events,

and he's like, and I just hear it. I was like, well, looks like somebody's got will-earned on the backwards. - That's right. - And I go, like, luckily, we all kind of know,

I forget his name's a nice guy and I was like, "Oh shit, at which point?" And then I go, "I do a self-checkout." And this girl taps me on the shoulder and like, "Are you will up the show?"

- Yeah, and I'm like, "Really being fed out?" - And I literally said, "Tow it." - And I said to the stranger and I said to the stranger, "Oh, I was so embarrassed I go." By the way, I never normally would wear this,

but I, yeah. (laughing) - And I just ran to my car, I was like, "Hey, what a tool." - It is, it is a deeper sweat, and then I hope you were walked out of your car,

I had a call trip away on the side of the street. (laughing) - Oh, we're, I'll wear a smart list. - We know. - We know.

- We know. - We know to the gym, to the gym, I don't know. - Sure. - Or anyone. - But nobody cares.

- Nobody's done. - It was, it was so humiliating, tapped on this shoulder. (laughing) - I love you so much. - Yeah, this is where you will learn that.

- Yeah, how's your merch going? - Wait, what's that new tag for Reese's?

Where you're using the Reese's name for a different word?

Like it's all, it's all, instead of like, it's all reality, it's all Reese's or something like that. - I don't know, it was, I was in class with it. - This week. - Yeah, everybody, everybody loves the Reese's?

- No, and something like that. - That's how it, that was exciting. - You were expecting more from me. - I apologize, I'm picking my teeth a little bit. What's the, what's the, what's the,

- Don't start now. - What's the protocol? - Yeah, the politeness thing. You guys aren't both real deep on manners, but I wouldn't mind pulling it.

- Much more than you are. - I don't know about that. - What about, I don't talk about potty stuff, I don't, I don't pick my teeth, I don't eat it. - And you don't, you don't fart, you don't fart either.

You don't have to give ever fart in front of me. - Well, it's disgusting, who wants to hear, what are you talking about, man? - Oh, it's listen, that's just, it's just a dude shit, you know, bro?

- Not just like you would burp, I mean, Sean and I love our power verbs. - Sean, I think you're not, you're not, I've definitely farted in front of you, Sean, I think you've definitely farted on me.

- Yeah, you farted in front of me before. - I have, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. - But Willie doesn't, he doesn't. So then Willie, you don't, you don't, did you ever poo in front of Amy?

(laughing) - Are you looking for clicks? - No, I'm just saying it. - Are you trying to get something that we can do?

- Right, right, I'm always forget people.

Let's do this. (laughing) - Wait, but, hang on, you were married to her, I had two kids, you guys never went to the bathroom in front of me.

- I'm sorry, the question is, did I poo in front of Amy?

- And you're saying that I don't have manners? What are you talking about? - I think it's a good question. - I think it's a good question. - And refused to answer it.

- It's a cute question. - I refuse to answer that. - Did you poop pee? - He's WP. - Yeah, yeah.

- All right, I know we have a very respectful answer. - Well, let me ask you, we do a way to make it. - We do a way to make it. - We can't be outraged by this by the way. - Wait a minute, but wait a minute,

do you poo in front of Amanda? - I mean, we don't use the same potty, but potty, got it. - If she needed to come in and ask me something important,

She could, and would.

I don't know if I would do that to her,

although to hear her, she doesn't poo, never has.

- Right, no, no, no.

- I'm amazing, but yeah, I spoke to her this morning.

She said, please tell him that I'm jealous that we get to see your face and she didn't this morning. - Oh, that's your, it's coming up on three weeks. - When are you back? - We saw this weekend.

I talked to her yesterday, and I saw her Saturday night, and we saw her Saturday night. I've been spending a lot of time with her. Well, let me say this, let me say this, when you get home, she is worn out.

- She's giving her a break. - I love, can I just say all bits aside, how much I do love your wife Amanda? - Oh my God, she's all of me. - She's on the phone with her this morning.

- She's the fucking greatest. She's such a good friend. She's so thoughtful and kind and sweet. - Always available. - Yeah, she's amazing, and I like her too.

- Pretty much. - She's so good, she's so so good.

Tell you's good, it's always real good.

And classy, and you're gonna feel badly about all this disgusting body type. - Oh, tell me, she's not an award winner issue. - Oh, well, okay, well, tell me if this means a lot. 10 Golden Globe nominations and two wins.

- Wow. - Seven Baffton nominations. - Oh, it's gonna say to shave a British shoe. - Two Emmy Nums, 10 Segs, nominations and two wins. - Five Academy Award nominations.

- Wow, okay. - Five Academy Award nominations. Do you like films like Junebug? Do you like films like Night of the Museum?

Do you enjoy a, do you like the master, the Muppets?

On the right, a rival Sean. - Oh, my God, I'm not even better. - I'm not even better. - I'm not even better. - She's fine with the crew's talk.

Get her out of here. - Hi. - Oh my God. - I entered on this conversation. - I'm so embarrassed, Amy, I'm sorry.

- No, we know each other a little. - I know you're good with the Poo-Tah. - I'm fine with Poo-Tah. - Absolutely. And I also love Amanda, so.

- Yes, yes. - Exactly. - Oh, my God. - I'm so happy to be here. - Yes, I'm very glad to get to participate

in this conversation. - Well, jump in if you want. - Amy, well, let's do it. - Here's our new intro for that pretend that never happened.

- No, we'll get this. - Is it Amy? - Oh, hi, guys. - Anywhere we're finding you today,

by the way, I'm really liking your background.

- Los Angeles, in my kitchen. - Okay, in your kitchen, you look so nice. - Yeah. - And I'm gonna let Will drive this, but I'm dying to get fucked out.

- Don't worry, he won't. - And arrival. - Because those are two of my favorite films ever. And I've seen arrival probably no joke, probably like 10, 12 times.

- It's so good. - And I can't tell you how many times we've had other people on who have no connection to arrival and in China being. Have you seen arrival?

- Yeah. - But that script is one of, you know, not since like, you know, the sixth sense or something, have you read a script or seen a script or seen a movie, whatever.

That has an ending that just completely blows your mind. I mean, the fact that all the flashbacks were actually flash forwards is so... - Spoiler alert.

- You've never seen anything like,

like when you read it, where you like, wait a minute, what, like... - Yeah, I mean, I was reading it sort of thinking it was told in like a traditional timeline. So I still loved it.

But then when I got to the end, I was like, "Oh, no, I gotta go back and reread it." And I understand it. - Right, you'll miss it to watch the movie again. - Yeah, it was so crazy to shoot it

'cause I had to perform it as if it were, like it was I had to live in those in that duality of like letting the audience think that it was flashbacks. But then on a rewatch, understanding that it was a flash forward. So that was a lot of fun.

- Yeah, it's fun with it. - So smart, yeah, that's so smart. - Yeah, Denise, amazing. - He's so good. - He's so good. And he's lovely, it's like the nicest.

- He was on the podcast, yeah. - Well, it wasn't just like so humble and funny and you're like, yeah. - Can you imagine he had to deal with Sean that old, the whole podcast?

It was like, oh my gosh, I was like everything's flat. - And then you did the, and then you like, and like, dude, yeah, and then I was the idiot over here calling him Denny the whole time, which is Denny.

- I called him Dennis Villanova, so there you go. - Villanova, oh, not to him, I joke to him because it's that's kind of how it's spelled in sort of the Colorado pronunciation. - But I was gonna say, Colorado, by way of,

so I didn't know this, that you were born in Italy. - I was born in Italy, which part? - Dad was in the army. My dad was stationed in Vichenza and Aviano Air Force Base in Vichenza Army Base.

So I was born in that region, which is kind of in between

Florence and Venice.

- Scotty, my husband, Scotty, he's in army bread too. He was born in Okinawa, Japan. - Oh wow. - Yes, you guys are like born all over the world. - Exactly, my husband was born in Ramstein, Germany.

- Oh wow. - Oh wow. - Also, also, also, also I'm Air Force, yeah. - Also Air Force. - Yeah, his dad was Air Force, so.

- Oh wow. - Oh, that's cool.

- How does it work then to get an American passport?

He has to, like, sort of, when you come to this country, then what goes on there?

- Oh, her parents are amazing.

- Is your parents are amazing. - Yeah, you're naturalized. - Because you're born in a Bay and American Base. - Exactly. - Yeah.

- Can you, could you run for president? - I think I'm, I don't think that's in my interest. But I think technically, by the way, all the rules are after window on that planet. (laughing)

Are there any rules for that anymore? - I think I'd be, I'd be great. - I bet you'd be very good. I bet you'd be very good. - I'd vote for you.

- There'd be a lot of singing in the White House. That's for sure. (laughing) - That would be lovely. So, your born overseas to Air Force Dad,

and he moved around a, oh, sorry. - My husband has an Air Force Dad. Sorry, I'm not that particular, but just in case he is, I wanna. - Yeah, yeah, of course, of course, okay.

So, Army Dad, and then you end up basically settling

in Colorado, which you mentioned, yeah. And then, where did the sort of the interest come from to, you know, for performing? Because you're not just a great performer who does it at the highest level.

You're also prolific. You've done so much. And so it seems like, where does that come from? Was your mom into that, or was your dad into that?

Was it really curging? - My dad was a performer. He played, he had a band and sang, and he ended up being sort of like a one-man band in he played in bars.

And so we'd go watch him in bars. - Wait, wait, wait, wait. - We're symbols tied to the tights of the leg. - It wasn't quite a different type, very popular. - I got it.

- I got it. - I love it. - No, he had like all these synths, and he would like push-bounds for, hey, yeah. - Whoa, bang your knees together.

- In bars, yeah. - Yeah, pizza jewelry. It's just rocking around. Flapping his wings. - No, love, they just, they just turned them loose

for someone's birthday. - Exactly. (laughing) - I actually wish that I didn't get it. - I don't think that's right.

- That's so good.

- No, he would pay, there's a foot synthesizer, right?

So, I don't know if you guys've ever seen those. - Yeah. - So he would wear fancy socks and play the foot synthesizer. - Oh, man. - Kind of like big, like the movie big.

- No, it's, it's not like that. It's literally looks sort of like, I guess this is what came to mind. You know, in Goonies, that big piano. - Yeah.

- Oh, with the skeleton. - It's like that, but like a black, blacker. I don't know. I guess the best way. That's the visualization.

- It's kind of like the bottom path of an organ. Like when they push the keys. - Yeah, exactly. So he pushes on these pedals with his feet. - You say that.

- You say that. - Yeah, yeah. - It's kind of cute. - It's kind of cute for that. - I like, it's kind of like the Goonies.

- Sounds like imaginative. They made big and Goonies and Goonies and Goonies. Like imaginative. (laughing) - The evil love made like Goonies and big.

- And the person who's backing it is watching a rival. (laughing) - Wait, so Amy, this doesn't sound like an irony. - It's like, I'm just like returned to the Goon Docs. All of the sudden, you guys are writing a script.

- Right? - It's so cute. - Yeah, it doesn't mean you're right. Jason's right. It doesn't sound like a regular army dad.

- He can also clean a weapon, too. I mean, this guy's multi-talented. We're saying, you're painting a great dynamic picture. - Absolutely. - Yeah.

- But mostly, mostly, played music, so. - Wow, so then that's where you got your, so then did singing and dancing precede acting? - Yes, yeah. - Yeah.

- Absolutely, I never thought I was gonna be an actress.

I was, I was such a musical theater kid. And mostly trained in ballet, but like I was so shy and I had paralyzing stage fright, still do, but I make myself do it anyway. And every time I'm like, why do I do this to my house?

- Yeah, it's torture. - It's what is in stage fright more acute on a stage doing singing, dancing, spotlight, microphone, and the whole anywhere. (laughs)

- Isn't the fright more intense there than in front of a camera or no? - Yes, oh yeah. I mean, I still get nervous in front of a camera, but it's such an intimate thing

and you have one person you can focus on. - And you can screw up. - You can screw up, exactly. - Yeah, and in just doing again. Now, this is reminding me because I was doing a project,

this is many, many, many, many years ago. - Oh, which project was the last one? - Which project? - We can't say it really really. - I can't say, and it's our whole plot. - And the producers were like,

you should reach out to Amy Adams for this project.

And I was like, well, I don't know. Amy Adams, I'm a big fan, but I don't know. No, just do what she knows you're gonna call. So I called you, I don't know if you remember this.

I called you and you picked up and you go, "Hello.

And I go, "Hi, Amy, it's Sean Hayes."

Oh, I'm in the White House right now in the bathroom, can I call you back? You remember this? - I was at the White House for Julie and Julia. - Oh, my God, and that's when I was like,

wait, the time I call you, you're in the bathroom at the White House. - Yes, I was in the bathroom at the White House. - That is crazy. - It's how clean it is.

- So that was last time, you know. - So that was last time you talked to her? - Yeah, that was last time it had Amy. - Have you been since? (laughing)

- No, just taking that out. - Wait, wait, so if you haven't again. - But what I wanna know, oh, yeah, we're gonna get into it. But what I wanna know is, you didn't think you would have a career as an actor.

So in your dad's doing all these playing the one made band in the bars and stuff. How do you go from that to what's the first,

what's your first acting gig and how did that happen?

From Colorado. - Well, I started dancing. That was sort of my way into performing, which was good 'cause I could be with like a group of people. For me, it's very much about a singular focus.

So like, always being in the chorus was really fun.

'Cause you got to feed off of everybody else and just become a part of a group, you know. And I love that. So yeah, I got into dancing which led me after high school.

I was gonna say the reason I got into all of it is because I was bad at math 'cause I wanted to be a doctor. - Oh, I was like, really? - What kind of doctor?

- Still wish I could have been a doctor. I think I wanted to work in emergency medicine. I'm really good in a crisis, yeah. - Really? - Yeah, yeah.

- And you'd be okay with like blood and gore and somebody in a lot of pain and trauma you'd be okay with? - Yeah, yeah, I really, I wanna like, I have this fantasy that when I retire from acting, I'm gonna be one of the seniors

that fall into yours down at Seeders.

- I was like, I kind of have the same thing.

I kinda wanna, yeah, like I wanna just go,

like help people out, like what's going on?

- What are you gonna be there anyways? So you might as well. - You've got your own parking spot, yeah. It's a hot-skippin' jump. Wait, that's so interesting, are you good?

So some people are like flight instead of flight during emergencies, right? They're like, I can't deal with this in a runaway. Whereas like, there's this one time when I was driving home from a taping of willing grace.

And a guy was lying in the middle of the street. - This is a sitcom. So funny. So many me-- - I thought there's nothing.

- They don't make them normal. - They don't like that. Now with the lives of this one, things this and the other one, things this and the other one, things this and the other, means I understand.

(laughing) - They have a misunderstanding. - The one-door shots, the other one, don't think those those are my bad. - Everybody's gay.

- I do. (laughing) - Sorry Amy. Sorry. - I love it.

- I love it. - You guys are great. I'm like sometimes way too earnest, so I appreciate you guys bringing humor in. - We're not.

- We should learn from you, is that right? - No, so I was driving home from one of the tapings. And there's this guy lying in the middle of the street. I was like, what? And the two cars ahead of me were just driving around him.

I was like, what this guy's lying in the middle street?

- That was me and well. (laughing) - I'm on the gas, yeah, smart, just missed his head. And so I pull over as somebody would do. And then just as I open the door to my car,

I'm like, oh, is this one of those things this set up where I get out? I help the guy and then somebody takes my car, or whatever, or, you know, jumps me, or whatever it is. So,

(laughing) (laughing) - Oh, I love to see you get taken over by that guy. - And he would rather do the tiding behind the mailbox. And then just taking your car and your clothes.

- By the way, and then just leaving you. (laughing) - Then tying you up and then not understanding how much you're enjoying it. (laughing) - And I'm just going, no, stop. - No, you don't want these gloves. (laughing)

- What these? (laughing) (laughing) - You don't wait. - What? (laughing) - Am I gonna get a home naked?

(laughing) - You'll figure it out. (laughing) - It's amazing. - All right, so, oh my God.

- So you went up lying in the middle of the road so somebody pulls over for you. (laughing) - It's a cycle. (laughing) - It's now you need to ride.

(laughing) - Sorry. - I'm gonna get off. - Oh, by the way. - So sorry. (laughing) - You need to keep going, love it.

- You kidding me. - It was only two blocks, so long, too. - Yeah. (laughing) - God. - We'll be right back.

- And now, back to the show. - All right, so, you're about to get out of the car.

You think it might be a thing.

- You're saying, but then I was like,

the guy, it's really, really, really pain. God, this is a long way to go. - Yeah. - Get to the question. But I, so I get out, and the guy just got shot. The guy was shot.

- Oh, oh no. - I did take off my shirt and I put, I didn't know what I was doing back to your point. Like, emergencies, like, you know, fight or flight. So I was like, I ain't how I'm gonna do this.

So nobody was around. And so I took my shirt off. - I put it on the bullet wound on his stomach. - And it was going on over for some pressure. - Not to any other.

- Yeah, yeah. - Yeah. - I'm gonna make shit turning around. And so I, pulling on, and I'm dialing on 911 on my phone. Meanwhile, other people have heard it

and now are starting to coming out of their houses, right?

And so they already called too. - And then you started to feel self-conscious about being topless? - A little bit. - A little bit.

- A little bit. - Were you actually topless? - I was, you sure? - Yeah. - And so I'm not everyone wears a undershirt granddad.

- Yeah, go ahead, go ahead, go ahead, go ahead. - And so, yeah, so the guy, I don't know that's,

so finally, the ambulance came and everything.

And he lived and he was okay and everything was fine. He, he got the helping needed. And, but, but like, of course the ambulance guy was like, are you shining? - No.

- With my hand on his stomach. I was like, yeah. But anyway, the point is... - Yeah, still top, so the, and the way he changed numbers? - No kidding.

- Then, but the point is, yes, emergencies, I tacked them. I don't run for them usually. - Yeah, I get very focused. Like everything becomes very focused in an emergency. - I'm sorry, was that whole story about the time

that you saved the dude's life? - Yeah, yeah. - Yeah, because most of the people who run,

he runs into a fire instead of away from him.

- Yeah, yeah, for sure. - Yeah, I've come across a couple of scenes where we've been sort of the first people on the scene. - Oh, really? - Yeah, yeah.

- Care to share. - Like, where? Like, we were in Santa Monica and coming out of our favorite restaurant. And I was just my dad and my dad is also very much like that,

thankfully. And these people were screaming in a guy was walking and they were yelling, he's dying. And my husband's like, that's blood and anything. I was like, Darren, you stay here with our daughter.

We ran over and he'd been stabbed in the neck. - Oh gosh. - Yeah, so he was bleeding and his friends were freaking out. So luckily we were going to the beach, we grabbed towels. My dad has been on lots of scenes.

I guess he attracts them as well and applied pressure. And I'm sitting there somehow going, you need to calm your pulse rate. Take a deep breath. (laughing)

- Wow. - And it was just so focused. I was like, the more you struggle, the faster you're going to bleed, just lay down. Let's elevate this.

We were like, just, and yeah. And then I ran into him a year later, a guy walks up to me in the restaurant.

He's like, I heard a story that you and your dad

were on the scene of a guy getting stabbed. And I was like, yeah, yeah, that's so funny. You heard that story. And he went like that. - Oh, I was so happy.

- And I was like, oh my God, it's you. - And it was him, no one. - Yeah, it was him. And he was like, all teary and he had a son with him. - Wow.

- Yeah. It was so crazy. - Did he tell you what the situation was under which the reason that he got stabbed? - I mean, as far as I could make out,

it was they had run into an old college friend and had some drinks and then went to the liquor store. They were going to go back to someone's house and he just freaked out. But I don't know kind of what the whole story is.

- Wow, wow, wow. - That's crazy. - Yeah, what have been great if you and your dad started singing in a little song to calm him down.

- Oh yeah, like a one million.

- Yeah, yeah. - So we had like a little pocket pocket thrombone and something. - Yeah. - You imagine I just started singing like chisel.

- Well, you're dead, but if you're dancing. - I'm like, stay away, stay away, stay away. - That's our calming, you know? - That is calming. - You're starting singing Mary Poppins.

- That would have been nice. - Wow, you really would have been great in an emergency room. - I'm not that smart, but I'm that focused. - You're not smarter than we are.

So I don't think so. - Have you ever played a medical person? - You know, I did in a Dr. Vegas. I played Rob Lowe's... - Wait a second, I need to see this.

- Yeah, and so I went ahead. - What year did we make this? - 2001, actually, it's a good story. I was filming and they sent me home and I was mad 'cause I was like of course the one project

where you wanna stay where they're filming and Vegas when I was like, you know, 30, I was, and when I went home I got the June bug audition. - Oh, nice. - Then was filming June bug when they reduced my role

from, to recurring. - Yeah, he's better. - I'm Dr. Vegas, I'm Dr. Vegas. - I'm Dr. Vegas, and I was like, I'm good. They're like, you're just gonna leave.

I'm like, yeah, I'm good, I feel like... - I'm all set, gotta empty, yeah. - Yeah, suck it. - Yeah, I just sit in an empty. I'm gonna let it go.

- I'm just gonna go ahead and get it. You can't be a word nomination over here. So I'm good, you wanna reduce it? - Yeah. - Yeah, I have no idea.

I just was like, anyway, it's a long story,

I did a shadow of emergency room doctor.

- For that part, yeah.

And I was like, yeah, yeah, yeah.

- Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. - That's gotta be fascinating.

Did you not wanna see, did you see some things you didn't wanna see?

- I think for me, it was just fascinated with the stories that kind of really helped me put things into perspective. I know, I'm so earnest, I told you guys, I just was so grateful and invested in people's

personal stories, it's just... - I was at, you know, I'm a frequent flyer at the ER in Los Angeles. - But you wanna give a shout out to Cedar? It's 30 feet.

- Yes, Cedar, sorry. - Yeah, yeah. And I was lying there waiting for a couple of punches on your punch card. - Yeah, yeah.

- And I was lying there waiting for a couple of punches on your punch card. - Yeah. - Because I get a fib and they zapped my heart back. Anyway, so, but one time I was in there,

just like two years ago, and the guy, some guy, OD none drugs, they were trying to revive him, and he died right next to me. - And the room right next to me.

- It's so crazy to witness how all that. - Yeah, I'm willing, and I play golf with it. Dr. Gary Shaman, he does a ER doctor, and the things that he knows how to do and he could save any life.

You put in front of him, I think he's incredible.

- Yeah, it's really amazing. - And he's got a great short game too, guys. - We haven't done it for anywhere. - By the way, let's be clear, he's got a great game all around.

- Yeah, middle of the fairway. - On game, yeah.

- He's never seen her trouble.

- He never seen looking for a ball. - Never, you want him as your teammate. - Yeah, Gary, Dr. Gary's been playing with the same ball for three years, definitely. - Yeah, anyway, let's have a nice man.

- Shout out to Dr. Gary. You know, so Amy, you've done so many things, but so many different kinds of rules, like comedy, drama, sci-fi. Is there one I seen the most is in Chantman?

- In Chantman? - You nailed it. - You nailed it. - Never saw Chantman because it's the only one. - Yeah, I mean, you know, having two girls,

you met both of them, they, - Yeah, how are they doing? - They must be. - They're doing great, thanks, yeah, they're, they're doing great.

- They're not watching anymore, yeah, but I mean, I knew that album backwards and forwards, loved it. - Thank you, and I'm sorry. - Yeah, no, no, it was fantastic. But I've seen them all, but that won a lot.

- I bet, yeah. - Very good. - Thank you. - Do you have like a genre that you like doing more than, 'cause you kind of, like I said, you've done it all,

like you do, you work in comedy, you work in drama, you work in sci-fi, like is there one sort of lane that you feel more comfortable in, or do you just kind of each one is just like a new opportunity to have fun and you don't really think about it?

- Yeah, I think each one's a new opportunity.

I like working in different genres, 'cause it requires like a different approach to tone and it's a challenge, but I mean, I'm most comfortable in like, musical theater, even at 51, if someone's like,

"You need to go play bell." I'd be like, "God it, like, that's where my spirit lives." - Right, right. - You want to do more of it? - I do, I did theater recently in London,

and I really do want to do more of it, but I think I'm so tired. - Yeah, yeah, I feel like it's so much work. I have so much respect for everybody who works on stage, 'cause doing that H.O.s week is really, really grueling,

and so I'd have to really consider it. Maybe when my daughter is... - Get a little older. - Get a little, when she's out of the house, 'cause I really want to be present for her.

- How old is she? - She's gonna be 16 next Friday. - Oh, yeah, God. - That's amazing, she's 16. - How are those driving lessons going?

- She has not started them yet, no, I... - You haven't taken her out in your car and just like in an open parking lot and said, and just put her in the seat? - Not yet, no, I...

- Oh my God. - I am definitely... She has absolutely... - No interest. - No, she has interest,

but she wants to get through finals before she starts studying for her permits test, 'cause she, yeah, yeah, she likes it. - This is a good, this generation, though, is because if Uber, there's just,

there's no right in there, because when we were kids, remember like the day morning you turned 16, you're at the DMV. - No, my guys did, I just got it immediately, but Abes, you kind of put it,

well, you can only get his lures 'cause he's not 16 yet.

- You know what I thought would never happen, though,

is that because Jason's right, when you're turned 16, you're like, it signifies independence. - Yeah, free driving, right, free to. But now, and I thought, well, that will never go away, but with Waymo, self-driving cars,

and Uber and stuff, maybe it's not a thing anymore. I don't know with kids. - Yeah, but it is nice to be able to just like, walk outside your house and climb into your car and go. - And it is, I think she's really gonna love that sensation,

when she sort of gets into it, but I respect, I'm letting her. - Are you still in driving her around mode, or is she leaning on the boobs like everybody? - A little above.

I mean, we're a little more cautious with Uber as long as she's with friends and stuff like that. So, but she loves a Waymo, that's her thing.

- Yeah, we always say, it's a known thing, Amy,

that Jason has the personality of a Waymo driver. And that's just kind of known around the office here. - I'm just gonna rub me off this here. - Oh, Waymo driver, that's enough, Sean. - That's it, that's so funny.

- I was gonna say this, Sean, I think you know this,

and this is, you're gonna freak out again, on Amy. You know, she's in the new, she just wrapped the new Star Wars, right? - What do you mean, the one with Ryan Gosling? - Yeah.

- Wait, I was on that set. - Okay, cool.

- Oh, amazing. - Yeah, Sean Levy asked us

to come visit, and we visited her for like a day. - What if you found out that Amy knew you were coming in? She's like, this guy fucking called me with someone in the toilet, the White House, this guy will be killed.

(laughing) - I had a very small part, yeah. - You did, wait, are you a fan or no? - Oh my gosh, yeah. - Yeah, huge, absolutely.

- By the way, Tatooine. - I mean, amazing. - My Tatooine had, I today. - I love it. - I love it.

- You know what I mean, I don't know what I mean. - Do you got to make the fourth Disney events at Disney? 'Cause I wanted to go, maybe next year you and I will figure out. - Oh my God, I would love it. - I do.

- Leave the kids at home, am I right? - You're right. - I hate the me, the fourth me with you, 'cause that's my birthday. I feel like they took it over.

They took it over. I'm not, they took it over. It was like, made the fourth make enough. - Wait, did you, did you get to hold all the props and whatever and all the fancy stuff?

I love that. - I love that. - Love that. - Yeah, I went to the creature shop, too. - Yeah. - It's a wonderful shop.

- I saw the new, I saw the new, I saw the new, you know, their version of R2D2 and the new one, which we, I couldn't post, we're not allowed to post. - Is he real?

- We just, we just wrecked focus to scotty in the back just heating up the paddles. - We were all going to be together. - Get them ready. - Oh, he's talking about the creature shop.

- Yeah. - Wasn't that, but, but, and then the guy, I said, I met the guy who created BB-8. - Yeah. - Yeah, that's wild.

- It's so cool. - It's wild. - I mean, I'll talk about this. I'm sure, down the road, but like, I don't know what I'm allowed to talk about,

but I was so nervous.

The first day of working, like, I forgot how to act.

I'm sure strongly, he's like, "Amy, are you okay?" And I'm like, "No, I'm just not an artist." - No, it's because of all the stuff that was around you and like, we're just, like, I'm on a starward set.

And I like, yeah, I grew up on this. This is like, I have to now get out of my, like, "Dorky Fan Girl" place, and go into, like, professional actors, and like, combining the two was really hard. So I had to, like,

- Could you feel it? Was it palpable? I mean, was it where the set's big? Was it where the set's big? - Yeah, the camera gear, like, all like, it's so cool, you guys.

It's just so cool. I mean, like, not a lot of talk about anything, of course, but I can tell you, it's so cool. And the kid in it is so great, I just... - What about, what about, like, was there a lot of,

like, like, were the sets real, were the weapons real,

was that all like sort of green screens, and, you know?

- It's a mix, but it's a mix, yeah. - It was, it was, it's enough to, like, get the feels, you know what I mean? - And then you get the great Sean Levy there, just like, oh, yeah, he's the best. I just love his energy and enthusiasm.

- He is. - And speaking of a rival, he was one of the producers on a rival. So, he was. - He was. - Yeah, I worked with him at night at the museum. - And grateful. - And grateful.

- So, you do this, and then you got another, you got a sci-fi film coming out later this year that you do with everybody, Tyka. - What's that? - Oh, yeah, yeah, I think I do, I was like, yes, yes.

Yeah, we did that, like, over two years ago now. So, yeah. - Wow. - Are you a sci-fi fan? - I do like sci-fi, yeah. - There's such that you have, like, still, like,

Star Wars, these sci-fi, like, this is, like, seems to be a genre that you're very comfortable with. - Super, man. - Oh, I love it. - I love it. - Yeah, but she's funny as hell, too.

- And can sing and dance, and let's not, we haven't even gotten to the drama part of it all in me. - I know. - I know. - Two, I do love it, but drama.

- Do you wanna leave any for anybody else? - Like, it's coming out, man. - How great were you in doubt? I saw that play, and I was like, "Wow, this plays one of the best plays

"and then the movie with you and Meryl Streep." - And how good is our Meryl and Phil up in that? Getting to sit through the rehearsals with them was like, it's my entire actor training. - I'm sure. - I'm sure.

- I never went to college or conservatory.

- So I really feel like that was how I learned how to act. - And everybody showed up on set off book, probably. Just no, there's nobody has side, right? Everybody just knows their stuff. - Oh yeah, but at that time, we really knew it.

- Yeah. - Yeah. - I mean, I mean, it's, it's Meryl.

- Was it a lot, was it a lot of rehearsal for that film?

More than usual? - I would say so, yeah, yeah. It was a while ago, it was amazing. - So then, do you just say that you did not go to drama school? - I did not, no. - No.

- And so, what would you attribute your talent, too?

Was it just a, a low amount of talent?

- Yeah, how'd you get so talented? - How lowly talented? - It was just like an innate sense of what would you, - I honestly, Jason, I really don't know.

I think I've always just been, I read a lot,

and I've always been plugged into characters and how and why and what motivates them. And all of that, and I think it just sort of started translating into acting. I honestly, I also, when I moved to LA,

started working with an acting coach, later on, after I'd started working, and that was really helpful, 'cause she helped sort of ground me a bit more instead of the end of the day, so that was good.

- Well, that's how I was going to say, yeah,

'cause theater is sort of at odds with your incredible level of subtlety when you're doing on camera work. You know, I mean, it's just, it's just masterful, how little you have the discipline to do, which, you know, if you did that on stage,

the people in the front row would be over the read it, but that'd be about it, you know, and it's great. But often times you'll see theater actors that are sometimes you may be just a little bit bigger on screen, but you do not suffer that at all.

It's really, really impressive. - Well, I absolutely love people's inner life. Like if I could know what people were thinking at all times, I'd be so happy. - Yeah, that's what I love about watching your performance.

Is that, yeah, I lean in and I try to read your mind. You know, there's that, there's stuff going on inside. - I told you guys, you gotta watch this new doc that's come out later this year, it's only shown you about it. That's called, there's based on the podcast

that really popular podcast that's the telepathy tapes about the one verbal. - Yeah. - There's a doc, I just saw a screening of the doc. - How is it good? - It's unbelievable. - Wait, what is it? - Dude.

- There's a really popular podcast. - Yeah. - Yeah.

- And called the telepathy tapes, and they made it,

"Doc" at the same time, and it's coming out later this year, and it's unbelievable. I'd goosebumps the entire time watching it talking about. - It was real popular at the same time, the Richard Simmons podcast.

- Sean, stop mentioning the reviews. - Every time I mention this, Sean brings the Richard Simmons podcast, it's really good. Sean, why?

- No, how would that be? - An easy-- - And leave it. - Yeah. - An easy reference for everyone. - Yeah, definitely, definitely, let it stand on its own.

- Let it stand on its own, why do you get to mention the fucking Richard Simmons podcast? - No, because at that time, it's years and years ago, those were the two first--

- I've never heard of the Richard Simmons podcast.

- Oh, God, you would love it. - It's so wild. - Oh, here we go, you fucking fucks sake, man. - Now, wait, Willie, the reason that you were seeing this earlier than when it's coming out is because that makes me

think maybe we're gonna have somebody from it on the podcast coming out. Did you get a little early Lancers? - I don't know. I don't know.

- Oh, yes, yes, look at you. - Putting, look at you, putting some stuff together.

- I know, look at you, it's honestly, you guys,

it's so fascinating and Amy talking about, like, under people understanding what other people are thinking and stuff, it is a fucking mind. - Did you listen to that, Amy? Did you listen to that podcast?

- Yeah, I did, actually, I listened to, I didn't get towards the end of the telepathy. It started to get, I don't wanna, you know, it's get a little like, it twisted a bit. I don't wanna give it any sprues.

- But it's, I found it, I mean, it was just something I'd listen to the podcast too, but anyway, yeah, I don't know how we got here, but it boy, it's good. (laughs)

- It's really good. - But what was your, so this one was gonna say,

what was your first pro gig as an actor?

Your first paying job? - Like exclusively as an actor, does this a dancer, like as an actor, as an actor actor? What was your first actor?

- First actor, I did a commercial, for Omaha National Bank, where I lip-sinked, so I guess it's, I mean, I lip-sinked to summer loving, but turned into summer banking. - No, have you ever laughed yet?

- Sure, sure. - So I'm gonna go back in. - Had me a bad boy, wow. - Yeah, yeah. - But then when I started, I was cast and dropped at Gorgeous out of Minnesota. So that was my first thing.

- First thing, then what was your first, what was your first did you do a lot of, 'cause I know, I've seen you did Dr. Vegas, we all know that, we're talking about, "Well, I still call him Dr. Vegas." - Yeah. - What was your first, like,

did you start doing guest spots on shows? - Oh yeah, yeah. - Yeah. - I did all the guest spots. - You did? - You did. - I was on Buffy, I was on Buffy.

- Oh wow. - Oh wow. - That's 70 show. - Yeah. - West Wing. - Oh wow. - We'll be right back. And back to the show.

What was the point when you figured that you might be safe, you might not need to have to study something else,

Or have a second job, or when did it,

when did it, when did it seem to make a living? - Yes, you might not. - Yeah, yeah.

- I think it was after, I think it was after and enchanted.

- Yeah, 'cause that was a big movie, yeah. - It's funny 'cause by the time enchanted came out, I'd been nominated, but I still didn't see that as anything that cemented me as secure.

I just thought that was an amazing, like, one off, like--

- Yeah. - So-- - But having the box office of enchanted, right, that was a different thing with that isn't it? - And I also think it was like the most confident, at that point I'd ever been in a role,

'cause even when I read this script, and I am not somebody who says this, I looked at my husband and went, "I don't know who else they're gonna get for this." Like, I just was like, "No, no, no, no, no, no, no."

I just, and I honestly, I'm not that person. I would cast someone else in every role I've done. Like, I'm not competitive like that, but I read that one and was like, "Well, well, this is mine." - So, just 'cause I felt like I really understood

that world and the duality of her. - But then you also do, like, then you go on to do a couple of films with David Arustle, some gritty films, you do the fighter, which is super gritty and such a great film.

- Yeah, David, that was huge,

'cause David really, I say take a chance,

but no one really saw me that way. And then there was something about an interaction he had with me that kind of was like, "Wait." You got it as face about like a valetic. - You're terrifying.

- No. - No, I think that's just-- - I was here first. - Yes, something like that. - Wait, was David, did you stab David Arustle

in the neck and then you did that saved him? Is that what happened? - No, it was not David Arustle.

- So you were surprised when David called you with that?

- Yeah, yeah, I was, I was like to say, I have like such memories of where I was when things happened and the huge for me and that was, I was in Ireland filming leap year. Like this romantic comedy, which helped me learn

that I was not good at romantic comedy, though I love the film. I just was like, this is, there are people who are really good at this and I don't think that's me. I don't think.

- There, there's nothing you're not good at, come on. - No, it's just, I'm too earnest. Like I wanna turn it into like weathering heights and like, I just don't have that turn of phrase that some people are so good at.

I'm just so earnest, it's so irritating. I've learned to accept it. - What about, what about, did your eyes light up like mine would if I got a call from Paul Thomas Anderson? Like the masters, one of my favorite favorite films

ever, Pastor was great. - Paul is one of those people that I will forever want to impress. It doesn't matter what I'm doing, what I'm saying, a text, I am just, I just love him so much.

Just as a person too. - Like, I'm a great, yeah, yeah, yeah. - I actually met him at a house party. - Yeah, yeah. - And I kind of read in the riot act, because--

- Uh-huh. - He had, he had, it's a lot, I don't wanna get Paul in trouble, but he had-- - He took the last piece of pizza. - He took the last piece of pizza.

No, no, there was mutual fan that was a little drunk and acting little silly and he was encouraging it, you know, having fun and I was like, that is highly irresponsible. No, to be fair, I was 10 weeks pregnant.

- Uh-huh. - I was not telling anybody, so I was agitated. And then I looked at there and I was like, I can't believe I just yelled at like my favorite filmmaker of all time.

I'm like, I'm never gonna get to work with them.

I don't know what I've done, but I was so late. - That's what it took. - And then I got cast, he's like, who can yell if you were - Right. - who can be stern? - Who's that girl?

- Wow.

- I don't know if that's why he called me, but um--

- Just loved it. - He's so great, yeah, I still, anytime I hear from Paul, I'm excited, but yeah, he's wonderful. - So you do that, I mean, and then you go and then you jump into the DC world, the Zack Snyderies,

sort of Superman, like that whole world. - Yeah. - It's amazing, you just have all these like different, like really distinct lanes and stuff that you do, totally, so different.

Did you feel, when you get that call, you're like, yeah, yeah, this is something that I'm into. - Uh, no, again, I'm just super dorky and loved Superman. So I was like, I didn't like it to pay the worst, I was just so cool. - Yeah, so cool.

- I was a grew-up, loving Superman, like I'm, I really am, like, meant for Comic-Con, like, to go down there in costume, like, that's really. - Really? - Yeah, I love it, I love it. - I love it. - I love it.

- Darren's a drut, you met my husband, we're both just- - Yeah, you guys are so honest. - Dorky, earnest people. - Are you big Halloween, are you Halloween people? - Um, yes. - Sure, you are, you pop around with Melissa and Ben,

and he guys get all dolled up and do your thing. - That's different, that was our movie club thing. - Right, but it's still, you guys, yeah, these guys that they'd watch a movie. - Yeah, oh, I do love to dress up.

- I love the theme party, I'm that girl. - Right, sure. - I have to, like, pull myself back if someone says theme party. Darren's like, Amy, you don't have to be, you can just to have a suggestion of, but-

- Ugly Christmas sweater party, sign you up, right?

- Yeah. - I went to a 70s birthday party a few months ago.

Yeah, I've already had a dress in 1970s. - Oh, remember? - And I was like, oh, we're going, we have to really go do it. And then you go to, kind of fun, yeah. - Well, luckily, Sean, you didn't have to buy a costume

for that, right? - It's fine, I'm just ready to do it, right? - Yeah, Sean, what'd you put together for that? - Yeah.

- I put, I think my photos of Sean's photos.

No, I put Bellbot and Pant, a big, a big wig, you know, some gold chains and some little bow open. Yeah, I'm gonna go, I'm done, all right, thank you. - It's got to get dressed too. - Yeah, we both did, let me check if I can find a picture.

- I used to get dressed up for auditions, guys. Like, I don't know, in costume, right? - Did you really? - Yeah, I didn't quite, and then like other girls would be coming out looking absolutely beautiful.

And I would be like, oh, I guess.

(audience laughs) I guess I look like I wanted too much, which is probably why I didn't work in the beginning. I hadn't sort of cracked the code of neutrality. I was like, it's me.

- I don't know. - I feel like you're dead with a pants. - I feel like you did everything really, I think you did everything pretty damn well. And then now, your daughter doesn't,

does your daughter seem like she is attracted to maybe going that direction, too, or no? Not a performing, and only recently,

on the set of Star Wars, on our way to the creature shop,

she looked at me and said, Mom, do you think I could find a career in film? - Oh, wow. - And I said, yeah, absolutely. - And did you guys start to talk about

different parts of it? - Yeah, so we're constantly talking about different, she's like, 'cause I love, I love travel, I love meeting new people, I like everyday being different. And this is really like the best suited job

for everything I want my life to look like. - Right. - So, yeah, so she kind of switched her motivation, she's still really interesting in psychology, like which I love, so she and I are constantly talking about human behavior, which is fun with a 16-year-old.

But it actually is, she's very intuitive and insightful, yeah. - So we'll say-- - So it's not neat how the conversations change over years, like as much as you might miss the toddler age, it's like, well, you couldn't really talk about,

you know, global issues within them, that now you see that they're taken care of. - Yeah, because they're so involved now. - Yeah. - And they get so much, I think it's so much information

thrown at them too. - Yeah, I wanna take her over to the groundlings to take the class, 'cause she's really quick-witted and mean. And I'm like, hey, you're the great and comedy. - Oh, we like that.

- We like, she's not a mean person, but like, her wit is so biting and-- - By the sarcastic act. - My husband's like, oh, and I just think it's, when she nails me, I love so hard.

It's really funny, so I love it. - It's fun, it's fun. It's fun speaking of psychological, you've got a psychological thriller series on Apple TV. - Okay, fair. - Dude, you're so good at bringing it back,

well-- - I know, I appreciate it. - Thank you, by the way. - By the way, thank you. - I love it. - I appreciate that, that's a skill. - Thank you, Amy. - You've been nominated in the group. - And they're group-shone, group-shone, group-shone.

- Amy, you should know that. - Amy, you should know that.

- Sean one time, got single that is best host host. - It's interviewer, podcast. - podcast. - And he's part of a threesome, they single him out. - Yeah. - He did not win. - I did not win, yeah. - Let me finish that.

- Yeah, because I was held down by two others. - But I would say, I would say he's sloppy at best. (laughing) - Criminal, contributive. - Oh, they're there, they're show's got eight.

- There's a lot of eight. - There's a lot of eight. - Oh, that's good. - I like you have hard copies, too, guys. - I know. - I know. - That's good, that's good. - So, let's hide by Cape Fear for a little bit.

You and Havier Bardem, I mean, sick. - What a cast, Patrick Willson, my doppelganger. - Yeah, I was gonna say you sort of look like his brother. - He and I, we've taken selfies before. - You guys could do it now.

I was actually very cultured, so I was watching PBS great performances last night. And there was Patrick Willson doing Rodgers and Hammerstein. - Which one, which one? - He's so good, you guys. - Like a medley of. - Oh, yeah, yeah.

It's a long, long, long with a few other actors, but Sean, it's gonna give us a number five, six, seven, eight.

- Oh, we got a million. - There's a billion, wrong.

- But did you, did you, did you, did you, did you, a Patrick, ever break out into song at all, during some of this set-up? - Okay. - So, he's a little bit more disciplined than I am when it comes to this singing.

Probably because he does it professionally, and I do it because I just love it and it's fun. So, what, the first time he did sing, I thought I was being pumped, 'cause we were talking about some of our favorite concerts.

We've seen, and I said, you know, oh, I went and saw the Indigo girls in Red Rocks, like 1992, 93, and I just, it was such a good concert. He's like, I love the Indigo girls, and I was like, you don't love the Indigo.

And he started singing like a deep cut. - Oh, wow. - One of the albums, and we harmonized for a bit, and I was crying.

- And I was crying like a songbird, right?

- Guys, yeah, he's got a little bit. - We're gonna be best friends. We're gonna have so much fun. (laughing) - We're not going in my phone right now.

- We like the same things because it was a lot. - But just, yeah, I mean, we are, all of us just talking about, I feel like we are closer, the closer we are to find. You know what I mean? - That's a deep cut.

- But yes, Cape Fear, Patrick's great. Havier's great. - I mean, yeah, it was, this is one of, it's a cast. - For it being so, like, challenging and difficult,

like content-wise and sort of physicality, it was so much fun. And shot in Atlanta, I shot with a lot of your crew from Ozark, I believe.

- Yeah, I think in every cover, they really have to recover.

- A man of our solace, I think, directed an episode or two, yeah? - She did see her again. - I just worked with her, she's all right. - Yeah, she's all right.

- But we like Amanda, she's really nice, I like her. - Yeah, she was fun. - No, I can't wait to see that show. I've watched the trailer a couple of times, it looks fantastic.

It does look like a lot of night shoots, which you know, you don't have an issue with. - You can know. - But there's a lot of, a lot of night shoots. - Was it more a split?

- Yeah, maybe we just talked about that. - Honestly, it was a, it was challenging. We couldn't block shoot because we had a lot of directors,

so it was challenging, thanks to we could never block shoot.

So it was a lot, it wasn't. - So for Tracy, Jay, or Amy, explain what block shooting means. - Yeah, Jason, you do it, yeah. - Yeah, you shoot out, like if all the scenes that take place in this one particular location,

no matter what episode they're in, we're gonna shoot them all in a row, so that we never have to come back to this location. - So you can knock out that location. - Yeah, it's cheaper for both of us.

- It's very easy to do, all right. - Yeah, when I did Sharp Objects, we did a lot of block shooting, and that was nice. - Another great project. - Yeah, okay.

- Yeah, okay. - I know, it's amazing. You resume doing it. - Okay. - You're doing okay, Jason.

- You are, you are at the tip top of what you do. You're so, so good in everything. - It's just so sweet. - You've never, and we talked about there are very few people.

You're one of those people, and we, John Goodman,

we hold up as the Gold Center, I always do,

have never a bad performance, no matter what you do, never a bad performance in San Francisco. - There's still time. - No, no, Amy, you're so good, you're so talented. - Well, do you allow yourself to,

this a tough question to answer, but do you, do you, do you,

do you, do you, do you have more of her time than we're allowed?

But go ahead. - Oh, shit, we are all right. - Sorry, but you can cut a lot of my stuff out. - You guys don't know, we'll let you go. - But do you allow yourself to sort of like say,

hey, you know, I've done, I've done all right, and I'm like only half way done, and I thought maybe it was just gonna, you know, kinda just sing and dance in front of mom. - Don't say half way, that's 'cause she's gonna be exhausted.

- Well, no, no, but I mean, it's really, really impressive what you've done, and what you will continue to do, and you're still ascendant, and just, - Well, you know, I adore you, and I'm just grateful.

I appreciate it, thank you, I'm just grateful. I think, like, I'm 51 now, and I think being in my 50s is the greatest. I'm so grounded, and I just feel grateful and kinda open to whatever comes

and grateful for what I've been able to do, and it's a great time of reflection. - It shows, you can hear it. - And Jason, I will say, I think this is the longest I've ever talked to you,

'cause you're normally ducking out of parties. - I know, wow. - Oh, wow. - Oh, wow. - Oh, wow. - Oh, wow.

- So I'm so excited to get to talk to you.

- Some people, these boys know, you know. - I'm just, I go out, and then it's time to go home. - You know, you're smart, I'm just gonna get in the bed.

- Like Jay always says, there's a window of energy,

and once that energy's up, that's it. - That's smart. - Well, I'm an introvert, and also I don't drink anymore. And so it's like, usually the last two hours at the party, you gotta have a little India, otherwise it's the stuff

that's being talked about is just not that interesting. - Yeah. (laughs) - And the stuff, and that's fine. - I'm usually the last person they are talking about, that's not fair.

- That's not fair. - Yeah, I'm gonna talk about it all for you. - You know, I'm just getting more, I'll be leaving, I'll be leaving at the same time, I'm just tired. - I'm just tired.

- We're to the wise, if you run into Jason in a social setting, just make sure you have a bunch of our loaded, just try to keep an interest in it. Because he doesn't want to talk to you. It sounds like a really great guy, doesn't he?

- No, it's true. - No, it's true. - Self-involved asshole. And Jesus Christ said, "W" you do it for other people, not just for you, you fucking thing. God, you met so much given to you.

You've had so much attention and shit given to your whole life. Why don't you fucking give back to other people? No bless or bleach. - All right, let us have some questions. - Amen.

- What up, you're just a delight. - I love you, you're so great. And thank you so much. We can't wait for Cape Fear on Apple TV. It's fantastic, and we just continue to success.

You're just the great. - Oh, thanks guys. Thanks for having me on. I talked to you guys for hours. - Likewise.

- Thanks, and kisses to Darren. - Yeah, too, Amanda, and the girls as well. - Thank you, honey. - Bye, bye, bye.

- Bye, bye, bye.

- Bye, bye. - Bye. - Bye. - Bye. - Double A, right there.

- I'd marry you. - Double A.

- Amanda? - Yeah, yeah, yeah. - Amy, I love you. - Yeah, I love you. - That's right, two A's, two A's, double A. And she's, she's, she's, when a career, every single thing you guys remember, I'm like, oh, that's right. Oh, that's right. Oh my god, that's right. I mean, everything's quality. Everything's quality. Always.

- And even if it's not, she's the best thing in it. I mean, that's just, she's just, she's never sucks.

- No, that's what, that's what, like, it's a very, that's a rare, rare, rare.

- Yeah, we all clank it every once in a while, but I don't, I think she's either buried the things that she hasn't been good in or she's just never been bad.

- Remember a night bitch, did you guys see night bitch? - I never saw it.

- I never saw it. - I saw the trailer and I thought that would, that looks cool.

- I like that moment when just looking, I'm just pulled up all her stuff because I'm like, I can't believe. - It's, it's awesome. - Oh, when you look at her, when you look at her things. - It's amazing. Oh, she's watching. - She's watching. - I was going to ask what musical she was, and she was into the woods. And in 2013, and every magazine piece, she said she watched by my birdie with her dad,

who's, um, huge and Margaret fan, but she's never done that show. But it's a great title.

- Oh, yeah, I was going to say I was present used by my birdie for the, goodbye, but it sounds like you might be doubling back.

- Well, it's one of those things. - Look, look, you know what, he did it, but everything happens for a racist, you know?

- Oh, yeah. - Oh, yeah. Oh, well, there's a re- there's a re-up coming when it will. You mean to Reese's up? You got... - So if you haven't already, get out and bye! - Bye! - Smartless is 100% organic and are tiznly handcrafted by Bennett Barbaco, Michael Grant Terry, and Rob Abjurf.

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