Episode Transcript
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0:00
Wow, this house Wow,
0:02
this house is cute! But can I
0:04
really get in the game in this
0:07
economy? I do have savings and I
0:09
am responsible-ish. Eh, I should bury it.
0:11
I'm being wild. But what if I'm
0:14
not being wild though? Could I actually
0:16
score a... Kick off your home buying
0:18
journey with Zillow's new viability tool. It
0:20
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0:23
you can afford, so you can get
0:25
off the bench and on to the
0:27
playing field with confidence. Check your
0:30
viability, only on Zillow. Obama
0:33
drama. The former first lady
0:35
breaks her silence about rumors.
0:38
She and former President Obama
0:40
are splitting up. People were,
0:42
you know, they couldn't even
0:44
fathom that I was making
0:47
a choice for myself. Then,
0:49
entrepreneur, professor, and podcaster Scott
0:51
Galloway is giving his harsh
0:54
economic forecast of Trump's trade
0:56
war, and why he says
0:58
America has a major masculinity
1:00
crisis. I worry that we
1:02
are literally evolving a new
1:05
species of asexual, a social
1:07
male. Plus, Bryce Dallas Howard shares
1:09
her latest pet project that's a
1:11
real labor of love. Having a
1:14
pet is hard. Oh
1:16
my god, but
1:19
it's a great
1:22
journey. And Oprah
1:25
Galey's helping you
1:28
feel good Friday
1:31
with an all
1:33
new view your
1:35
deal. Here come
1:38
hot topics
1:40
with Whoopi.
1:42
Sarah Haynes.
1:46
Sunny Austin and
1:49
Alyssa Sarah Griffin
1:52
now let's get
1:55
things started
2:05
Hello, hello, hello,
2:07
and welcome to
2:10
the view. I
2:12
said, this version
2:15
of me. Charlotte,
2:17
I'm fine. I'll
2:20
just say what
2:22
I think. I'll
2:24
tell you. Hello,
2:26
hello, hello,
2:29
and welcome
2:31
to the view. You, y'all.
2:33
I don't know if you
2:35
know this, but the Obama's
2:37
have been dogged by vicious
2:39
and false rumors since they've
2:41
been in the public eye.
2:43
So Michelle just appeared on
2:45
Sophia Bush's podcast to address
2:47
the latest claims that they're
2:50
divorcing. Look, you know that's
2:52
not going on. But it
2:54
was amplified when she didn't
2:56
join her husband at President
2:58
Carter's funeral. Take a look.
3:01
As women, I think we
3:03
struggle with like disappointing people.
3:05
Yeah, you know, I mean, so much
3:07
so that this year people were, you
3:10
know, they couldn't even fathom that I
3:12
was making a choice for myself that
3:14
they had to assume that my husband
3:16
and I are divorcing. You know,
3:19
this couldn't be a grown woman
3:21
just making a set of decisions
3:23
for herself, right? Right. But that's
3:25
what that's what society does to
3:28
us. If it doesn't fit into
3:30
the sort of stereotype of what
3:32
people think we should do, then
3:35
it gets labeled as something negative
3:37
and horrible. Yeah. Well, I
3:39
think addressing rumors like this head-on
3:41
is a great move. Do you
3:43
think it'll put anything to rest
3:45
or does the rumor mill just
3:47
run among? Probably runs amok. Yeah,
3:49
it just runs amok. I mean, I love
3:52
what she said though. Can it just be
3:54
a grown woman making decisions for herself? Because
3:56
if you think about it, she has been
3:58
in the public eye a bit regrudging. right?
4:00
She didn't run for office. Her
4:02
husband ran for office. She did
4:04
a wonderful job as first lady,
4:06
but she's got a I think
4:08
23 year old a 26 year
4:10
old. She's an empty nesting. She's
4:12
thinking about Michelle Obama right now.
4:14
She's in her era. She's in
4:17
her hair. She's doing her thing.
4:19
She's probably at the spa. She's
4:21
having a good time. I think
4:23
we should leave her. You know,
4:25
I met, I first met Michelle
4:27
and Barack Obama when he was
4:29
a senator in 2007 when he
4:31
put out his first book, Dreams
4:33
of My Father. And I realized
4:36
then, this is a woman who
4:38
does not suffer fools and is
4:40
as no nonsense as you can
4:42
imagine. I was really struck on
4:44
that visit. They were visiting Miami.
4:46
My ex owns a hotel and
4:48
they were staying there. And I
4:50
remember her telling Senator Barack Obama,
4:52
look, you gotta be in the
4:54
room at 5 o'clock for dinner
4:57
with the girls. And at 4.59,
4:59
that guy was like Cinderella, about
5:01
to turn into a pumpkin. He
5:03
was going up the elevator. And
5:05
so I think there is incredible
5:07
mutual respect in that relationship and
5:09
that she knows exactly who she
5:11
is, what is good for her,
5:13
what is good for her family.
5:16
Leave her the hell alone. in
5:18
office, I always feel when the
5:20
political families leave, it's like they
5:22
have given us everything. We watched,
5:24
we haven't had a woman yet,
5:26
but specifically the men age so
5:28
much in their time. Oh gosh.
5:30
As a, like you said, begrudgingly,
5:32
she's the first lady, she did
5:34
an amazing job. She no longer
5:37
has to fall in line. And
5:39
considering the times we're living in,
5:41
and how they were treated at
5:43
certain times, Deep respect for President
5:45
Carter's passing, but you don't have
5:47
to go sit at a funeral
5:49
for a gazillion hours when you
5:51
have other plans like Let her
5:53
live her kids are also out
5:56
as you mentioned out of the
5:58
house Yeah, this is the time
6:00
where she can be like it's
6:02
no longer about momming or wifing
6:04
now I can go be my
6:06
best. Did she go to the
6:08
swearing in? follow them both on
6:10
Instagram, they had a bunch of
6:12
pictures posted together. It sort of
6:14
feels like it was like created
6:17
out of thin air to entertain
6:19
people. But I'd say this. Running
6:21
for president is the only job
6:23
on the planet that you are
6:25
actively saying and with your spouse
6:27
I'm choosing a job that for
6:29
a period of time is going
6:31
to be even more important than
6:33
you and she signed up with
6:36
him to do that. Let him
6:38
serve and now he's been out
6:40
of office for over a decade
6:42
and it is her time to
6:44
have the right to make decisions
6:46
the way she wants to to
6:48
demand what she wants in her
6:50
marriage. Like she is the president
6:52
now. Can you just say over
6:54
a decade? Might as well be
6:57
a decade. There's also this long
6:59
tradition, quickly, of presidents tend to
7:01
try to stay, former presidents try
7:03
to stay out of the public
7:05
eye, show up at the things
7:07
that they have to, I think
7:09
that's their obligation. They should show
7:11
up to inauguration. They should show
7:13
up to inauguration. It's their club.
7:16
Yeah, into funerals. I don't think
7:18
that is the same requirement of
7:20
first. She's doing all sorts of
7:22
great stuff. Yes, it is Friday.
7:24
Nobody told Whoopi. Oh no. Many
7:26
people told me. But joys under
7:28
the weather today. And you know,
7:30
I can't leave y'all hanging. Thank
7:32
you. So I want to make
7:34
sure I was here. And she'll
7:37
be back on the weekend view
7:39
streaming on ABC News. Saturdays, Sundays,
7:41
check out your screen for times
7:43
you can see it. I'm so
7:45
glad y'all to do it. Podcast,
7:47
live shows. Live shows, I have
7:49
so much respect for y'all. And
7:51
thanks to our sponsor, Rock Skin
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Scott Galloway is an entrepreneur, broadcaster,
10:36
NYU Stern Marketing Professor, and best-selling
10:38
author of books like The Algebra
10:40
of Wealth, and he's joining the
10:42
Hot Topics table to tell us
10:45
why he thinks this tariff plan
10:47
just doesn't add up, and so
10:49
many other stuff. We always have
10:51
great questions for him. Please welcome
10:54
the fabulous Scott Galloway. You
10:58
know who has just wreaked havoc
11:01
on the global economy since his
11:03
so-called liberation day last week with
11:05
massive tariffs? He mostly talked, walked
11:07
back the other day. What is
11:09
going on? Can you have, can
11:11
you see anything that you can
11:13
help us see that will explain
11:15
what the hell he's doing? It
11:17
would be hard to think of
11:19
a more elegant way to reduce
11:21
prosperity this fast. Let's talk about
11:23
Apple. The notion was we were
11:25
going to bring back all those
11:27
great jobs. The average Apple assembly
11:29
person in China makes $500 a
11:31
month. The average Apple employee focusing
11:34
on more high-value things like design
11:36
store management makes $200,000 a year
11:38
here. We want to wear Nike's.
11:40
We don't want to make them.
11:42
We have outsourced low-wage jobs overseas
11:44
such as we can create more
11:46
profits, more investments, and create higher-wage
11:48
jobs. If these tariffs hold, your
11:50
iPhone's going to go from a
11:52
thousand bucks to $2,300 to make
11:54
an iPhone in the... it would
11:56
cost $3,500. As a result, the
11:58
threats of these tariffs take Apple
12:00
stock down the value of Walmart
12:02
in three days. If these tariffs
12:04
hold, 80% of toys under the
12:06
Christmas tree are from China. So
12:09
90% of US households. our budget
12:11
constrained. So we're talking about half
12:13
the number of toys, we're talking
12:15
about a destruction and shareholder value
12:17
such that your parents can retire
12:19
as quickly, and we're talking about
12:21
the entire world rerouting their supply
12:23
chain around brand America, which quite
12:25
frankly right now is toxic uncertainty,
12:27
so they can bypass a series
12:29
of unpredictable epileptic, sclerosisic decisions, but
12:31
we finally need to acknowledge. We
12:33
have someone at the wheel. of
12:35
the global economy that is blackout
12:37
drunk right now. Yeah, and he
12:39
doesn't drink. Well, when you put
12:42
it that way, Scott, so I
12:44
think... President Trump's rough explanation of
12:46
what he's doing is we need
12:48
to, you know, be less dependent
12:50
on trade with China. We need
12:52
to bring manufacturing back and re-industrialization
12:54
back to the United States. But
12:56
you talk a lot about the
12:58
future economy, you know, the rise
13:00
of AI, what this country is
13:02
going to look like and what
13:04
the jobs of the future are.
13:06
Does this trade war make sense
13:08
for the economy of the future?
13:10
Or is he envisioning some kind
13:12
of 1950s past that no longer
13:15
exists? First of America is the
13:17
second largest manufacturer in the world.
13:19
And the Cato Institute, we romanticized
13:21
manufacturing. The Cato Institute did a
13:23
survey. 80% of us believe that
13:25
we should have more manufacturing, but
13:27
only 20% of us want to
13:29
work in manufacturing. There isn't a
13:31
line to get in and have
13:33
work at an assembly plan in
13:35
Lansing, Michigan. What we want is
13:37
high-paying jobs. If, quite frankly, if
13:39
this president cared about young men...
13:41
and trying to up level people,
13:43
we'd go to a minimum wage
13:45
of $25 an hour. And by
13:47
the way, if minimum wage had
13:50
kept pace with productivity and inflation,
13:52
it'd be somewhere between 23 and
13:54
27 bucks an hour. This is
13:56
nothing, but in my view, do
13:58
you realize yesterday, about 10 minutes
14:00
before he took the trade, he
14:02
put a pause on the tariffs
14:04
and Apple skyrocket and the market
14:06
went up 2,000 points? It was
14:08
huge activity in the options market.
14:10
Yesterday, we'll go down is the
14:12
greatest day of insider trading in
14:14
Griffin history. Yes, that's right. Taking
14:16
us. Wow. Folks. Someone knew what
14:18
was going on and made a
14:20
lot of money and it wasn't
14:23
us. And we're going to find
14:25
out about this. If you want
14:27
to go back, he talks about
14:29
the great era of the late
14:31
19th century. Guess what? Where we
14:33
didn't have indoor plumbing? Where we
14:35
had child labor? I'll take Netflix
14:37
and Nova King. This is... We
14:39
have a habit because of social
14:41
media to talk about how terrible
14:43
America is. There are 159 nations,
14:45
they would all trade places with
14:47
us. Do we have income inequality?
14:49
We have polarization, do we have
14:51
struggling young people, 100%? But guess
14:53
what? This nation is less bad
14:56
than any other nation. Except if
14:58
you want to take us back
15:00
to the past. That makes absolutely
15:02
no sense whatsoever. You were just
15:04
talking about America and the toxicity,
15:06
the brand toxicity. The people who
15:08
support Trump, they like to say
15:10
that he plays fourth-dimensional chess. But
15:12
tell us, where do you think
15:14
America is... is right now around
15:16
the world. We have the greatest
15:18
inflow of capital which drives our
15:20
stocks up which lets us borrow
15:22
money at a lower cost. We
15:24
have the greatest inflow of human
15:26
capital. What are the best and
15:28
brightest in the world have in
15:31
common? They want to come to
15:33
our universities, they want to live
15:35
in America. Right now, and part
15:37
of that is that the American
15:39
brand is risk aggressiveness. It's rule
15:41
of law, its consistency. Rule of
15:43
law has gone out the window.
15:45
Right? We've now decided to defy
15:47
court orders. We're having used car
15:49
sales on the White House lawn.
15:51
We are picking people, rounding people
15:53
up with the wrong tattoo and
15:55
shipping them off without due process
15:57
to essentially healthscape prisons. Rule of
15:59
law is gone. Consistency? The tariffs
16:01
are on. They're off. The tariffs
16:04
are on. The tariffs are off.
16:06
We're alien. nations that love us
16:08
and we love. When did we
16:10
decide to go to war against?
16:12
Canada? Canada? You know what Canada
16:14
did? There's this great line that
16:16
the Holocaust Survivor talking to Warren
16:18
Buffett said, how do you judge
16:20
friends? And she said, very simply,
16:22
I ask a question, would they
16:24
hide me? Canadians hit us. In
16:26
the hostage crisis, the Canadian embassy
16:28
had six Americans. And if they'd
16:30
been found out, they would have
16:32
been hung by cranes. We're going
16:34
to war against Canada. They are
16:37
true friends. We can't even articulate
16:39
while we're angry at them. We
16:41
are going to war with everyone
16:43
at the same time. The big
16:45
winner here, if there is a
16:47
winner, is China over the medium
16:49
and long term. Who says, you
16:51
may not like us, but you
16:53
can count on us. The damage
16:55
here, when you posit the tariffs
16:57
yesterday, you took the knife halfway
16:59
out of the economy's back. But
17:01
the injury will take years, if
17:03
not decades, to heal. The definition
17:05
of stupid. is doing something that
17:07
hurts yourself while hurting others. This
17:09
could not be more stupid. I
17:12
love when you come here. I
17:14
love when you come here. I
17:16
love it. More with Scott Galway
17:18
when we come back. back
17:31
with Scott Galway. Sarah has the next
17:33
question. Yeah, Scott, you've been ringing the
17:36
alarm for years now on the crisis
17:38
afflicting young men in this country. It's
17:40
a topic that's come to the forefront
17:42
lately. We talk of toxic masculinity, but
17:44
also the massive success of shows like
17:46
adolescence, which I was chatting with you
17:48
before, and governors Westmore and Gretchen Whitmer
17:51
recently announced plans to focus on helping
17:53
boys and men in their states. You're
17:55
currently writing a book on the subject
17:57
called notes. on being a man. Do
17:59
you feel that we've reached a tipping
18:01
point? Because although you've been saying this
18:03
for a long time, it feels like
18:06
people are catching on now. I think
18:08
we're moving to a more productive. People
18:10
do recognize there's an issue, right? Four
18:12
times more likely to kill themselves. Three
18:14
times more likely to be addicted. Twelve
18:16
times more likely to be incarcerated. I
18:18
think mostly led by mothers who see
18:21
something's going on. We've now turned to
18:23
a more productive part of the conversation.
18:25
And I wrote this book because I
18:27
do think that I think everybody needs
18:29
a code to help them guide them
18:31
through the millions of decisions they have
18:34
to make around personal and professional activity.
18:36
You can get it from your religion,
18:38
your family, from the military, from work.
18:40
I think we can get for young
18:42
men, I like the idea of restoring
18:44
an aspirational vision of masculinity that can
18:46
serve as a code. And I don't
18:49
think there's anything wrong with leaning into
18:51
your femininity or your masculinity if it
18:53
feels natural. And for me, masculinity is,
18:55
and I'm open to criticism here, this
18:57
is a tough one that triggers a
18:59
lot of people, but I think the
19:01
three pillars are provider. I think every
19:04
man at the outset of his career
19:06
should assume that he needs to take
19:08
economic responsibility for his household. And by
19:10
the way, sometimes... At least for himself.
19:12
And sometimes that means getting out of
19:14
the way of your partner who happens
19:16
to be better at that money thing
19:19
and taking up the slack in other
19:21
parts of the household. Not being mad
19:23
about it. and be supportive. My partner
19:25
when we had kids was working at
19:27
Goldman making more money than me, so
19:29
I tried to step up. That's also
19:31
being a man, too, and this triggers
19:34
people being a procreator. I think wanting
19:36
to mate, that fire of desire, can
19:38
be channeled if it's channeled in the
19:40
right ways to making you a better
19:42
man. Making you kinder, making you stronger.
19:44
For God's sakes, thinking about how you
19:46
dress, showering for God's sakes. Being persistent,
19:49
initiating contact. The scariest stat I have
19:51
read is that 51% of men age
19:53
18 to 24 have never asked a
19:55
woman out in person. And surveys show,
19:57
distinct what the media tells you, the
19:59
majority of women still want men to
20:02
initiate. romantic contact while making them feel
20:04
safe. Third pillar, you're a protector, right?
20:06
Your default operating system is you protect.
20:08
If you think about the most masculine
20:10
jobs, cop, firemen, military, what do they
20:12
do at the end of the day?
20:14
They protect. Your default should always be
20:17
protection, right? It breaks my heart and
20:19
then in York, if you talk to
20:21
women, a lot of them say they
20:23
don't feel safe on the subway. Or
20:25
if they see men walking down the
20:27
street that cross the... the sidewalk. From
20:29
an early age we got to teach
20:32
our boys that the transition of manhood
20:34
means your default operating system is protection.
20:36
And it's not just physical. It's if
20:38
you hear people criticizing others behind their
20:40
back, your default is to weigh in
20:42
and defend. You may not agree with
20:44
the transgender community. You may not agree
20:47
that corporations need to have a third
20:49
bathroom. You may not believe in gender
20:51
affirmation. But when you see a group
20:53
being demonized, your default setting is a
20:55
man is you move to protection. We
20:57
are providers, we're protectors, and we're pro-creators.
20:59
There is nothing wrong with masculinity. It
21:02
is a wonderful guidepost. Lean in, we
21:04
just need to redefine what it means
21:06
to be a man. You add surplus
21:08
value, you create more tax revenue than
21:10
you absorb, you protect people, you witness
21:12
their lives, you register more complaints than
21:14
you actually complain. And if you leave
21:17
this earth, having given more than you've
21:19
taken, then you leave this world as
21:21
a man. That is what it means
21:23
to be a man. That
21:31
was a rant. But it was
21:33
clear, you know, it was clear
21:35
and succinct and that's why I
21:38
liked it because it's not, you're
21:40
not wondering what you mean. It's
21:42
very clear. Here are the things
21:44
that go into being a man
21:47
and they're not the things that
21:49
people tell you. You don't have
21:51
to be pop-eye, you know, but
21:54
you got to be present. You
21:56
got to know, you have to
21:58
be able to reach out and
22:01
talk to people. And I think,
22:03
you know, a lot of this
22:05
has to do. with people not
22:07
connect not with her from but
22:10
people don't connect you know I
22:12
always we get questions here and
22:14
we always think I say go
22:17
to a bar yeah smell the
22:19
people you know people people haven't
22:21
shawered get the hell out let
22:24
me just so we can have
22:26
a YouTube club I think young
22:28
people should drink more I don't
22:31
see drunkenness, IT togetherness. I advise
22:33
young people to get out of
22:35
the house more, drink more, make
22:37
a series of bad decisions that
22:40
might pay off. And also, just
22:42
to the point about masculine femininity,
22:44
masculinity is not sequestered to people
22:47
born as men. There are wonderful
22:49
women who demonstrate wonderful masculinity. I'm
22:51
drawn, my closest male friends, are
22:54
more feminine. Because I'm drawn to
22:56
men who take care of me
22:58
and are a little bit more
23:00
nurturing. These are wonderful attributes, are
23:03
not sequestered to anyone born as
23:05
a specific gender. But if you're
23:07
born as one gender and you
23:10
have an easier time leaning into
23:12
these wonderful attributes, then embrace them.
23:14
We've been celebrating femininity as we
23:17
should. And we should do nothing
23:19
to get in the way of
23:21
the fact that women are doing
23:24
really well. But let's also celebrate
23:26
our young men and recognize... that
23:28
being risk aggressive, being a provider,
23:30
being strong, wanting to be fit
23:33
such that you can protect and
23:35
provide, those are wonderful things. Let's
23:37
stop pathologizing it. Let's embrace. femininity,
23:40
but it's also for God's sakes
23:42
embrace masculinity. There's no such thing
23:44
as toxic masculinity. There's cruelty, there's
23:47
criminal behavior, there's abusive power, but
23:49
if you do any of those
23:51
things, you are not masculine. That
23:54
is anti-masculine. In the far right,
23:56
just to be political, conflating masculinity
23:58
with coarseness and cruelty, that could
24:00
not be less masculine. Our thanks
24:03
to Scott Gow, where you can
24:05
pre-order his book, Notion being a
24:07
man, by scanning the QR code
24:10
on your screen, and listen to
24:12
him on ProfG markets, and pivot
24:14
wherever you get your podcast. That
24:17
was a lot. We'll be right
24:14
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This episode is brought to you
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at lifelock.com/Podcastas. Terms apply. Welcome
25:18
back, Bryce Dallas Howard just directed
25:21
the movie we all needed right
25:23
now. It's a documentary that proves
25:26
that when times are tough, there
25:28
is no one else to turn
25:30
to. We can always count on
25:33
the unwavering love and support of
25:35
pets. And it's very fitting, since
25:38
today is National Pet Day. Take
25:40
a look. I rescue cats for
25:42
a living. It's okay, Mama. I
25:45
would love for all the cats
25:47
to have a forever home. A
25:50
lot of times when these animals
25:52
come to us, they're broken in
25:54
every way. You were so bad!
25:57
It's a lot of heartbreak, but
25:59
it's a lot of special moments,
26:02
too. That's a good boy! An
26:04
animal just loving you unconditionally makes
26:06
a connection. You just can't break.
26:09
We both have club pallets. So
26:11
he just understands me a lot.
26:14
Feeling really nice. Having a pet
26:16
is hard? Oh my God. But
26:18
it's a great journey. Please welcome
26:21
Bryce Dallas Howard. I'm
26:50
not holding a cat because I'm dressed
26:52
like a cat. Yeah, yeah, yeah, you're
26:54
representing cats. And I've got my puppy
26:57
upstairs and I would go back smelling
26:59
like a cat. She will kill me
27:01
in my sleep. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
27:04
But looking like a cat you'll be
27:06
fine. Yes. So Bryce, we're joined by
27:08
some animals from Best Friends Animal Society
27:11
who are all up for adoption. And
27:13
you directed your new documentary called Pets,
27:15
and it explores the amazing relationships we
27:18
can have with our animals. You follow
27:20
some really great stories here, and you
27:22
got to interview a bunch of kids.
27:25
What did you get from this that
27:27
you hadn't had going in? That's a
27:29
good question. Because I grew up with
27:32
pets. I have pets. I love pets,
27:34
you know, all of that. And in
27:36
the documentary, like what Whoopi said, you
27:39
know, we feature stories around the world,
27:41
but I also, I interviewed kids and
27:43
getting to interview kids about their pets
27:46
is a very special experience because something
27:48
that I didn't, that didn't really occur
27:50
to me is it's their first chance
27:53
to kind of be a little grown-up.
27:55
There's someone else who's more vulnerable than
27:57
them. There's someone who's counting. on them,
27:59
relying upon them. And then in addition
28:02
to that, the impacts that these animals
28:04
have because they listen, because they're present,
28:06
they create stability for these kids. And
28:09
so, yeah, it was really powerful. Okay,
28:11
baby. We're talking and listening right now.
28:13
But you don't just talk about cats
28:16
and dogs, actually. You have a. pigs,
28:18
birds, goats, and more. Now, we're all
28:20
huge animal lovers. And so it's... Here,
28:23
I can take the baby. I can
28:25
take the baby. Kitty wants to climb.
28:27
So, but it's impossible not to watch.
28:30
pets and not be crying especially at
28:32
like the first scene. So have you
28:34
heard that before? Yeah so this movie
28:37
is meant to be a celebration of
28:39
that relationship. I don't want anyone to
28:41
go in there thinking like folks are
28:44
like oh I'm so nervous like it's
28:46
you know pet loss and how do
28:48
you deal with that and all of
28:51
that? Oh yeah. We're we're we're very
28:53
careful in making it so that we
28:55
don't sort of succor punch anyone and
28:58
you know if an animal has past
29:00
will start use with using the past
29:02
tense so that you're aware of that
29:05
you're aware of that. So it's really,
29:07
you know, it's a comedy and it's
29:09
meant to be really fun. That said,
29:11
while I was editing this, I was
29:14
actually directing Skeleton Crew, which is a
29:16
Star War show. It's so good. And
29:18
thank you. And the gentleman who would
29:21
sit next to me every day is
29:23
a total legend named John Noll. And
29:25
John Noll invented Adobe Photoshop. And he's
29:28
a VFS supervisor at ILM, worked on
29:30
all the original stuff that everybody loves.
29:32
And he would sit next to me
29:35
every day. And he would sit next
29:37
to me every day. And he, I
29:39
didn't know this, but he has a
29:42
cat at home, who he loves very
29:44
much. over and I would open my
29:46
laptop and I would start editing between
29:49
between shots on skeleton crew and he
29:51
would lean over and watch and I
29:53
just looked at him one day and
29:56
he was crying and it was that
29:58
clip that I start the movie with
30:00
and I was like okay yes this
30:03
is how I need to start the
30:05
movie if I've got John Noel crying.
30:07
next to me on a Star Wars
30:10
set. And Bryce, you come from a
30:12
family of actors and directors. Your dad,
30:14
of course, is the iconic director, Ron
30:16
Howard. And you were raised in a
30:19
household with a bunch of animals. What
30:21
was that experience like growing up in
30:23
the Howard household? I mean, it was
30:26
really, really wonderful. Both my parents grew
30:28
up with pets, my mom especially. And
30:30
her perspective was that if we were
30:33
really willing to put in the work
30:35
and take responsibility and to understand what
30:37
that meant, then if we were like,
30:40
can we have a pet, the answer
30:42
would be yes. And so she's like,
30:44
if you're cool with mucking out the
30:47
goat barns on the weekends as opposed
30:49
to going to the bowling alley, then
30:51
yeah, we'll have goats and sheep and
30:54
all of that. And so kind of
30:56
quickly our house became the place where
30:58
people would sort of drop off their
31:01
animals if they were like, oh. You
31:03
know, this isn't quite the right thing
31:05
for me, re-homing an animal. They would
31:08
kind of, we would, we would inherit
31:10
those animals. So we had quite a
31:12
few characters over the year. Oh, you're
31:15
so sweet. This cat's great. Well, Bryce,
31:17
I love this whole concept and I
31:19
believe so strongly that animals are so
31:22
good for our mental health too. The
31:24
hardest days you have just going home
31:26
and having them unconditionally love you is
31:28
like the best centering thing. But we
31:31
recently had your friend Josh dad here
31:33
for his. memoir and God we trust
31:35
and you guys go way back and
31:38
he has a story in the book
31:40
about a night out that the two
31:42
of you have. What do you remember
31:45
from that night? So yeah so um
31:47
Josh God is my husband's best friend
31:49
since kindergarten. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
31:52
yeah. And so in dating my husband,
31:54
I was also effectively dating Josh Gath.
31:56
That happens. And he was, before I
31:59
started dating my husband when I was
32:01
19, and Josh had heard about me
32:03
and felt immediately threatened. and made it
32:06
very clear that he was not going
32:08
to approve of this relationship. So the
32:10
first time I met him, It was
32:13
in New York City, it was the
32:15
winter, and he had forgotten his coat,
32:17
and so he asked if he could
32:20
borrow coats. So I brought him down
32:22
my pink fuzzy, my robe, and I
32:24
let him wear the robe for the
32:27
night. Did that want him over, I
32:29
guess? I'm not the type to do
32:31
that, though. I'm really not the type,
32:34
but no. They have a great relationship.
32:36
And he was the type that would
32:38
wear it and embrace it. Yeah, yeah,
32:40
he did. He did. He really was
32:43
a type that might not give that
32:45
might not give that might not give
32:47
that coat. It's very nice to be
32:50
surrounded by all of this love. Yeah.
32:52
Puppy and kitty love. Yes. Do you
32:54
all have pets? Like what's your situation?
32:57
Mine have passed, but I wear them
32:59
on my wrist. We'll get the sad
33:01
story out of the way, but they're
33:04
also my screensaver. And my kids think
33:06
I carried them in my womb. So
33:08
we're fine. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, I
33:11
have two cats and I have two
33:13
dogs and I have 12 chickens and
33:15
I have beehives and soon to have
33:18
Nigerian dwarf goats that my husband doesn't
33:20
know about. You heard it here first.
33:22
Five and a half pound poodle, her
33:25
pronouns are bitch and princess. And she's
33:27
like the emotional support puppy of this
33:29
entire building. Yeah. And you have, I
33:32
have two dogs, a little havenis and
33:34
a little Maltese, and they're just the
33:36
absolute loves of my life. But she
33:39
wants a cat too. I do. I
33:41
have to get the sign off for
33:43
my husband, but Frito's looking pretty tempting.
33:46
her dog her dog her dog likes
33:48
me it's all good this is such
33:50
a lovely a lovely way to to
33:52
end a day for us and a
33:55
lovely way to to honor all of
33:57
these animals so our thanks to Bryce
33:59
Dallas Howard her documentary pets begin streaming
34:02
on Disney plus today and thanks to
34:04
Best friends, animal society for bringing these
34:06
wonderful, adorable, adoptable animals to find out
34:09
more about these pets and how you
34:11
can adopt your next pet. Scan the
34:13
QR code on your screen or go
34:16
to our website and see what you
34:18
can do. Anytime you can give out
34:20
a home to a pet, it's a
34:23
blessing. We'll be right back. Harvest
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41:31
and check it out. Well, you know they
41:33
will. But we really want y'all to know
41:35
that we would like you to have a
41:38
great weekend, everyone, and take a little time
41:40
to enjoy the view. And remember, do not
41:42
panic you, not in this alone. We'll see
41:44
you. The Stanley Cup playoffs. Man, your
41:46
your nerves might be And
41:48
you and you might
41:51
be screaming your lungs
41:53
out, and you might
41:55
be clinging to hope, it
41:57
and it might be
41:59
off time. And the guy and
42:01
the guy next to
42:04
you new be your new
42:06
best friend, you might and
42:08
you might be dreaming
42:10
about the cup, you
42:12
and you might be
42:14
completely lost for words,
42:17
but that's what it's
42:19
all about, about. that's The Stanley
42:21
Cup Stanley Cup playoffs
42:23
presented by by April 20th
42:25
on ESPN. ESPN.
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