The Weekend View – April 12

The Weekend View – April 12

Released Saturday, 12th April 2025
Good episode? Give it some love!
The Weekend View – April 12

The Weekend View – April 12

The Weekend View – April 12

The Weekend View – April 12

Saturday, 12th April 2025
Good episode? Give it some love!
Rate Episode

Episode Transcript

Transcripts are displayed as originally observed. Some content, including advertisements may have changed.

Use Ctrl + F to search

0:00

Go Go further with the

0:02

American Express Business Gold Card. Earn

0:04

three times membership rewards points on

0:07

flights and prepaid hotels when you

0:09

book through Amex travel.com. Whether your

0:12

destination is a business conference or

0:14

a client meeting, your purchases will

0:16

help you earn more points for

0:19

future trips. Experience more on your

0:21

travels with Amex Business Gold. Terms

0:24

Apply. Learn more at American express.com/business

0:26

dash gold card. Build for Business

0:28

by American Express. Coming

0:31

up on the weekend view. Former euphoria

0:33

star Barbie Ferrero reveals the biggest lesson

0:35

she learned in therapy and how she

0:38

made one therapist break down in tears.

0:40

You think Joyce done that too? Oh

0:42

for sure. Plus you won't believe how

0:44

many people are so desperate to separate

0:47

their work and personal lives that they'd

0:49

line up for that brain surgery in

0:51

the show's severance. Wow and find out

0:54

why fans are concerned that Ben Affleck's

0:56

having a midlife crisis. It all starts

0:58

now on the weekend view. Hello

1:04

everyone

1:10

and

1:15

welcome

1:19

to the

1:22

weekend. Viles, what a name,

1:24

Nick Vile? I love him.

1:27

You would like him. I

1:29

think it's Vile. Anyway, he

1:32

has a podcast to promote

1:34

her new movie, Bob Trevino

1:37

likes it, where she talked

1:39

about what an emotional experience

1:42

therapy has been, and not

1:44

just for her. Watch. You made

1:46

a therapist, Carl. Okay. And it was

1:48

very important. It was our first session ever

1:51

too. So I was like, okay, you know,

1:53

therapist, you got a day, you know, I

1:55

was a great therapist in New York who

1:57

I love, and she was such a wonderful.

1:59

in my life and you know when I

2:01

moved to LA six years ago I've still

2:04

been you know. dating therapist here and there

2:06

I haven't found I mean I have a

2:08

good one that I like but it's just

2:10

like I haven't found the one that I'm

2:12

like oh this is the person and maybe

2:14

this is the one that I have right

2:16

now is the person but it's like it

2:18

feels like dating she made the shrink cry

2:21

apparently have you done something like that joy

2:23

to my therapist yeah well she's dead so

2:25

many years now has a therapist ever made

2:27

you cry no no actually no but she

2:29

makes a good point though that not therapy

2:31

like doctors like doctors and different services they're

2:33

not all great to kind of shop for

2:35

the right therapist for you. Yeah, but

2:37

how do you know until you get

2:39

in the session? You don't know. I

2:41

had one horror story of it. I

2:43

think I shared this with some of

2:45

you. I tried a new therapist in

2:47

New York and I basically poured my

2:49

heart out for about an hour and

2:51

at the end of it she's like,

2:53

by the way I know who you

2:55

are, so like I know who you're

2:57

referring to. And I was like, what?

2:59

Totally at the end of a few

3:01

sessions the therapist hit on him. Oh

3:03

no, that's really, wow. But it's not

3:06

just like, you can't always tell

3:08

with a therapist as someone who

3:10

I feel therapy has like saved

3:12

me multiple times. It's not just

3:14

one session. And there's no magic

3:16

number, but you have to give

3:18

it a little bit of time.

3:20

Like usually with a date, you

3:22

kind of know, do I want

3:24

to see him again? Do I

3:26

not? For the therapist, you have

3:28

to be patient? And it's like

3:30

an expensive patient. I want my

3:32

money back. I have a lot

3:34

of friends that are in therapy and

3:37

this one friend of mine calls me

3:39

up and she's like, you know, I

3:41

just had a tele therapy appointment and

3:43

my therapist had like a huge black

3:45

eye. Oh no. And I was like,

3:47

well, where did the black eye come

3:50

from? Yeah. She's suffering from like domestic

3:52

violence or something and she said, no,

3:54

my therapist said that she fell off

3:56

the wagon after 20 years and she

3:58

fell on her face. So she would

4:00

have to cut. Oh, wait. So she

4:03

drank or? She was drinking too much.

4:05

And so she fell on her face

4:07

and got the black eye. And so

4:09

she would have to cut the therapy

4:11

session. Sure. Because she had to go

4:13

to a therapy session. And so then

4:16

I thought that was probably not a

4:18

good therapist. Right? You think? I would

4:20

like say the internet connection has broken.

4:22

I can't hear your voice. You know,

4:24

I don't want my money back. But

4:27

I want to. couples counseling to a

4:29

therapist, a couples counselor once right after

4:31

we were married. I've told you guys

4:33

this story. So Al, right after we

4:35

were married, came home with these like

4:38

enormous paintings. He spent a ton of

4:40

money on. So he came with these

4:42

enormous paintings for our house that he

4:44

spent our money on without telling our.

4:46

They were big. And I was ready

4:49

to just got to do with therapy

4:51

because we went to a because I'm

4:53

mad she was I really thought if

4:55

I had to talk to him one

4:57

on one I would kill him so

5:00

I had to I got a therapist

5:02

you know so that we she could

5:04

like mediate and There were boxes everywhere

5:06

in your house and she let us

5:08

she like she made us go into

5:11

like an agreement she refereed an agreement

5:13

that you know if he ever spent

5:15

this amount of money again he would

5:17

have to get my okay which of

5:19

course he violates the agreement on a

5:22

day basis and so that was that

5:24

for me on therapy. But that was

5:26

probably helpful. You might need to go

5:28

back to the therapist. I mean I

5:30

think if I had a one-on-one conversation

5:32

I would have strangled him. I really

5:35

would have. Which would have been terrible

5:37

because then I would have been in

5:39

jail. What you're saying is it could

5:41

have been worse. If you're telling the

5:43

therapist a very sad story about yourself

5:46

and that's happened to you. No, and

5:48

they start crying? I mean, doesn't that

5:50

show some level of empathy? No. If

5:52

you're telling them that you're like, you

5:54

know, that you were left orphan, whatever

5:57

they have. No, they're like professionals. They're

5:59

not supposed to show any emotion? Oh

6:01

no, I would prefer a little emotion.

6:03

If I am going, really, yes. I

6:05

want to know, they are hearing and

6:08

experiencing, they don't have to cry, but

6:10

I mean, don't have to cry, but

6:12

I mean, do it too. So the

6:14

therapists are not supposed to show any

6:16

emotion. That's not true. They can show

6:19

emotion. They have empathy for you, but

6:21

they're not allowed to merge with you.

6:23

Yes. I agree with you. Your misery

6:25

is not their misery. Right. Right. They

6:27

can show empathy, but they are separate

6:30

people, but they are separate people. Yeah.

6:32

Okay. Bobby also talked to people, people,

6:34

about how she started out on her

6:36

career path early and didn't really have

6:38

a map. Well, who does? Watch. I

6:41

knew what I wanted from a very

6:43

young age and I didn't grow up

6:45

in the Hollywood family by any means

6:47

or anything like that. So for me,

6:49

I just had no. plan B. I

6:51

trust my gut a lot. And that

6:54

was something that I had to really

6:56

like work my way up into like

6:58

the confidence and me like I know

7:00

this isn't gonna work but I want

7:02

to do it anyway just because I

7:05

don't know enough right. So as I

7:07

get older and as I become as

7:09

I get really into like my craft

7:11

and my career and I really have

7:13

like I know what I want at

7:16

the end of the day I just

7:18

make sure that everything I do is

7:20

towards that. So like tell me about

7:22

that I'm interested in your past lives.

7:24

Did you have a plan to be

7:27

a, you know, a co-host on the

7:29

view? No. No. What was your plan?

7:31

I was a lawyer. I was a

7:33

federal prosecutor. Yeah. When I put on

7:35

my legal hat, I would have, I

7:38

think I would have continued to do

7:40

that, probably. But didn't you have a

7:42

goal you had wanted to do something

7:44

in TV journalism? I had a journalism

7:46

degree and no one would hire me.

7:49

So I went to law school and

7:51

I really enjoyed that career very much.

7:53

What did you enjoy about being a

7:55

lawyer? It seems to me the most

7:57

boring job. Oh no, it's so good.

8:00

I was a federal prosecutor. I was

8:02

in court every day and I was

8:04

like I felt like I was helping

8:06

people's lives because I put away in

8:08

prison sex offenders and sex offenders and

8:10

human traffickers. like child sex offenders. Those

8:13

type of cases I could see but

8:15

to study those torts. I mean I.

8:17

I mean I. This week we had

8:19

on the show the young girl the

8:21

actress Marcy Martin. Oh yeah. And she

8:24

talked about how she knew what she

8:26

wanted to do since she was practically

8:28

from birth like she came out of

8:30

the wound wanting to be an actress.

8:32

You know I speak at a lot

8:35

of colleges and a lot of times

8:37

young people want to know what is

8:39

the path to you know to get

8:41

on TV. or what is the path

8:43

to be in politics. They want like

8:46

a formula of the shortest path from

8:48

point A to point B. And what

8:50

do you tell them? I tell them

8:52

not to take for granted the beautiful

8:54

detours that sometimes life offers. Because if

8:57

you are so focused on going from

8:59

point A to point B, you might,

9:01

you might, sometimes life is a little

9:03

bit more of a winding road. And

9:05

you might miss other opportunities that are

9:08

there. How do you make God laugh,

9:10

show him your plan? Yeah. You know,

9:12

like, I think it's that merging of

9:14

having ideas of things that fulfill you,

9:16

but also being open to what life

9:19

presents you. Yeah. Because it really is

9:21

a hard work meets opportunity to get

9:23

to where you are, and those options

9:25

are noise there. I always thought I'd

9:27

be a teacher, because I really, really

9:29

wanted to teach, and as a Virgo,

9:32

I had a plan B, C, D

9:34

and E for sure that I was

9:36

ready for because you just always have

9:38

a backup plan and nothing in this

9:40

business is. for sure. Right. And so

9:43

few paths are linear these days and

9:45

I think it changes even more with

9:47

technology. Just the fact that the way

9:49

this industry is is fundamentally different than

9:51

it was 10 years ago. So you

9:54

can't even really plan for where it'll

9:56

be five years. What do you want

9:58

to do, Alyssa? I wanted to work

10:00

in politics. So that I was kind

10:02

of the path that I was on.

10:05

And you know you want to be

10:07

a comedian, right? I was around close

10:09

to 40. I had been a teacher.

10:11

I had worked in many different which

10:13

I would be laid off now because

10:16

it was for the state. And then

10:18

I said, then I got a divorce

10:20

and then I had a near death

10:22

experience which I've talked about. I had

10:24

an ectopic pregnancy. And then I got

10:27

fired from my job at Good Morning

10:29

America. It was like the trifecta. Well,

10:31

I was overqualified to answer phones because

10:33

I had a... And I was executing.

10:35

I said, receptionist, and I know that.

10:38

So then I said, well, what shall

10:40

I do? I could either become a

10:42

shrink. Oh, you could have done that.

10:44

You could have done that. Or a

10:46

stand up comedian. Now, I needed money.

10:48

Yeah. The stand-up comedian sounded like I

10:51

could make money faster and it was

10:53

correct. Oh, you're right. By the time

10:55

I became a shrink, I'd be 80

10:57

years old. Yeah, yeah. I'd be like,

10:59

well, what did you say? You think

11:02

you would have the... It doesn't mean...

11:04

You are... You know, now, and that's

11:06

not how you sound. She gives all

11:08

of us therapy. I would like to

11:10

have been a therapist. I didn't want

11:13

to be alone in a... as a

11:15

shrink. Yeah, she's one emotion. Yeah, you're

11:17

very blunt, but I appreciate that. I'm

11:19

blunt because I tell the look, am

11:21

I too blunt? Clap if you think

11:24

I like it. They like it. The

11:26

audience likes it, right? To like that

11:28

as well. Yeah, I am blunt. Wait

11:30

till you're on the receiving end. She

11:32

gives good advice too though. I am

11:35

often on the receiving end. Yeah, often.

11:37

You give good advice. Listen. So I

11:39

didn't become a therapist, but I think

11:41

if I haven't do it all over

11:43

again, I would do it exactly the

11:46

same way. Really? Yes. Wow. Yes. So

11:48

there we go. Now, if you don't

11:50

watch the streaming show Severance, it's about

11:52

a company that gives employees a procedure

11:54

that erases all memories of their personal

11:57

life, hey, I'd go for that while

11:59

they're at work and leaves no memory

12:01

of their work life when they leave

12:03

the office. Creepy, right? But possibly effective.

12:05

So a new survey found that 35%

12:07

of workers and about half of Gen

12:10

Z, they would voluntarily get that procedure.

12:12

Give a time. What was it? 31%

12:14

I think I just wrote, right? 35.

12:16

35. Okay, so there are some days

12:18

I'd like to forget what happened at

12:21

this table. Yeah. But would you do

12:23

that? I would absolutely never do it.

12:25

Every job I've ever been able to

12:27

do was because of the people around

12:29

me. It's the best part of the

12:32

jobs I've had. That's what the depression

12:34

that I was sent into during the

12:36

pandemic. I was like, you mean I

12:38

have to work without people, like, lonely

12:40

awful like it was so good I'm

12:43

a touch her I'm a touch her

12:45

I need to feel you only had

12:47

to dress for the waist up I

12:49

know you could drink at 12 o'clock

12:51

you could you can binge movies you

12:54

could do anything I would do this

12:56

in movies I would do this and

12:58

I would do a narrow severance like

13:00

I could forget the bad things or

13:02

the stress of work when I'm at

13:05

home or if I'm fighting with my

13:07

husband I could forget my husband I

13:09

The thing though, like for us, who

13:11

we often talk about politics, particularly during

13:13

the week, It's very hard right now

13:16

to separate it right because like we

13:18

can't go home and and watch the

13:20

real housewives or watch the cooking channel

13:22

all day. Unless it does. You also

13:24

have to watch news because you have

13:26

to come in the next day and

13:29

talk about the daily the daily events.

13:31

Well we know she does. So we

13:33

can't separate. Yeah but my point is

13:35

we can't you know we can't turn

13:37

off completely when we go home. So

13:40

you would get the surgery right? No.

13:42

I'm not getting any surgery other than

13:44

cosmetic at this point in my life.

13:46

Before we go, what's cosmetic surgery? Yeah,

13:48

we do. That's a good topic. Honey,

13:51

please, I could holster a couch with

13:53

the things that are hanging off of

13:55

you right now. That is true. And

13:57

since they haven't put a tariff on

13:59

surgery yet. might be one thing that

14:02

we can still do. They will. But

14:04

you guys, we're lucky enough to have

14:06

a job that I think we all

14:08

love. But we've all had jobs we

14:10

didn't love. And without the family or

14:13

the purpose of the people you're doing

14:15

it for those days, you have to

14:17

put your head down and just make

14:19

rent. That, if I had a severance,

14:21

I'd be like, why the hell are

14:24

we here? Like this is awful. You

14:26

need the purpose to motivate you. Yeah,

14:28

I agree. I agree. The

14:32

Weekend View is sponsored by

14:34

Rock Skin Care, clinically proven.

14:36

Okay, so you just realized

14:38

your business needed to hire someone yesterday.

14:41

How can you find amazing candidates fast?

14:43

Easy. Just use, indeed. When it comes

14:45

to hiring, indeed is all you need.

14:48

Stop struggling to get your job posted

14:50

on other job sites. Indeed, sponsored jobs

14:52

help you stand out and hire fast.

14:55

With sponsored jobs, your post jumps to

14:57

the top of the page for your

14:59

relevant candidates. So you can reach the

15:02

people you want faster. And it makes

15:04

a huge difference. According to indeed data,

15:06

sponsored jobs posted directly on Indeed have

15:09

45% more applications than non-sponsored jobs. Plus,

15:11

with indeed sponsored jobs, there are no

15:13

monthly subscriptions, no long-term contracts, and you

15:16

only pay for results. How fast is

15:18

indeed? In the minute I've been talking

15:20

to you, 23 hires were made on

15:23

Indeed. according to Indeed Data worldwide. There

15:25

is no need to wait any longer.

15:27

Speed up your hiring right now with

15:30

Indeed. And listeners of this show will

15:32

get a $75 sponsored job credit to

15:34

get your jobs more visibility at indeed.com/view.

15:37

Just go to indeed.com/View right now and

15:39

support our show by saying you heard

15:41

about Indeed on this podcast. indeed.com/View, terms

15:44

and conditions apply. Hiring. Indeed is all

15:46

you need. It's 2025 and a new

15:48

year means new opportunities. For a lot

15:51

of you out there, I know you've

15:53

been thinking about one thing over the

15:55

holidays, and that's starting your own business.

15:58

But you have so many questions. How

16:00

do I even get started? How do

16:02

I come up with a brand? What

16:04

am I going to sell? Take a

16:07

deep breath. Shopify is got you. Shopify

16:09

makes it simple to create your brand,

16:11

open for business, and get your first

16:14

sale. Get your store up and running

16:16

easily. All you need to do is

16:18

drag and drop. Shopify makes it easy

16:21

to manage your growing business. They help

16:23

with the details like shipping, taxes, and

16:25

payments from one single dashboard, allowing you

16:28

to focus on the important stuff like

16:30

growing your business. With Shopify, your first

16:32

sale is closer than you think. Established

16:35

in 2025 is a nice ring to

16:37

it, doesn't it? Sign up for your

16:39

$1 per month trial period at shopify.com/View.

16:42

All lowercase, go to shopify.com/view to start

16:44

selling with Shopify today. shopify.com/view. Now, Sunny,

16:46

I know how emotionally invested you are

16:49

in the Ben Affleck and the Jalo

16:51

saga. I am, because it's probably true

16:53

love. Well, that's what you've been saying,

16:56

so prepare yourselves. Okay. Fans are worried

16:58

that the split has put Ben into

17:00

a midlife crisis. Told you. True love.

17:03

Can't do that. No, she's gonna double.

17:05

Apparently, he showed up at Comic-Con with

17:07

a freshly dyed new hairstyle and beard.

17:10

Wait, what does he look? He looks

17:12

great. I'm sorry. What are we doing?

17:14

Okay. Complaining about. Does that look like

17:17

a man in crisis or do men

17:19

try to knock a few years off

17:21

by getting rid of some of his?

17:24

That's what a man in crisis looks

17:26

like. Give me a crisis. Yeah, I

17:28

mean. Yeah, but you guys remember, it's

17:31

not the color of its beard. It's

17:33

every still shot of his face over

17:35

the last 10 years. Every time you

17:38

saw a picture of him, he was

17:40

like, remember when he was with her

17:42

and it was like always the caption

17:45

this photo? But you know, I'll say

17:47

something about Jalo. Like she gets these

17:49

men, right, who might be a little

17:52

out of shape, maybe smoking, maybe going

17:54

through drinking. She cleans them up. When

17:56

she leaves them, they look so good.

17:59

I'm married to a man who basically

18:01

had like three stages in life, right?

18:03

Infancy, adolescence, and midlife crisis. Which one

18:05

were you in? No, but oh, I've

18:08

been in midlife. He's been in a

18:10

midlife crisis for like 40 years. I'm

18:12

midlife. crisis but he you know and

18:15

I don't know why we only say

18:17

this about men because like don't you

18:19

think women also have no life crisis

18:22

I like how we're going after him

18:24

because he died his hair like what

18:26

do women do to look younger I

18:29

would there's no amount of money I

18:31

won't pay to slow aging we do

18:33

everything I won't pay to slow aging

18:36

exactly exactly man does it there's something

18:38

weird about it I don't know this

18:40

sound like an act like an expensive

18:43

sports car when they start to die

18:45

but go together. I think that's about

18:47

one of those cars that, what's the

18:50

name of the cars that James Bond

18:52

does? Oh, yeah, and it was impossible.

18:54

I mean, these cars are ridiculous. You

18:57

know, the cars that you drive, like

18:59

in the, with a wheel? That's how

19:01

you drive the car, you turn it

19:04

on, you do everything in the wheel,

19:06

you don't, it has no shifts, everything's

19:08

on the wheel. I mean, he almost

19:11

killed himself with his car. And went

19:13

back to the dealership, thank you very

19:15

much. Yeah, men buy cars or date

19:18

women like 30 years. See, my husband

19:20

did something different in his, I believe

19:22

he went through a midlife crisis, but

19:25

he took up like extreme sports. which

19:27

was like a weird thing to me.

19:29

Like all of a sudden he's like

19:32

crossfit. And he's doing all his crossfit.

19:34

Then he did like running in the

19:36

mud with people. Oh, tough mutter? Tough

19:39

mutter. Then he ran in the mud

19:41

with people and then he took up

19:43

extreme biking. Like a hundred, like he

19:46

bikes. like a hundred mile long at

19:48

that last. He's still doing it. That's

19:50

good, but that keeps you young. But

19:53

it's weird. And would you dye your

19:55

hair? A lot. You know, I had

19:57

no gray hair as when I started

20:00

working here, not a single one. And

20:02

then I started going gray a couple

20:04

years ago and I said to my

20:06

wife, what do you think? Should I

20:09

dye my hair? And she said, I

20:11

don't, I'm not gonna tell you that

20:13

you need to, but if you're. going

20:16

to do it do it now before

20:18

it's very obvious and then that that

20:20

time is passed. And you know and

20:23

also do it do it right with

20:25

high quality stuff because for some reason

20:27

have you notice that a lot of

20:30

men dye their hair black and it's

20:32

like orangey? Well that's the problem. You

20:34

know you all have noticed it doesn't

20:37

look good. They just don't want to

20:39

pay for it. Some of them are

20:41

getting hair transplants now too. Turkey. They're

20:44

going to Turkey when I went to

20:46

Turkey. There was all these men. You

20:48

can have a receiving hairline in white

20:51

lotus. You look great with the receiving

20:53

hairline. But men get away with everything.

20:55

Come on. Yeah. They have those love

20:58

handles that can be on the floor.

21:00

They don't care. Yeah. They just don't.

21:02

Manny also did a marathon? No triathlon.

21:05

A friend of mine says a man

21:07

can extreme sports. A friend of mine

21:09

says a man can be toothless, penniless,

21:12

and impotent and he's still an eligible

21:14

bachelor. A woman, you know, can be

21:16

successful, beautiful, and 40 and she's an

21:19

old mate. And she scares a man

21:21

too with that. It can be scary

21:23

to men when you're that good-looking and

21:26

that's smart. And that put together a

21:28

lot of times. Yeah, I need a

21:30

confident man. The

21:36

Weekend view is sponsored by

21:38

rock skin care clinically proven.

21:40

Vionic has the best essential

21:42

styles for everyday wear to

21:44

get you ready for the

21:46

spring and summer season. One

21:48

of my favorites is the

21:50

Uptown Loefer. I've even gifted

21:52

it to my mom. It's

21:54

Vio Lab engineered that is

21:56

part Loefer, part Sneaker. It's

21:58

the... technology and style you

22:00

keep voting for and so

22:02

does the press. These loafers

22:04

go with everything and you

22:07

can wear them everywhere. Loads

22:09

of shades of premium suede

22:11

and leather to choose from,

22:13

smartly deconstruct it to collapse

22:15

flat. You can pack them

22:17

with you when you travel.

22:19

Vionix exclusive bio motion technology

22:21

is what sets them apart.

22:23

They began by revolutionizing medical

22:25

orthotics. Today they are committed

22:27

to harnessing that medical foundation

22:29

in the advancement of biomechanics.

22:31

to engineer significantly better performing

22:33

shoes that strengthen your natural

22:35

movement while aligning and balancing

22:37

you. Feet first. Every shoe

22:39

in Vionic is powered by

22:41

their vio motion technology. Beauty

22:43

and well-being in every pair.

22:45

Vionic is about science that

22:47

sets you in motion. They

22:49

even offer a 30-day guarantee.

22:51

Wear them, love them, or

22:53

return for a full refund

22:55

within 30 days. Use code

22:57

view. at checkout for 15%

22:59

off your entire order at

23:01

W-W-W-W-Vionic shoes.com. That's w-w-w-v-i-c-s-h-o-e-s.com. When

23:04

you log into your account,

23:06

one-time use only, Vionic Shoes,

23:08

wearable well-being for your feet.

23:10

I want to find and

23:12

kill the people who murdered

23:14

my wife. Critics rave. The

23:16

amateur is a tense, unpredictable

23:18

ride. You're just not a

23:20

killer, Charlie. Train me. That

23:22

constantly finds new and inventive

23:24

ways to up the stakes.

23:26

The first one you kill,

23:28

you let the other ones

23:30

know you're company. I want

23:32

them all. Academy Award winner

23:34

Rummy Malick. An Academy Award

23:36

nominee, Lawrence Fishburn. The amateur,

23:38

maybe PG13, maybe an appropriate

23:40

for children under 13, now

23:42

playing only in theaters in

23:44

IMAX. Brian

23:52

Teddy, our beloved executive producer, sat down with

23:54

the charming and brilliant. and possibly blunt guess

23:57

this week on the Behind the Table podcast

23:59

and here's what we talked about. Watch. Bernie

24:01

turned eight yesterday. How about that? My little

24:03

Bernie. I also want to point out that,

24:05

because I feel like it's been forgotten to

24:08

history, I named Bernie. You were trying to

24:10

come up with names and I came up

24:12

with them. I know the pathetic thing about

24:14

you though is that you need credit for

24:16

the dumbest things. I do, but this is

24:18

not there. This is literally, Bernie is the

24:21

most important or second most important thing in

24:23

your thing in your life thing in your

24:25

life. But it seems like it's one of

24:27

the most important things in your life. I

24:29

impacted you. I did. I had a huge

24:32

impact on the culture. Bernie's a star. If

24:34

you named him something else, maybe he wouldn't

24:36

be. You want to know what happened? So

24:38

listen to this. I'm at an event with

24:40

Hillary Clinton a few years ago. What are

24:42

you? Anna Navarro with the name drops? Okay,

24:45

go ahead. No, I'm in television 28 years.

24:47

I know a few people too. I know.

24:49

I'm just teasing. I know. I'm just teasing

24:51

Anna. I know. I know. I know. I

24:53

know. I know. I'm just teasing Anna. I

24:56

know. I know. I know. I know. I

24:58

know. I know. I know. I know. I

25:00

know. I know. I know. I know. I

25:02

know. I know. I know. I know. I

25:04

know. I know. I know. I know. I

25:06

know. I know. I know. I know. I

25:09

know. I know. friend of mine, so she's

25:11

a friend, I know her, she's a very

25:13

nice person. She comes up to us and

25:15

she says to Hillary, who she knows also,

25:17

you know, Joy, this was in, she was

25:20

talking about the, what do you call that

25:22

before the primary, she says, you know, Joy

25:24

voted for Bernie. So Hillary goes, oh, that's

25:26

nice. You know, she didn't give a damn,

25:28

really. And I said, what are you talking

25:31

about? I didn't vote for Bernie. I voted

25:33

for Hillary. Thinking he was talking about the

25:35

election. And this woman goes, well, she named

25:37

her dog Bernie. I said, look, if it

25:39

was a female, I said, look, if it

25:41

was a female, I would have dropped her.

25:44

I don't hold grudges like some people. No.

25:46

Oh, like Anna Navarro, for example. Here's the

25:48

thing with Anna. She cannot believe that I

25:50

don't remember who said men mean things to

25:52

me. Yes, I know. Talk to her about

25:55

that. No, she likes that. She admires it

25:57

because she's the opposite. Right. It's easier to

25:59

be an enemy of mine because I won't

26:01

remember it. The other two. by the way.

26:03

Yes. Sarah and Alyssa. They just told me

26:05

that they enjoy my roasting them. That's what

26:08

I do constantly. Yes. They enjoy it. And

26:10

Sunny does too, I think. Sunny loves it.

26:12

Yeah. No, no. But these other two are

26:14

good too. Yeah, I think they all, they

26:16

all. Particularly Sarah. It's an honor to be

26:19

roasted by you, I think. But, yeah, but

26:21

I mean, I don't know. I do tease

26:23

out. Which she sort of like that. You

26:26

think it's a couple when I call

26:28

you Putana. So Putana is slut in

26:30

Italian. Yeah, in Puta, in Spanish. Nina

26:32

porfaworo. This is a morning show. Isn't

26:34

this thing on at 7.30 in the

26:36

morning? But also 9.30 in 12. Right,

26:38

don't forget. This goes on. Okay, first

26:40

of all, I want to know. Here's

26:42

what I want to know. Yeah. Why

26:44

do you all speak about me on

26:47

your podcast every single week? I mean

26:49

it's like, it's like, it's like my

26:51

Roman Empire. You're always on my mind

26:53

this time. I mean, it's like a

26:55

freaking off, why are you, I heard

26:57

that you were speaking about me on

26:59

your podcast. Oh, do we have some

27:01

beef too? I can't remember. Who knows,

27:03

who can be practical? Who knows, who

27:05

can be practical to? Whatever, I don't

27:07

care. Say whatever, say whatever, say whatever,

27:09

say whatever, say whatever, say whatever. They

27:12

eat the person that cares. It's like,

27:14

it just works against you. The other

27:16

question is not thinking about you. That's

27:18

what you're thinking about. You're giving that.

27:20

My Anna Navarro likes to remind me

27:22

of everybody who's ever dissed me on

27:24

this show, for example. She does. No

27:26

names. Yes. So I remember what someone

27:28

said. But I don't remember it. Let

27:30

me tell you something. You get to

27:32

breach my trust once. Yeah. That's me.

27:34

Wow, she's like a momphill. She's like

27:36

a little mobster. Yeah, I would have

27:39

been great at that. I would have

27:41

been great at that. And let's just

27:43

clear something up because I. I

27:45

do tease you

27:47

all and roast you

27:49

all. I love

27:51

it. you. You don't

27:53

mind? No. No, it's it's

27:55

literally for and punch

27:57

me in the face.

27:59

And to punch awesome. the

28:01

face and it was awesome. Yeah.

28:04

you can catch beloved behind

28:06

the table you stream

28:08

your stream or you

28:10

can watch us on

28:12

YouTube. on YouTube. Have

28:14

a great day, everyone,

28:16

and take a

28:18

little time to enjoy

28:20

the time to enjoy you.

28:22

We can view. Rapper

28:38

Sean Diddy Combs was a He

28:40

had He had wealth, fame, and

28:43

power. crashing it

28:45

all came crashing

28:47

down. owned by hip-hop mogul

28:49

homes Combs. I'm hop

28:51

mogul Sean an ABC News

28:53

legal an ABC As legal

28:55

contributor. to As Diddy heads to trial,

28:57

we trace his remarkable rise and fall

29:00

and what could be next. Listen

29:02

to rap, the case Case Against Diddy,

29:04

A a new series from ABC

29:06

audio. Listen now wherever you get

29:08

your your podcast.

Unlock more with Podchaser Pro

  • Audience Insights
  • Contact Information
  • Demographics
  • Charts
  • Sponsor History
  • and More!
Pro Features