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.
Podchaser is the ultimate destination for podcast data, search, and discovery. Learn More