May 5, 2026 · 1:22:46
Billie Eilish on Good Hang with Amy Poehler
The Hang, in Short
Finneas pulls over his car mid-Saturday softball commute to Zoom into Amy's show and talk about his little sister, Billie Eilish. He immediately gets distracted riffing on LA's driverless Waymo cars, admitting he has zero guilt cutting them off since there's no human inside, then pivoting to a genuinely sweet image: robot delivery carts meeting Waymos at intersections, just standing there like they're in love. Classic eldest child energy kicks in when he talks about making Billie laugh, saying her reaction rivals Conan's or Amy's. The conversation turns surprisingly real when Finneas explains why he shares so much of their creative process online. At 13, he was scrounging for these exact videos. His philosophy? There's no secret sauce, just ideas and a laptop from the Apple store. After some early career stress, he realized chaos doesn't make great work. Connection does.
Listen or Watch
Full Transcript
Click any timestamp to jump to that moment in the video.- 0:05
Hello everyone. Welcome to another
- 0:06
episode of Good Hang. We have an
- 0:07
incredible guest today. It is the one,
- 0:09
the only Billy Isish. Billy,
- 0:12
so great. Love her. And we're going to
- 0:15
talk about so many good things. We are
- 0:16
going to talk about how important it is
- 0:18
to laugh. Um, we're going to talk about
- 0:20
intrusive thoughts, what to do with
- 0:21
them. We're going to talk about how much
- 0:23
she loves to sing and how lucky we are
- 0:25
that she loves to sing because she's the
- 0:26
best voice in the world. We are gonna
- 0:28
talk about how she saved an animal that
- 0:30
was in her own walls. And uh we're going
- 0:33
to talk about her new concert film, Hit
- 0:35
Me Hard and Soft, coming out this week
- 0:38
in theaters. So much to talk about.
- 0:40
She's the best, Billy. And um you know,
- 0:42
we always like to do something on this
- 0:43
show. We like to uh speak to someone who
- 0:46
knows our guest and wants to speak well
- 0:47
behind our guest's back. And who do we
- 0:49
get? Phineas, of course. Phineas, her
- 0:52
brother, her collaborator, an incredible
- 0:54
producer, a musician, writer, composer,
- 0:58
um, who probably knows Billy better than
- 1:00
anyone and, um, very nicely uh, is
- 1:02
speaking to us while he drives his car
- 1:04
in LA. So, let's get on let's get on the
- 1:08
Zoom with Phineas. Phineas, hi.
- 1:17
This episode is presented by Hilton
- 1:19
guys. You know what vacation
- 1:20
perfectionism is? It's the pressure to
- 1:23
get your family's summer vacation booked
- 1:25
and make it perfect and memorable.
- 1:27
Stressful, right? Don't worry, cuz the
- 1:29
team at Hilton takes care of what
- 1:30
matters so you can exhale and
- 1:32
disconnect. They've got over 9,000
- 1:35
hotels around the world, including
- 1:37
amazing resorts and all-inclusive
- 1:39
options, so you'll definitely find the
- 1:41
stay that you're looking for. When you
- 1:43
want your summer vacation to feel like a
- 1:44
vacation, it matters where you stay.
- 1:47
Book now at hilton.com. Hilton for the
- 1:50
stay.
- 2:00
>> Fineas.
- 2:02
>> Hi. How's it going? Let me pull my car
- 2:04
over. Hang on.
- 2:05
>> Oh my god. This is very LA that you're
- 2:07
zooming from while you're driving.
- 2:09
>> Yeah. Well, the softball game the park
- 2:12
the Saturday morning softball game just
- 2:14
ended. Okay, cool. I'm pulling over. I'm
- 2:16
t taking this Whimo's space. Here I go.
- 2:18
I'm pulling over to really look you in
- 2:20
the eye and focus. Here we go.
- 2:22
>> I have a question about the Whimo. A lot
- 2:23
of people who don't live in California
- 2:24
don't experience this Whimo, which is a
- 2:26
driverless car.
- 2:28
>> That's right.
- 2:28
>> What do you think happens if you if you
- 2:32
hit a Whimo?
- 2:35
What happens?
- 2:37
>> Yeah. I am much more blasze about
- 2:39
cutting off a car with no driver than I
- 2:41
am about cutting off another human
- 2:43
being. I don't Yeah, I don't care. I
- 2:45
think it's really interesting that we
- 2:47
treat driverless cars like with derision
- 2:50
like we're we we're like whatever don't
- 2:52
let the Whimo in.
- 2:53
>> But we kind of love the little shopping
- 2:55
cart thing that rolls around. That is
- 2:57
adorable.
- 2:57
>> Have you ever been in an LA intersection
- 2:59
where the little robot delivery
- 3:04
cart meets a Whimo at the same time and
- 3:06
they just stand there together like
- 3:09
they're in love? I assume.
- 3:11
>> Uh I like that. No, I have I look
- 3:13
forward that's going to be that's going
- 3:14
to be like, you know, a four-leaf clover
- 3:16
in a field. That's
- 3:18
>> keep your eye out for that for that meat
- 3:19
cute that that meat LA meat cute. Okay.
- 3:22
I guess my what I what I wanted to ask
- 3:24
you before we get to your question and I
- 3:26
know you're literally pulled over on the
- 3:28
side of the highway so we won't keep you
- 3:30
but um you have made a point of letting
- 3:35
us in on your creative process a lot
- 3:38
which I really appreciate as a person
- 3:41
who tries to make things. What do you
- 3:44
like about letting people in on that?
- 3:46
Cuz people some people don't really feel
- 3:48
like they don't like to do that. What do
- 3:50
you get out of showing people how you
- 3:51
make things?
- 3:52
>> I like it because there's it's it's be
- 3:56
become in the music production space
- 3:58
more and more popular. I would say that
- 4:00
like when I was 13 and I was scouring
- 4:03
the internet trying to find the kind of
- 4:05
videos that we've made a lot of. I was
- 4:07
finding some but not a ton. And man, I
- 4:10
find them inspiring. You know what I
- 4:11
mean? I see here comes a a fire truck.
- 4:15
I'm going to wait for a beep.
- 4:16
>> I hope it's a Whimo fire truck and
- 4:18
nobody fire. Yeah. nobody driving it.
- 4:20
Um,
- 4:22
I find it I find it so inspiring as a
- 4:25
consumer to be like, "Oh, that's a
- 4:28
laptop that I could buy at the Apple
- 4:30
store and that's a microphone." Like,
- 4:32
there's kind of there's a kind of a
- 4:33
magic and mystery in hearing a great
- 4:36
song that makes it feel unattainable to
- 4:39
me. And I think that when I see somebody
- 4:41
break it down, um, I go like, "Oh, wow.
- 4:44
I could do that." And I think also I'm
- 4:46
I'm always rolling my eyes in the music
- 4:49
space at people acting like they have
- 4:51
some secret sauce, secret ingredient
- 4:54
thing. Yeah.
- 4:55
>> And to me it's like no no there is
- 4:57
nothing. It's all just like I had an
- 5:00
idea and here's how it is and it's
- 5:01
probably simpler than you think it is or
- 5:05
maybe it's just more tedious or
- 5:06
painstaking. You know what I mean? So
- 5:09
>> that I love that quality. I love and I
- 5:11
also think that like it connects people
- 5:12
to the to the project more like I'm a
- 5:15
DVD behind the scenes commentary of a
- 5:18
movie guy. I love learning about the
- 5:21
process of making the thing and I think
- 5:22
it makes you love something more.
- 5:24
>> Any creative process like they're all
- 5:26
kind of similar. It's like a lot of
- 5:29
trying things in real time and then like
- 5:31
a lot of jokes to like get your brain
- 5:35
off lines cuz you're you can't think
- 5:37
anymore which I I I can like I love that
- 5:40
you and Billy when you work together you
- 5:42
do that a lot. You like use comedy to
- 5:46
switch yourself out of a rut or out of a
- 5:48
mood or something. I've noticed
- 5:51
>> where where she cracks me up so much
- 5:53
when I make her laugh. Much like your
- 5:55
laugh or like Conan's laugh or something
- 5:58
like she has a laugh to me that I'm like
- 6:00
like that makes me feel so good to make
- 6:02
Billy laugh.
- 6:03
>> That's such an eldest child. Oh, Pineas,
- 6:06
it's so nice cuz Okay, I'm the oldest.
- 6:09
The eldest child.
- 6:11
We have it the worst.
- 6:14
I'm sorry. It's the hardest. We have a
- 6:17
lot of weight on our shoulders and we're
- 6:19
also like really always trying to get
- 6:21
our younger sibling to laugh feel
- 6:24
better. We're like that we feel we feel
- 6:26
a lot of obligation. I don't know if
- 6:28
it's different for oldest boys, but what
- 6:30
do you like and not like about being an
- 6:31
eldest child?
- 6:33
>> I guess the only thing I don't like is
- 6:35
that on a good day when I feel like I'm
- 6:37
really in the pocket, it seems like, oh,
- 6:39
it must be cool to have an older
- 6:41
sibling. That seems
- 6:42
>> That's what I'm saying. like the period
- 6:44
of time where I could drive her places
- 6:46
and like that. I was like, "This is
- 6:47
awesome."
- 6:48
>> Um, so that's a kind of a con. Like I
- 6:50
wish I had a a cool older sister or
- 6:53
older brother or something. Uh, and then
- 6:56
the pro is just having a younger sibling
- 6:58
is awesome, you know, and uh and getting
- 7:01
to like roll your eyes with your parents
- 7:03
about your younger sibling growing up
- 7:04
being like they're they're being insane.
- 7:06
Being the being the favorite, that's
- 7:08
awesome.
- 7:10
>> Who doesn't like being the favorite?
- 7:11
>> Oh my god. I know. So, you talk about
- 7:13
like, you know, liking the idea that
- 7:15
you're Billy's protector and and you're
- 7:18
also obviously
- 7:20
so important in her life, in her career,
- 7:21
and you guys are also doing tremendous
- 7:23
things separately. And what I wanted to
- 7:26
ask one last question is, how would you
- 7:28
describe the way you like to work? Um,
- 7:32
my fantasy is that you get in a place
- 7:36
with somebody and the prerec is that you
- 7:39
go in there and you already think
- 7:40
they're talented. Even if they're not
- 7:42
successful yet, they've done something
- 7:44
that you're like, I am attracted to that
- 7:46
quality. I think they have an amazing
- 7:47
voice or they're a great writer or
- 7:49
whatever it is. So, you already come in
- 7:51
an admirer and then you hang out and you
- 7:54
make each other laugh and you have a cup
- 7:56
of coffee and you let your guard down
- 7:58
and you talk about something and
- 8:01
then you're like, "Oh, damn." Like, we
- 8:03
probably only have like 90 minutes
- 8:04
before you have that flight back to New
- 8:06
York. Do you want to try to make
- 8:07
something really quick? And then you
- 8:08
make something in this kind of like
- 8:11
pressures off um expectations have gone
- 8:14
away sort of a thing. And then when
- 8:17
you're in that process, you get inspired
- 8:19
and you get passionate and you get the
- 8:21
kind of feeling that we all get of like,
- 8:22
no, no, we want to make this the best it
- 8:24
can be, but that it's all inside this
- 8:26
kind of, you know, eggshell of like
- 8:29
we're just like there, you know, we're
- 8:30
just having a blast here. We're just
- 8:32
having a great time. And I don't think
- 8:34
that you're a failure if you don't make
- 8:36
something today and you don't think I'm
- 8:38
a loser.
- 8:38
>> I don't know if you've ever met Mike
- 8:39
Sher who's a showrunner and writer.
- 8:42
>> I have not met him, but I'm an admirer.
- 8:43
I know who he You and Mike remind me of
- 8:45
each other a lot. um and when I've heard
- 8:47
you speak and because it's just
- 8:49
basically this idea of like you can
- 8:51
decide that chaos is going to be the
- 8:53
thing that's the agent that creates
- 8:55
creativity or you're going to or you can
- 8:57
decide it's connection
- 8:59
and you it sometimes there's an truly
- 9:03
eccentric chaotic experience that's like
- 9:06
holy we made something but for the
- 9:08
most part like if it's chaotic and not
- 9:10
connected it's hard
- 9:11
>> and also imagine I feel like the the
- 9:13
real pivot for me was like I was very
- 9:16
ambitious as a 19-year-old, 20-year-old,
- 9:19
mainly cuz I didn't I didn't want the
- 9:21
opportunity to go away. I felt like we
- 9:23
had this great thing. I didn't want to
- 9:24
lose it. And I was stressed. I was like,
- 9:26
"Oh my god, like I don't want to fail."
- 9:29
And I think that then we succeeded in a
- 9:31
bigger way than I thought we would. And
- 9:34
then we've had sort of ups and downs as
- 9:37
everybody does. And I was like, "Oh,
- 9:38
okay. So then if I really have no
- 9:40
control over whether something succeeds
- 9:43
or not, I might as well just have the
- 9:45
best time possible making the thing
- 9:48
>> because the couple times in my life that
- 9:51
I've been involved in making something
- 9:52
that was unpleasant to make.
- 9:55
>> Yes.
- 9:55
>> I didn't really care if it succeeded, I
- 9:57
was like that was horrible to work on
- 9:59
that. And especially if it failed in
- 10:02
whatever metric or capacity, I was like,
- 10:05
oh my god, what was the point of all
- 10:07
that? That was awful to do. And then
- 10:09
nobody even liked it. And now I work on
- 10:11
stuff and I'm like, well, you can't take
- 10:14
away from me that I had this amazing
- 10:16
summer. I mean, it's part of the unfair
- 10:18
thing about working with Billy for me is
- 10:19
I'm like, I'm expected to work with
- 10:21
people that I love so much less than my
- 10:24
sister. And you know what I mean? Like
- 10:26
year when you spend about a year making
- 10:28
a record and I'm like, yeah, that's a
- 10:29
year. I get to hang out with Billy like
- 10:32
three days a week and have a wonderful
- 10:34
time with her every time. and the idea
- 10:35
of like getting in with somebody that's
- 10:37
a stranger, it could lead to that, but
- 10:39
it's like unlikely that I'm going to
- 10:40
love somebody that much, you know.
- 10:42
>> So, what do you love about your sister?
- 10:44
>> I love so many things about her. I think
- 10:46
she's so earnest and sweet and um
- 10:49
hardworking and um I think she sees the
- 10:53
the world through a totally different
- 10:55
lens than I do. And then there are
- 10:57
things that we, you know, feel similarly
- 10:59
about and we think the same thing about.
- 11:01
Um, I love disagreeing with her about
- 11:04
stuff. It never for no reason, but I
- 11:06
love finding out why she feels
- 11:08
differently about something. She's so
- 11:11
competitive. I love that about her.
- 11:13
>> I love that about her, too.
- 11:15
>> I'm not a competitive guy. Like, we lost
- 11:18
this softball game. I do not care. Like,
- 11:20
that is not a problem to me. And if
- 11:23
Billy were at this softball game with
- 11:25
me, Billy' be sitting here next to me
- 11:26
like Kobe when Kobe would lose the
- 11:28
championship. like she is a she is a
- 11:31
fighter and I love that and that's lucky
- 11:33
for me to be you know on the same team
- 11:36
as um
- 11:37
>> and um you know and she's an amazing uh
- 11:41
uh compassionate sort of loving person.
- 11:45
She she got all that from our mom. She
- 11:47
loves animals of all kinds. She's
- 11:50
incredibly environmentally conscient
- 11:52
conscious. She's she's learned so many
- 11:54
lessons that I think take other people a
- 11:56
a longer time to learn if they ever do.
- 11:59
Agree.
- 11:59
>> So I'm an admirer of all those things.
- 12:01
>> Oh, thank you for saying that. So well
- 12:02
said. And so to our last uh to to let
- 12:05
you get back on the road and to honestly
- 12:08
take a look at how you could have done
- 12:10
better on the field
- 12:12
because that is important on your ride
- 12:14
home.
- 12:14
>> Yeah.
- 12:15
>> Um what what do you have a question? Uh
- 12:17
anything you think Billy would want to
- 12:19
talk about or you know uh Yes. Okay. You
- 12:22
got one. You got one.
- 12:22
>> I do. I do. Okay. So, I think that the
- 12:26
best way for me to phrase this is to not
- 12:29
overexlain it to you because I think you
- 12:32
learning it from Billy is funnier.
- 12:34
>> Okay.
- 12:36
>> I want you to ask Billy what tomato bis
- 12:40
soup is
- 12:42
and I want you to ask Billy how she lost
- 12:45
tomato bisc soup.
- 12:49
>> Fantastic. Perfect. This feels like
- 12:51
family lore. I can't wait to get into
- 12:53
it.
- 12:53
>> It's shockingly recent. This is not This
- 12:57
is not some thing from 10 years ago.
- 12:59
This is like This is fresh.
- 13:01
>> This is Friday.
- 13:03
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
- 13:04
>> Oh my god. Awesome. Okay, Phineia, thank
- 13:06
you so much for your time and doing
- 13:08
this. And truly, anytime you want to
- 13:10
come in here and talk more, I would love
- 13:11
it. So,
- 13:12
>> I'd be honored. I'm a big fan. Thanks
- 13:13
again. Have fun with
- 13:14
>> Thank you so much. You're the best. Talk
- 13:16
to you soon. And nice to meet you.
- 13:18
>> Bye. Nice to meet you.
- 13:21
This episode is brought to you by
- 13:22
Visible. Ah, spring is in the air, which
- 13:24
means it's time for some spring
- 13:25
cleaning. We're decluttering the
- 13:27
closets, and finally tossing those
- 13:29
mystery cords. But while you're cleaning
- 13:31
out the junk drawer, take a look at your
- 13:33
wireless bill. Don't fall for wireless
- 13:36
traps, surprise fees, confusing bills,
- 13:38
and empty promises. Join Visible and cut
- 13:41
out the nonsense. With Visible, you get
- 13:43
unlimited 5G data and hotspot on
- 13:46
Verizon's network for one flat cost.
- 13:49
Just $25 a month, taxes and fees
- 13:52
included. It's everything you need and
- 13:54
nothing you don't. Finish your spring
- 13:56
cleaning by ditching the carrier
- 13:58
clutter. Head to visible.com and get
- 14:00
started. Terms apply. See visible.com
- 14:02
for plan features and network management
- 14:04
details.
- 14:07
All right, listen up. Ralph's, King
- 14:09
Supers, Harris ter, Food for Less,
- 14:11
Kroger, and more are now on Uber Eats,
- 14:14
and you get 40% off your order of $30 or
- 14:17
more. Maybe you're trying a new recipe
- 14:18
and need some lastminute ingredients. Or
- 14:21
maybe the kids made a mess and you're
- 14:22
lower on cleaning supplies than you
- 14:24
thought. Whatever you need, you can get
- 14:26
it delivered in as little as 25 minutes.
- 14:28
So, order now on Uber Eats and get 40%
- 14:31
off your order of $30 or more with code
- 14:35
Kroger 2026. Plus, Uber 1 members get 0
- 14:39
delivery fees. Orders of $30 or more,
- 14:42
save up to $25. Ends May 31st, 2026. See
- 14:46
app for details.
- 14:48
>> Woohoo!
- 14:49
>> Oh my god, Billy Eyish is here. Billy.
- 14:52
Okay. I mean, you're a tiny You're a
- 14:55
teeny tiny, but you're a giant. But
- 14:59
you're a teeny tiny. You're a teeny tiny
- 15:00
lady.
- 15:01
>> What are you talking about?
- 15:03
>> You're a shorty. Like
- 15:04
>> I am shorty. I am a shorty. This is
- 15:05
true.
- 15:06
>> You're a shorty. How's your tiny shorty?
- 15:07
52.
- 15:08
>> 52. And you are?
- 15:10
>> I'm 5'3.
- 15:11
>> We'll see. 52. Yeah, we'll see. Should
- 15:14
we Should we height check?
- 15:16
>> People are 5'2 like to say they're 5'3.
- 15:19
>> Well, you know what's interesting? I've
- 15:20
been 53. I'm still saying that I'm 5'3
- 15:23
because I feel that it's not true that
- 15:26
I've grown an inch, but I did just go to
- 15:28
the doctor and they checked my height
- 15:30
and I was 5'4 suddenly. And I've been 53
- 15:33
since I was like 12 years old. So, I've
- 15:36
been telling everybody that I grew an
- 15:38
inch. I literally been going around and
- 15:40
being like, "Guys, I grew an inch."
- 15:42
>> Do you think though you have good Do you
- 15:43
think you have good posture or do you
- 15:44
think your posture's gotten better?
- 15:46
>> I think my posture is better and I think
- 15:48
my posture is generally good. I do have
- 15:49
the phone the iPhone bump. you know, the
- 15:52
iPhone bump at the top of the spine kind
- 15:54
of vibe. But other than that,
- 15:56
>> yeah, because you probably have like
- 15:57
Alexander technique dancer training
- 16:00
posture stuff. Yeah.
- 16:01
>> Well, but well done.
- 16:03
>> I actually have been working on my
- 16:04
posture because
- 16:05
>> is your posture bad in general?
- 16:07
>> It is pretty bad. It's getting worse.
- 16:08
It's getting worse. And
- 16:10
>> it's getting worse. Interesting.
- 16:11
>> I know.
- 16:12
>> Because of this, because of working,
- 16:13
because of sitting?
- 16:14
>> No, I think just because Well, maybe
- 16:16
because of computers and phones. Yeah.
- 16:18
But it might just be like age and yeah,
- 16:21
so I have to work on it. Okay, so Billy
- 16:22
Eyish is here. We're working on our
- 16:24
posture.
- 16:25
>> You're a teeny tiny, but you're a giant.
- 16:29
>> You're a giant in every industry. Okay,
- 16:32
>> I don't know how to not totally praise
- 16:36
head to, so I'm going to take it slow.
- 16:39
>> Okay. Very, very pumped that you're
- 16:41
here. I'm such a fan of your work. I am
- 16:43
such a um a fan of how you work.
- 16:48
And my gosh, you've been very generous
- 16:50
to us, uh, people who don't know you but
- 16:53
get to experience your art. you've been
- 16:54
very generous in like showing us how you
- 16:56
work
- 16:57
>> and I am like really blown away by how
- 17:01
you approach your art and your work
- 17:05
because what I feel from you and I think
- 17:08
is true is like you have this thing a
- 17:11
lot of it comes from your family the way
- 17:12
you were raised like this kind of like
- 17:14
the way in which your family
- 17:17
the people around you like made you like
- 17:19
a citizen of the world
- 17:20
>> that you're not you don't feel above
- 17:23
people.
- 17:25
>> I know. And because of that, it's like
- 17:27
you're in in it with us. Like this whole
- 17:29
thing feels like we're in it together.
- 17:31
>> You're like you're physically in it.
- 17:33
Like you're physically in the crowd.
- 17:34
You're physically in the room. Like you
- 17:36
you put you throw yourself in
- 17:38
>> sometimes. I get nervous for you.
- 17:40
>> And then but you also because of it,
- 17:43
that's why we feel as as fans, we feel
- 17:45
so connected to you. And
- 17:47
>> my god,
- 17:48
>> the the other part of you that I love is
- 17:51
you're so funny and you love to laugh.
- 17:53
Like comedy is so important to you.
- 17:55
>> Oh my god. I was literally saying
- 17:56
yesterday I was with my friends and we
- 17:58
were talking about how we live to laugh.
- 18:01
I just I literally live to laugh. I said
- 18:04
this to my friend cuz she was talking
- 18:05
about relationships and she was like she
- 18:08
was like, "Well, I just didn't laugh."
- 18:09
And and I was like, "Well, you
- 18:11
live to laugh specifically and I do
- 18:13
too." And so when you're not with
- 18:14
somebody who makes you laugh anyway, she
- 18:16
the rest of the day she kept being like,
- 18:17
"I can't get over you saying live to
- 18:19
laugh."
- 18:22
>> It is medicine. Amy, thank you for
- 18:24
saying all that stuff out on my face.
- 18:28
>> Oh my god.
- 18:29
>> Um God. Also, you're like us as fans.
- 18:33
Just you saying that.
- 18:34
>> Are you kidding me? I'm such a fan.
- 18:35
>> Wow.
- 18:36
>> Thank you very much. But yes, I feel I
- 18:38
feel one with the world and the fans and
- 18:41
all. Well, I think like the comedy part
- 18:42
is important because it is like, you
- 18:44
know, you can do so many things well and
- 18:46
you're you're in a family of artists who
- 18:47
do a lot of things and you're doing a
- 18:49
lot of things.
- 18:49
>> Yes.
- 18:51
>> But the comedy part if like I'm curious
- 18:53
where that where I'm curious like what
- 18:56
your relationship was to comedy as a
- 18:59
little kid and a young person and like
- 19:01
your family like you guys laugh a lot.
- 19:03
Oh yeah.
- 19:03
>> And you all have good senses of humor.
- 19:05
Like really sharp.
- 19:06
>> Yeah. I mean, my mom was was my both of
- 19:10
my parents. Gosh, this is amazing. I
- 19:12
literally like have never talked about
- 19:14
anything in this realm, which I'm loving
- 19:16
right now already. Um,
- 19:18
>> I mean, my mom was in the Groundlings,
- 19:19
so she is just naturally very funny and
- 19:22
very quick and witty and like
- 19:24
>> has so many characters and so does my
- 19:26
dad. My dad is like an incredible face
- 19:28
maker. He makes amazing faces and he and
- 19:31
I used to have like face making
- 19:33
competitions when we were when I was a
- 19:35
little kid. And um
- 19:37
>> so I would always see them just be funny
- 19:40
all the time and all they did was be
- 19:42
funny and laugh and all Phineas I mean
- 19:44
Phineas Phineas is like truly a comedic
- 19:48
genius.
- 19:49
>> Yeah. He has really good jokes
- 19:51
>> like really funny like and has been
- 19:53
forever. I mean when we were I was
- 19:55
thinking about this today randomly that
- 19:57
way when when we were doing meetings
- 19:59
with like labels and stuff when I was 14
- 20:01
and he was 18. He was just like cracking
- 20:04
jokes for the the whole thing and making
- 20:06
everybody, you know, die laughing. So, I
- 20:08
don't know what it came from. I love to
- 20:10
laugh so much. And I just
- 20:11
>> That's where it came from. Just as you
- 20:12
said, like you you you start to like
- 20:14
know what you see.
- 20:16
>> And like the love language at your
- 20:17
family was like laughter jokes,
- 20:19
laughter, and a little bit of slight
- 20:21
teasing, which to me is a sign of love.
- 20:23
>> That's literally my I live I I live for
- 20:25
that. I I like there's nothing that's
- 20:27
funnier to me than being made fun of and
- 20:31
making fun of someone else.
- 20:33
>> To me, it's like how I show someone that
- 20:35
I love and and that that's how love is
- 20:38
shown to me.
- 20:38
>> Yes. 100%.
- 20:39
>> And it is just like some families, it's
- 20:41
wild. Some families don't do that.
- 20:43
>> Uh I can't even believe that some people
- 20:45
don't do that.
- 20:46
>> Some people don't do that. Sometimes
- 20:47
like I feel like people enter my life
- 20:49
and I start to like absolutely just go
- 20:52
in on them for whatever thing I'm making
- 20:54
fun and they and and it's like I realize
- 20:56
like oh you you don't do this so it
- 20:59
feels like I'm bullying you but really
- 21:02
I'm just trying to be
- 21:03
>> I'm loving you.
- 21:04
>> I'm loving you. I'm loving you so much.
- 21:09
>> Oh my god. Also like laughing at
- 21:12
yourself is like the greatest one of the
- 21:13
greatest joys and like
- 21:15
>> it is and it's a sign of intelligence.
- 21:16
But having a sense of humor about
- 21:18
yourself, especially when you're all
- 21:20
eyes are on you or when you're young
- 21:21
person is super hard.
- 21:22
>> Taking yourselves too seriously is just
- 21:24
the worst quality in the world.
- 21:25
>> It is. But it it it is the worst
- 21:28
quality. But it is but I have empathy
- 21:30
for it because usually it comes from
- 21:32
like you know what I saw it a lot in SNL
- 21:34
because you got people at their most
- 21:36
nervous.
- 21:37
>> Yes. And when people are nervous, like
- 21:40
whatever is your shadow side comes out.
- 21:42
Like either you get quiet or you get
- 21:43
kind of mean to people or you get hectic
- 21:45
or
- 21:46
>> and when you're nervous like sometimes
- 21:49
people just they they they really tense
- 21:52
up. They want to take things seriously
- 21:54
cuz they want to do a good job
- 21:56
>> and you're like I hate to break it to
- 21:57
you. The secret is to be a big dummy and
- 22:01
pretend that life is a dream.
- 22:02
>> I know it's hard. It's a hard lesson.
- 22:04
Well, it's like the whole thing that
- 22:05
people talk about these days, which is
- 22:07
so real, which is like embracing
- 22:09
being cringe is is literally allowing
- 22:12
yourself to be happy and free. Like like
- 22:15
letting yourself be cringy or you know,
- 22:19
you know when like you know a kid hits a
- 22:22
certain age like depending on the kid
- 22:24
like for me it was like probably 10 or
- 22:27
11 where they start going like that's
- 22:29
weird.
- 22:30
>> Yeah.
- 22:30
>> Oh that's weird. Why are you saying
- 22:32
that? and you realize that they're
- 22:34
they're in they're suddenly very aware,
- 22:37
you know, self-conscious and aware and
- 22:39
then thinking everything is weird and
- 22:40
wanting to be cool and wanting to fit in
- 22:42
in whatever way. I feel like letting
- 22:44
that go
- 22:46
>> is very hard and challenging and trying
- 22:49
not to be cool.
- 22:51
>> Yes.
- 22:52
>> Is like
- 22:54
so much cooler.
- 22:55
>> I know. But it's like you have to go
- 22:57
through it to get there. And
- 22:59
>> we've all been on both sides. We've been
- 23:01
the 10-year-old that's like, "Dad, don't
- 23:03
pick me up at the mall. Like, don't
- 23:04
don't come inside the mall. Please don't
- 23:06
embarrass me."
- 23:06
>> But it's like sometimes a thing that
- 23:08
might be embarrassing is like what
- 23:11
brings us the most joy of anything in
- 23:13
the world. Like I was I spent so many
- 23:15
years when I started, you know, having
- 23:18
this career that I wanted to like prove
- 23:21
the kind of artist that I was and, you
- 23:23
know, I wanted people to think of me in
- 23:24
a certain way. And I feel like at a
- 23:25
certain point I was just like this is
- 23:27
bringing me no joy at all. Like I I this
- 23:30
is not
- 23:31
>> um fulfilling to me in the slightest at
- 23:35
all. I mean I wonder for you like at SNL
- 23:37
because
- 23:38
>> when I hosted a few years ago
- 23:41
>> I was it it is so good.
- 23:44
>> Thank you for saying that. You actually
- 23:46
think that? Do you actually think so?
- 23:48
>> Dude. Yes. We Okay. Well, there were
- 23:50
people that we host and and were like,
- 23:53
"Oh, like they did a really nice job.
- 23:54
>> Good for them."
- 23:55
>> Like that looks like they had a LOT OF
- 23:58
FUN.
- 24:00
BUT YOU'RE GENUINELY FUNNY.
- 24:02
>> Thank you, God. I mean, it was so scary.
- 24:04
But I my question to you though, I mean,
- 24:06
and like I love SNL, but but the vibe
- 24:10
was very intense.
- 24:11
>> And the whole week leading up, I was
- 24:13
like, why is nobody laughing at all? Cuz
- 24:16
I was like, isn't this show about
- 24:18
>> laughing, but it's so serious? And I
- 24:20
think everyone is like wants to keep
- 24:22
their job at the same time. Yeah, that
- 24:24
show is like
- 24:25
>> it's some serious
- 24:26
>> a lot of people auditioning to keep
- 24:28
their job.
- 24:29
>> Yeah.
- 24:29
>> And it's like an emergency room. Like
- 24:31
sometimes the emergency room days are
- 24:33
like fun and you're like goofing around
- 24:35
and other days you're just like,
- 24:37
>> "Oh, everybody's scrambling around and
- 24:45
>> I mean it's as fun as an emergency
- 24:47
room."
- 24:49
>> They have fun.
- 24:51
Wait, but you you are a huge fan of
- 24:54
comedy and you've talked about this a
- 24:55
million times, but you have watched The
- 24:58
Office
- 24:58
>> Girl.
- 24:59
>> How many times for real? Cuz is it it
- 25:01
says 30 times.
- 25:03
>> It's over that now. So
- 25:04
>> what?
- 25:05
>> Well, because I don't ever stop and I
- 25:08
never
- 25:08
>> You just have it on a
- 25:09
>> Well, when you asked earlier, I meant to
- 25:10
say to your question about like humor
- 25:13
and grow, how did you you know, a big
- 25:16
part of that was The Office. I mean, I
- 25:17
started watching The Office when I was
- 25:19
like
- 25:20
11 or 12.
- 25:22
>> And that's what it's interesting about
- 25:25
cringe because you're I mean
- 25:27
>> the like Jenzie their relationship to
- 25:30
cringe has been really interesting to
- 25:32
watch. They were really afraid of it
- 25:34
>> then shows embraced it like their
- 25:36
favorite comedies embraced it and they
- 25:38
almost got to like experience it
- 25:40
vicariously through someone else. Like I
- 25:42
mean Michael Scott is the ultimate
- 25:44
cringe journey.
- 25:45
>> Yes. 100%.
- 25:46
>> He's like oh my god you're dying for
- 25:49
him. And then by then you're like or
- 25:50
he's like Buddha
- 25:52
>> literally or he's the most literally
- 25:54
like the the most tender. I mean that's
- 25:56
what I think is so genius about the
- 25:58
whole show and Michael Scott as a whole
- 26:00
is that he is so awful but you you he's
- 26:04
so undeniably
- 26:07
you can't help but love him and feel for
- 26:09
him and see yourself in him weirdly
- 26:11
>> and and like kind of aspire to be as
- 26:15
open book as him at the end of the day.
- 26:17
I think that the amount of times at this
- 26:20
point,
- 26:22
I mean, I said 30 probably like four
- 26:25
years ago. So, wow.
- 26:27
>> I probably rewatch the whole series like
- 26:32
three or four times a year.
- 26:35
>> Sorry.
- 26:36
>> It's up It's not more. Sorry.
- 26:39
>> So, Jenna Jenna took a little Add a
- 26:42
other day and added up the added up the
- 26:44
hours of what that is.
- 26:45
>> Oh god. Oh,
- 26:46
>> do you know that it's like 92 days
- 26:50
straight?
- 26:51
>> NO.
- 26:52
>> I GUESS MY question to you is like, have
- 26:54
you tried parks and wreck? And do YOU
- 26:56
LOVE PARKS? OH GOD, I LOVE PARKS AND
- 26:59
WRECK.
- 26:59
>> I really want to check it out. I'd love
- 27:01
for you to check it out.
- 27:02
>> Best shows of all time. GET THE HELL OUT
- 27:04
OF HERE. I LOVE PARKS AND WRECK.
- 27:07
>> THAT'S THAT'S
- 27:08
>> I WOULD love for you to CHECK IT OUT.
- 27:14
YOU IN PARKS AND WRECK IS one of the
- 27:16
greatest performances in history and
- 27:18
everybody knows it
- 27:20
>> and that is one of my top five shows.
- 27:21
So, moving on.
- 27:22
>> But I but but but I feel you. Well,
- 27:24
getting back to the office and just that
- 27:26
I Okay. Also, I would say that the idea
- 27:30
that TV shows are like a comfort and a
- 27:33
way to self soothe.
- 27:34
>> Yes.
- 27:35
>> Is really really I really relate. I
- 27:37
think a lot of people relate, especially
- 27:39
comedy because there's something about
- 27:40
the way in which there's a tiny bit of
- 27:41
conflict.
- 27:42
>> People aren't supposed to get along.
- 27:44
Yeah.
- 27:44
>> They figure it out.
- 27:46
>> They go on with their day. Everybody's
- 27:48
okay. And then if you rewatch it and
- 27:49
rewatch it and rewatch it, you know how
- 27:51
it's gonna
- 27:52
>> Dude,
- 27:53
>> yes.
- 27:53
>> 100%. This is This is my exper exact
- 27:56
experience. Exactly what you're saying.
- 27:59
Soothing
- 27:59
>> 100. It's a self soothing like knowing
- 28:02
the end,
- 28:03
>> no anxiety thing.
- 28:05
>> Yes.
- 28:05
>> It's like
- 28:06
>> Yeah. Cuz I have trouble watching movies
- 28:09
that are I have trouble watching doing
- 28:11
anything that's new. Watching
- 28:13
entertainment that is new.
- 28:14
>> Yes.
- 28:15
because
- 28:17
I feel like it's like an ADHD. I I just
- 28:20
all I do is re-watch the same movie, the
- 28:22
same show, eat the same meal, listen to
- 28:24
the same song over and over in a way
- 28:26
that's like like it's like a little bit
- 28:29
over the top.
- 28:29
>> It depends on how you frame it, right?
- 28:30
>> If someone else was there, they're like,
- 28:33
>> you know, but when I'm alone, obviously,
- 28:35
it's the most amazing thing in the
- 28:36
world.
- 28:36
>> What TV show you watch The Office over
- 28:38
and over? What movie do you watch over
- 28:39
and over? What meal do you eat over and
- 28:41
over?
- 28:42
>> Amazing questions. Um, The Office over
- 28:44
and over.
- 28:45
>> Yeah.
- 28:45
>> New girl over and over.
- 28:46
>> Oh my god.
- 28:47
>> Uh, movie
- 28:50
>> like Ferris Beer's Day Off I've seen an
- 28:52
unbelievable amount of times.
- 28:55
>> Over the hedge.
- 28:57
>> I have seen so many times.
- 28:59
>> Wait, Over the Hedge?
- 29:00
>> Over the Hedge. Steve Carell plays a
- 29:02
squirrel.
- 29:04
>> Oh, it's an animated movie.
- 29:05
>> Yeah, it's an animated movie.
- 29:06
>> Okay. Okay.
- 29:07
>> It's unbelievably amazing. I've forced
- 29:10
so many people to watch it. Spirit.
- 29:12
Unbelievable film. Have seen it so many
- 29:14
times. Animated. It's a horse. The horse
- 29:18
movie. Yes. Horse girl.
- 29:19
>> I am a horse girl.
- 29:20
>> And you prove my theory. Jennifer
- 29:22
Lawrence was in here. She's a horse
- 29:23
girl. Horse girls have beautiful hair.
- 29:26
>> I did see you say that.
- 29:29
>> And you've got great hair. You always
- 29:31
have. And horses. You're part horse.
- 29:35
>> Also, I was the year of the horse.
- 29:37
>> Born the year.
- 29:38
>> You were. And this is the year of the
- 29:39
horse.
- 29:40
>> That's true. Aren't we in the year? The
- 29:42
fire horse whichor the fire horse.
- 29:44
>> You have beautiful hair, too.
- 29:45
>> Uh, thank you so much. Do you like
- 29:46
horses?
- 29:47
>> I don't have beautiful hair. Thank you,
- 29:48
though. I don't like horses. I They
- 29:50
scare the out of me. I love them.
- 29:52
>> Have you ridden them?
- 29:53
>> I I reluctantly have ridden them.
- 29:55
>> I've I rode one recently with my son in
- 29:58
Iceland a couple years ago. I was like,
- 29:59
you know what? I'm going to ride. Yeah.
- 30:00
I'm going to like And I The whole time I
- 30:02
was like, I cannot wait to get off.
- 30:05
>> It hurt so bad. It hurt
- 30:07
>> physically. Yeah. It hurt my
- 30:09
>> Yeah. The who's the who's and the haw's.
- 30:11
It does.
- 30:12
>> It hurt my my inner leg, upper butt,
- 30:15
front butt region.
- 30:16
>> Front butt. Dude,
- 30:18
>> it hurt. Well, like anything, you get
- 30:20
used to that.
- 30:21
>> That's That's true. And then you're a
- 30:24
champion.
- 30:25
>> Um, okay. You have had the phrase
- 30:28
youngest used on you constantly. the
- 30:31
youngest to reach 100 million Spotify
- 30:34
streams. Youngest winner, album of the
- 30:36
year, record of the year, youngest
- 30:38
person ever to win two Academy Awards in
- 30:40
any category. Oh my god. Um, do you is
- 30:44
it kind of nice to reach your 20s and be
- 30:48
a little bit away from that kind of
- 30:50
young wonder kind like vibe?
- 30:53
>> Dude,
- 30:53
>> do you know what I mean? Is it nice?
- 30:55
>> I do.
- 30:57
I mean, you're still very young, but
- 30:58
you're also not.
- 31:00
>> Well, I guess I never like thought that
- 31:02
I would ever not be a teenager. Like,
- 31:05
>> it's not like I like I don't know. I
- 31:08
just was like, I'm this will be me
- 31:09
forever. There's no other, you know, I
- 31:11
remember when I was like 17, I was like,
- 31:13
okay, and I am the person I will be
- 31:15
forever right now.
- 31:17
>> And I and it's just not how it works,
- 31:18
obviously. And I am so excited to age
- 31:21
and I'm so excited for my face to age
- 31:24
and my body to age and not change it,
- 31:27
you know? And I want my kids to look
- 31:30
>> at me and have my face look like their
- 31:33
face and not be some botched version of
- 31:36
whatever the is going on out there
- 31:37
right now.
- 31:38
>> You know what I'm saying? So anyway,
- 31:40
>> yes. And when what's really wild about
- 31:43
you being like I'm when I was 17, I
- 31:45
thought I was a person I was.
- 31:47
>> We knew you at 17. We like saw you get a
- 31:50
cake when you were 17,
- 31:52
>> right?
- 31:53
>> In the in the dock, you know, like happy
- 31:55
17th birthday.
- 31:56
>> Oh my god. Yeah, you're right.
- 31:58
>> And so you not only are you figuring
- 32:00
yourself out, but everybody's watching
- 32:01
you figure it out.
- 32:03
>> Mhm.
- 32:03
>> And there's, you know, I'm I'm saying
- 32:05
the obvious, but we all go through
- 32:07
versions of ourselves privately. You had
- 32:09
to go through versions of yourself
- 32:10
publicly.
- 32:11
>> And you also had to whatever change you
- 32:13
decided to make that day affected a
- 32:15
bunch of people. It's not like you were
- 32:16
like, I'm going to cut my hair now. And
- 32:17
everyone's like, "We got to change the
- 32:20
the posters or whatever." Like like it's
- 32:22
it becomes a thing where you you you
- 32:25
like trying new versions of yourself,
- 32:28
>> everybody else weighs in on that or has
- 32:30
something. How is from minute one,
- 32:33
Billy, from when I saw you to now, there
- 32:35
was some kind of inner governor, a voice
- 32:39
that you would, it felt like check in
- 32:42
with
- 32:43
>> to make decisions.
- 32:46
>> Who is that? Where is that? Where does
- 32:48
that come from? Is that true? Is that
- 32:49
how you make decisions? Do you go to
- 32:51
your gut first? How do you make
- 32:53
decisions?
- 32:55
>> Wow. These are amazing questions. I
- 32:57
think you are absolutely
- 32:58
>> Oh my god.
- 32:59
>> eating it up right now.
- 33:02
>> Wow. I feel like it is a gut thing. Like
- 33:07
I think that weirdly
- 33:11
as much as it was a strain on my youth
- 33:15
>> becoming famous at 14, 13, 14, 15,
- 33:20
>> uh
- 33:23
I weirdly do think that I had that
- 33:26
element of teenage carelessness.
- 33:30
>> Yeah. Right. Even though I was
- 33:32
self-conscious and very, you know,
- 33:34
trying to be cool, I I I also was myself
- 33:37
in a way that I look back on and I'm
- 33:40
like so grateful that I was that way.
- 33:43
And and I think that weirdly I'm glad
- 33:45
that it happened when I was so young
- 33:47
because
- 33:49
>> and I I think that it is attributed
- 33:51
also, I have to say, to just the person
- 33:53
that I've always been since I was a
- 33:54
little kid. Just very strong willed and
- 33:57
very
- 33:58
>> very bossy. extremely bossy and very
- 34:02
needing things to go my way and also
- 34:04
being very honest and
- 34:06
>> blunt I guess.
- 34:07
>> And so I think when I started
- 34:10
>> doing interviews or you know being asked
- 34:12
any kind of question
- 34:15
>> I was just very very honest and I also I
- 34:18
did PR training when I was 14 and I
- 34:21
sobbed through it. I hated it so
- 34:26
much. It was literally like
- 34:29
the scariest of all time.
- 34:33
>> What made it so scary?
- 34:35
>> I was just like,
- 34:35
>> what made you so?
- 34:37
>> I first of all, the woman who did it to
- 34:40
me was like I would she know she would
- 34:43
ask me a question cuz this is how PR
- 34:45
training works.
- 34:46
>> Okay, I should I should know this.
- 34:48
>> Did you do PR training?
- 34:49
>> No, obviously not.
- 34:50
>> Well, I only did one session and it was
- 34:52
like under an hour and I sobbed and I
- 34:54
left and I did not follow any of the
- 34:56
rules after that. But uh basically like
- 34:59
she'll you know they'll tell you what
- 35:01
you're you should say or the kind of
- 35:03
direction you should go and and then
- 35:06
they'll ask you the question like
- 35:08
pretending you're in an interview and so
- 35:09
I would start answering the way I would
- 35:11
want to answer and she would like kind
- 35:13
of cut me off and be like no no you need
- 35:15
to start saying this or no you should be
- 35:16
saying this don't say that don't give
- 35:18
them that. And it was important for me
- 35:20
to learn and I'm glad I learned it. But
- 35:22
similar to
- 35:25
>> learning to drive safely. It's good to
- 35:29
know how to drive safely so that you can
- 35:32
use your the so that then you can This
- 35:36
is really a bad analogy,
- 35:39
>> but so then you can bend the rules
- 35:41
according to
- 35:42
>> Yeah. No, I hear
- 35:43
>> safety. But like, you know, you know
- 35:45
what is safe and good and right, but
- 35:48
then I'm gonna
- 35:50
>> go be, you know, precise about, you know
- 35:52
what I'm saying? I don't know. Do you
- 35:53
know what I mean? Absolutely. It's like
- 35:55
you're figuring out your own boundaries,
- 35:57
like figuring out within those
- 35:58
boundaries how to play.
- 35:59
>> Yes.
- 36:00
>> Authenticity is like major for you. It's
- 36:03
like it's like what you're looking for.
- 36:04
It's what you want to put out into the
- 36:06
world.
- 36:07
>> And like you feel it and you just kind
- 36:08
of can't fake it. And it's probably a
- 36:11
little painful when you're not being
- 36:14
authentic.
- 36:14
>> I hate it. I hate it. And I think when
- 36:17
things get more mainstream and then more
- 36:20
people who aren't your fans are looking
- 36:23
at you and hearing it, it's
- 36:26
>> it becomes like scary. I mean, I feel I
- 36:28
feel like sad thinking back, not even
- 36:31
thinking back, just thinking about how
- 36:33
I've definitely like like 80 75%
- 36:39
come down on my my
- 36:43
uh not honesty, but my sharing
- 36:47
>> of myself. I used to be literally like
- 36:51
99%
- 36:52
complete like oversharing with the
- 36:55
entire world which I loved cuz I also I
- 36:59
am a fan and I've always been a fan like
- 37:01
my my I'm a horse girl and I am a fan
- 37:04
girl and I always have been and these
- 37:07
are like
- 37:07
>> and you were a believer and you let
- 37:10
everyone into that like tender place
- 37:12
like
- 37:13
>> but I did it specifically because I knew
- 37:15
that as a fan I wanted my favorite
- 37:18
artists to do that. I wanted realness
- 37:20
and honesty.
- 37:22
>> You do that. You make people feel that
- 37:23
way. I mean, your lyrics make people
- 37:25
feel
- 37:29
>> so seen, Billy. Like so like there's a
- 37:33
reason why Okay, I'm going to praise and
- 37:35
praise you again. Like there like when
- 37:39
when we're when I go to your show, I
- 37:41
went to your show and like and like
- 37:44
everyone's singing, you know? um
- 37:48
uh you know um you make me hate this
- 37:51
city like you know and everybody's like
- 37:55
those like those let's take that song
- 37:57
let's take let's take that song
- 38:02
>> okay hold on I'm going to sing the
- 38:04
entire song to you let's go
- 38:07
okay but that moment oh my god this is
- 38:09
not okay I have to break some news this
- 38:11
is not my laptop I forgot my laptop
- 38:14
today this is Sam's laptop And I'm
- 38:16
completely stressed out. Okay. And for
- 38:18
those people watching, this laptop is
- 38:20
bigger than my usual laptop. And they
- 38:22
probably already noticed that. And don't
- 38:24
write in no comments about laptop. Okay.
- 38:27
I'm so old. I got to read this. Okay.
- 38:29
Okay. But when you said,
- 38:32
okay, but when you were like when you
- 38:35
say cuz I'd never treat me this shitty.
- 38:38
YOU MADE ME HATE THIS CITY. I DON'T TALK
- 38:40
ABOUT you on the internet. WHEN
- 38:41
YOU'RE SINGING IT, when you're singing
- 38:43
it and I'm singing it,
- 38:45
>> you're making you're you're being like
- 38:48
you're speaking plainly, I guess, is the
- 38:50
way to say it. You're not hiding behind
- 38:53
some like
- 38:54
>> objects or metaphors.
- 38:57
>> And that authenticity, it's like it's
- 38:59
like a direct hit between the audience
- 39:01
and you like your lyrics are so
- 39:05
great. I guess my question is I guess I
- 39:07
have to give you a question. How do you
- 39:09
write lyrics? Oh gosh, THAT'S A TERRIBLE
- 39:12
QUESTION. FORGET IT. Let's sing more.
- 39:15
Okay,
- 39:19
cuz that shit's embarrassing. I mean,
- 39:21
that shit's embarrassing.
- 39:23
>> It is,
- 39:26
>> It is.
- 39:28
>> It really is.
- 39:29
>> That shit's embarrassing. You are my
- 39:32
everything. Like,
- 39:34
>> it's so real. Everybody felt that, feels
- 39:37
that. Thank you
- 39:38
>> with with your lyrics. But I am
- 39:40
genuinely curious like do you write a
- 39:42
lyric and then you go that's too
- 39:44
I I feel the way about dialogue
- 39:46
sometimes I'll write something and be
- 39:47
like nobody talks like that
- 39:48
>> right right
- 39:49
>> like nobody's going to say that I mean
- 39:50
dialogue to me is really impressive to
- 39:53
write like I don't understand how you do
- 39:55
that that to me I can't like fathom
- 40:00
writing a script at all like I don't
- 40:03
Yeah I don't know why I think I just I
- 40:06
have a similar feeling to like how
- 40:08
people talk to me who, you know, have
- 40:11
never made music or are musical at all
- 40:14
where they're like, "How do you possibly
- 40:16
do that?" Like, I can't begin to fathom
- 40:18
how to write dialogue.
- 40:20
>> Right. So, but I've watched you write
- 40:23
lyrics and you've let us watch you write
- 40:26
it and it feels like you're doing a
- 40:28
similar thing, which is like it's like
- 40:30
you try on a lyric and you're like, "Is
- 40:32
that real?"
- 40:33
>> Like you're you're you're asking
- 40:34
yourself, "Is that a real thing?" Even
- 40:35
though it's not always about a real
- 40:37
thing. It's just like, does that lyric
- 40:39
feel right in my head? Like
- 40:41
>> singing it out loud.
- 40:43
>> Well, so my answer to this is
- 40:47
interesting because I don't like writing
- 40:51
music.
- 40:52
>> I've heard you say this many times and I
- 40:56
have I have I have um grown to like it
- 41:00
so much more over the years and honestly
- 41:01
like growing up and becoming an adult
- 41:04
and not worrying about being cool. Yeah.
- 41:17
>> Literally anything. And I think like
- 41:20
>> it's so hard when you want to be good at
- 41:22
something and especially when you have
- 41:23
the pressure of people seeing it and
- 41:25
you're like, well, I it has to be good.
- 41:26
So, I can't even I can't let this be bad
- 41:29
for even one second. It'll stop you from
- 41:32
doing it at all. And so I like my love
- 41:38
is singing. Singing is like
- 41:41
>> my true true
- 41:44
>> soulmate. Like singing is the thing that
- 41:46
I love more than anything in the world.
- 41:48
And
- 41:50
>> um having songs that I have written to
- 41:53
sing is the goal. Like that's what I
- 41:55
love about writing music. And also when
- 41:58
I am cuz I write everything with my
- 42:00
brother and I write alone every now and
- 42:02
then but it doesn't bring me joy when I
- 42:04
write it alone. And also I'm too
- 42:06
critical and I'm like
- 42:09
>> it it's just frustrating for me. And
- 42:11
when I work with my brother, like I was
- 42:13
saying to somebody, you know, cuz
- 42:15
somebody said like, "Are you making an
- 42:18
album right now because you want to make
- 42:20
a new album or because you're required
- 42:22
in your contract to?"
- 42:23
>> And I was like,
- 42:26
>> I've never thought about that once.
- 42:28
>> Yeah.
- 42:28
>> And I feel that I'm lucky to feel that
- 42:31
way because I don't care if it's because
- 42:35
I have to. It's actually like any excuse
- 42:38
to hang out with my brother, I'll take.
- 42:40
>> Come on.
- 42:41
>> And we get to make music that we both
- 42:45
love. And I think that what's
- 42:47
interesting about not loving the process
- 42:49
of writing music is
- 42:52
>> I love the outcome so much.
- 42:56
>> I love my music more than any other
- 42:58
music. And I I think that that I think
- 43:00
that people hear that and think like
- 43:03
what the heck like you're listening to
- 43:04
your own music and it's like well yeah
- 43:06
that's why I make it. I It's like it's
- 43:08
like similar to like I make my own
- 43:10
perfume because I really like the smell
- 43:12
of it and I want to wear it,
- 43:14
>> you know? So I make music to listen to
- 43:16
it, to enjoy it, and to sing it. It's my
- 43:19
favorite thing in the world.
- 43:20
>> You're so good at singing.
- 43:22
>> It's so good that you like the thing
- 43:24
that you're so good at.
- 43:25
>> Thank god.
- 43:26
>> No kidding.
- 43:34
I like to ask singers this. We had
- 43:36
Haley.
- 43:38
>> Um, whenever we're friends, we text.
- 43:41
Whenever we're friends, we text. Um, not
- 43:44
a big deal.
- 43:44
>> That's how I feel about her, too.
- 43:46
>> Very cool. Um, and totally not don't
- 43:48
make a big deal out of it. Um um
- 43:52
but I asked her this and I like to ask
- 43:54
what like your first relationship to
- 43:55
your voice like
- 43:57
>> when you were like I like my voice.
- 44:01
>> Do you remember? You must have been a
- 44:03
tiny one because you were singing at a
- 44:05
very young age and you were encouraged
- 44:06
to sing a lot. But that thing when you
- 44:08
sing and you think like whatever's
- 44:10
coming out is like
- 44:11
>> is kind of good.
- 44:12
>> Yeah. Is good.
- 44:13
>> Whoa.
- 44:13
>> Do you remember a a feeling of that? Um,
- 44:17
well, it's so interesting because I have
- 44:19
been singing for my entire life. Like I
- 44:22
don't there was never a beginning. It
- 44:24
was just I was singing and singing and
- 44:25
singing and I grew up in a very musical
- 44:27
household.
- 44:29
>> Piano always being played, guitar being
- 44:31
played.
- 44:32
>> You know, my mom was a songwriter and
- 44:35
you know,
- 44:36
>> Phineas started writing songs before I
- 44:38
did. He was older than me and so there
- 44:40
was always music around and so I was
- 44:42
very encouraged to sing.
- 44:45
I think,
- 44:48
you know, I was homeschooled, but in the
- 44:50
homeschool community,
- 44:53
uh, there's like, you know, DIY talent
- 44:57
shows type stuff. There's like
- 44:58
homeschool talent shows,
- 45:00
>> and it was the only thing I looked for.
- 45:02
I I literally all I wanted to do was be
- 45:05
on a stage singing or dancing.
- 45:07
>> It was like a little baby Coachella that
- 45:08
you were getting ready for.
- 45:10
>> Yeah. And the first song I sang was
- 45:13
Tomorrow from Annie, of course. And I
- 45:16
think I was like
- 45:19
eight or wait no six. I think I was six.
- 45:23
And that right I don't know. I have a
- 45:25
hard time with numbers ages. But um that
- 45:28
I remember like I don't even think I did
- 45:31
but I loved it so much and the feeling
- 45:34
of the crowd cheering was just the
- 45:36
greatest thing. But I think my
- 45:38
relationship to my voice,
- 45:41
like I
- 45:44
this is gonna sound weird and I hope it
- 45:46
doesn't sound like pick me cuz I really
- 45:48
mean it.
- 45:49
>> No more cringe. It's over. No more pick
- 45:50
me.
- 45:50
>> No more cringe. No more. Yeah, you're
- 45:52
right. But I never like I didn't think
- 45:56
of myself as a singer. I just loved to
- 45:59
sing. M
- 46:00
>> and then I remember like when I was
- 46:03
about 11 like Phineas would, you know,
- 46:07
be with his friends and sometimes be
- 46:08
like, "Well, my sis, my little sister
- 46:10
has a really good voice." And I'd be
- 46:11
like, "What?" And then he'd be like,
- 46:13
"Billy, sing the beginning of Baby by
- 46:15
Justin Bieber." And I would like be like
- 46:17
I would be like, "Whoa, whoa." And his
- 46:20
friends would be like,
- 46:22
>> you know, "Whoa, like she's pretty
- 46:25
good."
- 46:26
>> Yeah. And I remember like doing it once
- 46:28
and like messing it up and I was like,
- 46:30
I was so upset cuz really I wanted to be
- 46:32
a dancer. That was like my thing.
- 46:34
>> I know. And that and that's
- 46:36
>> and they would like make me sing at like
- 46:37
the dance sleepover. Like they'd be
- 46:39
like, "Billy, go up and sing." And I was
- 46:41
too embarrassed. But then I wouldn't.
- 46:42
>> That I mean that's like the You're like
- 46:44
the athlete that like played basketball
- 46:46
and then like was like I think I also
- 46:48
like baseball and you're like win the
- 46:49
World Series. Like you were such a good
- 46:51
dancer.
- 46:52
>> I was barely a good dancer. I was like
- 46:56
loved dancing so much.
- 46:57
>> What was your thing? B. Were you ballet?
- 46:59
I started dancing cuz I loved tap
- 47:02
dancing.
- 47:02
>> Oh, come on, Billy.
- 47:04
>> So, I was a tapper.
- 47:05
>> What?
- 47:06
>> Yeah, I was a tapper. And then once I
- 47:09
started getting into tap, I was like,
- 47:11
"Oo, I like this."
- 47:12
>> Cute.
- 47:13
>> And then I started doing hip-hop and I
- 47:15
loved hip-hop. And then I would do
- 47:16
contemporary. So, those are my top
- 47:18
three. And then
- 47:19
>> because I fell in love with dance, I was
- 47:21
like, "Well, now I have to do ballet to
- 47:23
be part of the other stuff cuz it was
- 47:25
required." and then jazz and then
- 47:27
lyrical. And
- 47:28
>> have you ever had a like a thing of like
- 47:31
maybe I'll dance when I sing?
- 47:32
>> Right when I started getting good, I got
- 47:35
a horrible injury and then I was not
- 47:37
allowed to dance and I never danced ever
- 47:39
again.
- 47:41
>> Except I started dancing recently again.
- 47:43
I'm in like a I'm in like a class every
- 47:45
now and then. That's cool.
- 47:46
>> Which is really cute.
- 47:47
>> That's very cool. What did you injure if
- 47:49
you
- 47:50
>> I injured my hip, but basically that
- 47:53
took me out. Wa, that's so intense and
- 47:56
so interesting like how life like so
- 47:58
that opens the door to the thing that
- 48:00
you love doing anyway,
- 48:01
>> right? Well, dude, what's crazy about
- 48:03
the timing of it is that
- 48:05
>> I started getting really serious with
- 48:07
dance when I was
- 48:10
12, no, 13. And I like I dyed my hair
- 48:15
platinum white that year. And then
- 48:17
Phineas was like, "Dude, should we make
- 48:19
a Soundcloud page for fun and like maybe
- 48:23
make some songs and put them out for
- 48:24
fun, like for our friends to play or
- 48:26
whatever." And so at the same time as I
- 48:28
was getting really serious about dance,
- 48:30
we had this idea. We recorded like some
- 48:32
little stupid songs. And then my one of
- 48:36
my dance teachers, Fred Diaz, said,
- 48:39
>> and I've told this story before, but
- 48:41
literally like the older I get, the more
- 48:42
insane it is.
- 48:44
>> He he was like, "Billy, stay behind
- 48:46
after class." one day and he was like,
- 48:48
"Can you and Phineas make a song so that
- 48:51
I can choreograph a dance to it and we
- 48:53
can do it for the recital next year?"
- 48:56
And I was so excited and I thought, you
- 48:58
know what, Phineas just wrote a song
- 49:00
that I think is called Ocean Eyes. Maybe
- 49:02
it could be that one. I go home, I'm
- 49:04
like, Phineas, Fred wants us to make a
- 49:06
song. Let's make it as like dable as
- 49:08
possible. We went home, we recorded
- 49:11
Ocean Eyes, which he had written for his
- 49:13
band, and he said it didn't feel right,
- 49:15
and he wanted me to sing it anyway. So,
- 49:17
we were already kind of gonna do that.
- 49:18
Anyway, we went to put it on SoundCloud.
- 49:20
It had a free download link up. Anyone
- 49:23
could download it for free.
- 49:24
>> Wow.
- 49:24
>> And um we only put it on Soundcloud to
- 49:27
send an easier link to the dance
- 49:29
teacher. And so, we did. And then like
- 49:32
that week, I was getting ready for
- 49:34
competition. And then a week later,
- 49:36
Phiney's called me and he was like,
- 49:38
"Billy, Ocean Ice has a thousand
- 49:39
streams." A thousand. And we were
- 49:41
cheering and we were screaming and I was
- 49:43
like, "This is the most amazing thing
- 49:44
that's ever happened to me. This is all
- 49:46
I could ever dream of." Couple weeks go
- 49:48
by. It starts getting bigger and bigger.
- 49:51
Like Fred starts choreographing a dance
- 49:54
to it. Competition is the next week.
- 49:56
Things are getting bigger. It's like
- 49:57
Hilly Dilly is posting it and like, you
- 50:00
know, new music Friday or whatever. and
- 50:02
like all these new
- 50:04
>> these new outlets and we were getting
- 50:05
reached out to by these labels and stuff
- 50:08
and then it's the last rehearsal before
- 50:10
my first dance competition of the
- 50:12
season. I have a solo in each combo. I
- 50:14
was so excited.
- 50:16
>> We were done with rehearsal. We were
- 50:17
about to leave and our teacher was like,
- 50:19
"Wait, let's do one more just to film
- 50:22
it." And so we did one more and we
- 50:25
filmed it and in the middle of my little
- 50:27
twerk, literally 12 years old, I'm like
- 50:30
my hip is like and I got injured and
- 50:34
then I was poof
- 50:36
laying on the floor, couldn't walk,
- 50:38
couldn't dance, definitely couldn't do
- 50:41
anything and was basically like
- 50:43
bedridden for at least a week and then I
- 50:47
was on crutches and I literally never
- 50:48
danced again.
- 50:49
>> You missed the whole competition.
- 50:50
>> Missed every single competition. And I
- 50:52
didn't get to do one. Billy, I have
- 50:54
chills right now
- 50:55
>> because but then that week I went to all
- 50:57
these meetings in my crutches. I met
- 50:59
with Innercope. I met with all these
- 51:01
different booking agents. I had my
- 51:03
crutches. I was like, and I was so sad.
- 51:05
I was like, I can't believe I miss a
- 51:06
competition.
- 51:07
>> OH MY GOD. I mean, there's people
- 51:08
listening to this right now who are
- 51:10
going to be like having just missed
- 51:12
something that they think is the biggest
- 51:14
thing in their life.
- 51:16
>> It's pretty wild. They're going to be
- 51:17
like,
- 51:17
>> I have chills, too.
- 51:18
>> I That's so That is wild. I have in my
- 51:21
own story. The universe decided in that
- 51:25
like sliding doors moment of like we're
- 51:27
gonna we're gonna stop. We're going to
- 51:29
interrupt this program and there's no
- 51:32
deeper like sadness than thinking I I'm
- 51:36
not going to get to do the thing that's
- 51:38
right in front of me that I'm supposed
- 51:39
to do
- 51:41
>> and then like this little hey over here
- 51:43
kind of thing happening.
- 51:45
>> Whoa. when you think something is
- 51:46
ruining your life and it's really
- 51:48
actually
- 51:50
saving your life.
- 51:51
>> Yes.
- 51:53
And I like that you're dancing again
- 51:54
because there must be a little bit of
- 51:55
trauma honestly around all of it. So
- 51:57
like you're just you're coming back as
- 51:58
an adult going back and being like,
- 52:00
"Okay, maybe I can do this again as like
- 52:01
a a version that feels good to me like
- 52:03
where I can revisit it."
- 52:05
>> Yeah. It's been really nice and it's so
- 52:07
non pressure, you know? It's just it's
- 52:10
>> Well, we do need you to compete
- 52:13
>> because we need you to do that. We need
- 52:14
you to finish that routine.
- 52:16
>> Okay. Yeah, you're right.
- 52:17
>> I mean, that would be the movie is like
- 52:19
you go back out there to the competition
- 52:23
>> to encore in Las Vegas with all the
- 52:25
other teenagers. And I mean, I know we
- 52:28
all like all of our stuff comes from our
- 52:30
family, but it is. All of our stuff
- 52:31
comes from our family. And I imagine in
- 52:33
that moment,
- 52:34
>> I'm like really feeling for your mom in
- 52:36
that moment, right? Like she's got the
- 52:37
saddest kid.
- 52:38
>> Mhm.
- 52:39
>> And both your parents.
- 52:40
>> God. Yeah. like the saddest Billy who's
- 52:43
missed this
- 52:43
>> brokenhearted little
- 52:45
>> and and in pain
- 52:47
>> and then also your brother being like
- 52:51
hey let's do this sister
- 52:54
>> and then it catching on and watching
- 52:57
your family dynamic and again I don't
- 52:59
know but having the the privilege of
- 53:02
getting to see you interact with each
- 53:04
other I feel like the the way in which
- 53:07
you all kind of support those moments
- 53:09
like the big moments and the low moments
- 53:12
like that's very special.
- 53:14
>> I know.
- 53:14
>> Very special.
- 53:15
>> It's really special. And I feel so in
- 53:19
hindsight and present day
- 53:22
>> so so grateful for that cuz I think I
- 53:25
didn't I didn't even realize what I had
- 53:27
because
- 53:28
>> I already had it and so I didn't know
- 53:30
there could be another option. And I
- 53:33
think
- 53:35
sometime
- 53:43
it really I just really feel for them
- 53:45
and I feel like thank God I had my mom.
- 53:49
Thank god I had my brother especially.
- 53:51
Thank god I had my dad and
- 53:53
>> the home that we that I grew up in, you
- 53:56
know, and like my dog, you know, like
- 53:58
these are all things that really
- 53:59
>> I like that you bring up your dog a lot.
- 54:01
I love dogs.
- 54:02
>> Do you still have your dog? Like I said,
- 54:04
>> she passed away a couple years ago, but
- 54:06
she was old as all hell. She was
- 54:08
so old. God damn it. Her her legs were
- 54:11
It was like this kind of situation.
- 54:12
>> What's What was her name? And tell us
- 54:14
about your
- 54:15
>> Her name was Pepper and she lived to
- 54:17
like 16. She was old as I'm
- 54:19
telling you.
- 54:20
>> Um she was a mut. She looked just like
- 54:22
Petey from the Little Rascals, which I
- 54:24
loved. I loved the Little Rascals as a
- 54:25
kid. She had like a She was a pitbull
- 54:27
mix and she had like a circle around her
- 54:30
eye. If I didn't have, you know, a dog
- 54:34
with reactive issues, I would literally
- 54:36
have 17 dogs. Like, I have a dog. He's
- 54:39
the sweetest boy in the whole wide
- 54:41
world. His name is Shark. He's the
- 54:43
sweetest boy. He loves people. He loves
- 54:45
his dog friends. He just has he has a
- 54:48
lot of reactive issues. Yeah.
- 54:50
>> And he has since I mean, I had him since
- 54:52
he was 5 weeks old. So, it's
- 54:54
interesting. Like, I always thought, you
- 54:56
know, a dog is the way they are because
- 54:57
of how they were raised. And to an
- 54:59
extent that is true,
- 55:00
>> but they're like people also and we are
- 55:02
the way we are no matter what anybody
- 55:05
does.
- 55:06
>> And he just has like
- 55:08
>> he's just really anxious. He's very very
- 55:10
anxious and when he sees a dog that he
- 55:13
doesn't know, he he sees it as a threat
- 55:16
or something. But you know, if I
- 55:18
introduce him in the right way to other
- 55:20
dogs, then it's all perfect.
- 55:21
>> But of course, like of course you would
- 55:23
be a person that would be able to handle
- 55:25
something like that and understand that.
- 55:26
>> Oh my god. Yeah. But I think the
- 55:28
difference is like he he's a big gray
- 55:31
pitbull mix. Yeah. And so the difference
- 55:34
in having a reactive, bigger, stronger,
- 55:37
more marginalized breed when they have
- 55:40
anxiety and reactive behavioral issues
- 55:43
is there's so much more of a uh stigma
- 55:46
against them. And people like the the
- 55:50
stigma against the bully breed and
- 55:53
everything
- 55:55
is so messed up. It's like, you know,
- 55:58
someone can have like a little tiny
- 56:00
chihuahua. I love Chihuahua. I love all
- 56:01
dogs, but like someone might have like a
- 56:03
little dog who's like literally biting
- 56:05
everyone and like and it's like
- 56:09
>> and it just kills me. Like my my
- 56:11
reactive dog owners out there,
- 56:14
>> you are seen. You are loved. It's a lot
- 56:17
of work, but I have like also also, you
- 56:21
know, I think it's like I have such a
- 56:23
love for animals. It makes sense to me
- 56:25
that you're an empathetic, creative,
- 56:28
openhearted person living in a family
- 56:30
that tries to be that way, too, that
- 56:31
you're trying to pay attention to that,
- 56:33
too. Also, if I may, and I'm sure you
- 56:35
get this projected on you a lot, but the
- 56:38
specialness of your relationship with
- 56:39
you and Phineas, like it's it's like
- 56:41
it's really delicious because it's kind
- 56:44
of like every it's like watching a
- 56:46
healthy It's like watching healthy
- 56:49
siblings
- 56:50
>> and watching
- 56:53
a a like just a man support a woman like
- 56:58
that. Just even that like
- 57:00
>> forget them being related. just like a
- 57:02
very very talented self-possessed
- 57:04
>> I know
- 57:05
>> um uh selfactualized man being very
- 57:08
happy for
- 57:09
>> a woman's success
- 57:11
>> is already just like we're all like
- 57:13
really hungry for it
- 57:15
>> I know
- 57:15
>> like and just like speaking nicely about
- 57:17
women we're all just like looking for
- 57:19
>> and then the way that you guys speak
- 57:21
about each other
- 57:22
>> yeah it's truly a magical gift that I've
- 57:26
been given by who knows
- 57:28
>> what you know my parents like But you
- 57:31
guys work a little differently.
- 57:33
>> Mhm.
- 57:33
>> Is that hard when you're working
- 57:35
differently? Do you argue?
- 57:36
>> We argue, but we but it's very um
- 57:41
>> it's not like real argue. It's not I
- 57:44
like don't know how to put it. I think
- 57:45
we go through periods of
- 57:48
you know being not on the same
- 57:50
wavelength. Like we're in different
- 57:52
periods of our lives and that's when we
- 57:54
can kind of
- 57:55
>> butt heads a little bit. But even then,
- 57:58
I mean, like we got into like a nothing,
- 58:01
like something that was so didn't need
- 58:02
to be an argument.
- 58:04
And like literally, we sat there and I
- 58:07
said, "Can we go make music now?" And
- 58:09
he's like, "Yeah." And we went
- 58:10
downstairs and we made a song and it was
- 58:12
we were laughing and giggling and
- 58:13
talking. And I was just thinking that
- 58:15
day. I was like, "It is truly amazing
- 58:17
that we can do that." And it's amazing
- 58:18
that you know and I know all siblings
- 58:21
have different relationships and that's
- 58:22
a rare thing to have with a person
- 58:24
especially like a sibling and you work
- 58:27
with them but it is kind of the blessing
- 58:29
of working with your sibling because
- 58:32
>> you can't
- 58:33
>> you can't break up with your sibling.
- 58:35
It's not like
- 58:37
>> yes this is true but I guess I mean like
- 58:40
>> the arguing it's like you can say
- 58:42
something so hurtful.
- 58:44
>> Yes.
- 58:44
>> Especially like a little sister. I can
- 58:46
say something insane to Phineas.
- 58:48
>> You You have.
- 58:49
>> And I I sure have.
- 58:50
>> And And also it's like sometimes I bet
- 58:53
the challenge is to make sure you're not
- 58:55
you're like not too rough on each other.
- 58:58
>> Yep. For sure.
- 58:59
>> Because the more familiar you are, the
- 59:01
more
- 59:02
thinking of that amazing scene in your
- 59:04
dock where in the kitchen where is like,
- 59:06
I think we should just finish the
- 59:07
record. And you're like, the record is
- 59:09
bad.
- 59:10
>> This sucks. And your mom is like or
- 59:13
>> I think you can learn from each other.
- 59:15
you know, like perfect mom, like I think
- 59:17
Vineas has something that you need,
- 59:18
>> Billy. Bless her heart. And your dad is
- 59:20
like, I'm going to go outside and fix
- 59:22
the car. And you're all representing the
- 59:25
voices in like a creative process.
- 59:27
Basically, you're all representing that.
- 59:29
You're and you're all those things at
- 59:30
once.
- 59:32
>> And you would probably not say to
- 59:34
someone you were working with like,
- 59:35
"That was bad. That sucks.
- 59:36
>> It's not good. It's lame."
- 59:38
>> Yeah. Or like anything that I say to
- 59:40
him, it's like we can we can literally
- 59:42
jump all of the like
- 59:44
>> Yes. um uh politeness, you know, we
- 59:47
don't have to be like saving feelings
- 59:50
and you know, I can literally just be
- 59:52
like, "God, that's stupid." You know,
- 59:53
that's such a stupid idea. And he's
- 59:55
like, "Well, you." You know, it's
- 59:57
like
- 59:58
>> it's it's it just works like that. And
- 1:00:02
uh I feel like I'm also just,
- 1:00:06
you know, in another life,
- 1:00:09
the life that we didn't have this happen
- 1:00:11
to us,
- 1:00:12
>> I would have maybe gone to college and
- 1:00:15
moved away or moved away in general. And
- 1:00:19
what would you know I I I talk to
- 1:00:21
friends or see online like people
- 1:00:23
talking about how like they don't live
- 1:00:26
with their sibling anymore and they
- 1:00:28
don't get to see their sibling and it's
- 1:00:29
like you live completely different lives
- 1:00:31
and I just feel like
- 1:00:33
>> so grateful that I get to live a life
- 1:00:35
where my brother is a constant part of
- 1:00:39
my life
- 1:00:40
>> and that I don't have to live in a
- 1:00:43
different state than my brother and that
- 1:00:45
I don't have to like never see him and
- 1:00:48
not
- 1:00:48
you know, and I think that's usually how
- 1:00:50
it goes. And I just I feel really lucky
- 1:00:52
in that way. And like you said,
- 1:00:56
>> his
- 1:00:57
he is like just aside from how talented
- 1:01:01
and incredible he is and how he's like
- 1:01:03
my best friend,
- 1:01:05
he's
- 1:01:07
loves me so much.
- 1:01:08
>> I know.
- 1:01:09
>> And the he's just the greatest brother
- 1:01:12
in the world. And the way that he has
- 1:01:15
looked out for me, he's a big time
- 1:01:17
protector. So, he wanted me to ask you a
- 1:01:19
question.
- 1:01:20
>> He did?
- 1:01:21
>> Yeah. And I feel like it's a it's a it's
- 1:01:23
a fake I feel like it's a funny story.
- 1:01:26
>> It's a fake question. Okay. Um, what is
- 1:01:29
tomato bisque soup
- 1:01:32
>> and how did you lose it?
- 1:01:35
>> Wow.
- 1:01:37
>> Okay. Wow.
- 1:01:38
>> Let's hear it. Well, you know. All
- 1:01:39
right. I'll tell you. I'll tell you
- 1:01:41
exactly the answer. I
- 1:01:45
Okay. How far do I go? Well,
- 1:01:48
I actually haven't talked about this. I
- 1:01:50
was thinking literally last night how I
- 1:01:52
haven't Nobody knows this is happening.
- 1:01:54
>> It's very very sweet. It's It's an
- 1:01:57
innocent thing.
- 1:01:58
>> For my birthday, I was given
- 1:02:01
>> a little hamster.
- 1:02:04
And she was a rescue from a house, a
- 1:02:07
hoarder house that had 60
- 1:02:10
>> loose free roaming hamsters everywhere
- 1:02:14
being just in and like in stuff.
- 1:02:17
And she was rescued.
- 1:02:18
>> Won the lottery
- 1:02:19
>> and she is so cute.
- 1:02:21
>> She her name is tomato bisque soup
- 1:02:25
>> and
- 1:02:29
the story is taking a turn.
- 1:02:34
So, Tomato, as we call her, she's a
- 1:02:39
little dwarf hamster. She's literally
- 1:02:41
this big. She is so goddamn
- 1:02:43
cute. You wouldn't even believe it.
- 1:02:45
>> But she's used to being on the street.
- 1:02:46
She's used to running around.
- 1:02:47
>> She's used to being on the street
- 1:02:51
>> She's free.
- 1:02:52
>> She's wild. Not wild, but like living
- 1:02:55
her life
- 1:02:56
>> in her condition of tough.
- 1:02:59
>> Yeah. Sorry, I I got her on my birthday,
- 1:03:03
which was December 18th, and I got her
- 1:03:07
like I must have spent, you know, lots
- 1:03:09
of money on like random like little
- 1:03:12
like like I got her like little cuz they
- 1:03:14
have to have enrichment. So, they have a
- 1:03:16
wheel and they have to have different
- 1:03:17
levels. So, like and I do it all myself.
- 1:03:20
I'll show you. I will literally show
- 1:03:21
you. Her house is insane. She lives in a
- 1:03:23
mansion, Her house is so
- 1:03:26
big. It's like literally like her house
- 1:03:28
is like this big and this tall
- 1:03:32
>> and it's wooden. But so there's these
- 1:03:35
little vents in the top corners of the
- 1:03:38
house that are like this big. They're
- 1:03:40
holes so they can breathe.
- 1:03:41
>> Even I know that hamsters can get
- 1:03:43
through those holes.
- 1:03:45
>> It was a hamster house
- 1:03:48
for a hamster.
- 1:03:49
>> You're right. You'd think that they
- 1:03:50
would know that.
- 1:03:51
>> Well, and also it's up high, right? So
- 1:03:53
they can't even they can't climb up the
- 1:03:55
wall that
- 1:03:56
No, but we haven't met Tomato.
- 1:03:58
>> So, Tomato's wild little freaky self.
- 1:04:01
So, it's like a month since I've had
- 1:04:03
her.
- 1:04:04
>> I get home from a trip. I went on a
- 1:04:06
little trip
- 1:04:07
>> and I had I had put her seeds out and
- 1:04:10
they're also nocturnal, so you usually
- 1:04:12
don't see them in the day.
- 1:04:13
>> Um, and also they like to burrow, so
- 1:04:15
like sometimes I wouldn't see her. She's
- 1:04:17
like barely you can't really you're not
- 1:04:19
always seeing her when she is there.
- 1:04:21
>> But she loves pumpkin seeds so much.
- 1:04:24
Like little papitas. She loves them so
- 1:04:26
much. And so I know that she's very
- 1:04:29
happy if I put her pumpkin seeds and she
- 1:04:31
immediately comes out. So before I had
- 1:04:33
left, I put out some pumpkin seeds. And
- 1:04:36
then I came home many days later and the
- 1:04:39
pumpkin seeds were still there. God damn
- 1:04:40
it.
- 1:04:41
>> Damn it.
- 1:04:41
>> And I thought, you know what? And you
- 1:04:43
pulled back a little cover and she had
- 1:04:44
made a little dummy like like welcome to
- 1:04:46
Alcatraz.
- 1:04:48
>> She
- 1:04:50
had escaped day off. It was like an old
- 1:04:52
fake body poster and she pulled it into
- 1:04:55
the side and she made a little tunnel.
- 1:04:56
>> I am I pictured I just thought like, oh,
- 1:04:59
she's she's dug herself into a cute
- 1:05:01
little tunnel. She's sleeping. Four days
- 1:05:03
have gone by since the last sight of
- 1:05:06
her. So anyway, one day Oh no.
- 1:05:08
>> Um I'm like, you know what? I'm going to
- 1:05:11
look for her because I want to make sure
- 1:05:13
she's there. Obviously, she's there, but
- 1:05:15
I'm just going to make sure.
- 1:05:17
>> So I go.
- 1:05:19
where I keep her house is in my closet
- 1:05:22
on this like shelf that's like five feet
- 1:05:24
up. And I I I take all of her houses out
- 1:05:28
of her house. I take all of there's
- 1:05:30
these things called sprays which are
- 1:05:32
these like long plants that for
- 1:05:34
enrichment and I take them all out and
- 1:05:38
um I sign of
- 1:05:39
>> there's no sign of her and I'm like uhoh
- 1:05:42
what's going on? But I'm like okay but I
- 1:05:44
still have to like dig through the
- 1:05:46
bedding cuz she likes to crawl into the
- 1:05:48
paper bedding. Um, and I'm like starting
- 1:05:52
to like worry a little, but then I'm
- 1:05:54
like, am I going to find a little
- 1:05:57
>> a little body? And that was really
- 1:05:59
freaking me out.
- 1:06:00
>> But I'm like, I'm not. It's fine. She's
- 1:06:01
going to be in here. She's sleeping.
- 1:06:02
Whatever.
- 1:06:03
>> And so I take everything out. It's only
- 1:06:05
her bedding left over. And I'm literally
- 1:06:07
like, it's like looking through a lake
- 1:06:08
for a dead body. I was like literally
- 1:06:10
like doing like one of these like
- 1:06:12
fingers through everything. I take
- 1:06:14
everything out and she's nowhere to be
- 1:06:17
seen.
- 1:06:18
>> Gone. The has literally vanished
- 1:06:20
into thin air and your VCR was missing.
- 1:06:22
No, I'm just kidding. No, I'm just
- 1:06:23
kidding. Right. The night that she was
- 1:06:25
gone, I'm like texting all my friends
- 1:06:26
like, "She's gone. RIP. Love her so
- 1:06:29
much. What the hell?" One month of
- 1:06:31
having a hamster and I already lost her
- 1:06:32
into the walls. Like, what the hell?
- 1:06:34
>> And uh she could have gone anywhere.
- 1:06:37
Like truly anywhere. And I'm like, just
- 1:06:41
as a Hail Mary, there's no way this is
- 1:06:43
going to work.
- 1:06:45
But I'm going to put her wheel on the
- 1:06:48
ground and I'm going to put her favorite
- 1:06:50
seeds on the wheel and I'm going to put
- 1:06:52
her little mushroom house on the ground
- 1:06:54
and I'm going to put her bedding in it
- 1:06:56
and I'm going to put her seeds in it and
- 1:06:57
like maybe a miracle will happen and
- 1:07:00
she'll appear. She'll reappear. Of
- 1:07:03
course, I don't think this is actually
- 1:07:05
going to happen. I go to sleep. Oh my
- 1:07:08
god.
- 1:07:08
>> I'm like looking at videos of her
- 1:07:12
and we wake up. We're talking about like
- 1:07:17
>> this is so sad. How did we do this? How
- 1:07:20
could we do this to her? We failed her.
- 1:07:22
We are horrible people. We lay in bed
- 1:07:25
for an hour talking about I can't
- 1:07:27
believe we've done this.
- 1:07:29
>> And I'm like I'm going to go get
- 1:07:30
dressed. Also like let's go check on the
- 1:07:33
sad little seeds we left out.
- 1:07:35
>> Right.
- 1:07:36
>> I go into my closet. The seeds
- 1:07:37
are gone.
- 1:07:39
>> Gone.
- 1:07:40
>> Dang.
- 1:07:40
>> And her bedding has been pulled out of
- 1:07:43
her house that she And that's I know
- 1:07:44
that that's like a thing she does. She
- 1:07:46
pulls out her bedding. Her seeds are
- 1:07:48
gone. And I'm like, "Dude, her seeds are
- 1:07:51
gone. Is she here?" And I take
- 1:07:54
some more seeds and I go, "Tmato." And I
- 1:07:56
have a voice that she always comes out
- 1:07:58
to. I go, "Tmato, excuse me.
- 1:08:02
Excuse me, tomato."
- 1:08:04
And I hear no
- 1:08:07
in the wall. It has been four
- 1:08:11
days that she has been missing. I hear
- 1:08:13
this and I take the seeds and I like lay
- 1:08:16
them all and I literally keep hearing
- 1:08:18
like
- 1:08:20
she crawls out of the wall. I
- 1:08:23
have literally chills. She crawls out of
- 1:08:25
the wall and crawls right into my hand.
- 1:08:27
>> And she's eating Miss and she's like,
- 1:08:29
"What up?" Like she's LIKE, "WHAT UP,
- 1:08:30
BITCH?" HEY, SHE'S WEARING A little
- 1:08:33
sombrero. been living in the walls of
- 1:08:35
the closet for 4 days with no food and
- 1:08:39
no water, waiting for me to look
- 1:08:42
for her and find her.
- 1:08:44
>> Can you believe the story?
- 1:08:45
>> She's incredible.
- 1:08:46
>> She's amazing. So, since then, I have
- 1:08:48
gotten her a much bigger house with very
- 1:08:51
thin.
- 1:08:51
>> I don't think she has been I don't think
- 1:08:53
she needs to be um congratulated for
- 1:08:56
escaping.
- 1:08:58
>> Like, this is this is like supporting
- 1:09:00
bad behavior.
- 1:09:00
>> Yeah, I know. You're right. You're
- 1:09:01
right.
- 1:09:01
>> She gets a bigger house. She got a
- 1:09:03
bigger house. I felt bad. I felt like,
- 1:09:04
"Oh no, did you not like living in a
- 1:09:06
small house?" Now she's so happy. She
- 1:09:08
literally like her life is amazing.
- 1:09:10
Really quick and then I'll show up this
- 1:09:13
forever. Look at her house. Her house is
- 1:09:15
insane. Wait, I just cleaned it up
- 1:09:18
yesterday.
- 1:09:18
>> That's my worst nightmare is that a I
- 1:09:21
get a rodent and it goes into the walls.
- 1:09:24
So, okay, here is Tomato's giant mansion
- 1:09:29
house.
- 1:09:31
So like if you look here's so she has
- 1:09:34
different levels. She has her little
- 1:09:35
tunnel where she
- 1:09:36
>> has a lot going on. Listeners, it's like
- 1:09:38
there's a there's like it looks like a
- 1:09:41
aquarium but with like outdoor seating.
- 1:09:47
>> Oh, there's almost like a fire pit like
- 1:09:48
if she had guests over.
- 1:09:49
>> Yeah,
- 1:09:50
>> cuz I give her different bedding so that
- 1:09:52
she has different textures.
- 1:09:53
>> It's really nice. Really nice textures.
- 1:09:56
>> Yeah.
- 1:09:56
>> And then
- 1:09:57
>> it looks like a beautiful LA spa. I
- 1:10:00
mean, it is. Here's her on her wheel.
- 1:10:03
>> Wait. Oh, she's really cute.
- 1:10:04
>> She's so freaking cute. And then here's
- 1:10:06
me show I bonked my knee.
- 1:10:09
>> You can actually hear it happening.
- 1:10:12
>> She's running really fast. Look at how
- 1:10:16
nice THIS
- 1:10:22
And then here's the This is what
- 1:10:23
happened to my knee.
- 1:10:26
>> So there is Phineas's answer. That's
- 1:10:28
Phineas's question. I'm glad he asked.
- 1:10:30
There we go.
- 1:10:31
>> Incredible story.
- 1:10:32
>> And scene.
- 1:10:32
>> And scene. Okay, we're going to finish
- 1:10:33
with a lightning round.
- 1:10:35
>> Finish.
- 1:10:37
>> Wait, but by there's so much TO TALK
- 1:10:38
ABOUT.
- 1:10:38
>> THERE'S SO much
- 1:10:40
to do lightning round. Okay, go. Here we
- 1:10:42
go.
- 1:10:43
>> Just quick thoughts on these things.
- 1:10:44
Tarantulas.
- 1:10:47
>> Yes. Yes. Are you afraid of spiders?
- 1:10:49
>> I mean, I'm not afraid, but you know,
- 1:10:50
>> but it's a spider.
- 1:10:51
>> It's okay. You know, I'm I'm down, but I
- 1:10:53
don't want to touch it or anything. But
- 1:10:55
I'm glad you like it. Uh-huh. Um, horses
- 1:10:58
we talked about.
- 1:10:59
>> Mhm.
- 1:10:59
>> Love Survivor. The show Survivor.
- 1:11:01
>> Yes. The show Survivor.
- 1:11:03
>> I I They have my own Billy show.
- 1:11:10
>> Just They named the Immunity idol after
- 1:11:13
you. It's a Billy Eyish idol. So,
- 1:11:17
basically like I wrote a letter to the
- 1:11:20
contestants
- 1:11:21
being like, "Here's your secret idol. If
- 1:11:24
you use this idol, you can, you know,
- 1:11:26
it's like one, you know, have you seen
- 1:11:27
Survivor? You know, they have
- 1:11:28
>> What do you love about Survivor?
- 1:11:30
>> Um, I love imagining that I could one
- 1:11:34
day do it.
- 1:11:34
>> Yeah.
- 1:11:35
>> But I am so bad with like like the math
- 1:11:38
part of the problems are the things that
- 1:11:40
I couldn't do.
- 1:11:41
>> Yeah.
- 1:11:41
>> Like I could do the I feel that I could
- 1:11:42
do the physical stuff. I mean I say that
- 1:11:45
which
- 1:11:45
>> sure who knows cuz it's so hard seeming
- 1:11:48
but like when they have to like solve
- 1:11:49
the you know
- 1:11:51
>> I wouldn't be good at like when people
- 1:11:52
like I have a little bit of like
- 1:11:53
defiance disorder so if they were like
- 1:11:55
you have to do two I'd be like I don't
- 1:11:57
have to do anything.
- 1:11:59
>> I quit. I quit.
- 1:12:00
>> Yeah I have the same feeling. Yeah I
- 1:12:01
have the same thing.
- 1:12:01
>> Um okay music you're listening to right
- 1:12:03
now?
- 1:12:03
>> Honestly I've been listening to Kate
- 1:12:05
Bush this week. It's me.
- 1:12:08
>> Yeah, dude. Well, that just is I just
- 1:12:11
love the spooky whimsical of it all.
- 1:12:13
>> Isn't she incredible?
- 1:12:14
>> She's amazing. I like didn't even know
- 1:12:16
she was so amazing. I mean, Army
- 1:12:18
Dreamers is so good.
- 1:12:20
>> So good.
- 1:12:21
>> Wthering Heights. Oh my god.
- 1:12:23
>> Have you heard the Peter Gabriel um uh
- 1:12:26
the song she sang with Peter Gabriel?
- 1:12:28
Don't Give Up.
- 1:12:29
>> No. How How does it go?
- 1:12:30
>> Hold on. I'm sure you've heard it. Don't
- 1:12:33
give up. You're not.
- 1:12:38
>> Do you think they were
- 1:12:41
>> I hope so.
- 1:12:43
>> God, I hope so.
- 1:12:44
>> I just feel like this shoot where
- 1:12:45
they're in a hug the entire song.
- 1:12:49
>> God, I hope so. That's amazing. It
- 1:12:52
>> uh isn't it so good?
- 1:12:53
>> Wow. Yeah. I don't I'm not I don't did
- 1:12:56
not know Kate Bush was like that.
- 1:12:58
>> Yeah.
- 1:12:59
>> Amazing.
- 1:12:59
>> Um Okay, we're going to finish with two
- 1:13:01
things. You have a big movie coming out
- 1:13:04
and it is
- 1:13:05
>> I forgot it's a
- 1:13:09
>> concert it's it's a movie about your
- 1:13:10
It's a It's a concert movie.
- 1:13:12
>> Yes. So it's a it's a concert film
- 1:13:15
mainly. There's like some behind the
- 1:13:17
scenes dock type stuff, but specifically
- 1:13:21
it is
- 1:13:21
>> very cool.
- 1:13:22
>> The show the Hit Me hard and soft tour
- 1:13:25
filmed in 3D which is awesome.
- 1:13:27
>> Awesome. And really really cool. Thank
- 1:13:30
you. It's I agree. I loved it so much. I
- 1:13:33
just I I a I had the best time and b
- 1:13:37
>> it's like the best show I've ever made
- 1:13:39
and I just I felt I I felt proud to call
- 1:13:42
that my show every single night that I
- 1:13:43
did it. And I
- 1:13:45
>> I mourn the end of that tour and I'm
- 1:13:48
excited for the next tour, but I am also
- 1:13:50
like so so grateful that we have it
- 1:13:53
filmed forever. like I will be able to
- 1:13:55
watch it it whenever I want forever in
- 1:13:58
3D feel like I'm there and same goes for
- 1:14:01
everyone who watches it, you know,
- 1:14:02
people who didn't get to go to the show
- 1:14:04
and they get to experience it or who did
- 1:14:06
and want to reexperience it anyway.
- 1:14:08
>> Very exciting.
- 1:14:08
>> And what I love about that is I like I
- 1:14:10
like to watch things in my home early in
- 1:14:13
the afternoon or like I don't like to
- 1:14:15
like shows are too late. I don't like to
- 1:14:18
go out.
- 1:14:18
>> Oh, I see what you're saying.
- 1:14:19
>> Shows are late. Shows are super late and
- 1:14:22
they start and then you stand for so
- 1:14:24
long.
- 1:14:25
>> Yeah. And I like
- 1:14:26
>> I hate standing.
- 1:14:27
>> I hate I can't see anything.
- 1:14:28
>> I hate I just hate standing. I hate the
- 1:14:30
feeling of it.
- 1:14:31
>> I love to sit.
- 1:14:32
>> Would you ever consider doing an
- 1:14:34
afternoon show
- 1:14:35
>> for people who like to show?
- 1:14:37
>> It's so funny. I've like never even It's
- 1:14:39
just such a the thing you do. I never
- 1:14:41
even thought about it. That's what's
- 1:14:42
great about like music festivals.
- 1:14:44
Honestly, that's like kind of what I
- 1:14:46
miss about being on the earlier side of
- 1:14:48
the the lineup because you get to get
- 1:14:50
you get to go out there and the sun is
- 1:14:52
out
- 1:14:53
>> and like it's beautiful and then you get
- 1:14:55
a night after. It's pretty nice.
- 1:14:57
>> Yeah,
- 1:14:57
>> maybe I'll do that someday. A little
- 1:14:59
matinea.
- 1:14:59
>> Oh my god, a matinea tour.
- 1:15:01
>> What's your bedtime?
- 1:15:04
>> Well, last night I had a fantastic
- 1:15:06
sleep. Not to brag, but um What did you
- 1:15:08
get? What What's your sleep? I'm very
- 1:15:10
worried about your sleep.
- 1:15:11
>> Why?
- 1:15:11
>> You're a young person.
- 1:15:12
>> It's true. you. I used to be terrible
- 1:15:14
with sleep. I I never slept. Um for some
- 1:15:18
reason since last summer when I was in
- 1:15:20
Europe for tour, like I had three
- 1:15:22
different tour legs where I was gone and
- 1:15:25
then home and then gone in Europe each
- 1:15:26
time.
- 1:15:28
>> Um but so because of that, I was like
- 1:15:30
really getting becoming an early
- 1:15:33
bedtime. And so since then, I've kind of
- 1:15:35
kind of kept that up. Like I try to go
- 1:15:38
to sleep before midnight every night,
- 1:15:40
which used to be
- 1:15:41
>> love this for you. couldn't. I used to
- 1:15:43
go to sleep like earliest 2 a.m.,
- 1:15:46
usually 3, maybe 4. And now I'm like, if
- 1:15:49
I can get in bed at like 10.
- 1:15:52
>> Oh, I mean,
- 1:15:53
>> can you believe that I can do that? It's
- 1:15:55
amazing. And and also sometimes like the
- 1:15:59
like happiness is just one sleep away.
- 1:16:03
>> 100%.
- 1:16:03
>> Like it just really is. Sometimes like
- 1:16:05
the thing the reason why my day is so
- 1:16:06
bad,
- 1:16:08
>> it's because I don't I haven't slept.
- 1:16:09
>> 100%. I love it. Honestly, like when I
- 1:16:11
got this Aura ring, and this is not
- 1:16:13
sponsored. I just I love this Aura Ring,
- 1:16:15
dude. And uh since I got it, I've been
- 1:16:17
like I I really don't play about my
- 1:16:19
sleep now. I really need my sleep.
- 1:16:21
>> Let me as we finish up cuz I know we've
- 1:16:23
kept you, but
- 1:16:24
>> girl, I don't have anything else to do.
- 1:16:26
>> Same.
- 1:16:27
>> Wait, I was just going to say,
- 1:16:28
>> okay, we got to wrap this up.
- 1:16:30
>> Oh, I Oh, I'm I feel like when I'm at a
- 1:16:34
concert and people are talking really
- 1:16:35
loud, I will turn around and say,
- 1:16:37
"Please shut up."
- 1:16:38
>> Yeah.
- 1:16:38
>> Please shut the up. Or just like be
- 1:16:41
quiet, you know, like that that I I will
- 1:16:43
do
- 1:16:44
>> 100%.
- 1:16:44
>> Yeah. Or a movie.
- 1:16:46
>> A
- 1:16:47
>> not so much.
- 1:16:50
>> I be talking. I know.
- 1:16:54
>> Billy, I have to comment. I just
- 1:16:57
>> That is your Jen. You guys chat through
- 1:16:59
everything. I watch you. This has done
- 1:17:03
to me so much so many times. have has
- 1:17:07
someone who I love dearly gone,
- 1:17:09
>> right?
- 1:17:10
>> Because I can't shut the up.
- 1:17:11
>> Mhm.
- 1:17:12
>> Um, also like I'm a reactor. Like I will
- 1:17:16
re I react audibly. Let me remind people
- 1:17:19
like I I realize as I'm talking to you
- 1:17:20
about this that like you have
- 1:17:22
Tourette's.
- 1:17:23
>> Well, I was just going to say that. I
- 1:17:24
was just going to say that I do have
- 1:17:25
Tourette's and you know I have vocal
- 1:17:28
ticks but luckily for me and for
- 1:17:31
everyone else I um they're mostly just
- 1:17:34
noises and I can keep them pretty quiet.
- 1:17:36
>> Yeah.
- 1:17:37
>> Um I I go through phases of words
- 1:17:40
becoming ticks but you know there's a
- 1:17:43
thing called suppressing if you ever
- 1:17:45
heard of it. And you know when I'm in an
- 1:17:47
interview I I'm doing everything in my
- 1:17:49
power to suppress all of my ticks
- 1:17:51
constantly. And as soon as I leave the
- 1:17:53
room, I have to let them all know. You
- 1:17:56
have a lot. Honestly, I'm realizing now
- 1:17:58
as I'm talking to you and getting to
- 1:18:00
know you, meeting you.
- 1:18:01
>> You have helped me a lot with my own
- 1:18:02
intrusive thoughts, which I didn't
- 1:18:04
really know. You know, I didn't have
- 1:18:05
that term growing up. I didn't quite
- 1:18:07
know what it was,
- 1:18:08
>> right? and your you having them in real
- 1:18:12
time or talking about them or even just
- 1:18:13
like softly joking about them like the
- 1:18:16
getting all the way full circle back to
- 1:18:17
the idea of what we talked at the very
- 1:18:19
beginning which is like
- 1:18:20
>> coping mechanism and you're self
- 1:18:22
soothing all that stuff and the way that
- 1:18:24
you like like that you feel like comedy
- 1:18:26
is important for life like we are living
- 1:18:28
to laugh
- 1:18:29
>> it felt that way when I would have a
- 1:18:31
thought that I just thought like this is
- 1:18:33
a really bad thought.
- 1:18:34
>> Yep.
- 1:18:35
>> This is a really bad end. This is this
- 1:18:38
one I'm going to really never ever ever
- 1:18:40
share, right? Like, ooh, this is
- 1:18:43
>> and it and it took me so long in my
- 1:18:44
adult life to realize those were
- 1:18:45
intrusive thoughts of what they were.
- 1:18:48
>> And you really really helped me with
- 1:18:50
that. Like, yeah, I thank you for that.
- 1:18:52
You really did. You were an example.
- 1:18:54
>> I just I know it so well. God, now
- 1:18:57
imagine those intrusive thoughts, but
- 1:18:59
your mouth has to say them out loud,
- 1:19:01
>> right?
- 1:19:01
>> And that is Tourett syndrome, right? And
- 1:19:04
I think what's troubling about the way
- 1:19:07
that people do not understand what
- 1:19:10
Tourette's is, like when people are
- 1:19:12
like,
- 1:19:14
>> you know, if I like start having like a
- 1:19:15
tick attack or whatever, like a lot of
- 1:19:17
ticks in a row and people are like, "Are
- 1:19:20
you okay?"
- 1:19:21
>> You know, it's like
- 1:19:23
>> this is very much normal, like, you
- 1:19:26
know, and also like, "Well, I didn't
- 1:19:28
notice." It's like if you didn't see me
- 1:19:30
tick today, you're not looking at my
- 1:19:32
knees which are ticking constantly under
- 1:19:34
this table and my, you know, elbows that
- 1:19:37
are like I'm clenching my arms the
- 1:19:39
entire time and I'm I'm doing this for
- 1:19:41
the entire and it's because I'm
- 1:19:43
currently because I'm on camera
- 1:19:46
>> and I'm having a conversation and I'm
- 1:19:48
trying not to be distracting. I am
- 1:19:50
really doing this whole time as fun as
- 1:19:53
I'm having much fun as I'm having. I'm
- 1:19:56
doing everything I can to suppress every
- 1:19:58
single tick that's visible from the top
- 1:20:01
of my head to about right here,
- 1:20:03
>> you know, and that's like how we as
- 1:20:05
people with Tourette's pretty much spend
- 1:20:06
our days. And some people don't even
- 1:20:08
have the privilege of getting to
- 1:20:10
suppress them at all in any way. And the
- 1:20:13
>> the not understanding of that is really
- 1:20:16
frustrating as a person with Tourette's.
- 1:20:18
>> I bet. Thank you for Thank you for
- 1:20:20
educating me and us for real. Um because
- 1:20:23
it is it's like just yet another example
- 1:20:25
of what you do so generously.
- 1:20:28
>> Yeah.
- 1:20:28
>> You're really you're a really generous
- 1:20:30
person, Billy. You you really like
- 1:20:32
>> share Thank you. You share what you
- 1:20:34
know, what you what you're feeling or
- 1:20:36
what you're going through. You share it
- 1:20:37
with us. Like we're very lucky that we
- 1:20:39
get to hear things from you and hear and
- 1:20:43
I'm really happy you did this. I'm such
- 1:20:47
a fan of yours and I am so beyond
- 1:20:50
excited to be in this room with you and
- 1:20:52
do this podcast. I love you so much.
- 1:20:54
Thank you for having me.
- 1:20:55
>> Um, don't be weird, but I need to get
- 1:20:56
your cell phone number.
- 1:20:58
>> Let's go.
- 1:20:59
>> Thank you, Billy, for coming.
- 1:21:00
>> Oh my god.
- 1:21:01
>> Love you.
- 1:21:01
>> I love you so much. Thank you very much
- 1:21:03
for being here.
- 1:21:04
>> Thank you. GOOD.
- 1:21:09
>> Thank you, Billy Isish. What an amazing
- 1:21:12
person and what a great conversation.
- 1:21:14
love talking to you and for this polar
- 1:21:16
plunge. Look, it took everything I had
- 1:21:19
not to sing Billy's songs back to her. I
- 1:21:22
know that can make things awkward, but I
- 1:21:25
just want to remind everybody of the
- 1:21:27
perfect lyrics that are in Billy's
- 1:21:30
songs, specifically Happier Than Ever,
- 1:21:33
okay? Because I just want to remind
- 1:21:35
Okay,
- 1:21:37
I don't relate to you. I don't relate to
- 1:21:40
you. No, cuz I'd never treat me this
- 1:21:43
shitty. You made me hate this city. And
- 1:21:46
I don't talk about you on the
- 1:21:48
internet. Never told anyone anything bad
- 1:21:51
cuz that shit's embarrassing. You're my
- 1:21:54
everything. And all that you did was
- 1:21:56
make me sad. So don't waste the
- 1:21:59
time I don't have. And don't try to make
- 1:22:02
me feel bad,
- 1:22:06
okay?
- 1:22:10
Okay, this is the end of the We got to
- 1:22:12
go.
- 1:22:14
Genius.
- 1:22:16
Thanks for listening everybody. Billy,
- 1:22:17
you're a genius. Okay, bye.
- 1:22:20
You've been listening to Good Hang. The
- 1:22:22
executive producers for this show are
- 1:22:23
Bill Simmons, Jenna Weiss Berman, and
- 1:22:25
me, Amy Polar. The show is produced by
- 1:22:27
The Ringer and Paperkite. For The
- 1:22:29
Ringer, production by Jack Wilson, Cat
- 1:22:31
Spelain, Kaia McMullen, and Aia Xanerys.
- 1:22:34
for Paperkite production by Sam Green,
- 1:22:37
Joel Levelvel, and Jenna Weiss Berman.
- 1:22:39
Original music by Amy Miles.
- 1:22:43
>> Was a really good Hey