Transcript: Regina Hall on Good Hang with Amy Poehler
Full Transcript
Click any timestamp to jump to that moment in the video.- 0:00
Hello everyone. Welcome to another
- 0:01
episode of Good Hang. So excited to talk
- 0:04
to Regina Hall today. I love Regina. I
- 0:06
love her work. And we're going to talk
- 0:08
about a lot of fun things today. We're
- 0:10
going to talk about her incredible range
- 0:12
as an actress. We're going to talk about
- 0:14
the difference between phobias and
- 0:16
phonas. Uh we're going to break down
- 0:19
what it's like hosting award shows. and
- 0:22
we're gonna discuss her new movie, her
- 0:24
great new PT Anderson movie, um, One
- 0:26
Battle After Another, which is in
- 0:28
theaters this week. But we always do
- 0:31
this before we have our guest. We talk
- 0:33
to someone who knows our guest who, uh,
- 0:35
uh, who wants to speak well behind their
- 0:36
back. And we have a great guest today,
- 0:39
the extremely talented Andrew Ran.
- 0:42
Andrew um, was Regina's co-star on Black
- 0:46
Monday. Um he is the imaginary father of
- 0:50
the imaginary twins Dawn and Dawn that
- 0:52
they seem to share um a little inside
- 0:54
joke on set. And uh you know him from
- 0:57
Book of Mormon, you know him from Girls
- 0:59
Five Eva, you know him from Too Much,
- 1:01
Lena Dunham's new show. He's just a real
- 1:04
peach. So let's get him on. Andrew.
- 1:08
Andrew,
- 1:10
are you there?
- 1:14
What do you say?
- 1:18
I wanted
- 1:22
>> Amy.
- 1:25
>> There you are on your set and
- 1:27
everything.
- 1:27
>> There you are. It's so good to talk to
- 1:30
you.
- 1:31
>> It's great to talk to you. Thank you for
- 1:32
asking me to do this.
- 1:33
>> Are you kidding? Thank you so much for
- 1:35
doing this. I know you and Regina are
- 1:37
good buds.
- 1:38
>> We really are.
- 1:40
>> And she has such a great rep.
- 1:42
>> She really does. I've I've yet to meet
- 1:44
anyone who doesn't say like, "Ah, she's
- 1:46
the best." It's always a good idea to
- 1:49
hang out with Regina Hall.
- 1:52
>> Okay, we're going to get to Regina. But
- 1:53
first of all, I'm very, very excited to
- 1:55
talk to you.
- 1:56
>> To me,
- 1:57
>> of course. I hope I can get you in the
- 2:00
stew one of these days.
- 2:03
>> I would love it.
- 2:04
>> I mean, I haven't got a chance. I feel
- 2:05
like you and I have probably crossed
- 2:08
paths and like been in the same room at
- 2:10
a fancy event,
- 2:12
>> but I am a very very big fan of your
- 2:14
work.
- 2:15
>> Well, that's very generous of you to say
- 2:17
because I am a huge fan of your work and
- 2:20
I always get very nervous when I see
- 2:22
you.
- 2:22
>> Oh, tell me why.
- 2:24
>> Well, I just get nervous that I'm like,
- 2:25
should I talk to her? Should I not talk
- 2:27
to her? Am I talking to her for too
- 2:28
long?
- 2:29
>> Should I, you know, it's like, should I
- 2:31
get in, get out? It's one of those
- 2:33
things is at some event. Yeah. That like
- 2:36
there's a bunch of people around and
- 2:38
it's like I don't know there's like a
- 2:40
receiving line of people who want to
- 2:42
like talk to you and I just sort of I
- 2:44
choose to do the um like
- 2:46
>> well I I will say if if you have chosen
- 2:49
not to talk to me I appreciate that
- 2:51
because
- 2:53
I have a lot of social anxiety which
- 2:54
does not look like I do but I I do in
- 2:57
those events and I get overwhelmed.
- 2:59
>> Same same. One of the first like big
- 3:02
parties I went to when I first moved to
- 3:04
LA, I was very lucky and I walked in
- 3:07
with Jessica Lang
- 3:09
>> and I know, right?
- 3:10
>> You floated in with Jessica Lang.
- 3:12
>> I floated in with Jessica Lang and
- 3:13
Jessica Lang just wanted to like hold on
- 3:15
to me because I'm sort of tall and um
- 3:18
and I think she likes that. I think she
- 3:20
likes that. So then all night I got to
- 3:22
be the gatekeeper to Jessica Lang and
- 3:24
people people I really respected who
- 3:27
didn't know me were coming up to me and
- 3:29
saying could you introduce me to Jessica
- 3:31
Lang and I was like absolutely
- 3:34
>> you were like let me check with Jessica
- 3:35
first.
- 3:37
>> Yeah it was that was So I guess my
- 3:39
advice is if you can go to one of those
- 3:41
events with Jessica Lang do it.
- 3:43
>> That makes sense. God I would you two
- 3:46
would make a very nice couple. I have to
- 3:47
say a handsome couple. I I think we um
- 3:50
Yeah, I've got to to to be with her a
- 3:52
couple times and it's um it's always
- 3:54
successful. But you know, how's this for
- 3:56
a segue? You know who's very good at
- 3:58
those events? Regina Hall.
- 4:00
>> Oo, tell me why.
- 4:02
>> You go to a party with Regina Hall and
- 4:04
she first of all, everybody loves her,
- 4:06
so that's great. And she just sort of I
- 4:09
don't know, she just kind of floats
- 4:11
above it and just has a very kind of um
- 4:15
just kind of like chill attitude about
- 4:17
everything. Now whether or not that's
- 4:18
actually what she's feeling,
- 4:20
>> right?
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>> I'm not sure because, you know, we all,
- 4:23
you know, process those things
- 4:25
differently, but it is really fun to go
- 4:27
to those events with her because she
- 4:30
just kind of she just sort of always is
- 4:33
herself. And I will say from like, you
- 4:36
know, we got to work together for 3
- 4:37
years on the show Black Monday and on
- 4:40
Showtime. And whether it was like 4:00
- 4:43
a.m. in the makeup trailer or 3:00 a.m.
- 4:45
on a night shoot, she always maintained
- 4:48
the same level of like cool and, you
- 4:52
know, happy to be there and like sort of
- 4:54
calmed everybody down cuz Don Cheetel
- 4:57
and I on on that show often had to do
- 4:59
some like really wacky stuff and she not
- 5:03
only could match that, she, you know,
- 5:06
often times like outdid us in that
- 5:08
arena, but then also um just brought
- 5:12
like all the heart to it. She really
- 5:14
like anchored it in a way and it was
- 5:16
such a good lesson of like how to be you
- 5:19
can be absurdly funny and really broad
- 5:23
but still have a lot of thought and
- 5:26
heart behind it which I learned a lot
- 5:29
from working with her that like you can
- 5:31
you can do all of the clowny silly stuff
- 5:34
but unless there is some kind of heart
- 5:38
to it it it just looks like faces
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>> you know I think that way about you too
- 5:44
Like I feel like there's there's the ex
- 5:47
sometimes there's the exceptional
- 5:49
eccentric really kind of out there funny
- 5:52
person who's their own island. But for
- 5:54
the most part I find that people that
- 5:56
are very good at comedy have a switch or
- 5:59
a gear where they can really like
- 6:01
they're just very good at um being in
- 6:04
the moment and being present when asked
- 6:06
to do that. And it and it's kind of the
- 6:08
theme that I want to talk to Regina
- 6:09
about today is her career is really
- 6:12
>> really diverse and really wide. Her
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range she's done a lot of different
- 6:16
things and she can do really dumb fun
- 6:21
comedy
- 6:21
>> totally
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>> and very deep grounded stuff and that's
- 6:25
not a lot of people don't have that
- 6:27
range. I don't know. There's It sounds
- 6:29
maybe trite to say that she has a light
- 6:31
to her because that usually is reserved
- 6:33
for people who get murdered, but she
- 6:35
does have a she really lights up a room.
- 6:39
She really lights up a room. And not in
- 6:41
a way that
- 6:43
>> she's going to get murdered.
- 6:44
>> No, not in that way. In a different way.
- 6:46
In a very different way.
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>> In a in a better way.
- 6:47
>> In a very different way.
- 6:51
>> You know
- 6:53
this I I absolutely loved you in Book of
- 6:55
Mormon. I was lucky enough to see the
- 6:57
original cast and you in it with Josh
- 6:59
and so many other great people and
- 7:02
um but you bring something up that I
- 7:05
always wondered about and I haven't been
- 7:06
able to ask anybody who's been on
- 7:08
Broadway for as long as you have.
- 7:09
>> Sure.
- 7:11
>> Why is it unprofessional to see who's in
- 7:13
the audience?
- 7:15
>> Well, in theory, you should be
- 7:19
>> I guess connected to your co-stars.
- 7:22
>> Sure.
- 7:23
um and telling the story. But I think
- 7:27
over time, you know, you're doing it
- 7:29
eight times a week and you get to a
- 7:32
place where you know eyes. I mean, you
- 7:35
know, that's the tricky part about one
- 7:37
of the tricky parts about live theater
- 7:39
is that of all of the whatever 1,200
- 7:42
people that are in that audience,
- 7:43
somebody's looking at you at all times.
- 7:46
And I just know that from an audience
- 7:48
member, like sometimes you drift to like
- 7:50
an ensemble person, whatever. like
- 7:52
you're not watching the action. So, you
- 7:53
do kind of always have to be on guard
- 7:56
that like, okay, somebody's watching.
- 7:58
So,
- 7:59
>> but you never used to do what I used to
- 8:01
do, which is literally peak.
- 8:04
>> Oh, well, I mean, we got to a point
- 8:05
where I could look into the audience at
- 8:07
certain points and be like, "Oh, look
- 8:09
who's there." Um, and sometimes the
- 8:11
worst is when you make eye contact with
- 8:14
that person.
- 8:15
>> Ooh,
- 8:16
>> yeah.
- 8:16
>> Ooh, that's rough.
- 8:18
>> That's rough.
- 8:18
>> That's rough. I made I made direct eye
- 8:20
contact with Oprah Winfrey and I thought
- 8:24
I don't that probably wasn't a great
- 8:25
idea and I reflexed. I smiled at her as
- 8:28
if there was no fourth wall
- 8:32
>> you went Oprah
- 8:33
>> just like I'm just like I'm doing like a
- 8:35
nightclub act. I was like oh
- 8:39
>> I remember smiling at her and she smiled
- 8:40
back cuz she's polite. She could
- 8:42
probably she's probably had a lot of um
- 8:44
experience with intense eye contacts.
- 8:49
I mean, the reactions to
- 8:51
>> Yeah.
- 8:51
>> to her must be extreme.
- 8:53
>> You are so incredible in the Book of
- 8:55
Mormon. I
- 8:56
>> Oh my gosh.
- 8:57
>> I mean, you're you you've written two
- 8:59
books. You have
- 9:00
>> I have
- 9:01
>> You have You are You are You're
- 9:03
constantly in so many good things. Like
- 9:05
we mentioned Girls Five, the show that
- 9:07
you did with Tina. Um, you also are just
- 9:10
in in Lena's new show, Too Much, where
- 9:12
you play her husband, which was so
- 9:14
satisfying to see.
- 9:17
>> I do. We've graduated from being like
- 9:19
the messy kids to now being like the
- 9:21
still kind of messy adults.
- 9:23
>> So, my um I ask all of my guests if they
- 9:25
have a question for our guest and um and
- 9:28
like I said, I hope someday to get you
- 9:30
in the hot seat. So, um what what what
- 9:33
do you have any a question you think I
- 9:35
should ask Regina today? a story you
- 9:37
think she might want to tell, something
- 9:38
you don't know about her, something you
- 9:40
think people should know about her.
- 9:42
>> Her career is so diverse
- 9:45
and she bounces between all of these
- 9:47
things like this Paul Thomas Anderson
- 9:49
movie that that she is, you know, that's
- 9:50
that's coming out that it's wildly
- 9:53
different from anything she's done in a
- 9:56
lot of ways. And I as much as I I assume
- 10:01
that she's like the architect of that
- 10:03
that she's like making these choices and
- 10:05
doing these things like I wonder Yeah, I
- 10:08
do wonder like did she seek that out?
- 10:11
Was she like I want to I'm going to
- 10:12
switch this up
- 10:13
>> or is this something that just sort of
- 10:15
build it was built sort of naturally?
- 10:18
>> You're right. I don't think we know
- 10:19
enough about like Regina's origin story.
- 10:22
When I was learning about Regina, I know
- 10:25
she wanted to maybe be a journalist at
- 10:27
one point. So, I'm very curious when she
- 10:29
started acting and then also yes, the
- 10:32
her career is really feels like a flow
- 10:36
basically.
- 10:37
>> And also, you know, obviously like who
- 10:40
does she like better? Does she like me
- 10:42
better or Don Cheetel? I think that's an
- 10:44
important I think a lot of people
- 10:45
probably wonder that.
- 10:48
>> Yeah. And maybe you can stay on the Zoom
- 10:50
while I ask her that. Yeah, I'll I'll
- 10:52
take my camera off and then, you know,
- 10:54
and then I'll surprise her and be like,
- 10:55
"I knew you were gonna say Don." Regina
- 10:58
and I would annoy the cast that we um
- 11:00
she she told everybody that we were
- 11:02
married at one point. And some people
- 11:05
some people who didn't really know me
- 11:06
very well thought that that was true.
- 11:09
And then she she sort of in a um who's
- 11:11
afraid of Virginia Wolf way created
- 11:14
children for us
- 11:16
that we would talk about Don and Dawn
- 11:20
and we would reference Don and Dawn our
- 11:23
twins and who had the twins and where
- 11:26
are the twins and how are the twins
- 11:28
doing.
- 11:29
>> She's so good. I can't wait to talk to
- 11:30
her. I really appreciate I'm excited for
- 11:32
you to talk to her.
- 11:32
>> Your time and how tall are you Andrew?
- 11:35
>> 6'2.
- 11:36
>> Oh, congratulations.
- 11:37
>> Thanks. Thanks so much.
- 11:38
>> I just That's so great. I I I like
- 11:41
Jessica Lang, a tall man.
- 11:43
>> Jackpot.
- 11:44
>> Sign me up.
- 11:46
>> You did it.
- 11:47
>> It is so great to talk to you. Thank you
- 11:49
so much for your time.
- 11:51
>> Thank you very much. And thank you for
- 11:53
being so generous and so lovely, of
- 11:55
course.
- 11:55
>> And I hope I see you at some event
- 11:57
sometime soon. And we just totally ghost
- 12:00
each other.
- 12:00
>> Yeah. I'm not going to look at you. I'm
- 12:01
just going to be taking care of Jessica.
- 12:06
Okay. I'll talk to you soon. Thank you.
- 12:08
Bye.
- 12:10
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>> Woohoo! You're wearing formal pajamas.
- 13:00
>> I am. I am. I was like, how can I be
- 13:02
dressy and comfortable
- 13:04
>> and it's so hot out
- 13:05
>> because I was going to be in sweats.
- 13:07
>> You look great.
- 13:08
>> But not for you.
- 13:10
>> Mm- You know what I
- 13:14
makeup?
- 13:16
>> Yeah. If she's not beat, I don't want
- 13:17
her. That's what I said.
- 13:18
>> Yeah. I need two hours.
- 13:20
>> I need you to have two hours of hair and
- 13:22
makeup before we hang out.
- 13:23
>> Well, you look gorgeous. This lighting
- 13:25
is nice. This is great lighting,
- 13:27
>> isn't it?
- 13:28
>> You know what? I realize I'm not aging.
- 13:30
Lighting is just getting bad. Cuz in my
- 13:32
bathroom, I have really good lighting in
- 13:34
my bathroom.
- 13:35
>> Yeah.
- 13:36
>> And in my bathroom, I'm something else.
- 13:40
>> Yeah.
- 13:40
>> In my car, not so much. But in my
- 13:44
bathroom, I'm like, I'm chef's kiss.
- 13:47
>> But in the car, when the sunlight, so
- 13:49
it's the lighting. I always say this
- 13:51
about I mean I'm I'm probably saying
- 13:53
something very obvious but when I go
- 13:54
into dressing rooms I'm like I can't
- 13:56
believe the dressing rooms aren't better
- 13:58
lit. I would buy so many more things. It
- 14:01
would just be better for business.
- 14:02
>> It was a dressing room where I honestly
- 14:05
the for the first time discovered like
- 14:08
the depth of my cellulite.
- 14:10
>> Yeah,
- 14:11
>> that's the truth. It was in a dressing
- 14:12
room.
- 14:13
>> Yeah. Yeah. It's super serious.
- 14:15
>> It's when I started running. I started
- 14:17
jogging. I said I I was shopping with my
- 14:19
boyfriend at the time and I I screamed.
- 14:22
I'd never seen I I did I said, "Is this
- 14:24
what came out at night?" And I went and
- 14:27
I said, "Baby, my my" and he was like,
- 14:29
"What?" He didn't, you know, they don't
- 14:31
notice.
- 14:31
>> No, they just noticed the legs.
- 14:34
>> They don't care what's on.
- 14:35
>> They don't care. They don't care.
- 14:36
>> I feel that way, too. One time when I
- 14:38
got a mammogram,
- 14:39
>> I turned to the person and I was like,
- 14:42
"It's just It's shocking how this hasn't
- 14:44
gotten better. How has this not gotten
- 14:46
better? How have we still have to
- 14:48
literally squeeze?
- 14:50
>> I don't have a lot of boobs. I was like,
- 14:52
what are you getting?
- 14:52
>> And it's even this much breast.
- 14:54
>> It's sometimes worse when you don't. It
- 14:56
>> fits larger
- 14:57
>> and you Well, they're both worse, I
- 14:59
guess. But like sometimes if you can't
- 15:00
if you don't have a lot to put in the
- 15:02
machine
- 15:02
>> that we're squeezing it between two
- 15:05
metal.
- 15:07
>> No, like a like a waffle.
- 15:08
>> And that there's nothing to look at. No,
- 15:12
you're just you're and then they're like
- 15:13
if you just move your arm a little like
- 15:15
it's not like you're it's a it's a it's
- 15:17
you're kind of contorting your body in a
- 15:19
in a very
- 15:20
>> and I said and I remember doing it very
- 15:22
you know like lucky me I have a nice
- 15:24
place to get my mamogram. I'm very
- 15:26
grateful and privileged to have a nice
- 15:29
place to get a mammog.
- 15:31
>> Not a poster on the wall, not a piece of
- 15:35
art to look at.
- 15:36
>> No distraction. I was like, you guys
- 15:37
don't want to put even an inspirational
- 15:40
>> No. And it takes about It takes a few
- 15:43
minutes to get the right angle cuz it's
- 15:45
not just getting it in there. It's
- 15:47
getting it in there. I need a little
- 15:48
bit. And I was like, there's there's no
- 15:50
there's got to be a better way.
- 15:52
>> Yeah. I It's shocking to me how
- 15:54
>> gave up. They were like, "Well, [ __ ] it.
- 15:56
If we've got something in it, then we've
- 15:57
got something in it." Cuz after a while,
- 15:59
I they just couldn't get a photo. No,
- 16:02
they can't get.
- 16:02
>> And then what about when it comes out
- 16:04
cloudy and they're like, "We need
- 16:05
another one or we need an ultrasound."
- 16:07
>> Also, they're like, they squeeze you in
- 16:09
the tightest vice ever. Yes.
- 16:11
>> They say, "Don't move."
- 16:12
>> Yeah. Don't move. That's true.
- 16:13
>> And then they leave the room because
- 16:15
there's too much radiation.
- 16:16
>> Yeah. Yeah.
- 16:18
>> That's the truth, right? So, it's just
- 16:19
you, your nodes, and your breast, and
- 16:22
the rest of your body exposed. And
- 16:24
>> there's not a like you don't even want
- 16:26
to play a an old episode of Everyone
- 16:28
Loves Raymond or whatever.
- 16:29
>> There's no sound. There's no music.
- 16:31
>> I know. No music.
- 16:33
>> There's no music. There's nothing.
- 16:35
>> I I remember talking to my great
- 16:36
dentist. I love my dentist. But I
- 16:38
remember saying
- 16:38
>> I love your dentist.
- 16:40
>> I love a dentist, too.
- 16:42
>> You like your dentist?
- 16:43
>> I do.
- 16:43
>> And I get nitrous every
- 16:45
>> a lot. I like my dentist.
- 16:46
>> I do, too.
- 16:46
>> And my dental hygienist. I love I love
- 16:49
her.
- 16:49
>> Did you work as a dental hygienist?
- 16:52
>> A dental assistant. Like Yeah. I just
- 16:54
handed the instruments over and cleaned
- 16:56
them and stuff. Mhm.
- 16:58
>> Do you feel like you have healthy teeth?
- 17:01
>> I do for the most part. Um
- 17:06
I grind my teeth.
- 17:08
>> Oh yeah.
- 17:08
>> And I didn't know that when you grind
- 17:10
you can get a little recession from the
- 17:12
grinding.
- 17:13
>> Yeah. Do you wear a thing?
- 17:14
>> I wear a thing now.
- 17:15
>> Yeah. We're with Regina Hall and we just
- 17:17
got we just got really into it. We're
- 17:20
talking about teeth and boobs. We're
- 17:21
right into it. Mhm.
- 17:22
>> Um but um I feel like the last time we
- 17:26
saw each other was on a dance floor at
- 17:28
Rashidita Jones.
- 17:29
>> The last time, but there was a time I
- 17:31
think after too.
- 17:32
>> What was that?
- 17:33
>> Uhoh.
- 17:35
>> It was on a street and you were
- 17:36
directing.
- 17:39
>> What was that?
- 17:39
>> And it was on a culde-sac.
- 17:41
And I was like, "What's going on down
- 17:43
there? I think they're filming
- 17:44
something."
- 17:45
>> Oh, yeah.
- 17:46
>> Around the corner from Yep. And And I
- 17:48
walked down the street and I was like,
- 17:50
"Who's directing?" And they said, "Amy
- 17:51
Polar." And then I made my way. I made
- 17:54
my way. It was very exciting. Do you
- 17:56
remember that?
- 17:56
>> I do remember that. That was precoid.
- 17:59
>> It was pre-COVID.
- 18:00
>> Okay. Yeah.
- 18:00
>> Yeah. And then everything else has been
- 18:02
a blur.
- 18:04
>> Yeah.
- 18:04
>> Yeah.
- 18:04
>> Yeah.
- 18:05
>> Cuz I cuz I was trying
- 18:06
>> that breast exam.
- 18:08
>> Everything else has been felt like a
- 18:09
mammogram.
- 18:11
[Laughter]
- 18:14
>> Everything did was like this is going to
- 18:15
really hurt. It's really weird. It's
- 18:16
going to take a long time and every
- 18:19
>> exposed to all things.
- 18:20
>> Totally. Totally. Um, but I feel like
- 18:23
we've had a couple times. So, Rashita
- 18:24
Jones often had a pajama jammy jam as
- 18:27
she talked about in this podcast and she
- 18:28
had a dance party and I feel like we've
- 18:30
had a couple good times on the dance
- 18:32
floor together dancing in pajamas.
- 18:34
>> Do you you like to dance?
- 18:37
>> Here's the thing.
- 18:38
>> I do like to dance. I wish I were a
- 18:40
better dancer. I'm not a good I can hold
- 18:43
a beat.
- 18:44
>> Sure.
- 18:44
>> But I I would love to be able to do and
- 18:47
Rashidita does them very well. She can
- 18:49
learn choreograph dances. And I I I wish
- 18:51
I had that gift.
- 18:52
>> Yeah. Her and her sister Kada can do
- 18:54
like Kadata is a great dancer, too. Old
- 18:57
>> routines from the '9s.
- 18:59
>> They can get a choreographer in front of
- 19:00
them and they're able to
- 19:02
>> Yeah.
- 19:03
>> to dance um and learn that choreography.
- 19:07
I can't. No. I was having a conversation
- 19:09
with Sheila E and she was like,
- 19:10
>> "Wait, excuse me."
- 19:12
>> I know.
- 19:12
>> You just dropped that.
- 19:13
>> I know. And I did. Did you see how I
- 19:15
dropped it like suddenly? like I said
- 19:16
nothing is I was like yeah so when
- 19:18
Sheila and I were talking e you know um
- 19:21
no I did we were I did a a one-on-one
- 19:25
interview and so she was my subject and
- 19:27
she's
- 19:27
>> so cool
- 19:28
>> so amazing and I was asking her did she
- 19:31
understand her impact on girls when she
- 19:34
first came out cuz like the drums we
- 19:36
hadn't seen a lot of women playing the
- 19:38
drums necessarily but anyway she said um
- 19:42
everything for her moves very separately
- 19:45
M she can feel all the rhythms and every
- 19:49
She feels every limb and every portion.
- 19:52
So everything is separate for her.
- 19:53
>> Ooh.
- 19:54
>> Yeah.
- 19:55
>> So if you feel like you're not maybe the
- 19:57
strongest at choreography,
- 19:58
>> I'm a unit.
- 19:59
>> What part feels like you're like that's
- 20:01
a good skill? Like I can do that. Well,
- 20:03
can you memorize fast? Can do you have a
- 20:05
good ear?
- 20:07
Can you sing?
- 20:09
>> I think I can. But I'm gonna tell you,
- 20:12
you know, cuz I used to tell me that I
- 20:14
had a a terrible pitch.
- 20:18
I disagree with that. Um,
- 20:21
and then I went on I think it was Cordon
- 20:25
and I I was like I and I they started
- 20:30
and then I joined in the harmony and boy
- 20:32
was I off.
- 20:34
>> So I'm not a harmonizer.
- 20:36
>> Okay.
- 20:37
>> I'm a soloist.
- 20:39
>> Yeah. No one else sing when Regina's
- 20:41
singing.
- 20:42
>> But I have a good gift for
- 20:46
I can remember a face.
- 20:48
>> Hey, that's good.
- 20:50
>> Yeah. Not a name. Terrible with names.
- 20:54
>> But you'd be able to.
- 20:55
>> You remember me?
- 20:59
>> I want to talk to you about so many
- 21:00
things today, Regina, because
- 21:02
the theme today for me with you is
- 21:06
range. like you are you can do it all
- 21:10
and to and how to approach you and your
- 21:13
career and your work is really
- 21:15
interesting because you can come in
- 21:16
through a lot of different doors and
- 21:18
it's it's well first of all let me just
- 21:22
say that you have a great rep like
- 21:24
everyone loves working with you.
- 21:26
>> Oh I thought you were talking about my
- 21:27
agent. I was about to say he is a great
- 21:32
>> I was like I've got a good team but yes
- 21:35
>> a great reputation. Does it matter to
- 21:38
you um like how you like when you go to
- 21:42
work like what matters to you like how
- 21:44
you show up and how other people show
- 21:46
up.
- 21:47
>> I think for me like if I when I when I'm
- 21:50
working
- 21:52
>> I think of everybody who put so much
- 21:55
work into it before I got there.
- 21:56
writers, you know, people who write,
- 21:58
that's
- 21:59
>> once it's written, selling it, like
- 22:01
sitting with studio notes. There's so
- 22:03
much, you know, this, you've done it all
- 22:05
directors that goes into it. So for me
- 22:08
to come and be like anything less than
- 22:12
like excited for what like they're
- 22:15
bringing a vision together in addition
- 22:17
to what I get to do and have fun then I
- 22:19
think it's I won't take it if I don't
- 22:22
think I could come and and bring
- 22:24
something to the environment
- 22:26
>> or and to the work. So I think that
- 22:28
that's important for me.
- 22:30
>> Okay. What kind of kid were you? cuz you
- 22:31
grew up in DC
- 22:32
>> and you know
- 22:34
>> went to form went to NYU to be a
- 22:36
journalist like very you were not a kid
- 22:39
who were you around actors or anyone who
- 22:41
was acting?
- 22:42
>> No, because I just we didn't I guess we
- 22:44
had I was like we didn't have any but
- 22:48
>> yeah I don't I wasn't exposed to it.
- 22:50
>> You weren't you weren't studying it in
- 22:52
school?
- 22:53
>> No, we had our plays.
- 22:54
>> Okay.
- 22:54
>> I went to Catholic school and so we had
- 22:57
the nuns
- 22:58
>> who I loved. I loved my nuns. I loved
- 23:01
>> What do you love about nuns? Because my
- 23:03
mom went to Catholic school and she was
- 23:05
very afraid of her nuns.
- 23:06
>> Oh, I think I had some
- 23:09
>> I was respectfully afraid. I mean, I
- 23:12
certainly had a reverence
- 23:14
>> um where I wouldn't cross a line, but I
- 23:16
wasn't afraid of being hurt. I was more
- 23:18
afraid of them telling my mom and then
- 23:20
getting in trouble. So, I didn't I
- 23:22
didn't have that. They were I found my
- 23:25
nuns to be very
- 23:28
I mean they were I wouldn't say they
- 23:30
were strict
- 23:31
>> but they were they were loving I would
- 23:34
say I would yeah they were loving.
- 23:36
>> And then is it true that you thought
- 23:39
about perhaps becoming a nurse?
- 23:40
>> I did. I did several times when I was in
- 23:43
high school and then again when I was
- 23:45
older and I was too old.
- 23:47
>> You were too old to
- 23:49
>> 39. That was a cut off. I was 41. They
- 23:51
were like, "It's not a backup plan,
- 23:52
miss. Get on out of here."
- 23:54
>> But it's Oh, for that particular for
- 23:56
that particular order.
- 23:58
>> Okay, got it.
- 23:59
>> Cuz they're different orders. You know,
- 24:00
with some orders, it's a sleeping
- 24:02
partner number thing.
- 24:03
>> Yeah. Right.
- 24:04
>> Four.
- 24:06
>> I don't know if anybody
- 24:07
>> Wait, you can only have slept with four
- 24:08
people.
- 24:08
>> Yep. Amy, can you make it?
- 24:12
>> You don't have to count them, you know.
- 24:14
>> Uh, no, I can't.
- 24:18
I don't want to brag, but
- 24:22
Whoa, whoa, whoa. Hold on. So, there is
- 24:24
a there's some orders where there's a
- 24:26
number you can only have had a certain
- 24:28
amount of partners.
- 24:28
>> Some are could be a certain amount of
- 24:30
partners. Some might be how many
- 24:33
attachments that you have. Some, you
- 24:35
know, in the world it's hard and some is
- 24:36
age.
- 24:37
>> Yeah. Wow. But, but what made you,
- 24:40
Regina, as a young person, what was
- 24:43
attractive about that life for you? What
- 24:46
did you think about? What was the
- 24:47
fantasy of that life?
- 24:49
>> I thought if wow if if you you know
- 24:52
you'd spend your life in prayer prayer
- 24:54
for others I would imagine because it's
- 24:56
unless you were like healing cuz they
- 24:59
don't you're not really attached to
- 25:00
anything material. Right. So they're
- 25:03
>> they wouldn't have an outward striving
- 25:06
>> Yeah.
- 25:07
>> of like oh right the the the thing of
- 25:10
like you know success whatever that is.
- 25:13
And um
- 25:17
no romantic heartbreak, right?
- 25:21
>> You don't want to say love cuz that part
- 25:23
is beautiful, but it's the other side
- 25:25
when
- 25:26
>> Yeah.
- 25:26
>> whatever whatever trauma, whatever
- 25:28
reasons things don't make it.
- 25:30
>> And then um you had that singular focus.
- 25:35
I'm sure that it's not that easy.
- 25:37
>> I'm just saying that was that was what I
- 25:40
romanticized it would be if I did it.
- 25:43
And I thought that was
- 25:44
>> like lovely.
- 25:45
>> And and and what is how is your faith
- 25:49
like now many years later, young Regina,
- 25:53
looking out at the world that way,
- 25:55
figuring that might be a way in which I
- 25:57
can manage my own world?
- 26:00
>> How do you practice your version of
- 26:02
loving God now? What does it look like?
- 26:04
>> I mean, I think I really believe if you
- 26:06
believe in past lives, I believe I had a
- 26:07
past life where I was that. I believe
- 26:11
I've come from that. Mhm.
- 26:12
>> So I believe it probably exists within
- 26:14
me because it has existed,
- 26:17
>> you know, and so it it
- 26:19
>> feels familiar.
- 26:20
>> It feels familiar. And so there's a
- 26:21
certain piece in that familiarity.
- 26:23
>> It makes sense to me then that you're,
- 26:25
you know, for a while thinking about
- 26:26
going into journalism because it's this
- 26:28
like qu it's like the idea of like
- 26:30
unpacking big questions, finding out the
- 26:33
truth, being curious, like all that
- 26:35
stuff feels like it's connected. When
- 26:37
did you decide, okay, I'm I'm happy that
- 26:40
I have my journalism degree, but I want
- 26:42
to be an actor. What when did that
- 26:44
change happen? What?
- 26:47
>> Well, my parents were like, you're not
- 26:49
going to just My parents were divorced,
- 26:50
but they were just like, you're not
- 26:51
going to be in New York partying cuz I
- 26:54
had also I had left the nun life behind.
- 26:58
>> You were like,
- 26:59
>> I was in New York and I was partying and
- 27:01
I loved partying,
- 27:03
>> you know, and good. I had great friends
- 27:05
and from college and like we finished.
- 27:09
>> Yeah.
- 27:10
>> And then it was like what am I, you
- 27:12
know, but we were going out.
- 27:13
>> We were probably in New York at the same
- 27:14
time, like in the '9s, right?
- 27:16
>> New York in the '9s. It was great.
- 27:18
>> It was great.
- 27:18
>> It was great. And so we used to go out a
- 27:21
lot and then my mom was like, my dad was
- 27:23
like, "What are you doing? You have to
- 27:24
get a job or something." I either had to
- 27:26
get a job or go back to school.
- 27:28
>> Mhm. And so I went I was like I'm
- 27:30
choosing school because I could arrange
- 27:32
my classes to still party
- 27:36
but work I couldn't do it. I did work
- 27:38
for six months.
- 27:39
>> Ooh. What was your job?
- 27:40
>> I was working at a director's office and
- 27:44
their office was in their home and so
- 27:46
they really had to
- 27:49
carefully vet who worked there. So I was
- 27:51
like an assistant. And
- 27:52
>> was that like your first job in near the
- 27:54
industry
- 27:56
>> and it was working with a director?
- 27:57
>> Yeah. He was a commercial director. He
- 27:59
did TV commercials.
- 28:00
>> And um
- 28:02
one day I fell asleep with my my my
- 28:04
elbow on a button on the computer and it
- 28:08
was blinking. It was just like all X's,
- 28:10
whatever was at the end and the screen
- 28:11
was blinking and I woke up cuz I had
- 28:12
been out too late. And um I was like I
- 28:16
And then my roommate and I were like we
- 28:19
are going to raise money and um I don't
- 28:22
know. And I was like we have to quit our
- 28:24
jobs. Our jobs are holding us back.
- 28:27
Yeah.
- 28:27
>> And then
- 28:31
>> and then I had to borrow money and my
- 28:32
parents were like, "What are you going
- 28:33
to do?" So I went I was like, "I'll go
- 28:34
back to school."
- 28:35
>> Okay. You So you went back to study
- 28:36
journalism then. And
- 28:38
>> I went back to study journal and my dad
- 28:39
had a stroke and passed away very
- 28:40
suddenly my first few months of school.
- 28:42
>> First few months. And so you didn't you
- 28:44
you stopped going to school after that?
- 28:46
>> No, I finished cuz I knew he'd want me
- 28:48
to. But I had a friend who said, "Do you
- 28:50
want to make extra money doing
- 28:51
commercials?" And she was like, "I'll
- 28:52
introduce you to my manager." I met her
- 28:54
manager. that manager. I couldn't show
- 28:57
up for auditions because I was like, I
- 28:58
I'm doing my thesis. I can't show up to
- 29:00
an audition.
- 29:01
>> But I did. And then I took a class in
- 29:03
acting. And I think it it was very
- 29:05
healing
- 29:06
>> for me after my dad to be out of my head
- 29:09
a little bit and that's how and then I
- 29:11
was like, "Oh, I love this." So then I
- 29:13
finished NYU
- 29:15
>> and then decided to go to Colombia's
- 29:18
bartending school.
- 29:19
>> Wow.
- 29:20
>> Because I was going to need to pay for
- 29:21
acting school.
- 29:22
>> Yeah.
- 29:23
>> And then I went to acting school. I
- 29:24
remember my mom was like, "So, you just
- 29:25
don't want a job, huh, baby?"
- 29:27
>> And I could have been a professional
- 29:29
student. I did love school. I I studied
- 29:31
at uh at um at Bill Esper.
- 29:35
>> I could see you also being a great
- 29:36
bartender.
- 29:38
>> Oh my gosh. I would have been, but I
- 29:41
don't know how to make any drinks
- 29:42
because you were supposed to spit those
- 29:44
drinks out in class.
- 29:46
>> I was really tipsy after every class.
- 29:49
>> Yeah.
- 29:50
But but so much of bartending is faking
- 29:54
like faking the like you're just making
- 29:56
the drink but it's about the chitchat.
- 29:58
>> Yeah. And I do like people.
- 30:00
>> Yeah.
- 30:00
>> So I love to converse and meet. I find
- 30:03
people to be fascinating.
- 30:06
>> Okay. So back to commercials. You're
- 30:08
auditioning for commercials. Any Did you
- 30:10
get any commercials during that time?
- 30:11
>> I did.
- 30:12
>> What did you get?
- 30:13
>> I got that was a big deal to get a
- 30:15
commercial in the '9s.
- 30:16
>> It was national.
- 30:17
>> [ __ ]
- 30:18
>> McDonald's. What? You got a national
- 30:21
McDonald's commercial? How much money
- 30:23
did you make from that?
- 30:25
>> Cuz that could pay that could change
- 30:27
your life. A national commercial.
- 30:28
>> A Yeah, it was. Yeah, I my line I had to
- 30:31
say and some McDonald's fries.
- 30:34
>> You were ordering them or
- 30:36
>> I was at a movie theater watching
- 30:39
>> We were watching a movie about
- 30:42
McDonald's and then my
- 30:44
>> watching a McDonald's movie.
- 30:45
>> No, we watching a movie about something
- 30:47
and they were running maybe. I don't
- 30:48
even remember. But he says I could go
- 30:50
for a Big Mac. Yeah, I think the movie
- 30:52
that you're watching and then I send in
- 30:54
some McDonald's fries.
- 30:55
>> And what do you remember about being on
- 30:57
the set of did you like you know how
- 30:58
sometimes you can remember the feeling
- 31:00
when you're shooting something? What was
- 31:02
it? Were you nervous?
- 31:03
>> I was nervous. Yes, I was nervous. I
- 31:06
remember I was like, I don't know if I
- 31:07
like my hair cuz they did these rods.
- 31:10
>> But now I look back and I'm like that
- 31:11
hair was just fine. Um
- 31:14
>> I thought everyone was going to
- 31:15
recognize me. I thought that commercial
- 31:17
was going to air. I was outside like
- 31:18
this.
- 31:20
>> You were like
- 31:21
>> waiting
- 31:22
>> waiting for people to be like the fries.
- 31:24
There she is.
- 31:24
>> Did you just do a McDonald's commercial?
- 31:27
Not one. Nobody.
- 31:28
>> That's a big get.
- 31:30
>> It was a big get.
- 31:31
>> That is a big get. And it ran for a
- 31:32
while.
- 31:33
>> It did. It ran for like You remember how
- 31:35
they had to pay for your cycles? I think
- 31:36
I made like
- 31:38
>> over a per like 30 40,000 30k.
- 31:41
>> Yes. Back then you could make he could
- 31:44
>> And there were some people who made like
- 31:46
Yeah. But I made like I think I made
- 31:48
like 30.
- 31:49
>> Yeah.
- 31:50
>> And if you could get a commercial and it
- 31:51
could run and and
- 31:53
>> your residuals were nice.
- 31:54
>> Yes.
- 32:02
It's been like really interesting to
- 32:04
look at your range like we talked about.
- 32:06
I mean
- 32:07
you have done all different kinds of
- 32:10
work. You've done you've been in big
- 32:12
huge franchise.
- 32:12
>> Can I interrupt?
- 32:13
>> Yes.
- 32:14
>> I love this woman.
- 32:16
No, I want to say that. You know what
- 32:18
the re No, no, no. I have to say it
- 32:20
because I I have to say
- 32:23
how profoundly
- 32:26
inspiring you are, right? Um
- 32:30
>> that's across all cultures, races, and
- 32:32
genres. You know that too. Thank you for
- 32:34
saying in terms of comedy. Yeah. Because
- 32:36
it's like, you know, you say Amy Polar,
- 32:38
it doesn't matter, right? We all know
- 32:40
who it is.
- 32:42
Um, and so
- 32:45
when I would watch you and Tina, I'd be
- 32:48
like, "They're beautiful. They're
- 32:49
funny." And so you, you know, you're
- 32:52
always looking at people who you admire.
- 32:55
>> And, um,
- 32:59
I think also how much fun they're
- 33:02
having,
- 33:03
>> right? And so, um, whether it's
- 33:07
conscious or subconscious, like and Maya
- 33:11
Rudolph,
- 33:13
um, who's also hilarious, but
- 33:17
>> to see women be so funny and so like um,
- 33:22
beautiful and yet not vain
- 33:25
>> because you can't really have that right
- 33:26
when you're doing comedy. You got to be
- 33:28
like, you can't be like
- 33:30
>> um, I don't know. Oh, but it that was
- 33:32
profoundly like um impactful and
- 33:36
inspirational with I don't even think
- 33:38
without me without me knowing it at
- 33:40
first and then it became like oh my
- 33:44
goodness I love them.
- 33:46
>> Well, you know, thank you for saying
- 33:47
that. It it does mean a lot because I
- 33:49
have followed your career and been and
- 33:52
been so impressed by how genuinely and
- 33:56
deeply funny you are. You are really
- 33:59
funny and also you have played
- 34:02
incredibly subtle, grounded, interesting
- 34:05
characters, including the film that
- 34:06
you're in, the new Paul Thomas Anderson
- 34:08
film that you're in that we'll talk
- 34:09
about. Like you are playing deep,
- 34:11
complex characters and also getting to
- 34:13
swing the other way. That's very
- 34:15
inspiring because it's very hard to not
- 34:17
be uh just limited or like you know to
- 34:21
come in through the comedy door and
- 34:23
never leave that way. It's Have you
- 34:26
found that to be like was that did that
- 34:28
happen in the beginning like when you
- 34:30
were doing more comedic stuff? Did you
- 34:32
>> I think after scary movie I think after
- 34:34
and the interesting thing with scary
- 34:36
movie is after scary movie
- 34:39
then it was like oh she only does broad
- 34:41
comedy. So then you have to say well can
- 34:44
you get a um you know a grounded kind
- 34:46
and a lot of them I just you know I mean
- 34:49
a lot of stuff you don't get right isn't
- 34:51
there like
- 34:52
>> well I'd be curious because I was
- 34:53
thinking like what is Regina when you
- 34:55
were you know we all have this thing
- 34:57
where
- 34:58
we get scripts sent to us or parts sent
- 35:01
to us and we scroll down to see what
- 35:03
people are thinking about us and
- 35:04
sometimes it's like okay
- 35:06
>> I got my first part job I got was a
- 35:09
stripper and I just was like I'm going
- 35:10
to get inundated. I haven't been asked
- 35:13
again and I'm offended. I I'm serious. I
- 35:17
literally was like, "Watch, I'm just I'm
- 35:20
just I do remember I had an agent. I
- 35:21
love her so much. Her name is Jamie."
- 35:23
And she said, "We've gotten a foreign
- 35:24
film for you."
- 35:28
>> I haven't read it yet, but we just got
- 35:30
the offer. This is after Scary Movie.
- 35:31
And I was like, "Oh gosh, I'm I'm
- 35:34
international."
- 35:36
>> And um this is before emails. And
- 35:39
remember when you had to pick your
- 35:40
scripts up? Oh yeah. Physically go to
- 35:42
someone's house.
- 35:43
>> Yeah. So I physically went to the agency
- 35:45
and it was in the bin because I wasn't
- 35:47
at the point where they were messening
- 35:48
them to me. So I got the script and I
- 35:51
remember it um it was players which she
- 35:54
was reading as playa the beach.
- 35:57
>> No
- 35:58
>> yes play hiatus.
- 36:01
Playa hiatus. That's what she said to me
- 36:03
on the phone. And I said it's it's it's
- 36:07
player haters. I was like,
- 36:10
>> she was like, "So, it doesn't take place
- 36:11
on a beach?"
- 36:12
>> I was like, "No, and it's not a foreign
- 36:14
film.
- 36:17
There's nothing foreign about it."
- 36:20
And so,
- 36:22
and so I didn't end up doing
- 36:24
Playahatias.
- 36:25
>> Playa
- 36:27
playas.
- 36:29
>> It's a foreign film. She was so excited,
- 36:31
too. Um, Jamie, no.
- 36:34
>> Do you feel like you were getting after
- 36:35
Scary Movie? Were you getting a lot of
- 36:36
the same stuff offered to you?
- 36:38
>> Probably like more broad like Yeah.
- 36:41
Yeah.
- 36:41
>> Yeah. Like like I was I I was laughing
- 36:43
cuz I was like I bet Regina and I would
- 36:45
be in a movie where we'd be playing like
- 36:49
stereotypical versions like because I
- 36:51
still to you know to this day someone's
- 36:53
like we thought of you. We think it's
- 36:56
great. And I'm like okay. and I read the
- 36:57
part and I'm like just
- 37:00
>> I know
- 37:00
>> one of those characters that is just
- 37:02
like usually very like let me speak to
- 37:04
the manager very nuts and very like
- 37:08
>> get her out of here.
- 37:10
>> I know.
- 37:10
>> Yeah.
- 37:11
>> And and I feel like we would probably be
- 37:13
cast in a movie where we would be
- 37:15
>> I'd be the one that you wanted to speak
- 37:17
to the manager over. I'd be like, they'd
- 37:19
always have it like there's some hood
- 37:21
chick and she's always like and I'd be
- 37:23
like
- 37:23
>> and I would be like
- 37:26
>> totally
- 37:26
>> cuz you just can't do that all this.
- 37:28
You're like what else?
- 37:30
>> So versions of that.
- 37:31
>> Well, that that's leads me to my
- 37:32
question. So we always we do this thing
- 37:34
on the show where we talk behind well
- 37:36
behind someone's back. We kind of try to
- 37:38
find out more about them through people
- 37:39
that know them. And so we talked to
- 37:40
Andrew Ranels today.
- 37:42
>> My baby daddy.
- 37:44
>> I heard you have twins together. and
- 37:46
Don. We hatch We don't know where where
- 37:49
are our kids.
- 37:52
Don and Don. I love Andrew. I love
- 37:55
Andrew.
- 37:55
>> I know. He's so What do you love about
- 37:57
him?
- 37:58
>> Oh, he's just He makes me smile. He
- 38:01
makes me laugh. He's funny. So talented.
- 38:04
Yeah.
- 38:04
>> But he's just such a nice human being.
- 38:07
Like I love Andrew. Like I knew he was
- 38:10
my baby daddy from the first moment I
- 38:11
saw him.
- 38:13
>> Yeah. I know. Well, I can tell you have
- 38:14
a special connection with him.
- 38:16
>> I love Andrew. Like one day we did a
- 38:18
scene and I said decade instead of
- 38:20
decade and it was late and then every
- 38:23
time we had to do it over and it would
- 38:25
come to the word we couldn't say. You
- 38:27
know how that happens? You get the
- 38:28
giggles and we couldn't stop.
- 38:31
>> I have a I have I have a clip of that
- 38:34
God and I was like
- 38:36
>> I was it would just we couldn't stop and
- 38:38
he was like don't don't look at me and
- 38:40
we couldn't do it. We couldn't do it. We
- 38:42
had to break. He loves you and he loves
- 38:44
working with you. Loved working with you
- 38:46
and you guys work together in Black
- 38:47
Monday and and and he talked about like
- 38:50
one of the questions is kind of like
- 38:51
what we talk about we're talking about
- 38:53
now because like whether it's you know
- 38:54
girls trip or love and basketball or one
- 38:56
battle um after another your new film.
- 38:59
You've done big budget, you've done
- 39:00
small independence like um support the
- 39:03
girls, you've done scary movie, you've
- 39:05
done big and small like uh dramatic and
- 39:10
comedic. And he was just saying like I I
- 39:12
want to ask Regina, does she feel like
- 39:14
she's the architect of this or does it
- 39:17
feel like part of a kind of a bigger
- 39:18
flow? like like are you feeling like
- 39:22
you're adjusting the dials on those all
- 39:24
the time or are you just kind of seeing
- 39:27
what's coming up next?
- 39:30
>> I mean at a certain point you have more
- 39:32
options, right, as your career. I mean I
- 39:34
think it was I mean I would love to say
- 39:35
I was an architect. I think it was
- 39:37
probably accidental because in the
- 39:38
beginning you would just you kind of
- 39:40
said yes.
- 39:41
>> Yeah, totally.
- 39:42
>> I got a job. Ply height when does it
- 39:46
when does it start? Well, this if that
- 39:49
would have been my first offer, I would
- 39:51
have been there. So, it's kind of been
- 39:52
like
- 39:53
>> I know it is kind of funny in retrospect
- 39:54
when people say like
- 39:56
>> you know what what made you make that
- 39:58
choice and it's like they just they just
- 40:00
made ass.
- 40:02
>> I know and it and it went well,
- 40:04
>> but that's kind of how it was. I mean,
- 40:07
Scary Movie was a little I think Best
- 40:08
Man in the Love. Scary Movie was
- 40:09
different because I was a huge fan of
- 40:11
The Weigh-ins and I I mean, I would
- 40:14
really wanted to work with Keenan, but
- 40:16
>> and then that just ended up having But
- 40:18
it's it's I will say for the beginning
- 40:21
it was kind of an accident. It
- 40:22
everything was an accident
- 40:23
>> when that movie comes out and it's a
- 40:25
huge hit. You've been in a couple films
- 40:27
that are just like giant hits right
- 40:29
away. Scary Movie, Girl Strip, like
- 40:31
where you're just on this train. Mhm.
- 40:34
>> What is that like to just have, you
- 40:36
know, do something and then suddenly
- 40:37
it's like, oh, we've got a franchise,
- 40:41
>> you know? No, I don't know. I I'll ask
- 40:43
you this. Nothing necessarily feels like
- 40:45
that in real time.
- 40:46
>> Yeah, that's right. It's kind of like
- 40:48
what is what's discussed later.
- 40:50
>> Yeah, it's later. I think in real time
- 40:52
it came out, it did well. And I was
- 40:54
like, you know, that's great. But I did
- 40:57
die in the first one
- 40:58
>> and I was and we you know and I and and
- 41:01
I didn't expect to come back for the
- 41:02
second one. It was like I didn't have a
- 41:04
deal. I didn't
- 41:05
>> Remind me how they got you back after
- 41:07
you died.
- 41:07
>> It was a near-death experience.
- 41:10
>> Right.
- 41:10
>> They described it as a near-death
- 41:12
experience. And then I became psychic,
- 41:14
but I really wasn't psychic at all.
- 41:17
Jesus, Brenda just swore she was
- 41:20
psychic. Um um but um I think yeah that
- 41:25
was like it's kind of like I you know
- 41:27
you don't know who knew.
- 41:28
>> Yeah.
- 41:28
>> I mean and that was kind of
- 41:29
>> Did you feel that way about Girls Trip
- 41:30
too which I mean I can remember when
- 41:32
that came out Tracy Oliver who I got the
- 41:35
pleasure to work with on we produced a
- 41:37
show together called Harlem. Um
- 41:39
>> Oh yes
- 41:40
>> for a couple years on Amazon. And
- 41:41
Tracy's Megan
- 41:42
>> Yes. Megan and Tracy's so talented and
- 41:46
>> um I just remember that feeling very
- 41:49
exciting when that was a big
- 41:51
>> big hit. What was that experience like?
- 41:55
>> That was great. You know, I will say
- 41:56
this. This is going to sound crazy to
- 41:58
many people, but my dog got really sick
- 42:00
right before and my dog passed away like
- 42:03
4 days after Girl Script came out and he
- 42:06
had been really sick and I loved my dog
- 42:08
Zeus. So, it was a bit of a blur. I was
- 42:10
very sad. I was very sad cuz I had lost
- 42:14
um
- 42:16
I had lost my little little fat little
- 42:19
baby, you know, he was a little bulldog.
- 42:20
And so
- 42:24
I was very happy it did well.
- 42:27
>> Yeah.
- 42:27
>> I remember because at first I was like
- 42:31
I think I was not I think the girls were
- 42:34
a lot more um optimistic. I was like
- 42:37
should we be coming out in the summer?
- 42:39
That was my thought. I was like against
- 42:41
I mean, he's not like he's very
- 42:43
talented, but Chris Nolan um and
- 42:46
Dunkkirk, I was like, we're coming out
- 42:47
the same day.
- 42:49
>> But sometimes that counterprogramming
- 42:51
can really work.
- 42:52
>> They they sometimes and at that and I
- 42:54
guess at that time it did, I guess,
- 42:55
because I was I'm, you know, I'm a I'm a
- 42:58
Nolan fan, so I was not um So, yeah, it
- 43:02
was it was it was it was great.
- 43:04
>> But sometimes you've had a day and
- 43:05
you're just like, I can't go see Dunkirk
- 43:07
tonight.
- 43:09
>> You're like, I can't do it. I I had my
- 43:12
my day was Dunkerkian.
- 43:14
>> Yes. Right.
- 43:14
>> And I need a laugh.
- 43:15
>> Yeah. I don't need Dunkirk again.
- 43:18
>> Yeah.
- 43:18
>> Yeah.
- 43:19
>> Yeah. Because I I remember Tina and I
- 43:21
did a movie called Sisters and it came
- 43:22
out against Star Wars.
- 43:24
>> Oh.
- 43:25
>> And so it was like hm
- 43:27
>> I have a film I'm coming out in um an
- 43:29
animated film.
- 43:30
>> Oo.
- 43:31
>> Spongebob.
- 43:32
>> Yes.
- 43:33
>> And that's coming out the same day as
- 43:34
Avatar. So I was like that that that
- 43:37
that's
- 43:37
>> But I like that programming. I like that
- 43:39
because
- 43:40
>> Tell me how I don't understand that.
- 43:42
Tell me. Tell me.
- 43:43
>> I like it.
- 43:44
>> You like an Avatar?
- 43:45
>> I like an Avatar Spongebob um uh choice
- 43:49
because
- 43:50
>> cuz I feel like I would take my kids to
- 43:51
see Avatar as well,
- 43:53
>> dude. How much Avatar are we going to
- 43:56
get?
- 43:56
>> But the thing is this is the last
- 43:58
Avatar. So yeah, you got to go see it.
- 44:00
But he hasn't filmed anymore and it
- 44:02
takes like
- 44:03
>> I mean is it the last Avatar?
- 44:06
>> Yeah.
- 44:06
>> I mean how many times we get fooled by
- 44:08
that?
- 44:08
>> Right. That's true. The last
- 44:10
>> I feel safer now.
- 44:11
>> And I don't know. And that one I just
- 44:13
It's going to take so long. That's the
- 44:15
other thing cuz movies are so long.
- 44:17
>> Well, Spongebob is only It's short. I
- 44:19
mean 96 minutes you're in and out.
- 44:21
>> It's hilarious. In and out. But I mean
- 44:24
when you see I just like the other thing
- 44:26
is like what do you I could only go to
- 44:29
that movie at starting at 4:00 and
- 44:30
there's no way I'm going to go to an
- 44:31
8:00 movie of Avatar.
- 44:33
>> But of Spongebob. Aren't they sleep by
- 44:35
then too? the kids, you got to get them
- 44:37
in and out of there by 12. 1 2
- 44:39
>> Spongebob you got to do like a 600 p.m.
- 44:41
probably 6 p.m. But I think you're going
- 44:43
to get a lot of adult.
- 44:44
>> That's a good idea cuz
- 44:46
>> that's
- 44:46
>> going to Spongebob.
- 44:47
>> But don't you think those adults would
- 44:49
see Avatar 2? I'm just
- 44:50
>> not this adult.
- 44:51
>> Not that. So we got we got one
- 44:53
everybody.
- 44:54
>> I'm going to say it right now and I'm
- 44:55
sorry if I'm going to like cause
- 44:57
problems. I'm not going to see the new
- 45:00
Avatar.
- 45:01
>> I'm not I don't I'm not going to see it.
- 45:04
Well, we're not on IMAX anyway. So, the
- 45:06
Avatar took the IMAX. So, we're going to
- 45:08
be on
- 45:09
>> I also I don't like IMAX.
- 45:11
>> Yeah, those big theaters.
- 45:13
>> It's so intense. It's too loud.
- 45:15
>> Well, we're coming out one battle after
- 45:16
another is coming on on IMAX.
- 45:18
>> Okay. Except for that,
- 45:20
[Laughter]
- 45:24
>> right? Yeah, that one.
- 45:27
>> Okay. But so before I get to that movie
- 45:29
because it looks so great and I mean
- 45:31
Paul Thomas Anderson is just such an
- 45:33
incredible director and your cast is
- 45:36
incredible. Um but I want to talk about
- 45:39
award shows because you and I are we've
- 45:42
both hosted stuff.
- 45:43
>> You I love Yes. I love
- 45:45
>> I love when you host. You are so good at
- 45:47
it.
- 45:48
>> Well I mean
- 45:49
>> what do you what do you like about
- 45:50
doing?
- 45:50
>> It's I mean I don't know that I do.
- 45:53
>> I know what you mean. Yes. It's hard.
- 45:56
>> I know what I mean. It's hard and it's a
- 45:58
little bit of like diminishing returns.
- 45:59
Like the more you do it, like when you
- 46:02
when you pull it off the first time,
- 46:03
you're like and they like come back and
- 46:05
do it again. It's like I don't know if I
- 46:06
should.
- 46:07
>> You all have managed to do repeat
- 46:09
performance and honestly be amazing each
- 46:12
time.
- 46:13
>> Thank you. Right back at you. And I feel
- 46:15
like you have something that hosts need
- 46:17
that you just kind of can't teach, which
- 46:19
is you have to be a little
- 46:23
a little ambivalent, a little relaxed.
- 46:27
You can't care too much about it.
- 46:28
>> No. Because people can feel that.
- 46:30
>> I know. They can feel it in the room.
- 46:32
>> They can feel it in the room.
- 46:33
>> So, what do you do to kind of keep that
- 46:35
vibe going or you or like fake that vibe
- 46:38
when you're out there doing it?
- 46:39
>> I do. I mean, I don't know. Let me ask
- 46:40
you if you feel this. You know, you're
- 46:42
nervous, but once the curtain goes up,
- 46:44
you're like, "Well, here it is."
- 46:45
>> Yes.
- 46:45
>> There's nothing you can do.
- 46:47
>> I mean, it's at that point, it's just,
- 46:49
you know,
- 46:50
>> it's like that breast exam. It's on. The
- 46:52
shirt is off.
- 46:53
>> We got to do it.
- 46:54
>> The machine is open.
- 46:55
>> We got to slap them on in there. I think
- 46:57
it just kind of
- 47:01
I mean, you got to feel that what you've
- 47:03
got is enough. I think I think that's
- 47:04
what it is. You've got to just feel
- 47:06
like, well,
- 47:07
>> what I have is enough. cuz I always feel
- 47:09
like the minute you feel like you panic
- 47:11
>> Yes.
- 47:12
That's when it's going to be
- 47:14
>> and you are the ho like a host whether
- 47:16
it be you're having a dinner party
- 47:17
whether you're having a wedding whether
- 47:19
you're hosting the BT awards whatever is
- 47:21
the thing
- 47:23
>> if you're having fun
- 47:24
>> right I agree
- 47:25
>> and you set the tone people relax but if
- 47:28
to your point if you and I mean you were
- 47:30
hosting the Academy Awards during a very
- 47:32
hectic um year the year of the slap very
- 47:36
stressful you and Amy and Wanda and you
- 47:39
guys
- 47:40
>> had to handle like this crazy live
- 47:43
thing.
- 47:44
>> Are you the kind of performer when
- 47:46
something like that happens where you
- 47:47
like how do you
- 47:49
>> how do you adjust? Do you just
- 47:53
>> like try to stay in your body? Do you
- 47:54
disassociate? Do you what do you do? How
- 47:57
do you adjust when those kind of things
- 47:58
happen?
- 47:58
>> Well, I had I mean I I mean it was
- 48:00
wonderful to have them, you know, and
- 48:02
not be doing that alone
- 48:04
>> and they were great.
- 48:07
Um,
- 48:08
I think you just are like, let we just,
- 48:11
you know, the show must go on. I think
- 48:13
there's just something about the show
- 48:14
must go on mentality that you just are
- 48:17
like, it is we, here we go.
- 48:19
>> Yeah.
- 48:20
>> And because you're at that point, you
- 48:21
are thinking of your audience. You want
- 48:22
your audience to um
- 48:25
>> continue to enjoy the show and you don't
- 48:27
and that's the thing about a live show,
- 48:28
you know, anything anything can happen
- 48:33
um anyway when you're doing anything
- 48:35
live. So, I think you're have to just
- 48:37
always be prepared for that and whatever
- 48:39
that ends up being, you just ride it
- 48:41
out.
- 48:42
>> Yeah. I mean, it it it's a skill. It's a
- 48:44
skill to be able to to do that and to
- 48:46
not let things kind of throw you. And
- 48:49
you're so good at pivoting in real time
- 48:53
like whether you're accepting for Kevin
- 48:57
Cosner in real time which was amazing
- 49:00
like a beautiful poem
- 49:02
>> and an incredible
- 49:03
>> that is my fault because they said
- 49:05
Regina you should read this backstage
- 49:07
and I was like no no no no I got it I
- 49:09
was like no no no no I got it and I
- 49:11
didn't realize what they had written and
- 49:12
I think it was that discovery in real
- 49:14
time
- 49:15
>> it was very human and very light lovely
- 49:18
like because you were real. You were
- 49:19
accepting for Kevin Coer who wasn't
- 49:20
there at the time cuz he was dealing
- 49:22
with weather in Santa Barbara which was
- 49:25
real um destructive weather that people
- 49:27
were you know and you were of course
- 49:30
>> doing what anyone would do which is like
- 49:33
>> doing like this fun gracious kind of
- 49:35
light tease to the person who won until
- 49:37
you realized mid-sentence that you're
- 49:39
like I see this is more serious and it
- 49:42
was it was a beautiful pivot.
- 49:47
Do you remember? I forget what award
- 49:49
show it was.
- 49:51
Maybe it was the Emmys and Jimmy
- 49:53
Fallon's um prompter went out. Do you
- 49:55
remember that?
- 49:56
>> No.
- 49:57
>> Yes. And I mean he was he h he he
- 50:01
handled it so well. He just was like,
- 50:03
"Hey, I can't read the prompter." And he
- 50:04
just kind of riff for a second. And I
- 50:06
thought, "Oh,
- 50:07
>> oh, I do remember that."
- 50:09
>> He just kind of made a thing about it.
- 50:10
And I remember like for hours after just
- 50:13
kind of lying in my room thinking that
- 50:15
is a living stress dream
- 50:18
>> that you would just walk out to all
- 50:20
these people and just the prompter
- 50:23
>> and the prompter. I know. And even for
- 50:25
two seconds cuz it's like the beginning.
- 50:27
It's right when you need it's right when
- 50:29
you are like I need to engage them. I'm
- 50:32
letting them know what this night is
- 50:33
going to be like. And then you don't
- 50:34
have a prompter.
- 50:36
>> Back to dentistry.
- 50:38
>> Mhm. Have you ever had dreams that your
- 50:40
teeth fall out?
- 50:41
>> No. Have you?
- 50:43
>> You have? It's a very typical stress
- 50:45
dream.
- 50:46
>> Really?
- 50:46
>> That your that like you go to talk and
- 50:49
your teeth fall out.
- 50:50
>> Oh my god. That I'm stressed thinking
- 50:52
about it.
- 50:53
>> I know. I'm sorry to bring it up. Um do
- 50:56
you have what what would be a typical
- 50:57
stress dream for you?
- 50:59
>> I probably am not sleeping if I'm that
- 51:00
stressed. I think that's what happens.
- 51:02
>> Do you are you a good sleeper? I love to
- 51:04
talk about sleep. I love sleep.
- 51:07
>> Here's the thing. I love sleep. I want
- 51:09
more of it.
- 51:10
>> Okay. Well, let's talk about how to get
- 51:11
you there.
- 51:12
>> Okay.
- 51:13
>> What's your bedtime?
- 51:14
>> Well, there's the answer.
- 51:17
>> Too late
- 51:17
>> there. It's too late. There's a lot to
- 51:19
do sometimes when I get home.
- 51:22
>> Okay.
- 51:24
>> Or it's that last dine episode that I've
- 51:28
never seen and I want to get that last
- 51:29
one in.
- 51:30
>> You cannot watch a date line to feel
- 51:32
good late at night.
- 51:33
>> What happens?
- 51:33
>> Well, it's just bad for dreams.
- 51:35
>> Oh, I have great dreams.
- 51:36
>> Okay. A lot of times it's spouses. Have
- 51:38
you seen that? Have you noticed that?
- 51:39
>> That is true. And I was talking about
- 51:41
this with Zara Gar a couple weeks ago on
- 51:43
this podcast. Um that women who are is
- 51:46
great. That women who are married are
- 51:48
much more likely to die earlier and Yes.
- 51:51
to get married.
- 51:51
>> Oh, you mean from stress? Oh, yes. I
- 51:53
Yes. Yes. Yes.
- 51:54
>> But but it shortens your life if you're
- 51:56
married. You know that.
- 51:57
>> Yeah. Yep. Sucks it right out.
- 51:59
sucks it right out cuz you're caretaking
- 52:01
and you're thinking of and a lot of
- 52:03
times women
- 52:05
>> um they're they're nurturing so they're
- 52:08
giving so much but the men they they
- 52:10
fare better
- 52:11
>> they do a man lives
- 52:12
>> long I don't even know why y'all don't
- 52:14
want to get married
- 52:15
>> y'all should be begging to run down an
- 52:17
altar like literally
- 52:18
>> yeah right men should know that it's
- 52:20
going to add they should do like a you
- 52:23
should do like a very like um
- 52:27
like you know there's all these these
- 52:29
like podcasts and books and classes of
- 52:32
like maximizing your potential. They
- 52:36
should just do it about getting married.
- 52:38
>> They should just say you get married,
- 52:39
you live five more years.
- 52:40
>> 86% of the most successful men are
- 52:44
married.
- 52:50
I'm just saying
- 52:52
that's got I mean that's got to you know
- 52:55
they need that grounding. They need that
- 52:56
home base.
- 52:57
>> And women don't. No.
- 52:58
>> No.
- 52:59
>> Because they find it in friendships.
- 53:01
>> Yeah.
- 53:01
>> You know what I was saying? And tell me
- 53:03
this.
- 53:04
>> Anyone else in here?
- 53:06
>> Have you noticed that men
- 53:08
>> Oh, there was a study. If you ask men
- 53:10
who their best friend is, most of them
- 53:12
say their wives, right?
- 53:13
>> And if you ask a woman, she's really got
- 53:15
her friends. She like Lisa, you know,
- 53:18
Amy, like they really they have they
- 53:20
have it. And for men, it'll be their
- 53:21
wives.
- 53:22
>> Yeah. Um, I do feel like women have, you
- 53:25
know, tribes and
- 53:27
>> we're in our 50s, right? So, we're kind
- 53:29
of in the middle.
- 53:29
>> 30s.
- 53:30
>> Were we in our 30s? Wait, let me check.
- 53:32
>> Yeah.
- 53:32
>> Yeah, we are.
- 53:33
>> 39.
- 53:34
>> 39.
- 53:36
>> And we are in the watery middle.
- 53:38
>> We're in the watery middle.
- 53:40
Mhm.
- 53:42
>> Water is so important.
- 53:44
>> Resource.
- 53:44
>> Water is a sponsor.
- 53:45
>> It is.
- 53:46
>> Water. Please.
- 53:47
>> Yeah.
- 53:48
>> Water. It
- 53:49
>> don't go.
- 53:49
>> Don't go. Water. Don't go. Do you worry
- 53:51
about um like are you a
- 53:54
>> totally into climate change? Yes.
- 53:56
>> Yes. And do you are you like a prepper?
- 53:58
Are are you do you think about
- 54:01
>> totally aware and I'm like [ __ ] it at
- 54:03
the same time
- 54:04
>> cuz I'm like what can I do? I can't I
- 54:06
can't live in the stress of it. But am
- 54:08
aware enough to be like if there is
- 54:10
something I that can be done I will do
- 54:12
it.
- 54:12
>> If there was a zombie apocalypse.
- 54:14
>> Oh my gosh. I don't I can't live in
- 54:16
buildings and just just take me out. I'm
- 54:19
going to go at some point anyway.
- 54:20
>> I feel this exactly the same. I would
- 54:22
just be like let me be the first to go.
- 54:24
>> Just Yeah. Like don't bite me cuz I
- 54:26
don't want to be alive and dead. But
- 54:28
just just somebody just run me on over.
- 54:30
However, whatever is the quickest way,
- 54:33
but I don't want to just survive. I
- 54:34
haven't slept. Amy, get up. I hear
- 54:37
something. You've got a gun. We've got
- 54:39
one candy bar between us that's got to
- 54:40
last for like 10 days.
- 54:42
>> No. We should do a zombie movie where
- 54:43
the two of us immediately get killed.
- 54:47
We're trying to get killed the whole
- 54:49
movie. No one will kill us.
- 54:52
Can't even get bitten by a zombie.
- 54:55
>> We can't. Yeah,
- 54:56
>> that is a good idea. I know because I
- 54:58
feel But there But what are you like in
- 55:00
a crisis? Cuz I I'm projecting on you. I
- 55:03
feel like you'd be very levelheaded.
- 55:05
>> I think I'm pretty calm in a crisis. At
- 55:07
least most crisis, but I have a
- 55:10
meophobia. So, it depends on
- 55:11
>> Oh,
- 55:12
>> that crisis I'm not great in.
- 55:14
>> Let's talk about that.
- 55:15
>> I know. I love a phobia.
- 55:17
>> Do you have any?
- 55:23
>> I don't think so. I don't have a real
- 55:24
phobia. I I think I have like intrusive
- 55:27
thoughts that maybe is phobia adjacent,
- 55:29
like fear of uh stuff, but I don't have
- 55:33
an actual
- 55:34
>> fear of clowns. I don't love clowns.
- 55:37
>> You don't I don't mind clowns.
- 55:38
>> I don't I don't love them. I I I don't I
- 55:41
definitely don't want to be around a
- 55:42
clown, but I wouldn't I wouldn't scream
- 55:44
in my way. They're just they see it's a
- 55:46
lot. It's a lot.
- 55:48
>> Um I don't like any people that are like
- 55:50
performing clown stuff.
- 55:52
>> Clown stuff.
- 55:55
>> But I respect them and I would scream if
- 55:57
I saw one.
- 55:58
>> Right.
- 55:58
>> But a metaphobia is
- 56:01
>> well a I have two phobias. I have
- 56:03
amophobia.
- 56:04
>> Aophob phobia.
- 56:05
>> Yeah.
- 56:06
>> And then claustrophobia. Aophobia is a
- 56:08
fear of like
- 56:09
>> throwing up.
- 56:10
>> Yeah.
- 56:11
>> Someone throwing up. Are you throwing
- 56:12
up? I have some friends who have that.
- 56:13
We won't talk about it anymore because
- 56:15
it makes people stressed. Yes. For
- 56:16
people listening, we won't talk about
- 56:18
it.
- 56:18
>> But it's real.
- 56:19
>> It's real. And so is claustrophobia.
- 56:21
>> Okay. And so claustrophobia,
- 56:25
>> how does that manifest in your everyday?
- 56:27
>> My You know what? I only am
- 56:28
claustrophobic if I'm like, I can't get
- 56:31
out. So like I can do a small space if I
- 56:33
can get out of it. What if it's a small
- 56:35
space and I'm like like an MRI?
- 56:37
>> I got to know I can scoot out.
- 56:41
>> But you can't in an MRI. Exactly. That's
- 56:43
why I can't do those.
- 56:44
>> So, do you take a do you take a a night
- 56:47
night pill when you do?
- 56:48
>> No, I do the open MRI.
- 56:50
>> There's an open one.
- 56:50
>> Yeah, there's which is wider. Which is
- 56:52
wider. Where you can scoot out.
- 56:55
>> You can scoot out and I don't let them
- 56:57
leave me alone.
- 56:58
>> Yes.
- 56:59
>> They have to sit there with me and then
- 57:00
I have to talk to them.
- 57:02
>> Mhm.
- 57:03
>> They have to talk to me.
- 57:04
>> And are you feeling do you know do you
- 57:06
do you have a sense of where your
- 57:07
claustrophobia came from?
- 57:09
I remember it starting when I got a um
- 57:14
a face m what do you call those? Um
- 57:17
>> facial.
- 57:17
>> Not a facial.
- 57:18
>> Oh, I know exactly what you're talking
- 57:19
about. So, actors often have to get
- 57:21
>> Yes.
- 57:22
>> like a plaster cast
- 57:26
and it is terrifying.
- 57:27
>> And that's when I I didn't have it
- 57:28
before that I remember. But I remember
- 57:31
when they were both on me plastering me.
- 57:35
>> Yeah.
- 57:36
>> Plastering my face.
- 57:37
>> I know. Neither sound weird.
- 57:39
>> It's like I keep trying to make it sound
- 57:41
better.
- 57:41
>> It's a very weird thing that people
- 57:43
don't know, which is a lot of actors
- 57:45
have to get, especially if you're doing
- 57:46
any prosthetics.
- 57:47
>> Yes.
- 57:47
>> And I'm sure makeup artists have made it
- 57:49
better and better and easier and easier,
- 57:51
but back when we were doing it, it was
- 57:52
like stick two straws in your nose.
- 57:55
>> Yeah. And they do your mouth and then
- 57:56
they're patting you and you your ears
- 57:58
are covered and then they're trying to
- 57:59
go fast and then it has to harden.
- 58:01
>> That's right.
- 58:01
>> And then once it hardens, they can
- 58:03
remove it. And the thing wasn't that. I
- 58:05
just was like, "What if a fire comes?
- 58:06
They forget about me and run out."
- 58:10
>> Wait, like,
- 58:11
>> wait, this is a really interesting thing
- 58:13
your brain is doing.
- 58:14
>> So, my brain creates scenarios.
- 58:16
>> It wouldn't be the fire that would be
- 58:17
the problem. It would be that you've
- 58:18
left, you've been left alone.
- 58:20
>> I've been left and I can't get and I
- 58:22
can't get the thing out off, right?
- 58:24
That's a good anxiety.
- 58:26
That's what happens to me.
- 58:28
>> Okay. So, I do want to talk about one
- 58:29
battle after another because I mean, you
- 58:32
worked with a lot of great directors.
- 58:34
Paul Thomas Anderson is
- 58:35
>> Yeah. Amazing.
- 58:36
>> His films are really amazing.
- 58:38
>> He was one of my Yeah. He's like he's my
- 58:39
favorite.
- 58:40
>> What was it like to shoot it? It was
- 58:41
shot in all in LA.
- 58:42
>> All in LA. All different parts of
- 58:44
California. Not LA. California. It was
- 58:46
great. You know, it's wonderful to I
- 58:49
mean the cast is amazing.
- 58:50
>> And how did you like working with
- 58:52
Leonardo DiCaprio? Leo.
- 58:54
>> Um well, he's um you know, the thing
- 58:57
with Leo is he's he's not very
- 59:00
experienced. He's green. And so you've
- 59:03
when you're working like, "Oh, no,
- 59:04
sweetie. That's crafty. That's crafty.
- 59:06
That's not set."
- 59:07
>> Exactly. You went the wrong way.
- 59:08
>> No. Yeah. I had to do a lot of that. No,
- 59:10
that's the lens.
- 59:12
>> Don't look into it.
- 59:14
>> Cuz he was doing a lot of that.
- 59:15
>> Once we got past that though, he was he
- 59:17
was he was great. He was great. He's
- 59:19
great.
- 59:22
>> Yeah. No, it was sad, but it was also
- 59:24
sweet. It's endearing.
- 59:25
>> Tender.
- 59:26
>> Yeah. Yeah. And he he's got a lot riding
- 59:29
on this cuz he's never had a big movie.
- 59:30
>> No. Yeah. Yeah.
- 59:32
>> Oh, he sounds sweet.
- 59:33
>> He is.
- 59:34
>> And then you're making another scary
- 59:35
movie.
- 59:36
>> Making another scary
- 59:37
>> which is like perfect example of your
- 59:39
career. You have this like,
- 59:41
>> you know, kind of prestigious, very like
- 59:43
intense, and then you're going to go do
- 59:45
that dumb fun
- 59:46
>> cuz I imagine it's real big dumb fun.
- 59:49
>> Oh my gosh. Yes.
- 59:51
>> Yes, it is. And like, you know, I think
- 59:53
for us it's like, well, let's see how
- 59:55
far we can push humor in 2025.
- 59:58
>> You know, that's a that's a big thing.
- 1:00:00
But you know that the great thing is you
- 1:00:02
get at everybody.
- 1:00:03
>> Yeah.
- 1:00:03
>> That's what comedy
- 1:00:05
>> that's where it lives, right? Getting at
- 1:00:07
everybody.
- 1:00:07
>> I think so. I mean like what I asked
- 1:00:09
this of all my guests, but what do you
- 1:00:11
want?
- 1:00:11
>> Why do I have an urge to do this?
- 1:00:15
>> What is it called? It's called um what's
- 1:00:17
the word when you misophonia. So I don't
- 1:00:20
think it's a phobia. I think it's a
- 1:00:23
phonia.
- 1:00:24
>> I don't know what's the difference. But
- 1:00:26
yeah. Wow. Misophonia is when you can
- 1:00:28
>> Can you look up the difference between
- 1:00:30
phobia and phonia? Maybe
- 1:00:34
>> I can I have a laptop here
- 1:00:37
and um
- 1:00:37
>> and she is part of that generation like
- 1:00:40
myself of pre-technology.
- 1:00:42
>> That's right. Where type things in we
- 1:00:45
would be going to the microfish.
- 1:00:48
>> Remember micro
- 1:00:50
>> remember microfish?
- 1:00:53
>> Okay. misophonia
- 1:00:55
is a condition where specific sounds a
- 1:00:57
condition
- 1:00:57
>> so it's a okay
- 1:00:59
>> where specific sounds trigger intense
- 1:01:01
negative emotional reactions such as
- 1:01:03
anger annoyance or anxiety
- 1:01:05
>> I don't know if it it's intense but for
- 1:01:07
example if I'm listening to a podcast
- 1:01:10
>> and um someone needs to take a drink of
- 1:01:13
water and they're really dry mouth you
- 1:01:15
can hear it
- 1:01:15
>> not only can I hear it but I I really
- 1:01:17
can't listen to the person
- 1:01:18
>> so you have also you must have an
- 1:01:20
incredible ear
- 1:01:21
>> I do have a I have a good ear and I can
- 1:01:24
hear things pretty well.
- 1:01:25
>> Now, look up phobia and just see what
- 1:01:27
that definition is.
- 1:01:29
>> Phobia. Let's see what the Latin word of
- 1:01:30
phobia is.
- 1:01:32
>> Phobia meaning
- 1:01:33
>> if I was like phobia
- 1:01:35
>> in a extreme or irrational fear or
- 1:01:38
aversion to something.
- 1:01:39
>> So, it's fear and and the other one is
- 1:01:42
anger and disgust.
- 1:01:43
>> Yeah.
- 1:01:44
>> Sounds
- 1:01:45
>> but just about cuz like phonograph and
- 1:01:48
phonia.
- 1:01:48
>> That makes sense.
- 1:01:50
Um, but you want to know um what causes
- 1:01:53
phobia?
- 1:01:54
>> What?
- 1:01:54
>> It's genetic predisposition,
- 1:01:56
environmental factors, and traumatic
- 1:01:58
experiences. So, there you go.
- 1:02:00
>> That experience of that thing of that
- 1:02:03
face thing.
- 1:02:05
I also was like, they could be doing
- 1:02:07
anything. I can't see,
- 1:02:10
>> right?
- 1:02:11
>> I just heard fingers and then like, you
- 1:02:13
know, I could have been ass up in like
- 1:02:14
30 seconds. Not that I Not that I
- 1:02:17
thought that. I didn't think that. Yeah,
- 1:02:19
>> but if I think about it now,
- 1:02:22
>> anything could have happened. They were
- 1:02:23
very nice, both of them.
- 1:02:25
>> Treatment is CBT, exposure therapy,
- 1:02:28
>> exposure,
- 1:02:29
>> medication.
- 1:02:32
>> Well, how are you going to, you know, so
- 1:02:34
I just have to get in small spaces,
- 1:02:35
claustrophobia, and then just be forced
- 1:02:37
to send sitting there, huh?
- 1:02:38
>> So, you don't like to get smooshed? I
- 1:02:40
love getting smushed.
- 1:02:41
>> I don't mind getting I don't mind
- 1:02:43
getting smooshed. I just need to know I
- 1:02:45
can get out. If you put me in a small
- 1:02:47
closet and I know it can't get locked,
- 1:02:49
then I can get in there.
- 1:02:52
>> Yeah,
- 1:02:52
>> I can get in an elevator just fine.
- 1:02:54
Unless the elevator gets stuck.
- 1:02:56
>> Oh, has that happened? And
- 1:02:59
>> one day I was panicking. I just hadn't
- 1:03:01
hit the open button because you know
- 1:03:03
when you know that
- 1:03:05
>> if the door if the doors don't open it's
- 1:03:06
very stressful. Yeah.
- 1:03:08
>> Yeah.
- 1:03:08
>> And I was like you know cuz it was it's
- 1:03:11
the can't get out part. It's not the
- 1:03:13
actual cuz I can do Can you do roller
- 1:03:16
coaster rides where you get strapped in?
- 1:03:18
>> Okay. I can do them. I don't feel a
- 1:03:20
phobia from them but I hate being shook
- 1:03:22
that much
- 1:03:24
>> like the shaky like I don't do roller
- 1:03:26
coasters. I feel it's too much.
- 1:03:27
>> Where is it shaky for you?
- 1:03:29
>> Just the I don't I don't like a roller
- 1:03:32
coaster to me is like I I get nauseous.
- 1:03:35
I feel like all like dizzy. I It's not
- 1:03:39
worth it for me. The feeling of I love
- 1:03:42
them.
- 1:03:42
>> I You love them.
- 1:03:43
>> I get on them and like and I want to get
- 1:03:46
off and when it's going chick chick
- 1:03:47
chick chick chick chick chick chick
- 1:03:47
chick chick chick chick chick chick
- 1:03:47
chick chick chick chick chick chick
- 1:03:47
chick chick chick chick chick chick
- 1:03:48
chick chick chick chick chick chick
- 1:03:48
chick chick chick chick chick chick
- 1:03:48
chick chick chick chick chick chick
- 1:03:48
chick chick chick chick chick chick
- 1:03:48
chick chick chick chick chick chick
- 1:03:48
chick chick chick chick chick I'm like I
- 1:03:48
want to get off. I want to get off. As
- 1:03:50
soon as the first drop happens and I
- 1:03:52
make it, I'm like woo. Now I can't enjoy
- 1:03:55
it because I worry about someone
- 1:03:57
throwing up on it,
- 1:04:02
right? But if roller coasters are like a
- 1:04:05
way to shake it up, what is, and I ask
- 1:04:08
my guests this, what is something that
- 1:04:10
you're listening to, watching, where do
- 1:04:12
you go to laugh? Because I know you love
- 1:04:14
to laugh. You have a great sense of
- 1:04:16
humor. You're deeply funny. Who makes
- 1:04:18
you laugh?
- 1:04:19
>> I have comfort watches. I've seen
- 1:04:21
Sleepless in Seattle and When Harry Met
- 1:04:23
Sally 5,000 times.
- 1:04:24
>> Yeah.
- 1:04:25
>> And Heartburn. I kind of like Nor. Isn't
- 1:04:28
it?
- 1:04:29
>> Heartburn is not talked about enough.
- 1:04:31
What is
- 1:04:32
>> Merryill in that movie and the God
- 1:04:34
>> and Jack? They're so good together.
- 1:04:37
>> And you know, Jack, stop. You wanted it
- 1:04:40
to work.
- 1:04:41
>> What about when she would had when she
- 1:04:43
had that pregnant belly and then that
- 1:04:44
little baby and she had to sing and she
- 1:04:46
had to leave. That movie I I think that
- 1:04:48
movie is not
- 1:04:50
>> I don't know if it's underrated, but I
- 1:04:51
say it's underrated because I think
- 1:04:53
you're right. It is so good. Check out
- 1:04:54
Heartburn, everybody.
- 1:04:55
>> Check out Heartburn.
- 1:04:56
>> It's so good. So, and it's so honest,
- 1:05:00
>> you know, when she came back, even you
- 1:05:02
know what I loved the um the delivery
- 1:05:05
scene when he was talking to her and he
- 1:05:07
cried and you were like, "It's going to
- 1:05:09
be different." And they had the baby. He
- 1:05:11
was right back out there.
- 1:05:12
>> She was right back out there in 10
- 1:05:13
minutes just doing him. He couldn't even
- 1:05:16
So, she couldn't she couldn't
- 1:05:18
>> she couldn't do it anymore.
- 1:05:19
>> No, people are complicated.
- 1:05:21
>> People are complicated. And it's not
- 1:05:23
good or bad, but it it is it is can I
- 1:05:26
stand it?
- 1:05:27
>> And there was a little bit of her that
- 1:05:29
was too compromised in that film,
- 1:05:32
>> in that story or Efron's story. And I
- 1:05:35
love I love heartburn. Even before the
- 1:05:37
even in the beginning when it was like,
- 1:05:38
should we get married? Remember behind
- 1:05:40
when she had the cold?
- 1:05:41
>> Yes. So good. So human.
- 1:05:44
>> So human. Yeah.
- 1:05:46
>> She's funny, too.
- 1:05:47
>> Oh, Merryill's so funny.
- 1:05:48
>> I mean, Merryill's everything.
- 1:05:50
>> Merryill.
- 1:05:51
>> Merryill. I mean there's some words
- 1:05:53
Merryill
- 1:05:54
>> Merryill rub on us
- 1:05:56
>> rub up on us.
- 1:05:57
>> Yes just just rub on us. I mean love
- 1:05:58
Merryill. That that was a great one
- 1:06:00
though.
- 1:06:00
>> Well I have to say Regina it's been so
- 1:06:03
great talking to you and I have to say
- 1:06:04
that the Catholic Church loss has been
- 1:06:07
our gain. I really appreciate you doing
- 1:06:09
this. Thank you so much for coming. It's
- 1:06:11
so great to talk to you.
- 1:06:13
>> And I'll see you on another dance floor
- 1:06:14
hopefully soon.
- 1:06:15
>> Yeah. Yeah. Absolutely.
- 1:06:16
>> Okay. Okay.
- 1:06:17
>> Thanks honey.
- 1:06:19
>> Thank you so much Regina Hall. You are
- 1:06:21
awesome and it was so great to talk to
- 1:06:22
you and so fun. And um today's Polar
- 1:06:25
Plunge is presented by BMW Certified.
- 1:06:29
Visit bmwusa.com/certified-preowned
- 1:06:34
to learn more. Uh for this plunge, I
- 1:06:37
want to talk about uh a a film that we
- 1:06:40
mentioned briefly that uh Regina was in,
- 1:06:43
but it's just great if you get a chance
- 1:06:45
to check it out. It's called Support the
- 1:06:46
Girls, and it was 2018. I mean, it was
- 1:06:49
just kind of this slice of life indie
- 1:06:51
film about a bunch of young women
- 1:06:53
working at like a sports bar. And Regina
- 1:06:55
is just so great in it. And I just
- 1:06:57
wanted to take the plunge moment to um
- 1:06:59
remind you to check that out in uh where
- 1:07:02
wherever it's streaming. Um and just a
- 1:07:05
fine example of Regina at her best doing
- 1:07:09
big hilarious moves and deep grounded
- 1:07:13
dramatic acting. So, um check that out.
- 1:07:16
Um, but don't forget that today's Polar
- 1:07:18
Plunge was presented by BMW certified.
- 1:07:21
In a world full of uncertainty, BMW
- 1:07:24
certified pre-owned vehicles are the
- 1:07:26
real deal. They come with a BMW
- 1:07:28
certified warranty, genuine BMW parts,
- 1:07:30
and an additional 3 years of 247
- 1:07:33
roadside assistance. Learn more at
- 1:07:35
bmwusa.com/certified-preowned.
- 1:07:41
Bye.
- 1:07:43
You've been listening to Good Hang. The
- 1:07:45
executive producers for this show are
- 1:07:46
Bill Simmons, Jenna Weiss Berman, and
- 1:07:48
me, Amy Per. The show is produced by The
- 1:07:51
Ringer and Paperkite. For The Ringer,
- 1:07:53
production by Jack Wilson, Cat Spalain,
- 1:07:55
Kaia McMullen, and Alia Xanerys. For
- 1:07:58
Paperkite, production by Sam Green, Joel
- 1:08:01
Levelvel, and Jenna Weiss Berman.
- 1:08:02
Original music by Amy Miles.
- 1:08:06
really good. Hey