Family Trips with the Meyers Brothers - TOM HOLLAND Was Appalled by Fanny Packs
Episode Date: July 11, 2023From Billy Elliot to Spiderman, Tom Holland joins Seth and Josh to talk about growing up in show biz, cultural trips with his family, cooking with girlfriend Zendaya, and his love/hate relationship wi...th golfing.Hosted by Seth & Josh Meyers. Theme song written & performed by Jeff Tweedy. Produced by Rabbit Grin Productions
Transcript
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Hi, Poshy.
Hi, Zuffi.
It's Tom Holland week.
This is very exciting.
I know.
Billy Elliot.
Oh, that's interesting that you're going to call back Billy Elliot.
A lot of people would have leaned right into Spider-Man.
Yeah, no.
I'm more of a Billy Elliot.
That's a really good Billy Elliot.
But I guess that's not an impression of Billy Elliot because he wouldn't say his own name.
No, that's like someone who's like, dance, dance boy.
Yeah, somebody who's like, hey, enough talking.
Start dancing.
Hey, Tom Holland is a giant clue.
Do you know what superhero Bill Hader and I wrote a comic book about in 2008?
Spider-Man?
See?
You do care.
I feel like I did read.
That was like maybe the one comic book I read.
Oh, I'm a huge comic book fan and I could not convince my younger brother, Josh,
that it was a medium that was interesting.
Yeah.
I mean, you guys were really excited about that.
And I was excited for how excited you were.
Oh, that's nice.
It should be noted right now that my brother is wearing glasses and a piece of
tape over the bridge of his nose he looks like a dude in the 50s who all exclusively read comic
books yeah yeah i feel like i'm pulling some real nasa vibes right now some like 50s nasa vibes
mom and dad are riding pretty high on their podcast appearance yeah yeah they say it came out pretty well
they've been listening they like the song i appreciate that they are also currently
they just had 52nd 53rd wedding anniversary yeah i would guess 53 53 i'm not sure yeah they're in
canada and this just gives you guys you've heard them on the podcast,
so you might think, you might be worried they're not interesting all the time.
But we get a text from them every day when they go on a vacation
about who won that day's Scrabble game.
Yeah, and it's current, as we record this,
it is 1-1 with the rubber match yet to come.
So obviously we'll let you guys, we'll fill everybody in on that.
They're also coming straight here next.
We're going to entertain them.
My wife and my family is going to entertain them.
And Josh, could you just give the listeners a sense?
Because the last son they visited was you.
How wet was your kitchen on a day-to-day
based on when mom and dad were there?
Between the coffee and the soda stream and then just like general like trying to
maybe mop up some of that wetness and somehow generating more of it it's yeah it's unbelievable
you have to we had to buy those like uh those swedish kitchen wipes that are just like insanely absorbent. When they're over it, every morning you think you left a window open during a storm.
Yeah.
Just small counter puddles everywhere they go.
We also, we make like a big sort of pour over Chemex coffee thing.
And there was like a little bit of coffee,
like one more cup left in the thing.
And dad was like, can you make more coffee?
And mom was like,
why don't you just heat up that coffee that's in there?
And he was like, I don't like that.
I was like, okay, I'll make another pot of coffee.
He's like, I need more things to make wet with. Yeah, yeah.
So yeah, I try to wake up before before them which isn't hard when they're
here and get it sort of at least get around like lay down tarps get those get those rain delay
tarps out um we this is we i i should know and they're probably listening right now this is us
trying to take you down a peg after you were so red hot on the podcast although some social media feedback says mom was pretty hard on
dad to only give him a five out of ten people thought he did a lot better on the podcast than
that yeah they i also don't know if mom yet has realized that you don't get paid to be on a
podcast because right we get paid when we're guests on your show because that's just the way it goes.
Like when you're on a television show and you're a guest on a talk show.
Yeah, you get like a guild minimum to appear.
Yeah.
And it's not, it is under $1,000 and my mom talks about it like she just inherited Downton Abbey.
And then when they rerun it, you get residuals.
Yes.
It should also note that Josh and my parents are always the guests on the Thanksgiving show on late night since the dawn of my late night era.
And we always air Thanksgiving.
NBC has a football game.
They have the last football game.
And so that is the highest rated night of the year for NBC.
And therefore it's the highest rated episode of late night every year.
Yeah.
No exception.
And my parents walk around very confident that they're the reason.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean,
people,
people do like it,
but yeah,
they do love it.
We get that bump.
We do.
It is a Myers family bump.
And you know what?
Let them have it.
Let them have the bump for all I care.
Yeah, yeah.
Just try not to bump them
when they're carrying a giant glass of water.
Because it will slosh over the sides.
Hey, I mean, I feel like I soft-plugged
the short Halloween,
Bill Hader and Seth Meyers 2008 one-shot Spider-Man comic,
but I'd like to now hard plug.
Josh, do you mind if I hard plug some of my stand-up dates this summer that I've added due to my unscheduled free time off?
Yeah, go for it.
Okay, great.
I'm going to be at the Paomet Performing Arts Center
on July 16th.
That's in North Truro, Massachusetts.
Ooh, that's on the Cape.
Yeah, that is on the Cape.
It's on the very tip of the Cape.
Yeah.
August 9th, I'm going to be at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel and Casino
in Hollywood, Florida.
I know you live in LA, but that's always been my Hollywood.
Then the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel and Casino,
there's two of them, in Tampa, Florida the next night.
That's August 10th.
And then August 11th, the Wind Creek Event Center in Bethlehem, PA.
So Josh, what do you want me to do?
Put you down for two in Tampa, two in Hollywood, Florida?
Yeah, I think I'm just going to wait for the special.
I'll wait for the special on this one.
That's very kind of you.
I've been watching this transition.
Again, I've been in the late night game now for almost you know
nine years speaking of special
Tom Holland's a special guy
absolutely and
a lovely sibling
every time he comes on my show
he's got at least one of his brothers with him
and they are equally lovely
and I don't know about
you you're a little bit more jaded than me
I enjoyed talking to him
he's so charming
he's really charming
yeah
any
yeah
any
curmudgeon
qualities
that I might have had
going in
which I didn't have any
but yeah
he would have
he will
he will melt your heart
I'll say that
he will melt your heart
so you know what
put this on
if you're feeling
a little over
the world right now
because he's going to make you believe in it again.
Please enjoy our conversation with Tom Holland.
Family trips with the Myers brothers
Family trips with the Myers Brothers.
Nice to meet you, Josh. It's nice to meet you, sir.
Yeah, lovely to have you here.
My girlfriend also, Mackenzie, wanted me to say hello.
You do not know her.
She does not know you, but she insisted I say hello.
So you were one of the first people I thought of for this podcast
because, Tom, you've been on my show multiple times,
and you have never been on my show without at least one
of your family members with you.
Absolutely.
Because I feel like backstage family, that's not make-believe.
If you have your family backstage, you're not pretending to be close.
So you are an incredibly – I want to go through the list real quick.
Dad, Dominic.
Mom, Nikki.
Correct.
He's a comedian.
She's a photographer.
Yes.
Then you have twin brothers, Harry and Sam, younger.
And then a third brother. There's a fourth Holland boy,
but that is Patty. That is correct. Yes. All right. So first of all, I want to get into your
childhood, but it feels like showbiz started when you were very young. And then of course,
your dad was an entertainer as well. Do you feel like you had any sort of conventional childhood
or did it always feel like a showbiz childhood?
It's interesting. I grew up in show business, but not because I chose to.
And let me stress in saying it also wasn't because my parents were the mummager, daddager type people.
They just thought that I love dancing. It was something that I kind of excelled at and they thought I would just really enjoy doing it.
I had an audition for this show that came up pretty organically. I was auditioning for that show for two years.
Again, my parents just thought it was a good exercising character, something that would build character in me.
I don't think they'd ever anticipated that I would get the gig.
So when I got cast and I started performing in that show,
at the time, it was really just like a summer camp. It wasn't like at the beginning of a career.
It wasn't a keep your head down, son, because maybe you'll get an agent out of this. It was
just enjoy yourself. This is a crazy experience. You're performing on the West End at 11. Enjoy
yourself. And everything that came after that wasn't planned. It wasn't something
we looked for. I wasn't gunning for an agent or gunning for a film. I just was lucky that this
lady came to see the show. She signed me. We sort of thought as a family, like, why not? There's no
harm in saying no. She sent me a script, an audition. I went to the audition. I thought
nothing of it. I got the part.
I was then in Thailand with Naomi Watts and Ewan McGregor.
And I just was like, I'm going to be an actor.
This is really cool.
Yeah, not bad.
All right.
So I'm lucky enough to know some of these details because first of all, you like dancing.
And so your mom enrolls you.
And I do feel like, if I remember correctly, the name of the dance studio is Nifty
Feet. Yes. Wow. Well done, Seth. Jeez. We had a little bit of fun with Nifty Feet. Nifty Feet
sounds like a British film that came out in the 90s that I missed. You know what I mean?
It sounds like a film that I should make, to be perfectly honest with you. Yeah. Nifty Feet
was this really great little dance school.
It was every Saturday.
It was at the YMCA, and we would go there, and it was like a sort of naff street dance club.
And it just so happened that the lady that owned the school
was very close with the casting director of Billy Elliot.
So it was all super organic.
But I had so much fun at Nifty Feet.
I loved expressing myself.
I loved learning how to dance.
I thought it was really fun.
I love that one time we did this show at the Wimbledon Fate.
Now, the Wimbledon Fate is a very, very well-to-do occasion.
Wimbledon, obviously, where Wimbon tennis is very high end part of London,
very,
very posh kind of clientele.
And we did a street dance show and the street dance teacher did not get the
not explicit versions of the songs.
So I remember that my granny being there and my parents and all of these
really, really posh people who'd come to watch these little kids dance.
And the language was pretty bad.
So I do remember that being rather funny.
Were there monocles just dropping left and right?
Just canes hitting the floor.
People saying, outrage, order.
It was like the House of Commons all of a sudden.
You could still hear the clatter of the canes.
I will say, even posh or not, I do feel like, and I don't want to judge,
I've never been a dance instructor,
I feel like you should probably get the clean version no matter where the kids are from.
Especially when they're nine years old, you know?
Nine years old, yeah.
So when you were doing Billy Elliot, was that year round?
How long did you do it?
There would typically be four of us in the show playing Billy,
and we would alternate.
Hard times, there was three of us, which was tough because you had to pick up a lot of the slack.
There was a few times in my run there where we had five Billys,
which was glorious because at that time I was the more senior Billy,
so I was getting the Saturday shows and the, and the Friday night shows,
which was awesome. I did 176 shows.
It was the time of my life. I was a young kid performing on the West end,
you know, dancing my heart out. And, you know, we had these,
these ballet girl teams. There was three teams.
All of us had girlfriends in every team
because they were all never in the theater at the same time.
So, yeah, it was a lot of fun.
I had a great time.
I look back on it very fondly, and it changed my life.
It gave me such a wonderful background,
such a great kind of education into work ethic, professionalism,
performing at the highest level and working with
adults, which was weird for me, actually, when I went back to school, I was so used to doing as I
was told and being professional. And when the adult in the room is talking, you're listening.
So when I went back to my like very regular rugby school and the teacher would be like quiet and no one would be quiet I remember
really struggling to fit in because the I was you know I was different I was I guess more mature at
the time did you ever think about touring with Billy Elliot or was I mean I guess once you've
done the West End there'd be Broadway or to be perfectly honest with you when I was in the show
I don't know if you've seen the show it It's a very difficult show to take on tour.
So I think at that time they might have been talking about it.
But I was so lucky that I ended up in that film with Naomi Watts and Ewan McGregor
that I kind of missed that part of the Billy Elliot experience
and just went on to do films and sort of start that next chapter of my career.
So that film is The Impossible. And I know that was an incredibly arduous film physically,
a lot of acting and water tanks. And then of course, I don't have to tell any of our listeners
that you've taken on very, the arduous work of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. With that said,
was Billy Elliot the most physically taxing thing you've
done? I think it probably was, you know, I remember we have this thing in the UK called
the bleep test. I don't know if you guys have it here, but it's like a fitness test that they do
for athletes where you're in a hall, you're on a field, there's two points, there's A and B,
let's say they're a hundred meters apart. A hundred meters might be a bit far, let's say 50 meters apart. And you have to run between the two markers. And each time you get from A to B, let's say they're 100 meters apart. 100 meters might be a bit far, let's say 50 meters
apart. And you have to run between the two markers. And each time you get from A to B,
there's a bleep. And the bleep gets shorter and shorter and shorter. And if you don't make it to
the other side before the bleep, you're out. And I remember when I finished Billy Elliot and I came
back to school, I absolutely pissed the bleep test. Like, annihilated the rugby team,
annihilated the football team,
because I was just so fit.
And then I remember the teachers putting me in all the football teams and rugby teams.
And I was like, no, darling, I'm a dancer.
I'm not into the team sport thing yet.
But it was definitely very physical.
There's no hanging upside down.
There's no fighting.
There's no stunts or dangerous stuff with Billy Elliot.
It's all just fitness.
But it was amazing.
I had such a good time.
Were you judged at all by your classmates for returning to school
as this West End dancer, performer?
Yeah, there was a little bit of it.
You know, going to a rugby school and being the one kid that does ballet
is always a tricky, tricky conversation.
It does seem like act one of Nifty Feet.
Exactly, right.
Act one of Nifty Feet, the hardships of being a ballet dancer in tough, tough Wimbledon.
But yeah, as much as I tried to convince the guys in my school that I was like,
no, it's just me in a classroom with 30 girls in tights.
Like I'm telling you, this is way better than rugby.
No one believed me.
So it was a tough time, but I had good friends there and I got through it and I'm happy now.
You were like, there are three groups of female dance teams. There's three other Billies.
You can't believe what you get away with.
It's unbelievable.
So your brothers, your first set, the twins, Harry and Sam,
they're four years younger than you. Is that right?
They are three years younger than me. Yeah.
Were they aware when you first start doing Billy Elliot on the West End?
I'm assuming they're old enough to come.
So they're six, seven years old.
They would have been aware.
They would have been old enough to kind of understand that it was a pretty cool thing.
My little brother, Paddy, would have been really young, like three or four, maybe.
And he saw me do the show once.
And there's this really impressive sequence in the show called Dream Ballet, where Billy does a duet
with his older self. And ultimately at the end of the dance, he's flying around the stage on a wire.
There's dry ice everywhere. It's to Swan Lake. It's a beautiful number. It's super, super impressive.
But it's right after the interval. So my mom's sitting
there with my brother, Paddy, who must've been no older than four at the time. She's watching the
show. She turns to Paddy and she goes, Paddy, what do you think? And he was smashing one of
those ice creams and he just went, yum, completely like not focusing on what was happening at all.
on what was happening at all.
My wife took our oldest to see The Lion King when he was six.
And I was so excited to get him to report back.
But what happened, he had never been up that late.
He went to an evening showing of The Lion King.
And when it was over, they took a taxi.
We lived downtown.
And so he had never been in Times Square at night.
And so I asked, like, tell me about the Lion King.
He's like, there's nothing about the Lion King that's more interesting.
Do you know anything about the city we live in?
It is insane.
There are so many lights there.
And I was like, oh, yeah, that's.
We should have introduced him to Times Square first before he could.
Brilliant.
Enjoy that.
I wanted to buy your kids stuff.
I remember Seth, like, glow-in-the-dark stuff to play with at stuff. I remember Seth like glow in the dark stuff,
like to play with at night.
And then I was like,
they've never even seen night.
Like they don't,
they don't exist in the night.
They're too little.
When you have kids,
Tom,
put them in bed.
We put them to bed at six 30 and we still have a life.
And they will eventually get onto you because right now,
well,
like it's bedtime and they're like pulling the shades back and saying,
is it though?
Really bedtime.
That's when you need those shades that like are attached to the side of the windows.
It's somewhat more like a prison cell at that point.
Prison shades, yeah.
Who cares? You need your sleep.
You're a busy guy, Seth.
So your dad's a comedian.
I was reading up, he was at Edinburgh.
He won Best Newcomer at the Edinburgh Fringe in 1993.
Josh and I both performed at Edinburgh.
No way.
We only missed him by a few years.
We were there
in the late 90s doing shows.
What did you guys do there,
stand up?
We had been at a
sketch comedy improv troupe
in Amsterdam of all places
and so we came over
and we did that
sort of improv show.
Then there was a year
that I was doing
a two-person show
and I had to leave
about a week
before the end of our run
because I had gotten hired
on SNL and Josh actually stepped in and did my part leave about a week before the end of our run because I had gotten hired on SNL.
And Josh actually stepped in and did my part for a full week.
Wow. How was that, Josh?
It was great because I would finish the show that I was doing,
which was down the road at the Pleasance.
And right from the curtain call,
I would book sort of up the cobblestone streets
to get to whatever theater they were performing at
and i would just step in and i watched that show so many times um that i sort of knew it backwards
and forwards and also a lot of it was improv and they were nominated for a perrier i remember so i
never said that i was josh because you were still in the running. Sure, sure, sure, right. And I was like, well, if they're going to win,
we can't say that he bailed on it.
So we just sort of...
I'll tell you what.
Yeah, it was a weird whisper.
And people were like, you look taller.
You look, yeah.
You guys definitely do look like brothers.
Like there was no confusing you two
when everyone popped on the Zoom.
Yes, if you haven't seen one of us for a while,
it's easy to think get it
mistaken like if we're right next to each other you can tell the difference but josh have you
ever thought about hosting the show and just not addressing it and just seeing what happens
yeah i mean i think i could fool some people i'm sure just do it and never talk about it
just never once yeah i think we will at least fool some foreign markets yeah
you know english is a second language you might like not quite notice the nuance i was once at
a party with uh talking to a girl that seth had dated years and years ago and we were just having
a nice catch-up and we knew each other and we're you know friendly and at some point she was like
i'm sorry i have to walk away now it's just this is a little too weird and she was like, I'm sorry, I have to walk away now. It's just, this is a little too weird. And I was like, oh, okay.
Brilliant.
Thank you.
She was like, okay.
Yep.
Goodbye.
I guess that means I was a heck of a guy.
A heck of a guy.
I'd say, I was just talking about Edinburgh.
How amazing is that place though during the festival?
It's the best.
There's nothing quite like that.
You know, again, we are talking about travel.
I would recommend to anybody.
First of all, Edinburgh is a beautiful city. Amazing. so than August. The greenest place, one of the
greener places I've ever been. They're just shows all day from dance to theater to comedy. And you
could just go from show to show to show with a little bit of time in between to maybe have a
nice beer. Absolutely. It's the best. And your dad went back recently, right? Yeah, yeah, yeah. I was going to say,
one of my fondest family memories
was my dad did Edinburgh
maybe four years ago or five years ago.
His show was called Eclipsed.
It was this kind of very funny take on my career
and his career was kind of what his set was about.
It was a real family affair.
My brother Sam did all the lights for him.
My mom was front of house. My brother, Sam, did all the lights for him. My mom was front of
house. My brother, Harry, and I were in Canada shooting a film and we managed to somehow get
all the way to Edinburgh without him finding out. We surprised him at this weird little campsite
that we were staying at while he was doing the show. It was honestly such an amazing family
experience for us to be there, to see him perform. He did one of those
gigs where you didn't have to pay to go, but you could pay if you felt like you did a good job.
So we'd all be standing outside with these buckets and people would be throwing pounds at us and
stuff. And it was an amazing experience. And, you know, seeing my dad in his element and doing
what he does best is awesome. It was such a pleasure.
Because you probably missed it to some degree. As a young person, you weren't going out on tour and doing what he does best is awesome. It was such a pleasure.
Because you probably missed it to some degree.
As a young person, you weren't going out on tour with your dad, right?
And seeing him do comedy,
because that's not a very easy thing to bring kids to.
Yeah, 100% not.
I mean, I've seen my dad a handful of times when it's been, you know, on his terms.
I don't think my dad would like us just to show up at a gig.
Yeah.
Because you know what it's like. It's added pressure. I mean, we went to the comedy cellar last night. We had a
great time. Lucky that we saw fantastic comedians with a great room. Everything seemed to go really
well. But I've been to nights like that where you've got all the ingredients, but for some
reason it just tastes like shit and it doesn't work. So I can see how someone wouldn't
want a surprise visit from his son and all of his friends. But I've seen my dad a handful of times.
I admire, I cannot believe how terrifying it must be doing standup. I love standups. I love the
world. I think it's so interesting because when I work, I get picked up in the morning.
I love the world. I think it's so interesting because when I work, I get picked up in the morning. Someone makes my breakfast. Someone does my hair and makeup. Someone puts on my costume.
Someone tells me what to say. Someone tells me where to stand, you know, and they call us artists.
And when you're backstage at a comedy show, you see, you know, your favorite comic show up in a
raincoat, rip off the jacket, go on stage, rip it for 10 minutes and go to the
next club. I just think that it is such a raw form of entertainment that is so exposing.
I was sitting there with my brother last night as while we're here on this podcast, I'm always with
a brother. We're at a comedy club and we're like, can you believe that dad made a living out of doing this day in and day out club to club I just I admire my dad
I think he's an amazing comedian but he's an unbelievably wonderful dad and the fact that
he was able to be a great dad and also do that for a living is a real testament to who he is as a
person it's interesting because what you know obviously he he knows showbiz and then his kids
go into showbiz because your brothers have as well.
I would be worried if my kids went into showbiz as well
because I know all the anxiety about it.
But at least I feel like your dad can say, well, I had it worse.
Right.
At least they're not going to the stand-up clubs
because that would be, you know, the day my son says
I'm going to try to do five minutes at the cellar is the day I can't sleep.
It's so funny you say that, though, because I'm watching the comics last night at the cellar.
And like, I've thought about material and I thought about putting sets together because I just admire it.
I think it's such an amazing thing to be able to do.
And I'm sitting there and I'm with my brother and I'm like, would you would you get up there?
And he's like, bro, I can't stop thinking about getting up there.
I'm like, well, fucking go.
Like, I'm sure we can pull some strings here and say, like, you, I can't stop thinking about getting up there. I'm like, well, fucking go. Like, I'm sure we can pull some strings here
and say like you want to do five minutes.
And as soon as like the actual opportunity to do it comes up,
you're like, no, I don't want to do that.
I don't want to do that.
I can sit here right now and be like,
yeah, I'll rip the shit out of a room for 10 minutes.
Give me the opportunity.
I'll be like, oh no, I don't feel like I can do that.
The hardest I ever bombed was in Edinburgh.
So I was doing this two-person sketch improv show.
And I don't know if you ever went to Late and Live or if it still even exists,
but it would start at 1 a.m.
And it would be just sets from different comedians who were doing shows at Edinburgh.
It was sort of a best of.
And so it was mostly locals that would come for a cheaper ticket to see all the best acts.
And our show was getting very well reviewed.
Audiences liked it, but it was not a stand-up show.
It was a two-person improv show.
And we got invited to do Late in Lime, and we thought,
well, we can't possibly say no.
This is too exciting.
And trying to do improv comedy in a room full of very inebriated Scots
was the word.
And my brother was in the audience.
And let me just say, Tom, I am very lucky.
Like you, I have an incredibly supportive brother.
And usually when I walk off stage and I, you know,
if I'm spitting out that I didn't think it was a good show,
he's there to tell me it was way better than you thought it was.
And that was one time where he just looked at me and just was,
that was real bad where he just looked at me and just was that was real bad it was rough
because that show also sort of invited people to heckle right it was understood that this is
late in live it is you know well-known comedians they're going to be trying new stuff but also like
sort of throw you to the lions and uh there was like, there was a one word review
that someone yelled out to you, Seth,
or maybe it was two.
So I, again, we bombed.
And then I do remember we bombed,
but then we got 50 pounds for showing up there.
And so me and my partner, Jill, I said, you know what?
This proves we did a thing.
And then I had to go back into the theater
to grab one of our friends.
And they were saying goodnight
and they were listing all the comedians
and they were getting applause
and then they got to us.
The name of our show was Pickups and Hiccups
and they said,
and give it up for Pickups and Hiccups.
Dead silence except one guy went,
shite!
And it was just while I was standing there.
Shite!
Absolutely fucking shite!
That's funny.
How do you deal with that sort of stuff?
Like obviously,
so to try and merge two worlds,
I've had a similar experience this past week.
You know,
we were just talking about the reviews of the crowded room.
Yep.
They weren't what we were expecting.
Delighted to say that audiences seem to be loving it now.
I try to take a really positive approach,
but I'm able to see that it's not a personal attack.
But I imagine as a comic coming off of stage,
having not done a good set,
it must feel really personal.
Right.
And we were saying,
I do appreciate critics taking the time.
They're not always going to like your work,
but I do.
If a critic actually sits down
and writes thoughtfully about what did
or in some cases did not work, that is easier to say it's not personal. When a Scottish guy yells
shite, it does feel like maybe less thought went into it and it does sort of hit you in the personal
part of your psyche. But I mean, ultimately, I do think people show up wanting to be entertained.
Right. So, you know, that is, and you have people show up wanting to be entertained. Right.
So, you know, that is, and you have to be thankful and grateful for that.
Okay.
So if people don't like it, I try not to blame an audience.
And I certainly try not to blame critics as well.
Of course.
But it is tough.
You know, there's no easy way other than just to keep moving forward.
I think that's the thing, isn't it?
You know, you've got to just keep moving forward forward and comedians must have the thickest skin of anyone
because to be able to the highs and lows of being a comic must be such a an interesting balance
but my dad told me about a show when he was a kid i'm not sure it still goes on now and it was
called the gong show yeah and he used to say that, that was an audience that wanted you to fail.
They didn't want you to be there. He said, you maybe had enough time to get one joke out.
And if that joke came out, they laughed. That was it. That's all you were getting.
You know, he told us the story the first time he ever did a show and he absolutely
fell on his ass. And we're like, but why did you do it again? Like, what was wrong with you? Why would you put yourself through that again?
So I've always really admired my dad's resilience.
You know, he's a pretty sturdy bloke.
And, you know, I think that they say one of the smart things to do
when you're writing as a comedian is to write what you know,
and that last Edinburgh show was about the fact,
was it called Eclipsed?
Yeah, it was called Eclipsed, yeah.
And so your dad, you know, your dad was fairly well known there. And I think certainly when you
first became the Tom Holland we know today, I'm assuming people in England would say, oh, that's,
that's Dominic Collins. Right. And so, you know, you began as the, oh, this is interesting,
the son of a celebrity.
And then your dad basically wrote a show about how he is now the father of a celebrity.
Yeah, right.
It went from like, oh, that's Dom's kid to that's Tom's dad.
And it's great.
The show was brilliant.
He actually wrote a book about it.
He has a book called Eclipse, which is a wonderful read.
And it's insight into his early career, insight into my early career,
the parallels between the two, where I was lucky enough to sort of reach the kind of success I'm
seeing now and the things that didn't kind of work out for him. But it's nice for us as a family to
have that piece of work because it's such a great, it's like a memoir. It's like a diary of
our life. So it's really nice to go back and read read that it's also nice that the way he chose to do it was in a really positive sort of share with the world
both book and show as opposed to just wait to like a very drunken family dinner and it also
yeah you're right like it came from a place of love it wasn't like a i'm really jealous of my
son and this is my ploy to like bring him down a peg or two it was all like uh
it was it it was a great show i wish i wonder if he has a recording of it i'd love to see that show
again it was a lot of fun so i guess i want to get back to sort of the theme of our show did you as
a family were you with the six of you take trips together was that something that happened in your
youth it's something we still do now it's like, it's really a big part of our year.
Something my mom is, you know, she's the boss of the family
and she organizes the trips and she decides where we go.
We've been all over the world.
We've been so lucky as a family.
Sometimes it's been where I'm working, Thailand.
We did five months in Thailand to shoot that movie.
We've been to Africa, you know, I don't think we've
done, I did South America with my mom for a film, which was the most hilarious experience of all
time because typical, the American producers made it seem like we were in the most dangerous place
in the world and sent us this document of like what to do, what not to do. They went as far as
telling my mom that she should wrap
her hair up and not speak English in public. And we were like, I think you're over-egging where we
are. Like you can relax. So I've got hilarious videos of my mom sitting in bed, just absolutely
petrified. But we had a wonderful time. We were in Cartagena in Columbia for eight weeks and it
was amazing. I loved it. Does she travel well in general? Is your mom a good travel companion?
She is a good travel companion. My parents are terrible flyers just because it's something I do
every week. I'm on a plane going somewhere every week. There's no reason for flying to be
stressful. It's a relatively easy task. And flying with my parents is like traveling with two
toddlers who refuse to give up control. You know, I think, I don't know, I travel every week. I'm
on a plane every week going somewhere new. And when I fly with my parents, they're still adamant
that I'm not old enough to look after my passport. My dad has this like stupid little bum bag thing
he wears. You guys call it a fanny pack.
And he has all the passports in it.
And he's constantly panicking because he can't find one of the passports.
And it's because I put my foot down.
I'm like, Dad, I can look after my own passport.
It's fine.
So we travel all the time.
How about you guys?
Do you ever do trips with both your families?
I do just want to say real quick that I thought Fanny Pack was the worst possible name for it,
but I do think bum bag is a little bit worse.
That's what we call it, a bum bag, yeah.
Yeah, yeah. I apologize to the Fanny Pack name.
In England, a fanny is what we would refer to as a vagina.
That's what it's short slang for for us.
And I did this thing for Spider-Man 1 where I went undercover
as an
american student at the bronx school of science and i was there for like five days i was under
the radar and i remember the teacher telling me to sit on my fanny and as a brit i was like
what are you talking about you can't say that and i had no idea that it meant bum. But yeah, anyway.
Yeah.
We have a friend whose father, I think, got married for the third time.
And he was like, he devoted to his fanny pack.
And part of the agreement on that third marriage was like,
you got to retire that thing.
You can't wear it anymore.
And he gave it up.
Yeah.
We traveled a lot as kids, but we'd never left the country.
Did you come to the States before your showbiz career? I don't think we, we never came to
America. No, not before show business. It was a bit far and expensive for us as kids. You know,
when we were younger, it would be trips to Spain and France and Portugal and places that are
neighboring the UK. You know, We're so spoiled in Europe,
being able to hop on a plane in two hours, you're in a completely different country with different
culture and food and all that sort of stuff. So I think as Europeans, we typically stayed
within the kind of three hour flight radius, let's say. And then as we grew up a little bit,
and we wanted to sort of explore the world, we did safaris in Africa and my brothers went traveling through Australia and we've been very lucky to travel to the places
we've been. As kids, were they culture vacations or beach vacations? Mainly culture vacations.
Our family's very proactive. We're very into, let's go scuba diving. Let's go hiking up the
mountain. Let's go do all these sorts of stuff. Let's try the food. Let's go and meet the people that live in the authentic cultural town down the road.
And as kids, I think we probably thought that was kind of boring. But now as we've grown up,
one of my favorite things about my job is traveling to a new place, getting to spend
a few months there and just really diving into the culture and meeting the people. And I love that I
have really random friends dotted around the world from different beach bars to villages to all that
sort of stuff. Did you have vacations that sort of like ever went wrong or do you have any like,
oh yeah, that one we missed, we missed the mark on that. We had a vacation in Portugal where we all got the most severe stomach bug.
And it was just, we were in a villa.
It was me, my entire family, my auntie, Sarah and Tim and their three kids.
And there was nine of us just violently vomiting.
And I don't know about you, Josh, if you have kids,
but I can imagine like when your kids are sick, Seth,
that must just be feeling like the end of the world.
But when you're like looking after your kid
and also throwing up into the same bucket,
it was just the most brutal week.
And it was literally like the day we left
was the day that we all had broken the sickness.
It was brutal.
That's the way.
Leave it in Portugal.
When you would travel as kids, how would the sort of sleeping arrangement work? all had broken the sickness. It was brutal. That's the way. Leave it in Portugal.
When you would travel as kids, how would the sort of sleeping arrangement work? Did you have to sort of share a room with all your brothers? We would share rooms. Yeah, we would always
share rooms. I mean, typically now I'm going on a golf holiday in three weeks, three weeks or four
weeks with like eight of us. And I know that one of my brothers
will be my bunk partner for the four days that we're there. So we're always chopping and changing,
sharing rooms, top and tailing. It's something we still do today.
Golf is a real release for you, right?
It is.
I mean, I think it speaks to how stressful, this is how stressful your life is,
is that golf is relaxing.
And what's so interesting is like, I went away this weekend to play golf, to get away from the city and, you know, to focus on something positive.
And I'm like nine holes into my first round and I'm saying like, why do I do this to myself?
Like, I was upset before, now I'm miserable.
Do you ever like play scrambles and take it away from your own personal score?
So exactly, Josh, I got to the turn on the first round.
I said, guys, I can't take this anymore.
Like, can we please play a scramble?
You're supposed to have 14 clubs in your bag.
I came back this weekend with nine.
So, oh, so from, from just tossing them just over my knee, back of my neck.
Just great.
Yeah, it was.
See, this brings me, and I apologize that your rage brings me joy,
because I find you so effervescent a personality.
It makes me happy that golf can also break you.
It's so funny.
Sundae came to play golf with me the other day,
and I'm delighted to say she loved it.
She had a great time.
First time?
Was it the first time? This was the second time she had come to play the game.
Okay, great.
There was a point in time where we're driving the buggy,
and she was like, why are you so angry?
I was like, I just was like, oh, you don't understand.
I've played this game for over 20 years,
and I feel like I'm not going anywhere, and it's really difficult.
And she's like, but it's a game. You're here with your friends playing a game. Enjoy yourself. And I'm like,
no, you're right. You're totally right. And I wish I had that mindset, but I can't do that right now.
That's a conversation my wife has with me about just being a sports fan and how I react.
And it's the worst part about when they make that argument is there's no rational counter argument.
Of course, they're right.
100%.
And yet you just want to say it's too late for me.
It's just too late for me.
It's like my emotions have peaked and I just have to wait for them to plateau.
So I'm going to do what I can to try and manage my emotions.
But what sport are you into?
Well, Josh is a, as a viewer a viewer i'm a uh football american football fan and uh that
would i would say that's the one that still has the biggest emotional grip on me our dad is from
pittsburgh and so once a year we go and and see a stealer game together it's a wonderful vacation
but the problem is the games are on sunday and so it's the last thing that happens is the outcome
of a game right and so uh sometimes you do feel feel as though no matter how good the dinners are
and how fun playing cards at the hotel bar has been,
if the Steelers lose on the Sunday, you just get on the plane angry.
Right, totally, yeah.
It's make or break.
It's make or break.
But I would say Seth and my father are really, they wallow in it.
Okay.
And it's a sign of character yeah we call
our parents on sunday and if you call after the game my parents also will always jump on together
so they're on speakerphone and if the steelers have lost all we're going to talk about is how
bad the offensive line was or and it's just like it's just a drag i just i almost need
to split right right right them up for that conversation because i'll talk to mom and
she'll be able to talk about her week and her book club and her golf leagues and things like
that but dad has nothing to talk about other than how bad the stealers were on a on a week with a
loss crazy yeah so we used to golf as a family, Tom, and I opted.
I just realized I was not wired for it.
I have my dad's temper.
My dad is also not wired for it because of his temper, but he stuck it out.
And my poor brother, who, again, loves golfing and does it a lot on his own, he went on a
golf trip with my parents to Ireland last year.
Amazing.
Yeah, it was great. It was, yeah, we had like four days of golf, I want to say. We were in
Port Marnick and then we went out to the K Club in County Kildare, which is pretty posh, really
nice. But after the first two rounds, I don't know if you have this with your father, but it's hard sometimes to give notes
to your father, like to his face. So I had to send him an email that was like, hey,
if you're going to be that angry on the golf course, then like, let's go sightseeing.
We don't have to play golf. Like I want to have fun. We're here in Ireland. It's beautiful.
play golf like i want to have fun we're here in ireland it's beautiful it's like historic and uh if you're gonna be that angry let's skip it and he wrote back just a two-word reply that was like
we play and it was like okay yeah that sounds like someone i would get along with
and then he unsubscribed from his son's emails amazing he didn't want it it's so funny like
what you say about giving your dad notes i'm not at that stage in my life yet where I can do that. I have a lot of respect for my dad
and I would really struggle. This morning, I must have called my dad nine times because I really
want to talk to him. I miss him. I haven't spoken to him in a couple of days. We went to a comedy
show last night. I feel really close to him for going.
So I wanted to speak to him and he didn't answer the phone.
So I wrote this text message, which was like,
dad, why do you bother having a phone
if you're never going to answer it?
And then I deleted it because I'm like,
I can't, I can't send that to my dad.
I just said, tried you a bunch of times, dad.
Give me a call back when you can.
So I need to maybe learn how to be more honest with my dad, maybe.
My parents will drive to visit me and my family.
And it's about a three-hour drive.
And so my wife will say, do you know when they're going to be here?
And I'll call my dad's cell phone.
And I'll call my mom's cell phone.
And I'll call my dad.
And I know it's just two of them in a car.
And I cannot wrap my head around what is going on with the cell phones. It's ridiculous. Neither of them. Yeah. It's my
dad. My dad has the same thing I have. I have this really terrible noise intolerance thing.
Like I just, my ADHD, like if you and I, if we're having this conversation now and there is just the
slightest constant noise, my brain doesn't work. I can't hold a conversation. My dad's is so severe
that I guess the ringtone of his phone just sets him on edge. So he's like, I'm going to just have
no ring at all. So what we now have to do is we have to figure out which brother is in closest
proximity to mom and dad and call one of them. And then I feel really bad because I call my brother Paddy,
and I'm like, you can tell he's excited to chat,
and you're like, Paddy, is mum there?
So that now I'm like, I have to check myself and be like,
hey, Paddy, how are you?
It's nice to see you.
Anyway, where's mum and dad?
I've been fucking calling them for hours.
Now, you'd mentioned your mum's in charge of the vacations.
She also, is it true that she was in, she was in charge of finding you an apartment
or a place to live? And can you just let everybody know where it's kind of incredible
luck where she found a place for you to live? Yeah. And it's also, I can add to that story
now it's two for two. Um, she found me a wonderful apartment. I love living there.
It is a few hundred feet from my parents' house. Okay. and at the time I was a young kid I still
had my mom's cooking I could somewhat justify bringing my laundry over there and then I you
know I outgrew the place I needed somewhere a little bit more private I found a house I fell
in love with the house I moved in that house is just a few hundred feet from that apartment. So I'm still
just as close. Surprise, surprise. Who found the house? My mom found the house. So I live in a
lovely house with two of my brothers, two of my best friends, and my parents live only down the
road. So we are a very tight knit little group and we see each other all the time.
Which two of the brothers?
Harry and Sam, the twins.
So you live with the twins.
Yeah, and what's great about living with Sam is that he's a chef, a professional chef.
Oh, great.
A great one at that.
And he's doing these Instagram videos where he is teaching people how to cook things easily for cheap.
If you're a young kid who's trying to live in London and it's incredibly expensive right now, go to Sam's Instagram and you'll find out how
to make easy dishes quickly. And we just get to come home and feast on all the food that he's
been making for these videos. So I haven't cooked in months, which is great. So living with Sam is
awesome. Are you a good cook when you cook? I would consider myself a good cook.
Zendaya doesn't seem to like my cooking.
But the upside to me cooking to Zendaya cooking is that I'll finish with 10 digits.
And if Zendaya cooks, she'll slice one of her fingers off.
Because I don't know why she decides to chop up vegetables like she's some sort of samurai.
It is the most stressful experience ever.
But no, so I do the majority of the cooking when it's just the two of us.
I do feel like that would come down on you.
I feel like her agent would leave you a very strongly worded voicemail
if you let Zendaya cook and she lost one of her fingers.
Mate, when we were in New York doing The Crowded Room,
she came to visit.
She was lovely enough to cook dinner for when I got home from work.
And I came home.
I saw an empty kitchen with food everywhere, a really bloody rag and a knife and was like,
oh my God, what's happened?
And she'd cut herself like really badly too.
And she's like, I think it's fine.
I think it's fine. I think it's fine.
Showed me her finger and I was like,
we need to go to the hospital.
Like you need stitches.
Like that is really deep.
She ended up getting stitches and she was fine.
And she was actually a real, like,
she was a boss about it.
Nothing, no anesthetic, nothing.
She just straight in, had the sutures and was fine.
But yeah, so she's cut herself a few times.
She'll probably hate me for telling you that story
look you said she was a boss
if I cut my finger cooking I would tell my wife to
just leave me to die
I'd black out
in New York City I'm like no it's just better to leave me to die
move on without me
I want to go back to golf real quick I assume a lot of people
the most famous person they've played
golf with is you
but who's the most famous person you've played golf with is you, but who's the most famous person you've played golf with?
That's a good question.
I mean, I've been lucky.
I've played with some very famous golfers.
I played with Jordan Spieth.
A few weeks ago, I played with Colin Morikawa and Kurt Kitayama,
which was a real honor.
I'm delighted to say that I went four up on Colin, the front nine.
Wow.
And then he absolutely annihilated me on the back nine and won the match.
I feel like that speaks to your ability to rise to the moment.
I would be very, I mean, again, I'm a terrible golfer to begin with,
but do you feel like more pressure when you're with a professional golfer?
I'm like a real pressure person.
I really, really thrive under pressure.
I love
the feeling of being stressed and being overwhelmed. I get this really weird kick out of it.
So anytime I'm playing golf, I joke that if you get a camera out, I'm doing something special.
I don't know what it is about being on camera, but I love it. There's something about it.
I was playing a few years ago, playing some of the worst golf it. There's something about it. I was playing a few years
ago, playing some of the worst golf I've ever played in my life. I was in a real hole,
but I'd signed up to do this pro-am. Thousands of people showed up. It's on live television
and I don't know what happened. I just, I just, I played the best round of golf I've ever played
in my life. It was the best. Honestly, everything I've achieved in my career, that was the best day
of my life. I would imagine.
Do you ever, when you have a bad front nine like you had the other day,
do you ever turn to your friends and be like,
the problem is you're not famous enough? Yeah, exactly.
If you guys were more famous.
Why are you all just so unbelievably ordinary?
It's so frustrating.
No pressure here.
Yeah, when Seth golfs,
I don't know if there's a difference in Seth's baseball stance and his
golf stance yeah I like to have one stance for all the sports it's just more just slightly bent over
yeah yeah it's not yeah exactly but it's the same it looks like it's the same grip on the club
that's no good Josh what's your handicap I'm like a 16 it's not I'm nothing I'm like a 16. Okay, so you're playing good golf. I'm nothing. I'm all right.
What are you currently, Tom?
I'm currently a four, but I'm not shooting to a four right now.
I just had some lessons to go through a few swing changes to get my bad rounds.
My bad rounds are really bad, and my good rounds are really good.
There's no middle ground.
So I'm working on a bit of consistency.
So in those lessons, I have sort of lost the ability to play golf right now but there's light at the end
of the tunnel I'll bring it back and start
striping it again I'm sure
I don't want to spend too much time on this but
we were originally going to call
this podcast
Twins Can We Trust Them
so you have
brothers that are twins
how is it living with twins?
To be perfectly honest with you, growing up, it's an absolute nightmare.
Because you have a fight with one of them, you have to fight both of them.
And I was strong.
Because they're loyal to each other?
Well, they're best friends, you know.
They share the wounds.
Are they identical?
They are not identical.
Although they don't even look
remotely like brothers
I look more like
Harry
than Harry looks like Sam
I was making a film once
we were in the green room
my brothers came to visit me
you wouldn't know
they were brothers
had you just met them
and this actress
I was working with
she was like
oh my god
you guys are like
you're twins
and we were like yeah yeah they're
twins it's really cool and she said are you identical we were like uh i don't know have a
take a guess babe um but yeah playing you know i was very lucky when paddy came along
we had two teams we called ourselves the Singletons, Paddy and I,
against the Doubletons, Sam and Harry.
And what was great was because I was older,
I was better at sport just because of my age,
nothing to do with my talent.
So I was better and then disadvantaged by Paddy,
which kind of leveled us out.
And then Sam and Harry were not as good as me,
but because there was two of
them, it kind of made a very equal team. And our parents were so good at sort of saying you're
outside, go and play with your brothers. We didn't make all of you for nothing. You know, you're not
playing on the PlayStation, go and play with the gifts that we gave you as parents, which is each
other. So we were always just kicking the crap out of each other
and playing football and rugby and cricket and tennis
and all that sort of stuff.
So we were very, very active kids.
It does seem like probably the necessity then to have active vacations.
I feel like your parents wouldn't want to bring you somewhere
where part of it was just sitting around and doing nothing.
And there's also like four boys.
If you go back and watch any of our home videos,
my parents both look like they're strung out on heroin.
Like they honestly like, they look so awful, bless them.
And they are so tired because they went from one to three
and Sam and Harry weren't easy.
My mom and dad said the most peaceful experience
when having twins is when you fly on an airplane
because you know they can't kill themselves.
So you just sit there, let them run away.
And he said that you'd see Harry's red hair
just pop up on a seat six aisles in front of them
and my parents are too tired to do anything about it.
It's very impressive that they then went for a four.
I mean, I feel like to survive twins, to be at three then to uh to roll the dice one more time and get patty it's very uh obviously
says something about how much they like their kids i think and i can say this because patty
is aware of this but they wanted a girl yeah and along came patty who really is like the shining
star of our family like he's the funniest one.
He's the most social one.
He's the sportiest one.
He's really incredibly artistic.
He's just started painting and he's so good.
It's very hard to find a photo of Paddy where he doesn't have a very luminous smile is my experience.
Paddy also has what I love.
One of the things I love so much about Paddy is his laugh has never changed.
So his giggle when you get him going, I had the luxury the other day of Paddy was at home at my
mom and dad's house. I was home alone. I wanted to watch a movie. I texted my Paddy. I said,
bro, I'm at home. If you fancy coming over to have a movie night, let me know. I'm here.
He says, I'd love to. He comes over. I just bought this really cool little cinema drop down screen
thing in my
living room using it for probably the first time and we're scrolling through we're going through
the arduous task of like scrolling through itunes to try and find a film to watch and he'd never
seen this is the end and i was like oh my god you i am so excited that you've never seen this film
and to sit there with my brother and hear him giggle like a four-year-old at this film
was like honestly one of the highlights of my year it was amazing we josh and i don't you know he's
he's west coast and i'm east coast and we don't see each other enough and when we do like i was
in la for a day i like plan ahead the funny thing i want to watch yeah right yeah yeah like don't
watch it without me because i still i think that joy of watching something with a sibling, knowing in advance, the sense of humor
is going to line up and it's just going to be no judgment, just joy. It's so much fun.
It's like my brother and I, this past week, we were in upstate New York playing some golf and
just enjoying the countryside. And we, in the evening, watched an entire season of that show, Survivor.
Oh, yeah.
Oh my God, that show is amazing. I'd never heard of it before. I'd never seen it. We're on Netflix.
I love survival shows. There's a show called Alone, which I really love. I thought that's
what I was getting myself into. 10 survival experts are dropped in the wilderness and they
have to survive for the longest they can. But I was like, what is this really weird show?
And I was a little skeptical to begin with.
And by the end of the last few episodes,
I'm like, Michelle's gameplay there is off the charts.
Like the way she's backstabbing so-and-so,
like if she can get these people, I was so into it.
So I'm excited to start a new season of that with my brother.
Great.
All right, we have a few questions for you here at the end,
and then we're going to let you go.
First of all, thank you so much for being with us.
No, thank you for having me.
I know you've taken some great vacations.
Do you have any place left, dream vacation,
you would want to go on with your family?
I'd love, love, love, love, love to go to Australia or New Zealand.
I've never been to that part of the world.
I've only heard that it's amazing. So if I was going to go to Australia or New Zealand. I've never been to that part of the world. I've only heard that it's amazing.
So if I was going to go away with my family,
if we were going to do like a big family vacation,
we are actually going away as a family at the end of next month.
We're going for a little family golf trip,
but I would like to go to Australia.
All right, great.
If you could go on vacation with any family that is not your family,
who would you go on a family vacation with that's a great question i probably zendaya's family her family are amazing that's great that
you like her family yeah they're awesome people and i'm assuming um unless they have terrible
taste your family likes zendaya that's really. Absolutely. I would like it if you were like, no, they're the five people that...
They're the only five people on the planet that just despise her.
It just is not working for them.
They don't hate her.
They just don't get it.
They just don't understand it.
Yeah.
All right.
Another question.
Last one.
Have you ever been to the Grand Canyon?
I've flown over it.
Okay.
That doesn't count.
I haven't been there.
Yeah.
Follow up.
Do you want to go?
Are you inviting me?
Well, Seth doesn't want to go.
Seth has no interest.
All of our guests,
what we're going to do, Tom,
is all of our guests,
we're going to enter into a raffle.
Okay.
And at the end of the season,
we're going to draw one name
and pay an all-expense paid trip.
So if you want to be entered in the raffle,
I guess is the question.
Throw me in the raffle.
I'd love to go and see
that big crack in the ground.
Yep.
Never been something
on my radar, really.
But I think America
really does have
the most beautiful
landscapes in the world.
And what a great canyon
you guys have.
It's the great one.
This is coming off
as very sincere.
How nice you're being
about our canyon.
Yeah, I'm really impressed by the canyon, guys.
I would love to go to the Grand Canyon.
There we go.
I'm going to add this to the show notes so that everybody can see it,
but I did want to show this to you, Tom.
Someone recommended I show this to you.
My middle son, who's five, had a lemonade stand the other day,
and he did wear his Spider-Man outfit.
And then it got a little cold, so he had to put a coat on over it and just so you know this isn't a competing spider
man because he he wears glasses so it's like a different it would be in a different universe where
peter parker doesn't see great but there's a there's a i love it hilarious yeah i love the
coat over it as well yeah there's a, there's a lot wrong with it,
but everything wrong with it makes it more right.
It's a rabbit fur coat, right?
Yeah, it's a rabbit fur.
He's still wearing fur.
That's hilarious.
And it's real rabbit.
For our listeners, it's real rabbit.
And I'll be signing off now, guys.
and I'll be signing off now guys hey
Tom what a delight
to see your face and to get to talk
to you about your
just really amazing family it's really cool how close
you all are thanks dude well it's lovely to see you both
Josh it's nice to meet you Seth
you know how much I love you mate and how much I enjoy
doing your show so thanks for having me
and hopefully I'll see you soon I look forward to the next time you're here. Check out The Crowded
Room on Apple. And we will see you next time. Amazing. Thank you, guys. I'll speak to you soon.
All right, then. Bye-bye. Thanks, Tom. His life is so majestic But oftentimes it's really quite domestic
He lives down the street from dad and mom
Got brothers as his roommates, that's the bomb.
That's not to say it never gets exciting.
Cause sometimes it can be just downright frightening.
Came home from work And things looked pretty grim
A bloody kitchen
Staring back at him
That time
Zendaya cut her finger
She is fine
But the day you cut her finger
Oh, oh no Thank you.