Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - From Wild Card with Rachel Martin: Taylor Tomlinson
Episode Date: August 23, 2024There’s a great podcast we want to introduce you to today, hosted by our friend Rachel Martin at NPR. It’s her new show, called Wild Card, which she describes as “part-interview, part-e...xistential game show.” It’s a different way of approaching a celebrity interview, with a special deck of cards that helps shape the conversation. It’s a really fun show, and she talks to some really big names, including David Lynch, LeVar Burton, Issa Rae, and US Poet Laureate Ada Limon. Rachel was also a guest on this very podcast recently, and we had a great conversation and even played a little bit of the card game, so go back in your podcast feed and check that out. You can also listen to it here. The Wild Card episode we’re sharing with you today features Taylor Tomlinson, who has found the kind of success many comedians dream about, with multiple Netflix specials and a late-night hosting gig — After Midnight on CBS. She tells Rachel that part of the secret to her success is fear. They also swap stories about their Christian upbringings, the search for validation and getting things stuck up their noses.So enjoy this episode, and check out Wild Card wherever you find your podcasts. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Wondery Plus subscribers can listen to 10% happier,
early and ad free right now.
Join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple podcasts. Hello, everybody.
How we doing?
Today we're going to play you an episode of a fantastic new podcast from my friend over
at NPR, Rachel Martin.
You heard her recently right here on this show playing a game with me called Wild Card.
Wild Card is the name of her new podcast.
She calls it Part Interview, part existential game show,
which is a great way to describe it.
It's really just a very different way
of approaching a celebrity interview
with a special deck of cards
that helps shape the conversation.
It's really fun.
She's talked to big names,
including David Lynch, LaVar Burton, Issa Rae,
and the US poet laureate Ada Lamone.
Today, the Wild Card episode we're sharing with you features Taylor Tomlinson, who has
found the kind of success many comedians dream about with multiple Netflix specials and also
a late night hosting gig on the show After Midnight on CBS.
As you'll hear her tell, Rachel Taylor believes that a big part of the secret to her success
is fear.
They also swap stories about their Christian upbringings,
the search for validation,
and getting things stuck up their noses.
So enjoy this episode and check out Wildcard
wherever you find your podcasts.
Does the idea of an infinite universe
excite you or scare you?
Depends on the day.
You know, growing up in church,
so much of your life is focused on knowing exactly
what happens when you die and making sense of it all.
And here's the book and it tells us everything.
I found a lot of freedom in deciding that I didn't know
and was never going to know.
I'm Rachel Martin and this is Wild Card,
the game where cards control the conversation.
Each week, my guests chooses questions at random And this is Wild Card, the game where cards control the conversation.
Each week, my guest chooses questions at random from a deck of cards.
Pick a card one through three.
Questions about the memories, insights, and beliefs that have shaped them.
As an adult, it's easy to feel sad and hopeless and scared.
My guest today is comedian Taylor Tomlinson.
And I think when you are a kid, you're obviously more naive, but I think being naive can be
good.
Usually when I watch stand-up comedy, there is a safe layer of remove.
Like the situations they're describing of stories they're telling happen to someone
else, right?
I don't relate, but I get why it's funny.
When I watched Taylor Tomlinson for the first
time, I laughed in the way that only happens when you have lived the joke, but you couldn't see the
funny. And when Taylor points it out, it's a special kind of hilarious that comes with a good
dose of perspective. This is a long-winded way of saying that Taylor Tomlinson makes me feel seen deeply. Conservative Christian upbringing, check.
Dead mom, check.
Bad dating history, check.
Post a sort of fake game show, check.
Took yourself to the ER
because you thought you swallowed an AirPod
or in my case, a nose ring, check.
How could I not invite Taylor Tomlinson to play our game?
Her newest Netflix specialist called Have It All.
She's also the host of the CBS late night show
After Midnight.
Taylor, welcome to Wildcard.
Oh my gosh, thank you for having me.
First off, are we the same person?
I can't believe that, let us.
I mean, we might be.
You're way, way funnier than I am and younger and cuter.
But besides that, yes.
No, no, definitely not cuter. I'm certainly
dumber, that's for sure. Also, I have to hear the nose ring story. Okay. I thought you might
ask, so I'm trying to think of the short way to say this, but in your comedy special you
talk about falling asleep and thinking that you swallowed an air pod, and I'm watching
this and I'm like traumatized again because here's the short version. I'm embarrassed to admit,
I bought on Amazon a magnetic nose ring, right? And I had it, I was putting it in and then
my kids said something funny and I inhaled it up my nose and could not find it and convinced myself that it had lodged up like in my nasal
cavity or in my brain.
Obviously.
To the point where my husband got this huge industrial magnet and we tried to like lure
it out and it didn't work.
So I went to the ER.
I was the crazy person in the ER trying to convince them that I had maybe inhaled slash
swallowed my nose ring.
Like they did x-rays.
Oh yeah, they totally took x-rays, but they took them like of my chest or my stomach. They did not
understand what my story was. And then I just snuck out. Like after the x-rays, I was just
mortified and I just left. That's so funny because I was also, that was how I was going into it too.
I'm like, can you guys just do some x-rays? Like I just need to know I'm probably wrong,
but just do some x-rays. And they were just need to know, I'm probably wrong, but just do some x-rays.
And they were like, all right.
And luckily my youngest sister found the AirPod at home
before we got those x-rays done.
And then I didn't even,
I didn't even wanna tell anybody I was gonna leave.
I'm like, let's just sneak out.
I'm so embarrassed.
That is what I did.
I did not check out.
It was just like, I started to feel so guilty
because there were other people, you know, it's an ER in DC, it's crowded. And I was just like,
you know what, let's just forget this happened. I'm sorry I took up your time. And if it's
in my brain, we're just going to deal with those repercussions when they manifest later.
Yeah. Yeah, it's fine. So funny. Yeah, people's bones are just coming out of their leg and
you're like, I just, do you have a bigger magnet?
We tried at home with ours,
but they only go so big with a take-home magnet.
That's so funny.
That makes me feel, that makes me feel so seen.
So I've got a deck of cards in front of me.
Each one has a question on it.
I'm going to hold up three cards at a time and you are going to choose one at random
to answer.
There are two rules.
You get one skip.
If you use your skip, I'll swap in another question from the deck.
Okay?
Okay.
And you get one flip.
So, you could put me on the spot and ask me to answer one of the questions before you do.
You still gotta answer it, but I'll just do it first.
Okay.
If you're so inclined.
Okay.
We're breaking it up into three rounds,
memories, insights, and beliefs
with a few questions in each round.
Okay? Okay.
Because it's a game, there's a prize at the end.
Okay, with that, ready?
Yes.
Let's do it.
First three cards were in the memories round.
One, two, or three?
One.
One.
What's a moment from your childhood
when you realized you wanted to make different choices
than your parents?
Ooh.
I mean, I do think growing up,
my parents had gotten married in their early 20s
before they finished college
and never really encouraged that.
Would say things like,
wait till you're 27 to get married.
You don't have to get married while you're still in school.
Finish school, live a little life, and to get married. You don't have to get married while you're still in school. Finish school, live a little life, and then get married.
But even then, I don't know that I felt that way
because I did really wanna be married when I was little.
So I think that if I had met the person I thought
was my person at 20, which of course we all did and we were wrong. But if I had wanted
to get married at 20, I would have just done it. I wouldn't have said to myself, well,
you got to wait. Remember, you need to make a different choice than your parents.
Yeah.
Although it must be said, you came from a super Christian conservative home and culture
where people I assume, like the one I grew up in, got married, like maybe it wasn't 19,
but maybe it was like 22 when people got married.
Oh yeah.
So it was a lot of your peers I imagine did that.
Well it's a wild thing to tell people, hey, you should wait to get married, but also don't have
sex until you're married. And you're like, you got to pick one. Everybody like, do you
want me to wait or do you want me to wait to get married? Do you want me to wait to
have sex? What's the choice here? Although I will say that going back to religion, I
think that was an example of a different choice I was making
than my parents and my family.
And I think-
Yeah, that's a big one.
That's a huge one, yeah, where you sort of gradually come to the realization that this
isn't right for you or it's not necessarily what you believe.
But when your whole family believes this thing, it is very hard to accept that you don't feel
that way because you're afraid of being isolated and
ostracized from your family. At least that was my experience. I don't know what your
experience was.
Yeah, mine was my, my distancing myself from that came a lot later, like as an adult. When
I was, when I was young, I was like all in and mine, my experience wasn't as extreme as yours, I think we could say. I
mean, the, and I shouldn't put words in your mouth, but you came from a really evangelical
Christian culture that did not allow for a lot of individual choice.
Is that fair to say?
Yeah, oh absolutely, super fair.
Yeah, okay, I feel like there's more to plumble.
We're gonna move on.
Oh my gosh, look, you and I could talk about religion
for hours, I'm sure.
Whenever you find people who also grew up that way,
truly, how much time do you have?
How much time do we have? How much time do we have? Yeah.
How much time do we have?
Okay, three more cards.
One, two, or three?
One.
What do you admire about your teenage self?
Ooh, what a good question. I admire how hopeful she was. I think that a lot of teenagers are
probably like this, but I think she really believed in her future. I think at the time
I was really unhappy and really struggling with depression and anxiety and
a whole host of other things, but my head felt like a very safe place to go to. Like it felt like
my imagination was very rich and fulfilling, and I felt very hopeful about the future
rich and fulfilling. And I felt very hopeful about the future and excited and inspired by that. That's been something that I've lately been really trying to get back to about myself.
KS It's just the confidence and setting your expectations high, not letting other people
limit them? Or what do you mean?
Not even confidence.
I think just hopefulness,
maybe a little bit of delusion as well.
I think as an adult, sometimes you feel
sort of bogged down by everything.
It's easy to feel sad and hopeless and scared.
And I think when you are a kid, you're obviously more naive.
But I think being naive can be good.
Okay, we've got to take a quick break.
But when we come back, Taylor talks about an emotion
she understands well.
I think that I, at my core, am a very fearful person.
Round two is insights, stuff you're working on now, lessons you're learning today.
Okay?
Three new cards.
One, two, or three?
Let's do three.
Oh, I like this one.
What emotion do you understand better than all the others?
Oh, I'm going to use my flip.
I would love to hear what your answer is.
Oh, I'm going to use my flip.
I would love to hear what your answer is.
Oh, I'm going to use my flip.
I would love to hear what your answer is.
Oh, I'm going to use my flip.
I would love to hear what your answer is.
Oh, I'm going to use my flip.
I would love to hear what your answer is.
Oh, I'm going to use my flip. I would love to hear what your answer is. Oh, I'm going to use my flip. I would love to hear what your answer is? Oh, I'm going to use my flip.
I would love to hear what your answer is.
Oh.
Did I stump you?
Are you excited to answer it?
I just, I like this question, but I haven't worked out why.
I love it so much.
It's a good question. Okay. So I guess what I'm going to answer is going to make people think that I'm like someone
who rages.
But I guess it's the verb understand because I think I understand anger. I don't think people would describe me as an angry person.
I feel a lot, the other emotions are primary in my life. I'm really good at joy. I'm like
very good at gratitude. I'm not like some angry person, but having said that, I do get angry. And sometimes it's like
a little flash. And especially when I had really young kids, this thing would come up
in me and I'd be like, whoa, what was going on there? What is that? And now when I read
stories about people or just when I see someone have like a flash, I try not to judge
them by that moment. And I try to think about the broader context of their life because
I've definitely gotten angry in a way that made me feel a little bit ashamed before. So I guess I think about
anger a lot. And I don't know, I think that helps me understand it maybe. That's my answer.
That's a great answer. That makes a lot of sense.
What you got? I think mine is fear. I think that I, at my core, am a very fearful person
and have just learned to get comfortable with sort of being perpetually afraid,
which is all anxiety is, is just constant fear. It's a constant hum of fear.
Getting up on a stage, is that just like the thing that helps you not be afraid?
Because it's so frightening to the rest of us civilians to think about making yourself
vulnerable in that way.
That seems very scary to do what you do.
Because it's not just the getting up on stage, Taylor but the, you really do talk about all your stuff.
Right.
Really painful things, you know?
And that seems like it would be scary.
It is, it's very scary, but you get so used to it, I think.
And I was so scared of how I would feel
if I didn't do it,
that I think that helped me push through the stage fright,
is I was afraid that I would get years down the road
and go, man, I really wish I had pursued that,
or I wish I had done more with this potential I had,
and I wish I'd developed this talent
that might have taken me somewhere.
And it certainly helps day to day too when people remind me how terrified they would
be to go up in front of thousands of people.
It does help empower me to do other things.
I go, why am I afraid to talk to somebody at the grocery store when I talked to 3,000
people last night?
You know, it helps you.
Well, I get that. Well, I get that.
I get that.
I mean, because they're just like a bunch of people
in an auditorium who are mostly, think you're awesome.
Like, they bought a ticket to see you.
But the person at the grocery store, who knows?
And they're so close.
You know what?
You're right, I'm scared again.
No, you're right.
You're so right.
Oh, great.
Okay, three cards.
One, two, three. Let One, two, three.
Let's do two.
Two. What is something you still feel you need to prove to the people you meet?
Well, my instinct is to say to prove that I'm funny, but I don't feel that I need to prove that to everyone I meet, which I think is different than when I was younger.
I think when I was younger, probably I felt differently, but I don't really feel that way anymore. I don't know. I want people to think I'm kind, which can be a hard thing to prove. Yeah, but that's different. What I hear you saying is you're actually in a pretty comfortable place because I think that question plays off insecurities,
right? Something that you still feel insecure about that you have to prove otherwise. And I'm
not hearing that in how you're answering it. So that's pretty good. That is good. Wow, this is like a therapy session. This is so nice.
I'm gonna fire my therapist. This is lovely.
There's nothing that I feel like I need to prove it
to everyone I meet.
There are certain things I wanna prove to different people.
Like people I work with, I wanna prove that I'm kind
and hardworking, you know?
People I'm performing for, I wanna prove that I'm kind and hardworking. People I'm performing for, I wanna prove that I'm funny.
There's-
What about relationships?
Oh, oh, I mean, that's a great point.
I mean, in romantic relationships, I certainly wanna prove that I'm worthy and worth the
effort.
So, we really hit on something there.
Well done.
Well done, Rachel.
It's like, you know what you're doing.
I was like, but I don't know,
I don't feel the need to prove anything.
You're like, what about in relationships?
I was like, oh God, that's right.
Sorry, man, but you put it all out in your specials.
What I do is there's some work.
You're right.
I was like, nevermind.
In relationships, I definitely feel the need
to prove myself.
I think, and I think I'm different now.
I think I've worked on it a lot and I think I'm in a much healthier place with it now.
But I do think for years I've definitely felt that I'm trying to prove myself in relationships
and not in one way or not trying to prove one thing about myself.
I'm just trying to prove that I'm worthy of love, which is not
super healthy because we're all worthy of love.
That's right.
Plus it can tend to make you self-sabotage, right?
Absolutely.
I'm not quite sure I'm worthy, so I'm just going to bail on this situation before you
figure out the whole thing.
Yes. Well, because if you don't self-sabotage
and it doesn't work out,
then it's easy to come to the conclusion that you're like,
even my best isn't good enough, you know?
Like even when you have no regrets
about how you handled something,
if something doesn't work out,
despite the reasons,
it's easy to go to that place of,
wow, my best isn't good enough even though the truth of the matter is it just wasn't the right fit or the right
combination of people for success.
We've got another short break, but when we return, Taylor talks to me about what it was
like to leave her Christian faith.
It's a gradual process, I think, falling out of love with a religion.
You have round three to go, beliefs. Okay. This is how you see the world.
That guy, which round do you think's the hardest?
This one, this one.
Yeah.
That's what I was going to say.
I mean, sometimes I think it's too, because it's things you're learning in real time, but I think you in particular, you work all this stuff out.
Anyway, it is your work to think about the lessons that you keep on learning.
Like that's what you make your comedy out of.
That's true. So I don't know that that what you make your comedy out of. That's true.
So I don't know that that's necessarily,
I don't know, we'll see.
We'll see, we're not done yet.
We'll see.
Who knows?
We'll take stock at the end.
We'll be like, beliefs, piece of cake, slice of pie.
Here we go.
Three new cards.
Oh, the cards are red now.
Does that feel scary?
It does.
I think it's a warm red though.
Okay.
It's inviting.
It's inviting.
One, two, three.
One.
Does the idea of an infinite universe excite you or scare you?
Depends on the day.
Depends on the day and where I'm at in my life.
I think when I was younger,
the idea of infinity really freaked me out.
And as I've gotten older, I kind of go back and forth.
You know, growing up in church,
so much of your life is focused on
knowing exactly what happens when you die
and making sense of it all.
And here's the book and it tells us everything.
And there was a lot of, I found a lot of freedom in deciding that I didn't know and was never going to know. And so there
was no point trying to figure it out. I think today, today it excites me. So I must be in
a good place this morning. Yeah. But did you always feel that way? I
mean, you didn't. No. You believed in the heaven and the hell and the God and the creation.
And so when you made that pivot, was that scary? Yeah. Oh, at the beginning, for sure.
I mean, it's a gradual process, I think, falling out of love with a religion. I think it's really hard to accept and you go back and forth
for years and you have to constantly work on it and sit with some really uncomfortable feelings.
Yeah. For me, it was the falling out of love when you don't have something to replace it with
For me, it was the falling out of love when you don't have something to replace it with
immediately. And then that feels empty. Yeah.
Three more cards. Okay. Okay. One, two, three, still in beliefs.
Three. How do you stay connected to people you've lost? I think you have to do you mean people who have died or just people you've lost?
I know we say loss. I mean you can you can interpret it however you want to.
Yeah, I should say that. What am I talking about? It means dead.
It means dead.
What does that mean?
Like, I lost touch with my second grade teacher and I stalk her on Facebook.
Right.
That's so funny.
I know now you don't have to lose touch with anybody because of social media.
Right, you don't.
Yeah, no.
I think, especially since we're both in the dead mom club, as they call it, I think
just talking about them and asking people who knew them longer than you for stories
and people who knew them in different ways than you, how they knew them.
And if you are so inclined creatively, writing about those people and finding ways that you're similar to them or different than them
or even like what they would think of movies
and TV shows that are coming out.
Like, you know, like I think my mom would have really liked
Substack, like, you know, like it's,
like I remember talking to my grandma once
and we're like, she'd probably have a blog, right?
Like it's just even stuff like that.
What do you share in common with your mom?
You were young when she died,
but what do people tell you about how she shows up in you?
She loved to write and I think I have that.
I mean, I have three siblings and two of us
look like my dad and the middle two look more like our mom.
And I was always so jealous that I didn't look like my mom.
Me too.
My mom was the pretty one of between her and my dad.
I got my dad's looks too.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I know.
And it's so funny because it's such a specific thing
not to hurt our dad's feelings.
I know.
It's like, I'm sure both
our dads are handsome as well. But I, yeah, I always wanted to have more in common with
her, but you know, she was an extrovert. I'm not an extrovert. Like I had a lot, I was
really insecure about the fact that I didn't have more in common with her. She was very charismatic and smart and funny. And I just, I didn't
feel that I had those things.
Well, I mean, Taylor, charismatic, smart and funny.
I mean, we're doing a real good impression of it now. That's just what's...
But isn't that all what it is?
I know.
You just imitate it until it becomes you. And then it is you. Yeah, I feel like she, this is sort of sad, but I felt like because she died so young, she died
when she was 34 and she was sick like the last two years. So she got sick at 32, I think. And she had
kids really young. And so when she died, I was like, wow, what a waste, you know?
What a waste of such an amazing person
and just taken way too soon and all this talent
and creativity that I have scraps of.
And so that's probably a big reason why I've tried to stretch those scraps as
far as I can and have been able to, you know, with the help of Netflix. But I had like a
moment maybe a year ago where I was like, man, I've really pushed the bits of her I got to the limit
because in some ways I just feel that I'm
the unrealized potential that she didn't get to realize,
which is so sad.
What was your mom's name?
Angela.
I think Angela would be into Substack and she would be into Taylor Tomlinson for sure.
That's my hope.
Yeah, I'm pretty sure.
Maybe she wouldn't.
Maybe she'd be like, you're kind of a hack.
I don't know.
She'd be like a hackler at all.
Yeah, yeah.
She's like, I don't get it.
Taylor, you won the game. She's like, I don't get it.
Taylor, you won the game.
I did.
You did. Does anyone ever lose?
No.
Not yet.
You never know.
Okay, so no.
You, you won the game.
So because of this, you get a prize
and the prize is a trip in our memory time machine.
Oh my gosh.
Here we go.
You get to go back in time to a moment in your past
that you wouldn't change anything about.
You would just like to hang out there and linger a little longer.
Which moment do you choose?
Well, it should be something I can't experience again, right? Because that would be a waste.
Yeah. Yeah.
And it can't go, I don't want to go back to something that'll make me super sad.
Ooh. I mean, the most obvious answer, because we've been talking about it so much is I would just go
back to a day with my mom but I would probably pick a holiday. I would probably pick Christmas
because it was just such a full joyful feeling of like all getting together at my grandparents' house. And it's
back when I enjoyed church. Like when I think about positive feelings towards church, they
all happened before my mom died. And probably because when my mom died, I was like, I don't
know about this anymore. But I remember feeling very comforted by church and feeling like that
was a very consistent presence in my life when I was really young. And again, my whole
family was religious, so it all just felt very, it all felt very safe.
Did your mom have her favorite Christmas song?
That's a great question for me to call my aunt or my grandma
after this and ask them honestly.
I know that she and my aunt used to sing that sister's song
from White Christmas.
But you don't, in this Christmas memory, I guess I'm trying to
place her doing something.
She's not singing.
I think everyone's just sitting around in my grandparents living room,
opening presents and talking and eating dessert. That's like sort of what I have in my head of
like all the kids like playing around on the floor or sitting on like my grandpa's lap and
like listening to the adults talk. And it would be great to go back to that moment now, especially
listening to the adults talk and it would be great to go back to that moment now, especially being the age that they were and being able to hear what they were talking about.
You're basically telling me that you want to use the memory time machine to eavesdrop.
Yes.
That's cool.
Yeah.
I want to see what everybody was saying.
Were they talking about me?
Yes. Taylor Tomlinson, it has been such a pleasure to talk with you.
Thank you so much.
This was so lovely.
Thank you so much, Rachel.
Next week on Wildcard, actor and producer Lena Waithe plays the game.
She's known for her work on shows like Master of None and The Shy, and Lena tells me she's
working on humility.
My least favorite thing is getting something wrong.
And that can be in many ways, you know, it could be a relationship, you know, some trivia,
you know what I mean?
It's like, I don't want to get this wrong.
I don't want to get it right.
Those are the same brand. I know. It's like relationship, like taboo, you know what I mean? It's like, I don't want to get this wrong. I don't want to get it right.
Those are the same...
I know.
It's like relationship, like taboo.
You know what I mean?
This episode was produced by Lee Hale and edited by Dave Blanchard.
It was fact-checked by Will Chase and Greta Pittenger and mastered by Robert Rodriguez.
Wildcard's executive producer is Beth Donovan.
Our theme music is by Romteen Aribluy.
You can reach out to us at wildcard.npr.org.
We'll shuffle the deck and be back with more next week.
See you then.
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