The Three Questions with Andy Richter - Nikki Glaser (Re-Release)
Episode Date: January 14, 2025Back in 2021, comedian Nikki Glaser talked to Andy Richter about her anxieties around sex, her experience filming a reality show with her parents, and coping with depression through weed. This episode... originally aired in 2021. If you're able to, please consider giving to the Pasadena Community Foundation (https://pasadenacf.org). Do you want to talk to Andy live on SiriusXM’s Conan O’Brien Radio? Leave a voicemail at 855-266-2604 or fill out our Google Form at BIT.LY/CALLANDYRICHTER. Listen to "The Andy Richter Call-In Show" every Wednesday at 1pm Pacific on SiriusXM's Conan O'Brien Channel
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi everyone. I am talking to one of my favorite people, but I have very, very crappy taste.
So I don't know what that really means.
No, I'm really excited
because this is going to be an easy, fun one.
It's Nikki Glaser.
And of course there's a joke hanging there
because you're easy and fun, but I'm not going to say that.
Thank you.
I am, I feel, I, well, I'm actually not easy sexually
which some people, a lot of people think I am
because you know, that's what I joke about a lot,
but, and that's a whole nother discussion
that we certainly can get into,
but I like the fact that, yes, I feel like,
I felt the same way about heading into this podcast
as well as like, it's gonna be easy.
I'm just talking to my friend Andy and yeah.
And it's always easy.
I was just teasing, cause I know that about you too.
How dare you?
But you are, no, but you are like
an incredibly easy person to talk to
and not just like, you know,
cause you're not stuck up or distant or anything,
but cause you're naturally funny,
which there's some standups that aren't like,
that they don't wanna waste it.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, I thank you for saying that
because I don't feel like I'm that naturally funny.
I'm giving with laughter and I'm interested in people.
So I think that sometimes I'm not as funny
as I would like to be off the cuff.
Why?
Why do you think that about yourself?
I don't know.
I just-
I don't think that's true at all.
Thank you.
I, now the pressure's on.
And I am going to try to be as quick as possible.
But a lot of times I feel, well, Andy,
I have this kind of trick that gets people
to think I'm funnier than I am, especially men.
And I just laugh a lot.
And it's always earnest, but if you laugh a lot,
people think you're funny.
They just think that, I mean, and this is true,
if you laugh at the right things,
you must have a good sense of humor.
But sometimes I go on shows and I don't really get a word in,
but I'm laughing a lot and people are like,
you were so funny on that show. And I'm like, I didn't say anything funny.
They just, it's a psychological trick.
Yeah.
Now you mentioned something that,
you know, you joked that like people make assumptions
about you based on your filthy, filthy, filthy material.
Yes.
And is that like, does that get weird?
Do people come up to you and think, cause like I find, you know, it's like managers
and network people are like, you're so likable.
And that's a nice thing to hear.
And I agree with it.
But I think sometimes people think like, I'm the guy that wants to talk to everybody and
come on over and have a beer with us.
And I'm not, I mean, I'm not a rude person, but I'm certainly not, you know,
I certainly don't want to go around and talk to everybody at
the restaurant. So do people make assumptions about you based
on your material that kind of backfires?
Yeah. I really relate to that of just,
what am I putting out there that leads people to think that I,
cause I feel like I'm being honest about myself,
but then people think I'm a huge whore.
And it's, the thing is I'm just,
I talk about the sex I have had.
And so if you even talk about it,
it sounds like you're having it all the time.
And I like to deconstruct it.
And I like to really talk about things
that most people aren't comfortable talking about.
And it's not, you know, I have to defend myself a lot
because I'm not trying to like shock people
or make people uncomfortable.
I just am talking about the thing that is interesting to me
because I don't do it a lot, you know?
And because when I do do it, it stands out to me so much
and I want to investigate it and just uncover it.
So yes, it happens a lot that, you know,
I get hit on or people say discussing
things in my DMs and stuff like that. But I think the more, well, I'm such, I'm in such a
place right now that I feel like I don't even recognize the person that I was who talked about
sex all the time and specials and stuff, because I'm not having it. I haven't had it for a while.
I haven't been in a relationship for a really long time.
And so I feel very distant from that.
So I feel like it's happening less and less
because I'm just not talking about as much.
I'd love to.
It's not something I'm trying not to talk about, but yes.
Is that because of COVID?
I wish.
You know, it started before then.
I wish I could blame it on COVID.
Yeah, I haven't been in, I don't know.
I don't know why it is.
I think that I've, well, the reason I'm fascinated
by sex is because I was just a huge prude growing up.
I was really scared of boys and just sex in general.
I was just like, I'll never be able to do that.
That's so awkward and weird.
And like, I was obsessed with it and watched it
and studied it and talked to my friends about it.
But I just felt like it could never be me.
It just was something that I longed to participate in,
but it was just, I was too scared.
It was like the scariest thing to me.
And I've held on to that.
I mean, I was able to conquer those fears with alcohol eventually.
That really helped as it does every awkward situation.
It just makes everything so much easier.
And then I quit drinking and luckily I was in a relationship
when I like, right after I quit drinking,
I was able to get into a relationship which kept me like,
you know, like I got to really explore myself
like soberly, sexually in that.
And then that ended and I'm right back to where I started.
I'm in seventh grade again, scared of sex,
scared of intimacy, scared of being alone with men,
scared of being alone with women.
Like I have a huge fear of sex
and feeling like I owe someone something
or they'll fall in love with me
or I'll fall in love with them and they'll hurt me.
It's just the fears I have of it are just,
I mean, I've gone on a couple like dates in quarantine,
like outdoor dates and the dread I have before those dates
is it's like nothing I've ever felt.
Like it's truly so uncomfortable and so miserable
and I wanna get out of it.
I'm just miserable a couple of days before.
And, you know, people say it as like a joke,
but I would truly rather have like a root canal.
I actually enjoy going to the dentist.
I don't know why I think it's the heavy
like x-ray vest they put on you,
which one time my dentist did tell me
I was autistic when I was 10.
Cause I was just like, I had the x-ray vest
on the heavy thing.
And I go, I love this. They feel so good. And he goes, yeah, I had the x-ray vest on, the heavy thing. Yeah, the lead vest.
And I go, I love this.
They feel so good.
And he goes, yeah, a lot of autistic kids
respond to it that way.
That's probably why you like it.
And then he left the room and I was just,
and autistic wasn't a thing I knew about when I was 10.
And so I just kept saying autistic
so I could remember it and ask my mom later.
Because I was just so excited to have an identity of like,
I'm something special.
So I was just like-
And also that you were diagnosed autistic by a dentist.
Yeah, yeah.
And I was sitting there going,
autistic, autistic, autistic,
like as someone who probably is on the spectrum would do.
But yeah, I just, I have total fear of sex,
but also want it so bad and am obsessed with it when I get to have it. And so I think that's why I also want it so bad
and am obsessed with it when I get to have it.
And so I think that's why I talk about it so much
in standup is because we talk about our fears
and the things that we want so bad too.
It's also just an endlessly fascinating subject.
It's just, it's one of the most basic, basic, you know,
it's like eating, breathing, drinking, fucking, you know,
it's just, and, and I find like now, and I'm not, listen,
I'm not, I'm not one of those people that's like, you know,
I like it better when a white man could say whatever he
wanted kind of stuff, but I find, especially now that I'm
divorced and I'm single, but like, just if I make even a joke about horniness,
it is met with like, ew, shut up, grandpa, you know?
And so, which I understand.
And there's a part of me that thinks like,
if I didn't know me and I knew like, and I liked me.
Yeah, that's a funny guy.
I liked his work.
He's a 54 year old divorced guy.
He's on Twitter.
And here he is making jokes about being horny.
I would go, oh man, class it up, dad.
Come on, Jesus Christ.
Nobody wants to hear that from you
because it is like, there's just something like,
like my sexuality is, nobody wants to hear about it.
You know, it's just-
I hear that a lot from people when, you know,
we talk about this, like, oh yeah, it's,
and I do agree with you.
It's, there's something about a woman talking about sex
that is much more palatable than a man because there's like-
Well, it's more powerful in a way. It's, much more palatable than a man, because there's like a-
Well, it's more powerful in a way.
It's, you know what I mean?
Honestly, it is.
It's like men have talked about,
men can have been able to talk about sex
and own sex for a zillion years.
And it's only recently that women can be like,
I'm fucking horned up, let's go.
Yes, yes.
And it's an empowering thing.
And it's fun and it's cool
and it certainly is more interesting.
We're squirting all over that glass ceiling.
Yeah, you're right.
I think that that is probably a part of it too
is the rebellious aspect of it of saying like,
I'm here, I'm loud, I get to do whatever I want now.
I'm not, you know, I, my mom is super prude
and was always telling me you don't talk that way.
Don't, I was never allowed to talk the way I talk on stage.
And it was, it was really shamed.
And I think that it's part of me just the same way
when I go home and when I was living with my parents
over the pandemic, my room was a mess.
It was like this form of rebellion
cause I knew it would upset my mom so much.
So I think me going on stage
and talking about blowing someone,
it's just like, it's a little dig at my parents.
And that's not a healthy admission.
I backed away from it.
Having that be my instinct is to like upset them.
Yeah, yeah.
Are you in therapy?
Yes.
Right now, yes.
With you?
Yes.
Is this not what this is?
This bill is gonna be a motherfucker.
Yeah, I am.
I'm kind of in between therapists right now.
I went on, I hung out with Whitney for like two days
and she like forced her, Whitney Cummings for two days.
She forced her therapist on me and I was like,
oh, I'll just do this because I want to make Whitney happy.
And then I ended up really liking the woman
and she was wanting to do the EDMR, EMDR,
the eye movement thing where you like hold pulsars.
So I wanted to do some more focused therapy like that
where it like goes in and tackles whatever trauma I have
because I think all of this is like really stems
from just having a couple bad instances with guys
who like came on too strong, nothing like terrible,
but like my first kiss was pretty rapey
and I like had to push the guy off and he was mad at me
and he drove me home and he was speeding
and then he pulled off like so pissed
that he almost ran over me.
It was traumatic to a degree
and I think that has led me to always be like,
okay, well, if you're alone with a boy,
they might kiss you and then they'll be mad at you
and you'll lose your friend
who you were friends with before that
and now he won't talk to you anymore.
So going back and unraveling those specific things
as opposed to just talking to someone every day,
which, because sometimes you just are seeing these therapists and you go, this is
a podcast. Like I would, you know, it really is, I'm no different on podcasts than I am
with these people. I'm pretty honest with stuff and on air. And there were a lot of
times when I would finish my radio show when I was doing an unserious and I would go to
my therapist right after and she would go like, thank you so much for telling me that.
That's like so vulnerable of you.
And I really appreciate it.
I go, I literally just said that on air like an hour ago.
It's like that wasn't hard for me to do.
So-
Yeah, I shared this with America.
Yeah.
Or at least people in rental cars,
cause it was on Sirius.
And so it was, it was just,
I just want to go deeper than just talking to someone. And I, Dr. Drew for a while was just, I just want to go deeper
than just talking to someone.
And I, Dr. Drew for a while was like,
you need to talk to an emotionally focused therapist.
So I sought one of those out.
And those are therapists that just hear your life story
and then they mirror the emotions
that you should feel about that back to you.
So they just look at you the whole time like this,
just like so sad, like really?
And they cry for you because that's what I've been told
is I like don't feel my feelings, which I do know.
That's a crazy person.
That's not a therapist, that's a crazy person.
It felt that way a lot of times
where you have to comfort someone else
about them crying about your trauma.
Well, what ultimately are you looking for?
Like what's your end goal of doing therapy?
Just being happy.
Yeah.
Just being confident in myself,
being not and not getting wildly depressed,
like off and on.
And I have been able to-
Is that a problem?
Has it been forever like that?
No, it wasn't forever.
It started in high school and then it got really bad
when I was like, got an eating disorder because it was just,
you're hungry all the time,
of course you're gonna get depressed.
And then after that, a really bad eating disorder,
I just never recovered.
And then it would just hit me probably every couple months
and I would just, I just felt it coming on.
It would be like a flu,
but which I don't even get, I don't get physically sick really ever, knock just felt it coming on. It would be like a flu, you know, but,
which I don't even get, I don't get physically sick
really ever knock on wood, knock on wood.
I don't get colds and stuff,
but I do get so sick emotionally
that I feel like I should be able to call into work,
but you really can't call in depressed,
even though there are many days I would want to.
So now I'm, now I'm medicated and I'm good,
but there are times where I just feel it coming on
and I brace, it doesn't ever go as deep as it used to,
but I just, it's so scary to me that feeling
that you feel when you're super, super depressed.
I mean, you haven't too, right?
I've had it forever.
Yeah, I've had it forever.
I've had just like classic old depression.
And, you know, it was one thing when I was younger and,
I mean, first of all, when you're young,
you're a fucking mess.
Just, you know, like until you get to be about 23, maybe,
you're just a fucking mess.
You're, you know, you're a different person every three hours.
And so there was that time and I was really, you know,
and going away to, and just learning to be out on your own.
Like I have a 20 year old son now and he's going through that.
Just like you go from being,
living at home with mommy and daddy to going out and having to like,
write checks for rent and shit.
Oh my God, you just said write checks. I can't believe this.
You know what I mean? You know what I mean?
No, no, that was my biggest fears.
I once in the middle of the night woke up my parents
and said, I don't know how to write a check.
And I think I was in seventh grade
and I couldn't sleep because of it
because I knew that was in my future.
It was coming, yeah.
It was coming and I have no clue how to do it.
And I knew already we weren't gonna be taught that in school
and we weren't, you know, like just those fears
of leaving home.
I mean, I really liked living at home
and being taken care of and feeling safe.
And I just, and I still have those fears, I guess.
And when you're in it, you can't conceive
of how you could not be in it.
You know, like you can't conceive of like,
how am I gonna be a grownup?
You know, like, how am I gonna take care of myself?
How am I gonna, and you just do, you know,
like eventually you do.
Yes, but it's that being in it and not,
that's when I started to get scared
with my depression recently,
like especially over this past summer,
it hit some real low lows.
I was living with my parents and that wasn't even the reason.
Thank God I was living with them.
Being alone would have been even worse,
but I was just, I was entering those states
of feeling so, such despair about the world,
about my life, about who I was.
I'm a fraud, all of these things.
And then I started like not wanting to get help
because any help would be me living in an illusion.
And I know the truth, being depressed, I know the truth.
And if I get on a pill, it's just gonna,
I'm gonna be lying to myself.
And I don't wanna lie to myself.
It's inauthentic.
Yeah, you start to believe the lie,
which is, you know, nothing matters, I'm worthless.
I've fooled everyone into thinking I'm talented,
but all those things.
And that's when you start to go, wait,
this is like when people think they're Jesus,
like this kind of delusional thinking of your right,
you see everything correctly, everyone else is wrong.
And so that's when I was, I really asked for some help.
And I was like, I gotta get it,
despite not really wanting to fix this.
Yeah, because it's the brain chemicals.
It's the mood disorder that's making you think you're shit.
Like, cause you know, even when you,
as shitty as you can feel about yourself,
I mean, unless you're like a bad person that, you know,
did a hit and run or something, you know, I mean.
Thank God that hasn't happened yet.
You give it time.
But you know you're not as bad as you think you are.
You know you're not as bad as you beat yourself up.
And I've always felt anyway,
beating yourself up and treating yourself.
And I've worked so hard in my life
to not have that ongoing,
you fucking piece of shit. God damn it. Why can't you be better? You know you can do better than
this. What the fuck? Oh, there you are. What are you going to sit there? You know, that is a luxury.
That is in many ways you thinking you're really being hard on yourself.
You know, like you're really,
like I'm the tough dad to myself.
And it does, but it's not fixing anything.
It's just, it's just, you're doing this thing
that you know you shouldn't be doing.
You're behaving in this way that you,
you don't feel is pretty or good.
And you know it's destructive.
So you're going to be like, you fucking piece of shit.
And then you walk away like you would walk away from a traffic
altercation that you think you got the upper hand where nothing really changed.
You know, everything was, is the same, but you're walking away from it going like,
I just kicked my own ass.
And then you go doing the same shit, you know,
totally that, that self talk is the root of it.
And when you're able,
and that's what I've been able to do recently
is change that voice and not even yell at the voice
who catches me doing it.
You know, if I'm going, Nikki, look at you today,
you fucking piece of shit.
And then I go, don't do it, talk to yourself like that.
I don't even say that.
I go, isn't that funny that you just talk
to yourself like that?
That's just a coping mechanism that you learned.
But I've been really much better with the self-talk, which is it changes everything
because that really is the root of it.
But that's what happens is you yell at yourself for the destructive behavior and you only
do the destructive behavior because you're uncomfortable.
Like you overeat, you don't, you're, you are mean to someone, you snap at someone and
you're self-righteous, whatever it is, you're, you are mean to someone. You snap at someone and you're self righteous,
whatever it is, you're doing that.
Or you're lazy, you know, you're lazy or you know.
You're doing that because you're dealing with a bad feeling
and that's how you're coping with the bad feeling.
So adding more bad feelings onto that is only going to
result in more of that behavior.
And so it's, it's not helping anything.
And I just read a book about the way it's called chatter.
And it's about the voice in our own heads.
And it is a new tool I've been using that this guy,
this neuroscience test figured out that if you talk
to yourself in third person, it increases your output
and the value of what you put out there like so much.
If you just talk to yourself in third person,
because it goes back to the thing of you would never talk to a much if you just talk to yourself in third person because it goes back to the thing of
you would never talk to a friend
the way you talk to yourself.
So if you actually say in your own mind,
Andy, don't do that.
Andy, go get up and go outside.
You will more likely to do it
than if you go, I need to go outside.
And so I've been just talking a lot third person,
and reminding myself of that Seinfeld episode of Jimmy.
And I'm like, Jimmy was onto something. Nicky thinks Jimmy was onto something.
I also think, and I have had this feeling throughout my life, that the depression is like a fucking alien on the spaceship
that's really smart at keeping itself alive
and really, you know, thinks of many, many different ways
that you might think,
all right, I've got to handle on this.
Like, just as a for instance, the beating yourself up,
like, that's what I'm doing. I'm really battling this thing.
And the depression is sitting there
like rubbing its hands together going like,
hee hee hee, that's what I want you to think.
Yeah, that's the Trojan horse.
Yeah, you're just perpetuating me.
You're just making me go on and on and on.
And you have to kind of like,
because also too,
I also find, and this is from being around a lot
of depressives my whole life, even, you know,
like this imprinting behavior from a lot of people,
it's like you can also kind of like soak in it
and there's something comforting to it
because you just like, I'm stuck here and you know,
and you start to, you know,
there's a victim feeling of like, poor me here, so sad,
and I can't do anything.
And there again, it's like, it's the depression saying like,
you sit right here with me, hun.
You know, like I, you know, like, yeah,
you might not like me, but you know me.
You know how to deal with me.
You're comfortable with me
because we've been together for so long.
And when you have, you know,
in the last probably five years I've spent,
I still deal with it.
I still have medication,
but in so many ways I've become much less depressed,
if not undepressed.
And there was like some feelings of like loss about it.
There was like some feelings of like letting go
of this part of me that I knew was psychotic.
I mean, it was unhealthy.
It was a neurosis, but it was like a part of my identity.
It was who I was.
I was part of me was being sad, you know?
Yeah.
And I think you hit on so many things there.
First of all, talking about,
I love the way you're defining depression
as like this conspirator in you
that's figuring out ways to survive
because I think that's the thing.
We think that we are depression.
Like it is us thinking these thoughts
when really it is a disease.
I mean, it's something you need to get rid of.
I was able to actually get over my eating disorder.
It took a really long time,
but the big thing that helped me more than anything
was I saw a therapist who just told me like,
you're not the one who's choosing not to eat.
Like that's not your choice.
You have a disease like people get cancer.
Like you got infected somehow with this thing.
And there's a voice in your head that's like,
think of yourself like it's the exorcist.
Like you have the devil inside you.
And so as soon as I was able to take this thing
that felt like me, it felt like,
why am I choosing to starve myself?
Like I don't, and alienate my friends
and be mad and sad all the time.
It took it out of my hands.
And then when I was able to do that,
I was able to drop it.
And I think that's the thing is we think that we,
depression is us and that's who we truly are.
And if we lose that, we lose our identity.
And also the wallowing that you talked about
of just sitting there and being comforted by it.
Man, I love that sometimes.
And I love listening to depressing music when I'm depressed.
I like things that help me feel it more.
And I read a bunch of studies that say
that's the last thing you should fucking do
is listen to sad music.
You feel like it'll help you express it or get it out.
That's not, put on a happy mix on,
even though that music is so obnoxious
when you're feeling sad,
but it's pretty much everything you are,
it feels like the easy thing to do
when you're depressed, don't do,
or feels like the right thing, go against that
because it's the disease talking, it's not you.
Yep. Yeah.
I, you know, I, my son's had a real hard year and that's a lot I've been just
trying to tell him, just do something, you know, go watch a funny movie.
And I, I'm, and you know, and like my daughter, cause this is just, this
year has just been crazy.
Just like unlike, and like, you don't even, I don't even know exactly how
to parent in this shit.
Cause it's like, it's, you know,
it's like another planet or something.
But just there's lots of like, it's a, it's,
it can be such a blessing to just distract yourself,
just to get yourself, your focus away from yourself.
And, and yeah, go for a walk, change the scenery, you know,
go buy a popsicle, you know,
just get up and do something.
Get out of yourself.
I mean, the thing that I never wanna do,
but it always helps is calling a friend
who you think might need to talk to someone
about their problems.
Don't call to talk about yours,
but call someone and be, you know,
as they say in like programs, be of service.
Because when you help someone else
and listen to someone else's problems,
you get out of that wallowing thing.
So it really takes you out of it.
And I've been journaling recently.
I have all these things that are,
because you wanna stop it in its tracks
because you start to feel it coming on.
And I'm like, I gotta, like, it's like a migraine almost.
If I pop an excedrin when I feel it coming on,
I can beat a migraine.
But if I just go, no, let's get into it later, then I can't get out of it. And so it's like a migraine almost. If I pop an excedrin, when I feel it coming on, I can beat a migraine. But if I just go, no, I'll get into it later,
then I can't get out of it.
And so it's like this quicksand.
So I do journal, I'll meditate,
I'll try to like learn a song on guitar or something,
like engage my brain in a different way.
But the last thing I ever want to do,
but the thing that works the best for me
is always like calling a friend that I'm like,
I need to call that person.
They're probably struggling and ask about their life.
But you're just like, I don't want to,
but that's usually the best way.
Yeah, that is, yeah, absolutely.
It provides perspective too,
but it doesn't entail for your own self-preservation,
you have to keep a healthy stock of crazy people
in your life.
You have to keep like a lot of fucked up people around.
You do, and gratefully depressed people tend to attract those people. I mean, and it's
certainly in our business. We are, it's just, I mean, I, I've, I've seen you post about
depression before and so I knew about your history with it and we've talked about it
before, but even if I didn't, I could just assume that you get depressed.
I mean, it's like, it's hard to come across someone
who doesn't, who is as funny as you are.
And, but I was, that's what I was gonna say
about your son is very, and your daughter are very lucky
to have a parent who knows that, knows depression,
because I have parents who have never dealt with depression.
They have no concept of what it is
and they can't even imagine that their daughter
who gets to have the life that I have,
which seems like a dream life that I was drawn to
because I wanted their attention
because they watch TV more than us,
that I could ever feel sad.
I mean, you're doing Andy Richter's podcast.
Like, how could you be sad today?
Like that kind of thing.
Like that's how they would justify it.
And it's so hard to articulate,
especially when you're in high school
dealing with these feelings
and have no concept of where they come from.
And they couldn't relate at all.
That was really hard.
It's not easy to talk to when you're a depressed parent,
you know, a parent that's had depression
and talk to your kid who is getting depression.
Cause hey, you just, you know,
there's that feeling of like, oh fuck,
here's your legacy kids,
my broken brain.
But also there's a lot of it, having gone through it, in terms of like we talked about,
like something I always say is you can't control your feelings, but you can control your actions.
So you can do things.
And then it becomes, well, how can I do that?
How can I, you know, I'm sitting here saying,
I can't do anything.
How do I do that?
And the answer as me, like the wise depressed one,
been depressed for years is, you just do it.
Like there's no magic.
There's no method.
There's no crystal.
There's no mantra. There's no crystal, there's no mantra.
There's just, you just gotta do it.
You just gotta, you gotta do it.
I think about the, there's some show I watched
a really long time ago about someone who was probably
like, you know, bedridden, just like a thousand pound person.
It was some one of those documentaries
and they were beginning a weight loss journey.
And you look at someone like that,
who can't even get out of bed,
can't wash themselves and you go, they're going to lose,
they're going to work out.
And it just started with him going like this with his hands, just back and forth.
And that to me is what just do something,
just do whatever this hand flick is to you.
And maybe that's taking a shower. Maybe that's making your bed.
Maybe that's getting out of bed for five minutes. I mean,
sometimes I'm depressed and I just go downstairs, I eat breakfast,
and then maybe I'll go back to bed.
But at least now that's a nap,
that isn't a continuation of the sleep
from the night before.
You've chopped it off.
Yes, I'm napping now.
Yeah, that's exactly it.
Like I said, I have been immobilized
and I have also taken steps out of it.
And what made me take steps out of it was just taking steps
out of it. Again, there's like, it's, it, you think,
especially when you're in the midst of it, you think, oh,
there's gotta be like, you know, like if I could electro shock
or there's a supplement I can take and so no no, it's just the behavior starts to affect the mood
and I'm on medication too.
But that took a call to the doctor
that took you going to the pharmacist.
I mean, the hurdles you have to jump through
to get medication as a depressed person or an anxious person,
it's almost criminal how hard it is to get meds when you're already someone who might struggle
with all of the things that stand in the way.
I get anxiety about insurance companies
and feeling like I'm doing something wrong.
I have to get through, it's a miracle I was even able
to go to doctors and ask for help.
And so those are steps in and of themselves,
even obtaining medication that you think might be
a quick fix,
which it never is unless they're ABD meds and then.
Yeah, I mean, yeah, exactly.
And it's a fix, but it's not the whole fix.
Like you can't just take a pill and have it go away.
You also gotta do the talking part.
Something that actually helps me is like
when I'm feeling good is just making plans,
booking things, saying yes to things that I will feel too
bad to get out of and to cancel.
And so just, cause that'll get you out of bed,
just feeling obligations and feeling deadlines.
So thank God for those.
I wouldn't do anything.
Like right now I'm in quarantine.
I'm in the Cayman Islands.
I'm hosting this show.
I've seen videos of you and Andrew.
Yeah, my room.
And yeah, yeah, that you guys,
and I've been wondering,
because it's like, you see the window and it's like,
wait a minute, where the fuck are you?
Stuck in this like little condo, but you can't leave.
Yep. Wow.
So when we got here, like nearly two weeks ago,
that's what they make you do here,
because on the Cayman Islands, they have no COVID.
And so they're, and they have no COVID
because they treat it so aggressively.
Like you land and it looked like a scene
from a pandemic movie and you go, oh my God,
this looks like a movie set.
And you're like, oh wait,
that's the way it's supposed to look.
Like they're supposed to,
they test you when you get off the plane.
And if you leave, if I leave and go beyond the caution tape,
which is on my front porch,
I will be fined thousands of dollars and have jail time.
I mean, there's consequences.
But then in two days, I'm free to wear no mask
and just be normal.
It means 2019 again.
So it's very exciting, but I have felt very unproductive.
I'm working on a show that has no real work for me yet
because I'm not like creating it.
So there's nothing for me to work on.
I'm not, I can't do standup every night.
It's great to be able to do these podcasts
because this will make me feel productive.
I don't know about you, but are you someone
that like has to be working and say like,
I to earn relaxation or like self care,
you have to like suffer first?
Not that this is suffering.
No, but I mean, I do, if I don't do anything for a while.
Well, and also too, for me, a huge difference is weed.
If I smoke weed, which I, you know-
Oh my God, I'm so glad you brought it up.
Beginning in my, the beginning of my youth,
weed was self-medicating.
It was like, I feel bad, smoke weed.
I feel better.
But you know, the problem is, is that you just,
you do that in a serial, you know,
repeating, repeating way, it becomes,
when I'm not high, I feel bad.
So, you know, then it becomes a crutch.
And even to this day now,
and especially with the availability of it,
it's, you know, it's not like it's killing me,
but I certainly, I don't get shit done
because I feel okay about sitting on the couch
and watching some Israeli cop show on Netflix
that no one told me about.
I just happened to stumble on.
And so it's, and know, I, and,
and I'm in a period now where I haven't been getting high
cause and throughout the, throughout the pandemic
that I've been off and on and off and on.
And I'll get to be where like, where I'm like,
you know what, I could, I could,
I deserve a little kickback.
And then it's, you know, two weeks later, it's like,
dude, you're telling my life story.
I'm so glad you brought it up
because I wasn't even gonna bring it up
because that is one of the things I beat myself.
It's embarrassing.
Exactly.
And it's something that you don't wanna be associated
with being a pothead because in an industry
where you're supposed to be on and your best self,
I never want that connotation,
even though there are very successful,
well-known potheads that like, you know,
and that's another thing that makes me confused.
How do they do that?
I know, well-
How do they do that?
I gotta say that for me, pot, it is the same thing.
I self-medicate with it and I used to feel so,
such like a drug addict.
Like I wouldn't even want to roll joints.
I just would smoke it out of a pipe.
Cause I'm like, I want it now.
Like I need it.
Like I felt like a crack head the way
that I would consume pot
because I'd need the instant fix.
I don't want to eat it.
I don't want to wait an hour and a half.
I need to feel good right now.
And so I, over the pandemic,
I mean, I was going in and out of the same thing
you're saying.
I'm going to have it as a treat after I get my work done,
enjoy the show and go to bed.
And then you wake up the next morning and you're like,
it might be fun to have this before I walk my dog and then it turns to,
you're high all day and then you start to feel high
when you're not high.
That's when it starts, you feel sort of feel weird.
And I have, I've come around now,
I've been off it now for almost two weeks
cause I couldn't bring it to the Cayman Islands
and I've been trying to get it.
I'm gonna be honest with you.
I've been trying to smuggle it in somehow.
Standing at the caution tape, yo ho, waving money.
That's exactly what I've been doing.
I'm just trying and I have to talk in code words
because I don't wanna get kicked off the show
by like getting busted or whatever.
But I need it to feel good.
Like I was smoking a lot before I came here
and it was just to regulate my mood
because my meds are not where I'm still messing
with my meds to figure out the perfect balance.
And I depend on it.
And I am very productive on weed.
Like, but here's the thing,
I'm productive in the short term.
It's like almost like I get hyper-focused
and I want to clean and I want to write
and I want to think of ideas and make plans.
And then over time, after you're smoking daily for two weeks, you start to be depressed because
of the weed and it becomes, and you don't even get that jolt anymore because you grow
such a quick tolerance to it.
And then you just, you need it to not feel wildly depressed.
And so I'm still struggling with it, but I am gentler to myself now about my weed habit.
Because I used to go, you're such a drug addict,
you're so weak, you can't not go with it for two days,
you're doing it in the morning.
And now I go, Nikki, you're in pain right now,
and you're in some sort of discomfort,
and you, poor you, and this is the only thing
you have to turn to, because the other things are too dangerous or not available.
And this is just what you need right now.
You're still a little girl who's sucking her thumb
except that it's a fucking, you know,
rubber pipe she got off of Amazon that doesn't break
when she drops it every five seconds.
And doesn't show up on the airport scanner either.
Yeah. And it's in the fact that it is so ubiquitous now and it's so acceptable.
I mean, when quitting drinking was hard enough with how that is just so accepted in our culture to get shit faced.
And I got over that. But now with weed being so like, it's good for you.
It's harder to quit than ever because you just, you know, you pull up Twitter and you see Seth Rogen being like, you know, Seth Rogen,
the prolific Seth Rogen talking about how he smokes all day.
And you're like, I'm him.
Or you see like Doug Benson, who's funnier high than not
and can totally function and it's,
and stays organized and all those things.
And it's like, well, we're, I'm not them.
But I also realized that weed is the lesser of many evils, many, many evils for me.
So if I need it, I need it and oh well.
["Can't You Tell My Love's A-Growin'?" by The Bachelorette plays.]
I was just talking to my sister about this the other day,
that there's going to be fallout of the availability of weed.
Because right now it seems it's not as bad as drinking and it's fun and look at it, you
know, all these different ways you can do it.
And there's, you know, and then there's also too, if you're like the type that likes to
nerd out on shit, you know, you can, there's fun strain names to remember and remember
like, you know, Satieb and Indica and hybrid and what they all, which I, you can, there's fun strain names to remember and remember like, you know, Satie and Indica and hybrid
and what they all, which I, you know.
No, they're all the same.
It's like the difference between red wines.
Like there really is no difference.
Blind taste test.
Do you know that if people that claim that like,
even like sommeliers don't know the difference
between when they're blindfolded,
a room temperature white wine
and a room temperature red wine,
that you can't tell the difference.
It's all bullshit.
All of this stuff is bullshit.
I mean, I do think they could do certain stuff with strains,
but if you're an addict,
which most people who are drawn to these things
or have addictive tendencies,
you don't give a fuck what kind it is.
It's just, it's all the same.
I just-
Well, and also from coming from a, you know,
when I, you know, you know,
there was never, what kind of weed do you want?
Like, can you get me some weed?
And it was just whatever you could get, you know?
Yeah, how did you consume it around your kids?
Because that's the new thing of like,
women are treating it now like wine.
Like it's time for mom's wine
and there's trying to be this culture around it
that it's fine to do in front of your kids, which I mean, I don't know.
Oh, I'd never, I would never, I mean,
I wouldn't do it in front of my kids.
Like when people started having kids of like my age group
started having kids and they would talk about getting high
because they're like, oh, but I'm never high around the kids.
And then I would secretly be like,
I'm high around my kids all the time
because when they're little, it's really fucking boring.
It's all repetition.
So for me, like when you're like, what up around my kids,
it was like, I gotta check something behind the garage,
go, you get high around the garage and then come back out.
And then it's just like, oh, you're gonna go up
and down that slide again, okay.
All right.
Well, the thing is, those parents might not be high
around their kids and good for them for that.
But the fact that they're waiting for their kids
to go to bed until they can have the thing they want
so bad and they're fixated on,
that makes them assholes to be around.
If you ever been around someone who wants to get drunk
and isn't, they're worse than when they're drinking.
Yeah, but I did feel, you know,
cause like there's the yin and yang of everything
and the downside I did feel getting high,
like, and you know, sneaking out to the garage
and getting high, I always, I've likened it.
It's like there's a sneeze guard on my life.
Like I'm with them and I'm, you know,
I'm home and we're doing, we're having dinner and then we're watching TV or something,
but I also am off on my own little stoned island. I also am separate and I am,
you know, there's a distance and that's not good. And that's something that like,
And that's not good. And that's something that like, you know, that was, that was, you know, the part of the sneaking around, even when I, you know, you could, I could legally buy weed.
Part of the sneaking around was, was me withholding myself from the rest of the people in my life. And it was this way to kind of have this secret little state
of I'm taking care of me, you know, like, you know,
I'm feeling good and I'm doing this
because life is hard.
I make money for these people, you know?
And, but what I really was doing was, well, yeah,
and staying and keeping an arm's length
and keeping a barrier between me and everybody else.
Yeah, and that's when you started hot boxing the minivan
on the way to school.
Bring them in.
No, you're right though.
I mean, it all comes back to the lying and the sneaking.
You start to have this little, you're like,
you feel like it's your own little thing
and you deserve this.
It's me time and like, it's like a bath or a soothing bath or something.
And it's not the same kind of self care
that we're supposed to have those feelings about.
It really is creating a divide between you.
And I mean, at least for me,
when I look back on times that it was really high
and around my family or something,
and we were sharing a memory about that,
there is like that, like you said,
like that film over it where it's like,
I kind of was there, but it almost is like,
I'm listening to them talk about,
like I wasn't there.
There's something off about it.
It's fuzzy.
And I'm not myself, but then there are times I have,
I get stoned and I feel like I'm more myself than ever.
I'm just kinder.
And that's the thing, my mom is fucking awesome
when she's high.
Like I told her once, I was like, you need this.
I think you have depression.
And I think that weed, it makes you so great to be around.
And I was encouraging her to do it for a while.
And now it's to the point, like when she's nice to me,
I just go, what did you have a half edible?
Like I can tell it in her voice right away.
And there's resentment there for me,
cause I'm like, oh, it's just for me,
for you to wanna call me and be interested in my life
or wanna tell me how proud of you you are,
you have to eat a half a cookie
that your dad's friend gave you last Christmas
that you've been hoarding, you know, like that's always then I start to resent it. So it's tricky.
Is that an ongoing thing with your folks that, you know, or is it kind of now part of the,
you know, it's like your shtick, you know, the routine among all of you?
routine among all of you?
I've had a long journey with my parents being like fun and partying a lot and my mom and them drinking
and then me stopping drinking
and wanting to be removed from them because of that
and resenting, like working on all these resentments
and therapy, I mean, therapy is pretty much you just go
and learn how your parents fucked you up
and then you learn to like hate them for it.
And then you learn to forgive them for it
and accept them as they are.
And it's a long process.
So I'm at that point,
and especially living with them this past year,
where I just, no matter what ways they fucked me up,
it has served me and I can see that now.
And they only, they're not evil.
They only meant well.
They actually, that I did my best shit.
I always was like, really, you did your best.
I don't really buy that, but they love me.
And that's, and I've accepted that the things
they're not great at is just a product
of how they were raised.
And I do get frustrated sometimes though, and once,
and I think I try to, with my stand up and going on podcasts
and being so honest as I want them to hear that and learn to be as honest with their
feelings as I am because I think it would free them from some of the things that they
struggle with that I you know, but you can't make your parents go to therapy or talk about
their feelings.
But I love them so much.
I really am grateful that yeah, I'm grateful that, yeah, I'm just,
in the end, I'm so thankful that for the parents I have,
they really are awesome and so fun.
And I just like did a reality show with them over pandemic.
I was living with my parents and I go, this is a reality show.
And that's all the shows I watch as reality is like,
that's what I like to watch.
And I feel like if I was a producer on it,
I could control it in a way where I wouldn't look like a housewife I like to watch. And I feel like if I was a producer on it, I could control it in a way where I wouldn't look
like a housewife, you know, like flipping tables.
So I was like, we should do this show.
So I pitched it and then, you know,
by the time I moved out is when they're ready to film it.
And I'm like, oh God, I gotta go back and do this.
So we just shot a pilot and they were hilarious.
And it was, and now I realize I did that
because they're gonna be gone someday.
And I want to look back and be able to see footage
of them and really remember them.
So it's, and I want to spend more time with them.
And have a reason to stay in St. Louis and not have to
have to go back to New York or LA.
It, you know, I've seen, I saw a lot of videos online
of you guys on Instagram, you know, throughout the pandemic
and that you can tell
that there's a lot of love there and that it's,
and like, I would watch, I watched them like, you know,
like excited or not, you know, I don't know,
I'm not excited, but you know,
I looked forward to your videos with your folks because
A, it's a weird situation, like to have to go back home, Jesus Christ, I would.
I know.
I don't know.
I think I'd sleep in the garage or something.
I know.
I just, but there did seem, there's just warmth and love
and you know, and you can see that they love you
and they are very proud of you.
Yeah, they are.
And you know, I.
I mean, they're assholes. They, yeah, they are so proud of you. Yeah, they are. And you know, I- I mean, they're assholes, but-
Yeah, they are so proud of me.
And they, like, I realize now, like,
I pursued this because of them.
Like my dad's sense of humor, you know,
my dad was the first one to turn me on to Conan
when I was fairly young and was like,
you gotta check out the show.
And I always tell this story,
but the first time I saw the show,
like the stuff you guys were doing,
I just felt finally like understood.
Like there's some, there's weirdos like me that laugh,
that think like people are doing this stuff.
You know, it just, it just, it blew my mind.
I just remember the moment in like that I saw the show
and then I became obsessed.
And so the things he exposed me to
shaped who I am comedically.
And I want their, I'm constantly trying to get their love
and attention and approval and they love famous people.
So like that and the reality show thing,
my mom loves reality.
And I hear Howard Stern talk about how he got into radio
because his dad only liked listening to the radio
and he wanted his dad's attention.
And I realized, oh, that's why I want a reality show.
My mom is much more interested
in the housewives personal lives than she is mine.
And it almost bothers me that my mom doesn't care
that I am not married yet and don't have kids.
Like they're totally fine with it.
And I would almost rather her be like,
so do you meet anyone?
Like there's never that push, which is, is, is actually a very nice thing.
Cause I don't feel any pressure. And also I want to say like, my parents are my,
like kids to me, like they inspire me to work because I want to be able to get
them into a really good nursing home someday. Like I'm not even joking. Like I
don't want to, I want them to be able to be taken care of
and not get, you know, festering bed sores.
So I take gigs.
And you sure, you sure as shit
don't wanna be sponge bathing them.
Exactly.
I don't wanna be, you know,
whenever they buy new shit in their house,
I go, I don't, I'm not going to like look at that
and go, Lauren, do you want this?
I'm going to hire someone to go through all of this shit.
Like I cleaned it out now,
the stuff you want me to keep
because I'm gonna have someone else do it.
And that's why I work hard is I want money
to be able to pay people to do the things I don't wanna do
cause I, you know, but that is, you know,
it's not about fame anymore.
It's really about being able to take care of my parents.
And until I have kids, I just,
and I was hearing you talk about to Zach Galifianakis and your podcast with him about
having kids and how it motivates you and gives you just a new reason for living.
And I really feel like living with my parents and seeing them getting more dependent on me and just,
you know, my eyesight and my ability to lift chairs.
It really was like, okay, I'm gonna, I gotta work harder.
I'm gonna accept this commercial that I don't wanna do
or I'm gonna go, you know, I gotta think,
I gotta think about how to earn more money
so I can afford that bunker
cause the world's ending soon, you know.
Well, I can understand, like for me, when I hear you say
like my mom's more interested in the housewives live you know? Well, I can, I can understand. Like for me, when I hear you say like,
my mom's more interested in the housewives life
than your life, it's because the housewives lives are easy.
Like to be worried about your life is like, that's real.
And that's like-
And she's not responsible for the countess having,
being bad with men.
Whereas maybe she has a role for me in that.
Yeah, and if the countess really fucks up,
it's like, it's good.
Whereas if you really fuck up, it's terrible.
It's painful. It's awful.
It's the end of her life in a way, you know?
You're so right.
I never even thought about that, honestly.
Yeah, and it's having kids,
I thought of it when you were talking about it earlier too, that, you know, the thing about your...
Well, when you were saying, you know, your parents, they did the best they can, like,
yeah, I see what you mean. Like, you got to aim high. You know, like, you got to,
you know, you can't just phone it in when you're a parent. But also, the fact is, it's terrifying.
You don't know what you're doing a lot of the time.
And I, you know, I had, it was, it wasn't until a couple of years ago that I admitted to my son,
because he's the oldest, everything we went through with you, you were the first one that
we went through that. Like you were the first kid that went to kindergarten. Yeah, yeah, exactly.
So it's kind of like, you know, and there's times even to this day
where I make choices as a parent and go,
oh my God, I hope this is the right choice.
Like, I hope I'm not making it worse
because, and if you're making it worse,
like if you make a choice
where you hire the wrong roofing guy,
your roof will leak and you'll get it fixed.
But if you fuck up with your kids,
Well, you know, Elizabeth's dad hired a roofing guy
who later kidnapped his daughter and took her to the woods.
So, the decision on a roofer could be,
can be a fraud one, but no, I know what you mean.
Like it's, I can't,
and that is why I don't think I can have kids.
I mean, the number one thing I always say about kids is like,
how can you sign up for something
that if something happens to them, your life is over?
Like you will not be able to recover from that.
I mean, that is the biggest risk and it's so could happen.
I mean, kids are stupid.
And there's so many ways now that they can be harmed.
You're signing yourself, you're taking such a risk.
And I think being a parent is honestly more brave
than anything I've, you know,
me getting up in front of people and talking or whatever.
Like those things, people are like, you're so brave.
You talked about your vagina on your Netflix special,
but loving something that much that could,
that something could happen and your life would be over
and you'd have to live, it's just, I think it's's the bravest thing and I don't think I could do it.
You don't I mean, I think generally it just becomes a thing where you know, you're with
somebody and that and it and it just kind of comes on you this feeling of like it's
time for us to have a child.
Yeah.
And I honestly don't think that you think about it that much until later.
Yeah.
Until you're ready to make it with someone.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it is like, you know what I mean?
There's plenty of people that have kids so low
and that's totally normal too, you know?
Yeah.
I, everyone got into chess after the Queen's Gambit. Everyone was like, oh, I'm buying,
I learned that I really want to get into chess. And I was like, I think I want to adopt an adult
child who can just take me on luxurious trips. I was like, that was the first time I was like,
oh, you can adopt like a 16 year old. Like that sounds great to me. Because at that point,
they're less likely to like, you know, walk into traffic and stuff like that. And so, yeah, there is a part of me that like wants to adopt
and I actually, when I was getting ready to talk to you,
I called my dad to be like, oh, you know,
he might ask about my ancestry,
where I've been, where I'm from.
And so I asked my dad about like my roots
and my dad was so excited to talk about all this stuff.
But he, I go, you know what?
The Glazer name is gonna end with us
because we have no males to keep the name going
unless I become a single mother.
So now I have even more incentive
because now the name could keep going possibly.
You know, it's the name thing.
I'm kinda like, eh.
I know, I know.
It's all just.
Aren't you a narcissist though?
Don't you kind of like your last name?
Isn't there a part of you that's like.
I like it.
Well, you know what?
Mine is a particular case too, because my parents divorced when I was four.
My mom remarried when I was nine.
And my stepfather adopted, legally adopted me and my brother.
So my name from age nine to 18 was Swanson. I was Andy Swanson.
And you went back to Richter.
I went back to Richter because my dad asked me to. And I, you know, and I changed it. I'm glad,
I mean, I'm glad I changed it back just because it is kind of the reset of what I was born with.
Yes.
But honestly, I don't, you know, like I think it's like
when I hear women change their last name, you know,
like when a woman nowadays changes her last name
to her husband's name, I think that's bizarre.
It's bizarre.
Like, why is that necessary?
I agree with you.
There's the extra added thing of like, well,
if you have kids, whose name do they have?
And I'm kind of like, I don't know if my kids,
they, you know, they want to change their last name
to Paltrow, they can if they want, you know?
I don't care.
It'd probably be better off.
I'm very resentful of the last name change
because especially any girl you went to grade school with
or even college with,
you can't find them anymore if they're married.
They're missing people.
You can't locate them on Facebook.
So every man that you were friends with back in the day,
every boy you can still find,
but every girl you just throw in the trash,
this identity that everyone knew you by.
And it's just so weird.
It just seems like something we should drop.
And so, yeah, okay, maybe I can get married
and just keep my name.
I probably would.
Or Courtney Cox, our kid.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Or I was looking to marry someone with the last name Beam
so I could be Glazer Beam or Pointer, Glazer Pointer.
That was always like my goal
is to like have a funny hyphenated name.
Glazer Donut would be good too.
Yeah, okay.
So if you know any, Greg Don donut, will you hook us up?
Glazer donut.
You know what?
This is supposed to be the three questions
and all we've done is just talk about life.
Yeah, I mean, where are you from?
You said St. Louis.
Where are you going?
You know, you got a reality show.
You might have a kid, you might not.
You might get married, you might not.
Sure.
I just want to be happy.
That's where I'm going.
That's what I want to find.
I want to find serenity.
And then, and what I've learned is-
You want to find some weed in the Caymans.
That's, you know, that's where you're going.
If you know anyone.
Yeah. And then what I've learned,
I think we definitely covered that.
Talk to yourself in third person.
If you want to get things done, be gentle to yourself.
And podcasts are like therapy.
Yeah.
I'm actually in the midst of starting a new podcast
that will be out, I believe, by the time that this airs.
So I have a new podcast called the Nikki Glaser podcast.
It's gonna be a daily podcast, Monday through Thursday.
And it's wherever you wanna find your podcast,
the Nikki Glaser podcast.
It's, yeah, and it's just like a day
we're gonna go through headlines and just quick fun.
I'm trying to like create a morning radio show vibe,
but a podcast version.
And you know, like-
That's a great idea.
And the more I'm in this business as a woman on screen, getting older,
I just like hair and makeup really stresses me out and looking a certain way.
So I just kind of came up with the idea a couple of years ago of like,
I'm going to start getting good at, at, at radio and podcasts,
because that you can really age into. So,
and my voice already sounds like a 65 year old woman who,
so it's, it's, it's so it's something I can grow old into.
So it's, yeah, this is, I'm very excited about it.
So daily, the Nikki Glaser podcast, Monday through Thursday,
wherever you get your podcasts.
Yeah, as I get older in this business, I feel like,
yeah, it wouldn't be so bad if people weren't looking at me.
Not true at all.
Well, Nikki, I love you.
I love you.
This was really fun.
And I'm glad your quarantine is coming to an end.
Me too. So soon.
Enjoy yourself. We'll get some shells braided into your hair.
Oh, yeah. For sure.
And I'm looking forward to having my first puff of marijuana after this two weeks.
My tolerance is so down.
It's going to be so fun.
And then in three days, it'll be real sad again.
But it was great to talk to you about all of this and thank you so much, Andy.
You're welcome.
Thank you.
And thank all of you out there for listening.
I will be back next week with more Three Questions. I've got a big, big love for you.
The Three Questions with Andy Richter is a Team Coco and Yer Wolf production.
It is produced by Lane Gerbig, engineered by Marina Pais, and talent produced by Galit
Zahayek.
The associate producer is Jen Samples, supervising producer Aaron Blayert, and executive producers
Adam Sachs and Jeff Ross at Team Coco and Colin Anderson and Cody Fisher at Year Wolf.
Make sure to rate and review the three questions with Andy Richter on Apple Podcasts.