We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Melissa McCarthy: Sex, Nuns & Ghosts
Episode Date: October 11, 20221. What Melissa’s parents said when she told them about her dream – and how those magic words set the course of Melissa’s life. 2. The green and red flags Melissa tells her kids to look for in a... relationship. 3. Why Melissa is a shark, and her brilliant strategy to “Run Around the Block” in almost any difficult situation. 4. Melissa’s and Abby’s experiences with ghosts. 5. How Melissa learned about sex – and the way she talks to her kids about it. About Melissa: Melissa McCarthy is an award-winning writer, producer, and actor. Her work includes Bridesmaids, Can You Ever Forgive Me?, Ghostbusters,The Heat; Identity Thief; This is 40, The Hangover Part III, The Starling, “Gilmore Girls”, and “Samantha Who?”. She won an Emmy Award and People’s Choice Award for her role in “Mike & Molly” as well as an Emmy for “Saturday Night Live”. Melissa and her husband Ben Falcone founded On the Day Productions and have produced Tammy, The Boss, Life of the Party, “Nobodies,” “Little Big Shots,” Superintelligence , Thunder Force, “God’s Favorite Idiot,” and Bob Ross: Happy Accidents, Betrayal & Greed. TW: @melissamccarthy IG: @melissamccarthy To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi Pod Squad, welcome back to We Can Do Hard Things. I can't. We have a treat in a half.
It's like 12 treats. Okay.
dozen treats.
All right.
We have boxes of dozen treats.
Yeah.
I've never been called a dozen treats.
Oh my god.
Wow.
Do you hear that voice?
Okay.
When we heard that this person agreed to be on our podcast, we had a text chain celebratory
moment.
Yeah.
We were so freaking excited.
Okay.
You all Melissa McCarthy. Oh my god. I'm so excited and I'm weirdly nervous to be here.
Say, you know why? Say, you're gonna really excited.
Melissa McCarthy is an award-winning writer, producer and actor. Her work includes bridesmaids. Can you ever forgive me? Ghostbusters, Gilmore Girls, and Samantha
Who? She won an Emmy Award and People's Choice Award for her role in Mike and Molly, as well
as an Emmy for Saturday Night Live. I'm laughing just thinking about all of her. Melissa and her
husband Ben Falcone, who works I did to talk about your relationship, is so beautiful, founded on the day productions and have produced Tammy, the boss, life of the party, and Bob Ross,
happy accidents, betrayal, and greed.
Melissa McCarthy, welcome to We Can Do Hard Things.
Wow.
What a, what a, we started off guys.
I must be old.
It's weird to hear a list of that
because they're all like,
they're such a part of us.
But when you hear it in a list,
you're like,
all right.
You take that.
Not bad ass.
Not bad ass.
Bad ass.
Amazing.
And I actually want to start with you
and I both went to Catholic schools.
Yes.
And I wanted to know how your experience was. You know, it would go down
and good and bad. I think, you know, I was raised Catholic. There were certain things
about it that I liked. I did find myself often getting kind of sent to the principal for
things that now is an adult, I think, back. And I was just had questions. Like, I was like, well, I remember one of the sisters saying,
I think it was like our first foray into world,
his world religions.
And I mean, I'm from a small farm town in Illinois.
So anything with world in it, I was like,
oh my, I'm exotic.
I'm wonderfully exotic.
And I just didn't know anything.
I mean, there was no, you know, there's no internet.
You could only, if you didn't experience it, you really didn't know much about it. And I was
little. It was probably in like third grade. And I remember her saying, talking about other religions
and then it was also kind of mentioned, you know, but of course, the best one is Catholicism.
And I said, well, why? I said, isn't the whole thing that maybe none of them are better?
And then the energy changed to the real. And I said, how do you know that you were right?
And she was like, because God would have told me. And I wasn't being a, so I really wasn't trying
to be a smart ass. I said, well, okay, so God would tell you if you're wrong, then why hasn't God told everyone else that
they're wrong if they are wrong?
And she just said, you should go to the principles of it.
I'm like, why don't the only nerd that actually had questions?
I'm like, regarding the reading.
And they just didn't want to talk about it.
And I get that you're questioning someone's basic fiber and what they've built their world on,
but I was so ready to be like,
well, let's kind of talk about it.
And I never liked the priest to none ratio.
I felt that none's got very subservient.
And I remember being in second grade,
being like, well, that's weird.
It's like almost bowing when he came in and I was like, hmm, that doesn't seem
right. I didn't know why I didn't like it, but I didn't like that. And so many of the lessons
that be kind love. There was so much goodness to it. I don't practice anymore. I don't think you
have to be inside a certain building to have a relationship with whatever you think of as God. And if you do find solace in that, I think it's great. I don't. I think it's
become a bit of a business, which I'm sure would really infuriate so many people, including
my family. I can't believe I just saw that. I'm in trouble.
Oh, yeah. Are the principles knocking Melissa?. I credit you though, because you actually asked the questions, you know, in eighth grade,
I was too scared.
The Catholic guilt is real.
It's real.
Yeah, I think because I was younger, I didn't even know yet to be like, who this isn't going
to go over well.
I didn't know it was a trick question.
Do you have any questions?
I mean, don't have any questions.
Right.
Other than saying, boy, all those other religions are wrong. I can always kind of say the wrong
thing. It's my talent. It's a beautiful thing. Something you said that I felt very attached
to. You said, I have a shark. I have to keep moving, keep moving. Like, you know how
sharks they stop moving? Yeah.
If they stop moving.
And I am like that too.
And I just wondered, is that your way of being
or do you ever worry, like, I do that,
the need to keep moving,
the need to keep moving is just an effort not to be still?
Yes, on both sides of the coin.
I think it is my natural tendencies.
I'm constantly moving and I do always say,
like I'm a shark, I have to be in motion,
be moving, doing something.
I'm like doing things.
And I do think I felt my day probably with too much.
Sometimes Ben is very calm and very steady and sometimes he's like,
it is okay to stop and just be in the room. Instead of me being like, I haven't lifted that chair
in a year and a half. What's under it? He's like, you've been working for six weeks. I'm like,
I'm going to roll the whole cat. Like you want the poor man walks in and like the couch is literally
like you want the poor man walks in and like the couch is literally turned upside down and then I'm down another wormhole of like should I put casters on this and he's like I don't
know what's going on. You've worked for six months, this is your first day off and like you have
taken apart furniture. But then I'm like well I have to because I want to make it nice for everybody.
I'm just constantly moving and then I'm trying, it's like something I wear.
I like it because I like huddering and fixing things
for people, but yeah, I mean, sometimes Ben's just like,
you know, I've come in and like holding up close to his back
because I like shopped for him.
He's like, you know, sometimes it may cross over.
It's too much.
Yeah.
Like I just, and like, hey, should we go
into your closet and like make outfits? He's like, no, we should not. We should not do that ever.
You too. Okay. So Abby and I, we've watched every movie of yours again.
So good. We've been hanging out with you and we've been reading a lot about you and Ben.
And it's just like you work together. you raise your curls and it's beautiful.
And the way you talk about each other is so beautiful and Abby, we read one interview,
I think Ben was talking about you and Abby looked at me and she goes, they remind me of Lesbeth.
First of all, thank you for the compliment. Yes, it's our ultimate compliment.
I'm always like, you're such a better human than I am. He's just literally like
there's no, there's no other side of Ben. He is exactly who he is. He's the weirdest person I
have ever met. And that's high praise. And he's just steady and like endlessly kind.
Like he takes him in. I mean, he always calls me
fists of justice.
Like I immediately, I respond like the second something
happens, I'm like, oh my God, what are we gonna do?
Oh, this is outrageous.
It bends like we could sit and think about it.
And then probably there is a way to help.
But I'm already like, my car is in reverse.
I'm out the driveway just like flipping off the universe
and he's like, you wanna come on back
because there's actually a hotline
and we could help it.
I'm like, okay, he's like, where were you driving to?
I'm like, I don't know, but I figured we need to activate.
There were two physicists that were like,
there's the mosquito and the,
what is it?
Not the barge, but it's like a submarine.
And one is just spinning and turning, spinning and turning.
And the other just slowly goes
and they work together as a team for years.
And they said, both were great
but they could never have come up with all the things
they did without that weird dynamic.
And there's something to that.
Like he is, I mean, you couldn't take two of me.
That seems terrible.
That I did.
And probably two of Ben wouldn't be a good balance either.
But yeah, he's just the greatest.
I feel like I can't even imagine a minute of my life
without him.
Like not a minute.
And I love that he shows himself in certain moments of movies that you star in.
And I actually have become accustomed to waiting for it.
And we pause it.
I'm like this.
They're like, I will.
Kids, kids, that's Melissa's actual husband.
And I like, we know that.
We do that every time.
I mean, that's my thing.
I know I always try to get him to do bigger parts in it,
but when he's directing, as he usually does with our stuff, he's like, yeah, that's my big. I know I always try to get him to do bigger parts in it, but when he's directing, as he usually does with our stuff,
he's like, yeah, that's a terrible idea.
So he only takes the littlest parts,
but I'm like, or he can take a bigger part.
And he's like, no, someone is supposed
to be steering the ship.
Yeah.
Right, right.
But I love it.
Your fists of justice.
I've been working into my lexicon lately, run around the
block, run around the block. Can you tell us about your skill?
Because I too am a shark, I too have fist of justice. I'm like a
way less talented Melissa McCarthy. That is not true at all.
My God, I often say, because I'm often failing at it, I'm forever
trying to get better running around the block,
which does mean to me when something happens
that I don't immediately jump up.
I think because we do run our own things,
I take great responsibility with how people are treated.
And since I get to have that umbrella that I'm so grateful for,
I also take it really serious that if someone is being
like treated poorly, that I'm like, what?
Then I'm like, I have to go south, right now,
but I just lurch at everything,
because I think that just can't happen.
And if you can do something and often I feel lucky enough
that I am the one that can come and be like,
you can't do that, you can't talk to people like that
or you can't behave like that.
What I always wish is that I said, I would handle things so well if when I heard that, I
went, I'll be right back.
And if I could just actually run a block, then I would come back and be like, John, I need
a chat with you.
Instead, I go immediately to John and I'm like, what? Hey, you like it, people? Oh, yeah, yeah, I can't.
And like everything, everything does on like 22.
And then sometimes they do run around the block
and then sometimes they don't.
And I always come back in and especially people
that know me really well, they're like,
did you run around the block?
And I did not run around the block.
I thought about it and I didn't run around the block.
And then sometimes if I do run around
the block, I'm literally like, guys, I ran around like, and I'm, I'm, it's progress.
It's progress until I don't run around the block again.
So if that made any sense, it makes total sense.
Perfection.
And I love that waiting time though, that waiting time, if you really physically did it, I feel like it's like the car right home
where you finally are like, well now I know what I would have said or any audition. I'm amazing in my car.
Yeah, I'm the way home. Yes. Because you've just waited and calmed down. So it's what I'm always striving to be better at.
My confusion about that with myself is I understand this
of justice when I have forgotten to run around the block.
But what I don't understand about myself is when I am about to start
this of justice and I think I should run around the block and then I think,
nope.
It's like purposely overriding self even when you know that you're going to be
apologizing later. It's an interesting pattern.
It's the best in worse. It's like I'm glad that I'm not like,
I don't care. Yeah, I would hate that. I'm sure Ben and many
people that know me would like we could we could hit a
sweet middle. We could probably get a sweet metal middle
between these two things. But I'm not a great gray area person.
I'm working on it. It is a study that does not come naturally for me. I kind of sound like a monster.
No, the beauty of people like you and my wife and Amanda, because I'm a little bit more like Ben,
we need people like you. Because we are here and put on planet Earth to like support and
kind of keep peace and we're calm and cool and patient and collected.
But nothing would go right.
If you guys weren't around, I could not agree more.
I could not agree more with that analysis.
So you and Ben are raising two girls, they're two teenage girls.
Two, yeah.
Okay, same.
So what we have figured out, which is upsetting about parenting, is that in order to teach
them shit, you have to know what you think.
Parenting is, it almost demands that you figure out what you think about things
because they're going to ask you questions. Yeah, then you have to back it up. Yes.
Evidence. Yeah, go on or they did my parents who are wonderful, wonderful human beings. Like,
at that age, if you asked a question that was kind of complicated, they would be like,
don't worry about it. And we were done. And they said it lovingly, they're incredibly loving people,
but we just didn't delve into things.
And that's not the way of the world.
And which is great, but do you feel like you are clarifying
your thoughts more than you thought you would just
because you have to explain it?
Yes.
Our family is always having these ongoing conversations
about sex. And I just, I'm like, she usually takes over because she has less shame
and guilt and confusion. And then she didn't think she was straight or whole
like, it's just it's confusing for me. You're like, you're coming to me.
Yeah. I figured this out. I figured it out five years ago.
But I'm confused about everything. So I'm like, sex is good and beautiful,
except sometimes it's not. Just be open, except also be closed. How do you talk to your girls?
If your girls were asked, what's mom's philosophy about sex? What would they say?
First of all, I think they would be like, I'm so cringing right now.
I probably don't do enough. We've had the talk, which I did incredibly
awkwardly, because I knew I was going to come. I always thought I'm like, I'm going to
do it so early, because we're open about anything, and they can come to me for anything, but
there is still a Midwestern former Catholic person that's like, we're talking about sex.
The lightning bolt comes down.
And so I just very awkwardly, right before she went to school, the day they were going to talk about it at school,
I'm like, I'm certainly not having someone else initiate
that conversation with my child.
So we were literally in the backyard
picking up after the dog.
So it's really a wonderful time.
And I was like, what?
What did we do?
I was like, what happened? It wasn't late love, I jumped right in, and it wasn't late. And maybe just
just tell us, oh dear God, is this happening? And I was like,
there are some, you know, a different parts of bodies. So be it.
But at least I was like, just let me be awkward and get through it.
But I, I think they know, I think they know that as long as
whoever you're with is incredibly kind and respectful
and only lifts you up. We talk about that a lot, but whoever, whoever your love will be
and it may change, I'm like, you don't have to pick a side, you can pick a side,
you're a hex pick a side, you never know what's going to happen. I said, that person has to be incredibly happy when you succeed.
An incredibly supportive when you fail.
And if those are ever switched, I said, that's the biggest red flag on earth.
And nothing should make you feel uncomfortable.
Like, you know, we have it.
I probably, now, thank you.
Now I have to go, I have a better talk with them. No, it's have to go have a better talk with them. No, it's so good.
I've been skirting it.
No, it's so good.
I'm Jonathan M. Hevar.
I'm a podcast producer and someone who likes fancy things.
But I grew up working class.
My parents were immigrants with factory jobs.
And because of that, I think about class a lot.
And I wanna talk about it.
That's what we're doing on my new podcast, Classy.
And what did you all eat?
You know, trailer food.
And I was like, girl, we're not doing that anymore.
You'll hear from people who told me awkward embarrassing
and strangely intimate things about what class means to them.
She said you know for the house cleaner,
I hide the tag on the $6 bread.
And I just thought don't you think she knows
that you're wealthy?
You're hiding the tags from yourself.
Classy.
A new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios.
Available now, wherever you get your podcasts.
It's interesting because I came into the family six years ago,
so I'm not biological mom,
and so there was a little bit of like easier, easier transition in the conversation for me
to have.
And because of the way that we were brought up, most of it, I have completely counteracted
the Catholicism that lives inside of me.
I didn't ever get the sex talk.
I didn't ever get the sex talk. I didn't ever know get the sex talk. And then when we were in
Catholic school, it was all what is the word to not have to abstinence.
Absidence. Absidence.
It's you seem to it seemed to really stick in with you. No, well, I was I was a rebel from
the beginning, but it's just it's a very reliable strategy. So it's a shame you didn't.
It's so hard to have the conversations.
It is.
They know so much like, Mike,
there's so much more aware of the world.
And there's such little activists.
I always say like, I don't think anyone will ever tread on them.
They just won't stand for it,
which is like, I don't know what,
how I could be more proud of them.
They're just so well-balanced
and they're not afraid to speak up if something, you know,
is really wrong.
Both of them are like, they will stand up and say,
like, this is not right.
This is not okay when it's really needed.
And I think I do have to talk to them more about all of that
to their, they'll be like, oh, geez.
But then I know the more you talk about it,
then they will come to you.
And they will actually talk to you about it.
And I, not a word was ever spoken.
Like with my parents, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, toward, like, it must have been like seventh or eighth grade. And we went to, there was a sleepover
at someone's house, I can't remember.
And out came some kind of sex book.
And I was like, oh my God, like I'd never seen anything.
Before I actually laid eyes on it,
people were like, somehow parents got brought up
and I said, well, I know my mom and dad don't have sex.
And they said, how do you, well, like, first of all,
I think they all knew, like, how dumb are you?
And I said, I know for a fact they can't have sex
because my dad cannot do middle splits.
Oh.
And I literally thought I was like, boom.
So they were like, how are you talking about middle, like middle splits? I was like,
I didn't know that there was an erection. So I thought, well, it points down from what I know.
And so the only way to have sex is I thought both participants had to do middle splits. And then
I guess kind of like, like, when, keep like, wedging and then somehow that's how a baby is formed.
I literally was like, might meet neither of my parents could you middle splits and just the room of these young girls were like, I don't know where to even begin with what you said.
Thank you for the gift of that. I really thought I was like, so and I not even realize you like you have a sister. Clearly they've had sex at least twice. But I was like, nope, they're not that flexible.
Yeah, but you were like, they must have been at some point.
That flexible.
Yeah, but I've been talking a lot about that, you know,
Mary and the immaculate conception,
which is another question that I was like,
don't we assume that you know,
there has to be such shame that she can only be good
if she got pregnant
by not having sex.
Like, even as a kid, I was like,
I don't know what sex is,
but I'm pretty sure it's part of having a baby
and they're like, no.
No.
It's not.
It's not.
It's not.
Yeah.
Here's the thing,
you don't have to have sex to have a baby.
I'm like, what a thing to be teaching.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The immaculate conception.
The full side of abstinence is.
Good news.
Yes.
Oh my goodness.
You can have a baby or not have a baby using abstinence.
Speaking of your parents, didn't you describe your sweet parents as having been carved from
Marzipan?
Yes.
I do, especially my mom.
My dad's feistier and he's always on the move.
He's 82.
He's unbelievable.
He remembers everything.
He moves 100 miles an hour.
He's constantly like, what do you need?
What do you want to do?
And I actually just went home and visited for a week.
So I was in Plainfield, Illinois.
And we were just sitting in the backyard.
And it's primarily just them being like,
oh, there goes that guy.
There goes that guy.
And it's another squirrel.
Uh-oh, look at those butts,
they're over there.
It's the same squirrel,
just in a different position of the yard.
And then my dad just walking on with a fly swatter outside
because he's gonna, he's gonna put an end to those flies.
I'm like, dad, if you just, we're not being bothered by them,
you're hunting them.
That feels unfair.
So they're just there, I mean, at any given point,
even when I remember when I called them,
because I thought I was gonna finish college in New York.
And after like, I don't even know if it had been 48 hours, I was like, so I'm not going to go back
to college.
I'm going to do stand up.
I was just waiting to hear the response.
My mom's like, well, okay, probably.
I was like, why?
I was like, do you have any thoughts on it?
Well, I find those, I find fashion very unreliable.
That was like, so you're encouraging me to go into the rock
steady world of standard comedy.
And they were like, well, and they said, well, why not you?
They're like, if you work hard, you're a hard worker. And if you work hard enough at it and get good at it, why not you?
And it kind of is like the basis for why I wasn't like,
kid from a farm just ain't go to like LA and say like,
I'm going to be an actor.
Like it's just the those that math equation doesn't add up.
I think unless you have parents that are like,
yeah, why not?
Of course you can.
Like you're a really hard worker.
Like it's their work ethic is so strong.
I think it's why I work so hard and I enjoy what they do.
Their work ethic is like something that's kind of remarkable.
That feels filtered into me, but also now there was never
a thought.
Anything, even if I couldn't do back hands for it, right? It's like, yes, you can.
You should not do it again.
So go ahead and do it.
I was like, okay.
And then I kicked him in the head violently, but this weakness remains.
Oh my God, because so many of us try to protect our kids from the world's rejection by rejecting
them.
We're afraid the world's going to say no to them, so we say no first.
You can't do it.
It won't work.
I know.
If I could physically wrap my children in bubble wrap, I would be like, I wanted to put
a chip in my kids.
And then that's awful.
And I was like, we have chips in our dogs.
I said, why can't I chip the kids?
He's like,
is this really the convert?
You want to go to the vet and have them chip our children?
And I was like,
can we do that?
He's like,
we're not going to have this conversation.
I was like,
we are in it.
We are in the conversation.
Because I think about,
I think it has something to do with human rights.
That's what he said.
I was like,
they're little,
they don't have rights yet. They don't, they don't own anything. They have rights. That's what he said. I was like, they're little. They don't
know anything. I don't mean that. They have human rights. So we're always talking on this
pad about generational things we're trying to break. So do you and Ben have those things
that you brought that you're trying to do differently
with your babes.
Yes, even with my parents so sweet, I went through a really like gothic phase,
which I loved, I think it's probably why I ended up
loving characters so much.
I was like, I don't wanna be me,
but like you put Robert Smith hair on a five foot Irish gal.
She's suddenly a little more interesting.
At least it was to myself.
I try to, whenever they're going through phases, I want to never, even if it is something
that's like kind of really funny or like this will be funny later, I try to always think
of it as what it means to them, that I'm wearing these frozen boots
for eight months straight.
Georgie went through a phase where she just had these little,
like, these little black boots,
like that Anowar and Frozen.
And I was just always like,
I, instead of being like, this is so cute,
like you're gonna remember this and kind of almost,
there's a mockingness to that. And instead, I tried to always be where to be like, this is so cute. Like, you're gonna remember this and kind of almost, there's a mockingness to that.
And instead, I tried to always be worried to be like,
those boots are incredible, because they made her feel good.
So I was like, don't diminish or make cutesy something
that for whatever reason she wanted those boots on
and they empowered her.
My mom lovingly, but would always like come in with the,
you know, the disposable camera and be like, you're gonna get such a kick out of the house. I'm not going to be able to
get out of the house.
I'm not going to be able to
get out of the house.
I'm not going to be able to
get out of the house.
I'm not going to be able to
get out of the house.
I'm not going to be able to
get out of the house.
I'm not going to be able to
get out of the house.
I'm not going to be able to
get out of the house.
I'm not going to be able to
get out of the house.
I'm not going to be able to
get out of the house.
I'm not going to be able to
get out of the house.
I'm not going to be able to get out of the house. I'm not going to be able to get out of the house. I'm not going to be like, that's great. Or yes, which
I'm a, you know, I'm always like, if I, if I would just have
ended the sentence after great.
Exactly. It's just this constant like project and people aren't
projects, are they?
No, and especially my oldest daughter, she truly is like, I don't
care what it's a shirt, I'm sure. Sometimes it's an amazing
outfit. And it's so, she's really has the heart of an artist.
They're both really creative.
And I get such a kick out of that.
And then when it's just like,
I'm in pajama bottoms and like what I slept in,
I'm like, oh, what about that Victorian skirt?
What about that with like a dark maro?
Is that fun?
And she's like, no, not today.
Like she's more bent.
And I'm always trying
to be like, to me, Rob's here isn't got it. And we just look at it. She's like, no, that's okay.
Like no malice. But I'm like, and I can always feel myself from like,
I just, if I could just again run around the block instead, I'm like, I'm just going to go get it.
Yeah. It's gonna be fun to look at. And then's like, don't do what you're doing.
get it. It's really fun to look at. And then's like, don't do it. You're doing me. Well, it makes me actually think of like the first thing you do when you get a new
role or a character is you go to the wig store.
Oh, my god. Why do you do that?
One, it's my super happy place. I think I'd love a wig shop because in makeup and
costume, it's all such a big part of it.
I think there's something so altering about a wig
that I find really magical,
because it's not just like, well, it's a different color.
It's a different texture.
It's something that you really can't be because I'm not that.
And I can put it on and I feel like this is as close
as I can truly get to like walking
in somebody else's shoes. It seems silly because it's such a superficial thing.
But it's like I can put on a wig and I'll try on like 40 wigs. And when I get the right one,
I'm like, oh, well, she loves grudges. And definitely, I just suddenly have all these very,
very weird specific things that I feel like I know
to be true in my heart, and I know it's all conjured.
But a wig, it's like, it's the fun of acting for me
because sometimes I, I'm like, I don't always
quite know what to do with myself as me.
But when I step into somebody else's shoes,
I feel like, well, I know how they feel about it.
Like, it's much more, I think, difficult
to sometimes state my own opinion,
not that I'm not that intenitive at all,
but sometimes I'm like, I don't know,
but I mean, I see the good and the bad and this and this,
but if I'm someone else, I'm like, they don't like it.
And here's 15 reasons why they don't like it.
I can really be, we're succinct with it.
I don't know what that says about me as me, but that's cool.
It's like your respect for your characters.
You have such a profound respect
for the characters that you play.
And it's wild thinking about you put on the wig and you're like,
now I know she loves grape juice. Now I know it's so multi-dimensional.
Every single character that you play.
I truly love people that walk to their, just their complete their own rhythm.
I find it like so beautiful to watch. I find it fascinating. I mean I used to always go
big lots was my favorite place to go because there used to be one on Western that was gigantic and
it reminded me of home. It was like an old dime store. It really was the place I went a couple
times a week and I would just walk around for an hour because you saw the most eclectic group of
people.
They would never all be in the same place.
And there was just always somebody in there that's like,
doing their own thing.
And she doesn't care.
And she's not causing trouble.
But it's like, I'm all in purple.
And I wear purple and everything on these purple.
And then I follow them in the car and they're car purple.
And then they'd say, stop following people.
It's getting me. I also think they're the people that like get the eye rolls or they get like,
they're so strange, they're off-putting. Not more people to be mean to people, I don't like that,
but when someone's just like, this is what it is. I get up, I put this armor on every day,
and if it's all purple, if I only wear plaid,
and I do these strange things,
I just love that there's still people out there
that can, like just own who they are,
and they don't have to be like,
do you, I mean, especially now,
with, I feel like social media.
It's like, did you like my vacation?
Do you like my holiday decorations? I'm like, what are we doing? Cares! Why are you
showing? And like, so when I see someone who's, I guess, traditionally a little more off,
I'm so enamored with those people that when I get to play them, they, they, I really do love them.
Like, I feel like I've gotten to know all these different women because of those roles,
and I love them for all their flaws and all their mistakes and their good and bad points. I just
love it. And is this why you also are obsessed with, and maybe you're not obsessed, okay? I am
projecting that because I share this with you, but I've read that you enjoy going to vintage stores and finding random portraits of people.
I love it. I'm obsessed. It's I love it. You love it too. My whole, my whole entrance
of my and people will say, who is that? And I'm like, I don't know, but look at that.
That's the whole point. I don't know. I don't know, but she loves grape juice.
Yeah, she loves grape juice. I also think like, why isn't this person with their family?
I always feel like I have to be like, somebody, oh my god, like I can't, I can't leave like
Bernice, you know, piled in a corner of some thrift store.
Right.
No, I bring Bernice home because Bernice now has friends
because there's 24 of them in my office.
And I'm like, oh, now all these people are together.
It's like, I just, I, Ben is very terrified of portraits.
Okay.
It's just like, they're haunting us.
Mm-hmm.
He just not like them at all.
And he's kind of made the,
now the kids are like no more portraits, it's weird.
And I was like, I think you're, I think you're lying.
Yeah, I think you like them.
And they're like, no, we're telling you we don't like them.
They have caught me like coming into the house.
They're like, you promised.
They're like, you promised.
And they're like, you promised.
I'm like, I never promised.
I'm gonna rescue each time I find one. I love them. It's something like what you do in your work. I'm like, I never promised. I'm going to rescue each time I find one. I love them.
It's something like what you do in your work. I'm just saying.
It's like these people that aren't being seen.
And then you're like, no, that person does not belong in the corner.
I'm going to bring that person up, put them right on the wall.
Yep. And if she's standing next to a horse,
marry proudly all the better. Yes.
That's exactly right.
I don't even remember what happened, but I remember reading an apology that you gave. It was a video.
And it was such a gorgeous example of how to apologize that I saved it.
And I showed it to our whole team.
And was just like, this is it.
This is correct. So what makes a good apology and why do 99% of the time
we all suck at it?
Well, I don't know if I was good at it.
I just thought, we literally were doing 21 days of kindness.
It was, we were, I think it was super fun.
No good deed goes unpunished.
And the list of, gonna have to apologize to that.
Yeah, one of the charities we picked,
which on paper and everything we've added,
looked tremendous.
And then literally the day we're like, here's the days
and you know, support this cause, blah, blah, blah.
We found out that like they were also doing all these
terrible things.
We're completely like homophobic.
The headline for what the charity was doing was one thing
and then as we like got deeper into it and I thought, my God,
I've just literally, I'm trying to raise money for this and it was like
trying to catch something in the air. I felt so bad about it.
I just felt terrible, but I also, I think if you, oh my God, all I do all I do is mess up. If you can't mess up and then go, oh my God, I screwed
up so badly. And then just say it all honestly, I missed it. We didn't know. Like we never
would have done this. So like, I'm, I think if it's just, it's sincere and I don't think
it has to be so, I'm sure I was rambling. That's another thing I try to teach the girls,
like you're gonna screw up constantly.
It's just part of being human.
You just have to really own it when you do.
And you have to own it quickly and you have to own it 200%.
And I did wonder, I was like,
I wonder if there's gonna be like fury about this
because it really was an organization
that would never, ever back by 5 billion miles. And it really people were just like, that's okay. We all
make mistakes. And it was, it was such a nice, I was so pleased by the response because I do worry
sometimes that the concept of one and done, I just, I don't know any humans that are able to do that
and fit into that world.
And if you really sincerely apologize and you mean it, it also takes, I think it takes
some of the pressure off of everybody.
Yes.
Because if it's okay to go, oh my God, I couldn't have done that worse if I tried.
I'm so sorry.
Instead of we're all supposed to be perfect and say the right things and use the right words
and bump a bump.
I'm like, I'm going to screw up 20 times a day for sure.
And so is everybody else.
So if you're just sincere about it, I certainly felt like I had screwed up by backing that.
But then I'm like, well, I can do is say I screwed up.
Yeah.
Oh, it's beautiful. say I screwed up. Yeah, I think it quickly and completely. I have found that people are so
unused to to hearing other people own anything completely that when they hear that they're
so amazed by it. They're so excited that somebody finally apologized without excuses and all the you know, you can hear a real apology instead of a fake one
I tell that's the difference the response from so many
People now I always think of like I always see people as a giant toddlers
That you know if they cover their eyes, they're like you can't see me. Yeah
Well, I can because you're in the room and they're like, no, you can't, like, with so much in the last,
especially for five years of just like, you know,
you don't have a black headband on.
Like, no, I'm literally wearing a black headband.
No, you're not.
Like, there's no thing everybody wants to be like,
if I just kind of duck and cover,
no one will notice what I did.
And so nobody either rises or falls.
It's just this weird cowering because no one wants to get called out.
I know I would be, I would love to hear a politician just be like, God, I screwed that up.
Yes.
I kind of screwed that up for us.
If I like, I think the world would just be so amazed and charmed by that, coming from people that
are in theories supposed to be helping people.
It's so good because wouldn't you just say owning it without the 14 asterisks that are
like, but here's what we did, but here's why it shouldn't have happened.
And here's why someone else is actually to blame, but I'm being big by apologizing.
People are then responding to your explanation.
Whereas if you just say, I blew it, and I'm sorry,
then people respond to you saying that
as opposed to inviting them to be like,
well, was my explanation sufficient?
Mm-hmm. The sincerity of it, we all have that little that as opposed to inviting them to be like, well, was my explanation sufficient?
The sincerity of it, we all have that little meter and you can tell when someone's bullshitting or not or doing it to be like, I know it wasn't exactly right, but these were our
motives. You can never trust that person again. There's just, there's a thing that's broken.
person again. There's just there's a there's a thing that's broken. So say if that's a repeated thing, like you just need to come out and don't don't couch it. You have to really throw your whole
self into like you screwed up. There's something really like from that. I think you can rebuild anything
on that basis. I agree. I agree. I read that you said this recently, I don't do the thing anymore of,
yeah, I don't like how that person treats people or treats me, but they're still in my circle.
We're not all going to be friends. And if you treat people like garbage, I don't care if you're
nice to me. I can see that and I can take them off the list a lot easier than I used to.
Can you operationalize that for us? What are the words? How do you draw a boundary with
someone? If there's somebody in your life who you just found out is an asshole?
Yeah, what do you do? How do you say it? Yeah, like is it internally being like that
person is done for me? Or is it externally do you have to actually do something? I think it depends on if it's someone who's like,
really in my heart, it's a conversation,
and is there a way through this?
Is this, are you in a bad place?
Is something happening?
And then if it is like, no, this is really how I feel.
Then I'm like, okay, then we part ways.
If it's a business thing, we do crazy checks
on everybody because we don't want to work with the person that is screaming at someone
in the room or being terrible. But if it's not in my heart circle, it's very easy no matter
what the offer is. I don't choose to work with people that have come out and said things or just treat people
abusively. It's no job is worth that to me. I'd rather miss out. It's hard when they're
people you love. I mean, it's really sticky when it's people in your family or in your tight
rings when all of a sudden you're like, oh, we may be completely in opposing positions on
some pretty huge things in life. That's something that I guess naïve, I thought I'd never have to
deal with, but it's, it comes up. And then I try to think about it in terms of as much as I wouldn't
want them to call me and say, I think everything you think is incorrect will you change?
Because I'd be like, I can't turn against my basic beliefs.
And so I do try to hold some space for people
that I think right now is not the time,
they're not able to maybe see a different way.
So I do kind of put them in a different category of, I know what I'm
dealing with, but if I stay the course, will I be there for them when they maybe are like,
oh, I hadn't thought about that. Especially with, I think, religion and politics and everything
right now gets so crazy and no one's going to change my opinion. I mean, if you're like,
well, I don't think
to be able to sing gender can be married. There's no version of a world where someone's
going to talk to me and I'm going to go, ah, you're right. I'm just trying to hold
the space for someone. So maybe at the right time, maybe I can be part of them going,
oh, you know, it's like, like just do no harm.
Mm-hmm.
Do you know, if you do know harm,
you don't want someone to tell you what to do.
They don't want to be told,
I try to hold space, but I back off a little.
I've done that with people that I'm still kind of,
I'm certainly rooting for them to come around
to a more open and loving way of seeing the world.
But I do worry about if I completely cut them out, again, not everybody, certain people
that maybe they don't have someone that will ever be the influence of being around my
kids might make them be like, you know, it's a tricky sticky.
There's no way to do it.
I think it's a person by person basis.
And it's messy and it's heartbreaking.
And I do try to run around the block a lot with that.
Yeah.
So I don't really step in it.
Okay, so I was so freaking excited
of hearing that I read what you said.
And you said, I believe in ghosts.
I had an experience with the ghost.
Me too, what was your experience?
What was a ghost?
What was yours?
Well, I was living in an apartment.
I was living in an apartment.
I saw a little girl in a dress, white dress.
And she lived there with me for the seven years
that I lived in my apartment.
Did you see her multiple times? Oh, yeah, like 20 times.
Oh my God.
I mean, Abby was also on a lot of drugs for a while.
That was during a pretty intense drinking, drugging.
But what was your experience?
Well, when my great-grandmother lived with us on the farm,
and when she passed away, I've had two different things.
When she passed away, I was just a straw.
We were very, very close.
And I was crying in my room.
And then all of a sudden, I just felt a really strong presence
and she was in my little bedroom.
And it was just a look.
And I just kind of knew everything was okay. And I was like,
oh, I'm just kind of went downstairs and my mom's like, are you feeling better? I'm like,
yeah, I, because I was upset about my great-grandmother passing away. And I was like, yeah, I think
grand, like great-grandmother's fine. She was just in my room. And I was like, oh, she's
just like, I'm not going to touch that topic. She's like, probably, she was like, I'm not gonna touch that topic.
She's like, probably.
And then I kind of said it casually,
and then I had another thing with my mom's mom.
I was in LA at the time, and she had passed away,
and I had just gotten the call and I was driving.
And I was crying really hard,
and my sweet dad had given me his car
that I had in LA. And I'd probably had it nine months, but I'd never gone in the glove compartment
like ever. Like I don't keep anything in there. I couldn't reach it. I'm too short from the driver's
side. And I, and but I was like, I need a, a Kleenex. And I was like, he probably had Kleenex in here. So I'm looking all over the first time I ever, I opened the little door,
you know, to the glove compartment and a picture.
And I swear I'm not lying.
This little picture flipped out and landed on the passenger seat facing up.
And it was a portrait of my grandmother who two minutes earlier, I had heard passed away
that I never, like, I didn't have it in there.
And my dad's like, I don't remember putting it
in the glove compartment, but I must have.
And it was just sitting there on the seat
and I had the same reaction.
I was like, oh, and I got the feeling
that she was like, for God's sake, you're driving.
Like, get it together.
I should have pulled over, but she was just there. And then I
had a weird thing in Colorado where like we I took the attic because I was like, ha, a bigger room
and then you got up there and you're like, this is haunted by a million souls. And like you would
hear things, it was in Boulder, Colorado, the feeling was so palpable that I would know which side,
like it was, you know, it was so strong
and I never saw anything,
but you would hear things or like you had to,
the only way to get into the kitchen door,
you had to like pull up the handle
and like hit it with your hip to get in.
And we were sitting in the living room once
and the door just like flew open and there was no wind
and it like slammed against the door. And so just we're even a friend that stayed there with me. He's like,
we are not alone in this room. Like at all. Do they scare you or do you feel like these
experience that it like make you feel safer? Especially with my two, my great and my my grandma,
those were like it was an incredibly calming feeling.
And it was, it was funny.
I've actually never thought about that.
Both times I was crying about them passing.
I kept out of it separately.
And they just appeared in different ways.
But it was the most calming thought of like, it's fine.
I'm fine.
Like, it's okay.
And then even in the weird, how's it we were renting in Boulder?
Like, I didn't feel it was menacing.
It was just so palpable that I was always like, well, I know, I know somebody is here,
but I didn't know anything about the history.
We were the first people that were not of the family till it was like a hundred-year-old
house.
And we were the first non-family members to have it.
So I'm like, I don't know.
But I was sleeping in an attic with somebody every night.
Ha-ha. So you're not half like anymore, but you do have a, you believe that there's more than
we can see here.
Like you're, what, how would you describe your spirituality?
I strongly, strongly believe that this is not it.
I just, in my head, I feel, I feel too much and I, oh, I got, I couldn't even, I couldn't even, I can't comprehend a world
where I won't see my grandmother and my great-grandmother are like, oh, God, I can't finish the sentence
or crying.
Like the thought of not, that it just ends.
I just think there's too much magic, whatever, whatever it is, you feel between people.
There's no way to quantify that that that just ends one day.
Like I just couldn't bear it.
I had my sister once said,
we went out ironically for a beer and then she said to me,
she's like, I'd like to talk about your salvation.
I was like, oh boy.
Okay.
This is a big one.
But she was worried and I said,
I, you know, I don't think any of us have the same thought
of whatever God is, whatever swirling cluster of magic, you know, is it?
I don't know what it is.
I don't think it's a person.
It's certainly I don't see it as a white dude with a great beard.
But I do think something's there.
I tell you God all the time.
But it's like in my car, or I'm just like thinking about things.
I said, it's not that I don't believe in the magic at all.
I just, I don't think it has, I don't think it has a specific address.
And I don't think it can be connected to anything hateful.
Yeah.
So if you're saying, you're wrong, you're wrong.
You can't do this.
We don't acknowledge that. To me, you know, I think of those old, really old cartoons where
it's like, you get to the pearly gates. I think so many people that are really religious.
I'm like, you're not going to get into that club. You're going to have to do it. Like,
I do feel like they're going to be like, boy, did you screw that up? Like just go back and be nice.
Like it's so simple. Yes. But I certainly don't, you know, I
think, I think maybe my sister thought I was like an atheist,
which I'm really not because I just, I don't know how that,
there's too much magic, I think. Yeah. Whatever that means.
It's the theme of what you told your daughters about just always finding someone that will lift them up and the way that your mom lifted you up when you said the audacious. I'm going to move and the way that your spirituality is about lifting up. It's a really beautiful.
It's a really beautiful theme of life. Theme of life.
Yeah.
Beautiful.
It's a constant fail and rejigger and try to do it better,
but it's certainly in Ben.
I mean, Ben's whole thing.
I mean, he's just like, if there's one thing,
if everybody was just like, is this the kindness,
not being walked over, but like, is the next thing I'm about to do,
the kindest version that I can do, or the kindest version of this moment that I can participate
in?
He's like, if everybody just followed that, we think about it all the time, or can you imagine
a world, like even 24 hours where everybody like, stop trying to like, one up, or I'm going
to get noticed for this terrible hate
shitty remark about someone.
I look forward to being back in style
or doing the right thing.
Also, seems interesting.
Like, that would be so cool.
Instead of like just being the biggest dirt bag
gets you noticed and like, oh, God.
Okay, we're about to wrap here.
Tragically for us. Oh my gosh. What's hard for you right now?
Raising two women in a country that I feel like women are under attack for I feel like
women are under attack for I feel like all of my gay friends and women and my God when they're both they're like I got it coming for me multiple ways. Sometimes
the girls ask me questions about just basic human rights and kindness and I
I am so overwhelmed that I don't have a good answer for them. I can't make it better.
I can't say this won't happen. We won't, it won't come to this. People just like to be loud. I'm like, we're in it.
I never thought I would just be kind of fearful to be in this country.
And I want to take it back. And I just want to look at people and be like,
I'm here to tell you, no one's trying to turn you. I can guarantee you, Mitch McConnell, no one
wants you. I don't want to force you to believe anything and you just shouldn't force me.
Just do know her and everybody should just be able to like play in the same sand lot. And I it's really hard. I mean, you guys know with, with
kids, it's like they want an answer to something that seems
insane, it seems like a insane scary movie that I don't want to
watch and we're living in it. And when there, there is no, I don't
have the words because the thoughts are in my head of how to
make it better or even justify it.
That's what scares me.
And I feel I believe there's more good than menace 100%.
It's just the hate is so much louder.
I always think of it as a visual of like you have, you're at an intersection.
There's one person that's just screaming like,
girl, got a die and I hate you.
But like just it's so aggressive and loud.
And then there's somebody else on the other corner.
It's like, you're doing a great job.
You're great.
You got a great dance.
Do you have another one today?
It's like there's no way to do that with the same volume.
So I'm always like, do we just have it?
Is it physically be like, don't go up against that. It's like one has a microphone and a huge amp. And then somebody else is like talking, the nice guy's like talking
into a milk bottle. Just like, I know the good outweighs the bat. I try to always, when I
feel scared, remember that. But it's so quiet.
I think we forget it's there. So I don't know. So I try to remember that, but it's a scary place
right now. Can we please just have a skit where Melissa McCarthy screaming on the side of the road
at people just you're doing great. I would do that all day long. I would just love it. I do yell things at people a bunch.
Yeah.
I was very, I was very, I'm a,
weirdly vocal, but it's in, I think it's probably off-putting to people,
because I'm always like, oh, say it.
Like, I think it's, say it.
So I do often roll down the window and I'm like,
I've been laughing that scar.
I'm scared.
And then they kind of do, if they do recognize me,
it's almost like, what?
So I do like, I try to do that more and more
because everybody's yelling something.
I love to throw like a loud, aggressive compliment.
Yes.
Well, first people are like, what's going on?
I'm like, you look so right now.
Yeah.
I really encourage it.
It's like, it's the best.
And then I feel better for doing it.
And you can set, it's that wonderful ripple effect
of like, I'm so glad I did it.
And then I bet that person's within the hour
is gonna see something nice to that person.
And then it's gonna keep ping-ponging.
And I want that ripple effect more.
So good.
All right, that's our next right thing, pod squad.
If we think something positive, we're gonna say something positive.
And that's going to be something.
See something.
See something.
See something.
See something.
Scream it.
Okay, babe, I'm actually, I'm just going to go with something.
Okay, scream it.
What you doing that around the house.
Melissa McCarthy, you are God damn dream.
Yeah.
Well, tell it to the mirror guys.
You're so awesome. And you know,
bridesmaids is our families like go to, although I would say the
Starlink is now well, that was the most special.
It's just crushed as most.
Go see the starlink if you haven't get it in your living room.
Thank you for this hour.
Maybe you guys can't.
This has been such a delight.
And I just love what you guys do.
And I love that every day, you're just, you're, you're making that ripple effect better.
And you're making it easier to talk about everything instead of just holding, holding
in what ways you down.
It's like, it's, it's really impactful what you do.
And I just, I can't tell you how much I appreciate it.
Thank you. We love your pod squad. We'll see you next time. Bye.
I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlisle. I walked through fire, I came out the other side
I chased, desire, I made sure I got once money
And I continue to believe
That I'm the one for me And because I mine, I walk the line
Cause we're adventurers in heartbreak some map
A final destination
Glad they stopped asking directions
Some places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do a heartache
I hit rock bottom, it felt like a brand new star I'm not the problem, sometimes things fall apart
And I continue to believe
The best people are free
And it took some time, but I'm finally fine
Cause we're adventurers and heartbreaks on man
A final destination with man
They stopped asking directions
So places they've never been We've stopped asking directions
So places they've never been
To be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring We can do a heartache
This world finished her rose and heart breaks on my way Michael lost part of your own game
That was a stop that's gained directions Stop asking directions Some places may have never been
And to be loved we need to be long
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do hard things
Yeah, we can do hard things
Yeah, we can do hard things, is produced in partnership with Cadence 13 Studios.
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