What Now? with Trevor Noah - Orlando Bloom [VIDEO]

Episode Date: April 18, 2024

Trevor sits down in the studio with actor, adventurer, and producer Orlando Bloom. Orlando takes Trevor behind the scenes of his thrill-seeking new documentary series, To the Edge, and does his best t...o convince Trevor to go skydiving with him. The two also look back on Orlando’s early career, getting his big break when cast on Lord of the Rings just days before finishing drama school, how one terrifying fall from a balcony changed his life, and how Katy Perry, Orlando’s partner, inspires him to slow down and build “the sandcastle of life.” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 If there was a zombie apocalypse and we had essentially just tools on the ground, I would hope to be near you. I don't know if that would be... No, no, no, you're pretty nice with it. I've seen you with almost every weapon. You're pretty nice with it. Well, thank you. I appreciate that. I'll take it. You could kill a few zombies. You know, it is called acting as well. You know, this is my camera's ass. No, no, no, no, no, no, no. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, the classics like Blackjack, Roulette, Slots, and Baccarat. Or take a spin on exclusive games you won't find anywhere else.
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Starting point is 00:01:42 to couples and individuals about love and work, about turning conflict into connection. More than ever, our relationships define the quality of our lives. So let's explore the myriad of relational challenges together. See you Monday. You know, one of the weirdest things about doing an introduction when somebody's sitting next to you is that you want to give an introduction that's as honest as possible, but also as
Starting point is 00:02:19 effusive as possible without making it seem like you're doing it to the... So just act like you're not here while I speak about you. I'm not here. Yeah, I'm chatting to Orlando Bloom today, who is arguably one of the most recognizable faces in the world because he has been, I mean, the lead in some of the biggest movies that have shaped our lives, I was thinking about the other day. And we're going to be chatting today on the podcast
Starting point is 00:02:44 because today he's a he's Embarking on a different journey where it's a it's a different type of trilogy as Epic I would say as Lord of the Rings and Pirates of the Caribbean only in this story He could actually die He doesn't spoil alert. He's here. This is the great news. Yeah. He's here. Close though. Came close. Yeah, it came close, but, but spoiler alert. He's here. So, uh, Orlando Bloom, welcome to the podcast.
Starting point is 00:03:10 It's great to see you. By the way, when'd you, when'd you cut the hair? I just finished working in London, um, on this, this movie and, um, we cut it for that. So would you cut your hair for the project? Yeah. Yeah. This is probably why I'd never get into acting. Well, you've got beautiful hair. You want to, you've got I'd never get into acting. Well, you've got beautiful hair.
Starting point is 00:03:26 You want to, you've got, you've got Samson. No, you've got beautiful hair. You've got, I like, I don't know if I would like the idea of me having to change my appearance for somebody else's also because it might be shit. Which is sometimes as you get like a little older, you go, Oh, that could work really well though, you need to embrace that shit look. No, what I mean is like, imagine, imagine making something that's shit. And I cut my hair for it.
Starting point is 00:03:49 Oh yeah, right. Oh, I've done so much of that. And you go, forget just looking shit. It's like the time that you put in. Yeah. I attack everything like 110%. I can tell. I can tell.
Starting point is 00:04:02 I'm like fully loaded, committed. So if it doesn't work, it's just a lot of egg on my face and a really bad hair do. What's the thing you regret doing the most to your body for a project? Well, I don't know the answer to that quite yet, but the thing that I just did that I did extreme for my body was a movie I just produced and starting called the cut, which, um, it's, it's a boxing movie, but kind of it focuses. The fight is not the fight. The fight is the battle to cut, lose the weight.
Starting point is 00:04:33 Cutting is cutting is terrible. Yeah, it's terrible. And I'm, I'm a boxer kind of having, I'm a boxer coming out of retirement to have a last moment of the title fight, but what I had to do was transform my body in a major way. And so I'm about, as I sit in front of you, I'm about 18 coming out of retirement to have a last moment at the title fight. But what I had to do was transform my body in a major way. And so I'm about, as I sit in front of you, I'm about 185. It's probably similar to you. What is that in kilograms?
Starting point is 00:04:51 I don't use fake numbers. I don't know. I don't work in kilograms. But do you work in stone? Yeah, I used to work in stone. But now I'm like, yeah, I don't understand stone either. Like the English, everything seems correct. And then it's like, what do you weigh?
Starting point is 00:05:04 Stone? Stone? I know. 2024. Don't you feel like it was probably because they just had a bag of stones? Yeah, but it feels like that. Back in the day, in the medieval times, they had a bag of stones. But it's weird for that to be now. Still.
Starting point is 00:05:14 Like literally in this day and age. Oh, there's a lot of things that are quite unusual about. You know, it's like, oh, the economy, the GDP, and you know, oh yeah, the new Tesla's, oh yeah, electricity. How many stones does he weigh? Yeah, how many stones does he weigh? Yeah, how many stones? So, but anyway, 185 pounds, I dropped to 152. 185 pounds.
Starting point is 00:05:33 35, 30-ish pounds. Okay, I think I know what that is. That's like 70 something, 87 kilograms. It was brutal. How long did that take you? I worked with a really great nutritionalist in Santa Monica. He basically tethered me. He sort of teared me down on food. And so I started just stripping out carbs and basically was running mostly keto.
Starting point is 00:05:54 If you've heard of that, you know, that kind of fat thing. And then I ended up just eating tuna and cucumber. Yeah. It's basically it. And not worth it. And then what I did to make the last step, I actually had this hot Epsom salt bath, which is a technique that boxers use. I dropped 10 pounds in one night.
Starting point is 00:06:13 I had 25 pounds of Epsom salt in a boiling hot bath up to my neck. What does it do exactly? I've heard about this, but I don't understand what it does. It's like osmosis of some sort, I think. Because I had to basically drink two liters of water afterwards. I went to bed and I woke up and I stepped on the stale and I'd been on the scale, like looking at my weight obsessively. So the movie really is about the complexities of, you know, the masculine as it looks at
Starting point is 00:06:39 weight loss, weight gain, all of those things. But yeah, it was brutal. Okay, but so here's, this is maybe the perfect segue to get into your new show, um, on Peacock. You, you, you've made this new show. Yeah. Maybe, maybe why is the most important question for me? I mean, yeah, like, like you, you already make movies.
Starting point is 00:07:02 Right. Okay. And you're living your life. You're a dad, you're a husband. How and why does Orlando Bloom decide to make a show that isn't like a cute, easy show, which is what I thought it was gonna be when I first heard of it.
Starting point is 00:07:18 They were like, oh, you're gonna be skydiving and you're gonna be free diving and you're gonna be climbing. I was like, oh, this is adorable. I want to see you do this. And then I watched it. I was like, this is, this is work. This is horrible. Yeah. Yeah. It was a lot. I sort of came up with this idea during COVID, but it was, I was just feeling all the fear, you know, around me all the time. You know, we were all, I think that was a really challenging time for the planet, for the world. I'm actually a, probably a wonderful time for the planet because we, nobody was doing anything, but for the, for, for us humans on the
Starting point is 00:07:48 planet, it was a super challenging time. I think we can all agree. And I actually have had this Buddhist practice since I'm 16. And I thought what I'd like to do is meet people like elders, like wise people and people who live a long time, because I think we're also afraid of dying because of this COVID disease and talk to them. But the, uh, but we didn't really get any bites on that. They were like, how about we just throw you out of a plane down to the bottom of the ocean and, and, you know, you can try climbing something. And I was like, yeah, that works with my sort of, uh, that works. That's the other thing that I would sort of probably, because you're, you're,
Starting point is 00:08:22 you're an adventure junkie. That's the other thing that I would sort of probably. Cause you're, you're a, you're an adventure junkie. You know, I'm, I'm definitely, um, I definitely enjoy the thrills and the adrenaline and the high octane moments in life. And I think part of that is probably down to being, you know, I was diagnosed dyslexic as a kid, but I'm also wasn't diagnosed ADD. There's loads of labels you can give people, but like, you know, I think like that definitely played into who I am.
Starting point is 00:08:48 And often, you know, when you're like, when I was a kid, when I was on stage, I was terrified as a, as a child performing on stage is where I learned to perform was just at school theaters and stuff, but I was never more focused. I was never more present. I was never more interesting than when I was absolutely shitting myself. You didn't have time. I can relate to this. As somebody who has ADHD, your brain doesn't have the luxury of being distracted because
Starting point is 00:09:17 you have to concentrate. It's life or death. Right. You know what I mean? There's no checking your texts. There's no meandering off. You are on his game time and, you know, meandering. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:25 If you're not in the moment, did you, did you feel that as a child? Like, were you, were you, were you cognizant of that as a child or is it something that you now understand in hindsight? Do you know, I only really in the last two years started to look at, and this is even before the show, I kind of realized that ADD was something that was definitely part of my life. When I actually had a conversation and I remember sitting down in an office the show, I kind of realized that ADD was something that was definitely part of my life. When I actually had a conversation and I remember sitting down in an office with somebody and
Starting point is 00:09:48 they gave me a list and I was like, I started going through the list. It was just like tick the boxes and I was like, and I just stopped ticking and I just looked and then I flipped over and I just looked and I was like, okay, I don't need to. It was you. Yeah. I was like, this is everything. And then I was like, I don't want to take a pharmaceutical. I'm English and I think America has, you know, got a lot of stuff that they do with pharmaceuticals. You're not wrong. I'll tell you that much.
Starting point is 00:10:12 So I was like, I don't want to take an, like, somebody's going to get me. You didn't want to take like a stimulant. I didn't want to take a stimulant. And I'd been raw dogging it for so long that I was like, listen, this is my character guys, you know, love me or leave me. But I think my partner was like, okay, you know, like that doesn't work for somebody who's got OCD. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:30 You know what I mean? Because what are some of the things you do? So you race motorbikes. I saw you race around the track. Yeah. What do you have a bike right now? I have more than one. What's your go to?
Starting point is 00:10:41 I saw the Ducati and the... Yeah, I'm not riding super fast. I've got an Aprilia that's for track. Oh, those are fun though. Yeah, it's your go to? I saw the Ducati in the... Yeah, I'm not riding super fast. I've got an Aprilia that's for track. Oh, those are fun though. Yeah, it's fast. Those are nice. I just love the way the engine, like it's such a specific vibration. Vibration, yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:54 I mean that whole feeling, I think that like motorcycles, you know, I started riding motorcycles when I was a kid. I really, you know, I had, I got my license when I was 16. I rode a Vespa around town, you know, for the cool kid, you know, then I, I got my, my license when I was 16, I rode a Vespa around town and, you know, if I was a cook and, you know, then I rode a motorbike in London. Which town is this? Canterbury. Happily on the wall.
Starting point is 00:11:11 I feel like London, London is the least. Yeah, like London, UK, everywhere in the UK is the least Vespa town I can think. Like I ride bicycles everywhere I go in the world. Right. Just to get around. Love that. London, I'm terrified. Yes. Yes.
Starting point is 00:11:26 There's more. I remember even seeing the stats once and it's like, it's one of the most dangerous places to ride bicycles in. It is. Cause your drivers in the UK, they have like a, they're almost angry at you for being on a bicycle and passing them in the traffic. Do you know what I mean? There's like a, yeah, it's like, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:44 It's true. It's true. You know? It's true. It's true. You're getting ahead of us. It's like a massive, it's like, it's sort of a race, which actually I've, I think I've, I inherited a bit of that in my driving style, which is like, like aggressive and it's, you're racing through the streets. I mean, I'm, people hate being in the car with me. They think I'm dangerous, but I think I'm super focused, but I am, it is like I'm racing
Starting point is 00:12:04 everybody. So it's like, I'm like, okay, I need to just take a chill pill. Because I think there's a lot to learn from that as well, right? A bit of grace. A bit of grace. I'm considering more. I'm fascinated by this. Did it, for those who know nothing about the show, you essentially choose three, I don't even know if you'd call them sports,
Starting point is 00:12:27 because they're all extreme. Yeah, I guess they're sports. They're extreme sports. I don't know. It just feels death defying to me, you know, because you have, do they call it wingsuit flying? Yeah, wingsuiting. Wingsuiting where you're basically like a giant squirrel. Yeah. You jump out of a plane and're basically like a giant squirrel. Yeah. You jump out of a plane and then you hope for the best. Yeah. And then you do diving. It feels like that.
Starting point is 00:12:49 But no free diving. Free diving. No tanks. No nothing. Yeah. Terrifying. Essentially like, yeah, you might just die coming back up to the surface. Feels like it.
Starting point is 00:12:57 Yeah. And then you have rock climbing. But like all of these. Kind of, yeah. Talk me through this moment. So you're a dad. Right. Right.
Starting point is 00:13:09 You, you are currently with someone. I am. When you say to them, Hey, you know what I'm going to go do? I'm going to go learn how to jump out of a plane and I'm going to do this in two weeks. I'm going to get my jumping license. Yeah. My skydiving license. You know, the one that normally takes months. Yeah. I'm going to do that in a week. Yeah. I'm going to get my jumping license. Yeah. My skydiving license. You know, the one that normally takes months.
Starting point is 00:13:25 Yeah. I'm going to do that in a week. Yeah. I'm going to get qualified. Yeah. And then I'm going to start wingsuiting. Which I don't think anyone done before. No, I don't think I don't.
Starting point is 00:13:32 I've never heard of anybody do this. Do you think I could get a, do you think I could get, somebody said to me the other day, maybe you could go for like one of those Guinness Book of Records for like the quickest to a wingsuit. You might actually have it. Because how many jumps did you do in one day, for instance? There's the, in the first episode, we just see you go jump for jump for jump for jump for jump. You might actually have it. Because how many jumps did you do in one day, for instance? In the first episode, we just see you go jump for jump for jump for jump for jump. How many do you think you did in one day?
Starting point is 00:13:50 Like the first day was at least five, I think. And then, you know, I mean, the time, the accelerated timeframe. I mean, the thing is, is that what's crazy about that is that every increment, everything that you change technically with the gear, where there's a different shoe, like we started with one shoe, it's a beginner shoe, then you change to another shoe, which has a totally different feeling under canopy, right? The canopy is the shoe. All of these different things come into play and you're like, and you're, and your, and
Starting point is 00:14:18 my brain is moving, trying to keep up with the things that I'm learning. And it's a pretty straightforward thing. When you jump out of a plane, one, to release your shoe. If that doesn't work, two, you release the shoe that didn't work. And three, you're like, I've forgotten what it is. It's one, one to release the shoes. Two to release. Exactly. One to release the shoe. It's pretty straightforward. You see, let me tell you now in the, in the calm space that we were recording a podcast, it's pretty simple. And I've forgotten it. And we're like, is me tell you now in the calm space that we were recording a podcast. It's pretty simple and I've forgotten it.
Starting point is 00:14:47 And we're like, is this why you need to do it? You need to be like- One out the back is the shoe. Okay. Two to release it if that didn't work for whatever reason. And then three is on the other side. Yeah. Three to open the second shoe. So you have two shoes.
Starting point is 00:14:59 If the first shoe doesn't open, it's like a one in a thousand chance that the shoot doesn't open. We're watching you jump on the seventh jump. I think if I remember correctly, I'm getting PTS, just thinking about it on the seventh jump, your shoot doesn't open or like opens and then it's like a, so they opened actually, which is not as insane as if it hadn't opened, which would have been item in thinking in in. So the protocol is one two doesn't work one two I'm going so I was like right baby here we go one two and then I was like one my the other shoe fell away and I was into free fall again. And then two, and then I felt the canopy came out and I was like, I was just like, oh.
Starting point is 00:15:53 You don't even realize how terrifying this is until you see the look on the face of the guy who was driving by. Can you believe we got that? You land by the side of the road and there's some good, like just some good Samaritan who drives up. Don't you love that? You saw his face. He was like, how are you alive? Cause all he saw was somebody falling out the sky, parachute not working, parachute snap. And then a parachute land in the field. Yeah. In that moment, did your life flash? Like people always talk about what happened in that moment to you. Is it fear?
Starting point is 00:16:25 Is it adrenaline? Is it practice? Is it... You know what's really interesting actually, Trevor, is I think what I learned most is that these kind of wild people who do these wild things, they are experts in this little area. Like, people have asked me if I've done any of these things subsequently, and the truth is I haven't. Not because I haven't wanted to, but because I think it's a lifestyle choice.
Starting point is 00:16:51 These people are experts. They were the family. They were the people that taught me how to navigate, and it's protocol. It's like everything you depend on is like, there's a protocol. You follow that. So long as you're good with your, your, your, your maker. Yeah. You know, otherwise.
Starting point is 00:17:10 You know what I found? That's actually one of the things I found like really fascinating about the show is there's this paradox. You know, when you think of extreme sports, you think of all the people who are doing everything to risk their lives. And the one thing I noticed when watching your show was these people have more discipline than we have when like driving on the highway. You know, the same way you'll go, I'm going to look at my phone.
Starting point is 00:17:34 Let me check a few texts. Or did I put my seatbelt? Eh, no. The people who do extreme sports are the most disciplined people because they, they acknowledge the fact that at any moment it can end and it ends. And then ironically in life, we're running around like people cross the street. Yeah, we cross the street.
Starting point is 00:17:53 We cross the street. We don't even pay attention. You know, do you think that changed something in you at any point? Like, did it make you, even if it lasted for a few weeks, was there, was there a part of you that was a little more meticulous now? Huge. I mean, it was, it was huge for me in that respect because it, it like, I like to think that when I, I'm, I overly prepare partly because of dyslexia or whatever else when I, when I'm preparing to go into a, into a movie or a character of some sort.
Starting point is 00:18:20 But this was like, okay, this is life stuff. This is, these are, these are tools for life and confidence. It gave me a certain sense of like, oh man, I did that. I can do this. And I think- Wait, even at this stage in your life? Yeah. Because I would assume that you feel accomplished all the time.
Starting point is 00:18:42 No. Not really. I mean, I feel like, I think, you know, so young to have had so much great good fortune and to come out of the gate, but not really knowing, you know, my ass from my elbow and just like, I mean, that's not true. I trained, I went to, I always do this to myself, but somehow, yeah, I think, you know, I think it's, I think it's only really getting interesting for me now in some ways in this, I don't know how you're, you're, you're, you're a few years younger than me, right? You're like, where you're like, I'm like 47. Oh, I just turned 40.
Starting point is 00:19:12 So there you go. Right. So it's like, yeah, so it's, but my, but my journey was, you know, as, as much as you, you went to school and you, and you studied, there's a strange curse I'll think about for people who experienced the pinnacle, and I mean the absolute pinnacle of success. Yeah. Like, think about it. You come out of drama school.
Starting point is 00:19:34 It was what, your last week? Two days before I finished, yeah. There you go. That I heard. But I mean, yeah. And then you get Lord of the Rings. Yeah, I mean, I've been auditioning for months, but yeah. Yeah, but this is what, but they give you the announcements.
Starting point is 00:19:43 No, they give you the announcements. So they go, all right, Lord of the Rings. Yeah, I mean, I've been auditioning for months, but yeah. Yeah, but this is what they give you. Still, crazy. No, they give you the announcement. So they go, all right, Lord of the Rings, it's on. Even at that point, people knew that this was going to be one of the biggest films ever made because it was based on one of the biggest books ever. It was massive, massive, massive, massive. The cost, the everything, the budgets. But in a strange way, it's almost like dreaming of being a mountain climber.
Starting point is 00:20:03 And then your first mountain is Everett and then you know then you go on to do Pirates of the Caribbean and it's like oh your second mountain is Kilimanjaro. I often wonder like how you keep yourself motivated or even stimulated when those are your first peaks. What's that been like in life? It's been a real, uh, it's been a, it's a, it's been a lot about evolving. I think, I think that there was a period where I was just, it just never ended. I was either on a, on a set or I was doing publicity for a movie. If you think that there were three rings.
Starting point is 00:20:40 So I was for three years, I was releasing a huge movie with Lord of the Rings and there were like three Hobbits, two of which I did did and then they were like Troy and King of all these giant I just hit the juggernaut of all these epic style movies, right? I think I had just gotten kind of like I'd lost a I love what I do and I think I I just love what I do You know, I had all of this amazing opportunity. And I think a little bit like that kind of Tolkien quote of like where Bilbo says he felt like a piece of toast that was spread a little thin.
Starting point is 00:21:15 I just had lost a sense of who I was and where I was. Cause with all of those huge movies came all of this attention that I didn't really know what to do with. And it was, you know, there was always people following me and, you know, I couldn't go anywhere in the world. And I like to be in the world. I like to go to places, you know, it's like, I like to be amongst people and I like to ask people, I'm curious about people. So I was suddenly like, you know, not able to do those things. That's why I picked up motorcycling again, actually, because I could actually get
Starting point is 00:21:45 to one place without being full. The helmet, right? You know, the helmet. Can I tell you, one of my favorite things when, when riding, my friends used to ask me this, they go like, why do you like riding so much? You know, when I used to ride back in the day and I said, one of my favorite things about riding a motorbike is you don't exist. It's just the helmet.
Starting point is 00:22:02 And I found it was one of the few instances where there literally was no race, there was no gender, there was no where you find, and all motorcyclists, we have like a camaraderie about us. We all know what's happening. We all know that we- We've got life in our hands every time we get on the bike. It's this interesting connection that you have, but that anonymity is also a special thing. Yeah. And I had a child with my ex now and I was very present for him. And I, I, I had, you know, a child with my, my ex now and, and I was very present for him. And then when we separated, I was sort of, I was living kind of like, you know, and not,
Starting point is 00:22:34 and not really working. And, and then I sort of went on a bit of a journey at that time. And I was, I did a lot of stuff with led Hamilton. I was living in Malibu and I did this crazy swim training with him. And then I was sort of like flying on motorcycles, on tracks, learning a few kind of, I was doing a lot of adrenaline things. I was really pushing my edges. Like trying to.
Starting point is 00:22:55 Do you think you were trying to feel? What do you, what do you think? I think I was trying to feel cause I was numb and I was probably depressed and didn't really know that I was depressed. Um, cause I had everything. I had a chain and everyone looked at me like I had everything. I had a chain, everything. And everyone looked at me like I had everything. And I was like, you know, but then it felt like, you know, I remember Alec Baldwin telling me on this, on this movie set, when we worked on Elizabeth town, he said, uh, they'll give you the keys to the executive bathroom.
Starting point is 00:23:20 Take the keys. I was like, what does that mean? It was like, if you don't, there's a key right behind you. I was like, what does that mean? It was like, if you don't, there's a key right behind you. I was like, okay bro. What does that mean? It means you can go into like the studio and you can go into the executive bathroom instead of going where everyone else goes to the bathroom. You know, that's a big deal. Anyway, I don't know, but I think the analogy is if you don't take the key, if you don't keep taking that, making the
Starting point is 00:23:40 most of that moment, there will be a bunch of guys who are ready to go and they're going to take that. Yeah, but can I tell you, can I tell you, I'm torn on this idea. I agree. I'm torn on this idea. I feel like one of the worst things we've done in the world today, and part of it is a byproduct of capitalism. Part of it is like the competitive nature of like, it exists more in America, but it's not like, it's not a quote unquote bad America thing. It just, it happens in many places. I think we threaten people who dare to take a break or try to find balance in their lives by telling them that if they do, there's other people who are going to take what they're
Starting point is 00:24:20 taking for granted when they're not taking it for granted. Do you know what I'm saying? That happens. But in this instance, I think even like an energy wise, like I think I had personally shut down. Energetically, I had closed shop. I was just like, I'm toast right now. And I energetically didn't know which way to go. That's a scary place to be. And it created in me, I think, a very deep sense of, you know, like, what was my next... All of these things that had been so mapped out. Yeah. And I didn't have the work-life balance, right? So, you know, that was part of the problem.
Starting point is 00:24:57 And I always think I was working, you know, that old adage, are you working to live or living to work kind of thing. Yeah, definitely. So at the time of doing the show as well, it's like, how do I just, how do I grow? How do I, I'm all about evolving, trying to grow, trying to be, you know, as you said, I had a pretty unique experience. So how do I stay kind of creatively involved? I mean, I basically now for the last few years, I've done movies that probably
Starting point is 00:25:22 there's considering what, how many people saw the first half of my career, virtually nobody's seen the second half as the second chapter. It's really, it's artisanal. It's like, but you know what I think I was missing? Before it got cast in Lord of the Rings, my agent in London had called me and said, the RSC is interested in you coming to work, coming to be in rep and work with the RSC. And I was like, well, hey, baby, I've landed. This is it. Because in England, it was like, you go to theater, maybe you get a bit of telly and then you go and do a movie. Right.
Starting point is 00:25:53 And I was like, well, let's go. What are we waiting for? Let's go. I'm ready. You know, pull me. Let's go. You know, but she never, she never let on a thing, by the way, about, you know, about what was happening with rings. And I was like, probably ADD still, just going out on all these auditions, which I get pulled out for. I think I auditioned on tape for Baz Luhrmann like five or six times for Moulin Rouge.
Starting point is 00:26:14 And I kind of just did all of these and I would go up for all sorts of auditions. And it was like, that's a skill as well. That's a muscle, right? To learn how to be in a room and audition. So I was like not thinking about anything. And then she gave me that call about rings. So I was like not thinking about anything and then she gave me that call about rings. So I was like, wait, what?
Starting point is 00:26:28 But I often think, I wonder what my life would have been like because in a way I missed this part of my career. So I went back and did Romeo and Juliet on Broadway. I went back and did a play on the West End. I went back twice a couple of times. I feel like in a way, the things that I've been doing in the last few years, I did this crazy movie called, they renamed it Retaliation, it was originally Romans. I got these crazy reviews, I got some of the best reviews in my career, actually. It was wild.
Starting point is 00:26:52 It was like, it was beautiful. Did that fill something? Literally, I think one of the reporters, just to say, said, Orlando Bloom must be really gutted right now, because he's just done some of his best work and nobody's going to see this. Great. Do you think, do you think it filled something in you that you didn't know you needed filled because filling? I think I'm filling.
Starting point is 00:27:15 I think it's a tank where it's like, look, I think, you know, we're all on this journey, right? We're all in our own fields and our own respective fields. We've all got goals that we maybe look to. And when you've, when you've had so many met at such a young age, then you're like, I need to, I kind of was going back to basics. I was like, okay, what, how am I going to, I need to kind of do this. I skipped a step.
Starting point is 00:27:34 Yeah. You know what I mean? I skipped the, skipped the theater. I skipped the small independent movies, but there was something I felt was missing. So I've sort of been building that part of my life and career because I think I, you know, hopefully I'll have, you know, it'll, it'll only kind of keep getting better is my home. You know what I mean? And I want to, I want to fill the gaps in the foundation that I felt when we were maybe missing. And even if that's true or not. So that's kind of what I've been doing.
Starting point is 00:27:59 And it's been, there's been a few roll of the dice and some of them have worked, some of them haven't, but you know, I love every time I stand on a set. I always think, where would I rather be? Unless it's with family and my kids or something, even I'm just like, it's just I'm in my happy place there. We're going to continue this conversation right after this short break. One of the more interesting parts of the show is learning that you essentially, did you break your back or did you, what did you do to it? Yeah, I fell three floors and I crushed T12.
Starting point is 00:28:39 I need to understand what happened because you, obviously you allude to it and then we see the pictures of you in the hospital and essentially there's a moment where doctors said hey you're never going to walk again. So explain to me what happened? Where were you? How do you fall three floors? Because they just say that in passing, he fell three floors. And I was like, where do you fall three floors? I don't know how that's possible. I was in my second year at drama school. I just finished like we'd had this five a side soccer match with the other drama schools. We'd gone to a pub. Did you wait? Did you win or lose any of the details?
Starting point is 00:29:07 Anytime there's a football match, I need to know the. I can't imagine that we won. We weren't, we weren't the winning side. Okay. Got it. Got it. Um, I probably blanked that out. Um, I'd gone to a pub with everyone afterwards, had a Sunday roast and maybe
Starting point is 00:29:20 one pint, not like I was a big drinker. I've never been a big drinker. And then I went over to these, these in Chepstow Village in Notting Hill and they just moved in, these two girlfriends of mine and they'd had this fourth floor apartment and the stairwell that went up to the flat had a landing below their fourth floor apartment and the door, they said, oh, we can't get that door open, but there's a roof terrace for us to use and we're going to put plants and stuff. And I was like, oh, it just needs to be kicked in from the outside. So anyway, I was like, you'll have to get that. Anyway, we walked into the apartment. I was
Starting point is 00:29:51 like, wow, this is such a great apartment. I looked at the window. This is the ADD impulsiveness. Yeah. This is 100% what that is. I'm seeing it now. I looked out the window. I was like, oh, wow. I looked to the south, I said, oh, wow, there's the roof terrace. And I kid you, the roof terrace is probably from this chair to where, you know, a meter and a half to the left. And I'm like, oh, I could just jump.
Starting point is 00:30:10 I could jump that. That's no problem. But then instead I saw this piece of metal running down the wall, which was not a drain pipe that you could hold onto. It was a piece of metal like coming out of the wall, like, like this. And I was like, oh, well, if I just pinch it like this, I'll grab hold of it like this, you've watched movies, shimmy across, right? Somehow I like this, I'll grab hold of it like this. You've watched movies, Jimmy. And I'll shimmy across. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:30:25 Right? Somehow I was like, I'll pull it and just pull across. And I got out of the window, held onto this thing. And of course there's nothing for my feet. And I just fell and I landed on a, from a floor-to-floor window on a first floor balcony that had, you know, in England, they have those. So the railings are going around with those like, you know, spearheads. With like the spikes.
Starting point is 00:30:43 The spearheads. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And the, uh, an old washing machine. And I landed like plumb between the middle of it. And I was like, I think out for a couple of minutes. My best friend who's actually in the show. Yeah, yeah, yeah. He was like, Gibbo, Gibbo.
Starting point is 00:30:55 I was like, and I was out and then I kind of remember coming around and I was like, uh, I think my first thought was who's going to play Orsino in Twelfth Night. Cause I was having a really good time playing Orsino. I was like, I'm not going to be doing that. And I was like, I can wiggle my toes, but nothing else. And I was obviously in shock and your body, I think when you, you know, the pain came later, but, but, but, um, but essentially London is amazing, but this is, this is why I'll pay taxes for the rest of my life, wherever I am.
Starting point is 00:31:23 But I'm like in London is because like, there was nobody in that first floor flat that I was on the balcony. They got, so they ended up getting a fireman, winching him in. He kicked open the doors to the somebody's house, destroying their doors, no doubt. They opened and got the special services in. So they called this the Royal Stammore Orthopaedic Hospital and they said they'd just got a hospital flu. So they were taking no more inpatients. There was like no more, but they were like, we have a 20 year old kid, may never walk again unless you take him. And they were like, so they took me at walking pace in an ambulance. My parents were in the car, a car behind following like with police escorts, took five hours to get from Paddington to North London to this other hospital so that I would be able to be seen and treated at this much better
Starting point is 00:32:09 hospital that could handle my case. And so when I got in, it was like, yeah, for four days they were like, yeah, yeah, that's... Were you present when they were saying, were they saying this to you? Yeah. I was very present. I was in a lot of pain. I basically had almost severed my spinal cord, but I hadn't quite. So I remember this sensation.
Starting point is 00:32:32 They had a cage over my legs because if I touched my legs, it was like razor blades coming up under the skin or like electricity. It was crazy. The nerves had gone. There was this wonderful nurse actually who she used to come in at night and move my legs, move my body because she was like, I don't even know where she came from. This is the NHS care stuff. Amazing. Amazing. So I'm in this hospital. I'm looking at the bed opposite me and there's a guy with a cage. One of these, they call
Starting point is 00:33:01 it a halo. It's a cage. Young 18 year old guy jumped into a lake, he used to be in the army, his parents were just weeping by his bed because he was never going to walk again. And there was a guy to my left who'd fallen off a ladder and broken his back and he was wearing this plastic cast and he turned to us and he looked at me we were chatting and I was just getting used to looking at like the ceilings and thinking, oh, I could get used to looking at ceilings I suppose. I mean, you know, they're kind of interesting. It's a different perspective, right? He said, he knocked on his chest and he goes, if you get one of these, mate, you're going to be good. And I was like,
Starting point is 00:33:29 he goes, this, this, this. So the surgeon came first, they were like, you're not walking in. They said, we're going to do an MRI because you're physically able to move you to the MRI. And they were like, hang in on by a thread. So we're going to try opening your spine. We will pin and plate above this one crushed vertebrae and the two below that are fractured, but we will put a structure around it, a titanium structure so that you can move. And then we'll see what happens. And basically I got this, finally got this plastic cast and I, you know, I mean I was 20 so admittedly youth was on my side and...
Starting point is 00:34:09 Yeah, but still, youth and then, you know, as you said, your maker slash your ancestors slash whatever you want to call it. Angels, whatever you want to call it, Amen, heart. That clearly changes how you see the world and it changes how you see life. When you are now climbing, it was interesting of all the sports you were participating in, the first time you looked uncomfortable to me was when you had to climb. So jumping out of an airplane, you were like, tell me the rules, how does this go? There's even a point where you come in really hot on one of your parachute landings, I thought you were going to break your legs and you were just like, haha, did you guys see that?
Starting point is 00:34:46 Did I scare you? Hahaha. And you just carry on. You really just carry on. The first time where it just felt like a little bit of your swag disappeared was when you had to climb. Yeah. There's two things I wanted to know about that is like one, what did you learn about
Starting point is 00:35:00 getting over your fears or your traumas in that experience and in that moment? And did you? And then the second one is, how did you, how did you put that much trust in people who you never really met, never spent any time with, but fundamentally had to believe had your best interests at heart. Yeah, overcoming the fear was, was a sort of, I've had this sort of unique trust in life since I'm very young and there's not really any rhyme or reason for it, but I just mentally went to that place, which I think you do when you're in, when it's game time, when you're like, this is it, I'm on. The most challenging thing, the fearful thing about that, by the way, was for me was with parts of my dyslexia and other things, it was like these knots, and
Starting point is 00:35:52 all this, these knots, and these, and when you're going to move these things, it's just like, the loop goes that way. And if you go the other way, then it's wrong. And it's like, and if you go the wrong way. So that was like, I just had to commit to the process and be as present to it as possible and trust that this was something that was meant for me and that I'm on this journey and I'm committing to it. So I'm going to go like I do 110%, you know, and I'm going to go into it. And the really hard part was the second part to your question, which was trusting and meeting Mo for the first time. And he was an adaptive climber who has climbed since
Starting point is 00:36:32 she's a child with one hand, born with one hand. So her spirit and her confidence and the twinkle in her eyes was really kind of leading me forward. And I was like, look, if she can do this, and she's telling me I can do this, I can do this. But I was, I had terrible potty mouth on that shot. They beeped me about a million times. Because I was so, I was, there were points where muscles in my back and in my body that I didn't even had. Yeah, everyone says when you climb, you learn parts of your body you never knew you had. And, you know, I knew if I fell, I was going to fall on a rope. So in some ways it didn't have the same apps, abject terror of standing on the edge of something. But the climbing was just, it was so challenging to overcome.
Starting point is 00:37:24 At one point I'm climbing this in this video bit and I completely, I've had, I So challenging to overcome. At one point, I'm climbing this in this video bit and I completely, I've had, I've chanted Ammurengue Cure since I was a kid and this woman goes, so what do you do? I breathe and she goes, well, because my head was so spinning. It was like, I chanted Ammurengue Cure and I'm like, oh, Ammurengue. And then suddenly I was like, okay, I'm doing it. I can do it. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:37:41 It's like my magic kind of cape, if you like. And so I'm like, just like chanting my way through, which is like basically just say, I'm grateful, I'm grateful, I'm grateful. I don't know if my read was correct, but when I was watching the show, I felt like I learned a lot more about you as a person. You reveal parts of yourself that are forcefully drawn out
Starting point is 00:38:02 by the severity of the situation. So when you're wingsuiting and you're skydiving, you're getting, you know, accredited in the space of a week, I see a side of you that is, like, you really push yourself. I couldn't help but wonder where you get that from. You have, like, such a, it's like, are you hard on yourself? Yeah. Are you? Yeah, probably. You know, I don't want to ever look back and think I didn't suck the marrow, right?
Starting point is 00:38:31 Because I feel like I would always take the harder path, right? Because I would get something from that, you know? And I think that that's what the show represented for me, taking the hardest path possible to confront this fear at a time where I'd felt so much fear. And it's just that, like for me, I'm, I'm super privileged, you know, I'm super blessed, I've had this insane life. What is it going to take for me to be out of that?
Starting point is 00:39:00 To it took this insanity. Hopefully the takeaway is let's step outside of whatever it is, is our comfort zone so that we can and, and, and trust and engage and be curious and learn and sort of try to that was, you know, that's what I'm, that's me, right. Trying to do that stuff. That's just, you know, and, and I think the hardness is like, it's, it's probably just an ancestral thing. And like, you know, I think partly having so many remarkable experiences so early. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:39:36 Like I, my whole life played out on giant movies that everyone watches, had watched. And I was just still learning, you know, like I look at some of my peers and, you know, like some of my friends who were in the business who started in the Disney club, you know what I mean? Yeah. So like acting was like second nature to them. They're like all directors now, all like wanting, you know, they're like, literally they started at 12 and they're in the business. So they, they have timing, they have comedy, they have dance, they have everything that they, I was like, I was doing school plays, you know,
Starting point is 00:40:02 playing the Pirates of Penzance and the police officer. I didn't even play the pirate. I played the fuck, you know, I played the character, you know, and I was like, I was doing school plays, you know, playing the Pirates of Penzance and the police officer. I didn't even play the pirate. I played the character, you know. And I was like, you know, I went to the National Youth Theatre and I didn't get the lead roles. I was like the spear carrier. And by the way, Chewetel, I'm not sure, Chewetel, who was like, he played Othello, right? And he was like, I was like on stage with him when he was doing it. He was like chewing the scenery.
Starting point is 00:40:21 Oh my God. Yes. He's just like chewing the scenery. We all looked up to him and he was just like crushing it as a, I've never seen an animal on stage like it as a kid where he's just dominating. And I'm like, so I'm like with my spear and the guy was like, just pipe down with the spear Orlando. You're not like, do you know what I mean? I'm like, you know, it was like that. So I'm learning everything, but like in these tiny bits of moments. So then I'm suddenly 18,
Starting point is 00:40:46 20 and I'm going off and I mean, it was the most amazing education. And thankfully Peter Jackson and Fran, his partner and that whole team in New Zealand were just like, and Ian McKell and in home, you know, Christopher Lee, Viggo Mortenson was my, was my mentor basically. He didn't even know it. I used to sit next to him and just like absorb his and that guy, there's a guy who's committed. There's a guy who knows, like there's a guy who's an artist. I think I felt like maybe it was like people would like to say and people probably think or said it was a layup. They don't know the work that went into it before.
Starting point is 00:41:17 So in a way, it's like they don't know the amount of auditions I went through. This makes a lot of sense. I left home at 16 to move to London on my own, to hustle like a crazy person, to get into drama school, fail the first time, second time, get in, then to get myself through drama school, to work on the weekends, folding clothes, to sell, you know, to get, you know what I mean? It's like- There's a beautiful phrase, a friend said it to me once.
Starting point is 00:41:41 She said, Anelie, she was actually on the podcast a few, a few episodes ago, um, for my birthday, but she was saying, she, I love this line. She said, um, she said overnight success does happen overnight, but the preparation leading up to that point takes a lifetime. And I think that's sort of what you're speaking to. I was, I was because it's zero to everything. I was, I was probably eight or six and I used to sit in the school gym and imagine that I was Superman flying in to get my girlfriend or something. It was like, I had like fantasies of playing like the full guy, right?
Starting point is 00:42:14 Like Lee majors. I used to watch that or, you know, like it was things like Dallas and LA law. I was very like, you know, watching TV of American, the American style, you know what I mean? Like it was all of that that that led to the, and I think breaking my back, I think if anything, I remember going back to drama school and I sat in this circle of friends and it was all like,
Starting point is 00:42:32 everybody had to speak about what they were gonna do and we all had to speak about how we saw the other person. So everybody said, when we come out of drama school, we talked about, and everybody went around and we were like, oh, this is what Maya does. She's this amazing Italian actress who I love and adore still. When we come out of drama school, you know, we talked about, and everybody went around and we were like, oh, this is what Maya does. She's this amazing Italian actress who I love and adore still. And you're sort of imbuing all of these people
Starting point is 00:42:51 with like your dead dreams. It was beautiful, I like this. It was really special. And people said wonderful things, even though I'd broken my back and they were like, and people who I didn't even think liked me, honestly. And they were saying these wonderful things about what they thought I was capable of. And it was as if I didn't know that. It's a very
Starting point is 00:43:07 weird thing. You mentioned this earlier, I think there's, there is a disconnect, which is probably why I keep going back to like, to building it out. You know what I mean? And I'm good with that. It's like, I work, I just work, you know, it's like, just keep showing up. I think Tom Hanks said that, right? It's like, and something will give. And it's like in a weird way. I like that though. So the other thing I learned was you, one of the parts of the show that's, I mean, in time, it probably takes no time in the show, but it has, I think some of the most gravitas in the show. It's the moments where you're talking to Katie. And it's beautiful because it showed me something about the two of you that is very difficult
Starting point is 00:43:49 for people to understand until you see it. And it's that you seem to be pursuing a life of purpose, a life of peace, and also strangely enough, like a life of normalcy. Which is strange because like Katy Perry, one of the biggest pop stars that's ever lived, Orlando Bloom, one of the biggest actors that's ever been, you know, like the movies, not really the blockbusters, you name it, trilogy after trilogy. But there's this strange thing where it seems like the two of you have found a connection
Starting point is 00:44:20 that exists in peace and normalcy. And I could be wrong. You could just be like, no, nope. No, don't you worry. I think one of the things that I fell in love with with Katie was like, I didn't really, she hates when I say this, so I have to word it carefully, but her music was everywhere, right? When I came up, it was just on every radio station,
Starting point is 00:44:39 but I wasn't conscious of, I wasn't what I was listening to, but I fell in love with this, with Catherine, this girl from Santa Barbara, you know, and by the way, parents, pastors, living on food stamps. We're not talking glamorous, Montecito, like, or Santa Barbara. It's the side of Santa Barbara no one knows. It's the side that no one knows. And we both understand, I think we both meet each other with understanding where we came from, what we worked to do, what we had to do to get to where we got to.
Starting point is 00:45:11 And she definitely demands that I evolve, right? And I feel I do the same for her. And that makes for fireworks, pardon the pun, but it also makes for a lot of fun and a lot of growth. And you know, I wouldn't change it for anything, even when sometimes it feels like, how do we do this? Because we've got these two giant careers and lives and hers is even, you know, there's even it's like a universe sometimes. But I think I just keep coming back to her and trying to like, hold her hand and walk it back to the sandpit and be like, yeah, but this is we're just going to build a sandcastle, you know, and she loves to do that, and she's a master at helping to do, create, help to keep building those moments.
Starting point is 00:46:10 So I try to hold a space big enough. I try to be big enough. I think even you could even say in the show, it was like me proving to myself that I was man enough, big enough, whatever, capable enough. Cause part of it was I learned to be capable in that show, in life, in a way that like, and it's like, see, I can do it.
Starting point is 00:46:29 Yeah. Mom, I can do it. Yeah. See this babe, I can do it. You know, if you thought I couldn't, I drive too fast, look at this. You know what I mean? But in a way, you know, that's me. That's my journey.
Starting point is 00:46:41 That's my journey of evolution to like constantly remind myself that, you know, of the things that, you know, cause I sometimes I forget, I mean, maybe. But it seems like she never forgets that. That's what I mean is so powerful. And I hope, I hope people watch the show, even if it's just for that moment and that reason, every time you do something amazing in the show and it's amazing, not just because you've done it, but because of the timeframe that you've done it in, you seem to be surprised and you seem grateful and you seem happy.
Starting point is 00:47:08 She seems like it was a confirmation of something she always believed about you. Do you know what I mean? This was a moment where, and she either says it or she intimates. She almost has a vibe of like, all right, now come home. Yeah, yeah, yeah, you jumped. You did it. I knew you were going to do it. Now come, you know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:47:22 And it really is, It really is stunning. Don't go anywhere. Cause we got more what now after this. I could talk to you forever about this, but you know, unfortunately time is time. Yeah, that's right. Some people say, are you going to come jump with me then? Jump where we'll jump out of a plane together. Let's do that. I'll get you's right. Some people say it doesn't exist. Are you going to come jump with me then, Trevor? Jump where? We'll jump out of a plane together.
Starting point is 00:47:46 Let's do that. I'll get you with Luke. You'll love it. Confront some of those fears. Have you done it before? Maybe you've done it before in my life. I haven't done it before. Let's do it.
Starting point is 00:47:54 Let's go jump out of a plane. So here's the thing, Orlando. I come from an African family and there's one thing I've promised myself and my family that they won't, all they'll need to do if they ever, God forbid, have to come to my funeral, all they'll have to do is cry. They won't have to ask questions. They won't have to justify why I'm there or how I'm there. They'll just get to cry and go, Trev, God willing, none of them will ever be coming to my funeral because they're older than me. What would be your fear then? What would be the one that you would do? No, no, all of them are my, but it's not like my, what I mean by it's not my fear is,
Starting point is 00:48:34 I don't have a fear of jumping out of a plane. Right. I just think- Even those who have a desire either. Exactly. So I think of it this way. I think in life, we have a limited amount of luck and we have a limited amount of this magical life force thing. I think I got that. That's my brain. Oh really? This is what happens. If you break your back and then you walk, I mean, after that,
Starting point is 00:48:56 you go like, I can probably do it again, you know? No, and then it's great. It's great for you. But yeah, I don't know. I look, I'm not saying I won't ever do it. Right. You know, I don't know. I look, I'm not saying I won't ever do it. Right. You know, I, I bungee jumped and yeah, well there you go. Now that's I've done. That's, that's an intense feeling. You, so it's safer than skydiving, but it is more terrifying. Yes, it is. It's terrifying. It is terrifying. I'd never want to do it again. I don't need to do it again. I love it. I hated it. I hate it. I hate it. I hated jumping. I hated waiting to jump. I hated falling in South Africa. Yeah the time it was the highest jump. It's just terrifying.
Starting point is 00:49:28 And then there's a moment where you're just hanging upside down. This is all that's happening. You're dangling, the blood's rushing to your head. And you think, why did I do this? And then it feels like your feet are slipping out. And then you get to the top and they're like, huh? How was that? I'm like, no. I'm good, thanks.
Starting point is 00:49:42 It felt like I jumped off a bridge. Do you know what I mean? There was nothing that changed in me. Off like I, because let me put it this way. I, I believe as Trevor, I can jump off a bridge if I need to. I believe this. So nothing changed after that. I didn't walk away from it going, you see, I can jump off a bridge. I knew I could, if I need to, I will jump off of a bridge.
Starting point is 00:50:03 But I'm not, I hope I don't need to. Before I let you go, I'll ask you the question, ask everyone who comes on, on the podcast and thank you again for joining me. You know, I appreciate the time, the conversation, you being candid. Love what you're doing here. What now? Like what, what is, what does Orlando seek to do now? Because again, you have sort of done the same thing that you did with Lord of the Rings and Pirates.
Starting point is 00:50:26 This is another trilogy, but this is a personal trilogy. Right, right, right. Where do you want to see yourself going from here? I think it's like three visions. If I can make good on this promise that I made to myself for my career, right? Yeah. Like, if I can make good on this promise, then I'll be able to use what I've been doing there to support my work, like UNICEF, which I've done
Starting point is 00:50:45 for like 20 years, which I find like to be the most rewarding thing in my life outside of my family. If I keep moving those three around. So it's just, it's a quite family, family, not in any specific order, but family. It's like if I, if I, my career's going, if I'm, if I keep just showing up for my career and it keeps working, then it gives me a greater platform to keep working on UNICEF, which is really something that I think they do amazing work. And then, you know, and then my family will be taken care of. And that's the most important thing to me.
Starting point is 00:51:12 Interesting. And so it's a trifecta that keeps going. It's a trifecta that just keeps working. It's like, okay, keep doing this, do this. And, you know, and then, then you're good. Do you know what I mean? And, and, you know, I think simplify, honestly. Like I'm, you know, I think I'm seven years
Starting point is 00:51:27 older than you and I think it's like, I've got, oh, I just need to, like, who wants to sift through this stuff when I'm gone? You know what I mean? Like, get rid of it. You know what I mean? Like, I'm like, but it's so valuable, is it? Does anyone really know?
Starting point is 00:51:41 But, you know, just think the over my attachment to things and just like, just simplify so that you can just, the one thing my mom did say to me is he who travels light travels far. I don't know where I missed that lesson because I keep saying it and I did not, I did not travel light, but I like to think I travel far and mostly in my head. So I'm just, you know, slowly preparing for death. Damn. I mean, that is both, you know, I recently meditated with some monks. And it's funny because, you know, you practice Buddhism. That is one of the fundamental principles
Starting point is 00:52:18 is understanding that it is all fleeting, understanding that it is all temporary, but having more appreciation for it because of that. It's like we keep, you know, some of us just keep focused on this life. It's like, like, let's, I'm thinking about the next life. You know what I mean? I'm like, not this life. Let me just, don't fuck it up. I've already been given some plate. I've been dealt some pretty nice hand. Yeah. Don't F it up, but like, let's build for the next one. So when you drop in next time, you've like, you've done enough to be able to go, okay, am I good here? Do you want me back? You know what I mean? In a way, you know what I mean? Like in my brain, I'm like, did I did I get flying colors last time around or enough to bring me back? You know what I mean? So time around or enough to bring me back, you know what I mean? So yeah, what seeds do you plant today to enjoy the forest tomorrow? Yeah, correct. And but even if a lifetimes, I always say, I used to say to Katie, you know, like we're doing lifetimes, baby, like you're here and we're doing lifetimes. It's not this one. So let's, you know, it's like we're doing life.
Starting point is 00:53:20 I think everything is missed. I think we're all interconnected. You know, so... Yeah, I like that. Thank you. Thank you for this lifetime, for this moment. And, uh, here's to the next one. Yeah. I'm glad you're alive. Thanks, dude. Appreciate you. We'll do this again, another time. We will, definitely.
Starting point is 00:53:36 Love it. Oh, Trevor, you're sweet, man. What Now with Trevor Noah is produced by Spotify Studios in partnership with Day Zero Productions and Fullwell 73. The show is executive produced by Trevor Noah, Ben Winston, Sanaz Yamin and Jodie Avigan. Our senior producer is Jess Hackl, Marina Henke is our producer. Music, mixing and mastering by Hannes Braun. Thank you so much for listening. Join me next Thursday for another episode of What Now?

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