Apr 29, 2025 · 1:00:30

Paige DeSorbo and Hannah Berner on Good Hang with Amy Poehler

The Hang, in Short

Amy kicks things off by talking to Paige DeSorbo and Hannah Berner's moms, which gives her the chance to drop one of those perfect Amy observations: meeting someone's parents as you get older is either "now I get it, I understand why they're so great" or "now I get it why they're so f***ed up." Lenor and Kimberly gush about watching their daughters sell out two shows at Radio City Music Hall, though both admit they secretly doubted the second show would fill. Kimberly reveals the best part of Giggly Squad live shows is actually backstage, watching Hannah and Paige together before they even hit the stage. They talk about Hannah's messy Summer House exit (Lenor: "it wasn't a good fit") and how she's a coachable athlete who'd listen to producers and accidentally tank herself in the edit. The moms' questions for their daughters? "Are you pregnant?" and "Are you enjoying yourself?

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Full Transcript

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  1. 0:00

    Hi everyone. Welcome to another episode

  2. 0:01

    of Good Hang with me, Amy Per. Very

  3. 0:04

    excited about our guest today. Uh Paige

  4. 0:06

    Dorbo and Hannah Burner. Two great women

  5. 0:10

    who make up the podcast Giggly Squad.

  6. 0:13

    You may have uh listened to them on

  7. 0:14

    there. You may have seen them all over

  8. 0:16

    your social media. You might have met

  9. 0:17

    them in the Bravo uh reality show summer

  10. 0:22

    house, which uh is great. And one of

  11. 0:25

    them is still on it, and the other one

  12. 0:26

    is long gone. But we are going to talk

  13. 0:29

    about really fun things today. We're

  14. 0:30

    going to talk about standup comedy.

  15. 0:32

    We're going to talk about female

  16. 0:34

    friendship. We're going to talk about

  17. 0:36

    pimple patches. We're going to decide

  18. 0:38

    what is the best medication for anxiety.

  19. 0:41

    So, keep listening. Check it out. And we

  20. 0:43

    always want to start every episode with

  21. 0:45

    people that know our guests or is a fan

  22. 0:48

    of our guest or has an idea of what they

  23. 0:50

    think I should ask our guest. And who

  24. 0:52

    better to talk about two young wonderful

  25. 0:54

    women than the mothers of these

  26. 0:56

    wonderful women. So, we've got Lenor and

  27. 0:58

    Kimberly, Hannah and Paige's mothers

  28. 1:01

    joining us today who were so delightful,

  29. 1:04

    and I could have talked to them all day.

  30. 1:05

    So, let's hear what they have to say.

  31. 1:08

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  32. 1:10

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  47. 1:44

    [Music]

  48. 1:52

    I'm so thrilled you guys are talking to

  49. 1:54

    me today. Thank you so much. We're doing

  50. 1:56

    this we do this thing on on Good Hang

  51. 1:58

    where we check in with people who know

  52. 2:01

    the guest or who are fans of the guest

  53. 2:04

    or who want to tell me questions they

  54. 2:06

    think I should ask the guest. And um we

  55. 2:10

    thought there was no better people to

  56. 2:12

    talk about Paige and Hannah than their

  57. 2:13

    moms. I would say that's probably true.

  58. 2:17

    They played Radio City. What is it like

  59. 2:19

    to see your kids playing Radio City? I

  60. 2:21

    still don't believe it. No, it was

  61. 2:24

    unreal. It it really I I just we pinched

  62. 2:29

    ourselves. I'm like this can't be

  63. 2:31

    happening. I remember when they booked

  64. 2:32

    it, I just thought you're like I

  65. 2:36

    couldn't believe that was happening. And

  66. 2:38

    then they sold out the first show and

  67. 2:40

    added a second show and then I thought,

  68. 2:42

    "Oh no, they're never going to sell

  69. 2:43

    tickets to a second show." And then they

  70. 2:45

    sold out the second show and I thought,

  71. 2:47

    "What is happening?" Right. And we get

  72. 2:50

    nervous for them, but we don't tell

  73. 2:52

    them. Like when when Nora is exactly

  74. 2:54

    right when I'm like you're adding a

  75. 2:56

    second show for Radio City. What are you

  76. 2:58

    nuts? Like no way are you going to sell

  77. 3:00

    that out? What was it like being on

  78. 3:02

    tour, Kimberly? You went on tour with

  79. 3:04

    the girls. Where did you go? How long

  80. 3:06

    were you there? And what was it like? I

  81. 3:08

    love it. I mean, it's just, you know, I

  82. 3:10

    stay I don't go out on stage or

  83. 3:12

    anything. Our husbands have gone out on

  84. 3:14

    stage, but um I I just stay in the

  85. 3:17

    background and I'm just really there if

  86. 3:19

    she needs something, you know. Um, and

  87. 3:22

    it it's nice to be with the girls and I

  88. 3:24

    love watching I always say the best part

  89. 3:27

    of their show is when they're first

  90. 3:30

    together, whether it's in the green room

  91. 3:32

    or they're getting their hair and makeup

  92. 3:34

    done because when Hannah and Paige are

  93. 3:36

    together, it's like no one else exists

  94. 3:39

    and they're just it's a show. I like

  95. 3:41

    always say to my sister, "Oh, you have

  96. 3:43

    to come when they're getting their hair

  97. 3:44

    and makeup done because that's the best

  98. 3:46

    part, right, Lenor?" I mean, yes, the

  99. 3:49

    warm-up act. I think their bond is just

  100. 3:52

    incredible and so needed in today's

  101. 3:56

    environment. Really, I agree. I feel

  102. 3:58

    like their genuine friendship is really

  103. 4:00

    nice to be around. I think that's what

  104. 4:03

    you like so much about them is how

  105. 4:05

    genuine they are as people, but then

  106. 4:07

    their friendship and bond with each

  107. 4:08

    other is why you keep coming back. Yeah.

  108. 4:12

    you know, and and Lenor, what was it

  109. 4:15

    like to have your daughter be on reality

  110. 4:18

    TV?

  111. 4:25

    Honestly, I I don't know how Paige has

  112. 4:26

    hung in there so long. Yeah. Let's just

  113. 4:29

    say it wasn't a good fit, right? It was

  114. 4:32

    not a good fit for Hannah. Yeah.

  115. 4:34

    Stressful. You know, she jokes about

  116. 4:36

    how, you know, she's an athlete. She's

  117. 4:38

    very coachable. And so you put a

  118. 4:40

    producer in her ear and tells her, "Oh,

  119. 4:43

    you know, do this. It'll be great. Do

  120. 4:45

    that." And she's like, "Tell me how high

  121. 4:46

    to jump. I'll do it." And then she

  122. 4:48

    doesn't realize she's making a disaster

  123. 4:51

    for herself in the edit. To Hannah's

  124. 4:54

    credit, I always say this, if Paige went

  125. 4:56

    through what Hannah did on the reality

  126. 4:59

    part of it, Paige would have moved back

  127. 5:01

    home and you would have never seen her

  128. 5:04

    again. And and really I say that to

  129. 5:07

    Paige all the time like I am so

  130. 5:09

    impressed with Hannah's perseverance and

  131. 5:12

    I mean she blew everyone out of the

  132. 5:15

    water. You know I just having a Netflix

  133. 5:17

    special like come on who you know she's

  134. 5:20

    a fighter and she's very competitive so

  135. 5:22

    that you couldn't take away from her.

  136. 5:24

    I'm wondering if there's a question that

  137. 5:26

    either one of you think uh I should ask

  138. 5:28

    them. Anything you want to know? Doesn't

  139. 5:30

    have to be big or deep. It can be. Is

  140. 5:32

    there anything you think I should ask

  141. 5:34

    them today? Are you pregnant?

  142. 5:38

    I'm kidding.

  143. 5:40

    Okay, I'll start the podcast by asking

  144. 5:42

    them both that I think though a great

  145. 5:45

    question is like are they enjoying

  146. 5:48

    themselves,

  147. 5:49

    right? I I you know, what do they enjoy

  148. 5:53

    about it? Well, I I am so thankful that

  149. 5:56

    you guys gave time today. I think

  150. 5:58

    they're going to be thrilled that we got

  151. 6:00

    to talk today. I mean, now you're making

  152. 6:02

    me think I should always talk to

  153. 6:03

    everybody's mom because you really do

  154. 6:06

    get a sense. It really get a sense

  155. 6:08

    really fast. I'm sure you feel this way,

  156. 6:10

    too. When you meet somebody's parents,

  157. 6:13

    and the older you get when you meet

  158. 6:14

    somebody's parents, you're like, "Oh,

  159. 6:18

    now I get it." And it's either a now I

  160. 6:21

    get it, I understand why they're so

  161. 6:22

    great. Or sometimes it's a now I get it

  162. 6:25

    why they're so [ __ ] up. Well, right.

  163. 6:28

    Well, maybe you should have the dads on.

  164. 6:31

    No, it really means a lot that you both

  165. 6:33

    gave time and um I'm excited to talk to

  166. 6:36

    them. I think they're so great and the

  167. 6:38

    stuff that they've built together I

  168. 6:40

    think is a indication of the strength of

  169. 6:42

    female friendship. I think it's, you

  170. 6:44

    know, it's a natural resource, female

  171. 6:46

    friendship, and the way it drives the

  172. 6:48

    world. And um the way they talk about it

  173. 6:50

    and model it is really, really cool and

  174. 6:52

    special. So, thank you both. It was

  175. 6:54

    really nice to meet you both. Really? It

  176. 6:56

    was an honor. I never was this on my

  177. 6:59

    bingo card pages. Amy, I'm like, what?

  178. 7:03

    Huge fan, Amy. Huge. We love you, Amy.

  179. 7:06

    Oh, thanks, you guys. And you both sound

  180. 7:08

    exactly like your daughters and you look

  181. 7:10

    like they're older sisters. You do look

  182. 7:12

    Gen X all the way. Definitely our

  183. 7:14

    favorite.

  184. 7:16

    They're the mom giggly squad.

  185. 7:19

    Thank you so much. Thanks. Bye.

  186. 7:24

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    everyone.

  202. 8:02

    Hi Hannah and Paige. Hi Amy. It's so

  203. 8:06

    good to have you guys here. We're

  204. 8:07

    thumbming through your book, How to

  205. 8:09

    Giggle, which we're going to talk about.

  206. 8:10

    We have to say thumbming. That's a good

  207. 8:12

    We should bring that back. We're

  208. 8:12

    thumbming through it. Yeah, we're

  209. 8:14

    thumbming. You know, I I have so many

  210. 8:15

    things I want to talk to you about

  211. 8:16

    today. Um, I am huge fans of both of you

  212. 8:19

    and I love your podcast and I love your

  213. 8:22

    friendship and I love you individually

  214. 8:24

    and together as a unit. Oh my god. Thank

  215. 8:25

    you. Thank you. That's actually the only

  216. 8:27

    credit we need. Once I heard she listens

  217. 8:29

    to the pod, I was like, we can retire.

  218. 8:31

    We're done. We're What is there to do?

  219. 8:33

    It's only downhill from here. That's for

  220. 8:34

    sure. I'm here to tell you it is.

  221. 8:38

    We're going to talk about that about how

  222. 8:39

    life goes downhill. No, but um I talk to

  223. 8:42

    your moms and you know, so we have this

  224. 8:45

    thing on the on Good hang where we talk

  225. 8:47

    kind of about people behind their back

  226. 8:49

    in a good way.

  227. 8:51

    I I very different for us. She's like,

  228. 8:55

    "Your mom's had [ __ ] to say."

  229. 8:58

    But they are so great. They of course

  230. 9:02

    love you so much. What if they were like

  231. 9:05

    the girls are monsters? Yeah.

  232. 9:08

    a lot recently and they had they had

  233. 9:10

    questions that I wanted to start our

  234. 9:11

    interview with because I thought they

  235. 9:12

    were really important pertinent

  236. 9:14

    questions for the both of you. Hannah

  237. 9:16

    Lenor wanted to know are you pregnant?

  238. 9:18

    And Paige, that's a wild question. And

  239. 9:21

    Paige Kim wanted to know um are you

  240. 9:24

    enjoying yourself? Oh, that's such a her

  241. 9:26

    question. Two extremely difficult

  242. 9:28

    questions. We can get to them later, but

  243. 9:30

    they're both questions. No,

  244. 9:34

    easy done. not pregnant and not having

  245. 9:36

    fun, not having a good time. No, but I I

  246. 9:39

    will say yes, I'm having a great time.

  247. 9:42

    Like, in the past year, Hannah and I I

  248. 9:44

    feel like our careers have kind of taken

  249. 9:46

    a turn, but I would not be having this

  250. 9:49

    much fun if I wasn't doing it with

  251. 9:51

    Hannah. Like, I don't know if it would

  252. 9:54

    be the same experience at all. I I mean,

  253. 9:56

    I know it would. Stockholm syndrome

  254. 9:58

    syndrome, what you're hearing from her.

  255. 10:00

    Okay. So, for people listening like my

  256. 10:02

    mom who might not know Giggly Squam.

  257. 10:04

    Yeah. Um, who can you guys quickly tell

  258. 10:07

    us how you came together? Who you're

  259. 10:10

    doing your podcast, Giggly Squad, but

  260. 10:12

    how did you first meet and how are you a

  261. 10:14

    team? Do you want to go or you want me

  262. 10:16

    to go? Okay, I'll begin. Also, by the

  263. 10:18

    way, we are in a like nonsexual

  264. 10:21

    marriage. So, if we have that kind of

  265. 10:22

    interaction, half of America, we're in a

  266. 10:24

    partnership. Yes. Most of America. So,

  267. 10:26

    we and let me know if I'm overstepping

  268. 10:28

    Paige but

  269. 10:32

    we're like, we'll talk about this later.

  270. 10:34

    when we get home. You embarrass me in

  271. 10:35

    front of Amy. You embarrass me in front

  272. 10:37

    of Amy. So, talk about that. So, anyway,

  273. 10:40

    Gigg sleeping on the couch. We're just

  274. 10:41

    trying to not explain what Giggly Squad

  275. 10:43

    is. People like they don't know what

  276. 10:44

    their own podcast is. No, Giggly Squad,

  277. 10:46

    it stemmed from Paige and I both got

  278. 10:48

    casted on a reality TV show. Yeah. Which

  279. 10:50

    was crazy. It was never what Paige

  280. 10:53

    wanted to be an entertainment reporter.

  281. 10:54

    I wanted to be a stand-up comedian. And

  282. 10:57

    we found oursel on reality TV scared,

  283. 11:00

    alone,

  284. 11:01

    worried. But we like had this trauma

  285. 11:04

    bond from it. Fast and people liked our

  286. 11:07

    friendship which is weird. It's weird

  287. 11:08

    for anyone to comment on you when they

  288. 11:10

    don't really know you. But for some

  289. 11:12

    reason in the reality TV zeitgeist they

  290. 11:15

    were like Ann and Paige are entertaining

  291. 11:16

    and relatable I guess. Yeah. And I think

  292. 11:19

    we like obviously we didn't know

  293. 11:21

    anything about reality TV. So like we

  294. 11:23

    would watch it back and we would be like

  295. 11:24

    oh we feel like we were funnier like

  296. 11:27

    while we were filming or we feel like

  297. 11:28

    people aren't really getting our

  298. 11:30

    friendship. They definitely cut the best

  299. 11:32

    punch lines, but that's because we'd be

  300. 11:33

    in the bathroom and we'd be like to the

  301. 11:36

    camera guy like, "Hey, why don't you

  302. 11:37

    come with us? We're going to like really

  303. 11:38

    run a bit in the bathroom." And they're

  304. 11:40

    like, "We don't care." We didn't realize

  305. 11:42

    that there's a basic. We don't have room

  306. 11:44

    for this. Yeah. There's a basic story

  307. 11:45

    line and they have to cut down to 42

  308. 11:47

    minutes and Paige and I are going on

  309. 11:49

    these callbacks and we're, do you know,

  310. 11:51

    there's nothing to do with the plot. Oh,

  311. 11:52

    that's definitely going to be in the

  312. 11:54

    show. That was hilarious. And like, of

  313. 11:56

    course, it's not in there. All my

  314. 11:58

    interviews, they'd be like, "We need you

  315. 11:59

    to be angrier." And I was like, I don't

  316. 12:01

    even remember. I was drunk. So, I don't

  317. 12:02

    know why I'd be mad. But, um, fast

  318. 12:04

    forward, COVID hits. Yeah. And we're

  319. 12:07

    FaceTiming. Everyone's depressed.

  320. 12:09

    Everyone's scared again. More trauma.

  321. 12:10

    And we're both home at our parents'

  322. 12:12

    houses. And we're Lenor and Kimberly.

  323. 12:15

    Yeah. And we're like 28 years old. And

  324. 12:17

    we're like, "So, what's going to happen

  325. 12:19

    to us? Like, are we going to get

  326. 12:20

    married? Are we going to like start a

  327. 12:23

    business? Like, what's going to happen?"

  328. 12:24

    Like all the co thoughts. Are we going

  329. 12:25

    to live? And so, we would FaceTime for

  330. 12:27

    like 4 hours a day. and we'd be like,

  331. 12:31

    "We're funny." Like, "This is funny.

  332. 12:32

    People would think we're funny." And so

  333. 12:35

    then we were like, "Okay, let's just go

  334. 12:37

    on Instagram live." It was like the time

  335. 12:38

    that was a thing. I feel like a thing.

  336. 12:40

    Well, I'm I'm a weird like I have weird

  337. 12:43

    blind spots about all that stuff cuz I

  338. 12:45

    just started doing social media like a

  339. 12:46

    couple years ago cuz I was on I know

  340. 12:48

    it's No, it sounds beautiful. Amy, we

  341. 12:52

    are so envious of you. What is Instagram

  342. 12:54

    again? When I saw you on Instagram, I

  343. 12:56

    was like, "Oh, no. Say goodbye to your

  344. 12:58

    innocence." It's so true. Like I really

  345. 13:00

    and and but I know about Instagram live.

  346. 13:02

    I think I've done a few but I I never

  347. 13:04

    but it was a weird time. Yeah. Yeah. It

  348. 13:06

    was very weird. I remember um the first

  349. 13:08

    time we went live Justin Bieber also

  350. 13:10

    went live and then we created John

  351. 13:11

    Mayor. So then we created a beef. We

  352. 13:13

    were like they don't support women in

  353. 13:14

    the arts and they knew we were going

  354. 13:16

    live at this time and then they went it

  355. 13:17

    was such a weird time. It was so weird.

  356. 13:19

    And so we went live every single night

  357. 13:22

    for 3 months at 10 p.m. for an hour.

  358. 13:25

    That's how Giggly Squad started. It was

  359. 13:27

    just the two of you. just we were

  360. 13:29

    diligent. 1000 p.m. we were going on and

  361. 13:31

    people sometimes we'd mix a cocktail

  362. 13:34

    like and so it started where we'd have

  363. 13:35

    like 500 people watching then the next

  364. 13:38

    night it was like 2,000 then the next it

  365. 13:40

    was like 5,000 and we were like wait

  366. 13:41

    this like what's going on and we had no

  367. 13:43

    likement no structure and then nothing

  368. 13:47

    was happening every day. What were we

  369. 13:49

    possibly talking about? But we were

  370. 13:51

    Yeah, we were in so funny. It was like

  371. 13:53

    this community of of women and gays that

  372. 13:56

    like wanted and just like curious

  373. 13:58

    straight men who which is the most

  374. 14:01

    dangerous kind of straight man who are

  375. 14:06

    bored. That's when bad things happen.

  376. 14:08

    Are you bored? Go answer an email. So

  377. 14:10

    they they would like comment all these

  378. 14:12

    funny things and we were like what is

  379. 14:13

    this community of like girls who were so

  380. 14:15

    funny and silly and it was this light

  381. 14:18

    and then um we had to go film summer

  382. 14:22

    house summer house and we had to stop

  383. 14:24

    doing the lives cuz we were locked in a

  384. 14:26

    house and then the world kind of opened

  385. 14:28

    up and we were like okay I guess we'll

  386. 14:30

    make it a podcast but like we had no

  387. 14:33

    like going into it we weren't like we

  388. 14:34

    should start a podcast together so it

  389. 14:36

    just kind of naturally happened. We

  390. 14:37

    actually had to debate. I was like, cuz

  391. 14:38

    I'd been podcasting for a bit, right?

  392. 14:40

    And I was like, Paige, you should

  393. 14:41

    podcast. And she's like, I don't have a

  394. 14:43

    face for radio. You can do that.

  395. 14:46

    That sounds like something you would do.

  396. 14:48

    We're going to have to build it. She

  397. 14:49

    goes, I'm not made for podcasting. I was

  398. 14:51

    like, have you seen my bone structure?

  399. 14:53

    That's such an insult to me. I remember

  400. 14:56

    having to explain to her podcast. It's

  401. 14:58

    funny when I started this podcast. I'm

  402. 14:59

    like, oh, we have to shoot it now. Like

  403. 15:01

    now, I just had somebody come up the

  404. 15:03

    other day and say, "Oh, I just watched

  405. 15:05

    your podcast." which is like it's kind

  406. 15:07

    of crazy how that's taken over. Your

  407. 15:09

    clips are everywhere right now. And you

  408. 15:11

    got to have those clips. You got to have

  409. 15:12

    You got That's why we're not allowed to

  410. 15:14

    have two long conversations. We got to

  411. 15:15

    stop it quick. Right. Right. Let's for

  412. 15:17

    45 seconds.

  413. 15:20

    I'm just going to throw out a bunch of

  414. 15:21

    words.

  415. 15:23

    These are not my glasses, by the way. I

  416. 15:24

    forgot my glasses. She just stole it

  417. 15:27

    from a random person outside. Um, but

  418. 15:29

    when you went back on Summerhouse after

  419. 15:31

    all that talk, you must have felt

  420. 15:33

    psyched that you knew each other so

  421. 15:35

    well. Like you had gone from, you know,

  422. 15:38

    you had had a season, right? And then

  423. 15:40

    you shut down because of COVID. Two

  424. 15:41

    seasons. Two seasons. Two seasons. Then

  425. 15:43

    you shut down. And then during that

  426. 15:44

    time, your friendship grew. So you came

  427. 15:46

    back in knowing like, oh, I'm with my

  428. 15:47

    friend. We kind of always were like

  429. 15:49

    that. Like, oh, I have a friend. Because

  430. 15:51

    we were both new at the same time. So we

  431. 15:55

    already had that bond like that first

  432. 15:57

    day. And Hannah and I truly are so

  433. 16:00

    different in so many ways, but our humor

  434. 16:01

    is the exact same. So from the day we

  435. 16:05

    met, it was like this is my best friend.

  436. 16:07

    Not to get Look at me getting dark, but

  437. 16:10

    I keep going. I'm sorry to get dark, but

  438. 16:12

    I think you might understand this. In

  439. 16:15

    any kind of trauma you're going through,

  440. 16:16

    the only thing I've ever been able to

  441. 16:18

    control is laughter. So, like in reality

  442. 16:20

    TV, there's multiple scenes where like

  443. 16:22

    I'm sobbing about something and then

  444. 16:23

    I'll try to crack a joke because it's

  445. 16:26

    the only thing that I can control. And

  446. 16:28

    that's something that I think Giggly

  447. 16:30

    Squad is about is about taking your life

  448. 16:31

    less seriously in spite all of you can't

  449. 16:34

    control your relationships, your job,

  450. 16:36

    any of it. But we can choose to laugh

  451. 16:38

    instead of cry. And I think it's the

  452. 16:41

    elevator like to me like that takes you

  453. 16:43

    from the basement like the fastest. If

  454. 16:45

    you can find a way to go from crying to

  455. 16:47

    laughing. Yeah. It's it's hard, but it's

  456. 16:51

    a huge like it's it feels kind of like

  457. 16:56

    the fastest way to remember that life is

  458. 16:58

    a dream and that nothing matters if you

  459. 17:00

    can get there. But it's and it's with

  460. 17:02

    people that you can do it with people

  461. 17:04

    like you can do it with people that you

  462. 17:05

    trust. And it's kind of what we were t

  463. 17:08

    we've been talking about in this podcast

  464. 17:09

    is it's so dark right now. Everything is

  465. 17:11

    really tough. And I just want to do for

  466. 17:16

    my own mental health and for others to

  467. 17:18

    do what I do in my personal life, which

  468. 17:21

    is to talk to my friends and laugh and

  469. 17:23

    have a good hang. And have a good hang.

  470. 17:25

    Everyone needs that one person in their

  471. 17:27

    life where it's like you can call them

  472. 17:29

    and they make you feel better about

  473. 17:30

    anything. It like a spouse or like in my

  474. 17:33

    case it's Hannah. Like truly if anything

  475. 17:36

    happens to me like online that I'm like

  476. 17:38

    deep in and like everyone hated my

  477. 17:40

    outfit like you know something like

  478. 17:41

    stupid she's like this is the worst

  479. 17:43

    thing that's ever happened to me. No I'm

  480. 17:45

    like I'll never financially recover from

  481. 17:46

    this. It was a sparkly boa. I'm like

  482. 17:50

    they don't get it. I'm like they don't

  483. 17:51

    get it. No pants is actually really in

  484. 17:54

    like I can call Hannah and say anything

  485. 17:56

    and she really does like bring me back

  486. 17:58

    down to earth and like I will then like

  487. 18:01

    laugh at something and then I'll be on

  488. 18:03

    to the next thing. So, like I really

  489. 18:04

    feel like everyone needs that one person

  490. 18:07

    where you can just call. We also were

  491. 18:08

    going through very unique things. Like

  492. 18:10

    something would happen with reality TV

  493. 18:12

    that you you can't talk to like your mom

  494. 18:14

    necessarily. I mean, you can. And my

  495. 18:16

    mom's like, "Why'd you do it?" Yeah. But

  496. 18:19

    Paige would be like, "Yeah, I did that

  497. 18:20

    last week and this is how I got through

  498. 18:22

    it." Yeah. So, we've just had unique

  499. 18:24

    experiences. But Giggly Squad has become

  500. 18:26

    us talking about just the mundane, I

  501. 18:28

    think, and girls have connected with it.

  502. 18:30

    I bet you get asked a question like Tina

  503. 18:31

    and I used to get asked this all the

  504. 18:33

    time which is what do you two fight

  505. 18:34

    about? Yeah.

  506. 18:36

    Nothing. We've literally ne and we work

  507. 18:39

    together too. Like the podcast is

  508. 18:41

    obviously a business. So like will we

  509. 18:43

    have like business phone calls? Yeah.

  510. 18:46

    Like kind of. It's not like we have like

  511. 18:48

    a set time where like let's talk

  512. 18:49

    business. We've had like other people

  513. 18:51

    definitely try to get in the way of our

  514. 18:53

    friendship which leads me to the Acon

  515. 18:55

    song. Nobody want to see us together but

  516. 18:58

    I don't matter. know the fact that you

  517. 19:00

    had to break out into song. It's I can't

  518. 19:01

    believe I just said that in front of

  519. 19:02

    you. So embarrassing. Also, that was

  520. 19:04

    definitely a copyright issue. Also, I

  521. 19:06

    don't know this song. I'm so sorry. I'll

  522. 19:09

    send it to you after. It's going to

  523. 19:10

    change your mind. I do know AON. I know

  524. 19:12

    I know who they But there's this kind of

  525. 19:14

    level of There have been moments where

  526. 19:16

    people have tried to kind of turn us

  527. 19:17

    against each other, which has like made

  528. 19:19

    us stronger in a way. Yeah. The only

  529. 19:21

    thing we've ever fought about is she has

  530. 19:24

    to stand on a certain side and it's so

  531. 19:27

    diva that it's I can't because we

  532. 19:31

    literally did the Vanity Fair Oscar

  533. 19:33

    party and my dress had like a side and I

  534. 19:35

    was like Hannah I have to stand on this

  535. 19:37

    side like my dress and she was and she

  536. 19:39

    looked at me in the eye and she goes

  537. 19:40

    I'll literally die if I have to stand.

  538. 19:42

    That was the first time I ever stood up

  539. 19:44

    for myself and I said sorry she's okay.

  540. 19:48

    She was a limited two model. Yeah, she's

  541. 19:50

    got all good. She has all the sides. And

  542. 19:51

    all I wanted was to feel confident on my

  543. 19:54

    day. And one of my sides happens to be

  544. 19:55

    deformed.

  545. 19:57

    You're seeing it right now. I do

  546. 19:59

    disagree. I disagree. There's a little

  547. 20:01

    dysmorphia going on there. But I know

  548. 20:03

    what you mean, though. A woman knows

  549. 20:05

    what what her side is. And I wasn't

  550. 20:07

    going to solve the dysmorphia in that 10

  551. 20:09

    minutes. I was like, you know what? It's

  552. 20:10

    so It's so funny you brought that up

  553. 20:12

    because it means you still haven't moved

  554. 20:13

    forward from it because that was weeks

  555. 20:14

    ago. Yeah. Well, that's the thing about

  556. 20:16

    comedy is you have to depend. You have

  557. 20:18

    to decide how much you're going to care.

  558. 20:21

    Yeah. All the time when it comes to

  559. 20:23

    performing cuz I was a tennis player.

  560. 20:26

    Tennis was really like you're a winner

  561. 20:28

    or you're a [ __ ] loser. Like you

  562. 20:30

    can't walk off the court. You could be

  563. 20:31

    like I played wellad

  564. 20:33

    squad. It's it's an intense competition.

  565. 20:36

    But tennis like I really dealt with like

  566. 20:38

    very resultoriented. So when I started

  567. 20:40

    doing comedy I was like oh this is art.

  568. 20:43

    Like I can I could be authentic and raw

  569. 20:45

    and if people don't like it, I'm like

  570. 20:47

    it's subjective. It's subjective. That's

  571. 20:49

    you're projecting on to me and and I'm

  572. 20:50

    so lucky I'm getting paid to be goofy

  573. 20:53

    where tennis I really felt like every

  574. 20:54

    day was judgment day. Yeah. So comedy

  575. 20:57

    I've kind of retrained my brain to be

  576. 20:58

    like you don't have to be mean to

  577. 20:59

    yourself like you were with tennis. So I

  578. 21:02

    I cuz I feel like I've lived a couple

  579. 21:04

    lives before comedy. With comedy I've

  580. 21:06

    been I've been really nice to myself.

  581. 21:07

    And I think that's great. I hope other

  582. 21:09

    people can do the same if they're being

  583. 21:12

    mean to themselves with like how they're

  584. 21:15

    doing in their careers. I think that

  585. 21:17

    what you're saying is really important

  586. 21:18

    because so much of being funny is being

  587. 21:21

    relaxed

  588. 21:23

    and it's like less about content. Well,

  589. 21:27

    I not to [ __ ] on comedians, but I I

  590. 21:31

    don't like when comedians take it so

  591. 21:33

    seriously. I'm like the if the audience

  592. 21:35

    laughs, you did a great job. I can make

  593. 21:37

    all myself like this. Let's be let's be

  594. 21:39

    serious. Like it's like when you're in a

  595. 21:41

    comic club at home. Okay, get out of

  596. 21:42

    here. This is an important part of Amy

  597. 21:45

    Polar.

  598. 21:48

    No, but but but the but I'm mortified.

  599. 21:52

    But when you go backstage and all the

  600. 21:54

    men, it's usually men, sometimes women,

  601. 21:56

    but it's like with their headphones on

  602. 21:58

    like pacing going over their set and

  603. 22:00

    it's like, I saw your set. It's It's

  604. 22:02

    okay. It's not that great. We're almost

  605. 22:05

    like pregaming to Eminem. It's pretty

  606. 22:06

    tough to talk to standups um in general.

  607. 22:09

    Um Oh, yeah. We have an improv because

  608. 22:12

    they are just always performing at you

  609. 22:14

    and they're also either having done a

  610. 22:17

    set or about to do a set and they're

  611. 22:19

    just trying to figure out what went

  612. 22:21

    wrong and so they're just staring at

  613. 22:23

    like right past you doing their bit and

  614. 22:25

    it's tough. Every now and then I

  615. 22:27

    practice my bits on page without her

  616. 22:29

    knowing which is super annoying. Stand

  617. 22:31

    up. You know, she knows I I start I

  618. 22:33

    didn't get a microphone because my thing

  619. 22:35

    is if Paige laughs, I'm like, you make

  620. 22:37

    me light you in five minutes. What are

  621. 22:38

    you talking about?

  622. 22:42

    But I I have become aware that like it's

  623. 22:45

    really annoying to constantly just be

  624. 22:48

    wanting to take laughter from people and

  625. 22:50

    there's there has to be this Yeah. this

  626. 22:52

    vulnerability. It's it's annoying. Yeah.

  627. 22:55

    it it or or it it feels like you know

  628. 22:58

    you have to be aware that sometimes

  629. 22:59

    people feel like your audience rather

  630. 23:01

    than you know but do you what is your

  631. 23:03

    relationship relationship to being funny

  632. 23:05

    because you're very funny. Okay. My

  633. 23:09

    whole personality has been built out of

  634. 23:11

    spite because when I was younger my

  635. 23:14

    brother is so funny. His timing is

  636. 23:16

    great. He's so smart. He just like knows

  637. 23:19

    when something's going to hit. So my dad

  638. 23:21

    would always be laughing at my brother

  639. 23:23

    and he's like 5 years older than me. And

  640. 23:25

    I started to get so frustrated. I was

  641. 23:27

    just like, "Dad, I'm also funny." And my

  642. 23:29

    dad was like, "Well, you haven't made me

  643. 23:31

    laugh." You're beautiful. Yeah. Like,

  644. 23:33

    "You're beautiful. You can't read. Stay

  645. 23:35

    in your lane." And I And so I would get

  646. 23:38

    so annoyed. He's older and smarter and

  647. 23:41

    older and smarter. But my brother always

  648. 23:43

    loved comedy. So like I would always

  649. 23:44

    watch standups. I always knew who like

  650. 23:47

    famous comedians were. And so then just

  651. 23:49

    like over time, I think just hanging out

  652. 23:51

    with my brother and my dad, like I got

  653. 23:53

    certain timing. Yeah. But I was never

  654. 23:56

    like outwardly funny. Like I don't think

  655. 23:58

    in high school anyone would have

  656. 24:00

    described me as like, "Oh, she was like

  657. 24:01

    so funny in class." It really wasn't

  658. 24:04

    until I met Hannah that I feel like I

  659. 24:08

    was more open about being funny. Like my

  660. 24:11

    friends would say, "Yeah, like she's

  661. 24:13

    funny sometimes." Where now I'm like,

  662. 24:14

    "If you don't think I'm funny, I hate

  663. 24:17

    you." But yes, like then you don't get

  664. 24:19

    me. Then you don't get like my

  665. 24:20

    personality. It's funny how people can

  666. 24:22

    be mirrors to you. Like if you surround

  667. 24:24

    yourself with people that I mean your

  668. 24:26

    dad now is like Paige, you're hilarious.

  669. 24:28

    How do we not know? But a lot of friends

  670. 24:30

    I'd be with like they don't want you to

  671. 24:31

    be funny or that's not how they see. But

  672. 24:33

    I could never do standup.

  673. 24:36

    I think she can. I think you could say I

  674. 24:38

    don't think women should say anymore. I

  675. 24:41

    can I could never do anything yourself

  676. 24:43

    because I think don't you can do I could

  677. 24:46

    do it. I don't want to. No, we have She

  678. 24:48

    doesn't want to stand. She doesn't want

  679. 24:51

    to stand for more than 20 minutes ever

  680. 24:52

    with no chair. Get a grip. That's her.

  681. 24:55

    In this economy, I You could Dave

  682. 24:57

    Chappella and sit with a cigarette the

  683. 24:58

    whole time. I love that.

  684. 25:01

    Exactly. Hit the jewel. A mango jewel.

  685. 25:04

    Just get an IV while you do it and sit

  686. 25:06

    there and just get other things done.

  687. 25:08

    You get your nails done for 3 hours a

  688. 25:10

    week and you can't stand. Actually, that

  689. 25:11

    would be amazing if you got your nails

  690. 25:13

    done. Wild. That is like I have to fit

  691. 25:15

    it in. That's it does. It takes a while.

  692. 25:17

    I really relate because Tina and I are

  693. 25:19

    on tour and I want to talk about your

  694. 25:20

    tour and we have I pushed her. I was

  695. 25:22

    like, "Let's do standup." Um, and Tina

  696. 25:27

    was like, "We don't really." And I was

  697. 25:29

    like, "But we do." And also, we can. And

  698. 25:32

    also, let's just keep trying it and try

  699. 25:34

    new material and like use this section

  700. 25:36

    to try new stuff. Well, with with us

  701. 25:38

    with our tour, we we do a lot of improv,

  702. 25:40

    but then whenever a joke really hits, we

  703. 25:43

    keep it. So, it's basically like you

  704. 25:44

    doing improv, but then being able to

  705. 25:46

    save everything that works and doing it

  706. 25:47

    again. It's It's just such a different

  707. 25:50

    It's a different form of comedy, but the

  708. 25:51

    hard part's done. You're funny. I'm

  709. 25:53

    always so suspicious of when people

  710. 25:54

    start gatekeeping stuff as being really

  711. 25:57

    hard. I mean, with the exception of like

  712. 25:58

    science and like real hard stuff, real

  713. 26:01

    hard stuff like math, things that you

  714. 26:03

    have to controversial like are we

  715. 26:04

    respecting science on the spot. We

  716. 26:06

    believe in science. We believe in

  717. 26:08

    science. And I said it for the first

  718. 26:09

    time today. Like I would have never even

  719. 26:12

    thought to go on a tour or even been or

  720. 26:14

    said like, "Yeah, I want to do this." If

  721. 26:16

    it wasn't for Hannah being like, "Paige,

  722. 26:17

    you can go out on a stage and like be

  723. 26:19

    funny." What do you like and not like

  724. 26:20

    about being on tour? I always say like

  725. 26:22

    the beginning like before we go out on

  726. 26:25

    stage when we're in the green room is my

  727. 26:27

    favorite part because that's when we're

  728. 26:28

    just like waiting to like go do

  729. 26:30

    something. Your mom's brought that up

  730. 26:32

    really. um that like Kim being on tour

  731. 26:36

    um she was saying the best part I always

  732. 26:38

    tell people the best part is before you

  733. 26:41

    are on stage and it's just the two of

  734. 26:42

    you getting hair makeup just like we're

  735. 26:44

    literally it's like we're waiting to

  736. 26:46

    like go to a party or something then

  737. 26:49

    Paige started this thing she likes to

  738. 26:51

    show up in like her sweats I'm an

  739. 26:53

    athlete

  740. 26:55

    to look like she's practicing she's like

  741. 26:57

    let's not get dressed up until right

  742. 26:58

    before but I'm not organized so I show

  743. 27:01

    up in my sweats and then And I take out

  744. 27:03

    my backpack and I'm like, I left my left

  745. 27:05

    heel

  746. 27:06

    in the hotel. This is really, really,

  747. 27:08

    really And I forget clothes all the time

  748. 27:11

    where pages are perfect. This is my This

  749. 27:12

    is describes tour. We were in Denver. We

  750. 27:15

    had just started our tour. I

  751. 27:18

    know. We're about to go out on stage in

  752. 27:20

    like 15 minutes and I'm like, "Oh, I

  753. 27:22

    think I'm I think I'm having a panic

  754. 27:24

    attack. My hands are numb. I'm crying.

  755. 27:27

    I'm throwing up." I'm like, "Yeah, no,

  756. 27:29

    I'm having a panic attack." Hannah's

  757. 27:31

    trying to like play spa music in the

  758. 27:33

    background. She's like, I found on

  759. 27:34

    YouTube spa music. And I just put it at

  760. 27:36

    her face. Hey, is this helping? I'm

  761. 27:38

    like, not at all. I'm literally in the

  762. 27:41

    midst of crying. Tears are running down

  763. 27:43

    my face. I realize that Hannah has

  764. 27:45

    forgotten her shirt that she's wearing

  765. 27:47

    out on stage. So, she's going to wear

  766. 27:50

    like this silk pajama shirt that like

  767. 27:52

    the venue had given us, like this merch.

  768. 27:55

    I can't even speak. And the only words I

  769. 27:58

    can get out is, "You can't wear that

  770. 28:00

    shirt on stage." And she looks over at

  771. 28:02

    me and she's like, "You're having a

  772. 28:04

    panic attack and you're going to tell me

  773. 28:06

    what I'm going to wear." Luckily, I had

  774. 28:08

    like a t-shirt in my bag that was like

  775. 28:10

    extra whatever. And I was like, "Put

  776. 28:12

    this on." She put that on. Her outfit

  777. 28:14

    was fine. And then I got out of my panic

  778. 28:15

    attack. But that's a great example of

  779. 28:17

    like you're she got you. So I do a lot

  780. 28:19

    of beta blockers in it. She facetimes

  781. 28:22

    her mom cuz she's like, "Hannah, this

  782. 28:24

    isn't working. I'm facetiming Kim." So,

  783. 28:25

    I'm just listening, supporting, and all

  784. 28:27

    I hear is, "Paige, stop. Paige, stop it.

  785. 28:30

    You're fine. Paige, you're fine." She

  786. 28:33

    hangs up. We start dying laughing. We

  787. 28:35

    were like, "Your mom just told you to

  788. 28:36

    stop." She's like, "Panic attacks aren't

  789. 28:37

    real." And that's two generations of

  790. 28:39

    women. She's like, "Back in my day, we

  791. 28:41

    suck it up." Okay. Well, that is true.

  792. 28:44

    We never even had the word anxiety, you

  793. 28:46

    know? Like, I You did SNL and we we I

  794. 28:48

    had a high school boyfriend who used to

  795. 28:50

    get stomach aches and we all were like,

  796. 28:51

    "Huh, I wonder why." like and he would

  797. 28:53

    just be up all night and and then you

  798. 28:54

    realized it was because of you be

  799. 28:56

    worried

  800. 28:58

    the second you broke up. He's like my

  801. 29:00

    stomach feels great.

  802. 29:03

    He's like he totally went away. I was

  803. 29:04

    like okay I wonder what it was. And he

  804. 29:07

    used to be up all night worried about

  805. 29:09

    the future. Yeah. Get stomach aches and

  806. 29:12

    everyone was just like huh shoot I guess

  807. 29:16

    we fix that. There was no discussion.

  808. 29:18

    You bring up relaxation a lot in this

  809. 29:20

    episode. I was wondering because you've

  810. 29:22

    dealt with some of the most high

  811. 29:23

    pressure live performances in

  812. 29:26

    entertainment period. Do you have any

  813. 29:28

    advice for us when you feel like your

  814. 29:29

    career is hanging by a thread

  815. 29:33

    blocker to give something funny? I've

  816. 29:36

    never taken a beta blocker and a lot of

  817. 29:38

    people have told me about those. I would

  818. 29:39

    be worried it would slow me down. Yeah.

  819. 29:42

    Okay. So, here's the thing why I like

  820. 29:44

    it. It's not for anxiety. It's for blood

  821. 29:47

    pressure. So, like it doesn't do

  822. 29:49

    anything for your brain. No pressure

  823. 29:51

    because I am very against Xanax. I don't

  824. 29:53

    like the way Xanax makes me feel. You

  825. 29:55

    have to really really be careful with

  826. 29:57

    Yeah. I didn't like that where when I

  827. 29:58

    took a beta blocker before I went out on

  828. 30:00

    stage, it just like took away my hand

  829. 30:02

    sweating. So that's why I like it. It's

  830. 30:05

    good with physical reactions. Like you

  831. 30:07

    know when you're so overprepared for a

  832. 30:08

    performance, but you know your body is

  833. 30:11

    going to turn on you right beforehand

  834. 30:12

    and you're going to get the shakes and

  835. 30:14

    your lips quivering. Beta blocker for me

  836. 30:17

    I've taken just it just calms your heart

  837. 30:19

    rate. So I feel more normal but not your

  838. 30:21

    brain. It depends on the person. I took

  839. 30:23

    it. Did I take it? I didn't take it for

  840. 30:25

    Fallon. I took it for my Netflix

  841. 30:26

    special.

  842. 30:28

    Special by the way. Thank you. I was

  843. 30:30

    having um a lot of like panic because I

  844. 30:34

    felt like it was a makeorb breakak

  845. 30:35

    career moment for me and I blew it out

  846. 30:37

    of proportion in my head. But it I've

  847. 30:39

    never experienced that level of

  848. 30:40

    performance before and standup's never

  849. 30:42

    recorded. So I just went to a dark place

  850. 30:44

    in my head. I'm like what if I blink?

  851. 30:46

    Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I I feel like my

  852. 30:49

    anxiety tends to come after I do

  853. 30:51

    something. I get a little I get a little

  854. 30:53

    kind of zony before and then after I get

  855. 30:56

    very fluttery and nervous and it's a

  856. 30:58

    little bit like was that good? Did I do

  857. 30:59

    like I I kind of check out a dis I

  858. 31:02

    disassociate which our Jen is really

  859. 31:04

    good at. It's really healthy. Um you

  860. 31:06

    know like just float above your body and

  861. 31:08

    get out of your body and then when I'm

  862. 31:10

    like sucked back into my body that's

  863. 31:12

    when I get shaky after something more

  864. 31:15

    than before something. It's almost like

  865. 31:16

    I I get the the after adrenaline comes

  866. 31:19

    down. The adrenaline, did I say that

  867. 31:21

    right? Did I disappoint everyone? Was it

  868. 31:23

    good? Do Yeah. Did I even do it? Like,

  869. 31:26

    did it even happen?

  870. 31:30

    We're dark. We're

  871. 31:32

    going to try dissociating. What planet

  872. 31:34

    are we on? Best one. Just be just don't

  873. 31:36

    be there. I don't even remember the '9s.

  874. 31:39

    I think you guys are trying to be too

  875. 31:40

    present. Like, you're trying to be too

  876. 31:42

    in the moment. Be out of the moment. be

  877. 31:45

    out of the room. I do think cuz our

  878. 31:46

    generation is so aware of mental health,

  879. 31:48

    we're always trying to like be like,

  880. 31:49

    "Okay, this is anxiety and this is PTSD

  881. 31:51

    and this is OCD." And a lot of it is

  882. 31:53

    true, but then there's a moment where

  883. 31:55

    it's like, "And now let's how do we cope

  884. 31:58

    to not let it beat us and not let it

  885. 32:00

    suppress like who we want to be?" Well,

  886. 32:02

    I think and I'm sure like from your

  887. 32:04

    athlete days like there is a thing about

  888. 32:06

    your brain and you know everyone has

  889. 32:09

    different capacities for this so I

  890. 32:10

    realize that but there is something

  891. 32:11

    about your brain where you if you start

  892. 32:12

    to tell your brain something you can

  893. 32:14

    trick your brain for a short amount of

  894. 32:17

    time to get the thing done and yes if

  895. 32:20

    you start labeling the different like

  896. 32:22

    anxiety OCD this is this is this is

  897. 32:25

    happening again you're starting to tell

  898. 32:26

    your brain like we're doing it we're

  899. 32:29

    doing it again we're here we're doing it

  900. 32:30

    again there is a little trick. Sometimes

  901. 32:33

    it works for me where being excited and

  902. 32:35

    being anxious are the same physical

  903. 32:37

    symptoms, physical feelings. So if you

  904. 32:41

    say, "Look at how excited I am rather

  905. 32:44

    than how anxious I am." That it doesn't

  906. 32:45

    it doesn't help when you're like at the

  907. 32:47

    dentist or something and you're like,

  908. 32:49

    "I'm so excited to be at the dentist."

  909. 32:52

    Um they say a little bit of anxiety,

  910. 32:53

    especially in sports, is good and it

  911. 32:55

    helps you actually perform at more

  912. 32:57

    focused level. So a little anxiety is

  913. 33:00

    important. Like if you're ever not

  914. 33:01

    nervous before a gig, I get a little

  915. 33:02

    nervous. I'm like, "Someone's about to

  916. 33:03

    be loosey goosey." Yeah. No, that

  917. 33:05

    actually helped me when we were on tour.

  918. 33:07

    Like after my first panic attack and

  919. 33:09

    then I would like take a beta blocker

  920. 33:10

    before like I'd be like, "Shoot, I hope

  921. 33:12

    it doesn't happen again." Hannah would

  922. 33:14

    always say to me like, "It's good to be

  923. 33:16

    a little nervous. You care about what

  924. 33:17

    you're doing." And that truly would like

  925. 33:19

    calm me down. Yes. She'd also push me

  926. 33:22

    out on stage.

  927. 33:24

    Launch her like butt kick her onto the

  928. 33:26

    stage. Like your adrenaline will kick

  929. 33:27

    in. We hope so. Here you go. Go ahead,

  930. 33:30

    honey. You got it. And also, doesn't it

  931. 33:32

    help you? Because taking care of

  932. 33:33

    somebody is a great distraction. Oh, I

  933. 33:35

    was obsess I wasn't the problem for like

  934. 33:37

    the first time ever. So, but I was like

  935. 33:39

    forgetting my shirt cuz I was so

  936. 33:40

    obsessed with like is Paige okay? Well,

  937. 33:43

    you might have a little ADHD cuz you

  938. 33:44

    said you'd forget your shoe. Yeah. I

  939. 33:46

    wish you didn't say that because I could

  940. 33:48

    talk about this forever.

  941. 33:50

    That's all she says to me. She's like,

  942. 33:52

    "Well, I suffer from ADHD." And I'm

  943. 33:53

    like, "You've never seen a doctor." I

  944. 33:56

    wouldn't say suffer. I would say I

  945. 33:57

    thrive. You live with it. I'm like,

  946. 33:59

    you've never seen a doctor. You've only

  947. 34:00

    got been given Tik Toks about this. And

  948. 34:03

    so, I really need you to not to stop

  949. 34:05

    bringing it up. I You're right. Everyone

  950. 34:07

    on TikTok tells me that I have it or

  951. 34:10

    that they have it or we all have it. And

  952. 34:13

    yeah, it is. I mean, but that is how I

  953. 34:14

    diagnose most things. I'm like, "No, you

  954. 34:16

    just want to sleep an extra hour. You

  955. 34:19

    don't have ADHD. You literally just

  956. 34:21

    press snooze." Like, I told my other

  957. 34:23

    friend, I was like, "I think I have

  958. 34:24

    ADHD." And she was like, "Yeah, everyone

  959. 34:27

    knows that about you." And I was like,

  960. 34:28

    "No one told me this whole time." You

  961. 34:30

    know, Kim from Paperkite, she had a

  962. 34:31

    really um one of our producers, she had

  963. 34:33

    a really great thing where she said,

  964. 34:34

    "You can tell you have ADHD if someone

  965. 34:36

    says we have to leave in 5 minutes or

  966. 34:38

    we're going to miss the flight." And

  967. 34:39

    someone says, "All right, let me just

  968. 34:40

    take a shower."

  969. 34:42

    That's her. That's the only time I start

  970. 34:45

    cleaning. I'm like, "This

  971. 34:47

    is we have to leave in 5 minutes." It's

  972. 34:48

    like, "Great, let me take a shower."

  973. 34:49

    It's like, what? Yeah. That is that's a

  974. 34:52

    good indication that maybe time is more

  975. 34:54

    of a concept. You always do have to go

  976. 34:57

    to the bathroom when we have to leave.

  977. 34:59

    Yes. I als I also will like leave the

  978. 35:01

    shower just shaving one leg and find out

  979. 35:02

    like two days later. But these are all

  980. 35:04

    things that make me beautiful. Um

  981. 35:06

    absolutely absolutely absolutely special

  982. 35:08

    and beautiful. And then what and then is

  983. 35:10

    there anything that you have Paige like

  984. 35:12

    when I make mistakes? Yeah. I feel like

  985. 35:14

    for me I I think maybe this is because

  986. 35:17

    of reality TV. I'm very quick to want to

  987. 35:20

    like defend myself of like, oh no, I

  988. 35:23

    didn't make a mistake. You're just not

  989. 35:24

    seeing it from my perspective and like

  990. 35:26

    what I meant to do was this or what I

  991. 35:28

    meant to say was this. And I feel like

  992. 35:31

    in my 30s I've not mastered at all, but

  993. 35:35

    I've worked harder to be like, and not

  994. 35:38

    everyone is going to like me, and I

  995. 35:40

    don't need everyone to like me. I don't

  996. 35:42

    like everyone. I thought you could say I

  997. 35:44

    don't like me. Yeah. Well, that too. I'm

  998. 35:46

    like, imagine hating on me and I'm at

  999. 35:47

    home hating on me.

  1000. 35:50

    Um, so I feel like I've had to like

  1001. 35:52

    overcome that of like not everyone is

  1002. 35:54

    gonna like you and not everyone is gonna

  1003. 35:56

    think you're funny and not everyone's

  1004. 35:58

    going to love your outfits and that's

  1005. 35:59

    okay because you think you're funny and

  1006. 36:01

    you like what you're wearing. And so

  1007. 36:03

    that's been like a struggle. I think

  1008. 36:05

    reality TV like brought that up because

  1009. 36:08

    really like the human brain. I'm not

  1010. 36:10

    supposed to see 200 people commenting

  1011. 36:12

    how much they hate me. Like I a scene

  1012. 36:14

    that has no content. Yeah. Like I'm not

  1013. 36:16

    as a human, I'm not supposed to be able

  1014. 36:18

    to read that. No. And there's like this

  1015. 36:21

    new thing on TikTok where it's like we

  1016. 36:22

    were never meant to see ourselves. Like

  1017. 36:24

    mirrors were like invented. Like we were

  1018. 36:26

    never supposed to see what we look like.

  1019. 36:29

    And I feel like that with being so

  1020. 36:31

    public and like social media, we really

  1021. 36:34

    weren't supposed to see how people feel

  1022. 36:36

    about us. And so I think that's that's

  1023. 36:39

    Have you heard that saying? What other

  1024. 36:40

    people think of you is none of your

  1025. 36:41

    business. I was about to say our new

  1026. 36:43

    thing is saying it's in my business.

  1027. 36:45

    It's a fantastic way and I mean but but

  1028. 36:47

    when you're on a show like you're still

  1029. 36:49

    on summer house like that's hard to

  1030. 36:51

    because you have to talk about people in

  1031. 36:52

    real time. You have to hear and then for

  1032. 36:54

    the a year after like you don't get to

  1033. 36:56

    move on until a year after because it

  1034. 37:00

    personally because people are like

  1035. 37:01

    talking about who you are as a person.

  1036. 37:02

    Yeah. And I'm like no no no let me

  1037. 37:04

    explain that one moment. And it's like

  1038. 37:07

    no no I don't need to explain that one

  1039. 37:08

    moment. No one cares. Yeah. But being

  1040. 37:10

    misunderstood is is painful. It's

  1041. 37:12

    painful. But I really feel like people

  1042. 37:15

    who want to misunderstand you will and

  1043. 37:17

    people who want to understand you will.

  1044. 37:19

    And that's like how you get a little

  1045. 37:20

    peace with it. Do you ever talk about um

  1046. 37:23

    do you ever clarify things about the

  1047. 37:26

    show on your podcast? Never. I've never

  1048. 37:29

    said I've never said what actually

  1049. 37:30

    happened in my last season. We've never

  1050. 37:32

    spoken about Summerhouse. We've never

  1051. 37:36

    we don't honestly because when we

  1052. 37:38

    started we were like one of the first

  1053. 37:40

    podcasts to come out of Bravo. I think

  1054. 37:42

    maybe there was like one or two others

  1055. 37:44

    and they were really adamant of like

  1056. 37:46

    this is not a Bravo podcast. Do not

  1057. 37:48

    speak about Bravo. And we were like

  1058. 37:50

    totally fine with us. Like we weren't

  1059. 37:51

    going to anyway. We wanted it to be more

  1060. 37:53

    pop culture. And so now people are kind

  1061. 37:55

    of surprised if they find us from Bravo

  1062. 37:58

    because they're like they never talk

  1063. 37:59

    about Bravo. And it's like, well, we

  1064. 38:00

    weren't allowed to in the beginning and

  1065. 38:01

    now like Yeah. It doesn't really go with

  1066. 38:04

    who we are and like what we talk about.

  1067. 38:07

    So, it's actually better that way. Yeah.

  1068. 38:10

    I mean, it it definitely does. You're

  1069. 38:11

    practicing what you're saying, which is

  1070. 38:12

    you're just kind of letting go of things

  1071. 38:14

    that you can't have control over because

  1072. 38:16

    then it would be too

  1073. 38:18

    in the weed. It's too much. Also, it's

  1074. 38:20

    funny you brought up mistakes because I

  1075. 38:21

    feel like I don't know, I don't speak

  1076. 38:23

    for you, but like I really have just

  1077. 38:26

    failed upwards.

  1078. 38:28

    Does that make sense? It's like you've

  1079. 38:29

    been fired so many times and I love

  1080. 38:32

    every time and I love I'm and I'm sorry

  1081. 38:35

    to say this but we're going to

  1082. 38:37

    ask we need to ask you to leave right

  1083. 38:39

    now. I manifested it accidentally, but

  1084. 38:42

    not to do like a Jordan quote, but like

  1085. 38:44

    they say like of all the Why? Timmy does

  1086. 38:46

    a Jordan. Timmy wants to be like Jordan.

  1087. 38:47

    Timmy Shalamé, you're like Jordan.

  1088. 38:50

    Timmy. Right. Okay. So, he I need to

  1089. 38:53

    stop. So, I have ADHD. So, he um he

  1090. 38:56

    missed like a ton of the like shots to

  1091. 38:59

    win the game, but people don't remember

  1092. 39:02

    those. They remember the one he made.

  1093. 39:03

    Well, you know what? Yeah. I was going

  1094. 39:05

    to say if you don't worry about doing a

  1095. 39:06

    Jordan

  1096. 39:13

    looked me in the eye and went you miss

  1097. 39:15

    100% of the shots you don't take was

  1098. 39:16

    Wayne Gretzky and not Jordan but I bet

  1099. 39:19

    Jordan did say something about I'm sure

  1100. 39:20

    they're friends and they like each other

  1101. 39:22

    so it's all fine.

  1102. 39:24

    I mean I'm never going to say a quote

  1103. 39:26

    again. Um, but with that said, and Obama

  1104. 39:29

    actually said,

  1105. 39:32

    grab your hockey sticks, kids. Marilyn

  1106. 39:35

    Monroe, you miss 100 of the shots you

  1107. 39:37

    don't take. Monroe used to say Audrey

  1108. 39:40

    Heard

  1109. 39:42

    Audrey Heppern said, "You miss 100% of

  1110. 39:44

    the shots you don't take." Wait, can we

  1111. 39:46

    also tell them we misqued Amy Polar in

  1112. 39:49

    our book? We also didn't ask permission.

  1113. 39:52

    Did a full quote with Amy Polar, said it

  1114. 39:55

    wrong, and then That's actually so funny

  1115. 39:57

    cuz my brother literally saw the back

  1116. 39:58

    and was like, "You didn't ask my

  1117. 40:00

    permission." And I was like, "What are

  1118. 40:01

    you going to sue me?" Because your

  1119. 40:03

    brother has a quote on the back of it,

  1120. 40:04

    but I like wrote it like for him. We got

  1121. 40:07

    some fun quotes in the back of our My

  1122. 40:10

    sister isn't that funny. That's his

  1123. 40:12

    quote. I wrote that.

  1124. 40:15

    We didn't like it. We go, "Did you not

  1125. 40:17

    think it?

  1126. 40:19

    Did you not think it?" Okay. You talk

  1127. 40:21

    about pop culture on your podcast.

  1128. 40:23

    Because of that, I want to just throw

  1129. 40:25

    things out to you. Speed round. Tell me

  1130. 40:28

    your thoughts and opinions. There's no

  1131. 40:30

    wrong answers here. Okay. Like the last

  1132. 40:32

    thing I did.

  1133. 40:35

    She goes, "You got that wrong, but

  1134. 40:36

    hopefully you do better this time."

  1135. 40:37

    Incredible. Um, okay. Um, uh, veneers.

  1136. 40:42

    I don't think they ever look good.

  1137. 40:44

    Never. I think maybe there's like two

  1138. 40:46

    people in Hollywood where I'm like,

  1139. 40:48

    "Wait, they have really good veneers."

  1140. 40:50

    But like a normal person who can't

  1141. 40:52

    afford it, do you? Oh, they look great.

  1142. 40:55

    Well, you wouldn't know. But cuz you

  1143. 40:58

    obviously have access to a great doctor.

  1144. 41:00

    The normies out here shouldn't get them.

  1145. 41:03

    Too big. Too white. When did you get

  1146. 41:05

    them? Well, I guess are considered

  1147. 41:07

    veneers. I had a chip tooth. Okay. And

  1148. 41:09

    um when I went story you're going with

  1149. 41:14

    I was in a bar fight. Yeah. I got um I

  1150. 41:16

    broke my nose in a car accident and um

  1151. 41:19

    and I have a sinus infection here and I

  1152. 41:21

    had a sinus infection and it I had a

  1153. 41:23

    chip tooth when I got on SNL and I

  1154. 41:24

    thought no big deal whatever like

  1155. 41:26

    hilarious. Yeah, exactly. Like who

  1156. 41:28

    cares? And then I saw myself on camera

  1157. 41:30

    and I gasped. I was like oh no like I

  1158. 41:33

    look and um so I got my teeth fixed. I

  1159. 41:35

    got veneers when I was on SNL. So you

  1160. 41:37

    would never know. Just two but I but I

  1161. 41:39

    have them. If you didn't get into

  1162. 41:40

    Hollywood, do you think you would have

  1163. 41:41

    gotten veneers?

  1164. 41:44

    Wow, that's a good question. Maybe not.

  1165. 41:47

    I don't think so. I think like, you

  1166. 41:50

    know, where I came from in Massachusetts

  1167. 41:52

    and like I don't know if I I think I

  1168. 41:54

    would just wouldn't mind my chip. But

  1169. 41:56

    seeing yourself on camera is a different

  1170. 41:58

    You know how like people hate hearing

  1171. 41:59

    their own voice? Like even in a

  1172. 42:01

    voicemail, I'm like imagine watching

  1173. 42:03

    yourself on TV. You're like, that's what

  1174. 42:05

    I present to the world.

  1175. 42:07

    It's a real mind [ __ ] Okay, so you got

  1176. 42:09

    to be careful with Venezia. I I get

  1177. 42:11

    nervous when people shave it down and

  1178. 42:12

    they have little like nubs. Yeah, that

  1179. 42:15

    makes me nervous. I think that that

  1180. 42:16

    doesn't happen as much anymore. I think

  1181. 42:18

    they've really taken it back. They don't

  1182. 42:20

    go We don't know the science. We don't

  1183. 42:21

    know anything about veneers. But we have

  1184. 42:23

    we

  1185. 42:25

    hate them. I also have to say both of

  1186. 42:27

    you, if I may, you both have great

  1187. 42:29

    teeth. I thought you were going to say

  1188. 42:30

    you both need them. So that's crazy. I

  1189. 42:33

    have a doctor. I'd like to talk to

  1190. 42:34

    somebody who does. Dr. Ke and Beverly

  1191. 42:37

    Hills. Um, you both have great teeth, so

  1192. 42:40

    talking about veneers with great teeth

  1193. 42:43

    isn't really fair. Yeah. True. True.

  1194. 42:46

    Because some of us don't have great

  1195. 42:47

    teeth. Gel nails. Yes. Yeah. Okay. You

  1196. 42:51

    love them. Taking off of them. That's

  1197. 42:54

    the thing. You You just let them grow

  1198. 42:55

    out. I was just going to say we never

  1199. 42:56

    take them off. We never take it off. We

  1200. 42:58

    just rego. Okay. Okay. Okay. Um, how do

  1201. 43:00

    you feel about running from what? What

  1202. 43:04

    problems are you running from? Who are

  1203. 43:06

    you running from? What? We can do

  1204. 43:08

    Pilates. That's a workout. Laying down

  1205. 43:10

    with BDSM equipment. Actually, I'm going

  1206. 43:12

    to We're not running.

  1207. 43:15

    Run is to get away from a man. Okay. How

  1208. 43:16

    do you feel about people who love dogs?

  1209. 43:20

    Okay. You did that. You did. No, that

  1210. 43:22

    was on purpose. You did it on purpose.

  1211. 43:23

    No. Why do I know? Because we're cat

  1212. 43:25

    people and people are It's very

  1213. 43:27

    controversial. Oh, okay. Right. Right.

  1214. 43:29

    Huge cat. Okay. People who love dogs. I

  1215. 43:31

    love dogs. Yeah. I foster senior pets

  1216. 43:35

    all the time. Get that on. Mhm. Clip

  1217. 43:38

    that. People who People who love dogs I

  1218. 43:40

    love. People who say they hate cats.

  1219. 43:43

    Yeah. I don't like That's not nice.

  1220. 43:45

    They've never had a cat. They don't It's

  1221. 43:46

    always the dog people. They're like, I

  1222. 43:48

    love dogs, but then Scruffy scratched me

  1223. 43:50

    when I was four. I hate cats. I hate

  1224. 43:52

    cats. And it's like cats just want your

  1225. 43:53

    consent. Yeah, you're right. It's People

  1226. 43:56

    think it's okay to say they hate cats.

  1227. 43:57

    That's not That's not horrible. I love

  1228. 43:59

    cats PR though. Like I love that they're

  1229. 44:02

    hated publicly because like that's their

  1230. 44:05

    vibe. Like they like that. If you hate

  1231. 44:07

    cats, you hate women.

  1232. 44:10

    And now we've said it. We I wasn't going

  1233. 44:12

    to say it. I said it. And now we've gone

  1234. 44:14

    there on the path. We went there. When

  1235. 44:16

    you're talking about traveling, how

  1236. 44:17

    early do you like to get to the airplane

  1237. 44:19

    to the airport for a flight? Okay.

  1238. 44:21

    That's another reason why I think we're

  1239. 44:22

    pretty compatible. We have the same

  1240. 44:25

    flight time. We're very big on boarding

  1241. 44:28

    time. We like to know the boarding time

  1242. 44:29

    and we like to be there an hour before

  1243. 44:31

    it boards. I also am very lucky where I

  1244. 44:34

    where I live in New York. I'm 20 minutes

  1245. 44:36

    from LaGuardia. So I kind of roll out of

  1246. 44:39

    bed. That's great. The world's best

  1247. 44:41

    airport. And I'm besties with the clear

  1248. 44:42

    people. I get high fives from them.

  1249. 44:44

    They're like, "Hannah, good luck this

  1250. 44:46

    weekend." And I I

  1251. 44:49

    They're paid to bring you. You don't

  1252. 44:50

    think they care. You don't think they

  1253. 44:52

    care. Those clear people are passionate.

  1254. 44:54

    They do want to look at my soul. Says

  1255. 44:57

    your name. And that's how they know it.

  1256. 44:58

    They didn't remember it, but they get

  1257. 45:02

    paid for every person that goes through.

  1258. 45:03

    They go Minneapolis. They go, "You know

  1259. 45:05

    everything about me." They're like, "I'm

  1260. 45:07

    looking at your flight information,

  1261. 45:08

    ma'am."

  1262. 45:10

    So, yeah, we're we're the same. We keep

  1263. 45:13

    each other. Yeah, we're a pretty similar

  1264. 45:14

    traveler. Oh, that's really important.

  1265. 45:16

    It's really It's really important. Okay.

  1266. 45:18

    What about avocado toast? I think

  1267. 45:20

    avocado ruins a lot of really good

  1268. 45:22

    things. Really? This is Paige's hot

  1269. 45:24

    take. She's Paige. People are gonna be

  1270. 45:26

    so mad. I know. I think that I don't

  1271. 45:29

    know what year we were like, "Let's

  1272. 45:30

    throw avocado on every sandwich." But I

  1273. 45:33

    wish I paid attention more and stopped

  1274. 45:35

    it because I don't need avocado on my

  1275. 45:38

    turkey sandwich. It was gorgeous

  1276. 45:42

    years prior. It's been a turkey sandwich

  1277. 45:44

    forever. I don't need it now to be

  1278. 45:46

    turkey. A mature palette. Just say it.

  1279. 45:48

    Do you have like a a baby palette? Like

  1280. 45:50

    um like a little kid palette? No. Don't

  1281. 45:52

    listen to her. I

  1282. 45:55

    eat way I will try way more she said it

  1283. 45:58

    confidently than her and what do you do?

  1284. 46:02

    I will try I feel like I eat way more

  1285. 46:04

    things than you like try way more

  1286. 46:06

    things. You eat Mexican food and that's

  1287. 46:09

    it. I do get hyperfixated on a meal and

  1288. 46:12

    if I like it I'll eat it for a couple

  1289. 46:14

    weeks but then I'll change. You've been

  1290. 46:17

    having cheese for seven years. Look, I

  1291. 46:20

    don't recommend it before a show. That's

  1292. 46:22

    all I'm gonna say. What is your favorite

  1293. 46:24

    kind of sandwich? If you can have a

  1294. 46:26

    perfect sandwich, bacon, egg, and

  1295. 46:27

    cheese. I'm so New York. On what? Ooh,

  1296. 46:31

    good question. Anything, but like

  1297. 46:33

    everything bagel roll. Just bacon, egg,

  1298. 46:36

    and just bacon cheese. Perfect sandwich

  1299. 46:38

    would be like pudo, mozzarella cheese, a

  1300. 46:42

    little olive oil and vinegar on like a

  1301. 46:44

    hard like good baguette. Spoken like a

  1302. 46:48

    person has their real teeth.

  1303. 46:51

    I can bite into that front teeth. Well,

  1304. 46:53

    you have to be careful when you have an

  1305. 46:54

    ears. You have to go a little slower.

  1306. 46:57

    Like you don't want to get you want you

  1307. 46:58

    don't want to come up on an apple too

  1308. 47:00

    fast. Got it. Because they do they can

  1309. 47:04

    pop up. Yeah, they can pop up anywhere.

  1310. 47:06

    Okay. And the last one is um women who

  1311. 47:08

    ask men to marry them. Picking your

  1312. 47:10

    partner is the most important thing you

  1313. 47:12

    do in your life. I'm not just

  1314. 47:15

    willy-nilly waiting for a guy to spring

  1315. 47:17

    it on me. I'm sitting down and having a

  1316. 47:19

    serious discussion if you want to spend

  1317. 47:21

    the rest of your life with me. Yes. And

  1318. 47:23

    the the the bigger thing of like what do

  1319. 47:26

    we expect like expecting to be chosen

  1320. 47:30

    and and waiting to be chosen rather than

  1321. 47:33

    choosing. Mhm. It's It's complicated.

  1322. 47:36

    Yeah. But but but I but also but also um

  1323. 47:40

    I do think there's a thing sometimes

  1324. 47:43

    where I mean and you know straight cis

  1325. 47:46

    marriage is a whole other conversation.

  1326. 47:47

    Like who cares? But um boring. No, it's

  1327. 47:50

    very boring. It is. I mean is cheeky.

  1328. 47:53

    Getting married is cheoogy now. Yeah.

  1329. 47:56

    Are we still saying cheeky? No. That was

  1330. 47:58

    cheeky of me. It's funny. We also talk

  1331. 48:01

    on the pod. Like obviously Hannah's

  1332. 48:03

    married and so like we don't like to

  1333. 48:05

    talk about it though. It's very off

  1334. 48:06

    brand. So off brandand for

  1335. 48:09

    you my husband. I'm like what? You have

  1336. 48:12

    a husband? We say boyfriend.

  1337. 48:14

    But like we talk about how like people

  1338. 48:17

    expect you to look the best you've ever

  1339. 48:20

    looked on your wedding day and then like

  1340. 48:22

    you'll never be that skinny or pretty

  1341. 48:23

    ever again. Like this is your one day or

  1342. 48:26

    like it's the best day of your life. And

  1343. 48:27

    I remember Hannah's wedding, she was

  1344. 48:29

    like, "This is a great day, but like

  1345. 48:30

    I've had better." Like, you know, like,

  1346. 48:32

    "I've had a day." Like when she filmed

  1347. 48:35

    her Netflix special, she was like, "This

  1348. 48:36

    is truly the best day." I was high on

  1349. 48:38

    beta blockers, but it was an amazing

  1350. 48:40

    thing. I think we're in a generation

  1351. 48:42

    where it is like a little, it's shifting

  1352. 48:44

    a little bit where it's like, okay, your

  1353. 48:47

    wedding day and your marriage isn't the

  1354. 48:49

    best thing you're ever going to do your

  1355. 48:51

    whole life. And that's really put on

  1356. 48:53

    women where it's like, "This is the best

  1357. 48:54

    you're ever going to look. This is the

  1358. 48:56

    best weekend you're ever going to have.

  1359. 48:57

    Everyone's here for you. This is the

  1360. 48:59

    last time that's ever going to happen.

  1361. 49:01

    So, like the whole proposal thing and

  1362. 49:03

    like a girl doing it to a guy,

  1363. 49:06

    there's a re he hasn't said that he

  1364. 49:08

    likes you then. That's why you're doing

  1365. 49:10

    it. I feel like well I do feel like what

  1366. 49:12

    you what you two speak about a lot and I

  1367. 49:15

    feel like is and that's what I kind of

  1368. 49:17

    what I mean about the freedom that comes

  1369. 49:19

    from the women that are coming up behind

  1370. 49:22

    me is that the the discussion about how

  1371. 49:27

    gas lit we are all the time. That's it.

  1372. 49:29

    the discussion in real time about how we

  1373. 49:31

    get these crazy mixed messages all the

  1374. 49:34

    time and it's like push and pull back

  1375. 49:38

    and be this way but say what you want

  1376. 49:39

    but it's like I mean being a female

  1377. 49:42

    comedian is a [ __ ] you to the system

  1378. 49:45

    they don't want you to call people out

  1379. 49:48

    say things that are out of line make

  1380. 49:50

    people uncomfortable that's what we do

  1381. 49:52

    as comics make you think take up space

  1382. 49:54

    that's why I love being a female

  1383. 49:56

    comedian and yeah we get push back a lot

  1384. 49:58

    Yeah, but that's like what our choice

  1385. 50:00

    is. This is the life I want to live. And

  1386. 50:02

    I also think it's so cool you talked to

  1387. 50:04

    our moms before because generationally

  1388. 50:06

    they only had so many options. I joke

  1389. 50:08

    that icks are popular now because like

  1390. 50:10

    back then you barely had a credit card.

  1391. 50:13

    You couldn't have a cake with your

  1392. 50:14

    husband. You literally couldn't divorce

  1393. 50:16

    your husband. It was illegal. Yeah. He

  1394. 50:17

    starts singing happy birthday at a

  1395. 50:18

    restaurant. You're like la. Nowadays if

  1396. 50:21

    a guy gets like a little baby spoon like

  1397. 50:23

    let me do my stand up. A little baby

  1398. 50:24

    spoon eating eating a ice cream. And we

  1399. 50:26

    were like, "Yeah, divorce. I'm taking

  1400. 50:28

    all the money that I made." Yeah. Like,

  1401. 50:30

    "Get out of my house." And I'm taking

  1402. 50:32

    the money that we didn't we that we

  1403. 50:34

    never share.

  1404. 50:36

    Um, okay. Speaking of laugh, before you

  1405. 50:38

    leave, I'm asking people uh what they're

  1406. 50:40

    laughing at these days. What do you like

  1407. 50:42

    look at, read,

  1408. 50:44

    go see I mean, I know you make each

  1409. 50:46

    other laugh. Hannah Hannah's text

  1410. 50:48

    messages. When Hannah really goes off,

  1411. 50:51

    Here's the thing. Can you share a text

  1412. 50:52

    message? This is when I know No, she's

  1413. 50:54

    smart. She does voice notes.

  1414. 50:56

    This is what I voice. I thought that was

  1415. 50:58

    a boomer thing. Voice notes are Oh, we

  1416. 51:00

    love a voice note. But they disappear

  1417. 51:04

    and then you can never No, we love that.

  1418. 51:07

    This is when we would be in jail. Yeah.

  1419. 51:09

    This is when I know Hannah's husband

  1420. 51:11

    isn't in the city. Hannah's voice noting

  1421. 51:14

    me like crazy. She's like, "And then I

  1422. 51:15

    figured this out. And then I saw this

  1423. 51:16

    and oh my god, I haven't brought this up

  1424. 51:18

    to you." So my mom will be like, "You've

  1425. 51:20

    been voice noting Paige for two hours.

  1426. 51:21

    Pick up the phone." Yeah, but that's

  1427. 51:24

    invasive. I don't like the phone. I I

  1428. 51:26

    don't like to talk on the phone. No. And

  1429. 51:28

    I don't like when people FaceTime me out

  1430. 51:29

    of the blue. Yeah, that's aggressive.

  1431. 51:32

    But I think you guys don't mind it as

  1432. 51:34

    much. We don't. But we we are respectful

  1433. 51:36

    of each other's boundaries. But once if

  1434. 51:38

    one of us does FaceTime each other out

  1435. 51:40

    of the blue, it is the first thing we

  1436. 51:42

    say when we answer the phone, like, "Oh,

  1437. 51:44

    okay. Like, what's going on?" Yeah.

  1438. 51:46

    Someone must be dead. But that's why

  1439. 51:49

    there's not more female pilots, cuz we

  1440. 51:50

    don't like a dispatcher in our ear. We

  1441. 51:53

    don't want to hear it. text me. Yeah, I

  1442. 51:55

    know where I'm going. Thanks. I know.

  1443. 51:57

    Thanks. I know where I'm going. Stop

  1444. 51:58

    mansplaining how to land the plane.

  1445. 52:00

    Wait, we also started doing this thing

  1446. 52:02

    because like we stay in hotels all the

  1447. 52:04

    time with each other that like anytime

  1448. 52:06

    one of us has to go to the other one's

  1449. 52:08

    room, we think of like a line we're

  1450. 52:10

    going to say when we open the door. Like

  1451. 52:12

    we have to have a bit going into it.

  1452. 52:15

    Totally. I had like I was wearing a tie.

  1453. 52:18

    I think it was before we met you and we

  1454. 52:21

    opened the door and I was like I'm

  1455. 52:22

    selling you insurance and she was like I

  1456. 52:24

    just puked or so she said no I was like

  1457. 52:26

    I think I'm pregnant.

  1458. 52:29

    This is the thing. Life is sad. So if

  1459. 52:31

    you don't have a friend making you laugh

  1460. 52:33

    what am I here for? 100%. And what so

  1461. 52:35

    what do you Okay. So Paige gets Hannah's

  1462. 52:38

    text to make her laugh. What do you What

  1463. 52:40

    makes you laugh? Doesn't really make me

  1464. 52:41

    laugh that much but

  1465. 52:45

    Imagine

  1466. 52:49

    this is where she finds out. I actually

  1467. 52:50

    don't really enjoy the pod with her. Um,

  1468. 52:52

    no. Paige 100% makes me laugh. Okay, you

  1469. 52:55

    guys make each other laugh, but what

  1470. 52:57

    Okay, like what TV are we watching? And

  1471. 52:59

    like what do you do at night or like a

  1472. 53:01

    uh like I just watch Detroititers. I

  1473. 53:03

    thought it was the funniest thing ever.

  1474. 53:05

    So funny. Sam Richardson. I love comics

  1475. 53:08

    who are really different from me. It's

  1476. 53:09

    more I get more like it's more admirable

  1477. 53:12

    because I'm like I could never do that.

  1478. 53:14

    So then I think it's really funny. I

  1479. 53:16

    love watching standups. Who did I I just

  1480. 53:18

    watched two standups this week. I

  1481. 53:20

    watched Chelsea Handlers. I watched Bert

  1482. 53:21

    Chrysner's. Um honestly, anything on Tik

  1483. 53:25

    Tok. Like Tik Tok is funny. Really

  1484. 53:28

    funny. Like Tik Tok is the only social

  1485. 53:31

    media app where when I log on to it, I

  1486. 53:33

    never click my own profile and I never

  1487. 53:37

    click my notifications. You're not

  1488. 53:39

    re-watching your videos to be like, "Was

  1489. 53:41

    that funny?" No, I'm never re-watching.

  1490. 53:43

    We're on Instagram. I'm obsessed with

  1491. 53:46

    myself. I'm like, "My story is so

  1492. 53:48

    aesthetic today. My grid has never

  1493. 53:51

    looked better. I'm commenting on

  1494. 53:53

    everyone." Where Tik Tok, I really go to

  1495. 53:56

    it to just laugh. Same. I I I said this

  1496. 54:00

    many times, but in especially in the

  1497. 54:02

    pandemic, wrapping back around in the

  1498. 54:03

    pandemic, like that really saved me

  1499. 54:06

    because it was lots of good comedy on

  1500. 54:08

    Tik Tok. You've been on TikTok? Oh,

  1501. 54:10

    yeah. I I You've been on TikTok. I um

  1502. 54:12

    you know Oh, I see you commenting

  1503. 54:14

    gassing up the girls. You're doing

  1504. 54:16

    great. Also was that hilarious moment

  1505. 54:17

    where it was like everyone was leaving

  1506. 54:19

    and so you know before we leave I'm

  1507. 54:21

    going to just tell a couple people that

  1508. 54:23

    I think they're great but there's so

  1509. 54:25

    many funny people. No, there's so many

  1510. 54:27

    funny people. So many funny people. I

  1511. 54:29

    also as the creativity I'm like how did

  1512. 54:31

    you even think of that? That's

  1513. 54:33

    hilarious. Women are particularly so

  1514. 54:35

    funny because I say that for female

  1515. 54:38

    standups, it's hard to be in the clubs

  1516. 54:39

    at night, but that Tik Tok is like a

  1517. 54:42

    safe open mic where girls can just like

  1518. 54:45

    put I think there's more funny women on

  1519. 54:47

    TikTok than there are men because I do

  1520. 54:50

    feel like women are competitive with

  1521. 54:52

    each other, but there is a sense of like

  1522. 54:54

    we feel safe with each other. So, it's

  1523. 54:56

    like I know that my TikTok is majority

  1524. 54:59

    girls. Yeah. Yeah. So, like when I put

  1525. 55:01

    something out, I'm like, "Oh, it's the

  1526. 55:02

    girls will think this is funny." So, I

  1527. 55:04

    think that's like where guys I don't

  1528. 55:06

    know. They don't have that relationship

  1529. 55:08

    with other guys. Do you like making Tik

  1530. 55:10

    Toks? Yeah. I love it. I love it. And I

  1531. 55:12

    I feel like

  1532. 55:14

    I just was on it for so long and really

  1533. 55:17

    liked it that I I feel like there's a

  1534. 55:19

    way I mean my biggest fear was to come

  1535. 55:22

    on as some like old lady being like like

  1536. 55:25

    it the thing that drives me nuts are

  1537. 55:27

    like people that are like I guess I

  1538. 55:29

    should be doing this and you're like

  1539. 55:31

    beat it like it is actually like a a

  1540. 55:35

    culture of people that work really hard.

  1541. 55:37

    It's a lot of creators on there and it's

  1542. 55:38

    it's all just comedy in a different form

  1543. 55:41

    form. Yeah. Yeah. And having your stamp

  1544. 55:43

    of approval legitimizes it.

  1545. 55:46

    Well, I don't know about that, but I

  1546. 55:47

    love But I do love it. And it is like it

  1547. 55:50

    is cheoogy and it is cringey. Like if I

  1548. 55:53

    get it wrong, but whatever. Who cares?

  1549. 55:55

    Like Amy, you've never made a mistake in

  1550. 55:57

    your life. Also, I can't wait to see you

  1551. 55:59

    and Tina doing some Tik Toks on tour.

  1552. 56:01

    Continuing. Well, she doesn't love to do

  1553. 56:03

    them. Really? No. So, I always have to

  1554. 56:05

    kind of convince her a little. I feel

  1555. 56:07

    like I'm the Tina. I was I didn't want

  1556. 56:10

    to ask. Yeah. You think so? I think so

  1557. 56:12

    because there's always a Tik Tok that

  1558. 56:13

    Hannah's like, "This is gonna be so

  1559. 56:14

    funny." And I'm like, "Get away from

  1560. 56:17

    me." Yeah. And whoever is the quieter

  1561. 56:19

    one, right? Because Yeah. Yeah. I also

  1562. 56:21

    just have to say, shout out to animals.

  1563. 56:24

    Animals are the most effortlessly like

  1564. 56:26

    I'll never be funnier than like a baby

  1565. 56:28

    goat. Yeah, that's I've been trying to

  1566. 56:30

    tell you that. You may look like one,

  1567. 56:33

    but you're not. I go, I'm not following

  1568. 56:35

    a baby goat. I'm not following them.

  1569. 56:38

    They're effortless. They don't care.

  1570. 56:39

    They're everything we want to be. When

  1571. 56:41

    we were on the Vanity Fair red carpet,

  1572. 56:43

    we were the first to get our picture

  1573. 56:45

    taken cuz we were literally there first.

  1574. 56:48

    And so, like, me and Hannah are standing

  1575. 56:49

    next to each other and we just noticed

  1576. 56:51

    all the cameras go immediately off of

  1577. 56:53

    us. We were already having imposter

  1578. 56:54

    syndrome.

  1579. 56:58

    It was a dog. It was a dog. It was a

  1580. 57:01

    dog. I go, I've waited my whole life for

  1581. 57:04

    this moment and I'm losing to a dog. Was

  1582. 57:07

    it a famous dog? We don't know. Was it?

  1583. 57:10

    We stopped asking questions. We stopped

  1584. 57:12

    the question and then I saw the dog and

  1585. 57:13

    I was like, I get it. That's a beautiful

  1586. 57:15

    dog. It was a lab. Grew up in a nice. We

  1587. 57:18

    were like, that tail blowout is better

  1588. 57:20

    than Yeah. I'm like, how did the lab get

  1589. 57:22

    a Dyson air wrap?

  1590. 57:25

    And then it stood on the right side and

  1591. 57:27

    it looked gorgeous. It took my job. It

  1592. 57:29

    took your job. Um uh thank you guys so

  1593. 57:32

    much for doing this. This was so so fun.

  1594. 57:35

    Thank you for hanging with us. We love

  1595. 57:37

    you. You know, I love you back and I

  1596. 57:39

    just I can't wait for all the big things

  1597. 57:41

    ahead for both of you in all different

  1598. 57:43

    areas of the business that you're

  1599. 57:45

    working. And we feel the same about you.

  1600. 57:46

    It sounds weird, but we feel like are

  1601. 57:48

    you just getting started?

  1602. 57:54

    Click that. That would be such a great

  1603. 57:57

    vague title for this podcast. Like just

  1604. 57:59

    getting started.

  1605. 58:01

    Just getting started.

  1606. 58:04

    Amy Polar just getting started.

  1607. 58:09

    Wait, why is like your face has to be

  1608. 58:11

    like that started and then I'm I'm like

  1609. 58:14

    at Scales of Justice and I'm holding

  1610. 58:15

    like like a baby bottle and like a and

  1611. 58:20

    like a tiny little gravestone and I'm

  1612. 58:22

    like

  1613. 58:26

    I'm just

  1614. 58:29

    I'm hooked up to an IV just getting

  1615. 58:31

    started. one of those sands that's just

  1616. 58:33

    slowly going in time.

  1617. 58:37

    There's a guy I'm going like cuz I'm

  1618. 58:39

    like in a I'm in a I'm in a baby doll

  1619. 58:41

    dress

  1620. 58:42

    and I'm going just getting started and

  1621. 58:44

    behind me is um the grim reaper just

  1622. 58:46

    waiting for me and Botox getting

  1623. 58:48

    injected.

  1624. 58:51

    The grim reaper and I'm wearing pigtails

  1625. 58:53

    and I'm in like just overalls and I'm

  1626. 58:56

    like just getting started. Wait, the

  1627. 58:58

    grim reaper. All

  1628. 59:01

    right, we renamed the podcast. We have

  1629. 59:02

    fun here. All right, thank you guys so

  1630. 59:04

    much.

  1631. 59:12

    That was an awesome, super fun episode

  1632. 59:14

    of Good Hang. I loved having the ladies

  1633. 59:16

    here. It was a blast and we talked a lot

  1634. 59:19

    about a lot of things and I I I love

  1635. 59:22

    standup comedy despite maybe some of the

  1636. 59:24

    things I said podcast. No, but I have

  1637. 59:27

    great respect for it and um it made me

  1638. 59:30

    think about the people that I'm watching

  1639. 59:32

    and I would uh I would uh encourage

  1640. 59:35

    everybody to check out Jordan Jensen if

  1641. 59:37

    they haven't seen her work. She's a a

  1642. 59:40

    touring comedian right now and really

  1643. 59:42

    specific funny voice. Just great with

  1644. 59:45

    crowds, improvises all the time, deeply

  1645. 59:49

    interesting, funny woman who um yeah, I

  1646. 59:53

    just wanted to give a shout out to

  1647. 59:54

    because I think she's great. So, uh,

  1648. 59:57

    that's all. I never know how to finish

  1649. 59:58

    these things. I never know how to end

  1650. 1:00:01

    the podcast. So, okay, bye.

  1651. 1:00:03

    You've been listening to Good Hang. The

  1652. 1:00:05

    executive producers for this show are

  1653. 1:00:07

    Bill Simmons, Jenna Weiss Berman, and

  1654. 1:00:09

    me, Amy Polar. The show is produced by

  1655. 1:00:11

    The Ringer and Paperkite. For The

  1656. 1:00:13

    Ringer, production by Jack Wilson, Cat

  1657. 1:00:15

    Spalain, Kaia McMullen, and Alia

  1658. 1:00:17

    Xanerys. For Paperkite production by Sam

  1659. 1:00:20

    Green, Joel Levelvel, and Jenna Weiss

  1660. 1:00:22

    Berman. Original music by Amy Miles.

  1661. 1:00:27

    Really good. Hey

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