A DAY WITH BROOKE BURKE AT HER MALIBU HOME -Video Episode Part 1
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Transcript
Okay, girlies and guys out there, I have to say, I am very emotional.
This has been an incredible, incredible few hours with this woman that I admire so so much.
Let me interview her first and foremost.
Hi, Brooke Burke.
Thank you.
I don't even know how to describe you because you are multi-talented.
You are an actor, TV personality, entrepreneur.
You are a mother.
Now I know that you are a friend.
I am a friend.
I love that.
That might be the most important thing you said.
Yeah, a uniter of women.
You're incredible.
You're a fitness guru.
So first of all, thank you with all my heart because you opened up your home to us, to me and my friend Mojde.
And you don't even know us.
So I have to say it means the world to me.
Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you for doing this.
Thank you for coming, for trusting me.
You know, it's not easy when I open an invitation and I invite women to come and work out.
You came without fear.
You trusted me.
I'm happy to have you in my home.
And I don't think I could have described what we experienced today to you.
You needed to come and bury yourself in it and immerse yourself in it.
So thank you.
I love it.
We were saying the core of my podcast, and I keep saying that, it's not a studio podcast, it's not a perfect podcast.
I insist on making an organic podcast because this is what I want to show people, like how we are in real life.
And I think that's what my audience loves to see.
And today, in your case, it doesn't get more organic than this because this is your real home.
You guys have to go to my social media channels, YouTube, to see the videos because you're actually allowing us.
You're like, go for it, film anything you want, film your workout class.
I know how many people can't get here.
And one of the reasons why I open up my life so completely is because I built it to share it with everyone.
That's why we do Zoom and why we do digital connections because there's so many people that want a little sneak peek that might not be able to be here in person because we create this digital opportunity.
So I love it.
And this is where we are.
So I have to say thank you, Maj, my bestie.
She's a major, major businesswoman, executive, owner of Prevelli.
Thank you for supporting the podcast.
Thank you for coming with me to do this with Brooke.
Before I ask you the 10 billion questions we have, I think we would need like five hours to cover all the questions.
But I want to say that I wasn't an me personally, as a woman, I always try to find women that inspire me to interview.
I don't want to just interview whoever.
So I try to like handpick.
So I've been after you for a long time.
I, me, Kat, I look at your work and it inspires me.
Thank you.
I think your journey is incredible.
I think your energy is amazing.
But we never know how the person is going to be when we meet them.
We were talking about that coming here.
How are we doing?
And the minute we saw you,
you know, you feel disconnected.
I think I know you.
I think we're already besties.
because you have the most natural and I'm not kidding you guys and I'm not trying to kiss her.
It's just not paying me to say this.
You have the most insane real, you're real.
Thank you.
You're real.
You know, it's, it's, it's kind of like at this point in life, this is me, you know, and I remember the days, you know, being in the industry where you're to do something like this and have it recorded.
We're like, oh my god, I need a hairdresser.
I need my makeup.
I need full glam.
I need my life.
Like, no, this is just me
and my home.
And here we are sharing something that matters, that's collective energy, that's an opportunity to just get to know ourselves better, not just each other, but even ourselves.
Like, having you in class today, like to do nothing but just be in nature and experience something different is
really what inspires me too.
So
super real.
So let's start the journey from the beginning, and then we'll come all the way to your classes and what you do today.
When I told people that I was going to interview you, obviously we were, usually I'm used to getting 200, 250, 300 questions from my guests, but we got over 500 when I said it was you.
So in all honesty, we didn't even have time to go through all of them because you are very loved.
And Marsh said the same thing.
When we post and we say we're going to talk to Brooke, people are like, wow, I want to hear a chance to say.
So can you give us...
Appreciate that.
Yeah,
that's really nice, right?
Because you've been in this industry forever.
Can you give us a little bit of the background for people that don't follow your work, that don't even know that now you're working with wellness?
Let's go back to the TV days a little bit.
Are you game?
Yeah, no,
I'm going to see how I can fast track this.
It's been a real journey.
It's been a pivot.
It's been a lot of things.
I don't know, I guess if I could give you a two-minute summary.
Started out as a model.
I was never quite tall enough to really make it as a model.
I was that girl that was always stretching and trying to pretend like I was 5'8 and faking it all the way.
But I did a little bit of
kind of body work, health and wellness space in the modeling world, segued that into commercial work, studied broadcast journalism.
I always wanted to be a businesswoman.
I studied
business advertising.
I really thought that was my avenue.
and accidentally got into the modeling industry, started doing commercials, and then went on my first big audition for A Entertainment to host Wild On.
I didn't know the show.
I didn't have any experience.
I was very green.
I was still in school.
I took that one meeting.
Some of the best advice that was ever given to me was like, take that meeting.
And it was super casual.
I like showed up in a pair of jeans and wasn't
manifesting anything at that time in my life.
And I ended up getting this gig to host a show back in the day called Wild On.
That took me around the world to 40 countries.
It was amazing.
Oh, cool.
And I always loved to travel.
I always had a zest for life.
So I kind of learned that gig on the road.
Got pregnant as soon as I signed my deal with E.
Yeah.
Uh-oh.
And I was hired to be the bikini girl on the road hosting this really sexy team.
Sexy, this really sexy television show.
Did they fire you?
Well, they couldn't.
Remember, like at that time, being a woman, in the entertainment business, you couldn't not support.
you know, the evolution of life.
So I remember with my tail between my legs going into my executive producer's office, being young, inexperienced, and I just signed the gig of my lifetime.
And I had to walk in there and go, uh, guys, I'm going to throw a crew ball at you, but it's going to be okay.
Um, blah, blah, blah.
Um, they supported it.
I took my daughter on the road, and we did
40 countries in two years together.
Um, new mom, a zest for life, totally adventurous, had my baby, brought my baby with me.
I was crazy looking back at it now, but we did it.
And then that slowly transitioned to some other gigs.
I hosted Rockstar, then I went on to dance and then Dancing with the Stars.
Yeah, we have to talk about that.
Crazy.
A lot of questions, if you're okay.
Yeah, I have to.
Again, we didn't plan anything like always.
We don't script.
If we ask anything, they're going to talk about just like
I'm pretty much a number.
But obviously, a lot of questions about Dancing with the Stars because, number one, you won Dancing with the Stars.
You're a winner.
That's crazy, crazy hard.
And crazy.
And it was back then when it was like, I think the top show on TV or something.
I mean, there was a season when we had 20 million viewers, and it was like American Idol, if we can go back in time.
There were two, like, great shows, Bachelor.
It was terrifying, challenging, insightful, life-changing.
It was basically all the life lessons crammed into the ballroom.
And I never thought I...
Could win.
I never thought I would win.
I didn't go in there insecure.
I just was on a mission as a host to be a competitor so that I could sort of open up my life to a different audience.
You know, as a host, which I love doing live television, you sort of have a script, you're limited, it's live, you know, you're following a script.
This was a real opportunity to sort of show up really vulnerable and revealing.
And I had no idea how hard it would be, I had no idea how terrifying it would be.
Did you have the dancing background at all?
I never studied dance.
I love to dance and I have rhythm, but I,
as far as choreography and skill and talent goes,
not at all.
So I,
as a testament to commitment, I think I worked harder.
I think I could say that without insulting anyone.
I think I probably worked harder than anyone else because it was seven days a week.
I had a new baby.
I had had my son, my third child, who was three months old.
I was in a hormonal roller coaster.
I didn't have a dance background.
I was scared shitless.
But I showed up every day and worked really hard and found faith in my own body.
And I learned how to surrender.
I learned how to surrender to fear.
I learned how to
count on the experience and the time that I put in and then just sort of let everything go.
And your partner was Derek Puke and he's an incredible artist, right?
He's an incredible artist.
He was in his early 20s.
I always tease him because he was like
this little punk at the time.
He hadn't won a Miraball trophy yet.
I didn't know shit about shit and about dancing.
And together we were just like, you know what?
We're committed.
We're gonna dive into this we're gonna give it all we've got we're gonna outwork everyone and we're gonna just tell our story like that's what dance is really it's a narrative with your body right it's an intimate dancing story
anyway I it was amazing that I made it as far as I did and even more amazing that I want
and one of the greatest accomplishments ever and not because it was like a dance competition show because it showed me seven days a week in three months you can learn how to do anything
if you put your mind
i mean honestly, think about us as women.
How many things we're like, oh, I'd love to go take that class.
Oh, I'd love to get a culinary degree.
Oh, one day I'm going to go to Africa.
Oh, once upon a time.
But we don't.
Right.
Because we think we can't.
Yes.
Or there's all these things standing in our way.
I had four children.
Wow.
I was in a seven-day-a-week commitment to this show where life sort of stopped and stood still.
And I did it.
So,
major.
Yeah.
Shia was three months old, so I was bringing my baby with me.
Yeah, it was crazy.
It was crazy.
Obviously, you're leaving proof, and this is one of the things that I admire about you so much that you're insanely disciplined.
You put your mind into something and you get it done.
And this is what we're trying to tell people out there.
Because, like we were saying a little bit, because before we started the podcast, many times now with social media, it's multiplied by millions and millions and millions.
People out there see a celebrity, like they see you on TV, and yeah, the TV only shows the beautiful part, right?
The dress and the makeup, and the hair.
They don't see the sweat and tears and the rehearsal and the shit.
and the cracks.
We wish life was a dress.
Right, right.
Yeah, like you said, they all show up like, hi, look at me, I'm perfect.
But so, but yeah, people have this image many times of celebrity.
Oh, this is unobtainable.
She's rich.
She has 10 million nannies.
She doesn't have to do anything.
It's easy for her.
But it's not like that, right?
You've got to put a lot of work on it.
It's not like that.
It's not like that.
And I celebrate the woman whose life is like that too, by the way.
Like, I come into my connection with women with no judgment.
Like, I don't care what it takes to run your life and raise your family.
You got to do it with freedom and without judgment.
For me, it's not like that.
And it's that story and that possibility that, was that my mom?
Oh, my mom's calling me.
Sorry, mom.
She'll call back.
I love my mom.
It starts with my mom.
I have an amazing mom.
It's not like that, but...
I have to deal with that, you know, and I have to deal with that in the industry, all the criticism.
And I don't even lean into it.
You know what I mean?
Like, I know what works for me and my assembly here.
And I believe in hard work and grit and hustle.
And I also believe in dreams, you know, and I believe in making those commitments to yourself as a woman.
I do more as a mother than I did before I was a mom.
And I work with so many different women, young women, older women, women that are redesigning their life.
Women who are, Billy, that's my other girl.
That's my other dog.
Go.
Women that are redesigning their life.
Women that are
stuck in the what-now, the shoulda-coulda-would have.
Just do it.
Just do it.
We're laughing because her dog is like walking around, dancing around, they love it more.
So you win dancing with the stars.
Then they made you the invitation to be the host of the show.
Right after you went to the show.
They were casting the host and they interviewed and auditioned every single female host.
Every single female woman in the industry who wasn't a host.
I'm talking country music artists to hosts to athletes.
I mean, you name it.
Everybody wanted this gig because it was the most watched show on television.
It was ABC.
It was glamorous.
You got to dress up like a princess in the ball.
It was live.
Your dresses.
I have to make a parenthesis.
I rarely watch TV, but back then, I used to watch more TV because I was married.
I had free time and money.
And now I don't.
I'm like the broke artist.
But anyhow, I used to watch it and I used to like mostly because of the dresses.
Yeah, it was because it was like a dream, wasn't it?
It was so much dresses on this woman.
Yeah, it was a dream gig to be a princess.
Thank you.
And the bomb.
I had a great stylist.
I have diamonds and stilettos and fashion.
It was insane.
It was like Cinderella.
It was like Cinderella.
But I will keep it real and share that everybody auditioned for this gig.
And because I had one and because I was a host,
the executive team and producers said, you know, you don't need to audition.
We know who you are and we know your skill set.
And I thought, I want to audition.
And they're like, wait, what?
And I said, no, I want to audition.
Really?
I want to audition because I know what, in my business, it's a chemistry test, right?
So you might be the greatest podcaster of all time.
So if I'm producing a podcast show,
what if all of a sudden I meet somebody else and my whole creative brain shifts as a producer?
I kind of knew that in the producer world, the behind the scenes world of making a television deal.
So I said, I want to audition.
And they were like, why, Brooke?
You don't really need to do that.
And I said, I want to audition so that you see what Tom and I look like on camera and it's not beneath me.
And just let me audition.
I don't think I would have got the gig if I did an audition.
Really?
Yeah.
Because it was that moment of being on tape with a partner and bringing that energy to life.
And Tom Bergeron was an unbelievable partner, no ego.
He was so wise and seasoned and talented.
And he really gave me a space to come in and showcase my own talents.
You and I were talking about that earlier.
Not everybody knows how to be a partner.
A lot of women in our world don't know how to be a partner.
Unfortunately, there's a lot of ego.
There's a lot of competition.
Especially on television, right?
Especially when we were growing up in this business.
I grew up in this business.
So on and off, yeah.
And to this day, it breaks my heart how competitive we were talking about.
It's mostly I think women, and I hate saying that.
It breaks my heart to say that.
I think they're worse than men.
I don't know if you agree with me.
They look at each other constantly as competition.
Like, why does she get that?
Why did I like, as opposed to like, let's unite forces.
If a job is good for you, it's because it's yours.
If a job is good for me, it's because it's mine.
I love it.
And maybe something is good for both of us.
But it breaks my heart how they always like on each other's throats as opposed to like, you know, joining forces.
I'm glad you say that because...
what's ours is ours but i i you know i really do feel like we for me like in my faith i ask i pray i i i manifest what's in my divine right right so I want what's mine.
I don't want what's not mine.
I don't want what somebody else's.
But I do believe in the power of collective energy.
And you're much younger than we are, but what I would tell you and I would tell my own daughters.
No,
there's power when you realize that we're better together, that we raise our average, and that collective energy will shift you into a more powerful space.
I know that to be true.
That's why I work with women.
That's why I believe in the she tribe.
That's why I love the sisterhood circle.
I try to teach that that to my daughters.
It's like we're all here for a moment, right?
And we're all,
I think, in charge of who comes in and out of our lives and editing our lives and surrounding ourselves with people who are positive, that want what's in our divine right, that want what's best for us, that celebrate us.
I celebrate my friends.
I celebrate other women.
I celebrate
possibilities, power, happiness, change.
Like, I celebrate all of these energies.
and I have too much to do then to compete with
my life.
No, 1 million percent.
I agree.
I agree with you and that's how I live my life.
I just want like have you always been like that?
Yes.
Because I feel if I can leave a legacy behind, I want to be able everything I do,
no matter what kind of work I do, is about empowering women.
And we're going to get there because we're going to talk about social media and how it's been affecting people.
But even before social media, I think I have to send like, you know, something
good because we have the
communication channels open.
So, in a way, I feel it's my obligation because I know there are a lot of young girls that look at our work, that look at our social media, a lot of women out there who are, because I was in an abusive marriage
for 14 years.
And I feel now maybe there is somebody out there who is in a position that I was, and they don't know how to, you know, gain forces and get out.
So, I feel I need to keep sending the message of positivity, and we are stronger together.
I think you're right.
You know, you grew up in the entertainment business.
I started my career in the entertainment business and then I shifted into this wellness space and sometimes people are like, how did that happen and why did that happen?
And very similar to what you're saying, for me, it's an act of service.
So for me, I feel, A, I feel called to do it and I love it, but I also feel like it's sort of a gift and it's a gift back for me with other women.
And in doing that, this year, I'm really focusing on, and I'm actually writing a workshop
called soul service and it's about being in service to ourselves so in being if you can just entertain this concept for a minute we can explore this but if you entertain the possibility of being in service to yourself because we're in service to others especially as women all the time I'm a mom I'm always serving I'm always giving my dogs it's my man it's my kids it's everybody it's my students it's every single person that comes into my life everybody's tapping a little bit of your life force, right?
So I like being in service.
It's my own problem, I love it.
But when we learn how to be in service to ourselves, how to serve ourselves, how to serve our soul, our spirit, our self-care, how to fill our own cup up, I'm like twice the superhero.
Oh, yeah.
It's life-changing.
But I didn't know that as a young girl.
Oh, me and me.
I didn't know the value of being in service to myself.
So like when I teach yoga, I thank everyone for allowing me to be in service to them.
But then I encourage them and invite them.
I challenge them to learn how to be in service to themselves, like you coming to class today and diving into it and doing something hard.
It's not easy like we did out there.
It's freaking hard.
No, it's freaking hard.
You know, in service to yourself, to change your body, to feed your soul, to listen to your heartbeat, to slow down, change, to change.
It's freaking hard, but when you're done, you're like, oh, I'm so happy I did it.
Because the other side of it, that's my people.
How do you do it every day?
I go, because I know it's on the other side of it.
It's the self-care, self-love.
But we're going to get there.
But I have to finish finish this conversation because I know so many people are gonna be mad at me if I don't.
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and then
I know the media was all over you when they let you go from the job.
Yeah.
You know, it was unexpected.
It was unexpected.
And I want to talk about it because there's huge lessons in going through this.
I don't mind calling it fired.
People are like, well, your contract was up and it was a renegotiation.
It's very complicated.
For me, in and of itself, I wasn't there anymore.
I was let go, fired, call it what you want.
I never needed to bullshit my way around it with the media.
It is what it is.
I went from having the greatest gig on television, the greatest gig of, well, I would, I guess I would argue that Wild On was pretty cool, but it was an amazing experience in the ballroom.
And then, all of a sudden, in one moment, in an instant, it all went away.
Like, when I was said, we're not renewing yourself.
I was driving to school with my kids in the car.
My dressing room was being painted.
Like, we were gearing up for the season.
That's the entertainment business.
And it was sort of like, you could have, I'm like, wait, wait, what?
So it was that moment of, of, holy shit, my life just took a hard left.
Deep breath, right?
Now what do I do?
And I, Billy,
no, I really approach that from a,
I'd like to think I'm grounded and I'm spiritual in my process, but I also believe that things come along and rock us and rattle us and pivot for reasons.
And it was a time in my life where I think I needed change.
Would I have loved to continue there?
Yeah, I would be lying if I said that I wasn't, but it was probably time for a shift.
I just finished eight seasons.
It was an amazing run.
And it was time for me to explore other things.
And I didn't know what I was going to do, to be honest.
When
it hurts, right?
Especially when it's such a fabulous job, high-profile, you're making good money, you're on TV.
But at the same time, because I'm always like that, I'm always the optimist.
I know so much.
I think maybe things have the cheesy things happen for a reason because maybe all the windows are gonna open into your life to bring you to where you are today it's the concept we know that's so easy oh when the door closes when okay we know all that but I'm like fuck now yeah I know now like fuck I want to stay but I have to ask you this tough question and if you don't want to answer but but I think everybody asked and many years later people still send this question do you think or do you know or do you think it's true that they didn't renew a contract because they wanted to bring a younger woman there because to me when I heard that rumor like they gotta be spar I swear lots of yeah they gotta be footies
I didn't want to believe that
you know it's it's interesting dancing with the stars has an audience of grandmas
my mom's friends watch dancing with the stars a younger generation maybe not so much unless you're in the ballroom world right athletes big following in the sports world I actually think they chose Erin Andrews because she was a sportscaster and it served
two worlds.
She also had a lot of controversy at that time because of some social media.
I remember that really
tragic things that were going on, which a network will serve themselves in sort of publicity.
She was in the news a lot.
Could be.
I never really thought about it as a younger person because then you segue after her into Tyra Banks, right?
So what did that look like?
Was that ethnicity?
Was that culture?
There are so many ways to look at it.
Rather than me trying to figure that out,
I brought it back inward and I thought,
okay, now what am I going to do?
And it really allowed me to sort of put the word paint on and roll my sleeves up and go, What am I going to do now?
Am I going to go create a show?
Am I going to go do daytime?
Am I going to start a business?
Am I, am I going to, like, I didn't know what to do.
And it was a really great exercise of exploration and not easy.
It's like starting out in the business.
You hear no 99,
more than that.
I was lucky that I heard one in 100, but
you really have to have,
you know, guts and have strength and have a backbone.
And I was really blessed.
I think that I was grounded in my family and I was grounded in other things that really matter,
that don't come and go and that don't go away.
You know, what I do in the entertainment business, I've always loved.
I love what I do.
But I had a real foundation that probably saved me, or I would have drowned in that
like it happens to a lot of people right like it happens and I get asked that all the time because I while I was married I didn't I barely worked to the point that I didn't work anymore because my husband didn't want me to work
so he convinced me to to stop doing everything that I loved doing so now that I'm back
I
hear people say all the time in Hollywood like oh you know they're not gonna they don't hire women over 30 they don't hire women over there's nothing for me to do I don't believe in it because I think we open our own doors.
I don't believe in it.
What do you think?
It's a big conversation.
I love the depth of this conversation.
I love the depth of it in these different walks of life.
So please, you know, chime in on this too.
I don't believe in that, but I do really, really, really understand the culture of the industry of entertainment.
By that, I mean I host live television shows, and I went from being a sex symbol to being a ballroom princess to now being in my 50s and changing in my life as a woman and embracing it and owning it and really understanding that.
What I know is that I know where my talent lies and those opportunities.
So if there's a new live hot hip live show, it's probably not me.
It's going to be a younger, poppier, probably ethnic and probably a younger hipper personality.
I don't know that I even, it's funny that you're asking that.
I'm thinking now, I never really equated that to age.
I equated it just to
the person that serves that role best.
And so I've had to really embrace who I am as a woman.
But I also believe in the ebbs and flow of the business, meaning sometimes there's a pause and you can't get arrested, like literally for years.
So what do you do?
Do you go back to the drawing board and go, holy shit, what's going to become of me now?
Or do you just play the pause and do other creative things and then know that it's all coming back around so i i just have a lot of faith in that same but in the meantime i started other businesses and i really love what i'm doing now so you know it's funny awesome at it thank you awesome at it thank you but our age is a number our age is a number and if we're gonna fight it as women we're in big trouble i will say that i agree we're in big trouble if you're gonna try to look like that 30-year-old woman that you once were you're in big trouble and i think that's a big mistake a lot of women make i think you need to embrace your life and what you are, and live healthy, take good care of yourself.
But yeah, embrace because we're alive.
Yeah, it's all about being alive.
It's so true.
Even your life and the challenges that you went through in your marriage made you who you are.
So, what do we bring to this table?
Like, who is the woman that I'm bringing to the table today?
She's a wiser, more seasoned, I want to say, better woman than I brought to the table 10 years ago.
She's different,
yeah.
She's different.
She might not be as much fun.
I feel No,
I think I can speak for both of us.
Well, she's never been a lot of fun.
How old are you?
Dean Lines?
No.
Is this top secret?
No, I'm 35.
You're 35.
Oh, it's good to be at 35.
But it's good to be in my 50s.
I tell you, I've never been happier.
I never felt healthier.
I've never felt more like in tune with my body, my sexuality, my health.
I feel independent.
Being independent is empowering.
Like, we kick some ass.
I talk too much about that all the time.
Like, most of our clients in our agency they're men and they're like cry babies and I'm like we take care so much more
than this man
right and look at you like you're running like this this business and you're teaching everybody I think we're strong and that's empowering I love that you say that and I always hate to repeat myself but I'm gonna remind you I'm gonna remind you of this concept because we're so strong and we're such badasses and it's such an amazing time to be a woman that there is a bittersweetness to it because we are powerful.
Because we give and give, you talk about men, we are
it's different, though.
But because we give and we give and we give, and we give it away.
We love men, but they're we're strong.
I love men, I love it.
Some of the work that I've been doing lately, which I'm going to invite you to a workshop in the TP, is that we've been really exploring the polarity of masculine and feminine energy.
Oh, yeah, it's light and dark, it's sun and moon, it's yin and yang.
And I'm obsessed with that because
we're all strong, so we could very easily be misinterpreted for
boss bitch, independence,
you know, ego, all of these things that couldn't be further from the truth.
I don't feel masculine, but I feel strong.
Yeah.
I went on 25 dates last year.
We're like, oh, tell me about that.
And, you know, I'm like,
I got all these feedback of your masculine energy.
Because she's a boss bitch.
You know, and I'm like, oh my God, I need to switch, you know.
The energy.
Can I, okay, can I?
Okay, guys, can I
hold that thought?
Hold that thought.
We're going to take a two-minute break so we can pay a few bills and thank our sponsors.
The girl pays her bills, by the way.
That's right, by the way.
It's all about women's empowerment.
I'm going to say, like, you want to drive me crazy?
Let's not even talk about sugar babes, a whole other episode.
Women have to be independent and pay their own bills.
Number one.
But we're going to talk about this, the masculine and feminine energy.
Talk about how you got into wellness.
and then we're gonna poke a little bit in your personal daily life because it's really fun and exciting
i have a lot to tell you about this masculine misinterpreted woman totally it happens to all misread woman we'll be right back this is an insanely inspiring episode here at the home of this gorgeous gorgeous talented and incredibly nice woman
we'll be right back this is cat on the loose 100 organic this is what i love.
Never edited, never scripted.
It's real life.
We'll be right back to it.