Episode Transcript
Of course.
Speaker 2Love Supreme is a production of iHeartRadio.
This classic episode was produced by the team at Pandora.
Speaker 1Yo Yo Yo, What up?
Speaker 3This is fon Tigelow with this week's QLs classic.
This week we go back to June twenty seven, twenty eighteen, with our guests Tessa Thompson, best known for her work and Sorry to Bother You, and Creed Tessa Hillcourt about falling into acting social activism, Tato salad, Philly cheese steaks, and goat love.
Speaker 1I don't know what goat love is.
That sounds very Caucasian.
Speaker 3I'm gonna have to check it out and find out what that is.
But anyway, this is QLs episode number ninety.
Enjoy y'all basic.
Speaker 1On sit better Delivery.
I'm no ex let's do it.
Suprema s s Suprema.
Speaker 4Role called Suprema su su Suprema roll call, Suprema suck Supremo roll call, Suprema s.
Speaker 1Supremo roll Some Thompson needs raincoats.
Yeah Heenan Thompson's got chokes.
Yeah a mere Thompson's a show boat.
Yeah Ta Thompson's a go.
Speaker 4Suprema suck suck Suprema roll called Suprema s Suprema roll.
Speaker 1My name is sugar.
Yeah.
Speaker 5I was high on weed.
Yeah when I recorded the seed.
Yeah, and when I saw cream.
Speaker 4Supremo, Supremo role came Suprema supremo role.
Speaker 2You're white people, Yeah, please use seasoning.
Yeah, sincerely yours, Yeah, boss.
Speaker 4Suprema sun Suprema roll came Suprema so soun Suprema roll call.
Speaker 6Now y'all know I'm excited.
Yeah, Tessa Thompson, Oh, my sisters invited.
Speaker 4Suprema roll call, supremapt Premia roll call.
Speaker 1What you do, Suprema Suprema Really ste.
Speaker 4Supremai asshole, Suprema ruined.
Speaker 1I was trying to help is ruined.
Speaker 7Dear white Steve, go ahead, dear white Steve, gonna have the microphone.
Speaker 8Please thank you.
I'm reclaiming my time.
My intro.
Speaker 2We can't punch in, We can't, no, no, you can't punch and you can punch him in the face.
Speaker 8You like three more, dear white people, and then we either who.
Speaker 1Made the roll up that we can't have a do over you.
Then it kind of loses the spontaneity.
Speaker 8Yeah, you want to hear it though, I mean I was curious.
Speaker 2To see how fast you because the thing is, whoever my my determination on how good the interview is going to go.
Speaker 1No, no, it's based on.
Speaker 2How fast you are on your feet with the roll call, like Leon Silver is not answering questions.
Speaker 1It was like, this's gonna be a hard interview.
Actually it wasn't.
But you know, I'm just.
Speaker 8Saying, man, yeah, but now you can't.
Speaker 7We can't do do over now that you even applied more pressure onto what it was going to be.
Speaker 8It was going to be this spontaneous.
Speaker 9Supreme live in the moment, I'm here to say, yeah, I mean I'm gonna.
Speaker 1Go no, not see Steve never ever interrupt.
Speaker 8Against what that was on accident of what happens to.
Speaker 5Well, you hesitated and I thought you were frozen, so I tried to give you the first line he.
Speaker 2Was trying to man splain, was like line no, definitely, but never in the history of our listeners are confused, Okay, because Steve done through us all anyway.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to Quest Love, Supreme and Alternative Reality.
This is Quest Love and with Teams Supreme, Boss Bill.
It's like Ea, Sugar, Steve shout out to Fontigelow and his countertop and unpaid bill somewhere on Sesame Street.
But we're We're strong today.
Our guest today is the star of stage and the small and big screen.
Her credits include Creed from the Rocky franchise Do You Write People?
Uh, Selma, right, people, I'm sorry that again?
No do over, There's no do over, No Selma, Annihilation, Thor for Colored Girls, and this summer she stars as Detroit and be critically acclaimed already, so so much claim about this film.
It's not even coming out to July, and we critically claimed Boots Riley the directorial debut, and the science surrealist comedy Sorry to Bother You.
Speaker 8Uh.
Speaker 2She's also been present behind the camera as well as part of the Times Up movement, uh slowly helping to redirect the course for women and people of color to green her pastors and speaking of witch, speaking of pastors, rumor has it that she's also a goat m Uh.
We would like to welcome the world's finest goat enthusiasts.
Yes, Tessa Thompson.
I gotta ask, how did that whole testa the goat thing come up?
Speaker 1Yeah?
Speaker 7That's a Twitter handle I expressed that I liked goats, I guess on some public platform, wish he was here now, And somebody started taking photographs of me and putting them next to photographs of goats that look that are dressed like I'm dressed, or posed like I'm posed, and it's pretty impressive.
Speaker 2It's kind of scary, though, goat because that the yellow dress one.
I mean, it's sometimes they made the outfit and then put the goat in that yellow dress and had it in the same facial express right.
Speaker 7And then there's some people, some conspiracy theorists or some people that don't believe in just good things that think that I'm behind this account, and I just want to say that I'm not.
Speaker 1I have nothing to do with I know you're not.
Okay, that's the one thing in stalking you.
Yeah.
I went through every every comment, everything, and I was like, Okay, this is not her.
Speaker 8It's not me.
Speaker 1I understand.
Speaker 8I wish it was.
I wish I was that you drink goat's milk and eat goatmeal.
Speaker 2I don't.
Speaker 7I'm not into goat products.
I'm just into goats.
Speaker 1I got it.
I see.
I really wish that, Sorry, Zarah was here, right you're on the account.
It's great, right, it's god.
Speaker 4Yeah.
Speaker 8Yeah.
Speaker 1Like that's the point where I was like, wait a minute.
Speaker 7And and then some people were tweeting like at Desil Thompson is such a good sport, Like there's this idea that I also look like a goat, and I'm embracing the fact.
Speaker 8But and now I'm cool with that too, Like my eyes are whites set apart, Like it's fine, that's funny.
Speaker 1Okay, let's start the interview.
Stop.
I just wanted to know about the account.
Yeah, welcome to this show.
I guess today you're.
Speaker 2Doing like a bunch of press junkets and things because you're immaculately dressed.
Speaker 1Yeah, And all the years I've known you, I was like, wow, I've never seen.
Speaker 4This is you.
Speaker 1When you're on television dressed.
I never know.
I mean you know that, Like, I've never seen you look like you look on TV.
Speaker 8So that's what I say.
She looks press junk ist chic today.
Speaker 2Yes, some people help me, who's your stylist?
Speaker 7These guys named Mike and Wayman, they're dope.
They're friends, they like were competitors sort of.
And then they were like, let's just work together?
Speaker 8How does one How does a starlet find the perfect style?
Speaker 1I always want?
Speaker 8I mean that's what you want?
Speaker 1Uh?
Speaker 7They they actually kind of stalked me.
They asked if I was wasn't working with anyone?
See this is what you're talking about.
I didn't have my my proverbial ship together.
Speaker 4No.
Speaker 8I was just like I would just show up, like I'll just wear this and then not for my life.
Speaker 7But they dressed me for when I appear in public spaces.
Speaker 1They I meant for the meg.
Speaker 8Yeah, they dressed me for the Megal and Tom Brown they made that dress for me.
Speaker 1How does okay?
I was going to say, how does that work?
Like does a designer?
I think to you first, like what what is the what is the uh kind of the protocol for?
Because that guy is such a cool kids family club that the.
Speaker 2Rest of the world kind of watches like through the window, like what's going?
But how does one do?
Speaker 7They are like tears of coolness even there, like you're at least from.
Speaker 8Okay because even I've reposted the picture.
I think Lena Waite posted the picture of your whole crew, and it's funny because I reposted the picture it was you.
Speaker 6It was you know, it was Lena, it was about to say black Panther and his sister.
It was Chad, it was the T shirt.
It was it was a beautiful crowd of people and I was put under the picture.
I was like, you know, this is the photo that the press won't send out, but this is the one that you wanted to be.
Speaker 8I know, well, I think it might have been.
Speaker 7I mean, this is my first year, but it seems like it's probably the blackest met that there has ever been.
And how that picture happened is there were a couple of us just already in the hallway and we were like, someone started taking a picture of zone, like we want this picture.
So everyone black after dinner meet in the hallway and then it got just like loud and fun.
And then Frances McDorman came and then she realized everyone was black, so she was like maybe I should leave.
And then and then White was like, no, you're an ally like get insists you're cool.
But it was yet it was a young black and gifted experience.
It was really it was cool.
It was cool because you're right in the sense of like from the rest of the world's perception, there's this thing of like it's the cool kids.
It feels like it's also just like who's in the zeitgeist at that moment and who's in the cultural conversation, And so it felt good to look around at that hallway and be like, folks that are in the conversation and like moving and shaking, are all these really red black people people of color?
Speaker 2Like, based on what I saw on Instagram, you guys, even though y'all would sort of be the perceived outcast, i e.
Not the Kardashians, Yeah, not Rhiann and not j Low and you know, like the typical Blake Lively or whatever, but y'all seem way cooler and based on you know, the comments like that seemed like the coolest met Gallip Ball someone someone put up like the first year compared to oh, last year, and it was just like there was no comparison then.
Speaker 1It was like that.
Speaker 8But anyway, Yeah, it's I guess it's a good time, all right.
So where were you born Los Angeles?
Okay, what part Hollywood?
Speaker 7Well, Glendale technically was where I lived when I was little, and then Hollywood and then moved to the West Side to get to a.
Speaker 8Better school district.
Speaker 2Glendale with the world famous roller skating rink.
Yeah, yeah, that's the uh.
Speaker 1Every Hollywood roll bounce.
Speaker 2Like any time that you've seen roller skating in a video or in Hollywood, it happens at that place.
Speaker 8About to savans uh disorderlease roll bouts.
Speaker 1Seriously there.
Speaker 2Simpson as the roller skating teacher.
I don't know, but yes, true story.
Speaker 7I crashed Snoop Dogg's birthday party there one Oh wow.
Really was not an invited guest.
Speaker 1Did you know that it was happening.
Speaker 7Yeah, I heard it was happening, and I was in another bar with my friend Shelby, and I was like, let's go, We're just gonna get in there.
Speaker 2You seem like the type of person that knows that if you do something with confidence, it just happened.
Speaker 8I also had this is the thing.
Speaker 7I was like seventeen or yeah, seventeen or I was not twenty one yet, and I had a fake ID and I was out in Hollywood because I.
Speaker 2Was the death Row years, Dangerous Snoop years exactly, my uncle Snoop Years.
Speaker 8Okay, listen.
Speaker 7So I was walking with two girlfriends from mine and Snoop Dogg was going in the back door of a Hollywood club and he had like twenty six people with him and he was like yo yo and told us to come, and I was like it's Snoop, like we gotta go, and we didn't go because you were like do we go?
Speaker 1Do we not go?
Speaker 8So I was like, it's happening now, I'm going to go to your party.
Speaker 1I want Tom How I.
Speaker 8Didn't really meet him.
I just like rolled around.
It was really fund was scared of me.
Speaker 1Because like death row Ara, Snoop is way.
Speaker 8Differ No, but he's now No.
I didn't go then.
Speaker 7First I went to his birthday party and I think that was like he was snoop lyon then, so we're fine, oh yeah Snoop line is.
Speaker 8Yeah, wow, yes, that's.
Speaker 1Kindler, gentler Snoop.
Speaker 8Yeah, kind of wait how long has he been Snoop lying?
Speaker 1That was like not anymore?
Speaker 2He maybe wind like what two thousand and seven, No, it's like twenty twelve.
I think, oh, Grandpap Snoop Now Yeah, So in Glendale, Well, I okay, I'm gonna try and act like I don't know your history already, but for our listeners.
Speaker 8Yeah, because I don't know, Shi tell me I don't know anything.
Speaker 2Yeah, well I was still mind blowing that your father's genius.
How's he doing, by the way.
Speaker 8He's really good.
Speaker 7Okay, Yeah, he's really good.
He moved to New York when I was My folks weren't together.
He moved to New York when I was like seven or eight, and so I would come here all the time.
Speaker 1I came here.
Speaker 8Yeah, I was by coastal.
Speaker 7So he came here for a while because he just signed a record deal and he was like supposed to hear from music, and then he just fell in love with the city and eventually fell in love and had my little brother, my little sister.
So I grew up between here and Brooklyn, and my folks were on four Green for like fifteen years.
Speaker 1Your father being Mark Anthony to Chocolate Genius.
Speaker 8Yea, And I will say, tell me something about his music, like how would people remember chocolate genius.
Speaker 1To be uh, he was part of a black renaissance, like in the early arts.
Speaker 7Yeah, and I think made work like he has one record called black music.
And I mean he's sort of a musician that's hard to categorize.
And I think so often, particularly for like black musicians, they want to box you into this space like you're an R and B artist and that maybe isn't you.
Speaker 8So he kind of a mirror kind of talk about that.
Speaker 6She he likened him to like an early Martin Luther, Cody Chessn.
That's somebody who is kind of like out the box.
Speaker 2In the early arts, there was Saul Williams, Martin Luther, Chocolate Genius.
Speaker 1At some point.
Speaker 2I mean, even I guess Rasign was sort of he was still making stuff in the late nineties early ught, so he was in that circle.
I mean it wasn't official circle, but sort of like the the alternative alternative black, Like there was leftist center black, yeah, of Neils, and then there was even the leftist center to that.
Speaker 8So what is that like being growing up being the door of a left left left left left artist?
Speaker 7Did you you guys ever listen to Lightspeed Champion, who's the before Blood Orange.
Yeah, My dad like sort of occupied that space before other people were occupying that space in terms of not just like sonically the sound, but also Chocolate Genius was this creation.
Speaker 8So yeah, dad was a pioneer in ways.
Speaker 7Yeah, kind of I think I don't know, I think that he would say something different probably, but I don't know, it was cool because it meant like being in New York I was, you know, like especially Fort Green at that time.
I mean, it's still cool, but it just felt so rich.
It was before sort of like before gentrification.
So you know, we would be outside on our stupid like mos stuff would walk by our like Rosie Perez or you know, Spike Lee or it just and I would go, you know, with my dad to the public theater and like see plays and it just you know, I was like sixteen at the time, so it just felt like, well, I want to be a part of this world of people making things and such.
Speaker 8A difference in the culture from Glendale to Fort Green.
Yeah right, yeah, wildly so.
Speaker 2So at the time when you you're witnessing this, were you yourself thinking about a career in music or anywhere in the arts, Like what was your talent as a kid.
Speaker 1Or a teenager.
Speaker 7I always acted in school, but I didn't think about it as a career.
I always thought that I would I don't know that I would like be a teacher or be a lawyer, go into politics.
Speaker 8I don't know.
I felt like I.
Speaker 7Wanted to make a contribution in some way, and maybe because of my proximity to being around artists.
Speaker 8I just felt like, I don't know, is this possible for me?
Is this something that I could do or will do?
Speaker 1So what was the moment that you had the inspiration like, Okay, this is what I want to do.
Speaker 7I think it was just like at a time where I realized it was such a compulsion that it was like such a thorn in my side that it wasn't gonna.
Speaker 8Let me go.
Speaker 7And at that point, like I didn't go to college, Like I dropped out, you know what I mean, Like there was nothing else I was qualified to do.
Speaker 1I was like, where you go to college?
Speaker 7Well, I went to community college and then I was supposed to transfer to Berkeley, and I like just decided not to and took a semester off and started taking classes, and I just I don't know.
Speaker 8I was performing so much.
I was doing theater in la It just was all I really cared about.
Speaker 7It was the only thing I cared about that the idea of like being bad at it felt crippling to me.
Everything else I could sort of dabble in and not be that good at and move on.
Speaker 1Wow, that's crazy.
Speaker 2Like, because as productive and as busy as you are right now, I would have thought like this took meticulous planning, and you had vision boards and you did when you repeat mantras, and you know, I would post it notes one hundred million records more than thriller like, but you just like you know, it was a throw on my side.
Speaker 8I decided to well, yeah, maybe I'm underselling it.
No I don't.
I didn't.
I didn't have I didn't have vision boards.
Speaker 7But I think the other thing too, just just like truthfully, I felt like there's just more interesting work to do now if you look like me when I first started, that wasn't necessarily the case.
So I think I not that I had ambivalence towards it, but there was a part of me that was like is this sustainable, like if I can I make a living at this?
And also is this going to be able to captivate me and like hold my interest?
And so yeah, I think there has been an evolution.
Speaker 1I was going to say that.
Speaker 2Maybe around the time when Thor came along.
Then I realized, because I'm not go to front like I'm a marvel head.
I mean, I've seen a couple of Marvel films.
But in my head, I don't know the history of I can't pronounce it me.
Speaker 1Valkyri.
Speaker 2Yes, I don't know the history of her.
But I would imagine that, maybe initially that that role was written Witten, what's for on my ars?
My man, I'll just be a rabbit.
That role was written for.
It was written for, I would imagine for a white character.
Speaker 8And it was written it was written for a white lady.
They wasn't happy about this black lady.
Speaker 1Whoa call anyway?
No, but the fact that all of your roles you seem to to.
Speaker 2Masterfully uh steer your career in a place where it's it's not typical at all, especially for for black acts like I know worthy black actresses.
Yes, I know worthy black actresses that because roles are far between, they might have to compromise some ship.
And do you know Where's the Where's the Potato Salad?
Speaker 1Part three?
You know, straight to DVD or just something to Yeah it's a real movie.
Speaker 8No, No it's not.
Yes, yes, Where's the Potato Salad is a real film.
Speaker 2Yeah, there's actually really one hilarious scene and due wait you watched it?
Speaker 1Watched it in what year?
Speaker 8Was that made I don't know, but.
Speaker 1Hey man, trust me.
When the interview is over, I will say, the most funny thing is it funny?
Like that's funny funny?
The scene I'm going to show you is fucking hilarious, like genuinely nious.
Speaker 8I think I rented it from next I want to see it.
Speaker 1Wait, slight rabbit Hole?
All right?
Are you?
Speaker 4Are you?
Speaker 8Why?
Speaker 7Why?
Speaker 8Why can't we have it?
Why is that a problem?
I love dos my car?
You have a point?
We just I mean, it's just that we don't have enough.
We don't have enough, but we don't have enough content.
We don't have enough and don't have enough representations, so said the world.
Speaker 2There's no balance there canna be used in my car.
But then there's Mississippi burning and all this other stuff.
But I think, and when it comes to black films, I think we have too many serious films and not enough.
Speaker 1No, we have earnest films like common film.
Speaker 8We're still but we don't have a lot of Wherever you're going with that.
Speaker 1Route that I call him ernest camp.
But what I'm saying is we don't have it.
We don't have enough.
Speaker 2Like silly comedies aim to younger kids, you know, the teenagers.
There's not really that many of those right now, right now, there used to be there.
Yeah, I don't know, but like I think Nick Cannon is probably feeling that, like his production can become funny as far as funny stuff like silly do work.
Speaker 8They got dope kids, and that's not funny.
Dope dope.
Speaker 1Yeah, I wasn't.
I was too no.
Speaker 8I like dope.
It was dope, but it wasn't funny.
Speaker 2You know why I was mad at the it's gonna sound really really anal the band scenes.
I hated the band scenes because the music didn't match.
Speaker 8The band scenes are always tough movies.
Speaker 10Were the two that looks at your finger And it's not even that, it's the fact you've got Pharrell's tenny drums and plinky sounds and you've got people with actual guitars and keyboards sitting there.
Speaker 1It just I couldn't watch it.
Speaker 8I'm sorry, you missed the plot.
What about the plot and the act.
Speaker 2It was too distracting.
It was too distracting.
Sorry, Yeah, it's funny.
We have the same outlook, but I was willing to let it go.
I didn't even gate that Okay.
Speaker 8Did you do a Twitter I like when you do brands about things like Instagram retoring rants?
Did you do any rans?
Speaker 4No?
Speaker 8I didn't about dopey sounds and I do those you like?
Speaker 1I believe you're first.
Speaker 8I believe this is a widow.
I don't understand it.
Speaker 1Is about to lose invites and the ghost Where's.
Speaker 2Yeah, but that's that's a real film, Steve.
Also, the Roscoes Chicken and Waffle Comedy is also.
Speaker 1A real film.
Speaker 6Well, Roscoe's is a real film.
Roscoe Go Back Home or whatever?
That's the Martin joint with.
Speaker 1No, there's a.
Speaker 7Alright, see this all you have to do assume I'm gonna go home.
If where's the potato cells on Netflix?
I will watch five seconds of it?
So then my whole feet is like because you liked you.
Speaker 1Know what I mean?
Speaker 8And that's even all the deep cuts, all the deep cuts are like this is a film, like wait ahead, but I like for a white pot Oh no, that's not what I'm saying.
Have you ever had Japanese potatoes?
First of all, what do who tells them to do that?
Okay, yes they do that, they do that.
Speaker 1Have you had it?
Speaker 7It's delicious.
It's like it's like eating a cloud, like it's very mashed.
It's really good.
I'm sorry, it's good.
Speaker 1Where do you find this?
I don't know.
Speaker 8I mean in Japan.
But also like potatoes in Japan.
Speaker 1Huh, there's no potatoes in Japan.
Cheese either, But.
Speaker 8The Japanese love cheese.
They love mayo too.
Speaker 1Where's your source of information for this?
Steve from from eating in Japanese restaurants?
Speaker 8Oh wait, it's been in Japan.
Speaker 2It's about to be the most ignorant.
All right, all's ruined that.
No, I'm taking my back.
Speaker 8So can I just say so?
What you're saying is you prefer I did not see a record.
Do you prefer the Japanese potatoes?
Speaker 1No?
Speaker 8I didn't say that.
I didn't say that.
I just said that.
I don't I don't dismiss.
I don't think the.
Speaker 7Potato salad always has to be yellow.
I don't want fruit in my potato salad.
Speaker 6But if you're coming to the cookout, but American potato salad should be yellow, how about that?
Speaker 8Can we agree on that?
That's yeah, that's fine.
Speaker 1Now y'all got me thinking, no raisins, No raisins.
Speaker 8No, no raisins.
But also I don't mind like a different kind of mustard sometimes like a whole.
Speaker 1Brain, like a.
Speaker 8Yellow.
But I agree with you Bill, y'all can't see what he's doing.
Speaker 1But I only get my black carveroot.
Speaker 8Ain't no place invested, so she can she can let her go with that one.
We give her that one because you win it.
Speaker 1We found an incredible rabbitue did we did?
Speaker 2How are you able to navigate and stay active in a town that doesn't cater to you structurally to you?
Speaker 7And I think maybe I have my dad to think for that in a sense, because I feel like, you know, I got to see my dad be an artist do his thing that felt really singular and not make concessions.
And sometimes it meant that we were eating really good and stuff was great, and we were shopping what color do you wanted in?
Like I don't gotta choose both, And sometimes that wasn't the case, you know, And so yeah, sometimes you make money and sometimes you don't because you just aren't going to do certain things.
Speaker 8But will we ever see you in a Tyler Perry or will Packer moving?
I've been in a Tyler for color, Okay, you're.
Speaker 6Cheating because I mean, really, you were in for Colored Girls, and who could say no to the movie version for Colored Girls no matter who did it.
And I'm gonna say, like I said to Miss Felicia that if Debbie Allen would have Debbie.
Speaker 2Anybody, anybody, I gotta throw I wish, you know, and Zing and Stewart had directed it like.
Speaker 8Supposed to, I know, and her treatment sounded so beautiful.
Speaker 1It was it would have propelled her past or at least equal to right now.
Speaker 7Yeah, it's yeah, but you know what, I truly believe if the film were being made today, she would be the choice.
Speaker 8And this is no shade to Tyler.
It's like they wanted to get that movie made.
Speaker 6Crazy when you think about her in retrospect, because at the very least, I mean that we put her in the least, but Ava would have been the director of that movie Aba or in Zinger.
I'm just saying, like today in popularity and in sense of female empowerment.
Speaker 7And cultural conversation, which is like for us by a we want to be able to tell our own stories.
If it's a you know, it's not that men can't be involved in telling our story, but like if it's a female centric film, like yo, let a woman tell it.
Speaker 8And he couldn't even give it to Debbie Allen.
It just makes me man your sisters, Yeah, she did almost she did give us know that she was a part of pronouncing her name wrong this whole time.
Damn what a culture for is?
Please test it?
How you pronounce her name?
Well, now I'm nervous that I'm pronouncing it.
Speaker 4Ca.
Speaker 8So you're right, it's Cassie Lemons.
Okay, question.
My dad once told me that it's not SHOT's chart.
That's Truegeria.
I think one knows that though.
Speaker 1The thing like, yeah, pronounced pronounce.
Speaker 8Everyone says, and also, did you guys see that I was trying to do it?
Speaker 1Channel the four of us can see it physically described what you were about.
Speaker 2We'll take pictures.
We'll take pictures.
Yes, oh my god, this is like Wayne's World meets Let's just throw everything out there.
What did you have for breakfast?
Speaker 1No?
Speaker 7I had.
Speaker 8The embarrassed you're from Cali?
I know I had.
I had rye toast with some avocado, uh, some greens.
Very la.
It's just very l A.
Speaker 7I don't need eggs never in my life, not scrambled, not omeleted.
Not I have had a bite of for Toto, that's it.
Speaker 8Never know a bite of it.
But I don't.
Yeah, so breakfast is a hard thing for me.
Speaker 1You don't like yellow potato salad because well, the eggs done.
Speaker 8Yeah, it's the mustard mirrors not.
Speaker 1Yeah, I'm not I'm not sorry.
Speaker 8Your's bougie, I know, but this is the thing.
Can you be like, if you're truly a foodie, you don't want your potato salad all that yellow.
I don't know what you're saying, test, there's a limit.
Speaker 6I mean, there's a limited a yellow, but you better equal it out with some relish, you know what I'm saying, Like, Oh, hello, I.
Speaker 2Want to see we can do a whole ninety minute episode based on potatoes salad.
Speaker 8I feel like I'm walking into dangerous territory.
But I will prefer Celery.
Speaker 1I love you so much.
This episode is gonna be super lit.
Speaker 8Thin ley slice.
But I don't know.
I like the crunch.
Speaker 1Yeah, okay, I.
Speaker 2See why don't they put cucumber and stuff instead of Now you're now pushing it.
Speaker 1I hate celery, Okay, I think it's I don't think it's a purpose.
It's the crunch.
It's the crunch.
Don't you ship in there that don't taste like ship?
Speaker 8Celery doesn't taste like anything?
Speaker 1Mind?
Speaker 8You know what's speaking of publicist?
Speaker 7I've always said, don't you feel like sometimes when food has a moment, like certain that has a publicist like I s I E or like like remember or like Kale?
Speaker 8I'm like?
Speaker 7And also, who's the publicist for Romayne?
Because Romaine right now?
Speaker 8Can I eat it?
Is it safe?
I don't know, they need to talk to the publicist for Kale because Cale was killing it.
Speaker 4I know, Ki.
Speaker 8K's not that culturally relevant right now.
It was.
And my grandmother was like, what are you all talking about?
We've been calling for Kale, but we weren't calling it Kale, which is greens.
Speaker 1What are you promoting right now?
Speaker 6Just guys, ask Vakriye questions as you asked the Vacrie questions.
I just wanted to know, and you probably can't really answer this question.
Well, first of all, how did you feel about Valkerie not being in the Avengers movie?
And then is she going to be in the second one?
Because it seems like they might need some help.
Speaker 8I was I was I was cool with not you know, I was doing other stuff.
I was happy she lives.
That's hurt any word that she's going to be her assisting.
Okay, I don't know if you've seen The Avengers.
Speaker 2Yes, I've seen it Black Panther either.
You say I haven't seen Black Panther.
I'm the only black person in the world that has not seen Black Panther yet.
Wait why because I was busy doing what Well, yeah, the headaches and stuff, I get it, I get it, but just it's now Yeah.
Speaker 1Really I did not notice.
Speaker 8How does how does?
Speaker 6It's funny because I was thinking, since it was kind of well Blackera was before a Black Panther, but as a person in the Marvel scope of things, how did.
Speaker 8That feel like just the Black Panther was existing in your Marvel world?
Because that's man exciting.
Speaker 7Also just because like Ryan obviously is involved, and Michael b so and Chad is a friend of mine.
It just and the film is I think so incredible.
And I think sometimes it's a tricky thing when you do these big movies.
You're like there's this sometimes implication inside of the industry that like you have visibility, but in some way you've like.
Speaker 8Sold out or.
Speaker 7You're diminished in some way, And it just felt like it's so cool to see Black Panther mean so much culturally and like push boundaries and open doors and be a big old movie like that.
It's sort of legitimized why you you do movies that occupy that space?
Speaker 2You know.
Speaker 8Yeah, I feel like it helped people look forward to Valkyrie too, because.
Speaker 2H any truth to the rumor that they might consider your demand for an all female kind of you know.
Speaker 7The thing is, it's it's been spoken about so much in the press that and I've asked Kevin Figi.
Speaker 8I'm like, do you feel trolled by me?
Speaker 4Like?
Speaker 8Are we cool?
And he's like, we're cool.
Speaker 1I think, how did you pose it to him?
Or did you just post it?
Speaker 4Oh?
Speaker 8No, I like, we we asked him.
Speaker 7So we were at this Marvel like ten year anniversary photo shoot thing and it was like a circle of just women talking and we were like, oh, this would be so cool, Like I wish we could do a film together.
Speaker 8And I was like, well don't.
We just asked him.
So we went up to him and we're like we should do this?
Should we do this?
And then yeah, it's exactly literally.
Speaker 1Yeah, I would at least think that, at least for today that.
Speaker 2Even if not for the reasons why they should do it, but they could see that this is would be such a monumental moment.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 8And also that it's commercially viable.
I think that's the other thing.
Speaker 1Are they still like being controlled by like the sexist troll?
Speaker 8No, No, I don't.
I don't think so.
Speaker 7I think I think it's that they're their thing is like super well crafted, and they have ideas in terms of every phase they they they just have mapping and they have they have ideas about timing and rollout and you know, it's really masterful.
So it's I don't think it's that.
And they also want to feel like they're never you know, they have such an incredible relationship with fans, but they don't like the idea that that they're ever pandering to to fans, And so if they make a film, they want to make it because they really believe in it and it makes sense in terms of the scope of the whole universe.
Speaker 1It is a matter of somebody coming up with the right story.
Speaker 8Yeah, I think so.
Speaker 7And also in terms of like I think they're always trying to find cool crossover and that's happening anyways with Captain Marvel, and like.
Speaker 8You know, yes, that's what that was.
Speaker 1Were you into the Marvel universe as a kid?
Speaker 2No, not at all, not so, so how do you did you feel as though you had to like, Okay, I got to do my homework and yeah, because satisfy these fanboys kind of yeah.
Speaker 7Because I didn't really know anything about it.
And then also because like you said, I really was not written for someone.
Speaker 8Like me, so it was you know, really you know.
So yeah, so I felt like I really had to understand the character in the world.
Speaker 2What was the because of the what appeared to be the physical grueling process of the film as far as your action scenes and stuff.
Speaker 1How much physical preparation did you have to do a.
Speaker 8Lot, which was tricky because I was making Annihilation.
Speaker 7I made Annihilation and then I wrapped that and like three days later I was in Australia making Thor So it was hard to balance those.
Speaker 8But I had to learn like sword work and fighting and I had never done any of that stuff before.
Speaker 7And then also just like put on a lot of muscle mass.
You have the game wed yeah again, like fifteen pounds.
Speaker 2Of just like muscle bab see.
Speaker 1I thought it was give you the grab.
I mean that's legit mean man, okay, I'm impressed.
Speaker 8Yeah, that was not that I really had muscles.
I was strong.
I could do a bunch of only cost more money to put the muscles on you, you know, through video than to actually just put the muscles on.
Yeah, but sometimes you just I mean, they v affects those whole movies.
So no, I really did.
I worked really hard.
Speaker 1Give me and I ate a lot of stuff potatoes.
Speaker 4No.
Speaker 8Rotein.
We can move past.
We have other things to do.
What I want to ask you because the more and more you get into these, uh these commercial roles like you know, the Marvel, the West World.
You are, of course a big activist period.
I won't just even just say with the women's movement.
Speaker 6Have you felt somebody trying to kind of put the class on you yet because you are now you're this major commercial actress.
Speaker 8In a way you mean in terms of how I use my voice.
Yes, yes, that's no.
I think I've just had like a couple of.
Speaker 7Experiences where I'm like, is social media that the best place to do that?
And I think we're also in this space right now of like internet activism, and it's not enough.
And I think the experience of really like some of my experiences with times up and actually like organizing and doing the work is just more powerful than talking about what you're doing sometimes and you've been in people.
Speaker 8I appreciate that let people know who is really about.
Speaker 7That, But now I'm just mostly I just want to talk about goats because it's like a safer space.
Speaker 8It's just the same.
Speaker 2So, I mean, I don't think you caught that much black because a lot of people agreed with pretty much everything that you've been saying.
Speaker 6Yeah, and it made me follow you more to be honest.
Oh really well yeah, just in between that and the essence speech, I was like, oh, I gotta go back and get me some test of times.
Speaker 7But see that's the other thing in terms of the essence speech, like it's like those are conversations I want to have and I'm available to.
Like, colorism in this industry is real, and it's like has benefited me obviously immensely, and because of that, I feel like a responsibility to acknowledge it and to have nuanced conversations about it.
And I do that privately inside of my space.
There's certain roles I don't take.
There's certain things I won't do because of that.
But I think engaging in a more public conversation is something I'm willing to do.
I think it's just hard it, you know, in terms of like also, it frustrates me that like what journalism has become, that you could look on someone's Instagram and take something they say in a comment and write an article about it.
Like it feels unfair.
And I'm newly sort of navigating what it is to be a public figure in that way.
Speaker 8And yeah, all of us, right, but so yeah, we just live in public in a new way.
Speaker 7And it's not something that I'm particularly interested and I'm not fond of it, and i'm not frankly, i'm not good at it.
Like I'm not say what I'm gonna say.
I'm I'm petrified by it.
So it makes me want to take like a step back, and it.
Speaker 8Makes you like retreat as you're about to post something like well should I I don't that feeling of even that is.
Speaker 7Yeah, but I feel really like like Disney Marvel, like I've been astonished, like no one's like, hey, like, you.
Speaker 8Know, we need you to shut the fuck.
Speaker 1No, okay, I'm sorry, hey man, it's this is the way she said it.
How do how does she say, Bill, let's do it again.
Speaker 8To shut the.
Speaker 6He as you said at the end of that speech, I'm sorry, says we just I'm in the speech because I said notes and everything you said at the end of the speech, at the essence speech that you were hoping that you guys could have follow up.
Speaker 8Meetings to that and whatnot.
How has that been going with the sisters?
Speaker 7It's been good with the sisters, so so so one thing that's exciting to report is probably so so in terms of the structure of times Up, there are kind of folks, there are subgroups, and I would say.
Speaker 8One of the most like.
Speaker 7Vibrant, active and engaged subgroup with d times Up is called Woke Women of Color.
Speaker 8Yeah, and it's lit.
It's like it's like it's just very like robust and real.
Speaker 7And I think there's a lot there's just a real acknowledgment that without that that we're such an important piece.
And historically, I think feminism too often has sort of ignored the voices of women in color, women of color and hasn't been.
Speaker 8In don't even because I have to tell people all the time.
I used to hate when the Hillary Swank trailer would come on for her women's rights movie or whatever, and then it would come on right before like the Housewives of Atlanta.
I'd be like, so, did these white ladies know that we can vote for another like almost seventy years?
Yeah?
Speaker 2You know, like, yeah, how easy was it to navigate your way in the Hollywood women's movement?
Speaker 1You guys gathered almost in the hundreds.
Speaker 2I know that you guys were, but how hard was it to one explain, uh, to people that weren't aware of the different.
Speaker 1Levels of obstacles that that we face.
Yeah, exactly, because I know in the beginning it was sort of like kind of koumbayas.
But then I talked to you know, people out of the chat and they were like, you know, explaining this one of them, Yeah, it's and there was something that meant, well.
Speaker 7Yeah, for some there's this there's a steep learning curve.
I mean real talk, like, there are certain rooms that I was absolutely invited into because.
Speaker 8Of what I look like in the sense of safe.
Speaker 1Right did you call it?
This feels like tokenism or yeah, well I.
Speaker 7Was really lucky, like in instances that someone else called it out for me, like like being in a room and Jane fond of being like this is unacceptable, like there just has to be more.
And then that there started to just be a conversation around like who's not in the room and why And then also like once you're in the room, like once you have a seat at the table.
Speaker 8Are you really is your voice like legit heard?
Speaker 7Because a part of that when everyone is included is like it just gets harder actually to do the work.
It doesn't get easier because everyone is coming from a different point of view, you know, and so you have to really like you're gonna be at the table.
Speaker 8Longer, probably when everyone is invited.
So yeah, no, I I yeah, I called it out.
Speaker 7But I think there was a real cognizance, you know, a cognizance, and I probably.
Speaker 8Have like I don't have a ton of.
Speaker 1Uh, I don't know, it's clout.
Speaker 8Clout no bad yeah and ba and I don't I had less to lose, I guess you know what I mean.
Speaker 6On the subject of the woman thing, It's interesting, how I asked Rosario Dawson the same thing because even it's there's a their color tears, and there's also like subgenres of this industry.
Like earlier, we were just talking about how a certain company just pulled all our Kelly music and I said to Rosario, I said, you know, when you guys finished with the movie industry, you know this music thing is a whole nother animal.
Yeah, I mean, so is the fashion thing when you really think about it, like they it's a whole nother animal.
Speaker 8It's more ground.
So how do you guys feel about it?
Speaker 6And I guess you would know that as well, because even and Janelle is involved as well, But it still feels like on a movie TV types of things.
Speaker 8Yeah, it is.
And Janelle she was saying this because we had a meeting and she was saying, like.
Speaker 7It's tough in the music industry because there isn't the same sort of like enemy to rally around that there wasn't Harvey winstting there isn't this like public enemy number one that you sort of take down.
And in some ways I think that that makes sense that it doesn't just state the same kind of like intensity, But it also felt like a problematic thing in terms of the Harvey conversation because people don't want to acknowledge them that like, if there's a systemic issue, like when you talk about, you know, a gross abuse of power, you have to also acknowledge just like the imbalance of power, which is just as gross, you know, and victimizing, and that is like much harder in some ways to take down than a Harvey on.
Speaker 8The subject of that are kind of thing.
It's hard too because, like we were saying, he touches so many things.
There are so many other artists He's written for dudes.
Speaker 6Like it's like, how far as women do we, for lack of a better term, take these dudes down because there's so much.
Speaker 8And yeah, and it's also not just these dudes.
Speaker 7It's also just like this this system, and there are also like women that support that system.
Speaker 8It's not just men, you know too, Yeah, because women a lot of women have profited.
Speaker 2So I know you're saying for profit, but do they support it or is it just a thing of like I can't fight it, so I might as well roll with it enabling.
Speaker 8It depends on a woman, don't you think there's a certain way and your system.
Speaker 7Yeah, so there's this really rad woman that works with Times Up but worked with the Annenberger name is Stacy Smith, and she talks about women that support the patriarchy.
This is so nerdy, but they say that she says that they have high social dominance, which means that you have like a vested interest in protecting a system.
Speaker 8That empowers you, like the overseer exactly, so that they're so that.
Yeah.
Speaker 7So sometimes people will say, like, particularly these conversations about like just hire more women, It's like, but what kind of women are you hiring?
Speaker 8Because just hiring a woman isn't enough.
Speaker 2Being as though you haven't had designs on acting younger and you just quote wound up in it.
Speaker 1And I'm certain that you didn't think, like early in your.
Speaker 2Acting career, like doing the Veronica Marsdiy's whatever, that you'd be doing all this social activism.
Speaker 7And I don't know if that's true, though I think that was the thing for me where I was like, I don't know if I want to be in the pursuit of something I admire I don't admire, Like I think I've always wanted to be involved in in activism in some way, and even when I look back I didn't realize it at the time, but when I look back at Veronica ka Mars, that character, you know, like there she would say lines like you know, someone said, why why are you standing around here stalking?
Speaker 8And she would say, what you mean standing while black?
Speaker 7Like even that character wanted to sort of subvert ideas of like the sassy friend on a television show where like the very first part I ever played was an episode of Cold Case where I play a queer woman in nineteen thirty, you know, who can't live with her partner because that wasn't available to her at the time.
So I feel like the things that have always compelled me have have lived in that space by designer subconscious by design or by by kis med.
Speaker 8Or I don't know all right.
Speaker 2Well, as far as uh, your work, I want, I definitely want to talk about how did you prepare for your role as Diane Nash and sma.
Speaker 7Uh, Well, I I got really lucky in the sense of, you know, a lot of the leaders that were still around and available to talk to us did and then I read tons I didn't.
I couldn't meet Diane before we made the film.
There were some complications around that it's complicated.
I think when you're telling story, when you're telling a story about people that lived during that time, and you also want to have a balance of being able to take artistic license and tell the story that you need to tell, and and so.
Speaker 1It bigraphies are a little harder to do the person.
Speaker 7They're hard to they're hard to do.
But Diane, after seeing the movie, was super happy with it.
She told a really funny story that she you know, she they did ask her in terms of who she liked, and she just like, I just want someone cute, which was she's just being funny.
Speaker 1But I did.
I went.
Speaker 7I went to Chicago where she grew up and and you know, sort of trace her steps and talked to a lot of people that knew her, and.
Speaker 8Yeah, you know, found as much as I could about her.
Speaker 11Speaking of prep work, she sticks, yeah, wait, wait, wait, pat wait, I just say you said, but Selma just wanted to ask you because I know you're going to create was that your heaven, me being surround being with Ava, being with you know, being telling that story.
Speaker 8Those actors that cast Oprah the end of World, the end of my world, just like the sense of who we imagine Tessa is in my in my head, I was like she was happy.
I was happy.
Speaker 7But it was funny because we had a lot of conversations and cast like we would talk like, well, what kind of what part do you want to play?
And so often it would be like a character that's existed, like so and so wants to play Lean to Horn and so and so I wants to play James Baldwin and that's great, and I have a list of people that I'd love to play.
But I also I'm like, what about just playing a fictional character that's iconic and and so that's my heaven too, Like to get to play something that does that isn't real?
Speaker 1Do you scream right?
Like do you have aspirations of Yeah.
Speaker 7I've been writing a little bit something and kind of want to do I was talking to Greta Gerwig.
I sat next to her at the met Ball and we were talking a lot about writing.
She has such like incredible things to say.
Sometimes you have this idea that you just like you have to wait for some lightning bolt, And the truth is it's just like working diligence and sitting down and like committing to write something and be bad at it for a while and get better.
Speaker 1I love her approach to like, I'm a big fan of her.
The mumble Chord me were part of that.
Speaker 8No, so this is the thing I really wanted to be.
Speaker 7So I went to this period where I was like, I'm gonna make a mumble core movie like that that.
None of them have existed for us except for Medicine for Melancholy, which was my introduction, of course to Mary Jenkins.
Speaker 1It's a movement Greta Gerwork, who uh she directed.
She was up for a director this year The Girl for Ladybird, but she did Francis Has.
It's weird now because it's sort of like she's the commercial darling and the newbie on in the commercial.
Speaker 8Which she's been around for.
She's been seeing her face before.
Speaker 1Mumble Core.
I mean, I guess you can say it's a brand of is it Brooklyn.
Speaker 7It's sort of like twenty somethings.
Oftentimes it's it's oftentimes the film takes place in a very short swath of time where like nothing happens, but everything happens.
I think it got the word mumble core.
Sometimes non actors are in it because this sound design sometimes wasn't good.
Speaker 8So that's sort of how but there's a whole movement like dialogue more than plot exactly.
Speaker 1It's it's uh.
Speaker 2I would say that, no, no, no, it's it's our It would be the American version of Dogmen ninety five, where Dogmen ninety five was like there was there was a film challenge of Okay, a bunch of Danish filmmakers said that, okay, we're going to make film.
Speaker 1With natural light, no soundtracks.
It's it's almost like a bunch of.
Speaker 2Students or or knowledgeable filmmaker makers challenging themselves.
Speaker 8A filmmaker makers, you you bring.
Speaker 1Out the three year older means stop.
Okay.
Speaker 8Meanwhile, I'm like, you're not talking about that Dogma with interest?
Speaker 1Join now, I'm not talking about Dogma of the movie Dogma ninety five was uh.
Yeah.
Speaker 2It was like a movement uh in the nineties of filmmakers challenging themselves to these restrictive uh ways of making film as a way of the equivalent of walking on top of the Empire State Building drunk with your eyes closed.
Speaker 7See the interesting thing, So the genre is really I mean, apart from Barry Jenkins medicine for melancholy it's all white filmmakers.
And I remember, like this was before I really knew about like Charles Burnett, like and you look at his film and you're like he was doing the very same thing but doesn't get credit.
And I mean he's not mumblecore.
But just like being like, I'm going to make a film with what I have available to me, right, you know, and use non actors and tell a story that's contained that I can do, and make beautiful images and not have it be plot driven.
Speaker 8But yeah, there was a period when I was really like, is do I need to make a movie?
Speaker 7Also because I was playing parts where I was like I was doing I was stuck in this period of working on television and really dissatisfied.
And so I first found Greta in that time, and so to see her, to see what she's done now, to see it enter this space where she's being acknowledged.
Speaker 8It's just so cool.
It Yeah, it takes a while.
Speaker 1I see that for you, not that I'm trying to, you know, push my vision off.
Speaker 7Will love you for it, because he's like anytime I get new stuff, he's just like, cool, cool, When are you gonna write?
Speaker 8When are you gonna make a movie and now you know you have a producer here that will give you the money for it.
No Jesus no, but it's a movie.
You always need more money.
Yeah, don't you always need more?
Speaker 1I'll be at her door, Yeah, tell her mir Thompson a mirror.
Speaker 8That's days like.
Speaker 1Us quest love.
Speaker 2Maybe I'm trying to hint towards a job here, okay Philadelphia?
Speaker 1Yeah, now, no, no, no, this is not what the question that you think it is.
Speaker 2But when you told me that you were going to start researching your role for IM about to say Rocky uh.
Speaker 1For Creed Rocky eight wacky ye wait, but.
Speaker 2I remember distinctively, distinctively telling you, yeah, what you shouldn't.
Speaker 7Do, you did, like because you were also do you remember you were concerned for my well being?
Speaker 8Mysage?
Yes, why he didn't want me on Broad and Erie.
Speaker 1Like she did the very things that I told her not to do.
Speaker 8North Philly.
Yeah, she went Max Cheese Steak.
Yes, that's not even my favorite place, but that's goods Max two times.
Yes, I know you still have this maxes b What happened with Max?
Speaker 1Give you not dog?
Speaker 8They like they don't know not not that And Philly you know, they don't be knowing you.
Speaker 1Here's the deal.
You're right, You're right, you're right.
But here's the thing.
Speaker 2Though, Like, if you're going to treat me like an asshole, be consistent about it, Like I want you to be insisted about it, but don't three seconds later find out I am who I am and you start chasing my car down the block like bro, wait, wait, we.
Speaker 1Didn't know the street I have.
Speaker 2I have always listed them whenever any international magazine asked me, like.
Speaker 1Name your cheese steaks?
No, no, they are number one.
And so when she said, like, you know, go to.
Speaker 8Larry's yours, I'm chicken cheese steak.
No, I'm chicken cheestick to as far as chicken cheese steaks, cables got it?
Speaker 1Okay, Well I mean.
Speaker 8You know what I am now, I'm mushroom cheese steak.
Well there are Cape City veg Yeah, yes, because I'm l a Now so I'm a burger.
Oh my god, listen, mommy, thank you.
I've also never had a hamburger in my life.
Really, I've had.
Speaker 1A part that is not fair.
Speaker 2Well, I was just saying that, uh me telling you what spots to avoid in Philadelphia to research your roles.
Speaker 1You the exact opposite, because that's because what made you do that?
Speaker 7Because I was like that, that's some real Philly ship.
You're trying to prevent me because you don't think I'm ready.
Speaker 2So when you went to Chicago, you went to Kabreena and Green.
No, oh, that's what I'm saying.
Speaker 8Yeah, what is decrete was a different movie?
Right, like it was a different it was.
Speaker 1Yeah.
I'm just saying that, you know, did you talk to anything?
Would you go?
Would you go would you go to Ethan Butler?
Damn?
Yeah, you think I've been Butler?
Yeah, but you know about Eightan Butler.
Speaker 2So I'm just saying, like I would be like, yo, you know the spotsicles that you might not want to go to Athan Butler at.
Speaker 8Nobody's talking with Tessa Thompson Like at the end of the day, I don't think so I think nobody really I don't know.
I think so.
Speaker 1Okay, I'm just well, you did it already, so congratulations and now you're.
Speaker 8Doing it again.
Right You're in Philly as we speak, doing another greed.
Speaker 4I was.
Speaker 8I was at Max's the week before last.
Are you and Ryan back together too?
Is he back in Creed.
Speaker 7No, a new filmmaker named Stephen kemple Jr.
Really dope dude made this film called The Land that was it Sundance face.
Speaker 2No, I just don't like messing with any formula that's not broken.
So I didn't know that Ryan wasn't doing Creed too.
Speaker 8He's not.
It'll still be great.
It's gonna be great.
Stephen kimple Jr.
Is a great filmmaker.
Speaker 1You don't have to Oh, I was saying enough people rocky in it?
What is uh?
Speaker 6Two actors I want to ask you that you work with that first of all, Jeffrey Wright and the Keith stans film.
Speaker 8I just have to know, how is it acting opposite of those two men?
Are you thirsty?
Speaker 4Well?
Speaker 8When it hold up?
Speaker 6I'm not thirsty on Jeffrey Right.
Jeffrey Right is everything as far as an actor to me, he's.
Speaker 8Your talent thirsty.
No, I'm not, don't do it.
I'm not hold up now.
Speaker 6I'm the keep thirsty because he is one of the only black male actors that I know that you know prophesizes about the black woman.
Speaker 8So in that sense, yes, I am in level of Keith Stansfield.
Speaker 6Yeah, but I got I guess I'm on the regular, so I'm not really chasing, but I'm curious as an actress, what's it like with Jeffrey Wright.
Speaker 8I mean, he's so good, Like he's so good, and he's like, yeah, it's sort of like a not a masterclass, but he's yeah, he's just he's just really, really really good.
That's all I can say.
It's like a pleasure to.
Speaker 2Have you ever been intimidated by a fellow actor that that has such a pedigree or such a level of acting or Yeah.
Speaker 8Harris, he scared me scared.
I was a little scared to work with him.
Really, yeah, I was a little scared about and.
Speaker 1Also in terms of I must deliver this perfectly or he just.
Speaker 7Scared Like so, so I I went to the Sundeath Labs one year and I workshopped this film that I just came out.
I tried Baca this film called Little Woods, and Ed Harris was the acting advisor, which would mean you'd be shooting these scenes and the acting advisor comes in to see how things are going and give and gives tips and he just doesn't mince words.
So I was like playing the scene I had this idea that this character had, you know, really sort of stiff spine and anyways, I had this idea and he came in and I could just hear him at the monitor like stiff stiff, and he came over.
Speaker 8To like give me a note.
Speaker 7He's just like he just says what he feels and he's so impulsive and he's so gifted.
And then the first day that I came to work with him on West World, he just said to me, I voted for you by the way he liked my work and created and that made me so proud, but also like just intimidated me because I was like, oh God, I have to.
Speaker 8Like be good today.
But he's he's so yeah, he's so good.
I'm such such a fan.
And la Keith, can you tell the people how close he is to this character in Atlanta in realize, because I know a lot of people really think that in Atlanta he's not acting.
But as far as sorry to bother you, yeah, he is an actor.
Speaker 7So he's an actor.
He's so he's so gifted.
I mean, I think he brings a lot of himself to Darius, and I think he ad lips and stuff.
Speaker 8But you know who is nothing like his character that I.
Speaker 7Think people assume is Brian who plays paper like he's like that's that's a whole different human, like he's a shape shifter and not that la Keith isn't.
Speaker 8But but Brian really like it's night and day.
This is us too.
Yeah, because Brian did this is Us.
I'm still in the first season when Grandpa's bye, I live for that.
I was got by Grandpa.
So he's one of Grandpa's old friends.
You'll see it's really good.
Speaker 1Yes, the.
Speaker 8Season two and y'all are just late.
We're in season three.
If this is Us, no, I'm just like, it wouldn't have been a spoiler.
We didn't live in a binge.
Speaker 1Watch World's just okay.
Speaker 8It was like a too you gotta get this is us.
Speaker 1I wasn't playing to watch the show.
It's too emotional for me.
I watch it.
We love it, and I know I think it started like the same time my father died.
That's what I'm saying.
Process.
Speaker 8This is the thing.
Speaker 7The show is Earnest, and I like that.
You don't think it's Ernest's.
Speaker 2I don't believe it's Earnest.
Like Ernest tries and earnest means well, but ernest it may be a ground world double never home run, but I feel.
Speaker 8That's your death.
Yeah, I don't know about your death definition.
Speaker 1Oh definition, Okay.
I think earnest means.
Speaker 8Well, but felt are they.
Speaker 1I believe in this is us.
Speaker 8I believe in this is us to me too.
I believe it's like it's real.
It makes it evokes.
Speaker 1There are some earnest things that I roll at, like, oh boy, and it's.
Speaker 6Real life conversation and some of these conversations were not having but we should like the fact that the white daddy went and got.
Speaker 8The training to raise the black boy and oh my god, it was Yes, they're just borre.
Speaker 6I think they're too progressive.
They're progressive at times it's like, oh, some people aren't ready for this.
Speaker 7It hardens me though that because it's a very successful show, and I'm like, that's cool that America is into that right now?
Speaker 8Yeah yeah, yeah, right, yeah, yeah legit.
Yeah yeah, because sometimes I can be I don't watch a lot of like television, like network television, but I watched.
Speaker 2That and I was like, all right, I was shocked because when I happen to be at the upfronts.
Upfronts is basically, in the shortest way possible, it's sort of a convention for advertisers and they come to see which shows they're going to invest in.
So all these networks put together these little workshops, like NBC will rent out Radio City Hall for maybe two days, and the President will come in and Jay Loo will come in with the Thursday night lineup, and Jimmy Fallon will come in and do some comedy and you're basically watching night day after day.
Monday night, our lineup will be no No, no, no No, The Voice and no no, no No.
And as an advertiser, you're like, Okay, I want my product on the Voice and this particular show, and I think I like this, and they introduce what the news shows are going to be.
Speaker 7I swear I actually, until this moment, did not know what the upfronts were.
Like I have participated, but I didn't realize it was for advertisers.
Speaker 8Hell yeah, thanks for that.
Speaker 2Anytime you watch TV and you see commercials or product product placement, yes, upfront, so they get in early so like and sometimes it backfires.
Speaker 1So think of like when Michael J.
Fox was returning to COY with the Michael J.
Fox Show.
Advertisers were excited, so they all lined up like Okay, this this looks like it's going to be a ratings winner, and then they put all their money into The Michael J.
Fox Show and then it busted after a year.
Speaker 2So that's sort of who infamously, I think Kevin Hart show got dropped at he found out that his comedy on ABC, that his show got dropped right before you're supposed to go and stand.
Yeah, so that's the downfall upfront anyway.
So at the upfront I saw this is us and was sort of like, I don't know if this is going to work for m And then so can I ask how did knowing Boots Rally Wolly, This is ridiculous.
Speaker 1Okay, knowing Boots Riley the way that I do, I'm.
Speaker 2Extremely shocked at the amount of instant support that he had.
I knew that he had a friend in Patton Oswald and that he had a friend in David Cross.
And David told me how he almost this project almost passed him by, Like I think like his assistant saw the script read.
Speaker 1A little bit and was like, Yo, you really need to read this.
Speaker 2David was going to pass on it like, yeah, I got your script, I'm busy, and then the system was like you gotta do this shit?
How were you all convinced?
And I never knew that he had this, this, this level of talent in him.
Speaker 8I think this this.
Speaker 7Script was so singular and he had been trying by hook up at Kirk to get it made any which way, Like he made.
Speaker 8A record by the same title, sorry to bother You to entice people to make the movie.
He's just like he had such he was had such a clear vision and he also has such.
Speaker 1Yeah it took hooks like her.
Speaker 7Yeah, but it's like he really does you know what I mean, Like he's just like he's he's he's gutsy because he comes from a place of just like belief and.
Speaker 8Yeah, it's it's that that's sort of intoxicating to be around.
Speaker 2And the truth is cynical Hollywood though you just say, like rapper for twenty years really didn't make it to the mainstream level?
Speaker 1Was he have to offer me?
Speaker 4Like?
Speaker 7But I think, don't you think we're in a time right now where like everybody's looking for the outlier to like bandwagon with because so.
Speaker 1How did it come?
How did it come across your radar?
Speaker 7Well, funny, funny enough, he wrote me a letter two years ago and offered it to me, and then essentially resended that offer by then asking me to audition for it, because in the space of two years he felt like I like popped off too much to then be in his like ind movie, yeah, and so he asked me to audition.
So I auditioned, and I wasn't in the same city as him or Lakeith.
So we got on a skype call and then he felt like it was really instantaneous and he couldn't say no to me.
Speaker 2I don't even think that happens to any direct Like it's what do you mean?
That's luck I mean on his end, but uh, what, how do you feel?
I feel as though this will be descript is.
Speaker 7Literally unlike anything I had ever seen or dreamt of.
And then I also think in terms of like I really love films like you know, Being John Malkovich or Eternal Sunshine in the Spotless Mind, or like Michelle Gondry's films like I like, you know, weird shit, and I just felt like that was always a genre that wasn't gonna be available to me because like I don't see any black folks in those movies.
Speaker 2I saw the trailer for Sorry to Bother You, and I was like, I've been waiting for a black film like this for like.
Speaker 1Twenty five years.
Speaker 8Yeah, legit.
Speaker 7So that's how that's how I felt like that when I got that scripted answer to call that, like, I just had literally been like cool, I'll never get to make a film like that unless I make it, and I don't know.
Speaker 8I don't know that I will, And so it's like, yeah, that's how.
Speaker 1I thank you Jesus.
That is awesome.
Well, I know we have a gazillion more questions for you, but we have to love it.
Speaker 8I really like being here, Gus.
Can I also tell you that I love the magic whatever influence.
I don't know if it is, but the power of you and Janelle together has opened up her or her and away to her fans to watch the evolution.
That is just a gift.
Speaker 7Yeah, I'm really like, I'm so happy for her and so proud, like I like, outside of you know, I just really love the record.
Speaker 8Like I listen to the record.
Speaker 7It's weird sometimes when it's like if someone that you're close to and your friend, You're like, I'm geeking out on your stuff, but I legitimately just like really love the record.
Speaker 8Yeah, it's it's kind of cool.
Speaker 1I used to him all the time.
Speaker 8Yeah, so I so I feel that way about it.
Speaker 7So I'm just like so proud because I just think it's like such a beautiful record and so dope.
And then also just in terms of her evolution, you know, she's in a space where she really like is allowing her work to be more personal and that's like just setting herself free.
But in doing that, you said a lot of other people free.
Speaker 8So it's cool.
Speaker 1That's what's up.
Well, thank you.
Ms Thompson.
Speaker 2All right, well, ra and behalf of Boss Bill and paid Bill Front Ticcolo Sugar Steve, It's Aliyah.
Speaker 1It's a Leah wow, ls Man, I'm paying for this.
It's layah uh.
Speaker 2Antessa Thompson, thank god, there's no ours or else in your name.
This is Quest Love signing off for her Quest Love Supreme.
We will see You, or the dext gobund.
Quest Love Is Supreme is a production of iHeartRadio.
This classic episode was produced by the team at Pandora.
Speaker 8One.
Speaker 2More podcasts from iHeartRadio visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
