All Episodes

March 11, 2024 29 mins

Paris takes a step into the past with someone who was there from day one… her aunt Kyle Richards!
 
Paris and Kyle reminisce on her mother (Gram Cracker) and Kyle shares the story of what happened when she found out Paris was being bullied at school.
 
Plus, we hear Kyle’s iconic career as an actor at a young age, working with some of the biggest stars in Hollywood.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
I am Parised.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
Hey everyone, I have a very special guest joining me
today on I Am Paris.

Speaker 1 (00:15):
You may know her.

Speaker 2 (00:16):
From the Real Housewives of Beverly Hills or as an actress,
but more importantly, she's my aunt. Please welcome Kyle Richards.

Speaker 1 (00:24):
Hi. I'm Kyle. Hi Paris. How are you. I'm good.
This is exciting. I'm very excited to be here. You
look beautiful today. Thank you? You look beautiful. Yeah. I
love the pink. Oh yeah, you do love pink? Mm hmm,
thank you color. Yes.

Speaker 2 (00:39):
So today I want to talk about some of the
major moments in your past that made you the icon
that you are today. Okay, So, Kyle, even though I've
known you my entire life, I want to share our
special relationship with our fans.

Speaker 1 (00:53):
I would love that.

Speaker 2 (00:54):
So let's first talk about family. I was extremely close
to Grandma growing up and I miss her so much.
She was such a force of nature. She would light
up every room that she walked into.

Speaker 1 (01:07):
How would you describe her? She was a powerhouse, really strong, opinionated, outspoken,
a little bit of a temper at times, but she
was extremely passionate. You know, anything she felt she felt
really deeply and obviously you being her first grandchild. She

(01:32):
was just so in love with you. You were her
whole world. She was a lot softer with you than
she was with her own daughters, which I as an
adult now I see that and I read about you know, Oh,
once you have grandchildren, you're different. I always hear that
you know about people, and that was definitely Grandma. You know.
When it came to you, I used to think, well, wow,

(01:54):
she's so sweet and soft and snugly. She was a
lot tougher on on us, for sure.

Speaker 2 (02:01):
She was so much fun. I just loved living with
her in the desert for ninth grade, and she was
so funny, so funny, like if anyone was rude to me,
she was called on the phone.

Speaker 1 (02:14):
God forbid anybody was not nice to you. Yeah, she
showed up to the school ones and thinking like, yelled
at someone who was being Do you remember when I
did that?

Speaker 2 (02:21):
Yeah? What happened that day?

Speaker 1 (02:22):
Well, somebody made fun of you for having big lips
at school, which I'm like, okay, you know, and you
were too young to understand that, you know, there was
a lot of jealousy, and you know what was beautiful
about you. Kids would pick on you about and you
would get your feelings hurt. And so you told me

(02:44):
about this girl that was being rude to you. And
I would like to just preface this by saying I
was young, I mean imature, but I went. I was
also a mom of the school because I had Pharah
when I was only nineteen, so I think at this
time I was twenty two twenty three, I was twenty three,
and I just went and I asked to speak to them,

(03:05):
pulled them aside and told them they ever spoke to
you locked out again, and I forget the rest, but
I scared the daylights out of these kids, and I
was feeling pretty proud when I when I left there,
what if she said? I think she cried and I
was like, you know, let's just keep this to ourselves.
I just remember thinking, well, I don't want her to

(03:28):
like go and talk about this because I'm a parent,
but she cannot be bullying people like this. You did
get picked on and bullied a lot in school. We
mean people were mean to me when I was little too,
and I didn't, you know know what that was. I
remember when I did this mini series called Beulah Land
and I it was on it was like it was
a period piece, and I had like I wore like

(03:49):
all the what's it called, like the petticoats and all
this stuff from you know, like the bonnets in eighteen
hundreds and similar wardrobe that I wore on Little House
on the Prairie type of thing. And I went to
school the next day and like all these kids came
up in a circle and they said, we saw you
on TV last night, and I was like embarrassed and shy,
and they said you looked fat, and I just was
like embarrassed, so I just said, I know, and I

(04:12):
want now. My adult me is like, you know what
those kids are mean? I should have said few. I
was only like ten or eleven, But I'm like, that
was just so mean, And why did I just say?
I know, you know, I didn't know what to say
or how to react all but anyway, it's okay. Those
things made us stronger, right, Yeah, definitely.

Speaker 2 (04:33):
What are three important life lessons that Grandma taught you
in life?

Speaker 1 (04:38):
Oh? Three important life lessons to never allow yourself to
be intimidated by anyone, to always speak your mind, and
two I mean, I'm trying to think a way toward
this because she was really someone who didn't want I think,

(05:02):
being a single mom and raising daughters, it was really
important for her to teach us not to be afraid
or fearful, whatever that may be, you know. I mean
we were women who all lived alone in our house,
you know, or my grandma you're a great grandmother lived
with us growing up, and so it was her grandma
and your mom, Kim and me, and she just didn't

(05:24):
ever want us to be afraid. So she really wanted
us to be brave. That was a really big thing
for her. I think that's really formed too I am
today and not always in the best way, you know,
Like I think I have to be tough all the time,
otherwise you're weak. And sometimes I'm like, it's okay to
be weak, sometimes it's okay to need help. But I

(05:46):
can remember I was so afraid of bees because you know,
I'm severely allergic to them. And when she would see
me be afraid, it bothered her because she wanted me
to be strong and tough. So she would grab the
bee and literally grab with her hand, squish it like
scary was she And she'd be like, don't ever be afraid.
I'm like now scared of you. You're actually the most
scariest thing I've ever seen, taking to be and squeezing

(06:07):
in your like that. She thought she was helping me,
but I think she was traumatizing me a little bit.

Speaker 2 (06:16):
Yeah, she always just had an amazing advice. Like I
feel like she made me want to be independent and
to never depend on anyone, which I thought was like
an important thing to learn.

Speaker 1 (06:28):
Like, I don't think I would be the.

Speaker 2 (06:29):
Person I am today if it wasn't for her, Like
she made me feel so confident.

Speaker 1 (06:34):
She really had a way of finding the best qualities
in someone and putting the focus on that and bringing
that out in someone. You know, so much of positive reinforcement,
which I think is such an important part of raising children.
You know, so many people focus on you know, if
your kid didn't do something right and they get punished

(06:54):
for this or that. I would almost you know, unless
it was something horrible, sort of ignore that focus on
the good things, unless it was an important lesson I
didn't want them to miss. And I really think I
got that from her. Always focusing on our best qualities,
our best attributes, which gave us more confidence. I missed
her me too, I missed your graham Cracker. Graham Cracker.

(07:18):
You know she wanted to be called Mema. Really, yes,
she said, now when the baby comes, I'm going to
be mem because I don't want to be Grandma because
I'm only forty years old. And she kept saying I'm
such a young grandmother, and I was like, not really,
because I didn't realize, Oh, you're ten, you don't think that.
So then she said, yes, her name is Mema. And
then this, as soon as you started talking, I don't know,

(07:40):
you just said graham Cracker instead of Grandma. Yeah, I
just said graham Cracker. I think someone said there's your grandma,
and then you thought it was a graham Cracker and
then she was just a Graham Cracker. That's such a
cute story. She was obsessed with you so much so
that she got a standard poodle and named it Paris.

(08:02):
And I was like, mom, you can't have a dog
that's the same name as your grandchild. That's weird. I
can do whatever I want, yes, And she would leave
that dog with watching like cartoons and stuff. Yeah, oh
my god, it's so funny. We love you, Grandma.

Speaker 2 (08:26):
So you were a child actor with roles and Watcher
in the Woods with the legendary Betty Davis, A Little
House on the Prairie, the horror classic Halloween. What did
you love most about these experiences as a kid?

Speaker 1 (08:40):
You know, Grandma put me into acting because I was
so shy, painfully shy, and she thought it would help
me overcome my shyness, which to a degree it did.
At least it taught me how to fake it, pretend
it wasn't shy. But what I love most about, you know,
was just I had incredible experiences, you know, working with

(09:00):
Betty Davis. How many people can say that. And I
was very much aware of, you know, how powerful Betty
Davis was, only because Grandma taught me.

Speaker 2 (09:11):
You know.

Speaker 1 (09:11):
Of course, I wouldn't know at that age who Betty
Davis was or why she was such a big deal.
So I would lay in bed with Grandma at night,
and I slept with her until I was fifteen years old,
because I was afraid because of the horror movies I did.
But she would read me stories like old time Hollywood
and who these people were and how important they were,
and she said, you know, you can learn lessons from her.
Every time she says something, Watch how she speaks, Watch

(09:34):
how she moves, you know, take everything in learn from her.
This is like, this is the best education you could
ever get working with Betty Davis. So each time I
worked with these people was an education for me and
made me, you know, a better actor. And I mean
kids were going to camp and you know, doing the

(09:54):
fun normal things at school. This is what I was doing.
So this is what I got to do.

Speaker 2 (09:59):
It was Betty Davis.

Speaker 1 (10:00):
She was She was very intimidating, and not just because
I knew who she was and what a big deal
she was, but she had a very intimidating presence about her.
But I mean she was very nice. She was nice
to me, and Kim got to work with her. Like
the fact that both of us got to work with
such a legend as we're just very fortunate.

Speaker 2 (10:22):
She psychonic, she really is. A movie is so scary.
I've seen it so many times. It's weird little we'd
watch it all the time.

Speaker 1 (10:29):
Some people think that scarier than Hollo Halloween. But yes,
because it wasn't expected because it was a Disney movie
and they had never made a scary film. People were shocked,
so it was even more scary to them.

Speaker 2 (10:42):
Was it hard for you to memorize lines.

Speaker 1 (10:45):
In the scripts. When I first started acting, I wasn't
reading yet, so I had to memorize just by you know,
learning and memorizing the conversation, you know. So Grandma would
talk and she made like a speed game, so you
had to really really That's how she taught me, and
it really wasn't hard for me to remember lines at all.

(11:06):
I think that's probably why I worked a lot. I
remember my lines really well, and I took direction really
well because Grandma was a great I mean, she was
our manager and she had studied acting at the Academy
of Dramatic Arts in New York, so she knew what
she was doing. She was like a coach. Yeah, she
was a coach.

Speaker 2 (11:23):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (11:23):
She would help me at the school plays. Yes.

Speaker 2 (11:27):
Kim also starred with Betty Davis and The Witch Mountain movies.
What was it like having your sister to share these
experiences with.

Speaker 1 (11:34):
Well, when Kim did this movie, I believe I was
like four years old, and I played the younger version
of her in this, like in all the flashback scenes,
because when I was little, my hair was also blonde.
But I didn't really know. I was just a baby,
you know, So I was just tagging along in these experiences,

(11:55):
so I didn't really know and appreciate it until later.
Like I said, it was just what we did, like
when kids are going to school, and I mean I
would go to school sometimes sometimes to a normal I
call it normal, but it was like a school for actors.
But mostly I was just on the set, so I
didn't really know. Just this is just our life. And

(12:16):
we were never in competition with each other ever because
of the age difference, and just that's not how Grandma
raised us.

Speaker 2 (12:23):
Is there one rule that you feel most proud of, you.

Speaker 1 (12:26):
Know, I mean work wise, like stuff I've been doing lately,
I feel very proud of, just like this movie I
just did, Beautiful Wedding. I really liked doing that. It
was a comedy. But I think proud wise, not just
because of my acting. I would say Halloween, just because
so few people could say that. You know, I did

(12:47):
this movie when I was seven years old, and here
I am decades later, still a part of this franchise
and I still have not been killed by Michael Meyer.
So I mean I'm pretty proud of that. How is
Damie Lee Curtis Oh She's amazing. She's amazing from the
first time I met her when I was a little
girl to this day. She's so loving and so supportive

(13:12):
through everything, you know, showing up. She was showing up
on The Housewives to support me in Children's Hospital Los
Angeles and then which we got involved in and you
got involved in too. So she's just been a very
supportive co star, friend, and mentor. I cannot believe when

(13:34):
she won the Oscar. I cannot tell you how exciting
it was for me. I was screaming. I was screaming,
I cannot believe my friend is one an Oscar. So exciting.

Speaker 2 (13:44):
She deserves that. She's another legend. She really is, she
really is.

Speaker 1 (13:49):
And we went to the Girlman's Theater in Hollywood and
she put her hands in her footprint in the cement
and I sat there and I was like, this is
really such an incredible moment. How many people get to
do this. I mean, it really is unbelievable. You know,
her career and following her parents, and I just admired

(14:12):
so much growing up in Hollywood and being able to
do what she's done and still doing it. Yeah, I
love her me too.

Speaker 2 (14:20):
So let's fast forward. It's when you met me for
the first time. What was I like as a baby?

Speaker 1 (14:26):
Perfect, flawless. So when you were born, you were you know,
Grandma and I went to New York because I was
still little and you were about to be born. So
Grandma wanted to be there obviously to help your mom
because she was twenty one and so she was you know,

(14:47):
Grandma was worried about, you know, her not knowing what
to do. So we went there and I had a
little twin bed in your room with the crib, and
You're just the cutest thing. And because I was the
youngest and didn't have a little sister to me, that
was really exciting because now there was someone younger than me,
there was a baby in the family, so I wouldn't

(15:08):
I didn't have to be the baby. And I know
I've told you this before and I've shared this story before,
but I would sneak in your crib and pull you
out and pull you in the bed with me, and
I would cry because I loved you so much. And
I was like, even now, I'm like, why was I
twelve years old crying because I love this baby so much?
It was you were just so sweet and so cute,
and I just was obsessed with you. Did you babies

(15:29):
with me all the time because your mom was like,
she wasn't one of those moms like, don't touch the baby.
So I was changing diapers, making bottles, laying with you,
and we really bonded since you were an infant, and
because of your mom and aunt Kim always being so close.

(15:49):
We're all like so close with the babies, you know,
after you came Nikki, and then Brooke and then Farah.
When your mom was the first person to hold Farah,
the doctor put the baby, I mean, and your mom
took the baby and didn't even let fairs dad hold
the baby, and then she was like, would you like
to hold the baby for a minute. So, you know,

(16:11):
we have that unique relationship in our family, but I
feel like yours and mine is, you know, really special.
Obviously I'm close with all of you guys, maybe with
the first one, and you know I was not. I
was like, looking back, I was just a baby too,
so sweet.

Speaker 2 (16:27):
Yes, I love that. I love looking at all the
old pictures and videos and I.

Speaker 1 (16:33):
Was just dress you up. You were just a little
dull to me, I thought. And then when you were
like this age, I was a frustrated makeup artist. So
I would make up on you and you just have
the most beautiful features, and I would eyeshadow, a lipstick
everything and make you do like a catwalk thing. I
don't want to your mama come home have all this

(16:54):
makeup on. I may be part of the problem, now
that I think about it. Oh my god, it's so cute,
so cute. There's so many fund memories.

Speaker 2 (17:06):
When we were little, we were all like raised, like
we were sisters, were cousins, were always together.

Speaker 1 (17:11):
Always we did everything together, you know when every time,
I mean I say every time like it's a lot,
but it is because between your mom and Kim and me,
we have twelve kids, and we were always in the hospital,
you know, with each other, and in the room we
gave birth. When I tell people that your dad filmed
my births, they probably think that's very strange. But he

(17:33):
was up here, I have to say, and for the side,
But I don't know. I was just like, that's how
we did it, and they're all we're all in the
room with each other. My dad was always filming everything.
I'm so happy he did. I know, any memories, and
thank god I saved a lot of photos and things too.
I know my mom, I don't know where anything is.

Speaker 2 (17:51):
I'm like, you please find them.

Speaker 1 (17:53):
She's like, actually have boxes of stuff for you. I
found the other day, like magazine covers. When you first
started becoming famous. I started saving things for you for
when you grew up. And then it just got out
of control, and then I stopped saving. I was like, oh,
she's on this magazine cover. I'm gonna save it for her.
And I'd buy like a few for like copies, like
it was gonna be important one day. And then it

(18:14):
just got so out of control I stopped collecting them.
I was like, this, whatever that's I held, advertise them.

Speaker 2 (18:22):
Yes, yes, I had a cool So you guys will
get to see those soon. How would you describe me
as a kid in three words?

Speaker 1 (18:38):
How would I describe you in three words as a
little girl? You were always and you still are to
this day. And I always say this, and I think
this is something about you that is very misunderstood. You
are very eccentric, very much, and people don't get that
about you. You were very sneaky. What do you mean

(19:01):
whatever you weren't supposed to do, you did whether that
was sneaking in an animal into the house that you
shouldn't have or I don't you just just sneaky, sneaky,
sneaking out, sneaking out as you got older, hiding things.
I mean you were like the climbing out of the
window kind of kid. Yeah, yes, and very sweet, always

(19:22):
really sweet, a very big heart, and you know your
love of animals and just just like a very like
a very gentle soul. And I don't think people get
that about you. That always bothers me. I think a
leslie know me. I mean there's been times, like when

(19:44):
you were younger where people would pick on you and
the press and they didn't know you, and I would
get so upset and so defensive, and I'm like, you
have no idea who this person is, and how how
much words can hurt when you know nothing? So annoying
to me, It's so mad. And of course that hasn't changed.
We all, you know, are subject to that. But I mean,

(20:07):
you've grown into this woman now and you're a mommy
and you're a wife, and you know a lot of
that chatter is behind you. But of course, no matter what,
people are gonna say mean things. But I felt so
defensive of you, because I'm like, you have no idea
how this sweet little soul you're talking about you could
be hurting her.

Speaker 2 (20:27):
You know, sweet sensitive. But now I feel like I've
been through so much that nothing.

Speaker 1 (20:34):
I know I know, And that's kind of scary too.
I sometimes say I think I have flatlined, like something
bad will happen, and I'm like, oh, well, you know,
what can I say? I mean, you do get to
that point where you just you've heard so much and
the headlines that I've read about myself and this last year.

(20:56):
If you had told me I would read these headlines,
I don't know too. Three years ago, I would have
been like, just lost it. And now I'm like, I really,
what else can they say? Don't I don't care? I
don't care. Yeah, I know.

Speaker 2 (21:12):
It's like nowadays with everything, like people can just make
up whatever they want and it's just like.

Speaker 1 (21:18):
Well, it's all about clickbait. Well, I was saying, you know,
because clickbait was never a thing. Obviously, we didn't have
the internet, you know, but people were buying magazines and
you'd read the full stories in there, so there was
no such thing as that. But then when magazines kind
of went away and the only way they could make
money was clicking on the link in the bio. They

(21:38):
had to do something, so they will say something that
doesn't even match the story. But if you're not paying
attention and you're just scrolling, that's what they're going to see,
and that's their takeaway, and it doesn't matter if it
has zero truth to it. That's their opinion of you.

Speaker 2 (21:54):
Especially like in the early two thousands, it still happens today,
but they just the media pitting women against each other
and they'll just create more stories like oh, sources say,
just to like protect themselves from lawsuits. But so much
of the time people are just trying to stir up
trouble just to make a story.

Speaker 1 (22:14):
Well, I learned this from somebody who's very big in
that world of on the internet and stories. They told
me that they will sit around a table and talk
about what the hot topics are and just make up
a story and then they say a source set and
as long as they say they don't say a name,
you can't question it. So I couldn't say anything I

(22:36):
want about you because it's going to make us money
and click on it. And I'm just going to say,
we're just going to say a source set, because basically
it's like someone in the room that they're with right
now and just there's nothing they can do. So every
time there's something like that about us, we just have
to This is why we have flatlined. This is why
we're like, oh well, okay, whatever, I'm part giraffe.

Speaker 2 (23:00):
Okay, cool, Yeah, we know the truth.

Speaker 1 (23:06):
Yes.

Speaker 2 (23:08):
How did you feel when you found out that you
were pregnant with Fair at a young age?

Speaker 1 (23:12):
I I was living with grandma and I went with
Roxanne family friend to used to be rex Al on
Losiana go do you remember what it was? Little? Okay?
And I got like the two and one pregnancy test
and I came on and I was so scared and

(23:33):
it said if this water turns any shade of blue,
you are definitely pregnant. And I like put the drop
in and it was like literally the bluest blue you've
ever seen in your life. And I like started screaming,
oh my god, my god, freaking out. And rock Sane
was like, oh my god. I said. She goes, well,
I'll just show you. I said, maybe it's wrong, Maybe
it's wrong, and she said, well, I'll show you. I'm

(23:55):
going to do it. It's going to be clear, and
then you'll know that it's definitely working. So she does
it and she goes, look it's clear, and I said, mmmm,
it said any shade of blue. If I hold this
up against a white towel, it looks a little blue
to me. We were both pregnant. Oh my gosh. So
I went into Grandma and she was in her room
and she looked at me and I started crying and
she said, you're pregnant. And I was like what. And

(24:20):
then she said, well, what are you crying about? And
she said, I'm here for whatever you need. I'll help you.
I'm here for you one hundred percent. And I was like,
I mean, I was so young and I didn't old you,
not even nineteen. I was eighteen, she was nineteen. I
was nineteen, sorry when she was born. So I was

(24:40):
really young for your mom to say that. And I'm
so incredibly grateful for her being that kind of mom,
because can you imagine if I didn't have that beautiful
daughter of mine. It was just a miracle and the smartest,
most beautiful, most together, I mean wow, And if I
did not have a mom like her, yeah, this could

(25:01):
have been a very different story. Yeah. So anyway, so
fool all the girls, I know, so so many women
are our family. My gosh, right we have because I
have all girls and then so four, five, six, seven,
eight nine. So we have nine girls and three boys
between us. That's a lot of women, a lot of
really strong women too. There's not a weak one in

(25:23):
the bunch. No, there's not that Kathy Senior Dna run strong.

Speaker 2 (25:29):
Yes, it's so cute.

Speaker 1 (25:33):
Right. Did you ever want a boy? I did. I
did want a boy. I tried for a boy, and
you know, God wanted me to have all girls, and
I got what I was meant to have, and I
just I sometimes I look like, just even seeing those pictures,
I just think, oh, I can't believe they're all mine.
And I know it sounds like they're mine, like they're possessions,

(25:55):
but they are mine. They're my, they're my children. But
they're just I just can't believe it. I just look
at them, like, there's so many too, and I'm so lucky.
They're so sweet.

Speaker 2 (26:07):
Who do you think is the most.

Speaker 1 (26:09):
Like you personality? You know, they're all they all have
a little bit of me. Sophia is a lot like me.
She is the unapologetic version of me. You know. Alexia
is a lot like me, just with like how she's
very domestic and likes to do things in the house
and the cooking and making things look pretty. And Farah

(26:29):
we have that too. Farah and I have a lot
of same sense of humor. We're all they each ow
a little bit of me, but Sofia, I think is
the most. Porscha is just her own person. She's actually
starting to look a little bit like me, even though
she was all mo. She's starting to look a little
bit like me. People are saying, and she's my height,
like you did get my height, Porsha? How old is
she now? Seen or sixteen? She's driving so crazy, I know,

(26:53):
it is really crazy, and she's like such a great
student and so, you know responsible. I'm just I'm a
really lucky mom. Remember how strict I was. You said
to me, don't be so strict with the other ones
like you. Oh yeah, you said, like you were with Parah.
But hey, look it worked. Yeah you were so strict.

(27:14):
I was so strict. Pharah was always so su good
a girl, So I guess it worked. It worked with
all of them. What can I tell you? Are you
strict with the worshop? I'm less strict, but I am strict,
you know, like her curfews earlier than her friends, and
I will wait up and she has to, you know,
if I have fallen asleep, just to awake me. What's
her curfew midnight? Which, by the way, Parah's was eleven

(27:37):
until she went to college. I'm so embarrassed with that.
But she never asked for it to be later. And
I feel like kids do like structure, and I didn't
have the structure, which is why I was like that
with my children as much as I could with what,
you know, a little experience I had, But I mean
little experience with structure, is what I'm trying to say.

(27:59):
But she never asked for her curfew to you later.
And Portia really hasn't either. She'll say, can I be
a little bit late tonight? And I'll say yes, and
I try to. And I do think about what you said,
don't be so strict, But you know, I think they
know that they're loved and that the reason you're strict
is to protect them, and you love them so much.
I think it just I think it hits them differently.

Speaker 2 (28:22):
Do they have the find my iPhone on their phones?

Speaker 1 (28:25):
Yep? Or I have all my kids on there, all them.

Speaker 2 (28:29):
That's a great thing about technology. Actually, if I was
a teenager, I probably would have hated that you would.

Speaker 1 (28:33):
Have disconnected it. You would have won percent disconnected it
and said your phone was broken. Yeah, I lost some idea.
What happened in my phone is not that find mys
not been working on my phone for a long time.
What are you talking about? Or you'd like bury your
phone in your bed and then get another phone and
take it with you. Yes, right, you had all of

(28:55):
the back phone, which exactly. Yeah, you had the Burner
phone for sure. You would have had the r on
your phone for sure, and there wasn't that time one hundred.

Speaker 2 (29:06):
There's so much more to discuss with my aunt Kyle,
and the next episode, we're gonna catch up on what's
going on right now, So stay tuned for the next
episode of I Am Paris.

Speaker 1 (29:16):
Thanks for listening to I Am Paris.

Speaker 2 (29:18):
Don't forget to follow us on Instagram at I Am
Paris podcast, email us at Paris at iHeartRadio dot com,
be hot and subscribe now loves It
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Dateline NBC
Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

The Nikki Glaser Podcast

The Nikki Glaser Podcast

Every week comedian and infamous roaster Nikki Glaser provides a fun, fast-paced, and brutally honest look into current pop-culture and her own personal life.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2024 iHeartMedia, Inc.