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January 29, 2024 • 33 mins
Shazia and Tarun talk about middle age, Justin Timberlake and being a celebrity today.
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Episode Transcript

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(00:00):
Hey, going on, my goodness, my phone's out of order. It's
like I can't do anything when Ican't use my phone. First of all,
sorry I didn't see your message.Oh that's fine. Just uploading an
audition. It's taking forever. Iauditioned for something and it wasn't even for

(00:22):
me, like somebody was like,hey, uh, all states looking for
It's like an open casting. Inever even do that. But I was
like, screw, I'm just gonnasubmit myself. So I spent like all
Friday like making the stupid audition.And it was like, you like play
two roles, so I had torecord myself one way then another word,
but it's like two different auditions.So it just took me all day.
And you forget how long these auditionstake. And this is so unrelatable anybody

(00:45):
watching, but like it's it's takesso much time. If you want to
do this and and you just throwit into the the space vacuum and you
never you have to just forget aboutit. That's just the only way you
know that you're on the right track. As if the theme show or the
same pasting director is calling you backfor other stuff. Other than that,

(01:07):
you just don't hear back anymore.There used to be a day where the
market wasn't oversaturated, where your agentor manager would hear back like, oh,
hey, darn did an amazing job, but we decided to go in
another direction. Or he was oneof our final three and we decided to
go in another direction. So butwe just don't hear that anymore. I

(01:30):
don't even I don't even want tohear that though. Why even tell me,
because then you just get pissed off. By the way, when you
first popped on screen, I imagineDallas for some reason. Who's that girl
from Dallas back in the day?I actually sold? Now? But the
Black Hair or Dynasty? Do Ilook like that? I look like I
need to be on Dynasty? Yeah? Who's this very famous actress in the

(01:53):
eighties black Hair? I can't rememberher name, Joan Collins. Joan Collins.
We well, thank you? Yeah, you look like John Collins back
then? Now, yeah, thankyou. I kept Berni's articles about Justin
Timberlake's comeback. Did you see this? Like, I guess he hosted essen
L yesterday. But I'm only bringingthis up because it is seemed like Justin

(02:14):
Timberlake was part of our generation oflike two thousands, and they were like,
oh, this middle aged guy shouldmake a comeback. And I was
like, oh my god, howfast this time move? But he's raged?
Yeah, and he's old. Howold is justin Timberlake. It's got
to be what forty something? Right? Perhaps he's a dad, right,

(02:38):
I don't know. Maybe I thinkso. Do you think having a family
makes you more well balanced to bein showbis? Ooh, that's a good
question. I absolutely think it doesif you're an actor, Yeah, because
now you've opened yourself up to thiswhole new world of emotions and things that
you can go into and grab from. So yes, any life experience,

(03:01):
having a family, having lost travelingmakes you better in the entertainment industry as
an actor. I think that musicians, if they're on a roll and they
stop to have a family, someof them have just fallen off the planet
by doing that. Did you everdate any famous musicians? I did I

(03:25):
date a famous musician? No?I wasn't a justin Timberlake music video though.
Was he nice? Huh? Hewas very nice, very professional?
Yeah, it was it was along day. Music videos are hard work.
Did he force you to get anabortion like he did the Britney Spears.

(03:45):
No, unfortunately, I wasn't thatgal. Did he force Britney Spears
to get an abortion? Is thatwhat she said? That's what she wrote.
Don't quote me in this, butI think she wrote that in a
memoir that she got pregnant. AndI don't know if she said Justin Timberlake,
but I think it's insinuated that itwas Justin Timberlake who pressured to get

(04:08):
an abortion. Again, I don'tbe defaming him, but do your own
research. Google it if you're watchingthis, But I think it's something along
those lines that kind of just tarnishedhis his squeaky clean Disney image. But
will you think it was him orher people? Oh that's what you think
tarnished it? Well, it didn'thelp, I don't think you know,

(04:29):
because Justin Timberlake was a guy fromthe Disney Channel, right, Yeah.
They were all on the Mickey MouseClub, him, Christina Aguilera, Britney's
Fears. Like yeah, I thinklike two of the insinc guys the Mickey
mouse Club was they were like onthe dance team for that. I guess
I wonder what the comparison would benow is there still a Mickey Mouse Club.

(04:50):
I don't think so. I don'tthink so, But I do think
having a young start does put youin a different category of actors, Like
I do think those people are moremessed up. But and they're better actors
too. I mean, let's faceit, they're they're trained well. When
you're a kid, acting is secondnature. You can pretend anything is real.

(05:15):
You're in the world of make believes. So it's very easy to just
take a situation and pretend like it'shappening. But it's also dangerous because you
do that, you make it real. You don't know how to differentiate between
reality and non reality, and thatis emotionally taxing. This commercial ontion and

(05:38):
Fred Savage was directing it, andit seemed like the nicest guy, and
then literally like six months later,all these things came out like he's like
insane, like yelling at people,and I think he kind of got canceled.
I remember that too. And thenwell then a story came out that
he there was problems with him onset of Wonder Years within him and the

(06:00):
mom So you wonder if that's becausehe is an insane person or because he's
he was a child star that madehim all screwed up. Maybe it's a
combination, if he was a childstar having issues with the mom on set.
I don't know. There's always moreto this story than we hear.

(06:23):
Yeah, always. I wanted toask you, do you think celebrity is
dead? Like you know, inour days there was the big celebrities.
You know, it was like melGibson, Julia Roberts, you know,
or Angelina, Jolie brad Pitt andeverybody idolized the big celebrities. Do you
feel like that's still a thing nowor is that absolutely? I think there

(06:48):
are still major celebrities out there's justa few far between. But now there's
like many celebrities within their own worldthanks to YouTube and TikTok, so like
you're famous in your own ecosis.Like I went to Dantannis. It's like
this fancy restaurant on uh on SantaMonica. It's such a tight it's basically
like this really exclusive Battalion restaurant,but they only pack in like forty five

(07:11):
fifty people there, really small.I don't even know how I got in,
honestly, I think I just calledand and it was just me and
a friend and the guy from JustShooting Me was there? Another famous uh
that the guy Enzo's something I forgotnot David Spade, the actor, the
photographer guy and Just shoot Me.Anyways, he was there, like a
famous writer was there, and thenJohn Hamm walked. John Hamm was there

(07:36):
and you could just feel like theenergy shifting towards John Hamm because it's so
tight. And then as you walkout, everyone's like, oh John Hamm.
You could just feel that because he'slike an A list star in Hollywood.
So it's such a difference between thatand like a YouTube star. Who
I've been around these guys in comedyclubs, but when these A list guys
walk in, you're like, man, that's the guy from that show which

(08:00):
you see or these top Gun movie, whatever the hell he's been in.
You know, you just it's likea presence they have, which maybe it's
psychological, do you think, butdo you think that the twenty year olds
were thinking that we were only twentyyear olds in the restaurant. There's all
people in my age, so you'reright, maybe it's not as impressive to

(08:20):
them because they grew up, theygrew up on TikTok and cell phones.
I don't think they're into celebrities anymore. I think our generation, yeah,
we're keeping it alive, but Ithink the younger people are a little annoyed
with celebrities. And if you ifyou just look at your streamers like Netflix,
Amazon, like Pop on your streamer'sparamount, there are so many shows

(08:41):
and so many movies that how canyou be famous. It's like the difference
between going to a small high schoolwhere there's the popular crowd. Right,
there's the popular crowd and then thethe scholastic kids and then the goth kids.
But when you enter into a giantat high school with like thousands,

(09:01):
or you get into college, youcan't have those clicks. Those clicks don't
hold stature. And so the marketis so saturated with stars and people on
TV, Like there are people onseries regular TV shows right now that I
wouldn't know if I ran into thembecause I can't get around to watching all
the shows. Well, you're writingthe sense of this is a nineteen eighty

(09:22):
five with the like coor networks whereyou know who like Michael G. Fox
is or Yeah, That's what I'msaying, is that Dad, I think
it is definitely. I mean,they're not well known, and also TV
shows don't last the way they usedto when we were grown up. There's
like years that go on. Nowit's like you're lucky to get two seasons.

(09:45):
Exactly. Would you want to bea celebrity like family like that?
No, I don't think the celebritieswant to be what celebrity brings, because
you know, no longer have aprivate life and you can no longer just
go run an errand, And Ithink that's why they all end up living

(10:07):
in certain cities where they can kindof do that, but then they still
can't because there's photographers following them.And I think that kind of life is
really hard, and it's hard toraise a family in that kind of life.
So I don't know that I wouldwant celebrity status, but you know,

(10:28):
I don't mind people being familiar witha body of work that I've done,
but chasing the street like the Kardashianstatus. No, yeah, they
were like next level fame, Butisn't that the trade off between working and
making money? So I feel likeyou have to be sort of famous to

(10:50):
get projects moving, to be indemand, even if you're not an actor
like Kardashians, like they're selling theirmakeup, brends, whatever you're doing.
Like it's almost like this, yougot to sell your soul to the devil
and give up so much of yourlife to to work. Otherwise you're just

(11:11):
you're considered. Oh like justin Timberlake. You know he's not on TV.
I'm sure you know he's trying toget back into the limelight. But you
know, I'm saying, there's likethis trade off like ying and yang thing
to it. Yeah, I thinkthere is, And I think at the
higher levels, I think there issome sort of you know, deal that
they've made or inside of them they'vedecided, Okay, I'm going to give

(11:31):
this up for this. Did youfeel that in the room when you auditioned,
you were like, I'm not goingto get this. I think there
was a lot of self sabotage.In hindsight, I look at how much
self sabotage there really was. Idid do that to myself. Isn't that
crazy? Like I've done that tooin the rooms, like we get in

(11:52):
our own way. In fact,I keep telling myself now, I'm like
this, don't get in my ownway, like this show up and don't
mess us up. But for somemarine in her twenties, it's like we
can just that's why you need people. I've read so many bios of people
just getting shoehorned into roles, likethey don't even audition where they have the

(12:15):
opportunity to get in their own way. They're just kind of just like putting
like, you know, we're justgoing to give you this part and then
they just figure it out. Ifthat's so much easier versus having to go
through this rigormar role of auditioning andcallbacks, I mean it sucks, It
really sucks. Auditioning is the hardestpart of acting and the part that will

(12:35):
drain you the fastest. And yeah, I actually like the self tape situation.
And I've had a few auditions nowbecause of the new SAG after contracts
where they're like, would you ratherdo a live zoom or you know,
you have the option to self tapeor schedule a zoom time And I'm like,
oh, hel pape all day,baby, Yeah, why would I

(12:58):
do it on zoom? I don'tknow. I want to be able to
be in my creative space without someoneelse's energy there. Necessarily, I'll be
in the zoom room when there's acallback. Yeah, that's fine. Look
I get that. It's like,in fact, I have my background.
You can see in the background.I have the same thing. By the

(13:18):
way, I think because of you. I have that background because I was
expecting to be like auditioning like crazy. So I got that. So now
I use that for like my hostingstuff because I host a lot. It
works. You know, I wentthrough many other colors before I settled on
this color. I had like thebright blue, the bright green, then
I had beige, and then Ihad like this baby blue, and this

(13:43):
is the one I pop off thebets. I feel like, yeah,
I just got mine because I's tryingto copy you. But it also has
like a lighter side to it too. In case anybody wants to buy zoom
background, yeah, I remember sendingyou the link. It's not expensive.
Just got to get your setup done. But you've got to be willing to
invest, because if you're new tothe industry and you're turning in self tapes

(14:07):
and you haven't made them professional oryou don't have a professional headshot, nobody's
going to take the chance on havingyou on set where they're spending hundreds of
thousands, if not millions of dollars. Yeah, and you're green. It's
just not going to happen, Sojust step it up. I have this
conversation with actresses and they don't wantto get the stuff, and I'm like,

(14:33):
just do it. It's going toset you apart or you're going to
look obviously green. Do you helpout a lot of younger actresses? Like
why? Because I wish that someonehad done that for me. It's so
funny you say that because I usedto say the same thing. That's a

(14:54):
quote, by the way, bethe person that you wish you had in
your own life. I forget whosaid that, but so I would do
that, and then I realized thatpeople just take like they just take,
take, take, take, Andthen I feel like they're like energy vampires
where they just keep coming back.Like if you give an age, people
take a mile. Maybe it's differentin Texas. So now I just cut

(15:15):
it off. I'm like, youknow, the drawbridge is up to have
access to me is exclusive, right, honestly, So I stopped doing that
for people, Like I stop.People would call me. People would call
me and offer me money to talkon the phone. You know, like
he talk on the phone with you, and I was like, I'll just
call you for free. We canjust have a conversation. But then I

(15:35):
realized people are just everyone's just tryingto move up this ladder here in Hollywood,
and I don't know. That's mytake. I try not to be
as helpful to as I used tobe. You're right, I have encountered
some energy vampires. I have encounteredpeople that I've spent a lot of time
on and then they just disappear.They've moved on to the next person.

(15:58):
But I am a little bit morepicky with vetting these people now and the
current people that I'm helping, they'rereally good, good people. I really
want them. I want to seethem succeed. You too, nice I
am? I am? I needto be mean, but that's never been

(16:22):
part of my makeup. This isanother thing because I just had this conversation
yesterday with a friend. The peoplewho you know who have gotten famous,
have they turned around healthy of anycapacity? That's a no, your hesitation,
No one of them. And I'mnot going to ask them because they

(16:45):
know they know they see me,they know that I'm doing this like it's
interesting. So why do you thinkpeople don't help? And this is not
an Indian thing, this is justa normal thing Hollywood. Because I was
talking to a friend of mine aboutcomics I know who have made it,
and they just don't look back.Well, I mean, I also haven't

(17:07):
asked, so I haven't asked,So that's a and I think that they
haven't offered because maybe maybe they justhaven't seen the perfect thing for me.
I think that a lot of Hollywoodcasting is just being looking right for the
part. Yeah, they're looking forthat person who looks right, or it's

(17:33):
about who you know and who youknow as in the powers at me that
can actually cast you. The peopleI know that have made it have been
other actors. I don't really thinkit's up to them to get me the
job. I don't think they can. I know some casting directors, and

(17:53):
I do know some directors, butagain I don't think that they're the ones
the only one pulling a trigger onwho gets cast. Yeah. I think
maybe it's different in the acting worldof like, I think I come more
from the side of comedy where Idon't know. I just feel like I

(18:15):
know a lot of exec producers andit's like it's so easy just to I
think it's easy to let someone openforew on the road as a comic or
if you're staffing a show, Hey, I have a writing job. But
then also think it's up to me, you know, which is like the
whole ego thing of like I've gotto self generate it myself. I'm just

(18:37):
ask I mean I should ask youto ask for me, like, hey,
sho ask for me? Well,maybe that's what it is. Do
not have a manager for comedy?Is that not how the comedy world works?
Oh? No, managers do helpa lot, but it's hard to
get a good manager, like onethat is juice, got it? Have
you ever tried to stand up?I know I haven't. I was at

(19:00):
the Groundlings, but that's not standup, that's improv But I always thought
I would go to the ice Houseand take their course and do at least
write one stand up. But Ijust never got around to it. I
think I told you, or atleast had a conversation behind your back where

(19:21):
I was like, no, Jazi, I should do stand up and I
should just write her act and thenI can just clost on her because I
would just see these girls, right, not saying girls are not funny,
but I know some girls were notfunny, and they would have someone.
I assume somebody wrote there five minutesor six minutes, and they got so
much heat off of it, andthen they would just do stand up to

(19:42):
get to another level and then stopdoing stand up. And I was like,
well, Jesus Christ, I shouldjust find somebody to tell my jokes.
And well, you should have toldme we could have done that.
I mean, I'm down, Yeah, I just never I don't know why
I didn't approach you. Maybe Iwas kind of fifty to fifty about it,

(20:03):
but it's also an investment. Imean, to ask you to go
to comedy clubs. I mean,that's just the whole Yeah. I don't
know if you could have dealted that, honestly, it would have been horrible,
like grudgerate, going to these clubsand these guys hitting on you left
and right. Guys are animals,especially the comics that they're absolutely the worst.

(20:26):
Yeah, I don't know if that'smy scene. I also don't drink
alcohol. You don't drink alcohol,really, I haven't in a long time.
That's different than I haven't wait,wait, So when was the last
time you haven't? Uh? Whowas the last time you let you had
alcohol? Like two hours ago?Happened in a long time, last Sunday.

(20:48):
No, it's been years, Ithink as I as I've just gotten
older, I don't I realized thatI don't really like alcohol. I mean,
I've never been a big drinker.I can count on my one hand
how many times I've been drunk,and I always feel horrible the next day.
I always get terrible sleep that night. Like even if I drink,

(21:10):
I can pass out on a halfglass of wine and then two hours later
I'm up and I cannot sleep therest of the night. So it just
wasn't working out for me. Ilike my sleep too much. I like
working out. I like having mynext day not ruined. And it just
isn't a match for my body composition. I don't have a you know,

(21:33):
I don't have anything against alcohol.It just doesn't work for me. Even
in your twenties, you didn't drink. I did drink in my twenties,
but I was never the girl whoI was always a designated driver. Those
are my friends listening, you know. I was always leaving the party early.
So yes, the Playboy Mansion.I did not stay until even midnight.
I was always out of there likeeleven because I wasn't drunk, We're

(21:56):
doing drugs, So it just neverwas matched for me. Yeah, I
think I'm the same way, butI would drink when I'm around girls because
I was like, it's easier toget late. Let to be honest,
it's just when you're both drunk,it's just like, all right, great,
now we're both trashed. But thatworked better in my twenties versus thirties

(22:21):
because I was like, now Idrink more out of sadness. Oh that's
good, but I barely touch alcohol. I seriously, I'm bringing water right
now. But yeah, I feellike in all the years that we have
been friends, it's not like we'veever really drank to get I don't remember

(22:41):
a time seeing you really drink.Well, did become my thirtieth party,
my thirtieth part day party? Iknow I invited you because I put you
on the advertisement. I put ShayaDean, You'll be there, Yeah,
I did. I made this wholevideo about it because I got blackout drunk.
Well, it's the only time I'vegot black eye drunk, or was
it were we at a karaoke bar. I started at Bugsby. I don't

(23:07):
know if you came because and Idid you know, I made that ad
I invited guess that's when DACS waspretty big, and I invited from da
CUCs random India showed up and alot of and a lot of them thought
you were going to show up.I remember that. And you didn't show
up. You might have been busy. But then that's okay. And then
we went from my We just jumpedaround and then I just clocked out somewhere

(23:30):
onto Yeah. I never saw that. You know what it was the year.
We're the same age, right,I mean you're like a little bit
you're or you're younger than me.Yeah. Yeah, that that was a
rough time for me. I wasa little broken hearted. You were sure

(23:52):
what happened? I had. Ihad a boyfriend who one day to get
an oil change and I never sawhim again. He told me this,
so we call him oil change.He did reach out to me fifteen years
later, he's like, I finishedthe oil change. Yeah, yeah,

(24:15):
he finally Yeah, the car turnedout okay. I mean, wow,
it was it was rough. Itwas a really hard breakup, but it
made me a better person, socliche. There had to have been a
sign, though, right, Imean leading up to that, Oh yeah,
yeah, I mean, not asign that he was going to leave

(24:36):
on an oil change, but asign that perhaps we would have a conversation
and the relationship wasn't going where weboth wanted it to go, and that
maybe we could part ways and beamicable and still be friends until we found
other partners or something like that.That was where I perhaps saw the conversation
going, not I gotta go getan oil change. Okay, I'll make
us dinner. I mean. Weshared a beautiful home together in Silver Life,

(24:56):
like a tri level home overlooking thelag you know, look like a
rustration hardware pottery barn had exploded insidethe home like we were living like a
married couple. And that was it. He just left. He left all
his stuff there. His clothes werehung up in the closet. Did you

(25:18):
call the police? I didn't.I called his mom and they let me
know he's safe, he's just goingthrough something. They were all very sorry,
and I thought, Okay, maybehe just needs time and space.
And then like a month went byand I moved out. Were you both

(25:44):
in the lease or he was hein the lease. We were both on
the lease, and I let theowner know and she had been in touch
with him. So I left everythinghalf. I did have z's on everything,
and took what I would fit inmy new apartment and started my life
again. See that that's the beginningof like a movie or something. Yeah,

(26:11):
yeah, it was crazy. Yeah. He recently got into touch again
and apologized. So there's that.Well, I think everybody goes her.
You know that happen. You needthat to happen at least once. Oh,

(26:32):
you must have a broken heart.Well, also that extreme guy.
A girl ghost me once. Shejust disappeared and I'm like, what happened?
Are you dead? And she finallycalled me like after like three weeks
she was like, oh it's notworking out, and then she met somebody
I found out later. But howhard is it to just have a call,

(26:53):
like to speak the truth to someone. I don't understand people who ghost
people or disappear like I know,you know, you must clearly have some
anxiety or mental health stuff going on, and but you would feel much better
and if you just always spoke yourtruth. Yes, but some people are

(27:19):
not capable of that, I realizethat in retrospect, like they've got their
own messed up issues, it's notit's never on you. If you're being
left in the dust, it's therepsychological mess, and honestly it's way for
the better because you don't want tobe with someone like that anyways. Long
term, Oh, I dodged abullet. Oil change has oil changed again

(27:42):
on you know, his current situation, which is what prompted the apology.
Apology to me, perhaps he's finallyseen a pattern in his life. I
don't know. I wish nothing butthe best for him. I like you,
Like we said, actually everyone needsto go through something like that,

(28:02):
because it did help me really haveto reflect on my choices in significant others,
as well as my reaction to situationslike nipping things in the butt.
That's where we're different. You leaveme, you burn in your own bad
decisions. I wish you nothing butthe worst. Now I don't wish them

(28:26):
the worst, but I couldn't careless about how the future turns out.
It's just like armor's a bitch,you know. Well, I think I
did think that way our own,but I realized that you have to fully
release these people in good. Youhave to see them as broken and want
good for them, and then theyfully leave you, like energetically or spirit

(28:51):
Oh my god, honestly was goodfor them. Yeah, let me tell
you the story of how oil changeand up reaching back out to me.
I believe in like objects carrying energiesor like you got to clear your house.
So I was clearing my closet andI found this ring and I was
like, what is this ring?And I had a Buddha face, like

(29:12):
a moonstone Buddha face, big silverring, and I was like, I
don't know, but I feel likeI need to get rid of this ring.
I couldn't remember like where it camefrom. I took the ring and
I just threw it in the trash. I'm sure it is worth money and
solid silver, and I threw itin the trash and then like the next
day, I was like, ohmy gosh, oil change. I bought

(29:33):
that for me. We were upin the mountains at this resort and he
had bought me that ring, andwithin twenty four hours I had an apology
fifteen years later from him. AndI think there was something about the physical
act of me throwing away this connectionor whatever. That ignited something into us

(29:56):
connecting, and it was really goodbecause I don't have to hold onto anything.
I do really truly forgive him andI really truly wish nothing but the
best for him, and I feelat peace doing that, and it gives
me back the control. If you'rewishing bad on someone and they still have
some kind of control over you andyour emotions that they spark a negative even

(30:22):
just sparking a emotion, so I'mlike, I'm good, I'm clear.
Yeah, I mean, they'ret havecontrol over me, but they're just a
race. It's like they don't exist, okay. And I also redirect that
into my own work, which iswhy I feel like I'm very motivated.
I just it's like, well,the time I don't give you, I'm

(30:45):
putting into my own myself, I'mreinvesting it and again. But I also
think very valuable experiences. That's why, Like when I see like these simp
dudes out here in Hollywood, justlike put women and pedestal, I feel
like they're wasting their time. I'mlike, what are you guys doing?
Just put it in yourself, likeChase excellence. I like that you should

(31:10):
always always put the time into yourselffirst. Yeah, guys or girls you
know like I feel. But thenagain, look like you said you were
looking for a husband. I knowit's a different thing biological clock or a
family. Like Look, I'm sittinghere with them. Well that's what's scared.
Oil change. Yeah, I wasready, but he didn't know how

(31:32):
to let me down, so hejust went for an oil change. And
he was at three thousand miles withhis car, so he was in a
tight situation. That's a good point. Yeah, the car, you know
it needed help. That Mercedes dealershipin Beverly Hills is far from Silver Lake,
fifteen years far? Is that?Is that how we started off the
apology. By the way, itwas very far. I think going graphic

(31:59):
graphic traffic on Wilshure is tough.Oh, every day you reevaluate life going
through traffic. But look pros andcons in life. You got to pick
and choose your battles. If youlive in LA, you accept traffic,
yeah, or you just time outyour day so you leave like eleven o'clock

(32:20):
in the morning, eight o'clock beforetraffic starts to set in. Yeah,
it's a great quote, which youknow, I think we should wrap this
up. But I think it's BettyWhite and she was on the Red carpet
and they were like, Betty,any advice to anybody coming to La And
she goes, take Fountain. Shekeeps walking. That is the best advice
always, isn't it? Fountain?Yeah? Not not no, get ahead

(32:47):
shots not live with both of yourdreams. Take fountain. That that alone
will change your life if you come. No, that is just practical advice
that will change your life. Andwhen you discover Fountain, you'll see you
why. Yeah, it basically fountainsthis street that runs parallel the sunset,
so you can bypass a lot oftraffic. But Shazi had great talking you

(33:07):
as always. I hope you getyour audition. Oh thank you. Yes,
please watch me on the most showthat or the Joan Collins bio movie
Dynasty remake. Yeah, I'll thinkI'll take it, all right, bye
guys, bye, alright, makesure to follow us from Shazis or San

(33:30):
Shazia fan bail please do. I'mon a social media fast all right,
good seeing shazz Bye bye
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