Speaker 1
No, she's going to answer it. Good. Top five people. Can they be living and not living? Yes. Are they allowed? No, like living or not living top five people. What's your dinner? Pencil and kind of dinner work. If this is like an interesting dinner to like discover things and to like really get to know, this is just like, or if this is like, we're going to have a blast of a dinner. I think so. Okay. I would go. Andy Warhol. Ooh. I would then invite Bob Marley. Hmm. I would definitely invite Kate Moss. She's a blast. Let's see. I feel like already that that three is pretty good. It's getting up to you. Have a really good bite. I would invite. I feel like there's drugs at this dinner. No, no, no, no, no drugs. Only things that come from the ground. It's so hard. This is hard. If you'd like painting Manning, Peyton Manning. I wouldn't like Peyton Manning would be fun at a dinner table. That's right. Good one. I like Peyton. Can I come to this dinner? No, I'm like not there. No, but you're not one of the five. You're just there. Five, so you can actually like, you're like waiting on us. And okay, I'm at four. I got one more, one more, one more. Oh, you know who I would invite is Mandela. Ooh. Okay. I'm coming to this dinner. I would, I just know I've heard that he was like the most loving, amazing man. And I bet, and I just would have a million questions to ask. And what do you think that he and Kate Moss would be talking about? Father, you'd be surprised. Probably a lot. No, it's like I love that cover. And I'm sure he'd get a kick out of her. And Kate is a little whip. She's a smart cookie. Yeah. That's a fun dinner. Okay. Well, I'm okay. Of all the roles you've played, who is the most similar to you in real life? Oh, probably the knives out character. Bertie Jay. I would say the most similar would be almost probably, I mean, I mean, I have to say Penny Lane, but like, but not. No. Andy Anderson, no, no. I mean, what was that like Australian movie? Raising, oh, oh, that Australian movie is Tess, Fool's Gold. I just said that Australian movie. I just said it before you said it. Yes, yes. God, I know you better than you fucking know yourself. This is the most like me for sure. By the way, you had the best, you were like living your best life in Brisbane. You were so happy doing that movie. Oh, I loved being in Australia. I was like in the sun every day. I was on the water. I was so happy. You were so happy doing that. Okay. I've been the fact that I got divorced. Now it's kind of depressing, but. Well, it doesn't seem like it's good. I thought my life was falling apart. It was great. Well, it sounds like it was a great time. Sounds like you were out there. It was definitely a time to remember. Okay. So there's a feel like mom questions that I think are interesting. So one of them is how parenting in your 40s is different than parenting in your 20s because you're having like a second round of it, which is so different. And also how to tell your date that you have a child because sometimes it's a turn off. Now you're famous. Everyone already knew you had a child, but like is it complicated dating someone who doesn't have kids when you have kids? These are great questions. I'll start with it's very different. My 20s having writer in my 20s and having Ronnie are so different. I feel like I'm way more present emotionally with Ronnie now. My 20s was so different because I was also traveling all the time. So writer was with me everywhere I went. He had no structure. Like there was no school environment that he was at all the time. And it was just constant movement. There is now with Ronnie, there was COVID. So that was one thing. And that changed everything because she had me completely for a year and a half. And I see the benefit of that. Okay. So before you were like, I'm a working mom, but we make it work and he loves to travel with me and it's easy. But then now you see how important it is to just be home with your kid.