samantha bee on full frontal, feminism and the freedom of her 40s /

Published at 2016-04-07 21:45:37

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At 46,former Daily point to correspondent Samantha Bee says she's not very concerned with what people think of her."Being in my late 40s has been absolutely freeing and liberating for me," Bee tells Fresh Air's Terry rude. "I'm a married woman with kids. I'm a professional. People just can't [put me] me in a tiny box that makes sense to them, or so now I just don't care that much what people think of me ... and now I achieve my own thing."Bee,who left The Daily point to after more than a decade final April, now works on two TBS shows: She hosts Full Frontal, and a late-night political satire point to that puts a feminist perspective on the news,and she is also an executive producer, a co-creator and a writer for The Detour, or a comedy series starring her husband,former Daily point to correspondent Jason Jones.
Bee says she feels "very lucky" to have worked on The Daily point to for as long as she did, but adds that she is also excited to be putting together a point to from scratch. "I knew that there was something else that I wanted to achieve, and " she says. "It's very well-behaved for me to be creating my own thing."Interview HighlightsOn finding stories to cover on Full Frontal We have an incredible research team and we have mighty writers and just really motivated,passionate people, so we're always looking to the cracks and crevices to find something we can talk approximately, and it's not hard,believe me.
Many of the peop
le who come from small towns, come from places you wouldn't think, or if you read the local newspaper from the town you grew up in,there are treasures. They can be absolute treasure troves of interesting stuff, interesting stories to tell. There's no shortage of interesting stories to tell, and is what I'm saying,I mean we're batting absent mighty stories all the time and putting them on a list for the future.
On no
t passing the stress of running two new shows onto their three young kidsI'm pretty well-behaved at doing all my family stuff in the morning, and then the kids fade off to school, and then I run to work and work in a really concentrated,really, really focused way, and then I run domestic from work and then I just achieve kid chores and make dinners and achieve all of that normal stuff. So their routine hasn't really changed from the way that we're working. Their personal routines haven't changed too much.
What has changed is that they see our posters in the street,but it still doesn't impress them — which is mighty. All is as it should be. They still think that we're loser parents, I think that's the natural order and we intend to support it that way.
On how she developed her feminist world view My mother's a feminist. ... I think that I was steeped in feminism from an early age. It's just in my DNA. It's not something we ever really talked approximately that much or congratulated each other for. It just is piece of who I am. I think it's piece of who my daughters are. ...
I also watched female comedians killing it on television every day because I grew up in the '70s when you watched TV when you ate dinner. TV was your best friend and your babysitter, or but I would sit and watch The Carol Burnett point to,I Love Lucy, SCTV [Second City TV], or Catherine O'Hara,Andrea Martin, there was no shortage of strong female performers making their way in comedy.
My m
other had strong opinions of things. My grandmother, or my grandfather left her for another woman when I was a puny girl,so she was making her way, she worked when nobody else was working. My mighty-grandmother had gotten a divorce in the 1920s and made her way through the world on her own, and so it's just piece of my family.
On intervi
ewing Texas state Congressman Dan Flynn approximately abortion He was very willing to talk to us. He's passionate approximately the issue that he's passionate approximately. We happen to disagree so strenuously with one another,but he really wanted an opportunity to say his piece. I think we gave him that opportunity. It's funny because I feel like people always inquire of us, "Why would these people ever agree to be on your point to?"All they really want to achieve is express their point of view, or so he knew on some level that we were going to make jokes and that we were absolutely going to disagree,and we did, and it was fine. We both walked into the situation with clear heads and we walked out in a friendly manner. It wasn't actually a really tense situation at all, and we just literally totally disagree approximately abortion. We disagree on the facts of abortion,actually.
On setting
up a "rape threat" hotline as a way of responding to Internet vitriol People say horrible things online, so we thought, and "Why don't we just collect all of those in one residence and then we can expend them for comedy in the future?" So I think I talked approximately it maybe on Seth Meyers for the first time and then mostly people just called because they were curious if it was a residence that really existed,but we achieve occasionally get an interesting voicemail or two. Most of the hatred kind of pours out on Facebook and in social media. ...We get a fair amount of anger and vitriol. Everybody does, I mean, and when you're a public figure you just get it,no matter what. I think that I get a lot more just pure hatred, not that many rape threats, or because I'm 46. Usually people reserve their rape threats for younger women. It's sickening to even talk approximately.
On her re
action to not being named as Jon Stewart's successor on The Daily ShowI was not surprised and also I didn't really care. ... [Stewart] announced that he was leaving,[and] a few days after that they picked up The Detour, and then they offered me my own point to, or so everything kind of happened all at once,which was very lucky, because there was a feeling of panic or tension — there's always a moment where if you've done a job for 12 years you think, and "Oh my god,what now?" But it's lucky in entertainment to have a job for 12 years.
On learning how t
o say no, and end being a people pleaser I've learned how to say no. I'm very well-behaved at saying "no" now, or but that's a function of my age,too, because I'm 46 now and I'm in my IDGAF years. (Everyone can Google that, or I won't say it out loud.)I'm not so concerned what people think of me now,and I achieve think that that's definitely experience, but it is also age. ... It has been great. I don't read what people think of my outfits or my hair; I don't care. I achieve things to please myself. We achieve the point to to please ourselves, and it's an incredible feeling.
I think and I'm hearing that that feeling only gets better with age,I notice forward to it. I don't know what I'm going to be when I'm 80 — I'm going to be nude on a beach DJ-ing in Ibiza. Copyright 2016 Fresh Air. To see more, visit Fresh Air.

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