Entertainment
Kylie Kelce unveils why she craves ‘nobody needs me’ time over ‘me time’
Kylie Kelce joked about missing kids and then wanting them gone again!
In a recent chat on her Not Gonna Lie podcast, Kylie being a mom of four girls admitted she prefers “nobody needs me” time over “me time”
“”Me time’ to me says that I have things that I want to do for me, and that’s not necessarily the case. I want no one to need me,” she said on the latest episode of her show.
“I want to sit on the couch and sit. That’s it, period. That was my whole sentence. I want to sit on the couch, period,” Kylie explained. “I don’t want to open a snack. I don’t wanna fill a water bottle. I don’t wanna wipe a butt.”
However she noted that whenever she does get a chance to enjoy her “nobody needs me” time, she gets bored.
The wife of Travis Kelce’s brother, shared, “There have been times where all of my children have left the house and no one is currently in my vicinity, and I’m at my house by myself, which is a great place to have ‘nobody needs me’ time. That’s where I want the ‘nobody needs me’ time. I want to interact with my house the way I want to interact with my house,”
“Approximately thirty minutes — I’ll give it thirty minutes — into that, I get real bored, … and I want them to come back,” she added
But there is a funny twist to it as soon as they come back her kids’ annoying activities make her want the quiet time back.
“And, then a couple times, full honesty here, no judgment, they come back, and within 15 minutes of them being in the house, I’m like, ‘You could leave, Go back to where you were. I missed you, and now the fact that you drop-kicked your sister in the middle of the living room makes me want you to go back wherever you were for 10 more minutes,” Kylie spilled.
Entertainment
Tracy Morgan reflects on career and how a devastating crash impacted his life: “You have to cherish it”
Actor and comedian Tracy Morgan’s love for family is what drew him to his latest project – starring in the new Paramount+ comedy series “Crutch.”
Morgan plays Frank Crutchfield, a widowed father of two adult kids who move back into the family home in New York City’s Harlem. It’s a spinoff of the hit CBS show “The Neighborhood.”
“Prepping my whole life, man. I’ve got kids. My real wife died, Sabina. She passed away eight years ago. I … knew this role. I know this guy,” Morgan said in an interview with “CBS Mornings” that aired on Wednesday.
Morgan’s ex-wife Sabina, who was his high school sweetheart, died of cancer in 2016.
“I was with her in the hospital the day she closed her eyes and I said, ‘I love you. I miss you and please forgive me for any hurt I’ve ever caused you and I will see you again.'”
Purpose in his work
For Morgan, he says it’s important to not just be funny, but also send a message in his work.
“If it doesn’t have a heart, I don’t want to do it,” he said. “I need to be motivated. I got to say something. You got to tell life how I see it.”
Humor has helped the comedian through some of life’s most demanding moments, all while he built one of comedy’s most impressive resumes. Morgan found comfort in commanding an audience, standing out in everything he put his fingers on, including “Saturday Night Live.”
“When I first got there, I felt socially pushed away,” he said. “Because it is like the whitest show in the world and I didn’t want no one to portray me in a way that wasn’t true. It was like I had the whole Black community on my back.”
Morgan said then he had a conversation with the show’s creator and producer Lorne Michaels, which changed everything.
“Lorne let me know, ‘Tracy, we didn’t hire you because you’re Black. We hired you because you’re funny,’ and that changed it all. That’s when I let go and I let God,” he said.
Car crash impact on his life
In June 2014, at the height of his fame, Morgan nearly lost his life after his limousine was hit by a tractor trailer. His friend and fellow comedian James McNair was killed in the crash.
Morgan was in a coma for two weeks with a traumatic brain injury and broken bones.
“I just thank the Lord that I’m alive and I’m here and … I move on,” he said.
Morgan said he is now thriving with a renewed outlook on forgiveness and a focus on being present.
“The man almost killed me in that Walmart truck. I forgave him. As soon as I came out the coma, I forgave him,” he said.
For Morgan, forgiveness is the key to moving forward, but adds you don’t have to forget.
“I wouldn’t have been able to be funny no more. I would have been too angry. He almost killed me. I forgave him just to move forward with my life. Now look at me. I’m funnier than ever,” he added.
After the terrifying experience, Morgan says his perspective on life evolved: “You have to cherish it. Cause once it’s done, it’s done.”
Entertainment
Prince Harry hilariously attempts American accent: Watch
Prince Harry appeared on Hasan Minhaj Doesn’t Know podcast, where the host gave him a sentence to pronounce in American accent.
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