Caleb Hammer questions a guest about making money through non-nude photos on subscription platforms.
Guest: Anywhere from a hundred dollars a photo to like five hundred dollars a photo, and it would just be like bra...
Caleb: How many photos?
Guest: Sometimes one to five.
Caleb: Okay. What were you making off this?
Guest: Ugh, I don't know, every week...
Caleb: So you never went the... online... you never went to booby-booty-booty-booty.
Caleb Hammer questions a guest about making money through non-nude photos on subscription platforms.
Guest: Anywhere from a hundred dollars a photo to like five hundred dollars a photo, and it would just be like bra...
Caleb: How many photos?
Guest: Sometimes one to five.
Caleb: Okay. What were you making off this?
Guest: Ugh, I don't know, every week...
Caleb: So you never went the... online... you never went to booby-booty-booty-booty.
Tom Holland discusses his decision to quit drinking and the inspiration behind launching his non-alcoholic beer brand.
Amy: Why did you start a brand, and why non-alcoholic?
Tom Holland: So, I quit drinking because I had a problem and I just couldn't put it down. It was affecting my professional life, it was affecting my personal life, and my health. So, I decided to pack it in. And during that first year, I noticed that there were limited options for people like me that were looking for something that would scratch that itch, that would help you go to the bar and be a part of the social experience but not feel like the only person with a lemonade.
The truth behind the shandies, which we're bringing out this summer, is that Z has never drunk. She's never been a drinker.
Amy: She's incredible.
Tom Holland: She's the best. She's never drank, which means she never found the taste for beer. And everyone remembers their first beer it's a little bit like ugh.
Tom Holland talks about the collaborative freedom on the set of Spider-Man, recalling how he and Zendaya stopped a shoot to rewrite a scene that wasn't working.
Tom Holland: We had an amazing moment on Spider-Man: Brand New Day. And it’s only because of our relationship that this happened, where we were shooting this scene, and we’d shot my coverage, we then turned around on Zendaya, we’re doing her coverage. And I would never, ever dream of saying this to an actress that I wasn’t with. And I said to her, I said, "Do you think that this scene is working?"
Amy Poehler: Yeah.
Tom Holland: And she was like, "No, I don’t think this scene is working at all." So I then went to the producers and asked, like, "Do you think the scene is working?" and they said no. And I was like, "Yeah, me and Z are like really not feeling it
Tom Holland talks about the collaborative freedom on the set of Spider-Man, recalling how he and Zendaya stopped a shoot to rewrite a scene that wasn't working.
Tom Holland: We had an amazing moment on Spider-Man: Brand New Day. And it’s only because of our relationship that this happened, where we were shooting this scene, and we’d shot my coverage, we then turned around on Zendaya, we’re doing her coverage. And I would never, ever dream of saying this to an actress that I wasn’t with. And I said to her, I said, "Do you think that this scene is working?"
Amy Poehler: Yeah.
Tom Holland: And she was like, "No, I don’t think this scene is working at all." So I then went to the producers and asked, like, "Do you think the scene is working?" and they said no. And I was like, "Yeah, me and Z are like really not feeling it
Caller: I think there is close to a million dollars in debt right now, and I'm afraid that I'm going to be responsible for half of it in a worst-case scenario.
Jade Warshaw: What kind of debt, Cathy? What kind of debt is this million?
Caller: Well, he hasn't paid income taxes in three years... about 160[k]. There's about 80,000 in credit card debt with cards I didn't know existed. There is a 550,000 dollar mortgage on his office building that I was a personal guarantor on.
Jade Warshaw: And you didn't know about it?
Caller: I signed it, it's my signature, but I don't remember doing that... Like I said, I feel like an idiot because I've trusted him.
Ken Coleman: All right, well, hold on a second. While we're on this list, I want to just cover what you've given Jade so far. How much of it are you on the hook for?
Tom Holland discusses his decision to quit drinking and the inspiration behind launching his non-alcoholic beer brand.
Amy: Why did you start a brand, and why non-alcoholic?
Tom Holland: So, I quit drinking because I had a problem and I just couldn't put it down. It was affecting my professional life, it was affecting my personal life, and my health. So, I decided to pack it in. And during that first year, I noticed that there were limited options for people like me that were looking for something that would scratch that itch, that would help you go to the bar and be a part of the social experience but not feel like the only person with a lemonade.
The truth behind the shandies, which we're bringing out this summer, is that Z has never drunk. She's never been a drinker.
Amy: She's incredible.
Tom Holland: She's the best. She's never drank, which means she never found the taste for beer. And everyone remembers their first beer it's a little bit like ugh.
Caller: I think there is close to a million dollars in debt right now, and I'm afraid that I'm going to be responsible for half of it in a worst-case scenario.
Jade Warshaw: What kind of debt, Cathy? What kind of debt is this million?
Caller: Well, he hasn't paid income taxes in three years... about 160[k]. There's about 80,000 in credit card debt with cards I didn't know existed. There is a 550,000 dollar mortgage on his office building that I was a personal guarantor on.
Jade Warshaw: And you didn't know about it?
Caller: I signed it, it's my signature, but I don't remember doing that... Like I said, I feel like an idiot because I've trusted him.
Ken Coleman: All right, well, hold on a second. While we're on this list, I want to just cover what you've given Jade so far. How much of it are you on the hook for?
Joe Rogan says that Chris Rock getting slapped by Will Smith at the Oscars was the best thing that ever happened to him because it made his stand-up comedy wild and outrageous again.
Joe Rogan: ...getting slapped by Will Smith and all that crazy shit. I think that was like the best thing that ever happened to him. Because then he became like wild again. Like his stand-up was like outrageous. It was like the Rock of old.
Adam Sandler: That night was like watching a fucking Super Bowl. You were just like, "What? What's... It's a live event, holy fuck, what the fuck?" And then he was a badass, and I think he had some white shit on and he looked cool as fuck, and you were waiting for him to talk about it, and then he got to it, and he got fucking excited.
A caller named Dustin seeks advice on how to handle a situation where a friend who seller-financed his vacation home refuses to accept an early lump-sum payoff because of the capital gains tax implications.
Dustin (Caller): I bought the vacation home prior to our marriage... from a friend. He’s carrying the note. When I brought up to him, you know, excited, that hey, I’m going to have a big check for you, he kind of pushed back. He wants to spread his capital gains tax over the 10-year note we agreed upon. My question is, how do I approach this conversation without ruining a friendship?
George Kamel: Has he actually talked to a tax pro to see if this loan repayment counts as income?
Dustin: Yeah, he said he talked to his CPA. If I pay it off, he'll have to pay capital gains on the proceeds.
George Kamel: Is there anything in the contract that you signed with them that would prohibit you from just paying it off?
Dustin: And that’s the issue there's not. Legally, I can go pay it off.
Rachel Cruze: So, boohoo friend! Here’s your $500,000, you’re going to have to pay taxes on it. Sorry!
George Kamel: He can wipe his tears with hundred-dollar bills.