Margaret Cho: EPISODE

Choligarchy: TICKETS

TRANSCRIPT:

Colleen: Welcome back to hot flashes and cool topics get ready guys today. We have an

incredible conversation with comedian, actress, musician Margaret Cho, welcome to the

show.

Margaret: Thank you.

Colleen:  There’s so many topics that we want to get into that you have spoken

about over the years, but we wanted to

start with your most recent new show, Choligarchy. How did that come about? I mean,

the title kind of explains what it’s about, but can you talk about how it came

about?

Margaret: Well, I mean, I am so frustrated with this current administration.

It’s just a nightmare. You know, you think it can’t get any worse than it just

does. And we’re kind of faced with an oligarchy or a broligarchy and both of which

are terrible. And so I love a pun I’ve had quite a few shows throughout my career

that had puns I think this is a really good one. I’m really I like Cholagarchy.  I

think it’s a dumb, but it’s really fun and it’s my chance to really, you know say

what I need to say. I think the one thing you know, these are the richest people in

the world, but the one thing they can’t afford is jokes at their expense. They really

hate ridicule. It’s one of the reasons why South Park is so effective.

It’s just perfect. You know, and I think it’s healing to be able to laugh at all

of this terrible,

inhumane kidnapping of people off the street and, you know, a martial law and the

National Guard coming in, and the just

egregious racism and you know incredible corruption that all this is symbolic of. So

it’s a terrible time and so I think political comedy has a really

important place.

Bridgett: It sure does and I really appreciate your Instagram the other day

on Kim Davis. I’m from Kentucky and I don’t live there now but one of my friends

growing up was a plaintiff in the Marriage Equality Act. We’ve had her on the show.

We’ve had her and her wife on the show and my heart is breaking for her. It is

just breaking for her. So I just, I really appreciate the post that you make

because like you said, yeah, like you said, it, we have to,

 just to get us out of this craziness. It’s not really getting

us out of it but it’s bringing attention to it in a way that we can laugh but

also do something about it.

Margaret: Thank you. I mean it’s like we’re all suffering from

this and so I think where I can help is just to bring a little bit of

lightness and absurdity within the situation because I feel so deeply about it too.

Like my heart is breaking as well over all of this and um it’s and it’s just,

this is exactly what was going to happen. We knew this was going to happen. This

is all part of Project 2025. And like, you know, we just have to have our own,

you know, whether that’s, whether Project 2028, 2029, whatever, we need our own plan

in place. And so my plan is to really just keep hitting with jokes and or wherever

I can.

Colleen:- Well, comedy can be so effective, but at any time because the world is in

such a crazy state, do you worry about your safety? Do you worry about the

audience’s responses? Has that been a concern?

Margaret:- Yeah, I’m very concerned about it.

I have my exit plan. I have a very big,

you know, in and for Korean citizenship. So that’s actually quite easy for me to

become a South Korean citizen and to work there.

Also, the United Kingdom is a really easy place. You know, following in the

footsteps of one of my favorite ladies, Rosie O’Donnell. You know, and I love

Ireland actually. So I think that might be a good place to land. Also, there’s

always Canada. Canada, our long suffering neighbor and they’re, you know, in this

with us, so that might be a great place as well. So I definitely think about it,

and I’ve actually not taken quite a lot of jobs, acting jobs in other countries,

because I don’t want to be hassled at the border when I come back in. I don’t

want them to ask me questions. To be detained for 15 minutes is too long.

You know, I don’t even want to deal with that. So I’ve sacrificed quite a lot of

business opportunities for myself because of just my uncomfortability of actually

leaving the country. But if I need to leave, I’ll leave.

I think that we have to be really careful because we don’t know what’s happened.

I mean, freedom of speech is long gone. So, we have to be sort of aware of,

and I’m in a place of privilege enough to be able to get out when I need to,

so I feel fortunate about that.

Bridgett: Exactly. You know, we’ve, I’ve tried for years to

get my Italian citizenship, but I cannot get that consulate meeting. I just can’t

get it. And you know, looking at different avenues, but so many people. I think I

just saw that Jimmy Kimmel got his Italian citizenship as well and you know that

that brings, you know so many people, we’ve tried to come so far with racial equality

we’ve tried, it never was equality it never was, but we’ve made great strides and

what have you found now like just with the it’s like this rollback, what have you

found in that space?

Margaret:  well it is, we have made great strides and

that it is, DEI is actually one of the greatest things about America. It’s one of

the things that make us so special. And one of the things that already make us

great, because it’s the diversity of who we are. And to really think that it’s gone

away, I think it’s too easy for them to think that they’ve won that already.

 I don’t think a lot of Americans want racism. I think a lot of Americans

really do like progress. I believe that. I think a little a lot of Americans look

at the kidnapping of brown people as being unjust. I think a lot of people are

pushing back whatever their racial identity. If you’re American, I think there is a

kind of fairness that is inherently American that we want to feel. It’s,

you know, that’s true. It’s it is just so I think the voices that are so

racist, you just, that’s what you hear.

Colleen: Yeah, that’s the loudest.

Margaret: They’re the loudest.

And we’ve got to be loud. That’s why it’s so, it’s so

jarring. So that’s right. It’s so loud.

Colleen: Yeah. But there is such power.

I think, You know you mentioned it in the very beginning with the male ego the

more power they get the bigger they get, but they can’t take a joke

Margaret: No, especially

at their expense, right?

Colleen: So you have such Power in this moment to affect change

that maybe some other people even politicians don’t have, can you sense that?

Margaret: Yes, thank you, and I’m really glad for that, and I think

also they try to be funny and they’re just not, which is really great too.

So we have a good advantage. We have quite an advantage and I think they just are

stumbling around it. I think one of the effective things is to fight them kind of

like with their own tactics. That’s why I’m very fond, I’ve always been very fond

of Gavin Newsom, but I do love when he does a Trump impression in his social media

because he’s like giving them back what they give to us so readily and they can’t

take it and it’s so funny

Bridgett: Right, especially what’s happening was that yesterday or

today? Where he’s wanting to redistribute. He’s like, okay, you do it. I’m

gerrymandering here. Is that what’s going on there?

Margaret: Yes, California. Yes. Yeah fire

with fire. Yeah, exactly Which is high That’s the only way to do it. You have to

get down on their level because Democrats have so long wanted to take the high road

and we just don’t have that luxury. We don’t have the luxury of actually being the

good people. We need to get really rotten ’cause these people are rotten and we

need to get down on dirty like that and that’s what I appreciate about Gavin

because he’s just so game to play it in the way that they’re playing it and the

way they deserve to be played, so I really, I have a lot of high hopes for him.

I think he’s the one person who’s really standing his ground. I don’t see a lot of

real firebrands within The Democratic party. I mean there are quite a few really

great people But I think that we just need somebody who’s strong and I I love him.

Colleen: we need some new young people entering into politics and

entering into the world stage and speaking their truths. Because after a while, it

becomes very dry when the same people are showing up on your screen time and time

again. So we definitely agree with. So you’re going to be touring around a lot. Are

you ready for that?

Margaret: Yes. Yes. And, you know, it’s something that I always have done

and I love doing. So I’m really thrilled to just go back and get out there.

Colleen: You started very young in San Francisco. Did you always know you were funny?  Margaret: Well, I guess I must have. I don’t know, like, I think I  have like, some kind

of weird confidence when I was young and I don’t even know where it came from, but

I knew that I loved the art form,

and I knew that it was just the truth for me, you know, like I realized it was

the truth of who I was as a comedian. And I became friends with comedians very

young, and I knew that I was around my people. So it was the right decision.

I think you know in some ways, like I missed out on an education, which is too bad,

but it’s okay you know. Like I really do love my profession. It’s something that I

work at every day. Still you know, 43 years on it’s still my main obsession

creatively and so it’s something that’s always been there.

 Bridgett:  I love the story about you’re the competition, the college competition. Can you share that? I love that

story.

Margaret: –  when I was still a teenager, I lied my way into a

college comedy competition and I was the winner of the West Coast, which the prize was to go open for Jerry Seinfeld. And so I went and he told me

that I should probably drop out of college or because I was very good at what I did,

if I decided to pursue comedy, that I would be very successful. And I wasn’t even

in college, so it was like perfect. So I was like, oh, that was such a boat of

confidence and you know, he’s still my really good friend now. And I am,

I’m so, I’m just so honored that I got that kind of strong message when I was

young enough to really like appreciate it and go for it. You know, that’s a great

thing so because of that, like now when I’m around like young comics, I always make

a big point of encouraging them and telling them what I loved about what they did

and being really on their side because I think like it just when somebody

established really takes your number and takes your side, and in that,

it means so much. So I, I, I really feel that.

Bridgett:  I know that Bowen Yang and

Matt Rogers, my daughter is like such a fan of there. She’s gone to the Las Culturista,

 Awards. I love them. I love them too. And, and I love too how

Bowen looked to you as, as inspiration. So I think that is really incredible.

Margaret: It’s incredible. He’s my baby. I mean, they’re all like Bowen and Matt and Joel can

booster and I mean there’s so many young queer comedians that are like my children.

So I mean, I don’t have children, but this is like the next best thing, you know,

 they’re my babies

Bridgett: And you were great in Fire Island.

Margaret: Oh, thank you

Colleen: You know when when you’re starting out and you were getting this momentum and you’re getting the buzz and a lot of responses. And then you go to television and it like

flat lines. Everything is criticized about you. What was that like to all of a

sudden shifted to this world where you’re not enough? Where you’re almost like, going

great. It’s too much. It’s you’re just, you know, a wonder. And then all of a

sudden, wait, you’re not this, you’re not that, you’re not that. What was that like?

Margaret: – It was really hard, you know because I really identified and felt so strongly

within the role of the prodigy. You know and I think that it actually is a carry

-over from really young childhood because when I started, you know I was five, six, seven,

I was playing piano in classical music concerts and you know like these recitals, and

I was a very good pianist when I was a very young child. So I just like, I wanted

the role of the prodigy, you know child prodigy, so much and then you know because I

was such a young comedian I was like “”I’m a child prodigy” like I identified in

that role so much, so when that wasn’t there anymore, I didn’t know who I was. So it

very like crushing when you have an idea of yourself and then other people don’t

back that up. And so then it’s like, then you’re, you’re sort of left clueless.

Like, who am I? And it was a real, it was like mostly like identity crisis. Like,

oh, I was a prodigy, but I guess I’m not. And then what does that even mean now?

And so, but it was also good because it forced me to really assess what I liked

about comedy. Like, what do I like about this art form, well, Actually, I don’t

think I can live without it. Like I could probably live without television, but I

don’t think I could live without doing stand -up comedy because I had to keep doing

  1. And also I was doing stand -up comedy about my experience on television and that

was really therapeutic. So it was all really an important bed to fall back on,

this like world of stand -up comedy and the art form. It gave me something to

write about, which actually was the ultimate gift. So,

you know, like it did turn out the right way. I think that ultimately now I

probably have a longer career because of what happened. If the show had become

extremely successful and I think I would be like doing golf tournaments with Trump.

Like I might be MAGA, like you know, I mean like, I might be like that’s what scared me.

Like I might be doing golf tournaments with like Dean Cain. Like I definitely see,

like there is a side of me like maybe I could have gotten a really, like a really

easy start in show business and then just kept riding it and then didn’t they took

it for granted and didn’t work on the art form you know, it didn’t work on

politics, didn’t work on anything. I don’t know.

All of the real work as a comic, really good stuff,

didn’t come until my like 30s. I was still– I was like a fairly good comedian in

my 20s. But I was really good in my 30s. So I don’t think that would have

happened if I hadn’t experienced intense failure. So ultimately,

now I realize, oh, it’s probably been that was probably the best thing that could

have happened. But back then, it was absolutely devastating.

Bridgett: I tried to think when I first saw you

on TV. It was pretty, you know, it was a long time ago. And I think we’re the

same age.

Margaret:  So I’m 56.

Bridgett: We’re older. We’re older than you.

57 and 58. So there you go. Yeah, but I remember one of your specials that

remember just a story about boots like and I bought these boots.

Margaret: Oh, yeah. Yes,

that story.

Bridgett: And so, I mean, you were on a Bob Hope tour. Is that correct?

Margaret: It’s amazing. Yeah, it’s amazing. He used to do a show around Christmas

called the Young Comedian Special, and he would book all of these like sort of

young comics and you know when it was on, it was me and Dana Gould was on there

and Caroline Ray was on another year and I did it two years in a row. At that time, it

really helped me a lot and he was so old. He would do

comedy but they would film him doing like, one word at a time and they would edit

it together in the booth because he was so, I mean mentally like there

was so much cognitive decline, he could not actually say a complete sentence,

much like Trump, it was a word salad coming out.

Bridgett:  I’d rather have Bob Hope right.

Margaret:  I would so much rather, so much rather, but they would actually edit together his comedy monologues where they were seamless and it looked really good. So I remember being there and Phyllis Diller was there. Phyllis Diller was so sharp and together. I

mean, I think she must have been significantly younger than Bob Hope, but they sort

of seemed like from the same generation. They seemed like these older people, but he

was absolutely ancient.

Bridgett: – Oh my, that to me is amazing. Just completely, how many

people your age actually got to work with Bob Hope and Phyllis Diller?

Margaret:- It’s really incredible. Well, I was around at the end of the golden era where you would see Milton Berle around and they would say don’t park in Milton Berle’s parking space,

whatever you do, like that was a big thing ’cause there was an old Friars Club in

Beverly Hills, which I got invited to. They always wanted to have younger comedians

around.

So yeah, Milton Berle was a very showy guy and very powerful.

But God help you if you park in a space. So I would always see people like that

or like Steve Allen. Steve Allen doing comedy sets around.

You know, it was just such a normal, everyday occurrence. So,

yeah, that old era of Hollywood, like going to parties and,

you know, being on the toilet and Shirley McClain walking in on you. You know, like

it’s like that kind of… Okay. Very old Hollywood existed still on the periphery of

where I was. So, You know, I was honored and able to be a part of it.

Colleen: – That’s amazing. With, when you were gaining popularity, and I know there weren’t a ton of women comedians, but still it was past the beginning of Saturday Night Live,

so you were starting to get some women in comedy and their names going around.

Was it very hard for you in areas where it was male dominated?

Margaret:- Yes and no,

because I don’t know if it was hard. Like, all I,

I mean, it’s weird because I kind of like know that I was given opportunities

because I was a woman, because I was Asian American, because I was young. There

were things about me, I think when comedy, the things that make you different are our

currency. So I was really wealthy in identity. And so in that,

it became almost easier for me to get through.

I don’t know if I was a white woman, it would have been as simple. If I was a

little older, I think it would have been harder. I think because I was just such

an anomaly, an odd thing, like what does this kid want, you know,

so there was a bit of ease kind of going into things because people were kind of

curious.

But I will say, though, like a lot of my male peers, you know,

people who started around the same time as me,

I look to their success. It’s like really astronomical compared to mine. You know,

somebody like Ben Stiller, which we sort of began around the sort of same time.

And he has a completely different career. I mean, he’s not a stand -up comedian, but

he has a completely different career. And it’s like, I don’t know if I would have

that if I was– maybe I would have that if I was a man, and if I was a white

man. I don’t know. I mean, I know that there is a lot of gender disparity.

I know that there is a lot of unfairness, but I think that the tendency for me is

to more look at the opportunities my gender gave me in this case just because it

just seemed like an advantage at that time, but it’s not to say that there were

opportunities for women, there weren’t. We had to force them, but what would happen is

like you would have one woman per show and it just ended up being me

all the time because I was, um, kind of just willing to physically be there,

but also I was just so different and I wasn’t that pretty.

That was all because there was also the other person around me all the time that

didn’t get a lot of like respect with Sarah Silverman because she was so beautiful

that nobody took her seriously. And she’s hilarious. But when she was like 17, 18,

didn’t you imagine, I mean, she’s beautiful now. But back then it was like, oh, you

know, who’s this, like there was a resentment that people have towards beautiful

girls in comedy. And I was not a beauty. So there was like a really easy street,

easy street. Like, but of course she got the recognition. She’s a massive star,

so of course it took a little bit, but it’s like that thing of you would, when an

audience is faced with a beautiful young girl, comedian, comedy audience is faced

with a beautiful young girl, they’re very like, this, it’s misogyny. It’s like that

takes over like, she couldn’t possibly have anything of worth to say. – Right.

Bridgett:- You know, and Of course, I never thought that. I do I know Joan Rivers was a mentor to you and I remember hearing her say that on shows, that

“You can be pretty but not beautiful.” I remember her saying “you’re not going to find a

beautiful female comic”.  That you can be pretty,

But are you beautiful? But I think you’re pretty.

Colleen: – I do too,

Margaret:  thank you. But I think that it is like beauty, like I think Sarah

Silverman is the exception. I find her really beautiful. And I think that’s what

made it harder in the beginning. But also maybe it made it easier because she was

such an anomaly, you know? Like maybe that is the exception to the rule because

people were so sort of floored by her beauty. That it was like, oh, I don’t I

don’t know, like it’s hard to say. And of course over this, you know,

40 years of a career. It’s like who even knows, but yeah It’s definitely the

path is different for women and it’s so much of it has to do with like looks.

I do think that like there men’s handsomeness is an asset for them. You know,

like they don’t have to worry about that because people still go along with it

Bridgett: Right, it’s um, I was thinking about oh

Brain fog moment. Yeah, but about oh, I know what I was gonna say, I know Tina

Fey brought up another thing when women say things and they’re funny and some

people might think they’re crass, and I love that about Sarah Silverman and different

people that will come out and just say it. I was reading Tina Fey’s and I

believe Amy Poehler had said something in front of Jimmy Fallon and he kind of

cringed and Amy let him have it. Like, just like hey, no you say this stuff all the

time.

Margaret: Yeah, yeah.

Bridgett: Yes And I do like that about, I remember Sarah Silverman,

you know, watching her show and my kids, and I probably wasn’t a good mom, but I

don’t care. I loved to watch it too. And yeah, she would just say the things like

that.

Margaret: Yeah. You kind of accepted that societal norms were not going to

apply to every comedian and every job and every acting job that you got.

Colleen: It seemed to be more natural for you in your 30s and 40s, but I noticed in some

of your conversations, and I loved when you talked about this, that some of your

decisions are more hormonally based or driven when you were younger.

Margaret: – Yeah, always.

Colleen: – And once you say goodbye to the hormones, it’s like your authentic self kind of

grows from that. Can you talk about that?

Margaret: – Absolutely. Well, like a lot of times,

like I’m making these decisions based on do I want to take this job because I

might have to like leave this relationship. I don’t know, like I might I don’t want

to like travel right now because I’m seeing somebody and I want

relationships, like that kind of stuff took so much more precedence over things that

might be really helpful you know.

I just made choices that I wouldn’t necessarily now and having a clear head

and no hormones ruling my sort of emotional decisions. Like my hormones and my

emotional life are totally separate,whereas before they were intertwined.  I thought

they were supposed to be intertwined. Now, I’m just so clear-headed about

everything. It’s really weird, like menopause actually gave me the motivation to be

myself which, I never realized that’s what menopause was for. But I don’t think

that many people do. It’s like, oh I’m me now! Like I’m actually me!

Before, I was this kind of baby making vessel and of course I don’t want children

and I never have, but still even though I didn’t want them, I was still making

these decisions based on my biological availability as a mother.

It was very coded in like having kids,

even though I wasn’t planning on it. So it was going against my nature.

Bridgett: Right. You

know, we’ve heard so many women talk about that. It’s like when they hit 60, it’s

like this magic thing happens or it even could be a little before, but it is

amazing. It’s, and I never really thought about it, but it’s like those hormones are

gone. And now it’s time for me. And now you don’t care. You know, you don’t care.

You’re like, okay, I’m here. I’m walking out here with the dog in my pajamas. And

I don’t care.

Margaret: I mean, it’s like, you don’t fear judgment. You just think about,

well, you care about your own judgment. You care about your own opinion more than

anything else, which is so powerful. I mean, it’s not really like hormonal ’cause I do take them, I’m on hormone replacement, which I

love. I like really believe in it. But the thing about the hormone replacement,

it doesn’t affect my mind. Like it just affects my body.

Like it doesn’t affect my decision making. It doesn’t inform my decisions it doesn’t

sway me any other way like it’s the hormones have helped my with no hot flashes you

know, like the hormones help my hair and the hormones help my insomnia you know,

all these things that are like perimenopause, menopausal symptoms that the symptomatic

things are really helped but you’re not burdened by the emotional weight of

like, hormonal thinking.

Colleen: – You’ve said that you thought menopause was one of the best

things that ever happened to you. How was your perimenopause experience? ‘Cause you’ve

also said brain fog, you felt like an etch -a -sketch, a human etch -a -sketch.

Margaret: – Yeah, I forgot everything. You were like, you take a step and everything’s like

erased. The peri was weird because I would just like have a really emotional

outburst and I didn’t really know why and also I sort of would go through periods

where I’m like now like I just didn’t care. So I’d have like good periods where

I was just on the other side of it and then I think what helped me the most

probably it was just getting it, getting my hormones regulated,

getting on, you know, regular, like a good dose of estrogen, good dose of

progesterone, little bit of testosterone, you know, where, where it helps and can

leave that behind as well, if I need to, you know, that there was just an awareness

around, like, if I figure out the right sort of system of where to go, helped.

But, you know, I’m just, I’m fortunate in that it didn’t last that long because

compared to I think the menopause started like a little bit earlier. So now it was

feel much more stable. It’s been a while that I’ve been feeling very stable

Bridgett: Right. It can last 10 years. I mean peri can last 10 years. Yeah,

it is it is amazing I’m on hormones as well and my little patch I’ve got all this

the stuff and it does make a difference. But it is another thing too, was with

relationships. And I think I’ve heard you say that right now you’re just kind of

not interested.

Margaret: – No, no, not at all.

Colleen: – And I think that can happen.

I mean, it happens. – I think a lot of women who are post -menopausal are very

content with finding the joys in other ways, whether it’s gardening, I know you love

to garden, or friendships, that sexual tension isn’t really there for a lot of

people.

Margaret: No, no. I mean, in some of my relationships, it still exists, and that’s

okay, and that’s kind of fun to have around, and that’s fine, but I don’t want to

pursue it into anything else. I love to have that sort of frizz on of romantic

interest, and that’s there, but It’s safe because it’s not gonna go anywhere,

which I’m so relieved like I don’t want to shave my bush! (Colleen & Bridgett laughing) Like I don’t want to have somebody in my bed. Like I don’t want that except my

cats and my dog. Like I don’t want to meet somebody new. Like, oh like I don’t want

like – I mean, I’m open to it happening and I’m open to the idea of like romance,

but it’s like, and I like the sort of flirting and having sort of a space around

it, like a possibilities, and there is stuff there, but I do not pursue or want

another relationship. I don’t think, we’ll see.

Bridgett: – Right, yeah, you never know, but we

hear that from a lot of people too. And like Colleen and I have both done a whole

talk about, we’re both married. We’ve both been married for a long time, but we

both decided ifn something happened to our spouses. – Not interested. – Like, nope, not

interested, you know?

Margaret: – Yeah, I mean, like, I think it would be okay to be married

and then like, you know, to be settled into like a family with a partner, but now

I’ve been so, like, I’ve been in part, I’ve been in romantic relationships my entire

adult life and I’ve never been happy, not once, ever. And that’s saying something,

like I’m like, um, maybe I’m not supposed to, like maybe I’m not supposed to. Like

the happiest I’ve been is being alone for the last several years. So it’s

an experiment that’s going really well.

Bridgett: Yeah. And a lot of women say that at this

age, they really embrace their alone time. I mean, I do. My husband retired

a few years ago and I’m like, don’t you have to be out of town? I mean, don’t

you have somewhere to go? I mean, I love him, but it’s like, you know, I’d like a day

go to the bathroom with a door open, you know, just something like that.

Margaret: – I just

love solitude and I didn’t realize that I would because I was so afraid of it,

of what it might mean. So I think in solitude, there’s like this thing, especially

in the ’90s, they would be like, oh, you’re gonna die alone, you know, you’re gonna

end up alone. And that fear was sort of pounded into,

as like you gotta take what you can get and then settle for what you have and

make it work because what if you’re alone?  But now that I’m actually

legit alone, I’m like, oh, this is actually much better than being with anybody ever

has been. So I really like it.

Colleen: And you’re open to whatever happens,

which I think is great. That pressure isn’t there anymore, that somehow your value

is measured by another person. And you have said that you think we actually increase

in value as we age.

Margaret: Yes we do.

Colleen: And why do you think that?

Margaret: Well we have wisdom and we’re making our own decisions like that’s like the biggest part of it.  It’s like finally oh we’re actually calling the shots from inside it’s not our you knowuterus is it’s not our like fallopian tubes calling the shots it’s us. It’s very

different so when you come from this grounded place, then you know what you want

then you’re operating on all cylinders. They’re firing like,it’s like

everything is prime. You know we’re just in a great place to live and so we got to

enjoy that right? And it’s such a good thing.

Bridgett:  I think it’s a great model for the younger

generation too to know you’ve got lots of options out there you don’t have to

follow this path right and there’s lots of women out there that are doing it and

they’re great examples. So just like you!

Colleen:  Why do you think?

Bridgett and I always say that that aging is kind of the best -kept secret because women

never talked like it was always a negative connotation. If you watch the media

obviously aging is not praised. You need anti -aging cream. You need to do this, but

it can be such a powerful, peaceful time of life that I think it gets a really bum

rap. Why do you think that is? Would you agree?

Margaret: – I agree, I agree.

I think because, you know, it doesn’t sell products. Like if you’re fearing aging,

it’s a big market for you to buy into that fear. It’s a huge market that

corporations don’t wanna lose. A society that’s fearing the loss of youth,

it’s like we need to buy into that, you know, that fear is something that’s

cultivated by society to keep it going financially.

And also, it’s this idea that women have to be biologically viable in order to have

children, in order to matter. And that’s also not true either, at all.

So I think it’s a combination of misogyny that’s baked into our society,

our culture, that’s making a horrible comeback now.

But it’s also just sort of like, maybe we’re just, we haven’t been talking to each

other. We haven’t been talking about it. You know, I know there’s been a lot of

women in menopause who’ve been happy this whole time. We just never asked, or they

were not told, or they were not inspired to tell the secret.

Bridgett: – And you know, like I always said, I’m happier than I’ve ever been right now. And

like we said, no one said that this time of life was gonna be this happy.

Colleen: – It

  1. – Best kept secret. – It is.

Margaret: – Yes, it’s insane.

You know like our lives and they don’t have to be like a constant either. It’s like

we can go years without talking and then suddenly see each other and it’s like

everything’s there. So that’s what’s wonderful about friendship is that it’s enduring

And also of course there I have my everyday friends that I see all the time, which

is great as well, But yeah friendship is a very important, so that’s a wonderful important part

of all of this.

Colleen: – How was that during COVID? Were you able to keep busy and active

and working or?

Margaret: – Yeah, I didn’t do a lot of touring.

So it was a first time in like 35 years that I had not toured and it was really

weird. And that really gave rise to my gardening, that gave rise to getting cats.

You know, now my life is like so much about treasuring my home and being part of

my home where I was just living out of suitcases for a long time. I mean, I’m

still very happy to go on tour and still very excited about it, but I spend so

much more time at home than I did and I’m really appreciative of that. And

friendships were definitely key during the pandemic, you know, having a pod and

having people that I was just close to that I got to see. Definitely kept me

going. And then building other relationships through Zoom, through FaceTime,

through texting, all of that. It gave rise to a lot of other ways to communicate,

which are still very much active now.

Bridgett: – And I know that you’re a very big activist too, that you really do really speak

out for all kinds of communities, LBGTQ communities. How is that going and what else

can we expect?

Margaret: – It’s good, it’s gonna be a tough road. You know, this

administration is trying to erase trans people from existence. It’s really a

nightmare. Just today or yesterday of the gay marriage thing, you know, all of this

is truly scary. So it’s about really getting very active with it,

getting very vocal about it, getting very proactive wherever we can. But yeah,

it’s really scary.

Colleen:  you know, Bridgett’s friends who were the

plaintiffs in Obergefell, one of the five couples, they even said, “if we have to

fight again, we will do it. We don’t want want to. We want the younger generation

to step up and take control, but if we have to fight, we will.” And they’re such

an inspiration.

What would you like to see for the next, you know, you’re about to get closer to

your 60s. What would you like to see happen over the next few years in your

career, in your life?

Margaret: I would just like to move more. I’d like to work more, I’d like to do another

comedy special, I would like to make some more music albums, I would like to travel

more, I would like to do more television, you know for me it’s just about staying

active and staying working and I think you know that I would like to keep doing

that for the rest of my life, like Joan Rivers did. She’s one of my big heroes

and my good friend, and that was a perfect example that she sort of set out for

me, and I really follow in her footsteps that way. So yeah, I wanna keep on going.

Colleen: – How devastated were you during that time when she passed, ’cause it really wasn’t

expected?

Margaret: – You know, it wasn’t her time, it wasn’t right,

and it was an accident, but any of us could go any time.

So she really lived very fully.

And that’s what I appreciated about her. She wanted to make the most of every

moment and she really did. So I was proud of the way that she lived to the very

last day. So

I don’t think she would have had any regrets. I don’t think she would have, but it

was really a terrible. Because that whole couple of weeks, it was her, it was like

Robin Williams. And it was like a very dark time. And you know,

but with Joan, I think that she led by such great example.

A woman should be, you know and I love that, so you know always carry her

inspiration with me.

Bridgett:  I was so glad that I got to see her that summer right before it happened,

that was the one concert, I mean show, I got to see her  and we’ve had

Melissa on.

Colleen:  right,  when she would do Atlantic City, my parents owned to

the amusement park so they would bring Melissa over and Joan over during that time

and I went to see her show I was maybe 12 and I was like am I allowed to listen

to this? But I loved it and I just I had such respect for

her strength and her fortune like she was.  I love the story of her having all of

her jokes in a file cabinet.

 And so, do you see yourself trying to be that inspiration for

the new comics coming up?

Margaret: – I hope so. You know, I would like to be, you know,

that would be great.

I think it’s just, you know, a matter of just like being there, you know, which I

would try to do. And I always try to collaborate with young people and, you know,

get and do things with them, which is really special. So yeah, I would love that.

Colleen – Well, we hope your show comes to Nashville.

Bridgett: – Is it coming to Knoxville?

Margaret: – I think, yeah, it is, it is, yeah. And definitely things are being added all the

time. So it’s not completed. But I’m sure I’ll make it to Nashville ’cause this is

one of my favorite places to play.

Colleen:  – We love it here. So please

let us know ’cause we love to come see it. – Thank you so much for coming on.

This was a wonderful conversation. Thank you for everything you’re doing both in your

personal life and political. Yes. You’re such a wonderful voice for many communities

and we appreciate it.

Margaret: I appreciate you. Thank you.

Bridgett: Thank you.

 

 

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