Bailey Taylor
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
No hair and makeup, blah, blah, blah.
So I'm nervous about it and excited that it's like a real, like a real piece or whatever in the New York Times.
When it comes out, there's like a mark on my upper lip, like an ink stain on my upper lip.
And it's not just in one New York Times, it's in all of them.
He wrote that into the show when Harry and Charlotte get their picture taken on the rocks for the love section, you know, for the engagement section.
And I and I say, like, I look like Hitler.
I call Carrie and I'm like, I look like that was based on something in life that happened to me.
So hilarious.
Yeah, it was hilarious.
Like, so Michael, right, that he would do that.
But usually it was the writers.
But like this whole storyline, I felt for Miranda, I felt like it was kind of a little bit like, oh, you guys feel so successful now.
Do you know what I mean?
Maybe I'm reading into that and it wasn't.
I'm going to ask him.
sense is because it's like the people you're like going on people's assumptions of what you must be like because you're experiencing such success yeah kind of dealing with the thought of what somebody might be thinking and then you're acting on it it's very complicated but i love that isn't it and then what they really like is that you weren't like that right
you know, but then like, how do you, like, how do you make sense of that?
Yeah, it is.
Isn't it?
It's interesting to think about, but when I do watch it, like I had always thought that the first season was, was really bad, like a mess that in my mind, that's what I thought, because I think we felt a bit of a mess, right?