Carrie Coon
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I mean, they're Americans in the Midwest. It's not great. It's really hard. It's hard to make a living. It's hard to pay your bills. My siblings have sort of various degrees. We sort of are kind of representative of a certain kind of American family that's been here for many generations. Some of us went to college and some of us didn't. One of them is an immigrant.
I mean, they're Americans in the Midwest. It's not great. It's really hard. It's hard to make a living. It's hard to pay your bills. My siblings have sort of various degrees. We sort of are kind of representative of a certain kind of American family that's been here for many generations. Some of us went to college and some of us didn't. One of them is an immigrant.
I mean, they're Americans in the Midwest. It's not great. It's really hard. It's hard to make a living. It's hard to pay your bills. My siblings have sort of various degrees. We sort of are kind of representative of a certain kind of American family that's been here for many generations. Some of us went to college and some of us didn't. One of them is an immigrant.
We kind of represent all things. I've got a chef. I have a general manager. I have somebody who didn't go to college who kind of works in a trucking company. My sister, who is mentally ill and struggles in the world. Is El Salvadoran. Has the adopted child. Always going to feel like she was abandoned on some level. It's really an intense psychology to be adopted.
We kind of represent all things. I've got a chef. I have a general manager. I have somebody who didn't go to college who kind of works in a trucking company. My sister, who is mentally ill and struggles in the world. Is El Salvadoran. Has the adopted child. Always going to feel like she was abandoned on some level. It's really an intense psychology to be adopted.
We kind of represent all things. I've got a chef. I have a general manager. I have somebody who didn't go to college who kind of works in a trucking company. My sister, who is mentally ill and struggles in the world. Is El Salvadoran. Has the adopted child. Always going to feel like she was abandoned on some level. It's really an intense psychology to be adopted.
Yeah, it's really... And back then, when my sister was adopted from El Salvador, which was in the middle of a civil war, they were just like, good luck, Christians. There was no trauma counseling. There was no sense of, like, telling my parents, like, hey, get ready. There could be some real deep psychological shit going on.
Yeah, it's really... And back then, when my sister was adopted from El Salvador, which was in the middle of a civil war, they were just like, good luck, Christians. There was no trauma counseling. There was no sense of, like, telling my parents, like, hey, get ready. There could be some real deep psychological shit going on.
Yeah, it's really... And back then, when my sister was adopted from El Salvador, which was in the middle of a civil war, they were just like, good luck, Christians. There was no trauma counseling. There was no sense of, like, telling my parents, like, hey, get ready. There could be some real deep psychological shit going on.
They weren't... And they come from a generation that, like, it's all Stoicism. Nobody was going to therapy.
They weren't... And they come from a generation that, like, it's all Stoicism. Nobody was going to therapy.
They weren't... And they come from a generation that, like, it's all Stoicism. Nobody was going to therapy.
I was the first person in my family to go to therapy.
I was the first person in my family to go to therapy.
I was the first person in my family to go to therapy.
Nein, meine Familie ist sehr klassisch-liberal, weil mein Vater, wiederum, er war beteiligt.
Nein, meine Familie ist sehr klassisch-liberal, weil mein Vater, wiederum, er war beteiligt.