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  • Did you eat breakfast this morning?

  • I did.

  • He did.

  • I did.

  • What's this thing with you and Dr Oz?

  • You know, I was literally walking out, if I think a dentist appointment and Beverly Hills and I was getting in my car and a guy stuck a camera in my face.

  • It was like, What did you think about Dr?

  • Are telling you not to eat breakfast, and I don't care what doctor has to say.

  • You know, I had never met him and never spoke with him.

  • I kind of like old school routine guy.

  • Whatever I have to do for the part that I'm training for is what I did.

  • So that's putting on weight or losing weight of liquid diets have been £212 £137.

  • So whatever I have to do, I do.

  • And then it just kind of started this whole thing and it took on a life of its own.

  • So then he started talking about one of the workout with me, and I said I'd gladly, uh, you know, put him on a defibrillator if you try to work out with me, and then we actually connected yesterday and we worked out together.

  • I don't think he knew what he was getting himself into, but he was a trouper.

  • And I do.

  • It's funny because I just trained for a movie where for six months I was super disciplined, didn't have a drop of wine, didn't have any car, was anything but I was eating 78 meals a day and everyone was loaded with protein.

  • And I got a little bit of a leaky gut.

  • So it was like I went on the cleanse.

  • I did the bone broth cleanse, and you've been plant based for, like, three weeks now.

  • Um, but I still had a big work breakfast before the work out, right?

  • And, uh, you know, But I'm definitely more conscious.

  • If I wasn't working or preparing for a role, I would I would.

  • I wouldn't say that I wouldn't eat or intimate and fast for 12 hours.

  • It's not necessarily my thing, but I understand how it works.

  • And I lost £10 in, like, five days.

  • So let me ask you this.

  • Did you beat him down a little bit?

  • Oh, I squashed him like great.

  • That poor thing.

  • He didn't know what was happening.

  • You really didn't have seen new.

  • He's huffing and puffing and breathing.

  • His crew was there and they were all worried about him.

  • And we did the first loop.

  • We're about 45.

  • We did the first loop and he thought it was over.

  • It was like I wasn't that bad, but we're just having a 45 2nd water breaking.

  • We're right back to the grind.

  • We still got another half an hour to go, but it was a truly sent me a message today saying Thanks for letting me play in my sandbox And he said he he's sore and muscles that he didn't know he had.

  • He didn't know the names of those muscles that he had to look him up, but But he was a great sport.

  • I love what he's doing.

  • I mean, he's really, you know, he's dedicated his life to getting people To be healthier makes people happier.

  • So let's talk about Spencer.

  • Did you watch Spencer for hire when you were kids?

  • Of course.

  • Of course.

  • I mean that and the brings jobs bring shot movie with the only really kind of recognizable places in Boston, and I would see on screen so fell in love with the Siri's.

  • This is based on the book, not the Siri's, but, yeah, I loved it.

  • I mean, you know, and I was also a big cinema guy.

  • My dad was a truck driver.

  • He would take me to the movies every day, would see movies that were a little inappropriate for me, but But it's still, you know, that was our thing.

  • And I, you know, I got introduced.

  • Robert Ryan, John Garfield, Jimmy Cagney, Steve McQueen.

  • Guys like that.

  • So I had this year's love.

  • Did you think then I want to do that?

  • No, absolutely.

  • It was impossible.

  • Nobody nobody from Boston had ever left certainly from my neighborhood, never left and gone on to be in the movies or on television.

  • So it was like, Okay, if I'm not gonna be an athlete, I'm gonna be a cop.

  • Gonna be a crook.

  • I mean, you know, you only have so many choices there, and it's funny because that was the mentality.

  • Even though you think about it, some of the best you know, educational institutes in the world are all right there, but didn't really seem like they were accessible to us.

  • So it wasn't until I had became successful in music.

  • And then I met Penny Marshall, who gave me my first shot.

  • And then, of course, once I once I had that first acting experience, I didn't want to do anything else.

  • I really felt like I had found my niche.

  • Yeah, let's talk about Spencer a little bit.

  • Um, for people who don't remember the television, Siri's you're a cop, gets incarcerated, gets framed, gets out and you basically can't say no to injustice.

  • Yeah, innocent people getting wrong.

  • It's one of those things where But in this he doesn't get framed.

  • He actually says, You know what?

  • No, I'm gonna take it upon myself to basically right a wrong There was, Ah, homicide investigation.

  • That's kind of being swept under the rug by some higher ups in the department.

  • So I go to them and confront them, and I see that he is not a good, honest cop.

  • So I take the law into my own hands and put my hands on him and the ends up.

  • Getting five years survives in general, population gets out, is about to leave and of course, gets sucked back in.

  • And it's a great character, reluctant hero that people can really root for.

  • Ah, lot of humor, a lot of heart.

  • And there's some steaks there, so I think people thoroughly enjoying it.

  • The, um when you go back to Boston and shoot a Serie A movie like this and it's about dirty Boston cops.

  • So they say, Does it have to be about dirty Boston cops again?

  • Yeah, there is a little bit of that.

  • But then there's also, you know, appreciation because we're bringing a lot of jobs there.

  • Um, you know, it's my hometown.

  • We literally shot you.

  • Talk about coming full circle.

  • We shot a 24 Pebble Street, which was Alan Arkin's characters home, and I lived at 25 Papal Street.

  • So we're sitting on my stoop where I would sneak out at night to steal my mom's car or do things that I wasn't supposed to do.

  • And now here I was producing and starring in a film and, you know, creating hundreds of jobs for people and hopefully inspiring inner city kids and at risk youth and kids like myself that anything is possible.

  • And no matter where you starting, you know, to aspire to, uh, you know, achieve your goals, right?

  • As you're sitting on the stoop and you're seeing lights set crews all over the place, tables everywhere.

  • It's a lot.

  • A lot of stuff going on.

  • Just that set, even a picture in a movie.

  • What did you was there a pinch yourself moment?

  • Or just like I can't freaking believe.

  • Oh, there was quite a few, because being there, you know?

  • I mean, I have so many memories of being right there on that stoop.

  • Um, it's pretty remarkable.

  • Yeah, yeah, a full confession.

  • 11 o'clock at night.

  • It's time to go to bed.

  • My wife says, I'm heading off.

  • I said, I'm just gonna You know, sir, if Ted's on, I can't not watch to go.

  • It's a problem.

  • It's a good 1 50 may need to be like a Ted's Anonymous.

  • Need a 12 step program.

  • It doesn't matter if it's one or two.

  • Yeah, I text my son's head.

  • Yeah, it's one of those things where I mean, I remember, like, just we hadn't talked to each other since the fighter s o.

  • I had gotten a call about the movie.

  • Uh, from Ari Emanuel, who also happened to be Seth Macfarlane's agent and says, I got this.

  • I got the next movie for you.

  • It's about a guy, that teddy bear basically hang up the phone and then he's like, No, I'm telling you the script is fantastic.

  • You got to read the script, he said.

  • It will be like it would be like the experience of you reading Boogie Nights like this could be the greatest thing ever or could be the worst thing ever.

  • But there's a good chance that could be fantastic.

  • So I then read the script, met with Seth, committed to making the movie.

  • I saw the test with the Bear, and I thought, If we pull this off, this could be great This was one of the great buddy comedies that I had ever read, and then we're driving to the Oscars and my wife is like, uh, what do you do next?

  • I said, We're trying to explain It's a hard movie because you have been nominated.

  • Yeah, so it's a hard movie to pitch and she said, Well, enjoy tonight because you'll never be back to the Oscars on I haven't been nominated sense, But But, uh uh, Seth was, I think Seth hosted and Ted and I appeared and we presented at the Oscars.

  • But still, it's the most successful already comedy of all time.

  • And if I if I turned on it anytime I cannot help but sit there and watch it and just laugh out loud, it was absolutely history.

  • It's so fantastically inappropriate.

  • Yes.

  • Oh God.

  • When he It's funny because I was just meeting with the supermarket chain, high end convenience store, Healthy Convenience stores in Oregon, and the first thing they started talking about was Ted and people doing inappropriate stuff in the freezer and, you know, parsnips and selling a family of four.

  • And it's like in the guy getting it, Ted, literally not wanting the jobs were saying whatever you can to the boss and he gets a promotion and a raise and right, should there be a Ted three?

  • Um, you know, it's one of those things where Ted to wasn't as good as Ted.

  • Let's just be honest there, parts of Ted, too.

  • But, you know, Ted, one was a classic.

  • So I think it's one of those things where I don't know if we could make it as good or better than the first, and it's worth exploring.

  • But right now, now, did you bring Spencer the Netflix, or did Netflix call you and say What?

  • Did you know they had it?

  • Um, Numerous had been talking to me about it and asked me if I wanted to do it.

  • Pete and I obviously we're like brothers now.

  • Yeah.

  • So this is our fifth film together.

  • And Brian Helgeland, who's a fantastic writer.

  • So we just said, You know, let's take a look at it.

  • And you fell in love with the script in the idea of making that movie.

  • Yeah.

  • I love the woman who plays your love interest.

  • Yes.

  • Allies Film?

  • Yeah, she's very funny.

  • There.

  • Some Ted like aspects.

  • She's got the Boston.

  • The tough Boston girl thing down.

  • Yes.

  • So if you think about Ted's girlfriend or, you know, the Sisters and Fighter Award Ekland girls and then and then her.

  • Yeah, she's She's right up there with him.

  • Yeah, you could do anything.

  • You've your movies have grossed more than $5 billion.

  • You have a zillion businesses or you're the gym business.

  • You've got a supplement business, sports nutrition, restaurant, restaurant Walberg.

  • Harve isn't right.

  • Etcetera, etcetera, etcetera.

  • How do you figure out what to do?

  • I want to do things that I'm passionate about.

  • And then I can I don't know.

  • I don't do anything passive.

  • I'm not saying okay, if I could bring real, you know, be a great strategic partner, bring real value to the to the equation, then, yes.

  • And it's something that I've got to be passionate about and with fit anything with fitness and health and wellness is just a direct extension of who I am.

  • That's why I clicked so much with Dr Oz.

  • And, you know, if we could, you know, motivate inspire people to be healthier, they're gonna be happier and feel good.

  • And when I wanna look good and that's it's a beautiful thing, you know, life is his pressure.

  • So why not try toe, you know, extended as long as possible, But things that I can really be involved with and also being involved with important up with real serious adults in that space, you know, because I think the restaurant business the first time I've been in that business, um, you know, learning as you go.

  • You know, everything has been a growing, you know, and learning experience in a challenge.

  • So, man, um, I'm very curious about your routine because as I've read different pieces about you, there's the 2 30 in the morning.

  • Maybe it's 3 30 in the morning is the workout.

  • But the thing I'm most intrigued by is that you take time every day to pray.

  • That's the most important thing I take a day off.

  • I take two days a week off from the gym.

  • Now I don't take a day off from getting on my hands and my knees, reading my prayer book in my daily devotionals and, you know, first of all, expressing the gratitude that I have for all the blessings that have been bestowed upon me And then, of course, asking for the strength and guidance, um, to be able to use the towns and gifts that God has given me to help others and inspire and know what right isn't to do.

  • So.

  • Don't be a better best husband.

  • I could be best father.

  • I could be.

  • You know, it's funny because as any people along the way, and I add people to my prayers.

  • If I see somebody in public ire that I read in the newspaper of somebody that struggling somebody that has a child that you know, health issue, stuff like that.

  • I add them to my prayers, and I usually end up keeping in my prayers.

  • So it's now it's now, like, what?

  • 20 minutes of praying, actual praying and then you know, my reading and stuff like that, right?

  • Do you have favorite Scripture?

  • Uh, you know, the daily devotional every day.

  • I think you know the idea of being good soil bearing good fruit.

  • You know where it sprinkled, how it's used, how you absorb that information.

  • Do you really retain that information yet?

  • Those air, the more powerful things.

  • How does it inform your day?

  • It just puts things in perspective, you know?

  • I mean, I'm I remind myself every day how fortunate I am, um, and how blessed I am and how so many people are not.

  • And to be able to just kind of, you know, remind myself what I should be doing, how I should be doing it, you know, to be a positive, productive member of the community and the church.

  • Um It's just it's it's what's keeping me going.

  • I think if I've been put in this position for a reason, it's not to forget about where I came from.

  • You know I have to utilize these hounds and gifts that have been given to me to help others to inspire others.

  • Um, so that's a challenge.

  • Because if you're giving all these, if you're given all these things and you don't do the right thing with him, it's not gonna be good.

  • There is a verse in the Bible that says too much to whom much has been given.

  • Much is not expected, but actually require Yes, of course.

  • And you think about those talents and gifts that you were given.

  • You know, somebody was given 11 little gift and talent, and he didn't want to take any risk.

  • You didn't go and utilize it and get 10 fold on his on his investment, uh, buried in the ground.

  • And God didn't like that.

  • It was not impressed.

  • No, not at all.

  • It's amazing to me to be in the business you're in, and for us to be sitting here having this conversation.

  • Does anybody ever ask you about it.

  • Does anybody ever say any of your colleagues say what do you get out of it?

  • Or does anybody ever say I read about you doing all this stuff?

  • Yeah.

  • Look, I don't I will not hide the fact that I love the Lord.

  • You know, I want to be committed to serving Lord, but I also don't jam it down anybody's throat.

  • But it's better to never have known God than to, you know, deny God.

  • That's that's not a good look.

  • You know, that's not a good look.

  • So that being said, you know, there are people that I'm close to, that I will send devotion devotionals to try to encourage them.

  • You know, it's like when people dealing with loss and, you know, it seems like now, as 48 years old, dealing with a lot more lost.

  • Now, um, then I ever had It seems like every other day losing somebody that I know that I'm close to, um and so you know, when people are dealing with loss and knowing that, you know, it could be devastating to somebody.

  • But also what comfort enjoy Does it bring when you know that there is something else.

  • You know, there is now no more pain, no more suffering.

  • An eternity of love and joy and all those things.

  • And even if you live 250 life is still short, right?

  • So I don't know.

  • It gives It gives me comfort.

  • It doesn't make you a better parent.

  • Yeah.

  • I mean, I pray for the patients, you know, It's also, too, with my kids.

  • I want to be an example to my Children.

  • They, you know, they're getting a faith based education, but I don't force them to go to church with me, but they know that it is not.

  • It's not even on option for me to not go to Mass or to not take my time to pray and to do those things.

  • And hopefully they'll say, Wow, well, that works for Dad.

  • And maybe they'll get a little bit more curious and they'll slowly start to gravitate towards that.

  • But I got to be an example, you know, with my work ethic, with my commitment to my faith, my commitment to my family, right and those things.

  • So, speaking of family, you know, I've been hearing about your dog.

  • And if Mark Wahlberg going to have a dog.

  • I'm not sure if I were gonna like right that script, it would be the dog.

  • I got the dog because my kids really wanted the dog.

  • We've been very unsuccessful with pets.

  • I mean, we had a bulldog that ate all the furniture.

  • We had cats who would like, you know, we live in a big house.

  • They would just find my shower mat.

  • And I'm allergic to cats and go to the bathroom on my shower.

  • Man, we've been very unsuccessful with pets, so I saw a gentleman holding a dog that was just a tiny little miniature Pomeranian.

  • I said, Is that as big as that dog gets?

  • He said, Yes, I goes, How big is this Poopy goes on.

  • It's like a tiny little tattoo.

  • I said we can handle that And it really cute.

  • So I literally got the dog that day.

  • This dog was tearing up the house.

  • I mean, we got we have, like, the most expensive dog trainer, and we're now trying to We all have to come around and basically learn how to cater to the dog.

  • And I'm like, I saw a giant turd this morning.

  • And then, you know, he'll come into the dining room, poop on the carpet, wipe his bottom on the carpet, too, and then just walk out and look at me like that.

  • You're gonna get that and then go out the door.

  • But it's brought so much joy to the to the kids, you know?

  • I mean, they love him.

  • My wife loves him.

  • Movie tough guy, right?

  • Mark Wahlberg as a dog this big that runs his life.

  • And you know what I'm telling you?

  • If you come in the house, he's gonna try to take a chunk out of your finger, something He thinks he's a rival.

  • He thinks he's the things the people for sure.

  • Yeah.

  • I've had the master of something.

  • We've done it all.

  • My son will be very happy.

  • That champ is brought up now.

  • Now.

  • Well, actually, he'll sit down and watch this interview because he's running Champs Instagram account.

  • And he's hoping that if Champ now gets over 100,000 followers, that's his new mission in life.

  • You're basically chance Manager.

  • Yeah, Well, Champ is gonna turn into an influencer.

  • Yeah, right.

  • As long as he doesn't poop on the floor anymore.

  • I'm good.

  • And it was such control over his life has No, I mean, if you find it at minimum really funny.

  • Yeah.

  • Yeah, I understand.

  • Yeah.

  • A couple of other things, as I was reading through all your stuff, is $6 million man still alive in place?

  • Yeah.

  • Where we were supposed to get a script this weekend.

  • I mean, again, this is, you know, one of those things.

  • Hopefully, you know, it's worth the wait.

  • I mean, we've been developing this thing for quite some time.

  • We have build a buche now, writing the script, who is a fantastic screenwriter.

  • We've got a great idea, but it's, you know, it's like the fighter.

  • You know, there's a ticking clock.

  • I'm on Lee able to play this part for so long.

  • Um, it's gotta happen soon.

  • I'm hoping in this within this year, hopefully we'll be making the fall.

  • But when you look in the mirror, do you see a 48 year old guy?

  • Uh, you know what?

  • I sometimes I do it sometimes I don't.

  • Sometimes I feel like I can't get up.

  • And I feel like I'm I'm an 88 year old guy.

  • And then sometimes I feel like I'm an 18 year old.

  • You know, it just depends on the day and what I'm doing.

  • What I did for the last 16 hours could so much of so much of what your work has been about has been very active.

  • Very active rules Do you think about?

  • OK, so I'm maybe going over this 50 threshold.

  • Does it have to change in one some way, shape or form?

  • Or do you know I can't do that part?

  • That's after a certain age.

  • Yeah.

  • I mean, I just did a movie worse probably, Um, Maur, uh, physically demanding than anything I've done.

  • And I was good, but I'm also not so gung ho warm like, Oh, I have to do everything.

  • You know, I got two or three guys that looked just like me and the younger, and they're more fit, more capable.

  • I don't mind them getting in there.

  • I'm not the kind of thrill secret that I used to be.

  • I'm a little bit just a little more cautious and you know what I do and how I do it.

  • You know, like snowboarding with my kids like that.

  • Let's at this double black diamond.

  • You know, I'm like, uh, stick it down.

  • Yeah, so it really depends, but But I think you know, I'm actually now that I'm training smarter.

  • I'm eating better.

  • I I do feel better.

  • You know, I'm not.

  • Everything's more about functional movement now and stuff like that.

  • I was trying to be the biggest and strongest the I remember interviewing you once, and you have been working on the movie about the guy who joined the Philadelphia Eagles.

  • Convince Papa Leo.

  • Yeah.

  • And you were beat to smithereens.

  • Yeah, no more.

  • Uh, you know what?

  • That But that was one of the That was one of my childhood dreams come true.

  • You know, be able to put on it.

  • And I felt uniform and get out there with the with the big boys.

  • And, you know, I like lighting people up more than I'm getting a little, but, uh, yeah, I mean, that was That was a tough one.

  • It was a tough one.

  • But I I do feel better now that I felt then physically because I've changed now I let myself recover.

  • I'll take a day off.

  • I know when I need to kind of go easy and just did, you know, being a little bit more smart.

  • I was hard headed for quite some time.

  • Hard to believe.

  • So Spencer's been your character has been in prison for five years and he gets out.

  • Is the world changed when he's been incarcerated?

  • I mean, I haven't been incarcerated quite a long time.

  • The world still changing every day with technology for me.

  • So, uh, and I've had quite a few friends who have been in and out and have experienced the change in technology and the changing times.

  • So I thought that was a very, very funny moment, actually.

  • You know, I picked that up from friends of mine who had had gotten out and, you know, trying to figure out an iPhone and to understand how to tax and sent pictures and all that stuff where they were stolen.

  • So people you knew yes or no who had been incarcerated said like, what is this?

  • Yeah, yeah, yeah.

  • While we were making the movie and took it to a Patriots game, you took him to see all the guys and everything, and they were, like, trying to take pictures.

  • Didn't do it right?

  • Your friend Tom Brady.

  • Where do you want him to end up wherever he wants to be, wherever makes him and his family happy.

  • I mean, you know, as a Patriots fan, I think, Would it be nice for him to finish his career have been played for one team.

  • Um, but you know what?

  • He's got more left in the tank.

  • And if if they let him go, he wants to go somewhere else.

  • Hopefully, we'll go there and be just a successful I'll refer him.

  • But I'm rooting for him as a person, as a father and as a husband to do what's right for him and his family.

  • I mean, how much more can you ask from a guy who's given us so much?

  • I mean, 62 plays away from eight.

  • I mean, it's it's remarkable.

  • So, you know, wish him nothing but the best and just I think everybody should just appreciate all that he's done for you.

  • So I was on the morning show at CBS.

  • We've done an interview about the fighter and do you know what happened at the end?

  • Because is one of my last shows on morning TV.

  • Kiss my feet.

  • Oh, yes.

  • Well, I listen, you have been not only somebody who I have in mind for such a long time.

  • You've also been very, very kind to me for such a long time.

  • And I appreciate that.

  • I appreciate your work ethic.

  • Thank you.

  • Right where you were.

  • Where you going?

  • Yeah, hopefully.

  • Hopefully, my kids do, and that rubs off on them.

  • That's the thing.

  • I just want them tow, You know, whatever they decide to do, I'm gonna support them on or 10% and just, you know, put in the work to be the best that they can.

  • Because if you if you don't do the work and then doesn't work out, you live with regret.

  • I don't want to live with regret.

  • You know, sometimes you win.

  • Sometimes you lose.

  • But if you put it all out there, you prepare as much as possible.

  • Then you feel good about, you know, Thanks.

  • Thanks.

Did you eat breakfast this morning?

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マーク・ウォールバーグ、ハリー・スミスとのフルインタビューを見る|TODAY (Watch Mark Wahlberg’s Full Interview With Harry Smith | TODAY)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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