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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
Actress and musician Zooey Deschanel returns to Armchair Expert for a heartwarming Christmas episode, sharing personal stories about evacuating during the LA fires with her three kittens, celebrating the holidays with elaborate decorations, and the challenges of parenting in Hollywood. (03:00) The conversation flows from fire evacuations to Christmas traditions, with Zooey discussing her parents losing their childhood home in the fires and how her father heroically saved his photography archive. (08:29) The episode culminates with Zooey performing a beautiful rendition of "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas," creating a truly special holiday moment. (61:50)
Zooey Deschanel is an acclaimed actress and musician best known for her starring role in the hit TV series New Girl and iconic films like Elf, 500 Days of Summer, and Yes Man. She's also half of the indie folk duo She & Him and has a new movie called Merv streaming on Prime Video. Deschanel comes from a family deeply rooted in the entertainment industry, with her father being a renowned cinematographer who worked on Twin Peaks.
Zooey shared her experience evacuating during the LA fires with three kittens and discussed the challenge of maintaining a proper "go bag." (05:30) She highlighted how difficult it is to keep emergency supplies ready when you want to use the items you've packed. The key insight is that true preparedness requires dedicating specific items solely for emergencies, even if it means buying duplicates of things you love. This approach ensures you'll actually have what you need when disaster strikes, rather than having an empty go bag because you've used everything in your daily life.
Deschanel explained her family's rule about child acting: kids can pursue professional acting at 16 when they can drive themselves to auditions, but not before. (29:36) This boundary allows children to gain experience through theater and creative activities while avoiding the pressures of professional entertainment during formative years. The strategy protects kids from having to earn money as children while still nurturing their talents and interests, ensuring they can develop character and resilience before entering the professional world.
Drawing from her childhood experience with ADHD diagnosis and educational therapy, Zooey emphasized the importance of building in extra time and developing specific coping strategies rather than using ADHD as an excuse. (44:13) She learned to wake up hours before she needed to leave to account for her tendency to run back into the house multiple times for forgotten items. The key is understanding your patterns and proactively planning around them, such as setting multiple clocks around the house or using tools like audiobooks to make boring tasks like brushing teeth more engaging.
Zooey discussed the challenge of helping her children understand that not everyone receives special treatment like they do when dining out, while still maintaining normal family experiences. (32:06) She emphasized teaching her children basic courtesy and gratitude without assuming they'll always receive preferential treatment. The strategy involves being transparent about their unusual circumstances while still instilling normal values and expectations, ensuring children develop proper social skills and realistic expectations about how they'll be treated in the real world.
When discussing her approach to recording music, Zooey emphasized preferring "the take is the take" philosophy over perfected, heavily edited performances. (64:14) She believes that fixing every line in post-production removes the natural musical through-line and emotional story of a performance. This approach values authenticity and human connection over technical perfection, recognizing that slight imperfections often create more engaging and emotionally resonant art than sterile, over-produced content.