00:00Per favore, kiss Italy per me!
00:02Ciao!
00:03Ok, ciao!
00:03Grazie! Ciao!
00:05Ciao! Ciao!
00:10Tutti quelli che vengono in Thailand lo fanno per nascondersi da qualcuno
00:14o per trovare qualcuno.
00:16L'universo ci ha fatto incontrare, ti farò ritrovare la felicità !
00:21Buonanotte, Walter.
00:23È così amico di incontrare.
00:25So, it's a pleasure because you are a Prestige TV royalty
00:31because you have done the best shows in town.
00:33So, how does it feel like to be royalty?
00:37Oh my God, I wish my house reflected it.
00:40I wish my bank account reflected it.
00:42You know what, to be on any level,
00:45just considered even just a friend in the country of Italy
00:51is one of the greatest compliments I could ever be given.
00:54It's a country that we spend a lot of time in, my family.
00:58And I just love it very, very, very much.
01:01So, thank you so much for saying that.
01:02I'm blushing, is what I'm saying.
01:05Now I'm sweating.
01:08I'm going to throw another compliment
01:10because I think you have one of the best voices in the business.
01:14So, I want to know how do you care for your voice?
01:18Do you do something special?
01:20I smoke and I drink alcohol.
01:26You know, I don't know.
01:29Look, I like a lot of people,
01:31at least that I look up to and admire,
01:34have lived a full life.
01:37And I continue to live that life in a very certain way.
01:41And it's more often than not experiential
01:43and like traveling all over your country
01:47and everything else.
01:49So, if it's anything,
01:51it just has something to do, I guess,
01:53with just being open to the world around me
01:56and receiving all of those gifts
02:00of all of these conversations with all of these people
02:03and all of these different countries all over the world.
02:05So, thank you very much for saying that.
02:07Now I'm really sweating.
02:09Now, for sure, but I really appreciate it.
02:12You know, I will say that I did do this.
02:14You know what? I can't say that actually.
02:15I can't announce it here.
02:18And you were speaking about living a full life
02:21and you said that this role was more difficult
02:24because it's more personal.
02:26So, how much of your experience you put into Rick Experience?
02:32Well, I do believe that you live in your imagination, right?
02:37And you turn yourself over to an imaginary set of circumstances.
02:41It's pretty simple, my outlook on this business
02:44and it's shared with a lot of different people.
02:46It just so happens to be a story that resonated very deeply with me
02:51for different reasons, not very different reasons, but for different reasons.
02:56I went to Thailand 18 years ago at a time in my life
03:01looking for things that are very similar to the reasons why Rick goes to Thailand.
03:08The stories are different, but the feeling of being angry and bitter
03:17and evaluating one's life and being lost, you know,
03:26something that resonated very deeply with me
03:28and I just so happened to go to the same place that he went to looking for answers.
03:32We're not alone in this, right?
03:34It's not just me and Rick Hatchett.
03:36I mean, throw like a rock and you'll hit anyone that has gone through something similar.
03:43It's just a part of being human.
03:44It just so happens that this was, you know, in a place that I was very familiar with
03:50because I was there looking for the same thing.
03:52It's interesting that you said anger because the therapist says to Rick that underneath anger
03:58there's always a sadness, something we are grieving.
04:03So, how can we face anger?
04:05You're an actor, you know better than me maybe.
04:08You face emotions better than me.
04:11So, tell me.
04:12How can we do that?
04:13You know, it's very interesting that you say that
04:14and I'm so happy that you said those words
04:16because, you know, underneath anger there is a grieving, there is sadness.
04:19You know, these are words from Mike White, right?
04:21He wrote this.
04:24He doesn't write anything, I'm sure, without, you know, understanding it completely
04:29and I think he understands it in his own life and it all comes from within him.
04:35And I agree with that wholeheartedly.
04:39You know, anger is just a symptom, isn't it, you know, of what's really kind of going on inside
04:45and so much of it is sadness.
04:47And there's a point like in all of our lives where, you know, you get the invitation to cross the
04:56Rubicon or not.
04:59And on the other side of this fence or this river, maybe there are greener pastures.
05:05and a lot of that is coming to terms with your childhood, for sure, your own shit that you kind
05:14of bring into the world.
05:17But so much of that is just coming to peace with yourself.
05:24Really, it's just falling in love with yourself, being okay with who you are, right?
05:31And I think that's the thing that people struggle with the most.
05:35It certainly was what I struggled with the most.
05:37And as soon as that kind of happened in my life, life became easier.
05:43But like so many other people, the moment you kind of find that peace, that you make that transition,
05:49you can bet you'll lose it.
05:51But the thing is, if you found it once, you'll find it again.
05:55And I don't know that Rick Hatchett has ever found that for himself.
06:01I don't know that he's ever asked these questions, but he is asking them now.
06:09And his motivations for being there are with anger and revenge in his heart and just being neglected and having
06:24the life that he's lived.
06:26And hopefully, you know, he finds the answers that he's looking for and he gets some peace like I did,
06:32you know?
06:33And I think that'll be explored in the story.
06:36And I can't wait for you to see it.
06:37Thank you so much to us. It was beautiful.
06:39Thank you.
06:39What a great conversation.
06:41Hey, so lovely to meet you. So lovely to talk to you.
06:44Please kiss Italy for moi.
06:47Okay, bye-bye.
06:49Ciao, ciao, ciao.
07:04Bye-bye.
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