Did you bring the picture?
I heard that you rescued a dog.
Yes, that's Penny.
Where did you find Penny?
So Penny was at the
Ventura County Humane
Society of Rescue.
How old is she?
She is a year now.
Oh, you got her when
she was a puppy?
Yeah, we got her when she
was like three months.
But--
Is she a good dog?
She is very, very sweet.
Uh-oh, that sounds
like there's a but.
She's not so trained.
We're not very good at training.
She's still pooping
in the house.
And she's a year?
I know.
It's a problem.
That's horrible.
I know.
How do you not train
a dog within a year?
I tried.
I tried.
No, I don't think you have.
I think there's
no way you tried.
Do you want to
come over and help?
Yes, I'll help for sure.
Please.
That's ridiculous.
Poor Penny.
She's still-- she
mostly goes outside.
Well, then that means she
knows that she should.
You're not taking
her out often enough.
OK, I'll do better.
And that's why
you're here for me
to yell at you about your dog.
All right, let's
talk about the movie.
Yeah.
It is-- so Sia did
all the music for it?
Yes.
Explain what the premise is.
Yes, the Sia, the
incredible, wrote the music
so that this pop singer
would be realistic.
And the film is about this pop
singer who sort of is born out
of a national tragedy where
she as a kid like writes
the song in response
to the tragedy
and becomes this big star.
And then she turns
into kind of a monster.
And it's a wild, wild woman.
And it kind of ended
like all of a sudden.
I was like, what?
That was an hour.
Like it just ended.
But there's at the
end there's like AI--
I heard it was 20 minutes.
It didn't seem 20 minutes to me.
Oh, good.
But it didn't.
It was a singing and
dancing number that you do.
And I was so impressed.
So your husband
choreographed it?
Yes.
I was so impressed
with your choreography.
Thanks.
And with all of it.
And who did you
channel for that?
What pop star?
I don't know that there is
one person in particular.
But I mean, it was sort of
like a kid dream of mine,
like singing Madonna
in front of the mirror
with a hairbrush
kind of growing up.
Is that who you used to--
Yeah.
--yeah.
I was definitely-- when I was
little, it was like Madonna.
I had a Tiffany phase
[INAUDIBLE] my age.
Wow.
And then later on,
'90s year was more
like Fiona Apple,
Alanis Morissette.
Fiona Apple's album was so good.
I don't know where she went.
She had Criminal.
She had like Shadow Boxer.
She's amazing.
She had so many good songs.
She's amazing.
Yeah.
Well, I mean,
she's still around.
But yeah--
She's great.
But that song-- that
album was great.
I don't mean to say
she's not around.
Hi, Fiona.
[LAUGHTER]
She still writes great music.
Yeah.
All right, so Vox Lux is in
select theaters this Friday
and across the
country next Friday.
And you brought something
for Hanukkah for everybody?
Yes, some jelly doughnuts.
Jelly doughnuts?
It's classic [INAUDIBLE] vegan.
Jelly doughnuts for everybody.
We'll be back.
