Huffington Postさんのインスタグラム写真 - (Huffington PostInstagram)「Three years into her tenure as a talk show host, Drew Barrymore has patented the art of a good, revelation-filled celebrity interview.⁠ ⁠ At first, it seemed like CBS’s “The Drew Barrymore Show” would be just another celebrity talk show ― a pandemic pick-me-up with a particularly enthusiastic host. (Jezebel’s Rich Juzwiak noted early on in Season 1 that the actor approached pretty much every topic “with an Oprah-discusses-bread level of enthusiasm.”)⁠ ⁠ But since those days, Barrymore revealed that, like Oprah Winfrey before her, she’s an able and accomplished interviewer.⁠ ⁠ While other talk show hosts fish for PR-approved anecdotes, Barrymore uses self-disclosure to get her guests to open up; they open up about emotional, thorny subjects because she does, too. The 48-year-old thinks nothing of casually tossing out some embarrassing (or even painful) anecdote from her four decades in Hollywood or her personal life to show how she relates: Her addictions at an early age, her recently lackluster dating life, to name two.⁠ ⁠ It’s more than just self-disclosure that makes Barrymore so good, though. She has a gentle, almost enveloping body language that makes people feel emotionally safe. Sometimes she even kneels on the floor and makes direct eye contact with whoever she’s speaking to, as she did during her interview with transgender actor Dylan Mulvaney, much to the annoyance of those at Fox News.⁠ ⁠ In an interview with actor Brooke Shields earlier this month, Barrymore sat cross-legged and listened raptly, seemingly relieved to have someone on her couch who could relate to the horror show of growing up in Hollywood with an overbearing stage mom and being sexualized in the industry at far too young an age.⁠ ⁠ Barrymore’s show is a master class in how to be a better, more empathic listener to the people you care about, too. So just what can be gleaned from Barrymore on how to be a more emotionally available friend, especially when they’re having hard times? We asked therapists to share five Barrymore-perfected communication tips — read more at our link in bio. // 📷 The Drew Barrymore Show/CBS Media Ventures // 🖊️ @binnywong」4月21日 4時55分 - huffpost

Huffington Postのインスタグラム(huffpost) - 4月21日 04時55分


Three years into her tenure as a talk show host, Drew Barrymore has patented the art of a good, revelation-filled celebrity interview.⁠

At first, it seemed like CBS’s “The Drew Barrymore Show” would be just another celebrity talk show ― a pandemic pick-me-up with a particularly enthusiastic host. (Jezebel’s Rich Juzwiak noted early on in Season 1 that the actor approached pretty much every topic “with an Oprah-discusses-bread level of enthusiasm.”)⁠

But since those days, Barrymore revealed that, like Oprah Winfrey before her, she’s an able and accomplished interviewer.⁠

While other talk show hosts fish for PR-approved anecdotes, Barrymore uses self-disclosure to get her guests to open up; they open up about emotional, thorny subjects because she does, too. The 48-year-old thinks nothing of casually tossing out some embarrassing (or even painful) anecdote from her four decades in Hollywood or her personal life to show how she relates: Her addictions at an early age, her recently lackluster dating life, to name two.⁠

It’s more than just self-disclosure that makes Barrymore so good, though. She has a gentle, almost enveloping body language that makes people feel emotionally safe. Sometimes she even kneels on the floor and makes direct eye contact with whoever she’s speaking to, as she did during her interview with transgender actor Dylan Mulvaney, much to the annoyance of those at Fox News.⁠

In an interview with actor Brooke Shields earlier this month, Barrymore sat cross-legged and listened raptly, seemingly relieved to have someone on her couch who could relate to the horror show of growing up in Hollywood with an overbearing stage mom and being sexualized in the industry at far too young an age.⁠

Barrymore’s show is a master class in how to be a better, more empathic listener to the people you care about, too. So just what can be gleaned from Barrymore on how to be a more emotionally available friend, especially when they’re having hard times? We asked therapists to share five Barrymore-perfected communication tips — read more at our link in bio. // 📷 The Drew Barrymore Show/CBS Media Ventures // 🖊️ @binnywong


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