transcript
Speaker 1:
[00:01] Hi, Ambyr. Hi, Lala. Welcome to an Unlikely Affair.
Speaker 2:
[00:08] Hello, everybody. Welcome back to another episode of Unlikely Affair. I'm here with, I don't even know what to say. It's so funny. I'm looking at you. You look beautiful, though. Lala Kent, good morning.
Speaker 1:
[00:20] Good morning.
Speaker 2:
[00:20] Good morning.
Speaker 1:
[00:21] Do not even act like we didn't just get on this Zoom and you go, are you in the same outfit from the airport?
Speaker 2:
[00:28] You are.
Speaker 1:
[00:29] Okay, but give me a chance to explain very quickly because I'm not a sick fuck. I promise you.
Speaker 2:
[00:34] The floor is yours. Go ahead.
Speaker 1:
[00:36] Ocean constantly battles me when it comes to getting dressed in the morning and all she ever wants to wear is a plaid skirt and a striped tank top with a headband. And I'm so over it. And I'm like, it cannot happen again today. So in the midst of battling her, the clock keeps getting closer and closer to, you need to leave the fucking house to beat traffic to get to the school. I get her hair done. We have no time left. I grabbed the first thing I saw, which was this outfit in the dirty clothes and put it on. And I will be changing after this and bathing. I promise you know who I am. I'm not a filthy fuck, but today it's survival.
Speaker 2:
[01:22] You know what? I know you're not a filthy fuck because let me tell you something you love taking baths like I do.
Speaker 1:
[01:28] I know. I know. Well, and the thing about baths, Amber, is a lot of people are weird about them. But I feel like I bathed so often that it's fine. It's fine. You know?
Speaker 2:
[01:41] No, I love, I love baths. You can't. This house in Montana doesn't have a bathtub. Actually, I've noticed a lot of houses in Montana. They don't have bathtubs and it is so, it's like the number one rule. And I didn't even think about it. I was so desperate to find a house because I had looked everywhere. And it just so happens that this one has a shower bath and that grosses me out so badly. So that means that I would have to like, I would have to like clean it and it's like a whole thing. So like going to Vegas and having a bath and then like going to other, it's like a real treat. So.
Speaker 1:
[02:15] Yeah. I did miss you a lot last night. I couldn't sleep really.
Speaker 2:
[02:19] Oh, I miss you too.
Speaker 1:
[02:22] Yeah. I went down and got Ocean out of her bed and put her in mine.
Speaker 2:
[02:25] Oh, my gosh. I told Riley she was getting, she was brushing her teeth and I said, you're sleeping with me tonight. And London was like, she's mom. And I said, Riley goes, it's non-negotiable. I'm not even going to fight it. I literally made Riley sleep with me. And I think I just needed that. I don't want to sleep by myself. I didn't want to sleep by myself.
Speaker 1:
[02:45] I didn't either. I kept waking up with a pit in my stomach for some weird reason. And then looking at her and grabbing her and just like, I needed to like feel my baby next to me.
Speaker 2:
[02:55] You know what's great at that age is that they don't resist it. As they get older and you try to snuggle with them, it's like I get a freaking elbow. I get kicked. Like, it's not pretty. So.
Speaker 1:
[03:06] Oh, I better not take an elbow to my brand new tatas. Then we got a real problem.
Speaker 2:
[03:11] Get the fuck out of the bed. But I'm sure Ocean still sleeps where she does like the turning. Or no, is she pretty straightforward?
Speaker 1:
[03:21] She's pretty, you mean like literally flipping all over the place?
Speaker 2:
[03:25] Well, you know, when kids are little, they, well, at least my kids did this, they like turn. They don't stay in one position next. Like you have a foot in the mouth and then their head's at the end of the bed. And then they're sideways and then they're falling. I'll never forget. I had a kid fall off the bed at one point. Like they're all, they're like disoriented or something.
Speaker 1:
[03:43] Your kids were wild in the bed because I remember there were a many night that I would sleep in my bed with London and Riley. We do like little face masks or whatever. And they were wild. Yeah.
Speaker 2:
[03:56] All right. Well, maybe it's a genetic thing. I have no idea.
Speaker 1:
[03:59] It depends on the night. Ocean last night was zonked. But yes, that happens. Kids are wild in the bed. Not fun. Last night, we were all good. I'll take it.
Speaker 2:
[04:10] Okay.
Speaker 1:
[04:10] Today, I want to talk about affairs in the workplace because of something that had just come out about, I don't know if you heard about this, the New England Patriots, the head coach who was spotted with a reporter.
Speaker 2:
[04:26] I have a few thoughts.
Speaker 1:
[04:28] I'm just, I want to trust men, Ambyr. I really want to trust them.
Speaker 2:
[04:35] So do I. I want to trust humans, not just men, because let me tell you something. People catch feelings no matter where you go. And the workplace happens to be one place where you're really seen, you're collaborating, you have failures, you have comebacks, there's so many different emotions, especially when you're not a high-stake, running a company, doing whatever you're doing, right? I did my little research. This woman sounded like a piece of shit when it comes to her husband. She was not, the things that she was saying on air about her husband was not okay.
Speaker 1:
[05:12] Before this even happened?
Speaker 2:
[05:14] I think, yes, yes, yes, yeah, before they were even caught.
Speaker 1:
[05:17] So basically, it's the head coach of the Patriots, Ra'Belle and Diana Rossini. And Diana has resigned from her position. And she worked for the athletic, the sports journalism department of the New York Times. And I mean, I would say that those are pretty prestigious titles to be holding. In your career, as a journalist, sports journalist, Mike, the coach, has yet to resign. So let's touch on her first, because you said that she's like a real piece of shit. Just what she was saying.
Speaker 2:
[05:56] Yeah, in my opinion, it was she was talking about her husband, who, by the way, I don't know the guy, seems like a nice guy. She coined him as, I think, basic or general.
Speaker 1:
[06:08] What was it?
Speaker 2:
[06:08] Oh, she said, she said, I'm married to someone very average. And it was like such an insult.
Speaker 1:
[06:14] Like, how do you go?
Speaker 2:
[06:16] I think if I were to guess, she was saying, he's not someone of importance. Like he has a normal job, comes from a normal family, but he was just not kind. And I found it was very disrespectful to their marriage to go online and be like, yeah, my, my. And then there was another video where she was like, oh, my husband, you don't even want to know what I was doing in Miami. She's like, well, no, no, no, not like that. Like the type of partying I was doing, I'm like, why would you, like, why would you even say that? Like this guy needs to leave her. He needs to go find someone who respects him. Listen, I don't know what happens behind closed doors, but just the words that were coming out of her mouth were disgusting to me.
Speaker 1:
[07:00] That's the other thing is I always wonder where your mind has to be to go behind your person's back and start an affair. And if you don't even like the person you're with, why do you stay? I just, I cannot for the life of me wrap my mind around that. I get it, like things happen and people catch feelings. And like you said, when you're in the workplace and you're experiencing big wins together or a tough day, that person is there to kind of like be your partner in crime. But I just, I don't get it. I don't think I could do it.
Speaker 2:
[07:44] I think it starts with an emotional fair, right? It starts with like, like you were talking about the big wins, the losses, the like, how are we going to solve this problem together? It's proximity. It's a lack of boundaries. I think people don't have any boundaries and they're so, they're so ambiguous. The boundaries that people have in their personal lives and in their personal relationships, as well as romantic and professional. I just don't feel like people know how to pause. Like I always talk about the pause and say like, okay, what is this feeling that's coming up? Because listen, I'm an actor. I've been on set. I was, when I was married, I had sex scenes, I had romantic scenes, I was making it. But never once did I think, okay, I'm gonna take this back to the trailer. That never once came into my mind. It's because I just, I didn't, it just never crossed my mind. Did I think a co-star was fucking hot? Of course I did. But like I would never jeopardize my family, even if I wasn't in a good position. Like I would question myself in these feelings, like, okay, wait, I feel like I'm really being, like I really am attracted to this person, right? Or there's something about this person that makes me feel really good. Okay, what is that feeling like? Am I being seen? Do I feel more seen here than I do in my personal life? Okay, well, what am I gonna do about those feelings? I'm gonna go back to my husband or my partner and say, can we talk about something? I'm not gonna bring up what happened at work or the feelings that I was having, but like, I'm gonna sit there, look back and reevaluate my relationship and what I feel like I'm missing and what tank is not being filled up at home. Totally.
Speaker 1:
[09:33] Oh, I love what you just said. I also think that you and I are the type of people where when you and I start building something with someone, building the foundation, right? I hold on to that. I don't forget it easily. So when I'm out in the world and let's say I see someone who's good-looking, it goes so far beyond that that it's like, okay, you're good-looking, but there's nothing there that would make me want to like get naked with you because I'm holding on to something that I've built that's sturdy with this other person. So like you said, it could be where maybe the foundation is fractured, and that's when things kind of get scary. But like you said, having the conversation. I also think with this Diana person, the journalist, I think this guy is a shiny object for her. She's in sports journalism, and the guy who is the head coach of the New England Patriots, the team that Tom Brady used to play for, the team that was in the Super Bowl, he's paying attention to me. I think people get cloudy.
Speaker 2:
[10:51] So allegedly they were vacationing together in Sedona, Arizona. By the way, if I'm having an affair, which I never would, but if I would, I wouldn't be going to Sedona, Arizona.
Speaker 1:
[11:03] If I know anything about dabbling in the sports world, I know that training camp players had to start showing up. Right? There's been a lot going on, a lot of trading happening, a lot of people being re-signed that may have been free agents. Like both of them, they didn't have time to affair outside of the country. They got to be boots on the ground right here in the United States. So Sedona, maybe they thought no one would be there because it's kind of sleepy town. People go to like retreat and enjoy like the vortex. You know, that's the whole thing.
Speaker 2:
[11:40] Watch, they're going to come out and we went on the vortex.
Speaker 1:
[11:42] We went to the vortex, right? That is what they're going to say.
Speaker 2:
[11:45] Couldn't resist, it just brought us together.
Speaker 1:
[11:59] The thing that bothers me the most is that she has resigned from her positions. He's still rocking it. And I know that she says mean things about her husband. But does that bother you at all? Because I feel like the men, I mean, even in my situation, I caught a lot of freaking heat. And homeboy just kind of went about his business. And here we are talking about how she was a piece of shit in her marriage, we haven't even touched on what a piece of shit he is.
Speaker 2:
[12:32] I know, I think that, again, I've never been in this position and I don't know the repercussions or what's going on behind the scenes. But I think when you resign from your position, you're automatically saying I'm guilty of something.
Speaker 1:
[12:44] She is. We see the photos. He didn't resign. He's business as usual. And I'm sure because he's got cash and again status, that's hard for a woman to leave. So his wife, I'm sure they're going to work through it. And this this other woman, Diana, you know, her life is forever shifted.
Speaker 2:
[13:06] I don't know why I just have a feeling this is not the first time he's cheated. That's my gut intuition.
Speaker 1:
[13:10] No. Let me tell you something. You're taking the mistress on vacations. You're a one trick pony. You've done it a lot of times.
Speaker 2:
[13:20] Of course. Of course. I just hope his wife doesn't have a prenup. Because, you know, I just want her to live a good life now. If he's going to be a piece of shit and go have an affair with someone at work, just let her live. There's eight million people in the world. I promise her, listen, she's going to be okay. She's just going to be like, you know, she's going to live a good life. Fuck him. Sorry, I'm in a really spicy mood this morning.
Speaker 1:
[13:47] I love when you get spicy. I'm kind of there too. I'm kind of in that mood too.
Speaker 2:
[13:52] I just can't. She's gross. He's gross. Everyone in the situation is gross. Like, just no respect.
Speaker 1:
[13:59] And I get that it's in the workplace. But is it really? I mean, this girl's not fucking in the locker rooms every day. She doesn't work for the Patriots. No, she's covering multiple different sports teams, whether it's basketball or football. Like, how did this come to be? You think it was the DM? Do you think they have Instagram? I bet they've deactivated them now, but let me tell you, Instagram makes people very accessible. I should know. I should know.
Speaker 2:
[14:34] You could do, you could find out a lot of information by really diving into someone's Instagram.
Speaker 1:
[14:38] Oh, that's where all the bodies are buried. You can turn on the little, like, the disappearing thing, which I didn't know was a thing until I dealt with someone who was doing that.
Speaker 2:
[14:50] I accidentally always do that, and it makes me crazy. They should have a toggle for that.
Speaker 1:
[14:54] Yeah, and not just, like, the swipe up, the big, like, the giant swipe. You know who else made a stupid decision, though, during their affair was that Jumbotron couple?
Speaker 2:
[15:04] Oh, my gosh.
Speaker 1:
[15:06] Which, by the way, I looked it up, because she did an interview. And I think it was with Oprah. She did a big interview. And that was during that Coldplay concert in 2025. Everyone knows this. He was the CEO. She was... This is what I love the most. She was head of HR. People were getting away with murder in that company. She's like, you can do whatever you want. I'm fucking the CEO right now.
Speaker 2:
[15:36] Ha ha ha! Honestly, it's... This scares me. This really does.
Speaker 1:
[15:44] Tell me.
Speaker 2:
[15:45] Because I swear every day that goes by, I never want to get into a relationship again. And I'm like, I'm out there. I'm single. I'm on Raya. You're teaching me how to slide into people's DMs, which is like...
Speaker 1:
[15:59] Terrifying.
Speaker 2:
[16:01] Terrifying. You can't... I don't know how you trust someone. How do you trust someone?
Speaker 1:
[16:06] It's very hard. And can I tell you? I mean, you saw you and I in Vegas with whatever situation. We were like looking at text messages and what was said. And it's like, oh, what flag? And like when we called him on it, he was like, what the fuck is going on?
Speaker 2:
[16:26] We are on high alert.
Speaker 1:
[16:27] He was like, read your last message. You did this. And we did do that. We did take him to that place, didn't we? Poor guy.
Speaker 2:
[16:36] Maybe I just... I don't know. Maybe I'm just like... I don't want to say damage. It's not like the right... Because I know I'm not damaged. I've done so much fucking work to be on a podcast and say that I'm damaged. It really does. I just don't know. It's going to take a lot of convincing. Something happened to me in the last three months. I think I just prayed to God and said like, I don't ever want, I don't want... I think I prayed it away. That's what happened.
Speaker 1:
[17:05] That's a real thing.
Speaker 2:
[17:07] All right.
Speaker 1:
[17:08] But what did you pray away?
Speaker 2:
[17:09] I just didn't want that feeling like, oh my gosh, I really want a relationship. You know, the desire. I think I prayed away the desire for a relationship because it was too... It's too much. There's too much... Like my trust has gone down so much. And that's really interesting. I'm figuring something out about myself. How do you trust someone again?
Speaker 1:
[17:32] Well, that's what's so hard is then you're putting into a position where someone does allow you to put your guard down, but then there's no winning for them because one wrong move, it's almost like there's no room for mistakes. That's the position I'm in right now is I've noticed that one wrong move and you're going to make me feel unsafe and like I can't trust you. And I have to really think about it and go, okay, if you're really talking about a relationship and it being a forever thing, there are going to be times where your partner disappoints you, leaves you sad. And the whole point is that you work through those things and the foundation becomes so strong and the communication is so strong that each time you get stronger and you learn something about each other. But I'm right there with you, Ambyr. The moment I feel like I can trust somebody, it's kind of a lose lose situation for both of us. Because it's like I trust you, the moment you do something that maybe you don't even realize, it can throw me for a fucking loop and go wall is back up never again.
Speaker 2:
[18:46] Okay, so I think this is what we have to do. In my head, I see like a scale of one to ten. When something comes up for us, I think we need to question, is this a ten, like a ten would be infidelity, cheating, lying, right? Something that is like, like kind of brings up old wounds where you're like, dude, this is, or a red flag that's just, you can't ignore, right? And then a one, so you have this like sliding, you have a scale. So we have to say like, okay, what happened is this like a three and how fast can we recover? Because I think, I told you this this weekend in Vegas is, being able to recover and not hold on to something is, is really important. Like you don't want to, like let's repair the relationship. Let's have a face to face talk and, and then get back on the moving train of like moving forward in a healthy way of this relationship. I think like sitting in that where you hold a grudge for like weeks on end, or you don't say anything and it just builds, builds, builds, and then one little thing and then you explode and that can cost the relationship. But I think, I think I need to look at things in a little bit of a like, okay, is this like a three? Like, does like, like Sabrina said, does the pinch match the out?
Speaker 1:
[20:06] See, I don't know.
Speaker 2:
[20:08] Like how bad is the pinch? Is it like a little?
Speaker 1:
[20:11] Well, that's the thing is, that's why I say it's a lose lose for both of us, because any sort of anything that makes me like become thrown off, it's big, just because of what I've experienced. And even though, like you said, you work through it, but anything, there's only so much work you can do on your own before someone else has to come in and repair that. But then what are they going to do that's going to, you know, cause you more triggers and more trauma, you know? But it's, it's hard. And I think women who can come back from infidelity, like Ambyr, I don't know how you did it so many times.
Speaker 2:
[20:53] I was a dumbass. Let's be real. Like someone should have literally taken a bat to my head. I really, really, but now I know.
Speaker 1:
[21:03] What would you do now if you experienced infidelity?
Speaker 2:
[21:06] Oh, I would just quietly leave and very calm. Like even like, okay, I hope, I hope it was worth it and, and leave.
Speaker 1:
[21:26] Which would you prefer? Your husband just putting his peep where it doesn't belong one time, or having an emotional affair where there was no physical contact?
Speaker 2:
[21:42] An emotional affair, that just really feels like it hits differently.
Speaker 1:
[21:47] I don't think I could get over either.
Speaker 2:
[21:49] No.
Speaker 1:
[21:49] I think either one, there's the door.
Speaker 2:
[21:51] Oh, of course, there's either one, but what would hurt worse? I think an emotional affair, I feel like eventually, if not caught before, always leads to some physical...
Speaker 1:
[22:03] Yeah, I don't know that I'd believe you if you were in an emotional affair and they said they had never touched each other. It's just like, that's just not how it works. And then if they drink, they don't have to be alcoholics, but you add some wine.
Speaker 2:
[22:14] Forget it.
Speaker 1:
[22:15] Forget it.
Speaker 2:
[22:15] Clothes are coming off.
Speaker 1:
[22:17] Clothes are coming off 100%. But the more that I, and I'm trying not to fight it, but I just, I feel like I opened myself up, told the universe I was down for the cause of love and finding my person, and we're only in April approaching May, and I'm going, I don't know about this. I lived a really peaceful life. I was happy every day, and it was only contingent on myself and if my kids were good, and that was a really fucking great way to live, because I can't control another person.
Speaker 2:
[22:53] You can't.
Speaker 1:
[22:54] That scares me, Ambyr. And the thought of it makes me want to sob, where I'm like, just make this fucking easy.
Speaker 2:
[23:04] I think the right person will. I really do. I think the right person will make it easy. It's not going to be perfect because there's no perfect relationship. But I think our universe, our country, is going through a really hard time with the word trust. Like, we need to reset what trusting actually means. First, you have to trust yourself, right? Something I feel like I've really grown to learn how to trust myself, to trust my instincts. And so if you get these feelings and you're like, huh, like, doesn't mean you act on them. And I'm not saying like the red flags. Like, you feel something and you're thinking, God, why do I feel this way? I think we have to learn to trust ourselves. And then you build trust with someone. And you have to be willing to build trust with someone. Because if you're not, then it's like, what's the point of being in a relationship? You might as well just live your merry life the way you have, raise your kids, have girlfriends. But you have to want it. You have to want it. And maybe you don't know if you want it yet. I think you do. I think you're just fucking scared. It's okay to be scared.
Speaker 1:
[24:16] Yeah, I'm really scared.
Speaker 2:
[24:18] I know you are.
Speaker 1:
[24:19] What I've noticed is now, like before when I would hear like men doing things that were dirty or like, you know, the stuff that we've been talking about, my reaction would be like, see, men are shitty. They're all the same. Now when I hear something like this, it doesn't, I don't necessarily go straight to like the man being so shitty, like the man in general. It's like, wow, that guy like really fucked up. And it's more of like a pinpointed, like this is you, this isn't every man, which is definitely different for me. And it just, it just happened. It's not like I'm trying to not put men under one blanket. It just like overnight was like, okay, you know, some men do really shitty things. And I have to trust that like, I'm gonna find someone who's not gonna do shitty things. Again, I have to be comfortable with the idea of like, knowing that it's not gonna be perfect, but that scares me.
Speaker 2:
[25:20] Right, but let's not, let's put, let's put these guys on a scale, like a 10.
Speaker 1:
[25:24] I know that's gonna be hard though, because I'm an emotional person.
Speaker 2:
[25:28] I know, but until they, if until they prove that they're a 10, meaning a piece of shit, don't put them in that category. Let them start, like start at them out of five, right? And they do something stupid. Okay, they move up a little bit. Okay, they move down a little bit and see where they land after like three, six months.
Speaker 1:
[25:48] Yeah. I don't know if you do this, but I also need to retrain myself the difference between you're a piece of shit or you did something that was kind of shitty.
Speaker 2:
[26:00] Oh, I love that. I feel like that's a good slogan on a shirt. Are you a piece of shit or did you do something shitty?
Speaker 1:
[26:07] You know, it's like I can do, I can do shitty things, but like I like to think that I'm not a piece of shit.
Speaker 2:
[26:14] No, you're not a piece of shit. That's really interesting. I'm not a piece of shit. I just did a really shitty thing.
Speaker 1:
[26:21] Yeah. And that, that I can take that and go, okay, we've got something here. You did something that made me feel yucky. We can work through it. This is my hard line. There will be no cheating and there will be no drug use. Those two things, there's no discussion, I'm out. The trust is completely gone. I can deal with a lot and work through it. Those two things shut me down to my very core.
Speaker 2:
[26:48] Well, you're non-negotiables before you even open the door. And you know very soon when you open the door. Didn't you recently ask someone if they've ever cheated? Or am I making this up?
Speaker 1:
[26:57] No, I asked them.
Speaker 2:
[26:58] Okay.
Speaker 1:
[26:59] And their response was flawless.
Speaker 2:
[27:02] Well, that's good. That's good.
Speaker 1:
[27:07] You can get a read on people. I see in their eyes.
Speaker 2:
[27:10] But here's a question. If someone, and I'm not talking about that specific person you're talking about. If a man in general said, yes, I have, I made a huge mistake. You know, I learned my lesson. I've done a lot of work on myself. I can never see myself doing that again. Would you still go into a relationship with them?
Speaker 1:
[27:30] Well, because I'm a dumb ass probably.
Speaker 2:
[27:32] No, I don't think you would. You're not a dumb ass. You're so smart. Stop saying that.
Speaker 1:
[27:37] That would make me pump the brakes. Have you cheated before?
Speaker 2:
[27:41] No. And I say that. It's funny I say that because remember I was telling you, when I was married, I, again, I was on set with a lot of random, good-looking, intimate scenes. I don't, I don't know what, like, I just don't have, I think you're either a cheater or you're not. I don't, I don't know. But I remember I got like a love letter sent to me, a handwritten, remember I was telling you this?
Speaker 1:
[28:11] Yeah.
Speaker 2:
[28:11] Someone whose name will remain, obviously not on here, wrote me a love letter. And it was like the most beautiful pen to paper letter. And I was like, and I was married. They were not, they were single. And I was thinking, oh my God, this was like, that would have been such an easy in for me, such an excuse to leave my marriage. But I didn't, not even emotional. And like, I think I was just so, I was also on like in turmoil for eight years straight. I don't even think that was, it was me in survival mode. I wasn't even thinking like, how do I get out of this situation? For me, it was like, let me take more pills so I could stay into the, in this situation and manage my feelings, you know, or suppress them rather.
Speaker 1:
[29:09] Yeah, I haven't cheated either, but I remember with our ex, I went out and started doing my thing because he had told me that he was separated. And at this point it was like, okay, like how long does one stay separated for before you like have a finalized divorce? So I just started going out and doing my thing. And I just think it's impossible to cheat on a married person. It doesn't, that doesn't, you can't cheat on someone who has a wife. So I stand by, I never cheated.
Speaker 2:
[29:40] Good. Yeah.
Speaker 1:
[29:44] And I almost did. I almost did.
Speaker 2:
[29:48] Oh, that's right.
Speaker 1:
[29:49] When I left the ring behind.
Speaker 2:
[29:51] Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1:
[29:51] And when she hit the fan, I was like, look who I could have been fucking this whole time.
Speaker 2:
[29:59] I had my shot.
Speaker 1:
[30:00] I had my shot, both of us.
Speaker 2:
[30:02] Yeah, but you walked away with your dignity.
Speaker 1:
[30:05] Amen, sister. I love that. I actually really liked this episode. It took a turn. We went from like the affairs in the workplace to could you handle that shit? Nah, we're good. You guys, thank you for listening to another episode of An Unlikely Affair. We're going to catch you guys again next week. We love you. Amber, I love you and I miss you.
Speaker 2:
[30:27] I love you too, baby.
Speaker 1:
[30:29] I'll call you after this. Bye.
Speaker 2:
[30:31] Bye.