Watch some of Time’s best interviews of 2024
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00:00Every single person figures this out in their own way.
00:16I think finding the benefits of what scares you can only help to, I think, provoke greatness.
00:31In a way, perhaps it's self-protective, but I think I always like to know the next thing I'm working on
00:38before the current thing comes out, kind of the getting back on the horse.
00:50My mission is to help as much as possible families that lost their close members
00:58and still believe in peace.
01:00For me, this is the highest level of humanity.
01:05The peace building can't come from one side without the other.
01:08If you want peace, we can do it alone.
01:11We need Israeli women that really believe in peace.
01:14I believe in peace.
01:25I think people are just getting a little bit more risky with pop, and that's always when great music is born.
01:33I think being a housewife, being a mortician, a funeral director, I have lots of jobs.
01:38But I think being a housewife makes me understand people's human nature and the need to survive, shall we say.
01:48When I first became an activist in 1970, it was the women that I met that really changed my life.
02:19I think as a people, we understand joy.
02:22We've been through so much.
02:24So many things have traumatized us, but that's all we have.
02:29And I fight for my joy every day.
02:48It's been a heck of a run in Kansas City.
03:01I've been very blessed to be around a lot of great players.
03:03And I'm excited for the future and what we can do.
03:06I feel the most confident at this point in my life.
03:18I feel very much myself.
03:20I call it the Saturn return.
03:22Oh my God, the Saturn return.
03:24That's exactly what it is.
03:25A time in my life where I felt utterly elated and beyond grateful to finally be in a place where I could accept and love myself and do what I needed to and wanted to.
03:50Present times are moving so quickly.
04:00It's hard to get a point of fixation.
04:04So as soon as you write about something in the present day, it's all changed.
04:10Or some of it has.
04:13But I was interested in the 17th century Puritan New England partly because they're my folks.
04:28I think makeup and hair and clothes and everything can kind of turn you into a character, and that's what I love about it.
04:35I love to see how people put my products together and how they mix products with certain things.
04:40And I never would have thought of that.
04:42And they've given me ideas to create products as well.
04:45The best part about being Coco Gauff is just the ability to do both on-court and off-court life.
04:59On-court being pretty energetic, intense, and then off-court, not mellow, but just giggly.
05:06I feel like I have two different personalities.
05:08I definitely look like I don't smile a lot when I'm on the court, but it's quite the opposite off-court.
05:15I've always been very, you know, I know what I want and I'm very passionate about when something sparks inside you and you just have that inspiration to just run with it.
05:34My name is Heman Bekele.
05:44I'm 15 years old, and I love science, creating, and I recently made skin cancer treating soap.
05:59I feel like Harper's going to come in and she's going to be like, all right, let's get to work.
06:02Let's get to work.
06:03Like, what do we do?
06:04And then like almost immediately she's going to be like, and then like, you know, the zoom in, they'll do this.
06:11She'll be like, you know, she'll do that.
06:16Yasmin would spend a lot of time like in the confessional.
06:18Yeah, yeah.
06:19Like, f*** this.
06:20Yeah.
06:21Get me out of here.
06:22I hate it here.
06:23Crying?
06:24Maybe crying.
06:25Yasmin would cry in the toilet for sure.
06:27I really believe that the only reason you make a film is not for the result, but for what you learn for the next one.
06:33At least happens with me.
06:34I find that this is such an amazing learning experience that I hope you keep on going.
06:47Try and find one of the candidates that you feel will do better to protect nature for the future.
06:54That's what I've been saying around the world.
07:04There's always a door like that in a hotel room, a funny locked one.
07:06But I always try and change the voice a little bit to make it more specific to the character so it doesn't sound just like me.
07:12I feel like everybody here that's honored is just like, you know, obvious.
07:16This is so conceited.
07:17I'm like, everyone here that's honored is amazing and I'm honored.
07:24But I really, really do just appreciate all the talent and different people that are in the room.
07:29I think it's really special.
07:42Omeri has been extended into 2025.
07:44Congratulations.
07:45But how are you maintaining the energy?
07:48I'm not.
07:49The show is falling apart.
07:50It is slower, sadder.
07:54People are turning on it and starting to hate it.
07:57Please don't come to see Omeri.
07:59Please.
08:07What's going on?
08:09What's going on?
08:10I'm Jalen Brown from the Boston Celtics and these are my firsts.
08:15I remember the first time I picked up a basketball is how I learned how to walk.
08:19My mom would tell you, like, I learned to walk by chasing after a ball.
08:30I really feel so fortunate to be in what I consider the business of my family and my family's legacy.
08:36So encountering poverty and generational poverty as well as situational poverty have always been a through line of my upbringing.
08:46But the other piece of that through line of my upbringing was that poverty was not something to be afraid of.
08:58Hey, I'm Abigail Barlow.
09:00And I'm Emily Bair.
09:01And together we are Barlow and Bair.
09:04So what did you make of the cover?
09:06I genuinely, I genuinely loved it so much and it felt so, like, classic and timeless.
09:12Timeless, no pun intended.
09:13I really, really was so excited when I saw it.