
#785: Join us as we sit down with Madison LeCroy – the vibrant personality from Bravo’s Southern Charm! As a southern belle turned reality TV star, Madison effortlessly shines in the spotlight while navigating her personal...
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The following podcast is a Dear Media Production. She's a lifestyle blogger extraordinaire.
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Fantastic.
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And he's a cereal entrepreneur, a very smart cookie. And now Lauren Everts and Michael Bostic are bringing you along for the ride.
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Get ready for some major realness.
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Welcome to the Skinny Confidential. Him and her.
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The working out. I've always been athletic, but it didn't like, consume my life. But there were times when it was a little extreme. I was working out too much, I was undereating. But I know that the focus is just to feel good and that's the main thing that I try to do to my day to day. Obviously the eating is, I feel like one of the number one reasons to being in shape and looking healthy. But the weightlifting, for me, instead of going to therapy, I would just go lift weights. That was like my escape.
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You may know her from Southern Charm. You also may know her from social media. Perhaps you know her from TikTok. I know her because we started talking through DMS and we became fast friends. She is absolutely vibrant, amazing, funny. Madison lacroix, welcome to the show. I have asked her to come on the show multiple times over the past couple years and she's not really someone who does podcasts a lot. She finally agreed. She came out to Austin and in this episode, her first podcast, she talks about working out, fitness, what she eats a day in the life the show. She gives us juice on the show and sets the record straight on common misconceptions about reality tv. She's an entrepreneur, a mother, and the star of Bravo's Southern Charm. Madison. Welcome to the show.
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This is the Skinny Confidential.
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Him and her.
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Michael has been watching Southern Charm since Thomas. That's who he initially fell in love with on the show.
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I know we need him back, to be honest.
A
Well, because as a viewer and as a fan of the show, I. I'd never seen anything like that. I was like, this is like, this is wild.
C
You know, we've never seen anything like it either.
B
I mean, the mix of him and Patricia to kick that show off was out of control.
A
That guy was made for television.
B
Yeah, it's really true.
C
My favorite part was when he stood up at the table and he just goes down the line and he's like, and you suck and you are poor. And I mean, I was like, this is amazing.
B
Yeah, it is amazing. Well, the show is amazing. There's so many different colorful dynamics that you guys have really, in my opinion, hit the goldmine when it comes to reality tv. As a viewer, I'm like, on the edge of my seat.
A
I've got a weird thing, too, where because I get to do this show, I get even more invested when I meet the people on the show, but I have a hard time watching it until I'm that invested. But now that we're meeting, like, I'll be yelling at the TV like, don't do that to her.
C
Yeah, exactly.
B
Anyways, you got to give us the background of what was going on before you were on the show because you were working with Patricia. Give us, like, the whole story.
C
Okay. So, I mean, to start off, I was, like, the help for the show. I was doing all the glam. I was the hair and makeup artist, had my own little trailer. I mean, I was running a salon. I was doing the best I could. I was making good money. They were like, wait, this girl. We've got to get her in front of the camera, not behind the camera. And then I kind of started, you know, dating one of the guys on the show, and that's when it all took off.
B
Now, when you're dating him, were you, like, thinking, this is the one. I'm going to be in love with him forever, or was this just, like, a fun situation?
C
Absolutely not. Like, I knew instantly he wasn't, like, husband material. Sorry.
A
But, yeah, two minutes, and that's gonna be a headline.
C
Yeah, I know. I literally, like, I shouldn't be doing. This is probably. I don't do podcasts. I'm gonna say too much.
B
We should have got you drunk.
C
I know.
B
Before.
C
You know, that's what Erica Jayne told me my problem was on tv. She's like, your problem is you're sober. I was like, well, not like sober all the time. I'm just sober right now. Yeah.
B
I think, though, when you give you a little alcohol, you let it rip. That's what I like about you.
C
Bring them in.
B
Yeah. So, you know, going into dating Austin, that he's just, like, for fun.
C
I mean, honestly, we had a friendship. We should have just stuck with that, I guess. I don't know. I was divorced for probably four years when him and I started dating. So I really wasn't ready to jump into a marriage or anything and give.
B
The audience a little bit of background. You have a son. You were married for how long? Give us a little background story.
C
So I was married for four years. I had my son when I was 22, so I was very young. He's 12 now.
A
Wow.
C
I know. It's great. Yeah, I love it. I got divorced pretty much immediately, which was A good thing. But we co parent well and my son is the best thing that's ever happened to me. Honestly.
B
What's going on with the water with these boys in Charleston? They're very like rowdy. I feel like they're hard to tame.
C
Yes. I mean, let's just say Charleston is a place you go and visit when you're traveling. And they know that it's just like import of girls all the time. And there's eight to one ratio. So there's eight females for one male. So why not have three girlfriends?
B
I'd go lesbian. Yeah, well, yeah, it's just like you're fighting an uphill battle at that point.
C
Yeah. You got a date outside of the box.
B
Have you always lived in Charleston?
C
Well, 16 years.
B
And where were you before?
C
Greenville, South Carolina. So upstate born and raised. Yeah.
B
So when the show is around, do you feel the bug that you need to be on television because you have a star sparkle about you?
C
Oh, that's so sweet.
B
You do.
C
Thank you.
B
Like immediately you can tell, you know, not really.
C
I just kind of actually the first year I got on the show, I wasn't sure that they were even talking about me because I was like a day rate kind of girl. They were like, oh, come to this party, we'll pay you like $1,000. And I'm like, okay, sure. And then I didn't realize the whole show was based around me. And then that's when it all kicked the hornet's nest.
B
And so when you watch the show back and you see the whole show is about you from a business standpoint, are you like, I'm upping my rate? And also are you happy about it or were you kind of like, eh.
C
Well, I felt like I didn't have a voice. You know, it was the guys speaking for me. You know, I was being called white trash. You know, I was a service worker, all these things. I wasn't born into money that was just mailed to my house in a mailbox. So for me, it kind of ticked me off just enough to be successful at it.
B
You came back, I feel like the season after that with a vendetta. You were like, I'm. It's. I felt like you were like, I'm taking my voice back.
C
Oh yeah.
B
Was that like thought out or was it just. Did it just come out?
C
It just came naturally. I didn't even really have to try.
A
What was the reaction when you started doing that? Were they like, whoa, what's going on? The person that was the day raid is now, like, screaming at all of us and taking over the show and having a much greater voice. Were they positive to that react or to that experience? Or were they like, whoa, tone it down.
C
I definitely think my showmates were a little taken back, but they were upset that they probably introduced me to the group because they realized real quick I wasn't going to have it. I was going to take them all down, at least the ones that pissed me off.
B
Is it all real behind the scenes, or is it, like, set up?
C
It's pretty real. I mean, obviously, there's going to be situations that I wouldn't put myself in, like, you know, having a drink with an ex, but it is real from that point on. Once we walk in, we sit down, it's. It's real.
B
And you're very good friends with Patricia, who's sort of like the matriarch of the show. She's absolutely fabulous. What advice did she give you going in into the show?
C
Be myself.
B
That was check, check.
C
Yep.
B
Check, check. So as. As your relationship with Austin, who just. If you guys haven't watched Southern Charm, you have to. It's the best show ever. Is sort of crumbling on air. What. What is happening off air that we didn't see?
C
You know, these friendships, especially the guys, they're genuine. I mean, they're real friendships and a lot of emotions. I think they cry more than the girls cry on this show, and, you know, it's endearing, but they. They really have a bromance going when they fight all the time.
B
When. When people from South Carolina dig you, it's a. It's like a piece of cornbread with jalapenos in it.
A
What the hell does that mean?
B
Meaning, like, you think you're taking a nice bite of honey cornbread, and there's a little spice.
C
Hey, by the end of this, y'all both will have an accent.
B
I'm kind of getting an accent going.
A
I have no ide idea what that analogy was like.
B
Like. Meaning, like, you don't. It's not like New York and LA is very curt with the way I think that they.
A
When you say dig, you, do you mean, like, dig like a me or.
B
Dig like, they dig? The way you just. The way you dig is different.
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Like, when you, like, when you kind of like.
B
You know what I'm saying? When you, like, give a little fighting word, it's different.
C
You're like, did I just get insulted or maybe.
A
Okay, I get it now. I had. Honestly, the corn, the cornbread, and the.
B
Jalapeno in Your accent, it's like a.
C
Piece of corn spite sweet tea. You know, it's like a spicy sweet.
A
You were going to try to do the accent again, weren't you? I know, I know.
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I love the accent. I mean I could go and live there if the guy to ratio wasn't that.
C
Woo, that's rough. What's crazy is I don't think I have an accent, but.
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Oh, you got an accent.
C
Yeah.
A
You got a real one, Lauren. I don't know.
B
I love the accent. I think it's so pretty.
C
Thank you.
B
Don't ever lose the accent. So as you're going on, on the show and you meet your now husband who seems to me that he's very quietly confident and doesn't feel like he needs. He wants to even be a part of it.
C
Not at all.
B
What is happening with that behind the scenes while all this is going on?
C
Oh, he's looking at me and he's like, mm, Madison, do I have to really go to this black tie party? And I'm like, yes, you do. It's okay.
B
So he doesn't want to do it?
C
No.
A
He doesn't want to go to the party or he doesn't want to be on camera?
C
He doesn't want to. Either one. Really? Yeah. I mean the guy's not made for. I think he's made for camera, but he just isn't interested. He's private. He's a little shy until you like really get to know him.
A
Well, I always, I analyze these shows again as a fan and a viewer and I think that they're speaking of ratios. A lot of the time these shows don't work very well for the men. Like it doesn't turn out well for them. Like just to talk about Thomas or some of the guys that are on Housewives, we know a lot of. I think it works a lot more of the time in the woman's favor. Like you can go and build a life and a career and you, you know, and, and all sorts of great things and people are like, oh, they fall in love with the character. But the guys, a lot of times like, why are you in the ladies fight? Why are you involved here? What do you. It's a, it's a weird thing for the guys and a lot of times I feel like they get put in these situations where it's like, it's a lose lose for them.
C
Right. I mean, obviously the first thing you think is like, okay, this is my marriage. This is the one thing I'm going to protect from Everything. But also, it is my life and my reality. And you're not going to know me until you meet who I'm surrounded with every day. And so I have to pressure him in that sense, but also protect him because he didn't sign up for this. So I'm very protective. And especially this new season, you'll see that.
B
I think that you do a good job of balancing that. I can feel that. The. The energy and the undertone of that. I think that you're like, this is my job. I'm going to do it 100%. But like you said, he didn't sign up for this, so, like, will pepper him in. But like I always say about my kids on my Instagram story, my kids are extras on my Instagram story.
C
Right.
B
They're not the main character. They're not a supporting sporting character. Maybe you'll see them, like, once every two weeks here and there. You're not going to see me potty training them and their first words and them walking and, like, them on the first day of school every year. Like, you're just not. So I think that that's how I see it as a viewer. It's like he is sort of like an extra to your life. You don't need to show your entire marriage because you feel confident in it.
C
Right? For sure.
B
I don't know if that's.
C
No. I mean, listen, it annoys me all the time when you have people on social media who are like, oh, you're never with your kid, or you're never with your husband, and you're like, wow, did you just see the Instagram story for the last week? That's why you say things like that. It's hurtful, but deep down I know that it's.
A
Well, I could get that. I mean, if I was doing what you were doing, I'd be very hesitant to put my family in that situation for the visibility of the world all the time. Right. But I feel like, again, doing what you do, I would say, like, this is a curated environment. We can sit down in our studio and I can control it, and I don't have to get in fights with Lauren's friends and all that. But, you know, it's not the same. Like, we, like, speaking of having a voice, like, we produce this, what we say is like, what goes out. You guys are filming with an ensemble cast, and you don't always have say over the end. And then there's this weird dynamic that exists. And I see this all the time. We work with a lot of people in your shoes that do these kind of shows where people on the Internet that comment on something like this is completely different than them commenting on a reality show. Like, they feel like they can go in on everything, and the comments are brutal.
C
Yeah, that's the worst part about this job. That and the reunion.
B
Have you gotten a thicker skin because of the comments?
C
I mean, I've always kind of had a thick skin thanks to my mother, but, you know, it's just one of those things that every day I feel like I've heard everything under the sun about myself or my family. So. Yeah, you tend to block it out.
A
What rattles you at this point?
C
I think it's. It's definitely my son and my husband. I mean, for me, I really don't care what anyone says about me, but to this point. But for them, like I said, they didn't sign up for it, so they're innocent.
B
People need to understand, too, that an Instagram story is like one to two minutes of your whole day.
C
Yeah. Yeah. And some of it's not even happening in actual real time.
B
So for people to say you never see your blank or you're never with your blank, it's one to two minutes of the day.
C
Right.
B
It's kind of like a really broad assumption to say that. I think that that's like a dig that they think will get you. Yeah, but you're actually living in your own life. You have been very honest about huge celebrities that have slid into your dms before you were married. What do you do when you get on television? You're this beautiful blonde, and you get all these huge celebrities DMing you. Is it, like, flattering? Are you going on dates with them? Are you grossed out?
C
Like, what's the vibe at this time? When this was happening, I was like, am I being catfished? You know, like, I'm just a girl from the south that's like, small town. Like, there's no way that these a list celebrities are interested at that point. And then to come to find out it was real. But that's when you then get grossed out because you're like, actually, you're a pig.
B
I know. That's. That's exactly kind of what I was getting at. You almost are like, ew.
C
Yeah.
B
Like, it's. It's like cheaty vibe.
C
Very.
B
When you come out with all of this information, what was the behind the scenes like?
C
Oh, man, that. Yeah, that's. Behind the scenes is rough when you're. When you're trying to navigate and then it comes out to the public that, like, this has actually happened. And then people call you liars and of course. But I'm like, why would I ever lie about that?
B
Well, also, you have the screenshots, right? So I don't. I don't think. And I'm just going to go ahead and say that whatever you said is probably 100 times worse with 100 more people. Yes, I would guess.
C
Yes.
B
So people are even lucky that you even said something.
C
Right.
B
When you met your husband and you guys got married, what did you guys talk about behind the scenes about the show? Did you set parameters or boundaries, or has it been something where you just threw yourself into it?
C
We just kind of threw ourselves into it. And we just knew that the main focus was obviously our marriage. And whatever happened, we made sure that was the main source of not dragging in the outside noise.
B
So what has the season been like compared to last? What are we gonna see differently?
C
Okay, you know, I'm gonna try to say this without getting fired, Tina, but. So this year's I'm. It's my most emotional year I've ever had. So I'm dealing with, like, my dad had just passed when I started airing with this, so I was very emotional, worked up. I was still grieving at that point. My husband was going through some health issues, which was obviously very scary. You know, trying to have a baby, all of these real things that were actually happening. And then filming a show with people who didn't really know what was going on. Behind closed doors, you were very open.
B
About the loss of your father. Since losing your father, what have you done differently in your own life? Is there something that he taught you that you just start. You're applying every single day?
C
Well, I mean, I would say this without trying to cry, but I think that, like, obviously me and my husband just celebrated our two year wedding anniversary. And I swear I think my dad put him in my life just because I feel so safe. And I always felt like that with my dad around. But there was a fear of me when I lost my dad, like, oh, my God, who am I gonna, you know, call on when I need something? And then my husband has obviously just been there a thousand percent.
B
And he's a good one, huh?
C
Very good.
B
He's not from Charleston.
C
No, California.
B
Mine's from California, too.
C
Look at him. Yeah, pretty good one.
B
I do like a guy from California. I do. So you have had, in my opinion, one of the most incredible changes physically that I've ever seen. And I think from watching your stories A big part of that is through weightlifting. You have to give our audience all your secrets. I know you're. You seem very militant about how you handle what you eat, your workouts, your body. It's. I love it.
C
Yeah.
B
Give us every single detail.
C
Well, I've been seeing your weightlifting, so good for you.
B
You really inspired me a lot. I always like to watch your stories. You're one of the. She works so hard in the gym. I've never seen anyone work so hard. You're like David Goggins.
C
Well, I will say I. The working out. I've always been athletic, but it didn't like, consume my life. But there were times when it was a little extreme. I was working out too much. I was under eating. But I know that the focus is just to feel good. And that's the main thing that I try to do to my day to day. Obviously, the eating is. I feel like one of the number one reasons to being in shape and looking healthy. But the weightlifting, for me, instead of going to therapy, I would just go lift weights. That was like my escape.
B
What kickstarted it? Did you see yourself on TV and be like, I want to change this? Or Was it before TV?
C
It was after TV, obviously. You know, the camera will add £10, but rough. It is rough. So I look at that and I said, you know what? The goal is to be above average. I feel like I looked fine, but like, I can do better than this. So that's when I just dedicated, you know, six days a week. I mean, I was like, leaving these workouts and I was throwing up outside of the car because I would push myself to the point.
B
Michael, she's gnarly with her work.
A
I think that's a great message. I think, like, a lot of people are hesitant to say that they want to be above average these days for whatever reason. And I go. I always, like, go on these big tangents. I think it's like, it's commendable to say, like, I want to be above average. And I can be above average, right?
C
Yeah.
A
A lot of people are just like, it's like that message is like, looked down upon sometimes these days. But I think, like, that's the whole point of human potential is like, if. If you. If you can be above average, why would you not try?
C
Yeah. I mean, you're never, never going to know until you try it.
A
When you. Did you. Have you always weightlifted or was this something that you started doing later in life? Because a lot of women, I mean, now we talk about A lot on the show, but it. I found I've always weightlifted my whole life. But it was strange to me when she started doing. I was like, all right. Is this something I didn't attribute to thinking that women even did when I was younger?
C
Yeah, I actually have done quite some time, but not to the extent. I mean, it was the weightlifting. For me, it was a little scary because I didn't want to bulk up. I was a little heavier at the time, so I was scared. But then that's when the weight kind of started to shed off when I did lift a little heavier.
B
You almost have to, like, you gain. You gain the muscle and then you still, like, for me, I still had the fat on me. And so you feel like, you feel like you're regressing, right? And then all of a sudden it drops.
A
I always find it so funny when women say they don't want to bulk up. I'm like, do you understand that men go to the gym like every single day just to try to get a little. It's so hard.
C
It is very hard.
A
It's not that easy to bulk up.
C
I mean, everyone's scared of, you know, looking like a thug in a cocktail dress. But at the same time, you just have to take that risk and, like, it does end up working out in your favor. Especially, I think having the good diet and lifting the weights is. Is the perfect key.
B
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A
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A
But you touched on something earlier, which I think is really important. You know, I have younger sisters and I always tell them, like, listen, if you're starting to not be in the right mental head space, listen, therapy's great. And betterhelp.com skinny of course, use that and all that. But I always say like, if you're not feeling right in your mind, you don't feel good. Like go to the gym and get those endorphins going and get a sweat. Like it's, it's such a mind shift to just go in there and kind of like beat yourself up a little bit and like get a good sweat. And it you don't realize like how much that will do. Just that alone. Therapy's great and all that, but like do that first.
C
Yeah, I mean, I think a workout can solve 90% of your day to day problems, especially if it's hard because.
A
You can't think about anything else other than that when you're doing it, you want to serve.
B
You tell our audience exactly, like what you eat in a day, your supplements, like what your workout schedule is. They like a lot of detail.
C
Okay. I've never really done one of like what I eat. In a day, because it's just. That's so hard to do. I don't know how these women make these videos, but I'm a creature of habit. I do cottage cheese, tomatoes, hard boiled egg, cucumbers, avocado in the morning. I do ag1 greens. I'm not sponsored. I wish I was. I do love them.
B
We should sponsor you. I know on your podcast that you're going to launch. Keep going.
C
Yeah, I love it.
A
They're going to reach out now.
C
Yeah. So lunch for me, I mean, it's really just whatever I can get my hands on. I obviously have probably two cups of coffee in between there. I love a good Red Bull and I know that's probably really bad for me. And then I'm a grill master. I'm actually really good on the grill and that's kind of what I eat every night.
A
Steaks, chicken.
C
Steaks chicken, kush.
A
Everything.
C
Yeah, everything.
B
What about alcohol? What's the relationship like with the show? Because if I was on a reality show, I would be drinking every single time we film.
C
Yeah. Oh, I drink every time. And a lot of champagne. Yeah, I'm not. Listen, I'm a little hesitant of liquor. I'm a lightweight, I think. But the champagne, I just love.
B
Yeah, that's. That's my drink of choice. Champagne on ice. And I'm good to go.
C
And I'm like, you know what? I don't care about the sugar, I don't care about the salt. I'll jump in the sauna and I'll lay there for, you know, 45 minutes.
B
You love cold, plunging and sauna. You have a wellness room in your house, right? Tell us about that.
C
So the sauna is brutal. My husband actually loves it more than me, but he likes to get in there together. And I don't know about you guys, but I hate that you like to.
A
Do it with him.
C
No, because like he's breathing and then it's taken up the little bit of air I have in there and I'm like, dude, I can't.
B
I can't breathe.
C
Don't breathe. So, yeah, he's. I don't like to do that. But 45 minutes for me and then I just.
A
45 minutes in the sauna. Like one round.
C
One round.
A
That's a long ass time. What kind of heat are we talking here?
C
You don't want to know. Like 165.
A
Okay, that's okay.
C
Why?
B
What do you do?
A
No, no. Where ours is jacked up. But hold on.
B
No, no, no, no, no. Don't. You can't do that. What is. What is ours?
A
No, we go to two. We go to 200.
C
Oh, okay.
A
I almost killed Jesse. It's learned Arcelondo.
B
But.
A
But again, we're in there for like.
C
Like.
B
But I'm gonna send you the link. He bought this thing that makes it go high.
C
He, like, took the governor.
A
I took the governor off and I bought the upgrade. But. But anyways.
B
But I think that may be strategic to do 45 minutes on a little bit lower.
A
No, no, but that's still really good to go for that long.
B
Yeah, it's good for your partner.
C
Yeah.
A
I don't know, but I would die in mine. But yeah, like 1520 minute sessions, then I have to get out.
C
See, mine only goes to 175. But now if I know I can, like, pull a little.
A
I'm going to send your husband the information. Take off that governor.
C
Oh, my gosh.
A
Boost it up.
C
And then what's your.
B
Your cold plunge wellness situation.
C
Okay, this is my number one rule with cold plunge is right when you get in, you send it. Go completely under. Don't even. Yeah, all the way. And then you sit there for three minutes.
B
Three minutes.
C
And then you're done.
B
So you do 45. Three minutes.
C
Yep, 45, three minutes. And then once you get out of the cold plunge, you just want to, like, walk around the gym or like, I just walk around to, like, naturally let my body heat back up, and I do not get back in the sauna.
B
And as far as your workouts, you mentioned six times a week. What exact workouts are you doing?
C
So that was when I was weightlifting a lot more. I've chilled out on that. Right now I'm doing more like a bar classing hot Pilates kind of thing right now.
B
You said that you got, like, obsessed with it. Is that because of the show? Is that because of a bad relationship? Like, why did you get obsessed with it? And when you look back, like, what changed?
C
You know, I mean, obviously you kind of get obsessed with the results. You know, I mean, you're looking at your legs and you're like, I never thought that I could have this definition. And then you get a little too obsessed. And obviously at that point, I was single when I was doing all this all the time. And so I wasn't having too much fun. I was just more disciplined. And.
B
And then you're in your DMs and there's like the biggest celebrities in the world messaging you. So you're like, this is working. So I'm just gonna kick it up another knot.
C
And I didn't even have any plastic surgery when I was doing all that yet, so it was a good breakup's.
A
Good for motivation, though, don't you think? Like, that's when you, like, kind of get going again.
C
I told my husband, I'm like, just break up with me for like, a month.
B
Yeah, let's just see what happens.
C
Yeah.
A
Lauren, if you dump me, I'll be.
C
Like, yeah, it'll be over for you.
B
If I dumped you, you would put in your bio Lauren Bostic's ex husband.
A
Well, I've talked about this for years. I wouldn't put My dating bios would just be like, lauren Zach. I would use all that. I'd take pictures of us from the past.
B
Your girlfriend would be like, oh, but are we spending Thanksgiving with Lauren?
C
No, I'd be like, yeah, you're like, inst.
A
Listen, I tell my friends, one. One way is good as another. You know what I mean? Like, let's not make it hard.
C
Yeah.
B
What advice? This was a question a lot of the audience asked, would you give to single mothers out there?
C
Okay, so this is what my dad said about me, and I've done this as being a parent as well. And that's just. Don't kill their spirit. You know, there's. There's things about Hudson that are quirky or say if he's, you know, I just let him be him. I try not to be extremely hardcore or make him the vision that I want him to be. I let him be himself.
B
So I love that advice. Like, not projecting your personality onto them either. Like, my daughter. My daughter is a little bit more of an observer than I am. When I was little, I was like, came out tap dancing of the womb. And she's. She's not like that. She takes a little bit longer to get to know. She wants to vet you. And so I always try. Really. I really think about that. Like, I don't want to project my personality onto her.
C
Yeah. I mean, that's. That's all you have to do.
B
The scene of you. You with your. And I don't know that you saw this episode because you would have totally mentioned it. The scene with your little boy getting bullied.
A
Oh, no, I did see that. Pissed me off. I did see that.
C
Oh, my God. I just hate that they cut the part where I went over to the lady's house. Yeah. You want to talk about, like, what did you say? Well, of course no one was home. So what do I do? I Like, start talking to the ring camera. Like, ringing it. I'm like, hey, I'm writing you a note in case you're like, little shit, kid tears it up. But I need you to call me. Like, we have a problem. And the kid was in third grade. No parents were home. So the kid's just out there running in the road by himself. And so I instantly thought, I told Hudson, I said, he clearly has issues with family issues. I mean, how could you just leave him outside running around? So then I kind of refrained from getting any crazier. But that was something that I've never heard anyone speak about is the bullying and having to witness. That was really hard. That obviously there was no, let's say, script for that. When he comes walking in crying. He wasn't even supposed to be filming that day. When Hudson walked in, I don't know.
A
What I would do in this situation.
C
Well, I started crying because I was like, I'm going to freak out. Like, please. And my husband's like, okay. I was like, I know I might go to jail. Help me. Like, I'm. I'm like shaking. I don't know what to do.
A
I don't think that's something you could understand if you haven't become a parent yet.
C
Yeah.
A
Because I don't know, like I said, I don't know what I would do. I would. I'd probably go to jail.
C
Yeah, you think it. You're like, oh, my God.
A
Because you can't do anything to the kid. But, like, no, I'd have to go and, like, find the dad and, like, probably do something. The dad.
C
Right.
A
Like, it'd be like. Or like, if they're not talking, they gotta, like. Because there's. I think when you become a parent, you're obviously protective of yourself as an individual, but people don't understand. There's some trigger that happens when you have a child. It's so much more important to protect that child than even yourself. Like, imagine, like you've. If you've gone through life as the most important thing in your life is yourself. Right. Do you think? And maybe your family members. But then you have this child and you're like, you'll do anything.
C
Oh, for sure.
A
I can't imagine.
B
I think it's important, though, that the show left that in because it showed, like, your mama bear instincts toward your son. And you guys had had this history of you being a single mom and the show has showed you work so hard, whether you were doing your glam or running your business. It Showed you work. And then it was a moment that. You're right. It hasn't really. That moment, like, hasn't really been caught that I've seen on reality television. And the way that you handled it was very graceful, and I thought that it was. It was good. They left it in. Yeah. You know what I mean?
C
Yeah, it was good.
B
Yeah.
C
I mean, obviously there's the part after where I was like, get your shoes. We're getting in the car. Okay. So, you know, at this point, I could care less who was in the room. I was like, either you're following me where I'm going or what. And maybe it's a good thing they were there. That's what my husband says. Like, I think you toned it down thankfully because of the cameras. I was like, but my son's in the back seat, and he goes, that lady don't know who my mama is. And I was like, oh, my gosh. I was like, I don't even think, you know, like, what. How I'm feeling right now. But it was the worst. That was the worst day in filming history I've had so far.
A
What is a misconception you think the audience is unaware of when it comes to filming a show like this? Is there something that you wish people would know that they just don't know as being an audience member?
C
I mean. Yeah, but I probably shouldn't say that. Let me just say it, okay?
B
I mean, no peer pressure.
C
I mean, I think that, like, for me, it's one of those things being newly married, and people see me hanging around an ex. They assume that, like, I'm doing this just because I want to go hang out with them, but I'm getting paid to be here and have this conversation and be in the same room. So that's what we're doing.
B
It's also more than just getting paid, in my opinion. It's like, an incredible platform for you to do what you do and have mobility, to move how you move. I mean, billboards, entrepreneur endeavors, businesses. Like you're doing, in my opinion, like, you're also doing it as a mother.
A
But what you're saying is if you weren't filming a show with another cast member, you would not be in that situation as a normal person. That would. That wasn't filming.
B
It's not really rocket science.
A
Well, I know it's not rocket science, but that's what I'm saying. Sometimes people, they, like, they forget that they're. Listen, it's reality tv, but there is, you know, it is.
C
I Think people Forget that there's 15 people in a room when you're filming right now?
B
Who is your favorite on the cast besides your husband and Hudson?
C
I mean, we'll take Patricia out of that too, because she's always my favorite. Oh, this one's going to be hard because it's Craig. I mean, I love Craig. And then it's Austin.
B
So you guys are friends.
C
Yeah.
B
You guys are truly friends. Well, you didn't add Shep in there.
C
Well, yeah, because, you know, he'll always be a little bit on the outs. But all season, the producers were calling us the core four, so three guys and myself.
B
So is like, is that your husband's like, seems very confident and cool. He's like, those are your friends.
C
Yeah, he doesn't. He's. He has nothing to be insecure about with.
B
If I was on that show, I feel like I would be the same way. Yeah, I would be with those three guys. Like, yeah, it's very. There's almost something like Michael. There's almost a feminine energy. And I mean that in, like, in like, a nice way. Michael has a feminine energy, too. I like when guys are comfortable with their feminine energy. Like the fact that Craig has a sewing company. So, like, cool. I don't know. He leans into it.
A
I'm really manly, Lauren. Right.
C
I'm trying to be Martha Stewart and Craig is, like, giving me a run for my money. I'm like, craig, okay, don't start baking now because, like, I want to do that.
B
So why don't you guys do a collaboration? We should, like, some kind of, like, Madison, like, like, period kitchen. A kitchen collection.
C
Yeah. Like, I don't know if he's gonna share all that with me, but we'll see.
A
I like Craig. I feel like we would get along. I want him to come on this show. I've taught. We have. We have some mutual.
C
Yeah, you should.
A
Yeah. He seems like.
B
We also like Paige. Adorable.
C
I know. She's so cute.
B
Adorable. Who is someone that's new that's coming on the cast that you're like.
C
Well, I brought all the new ones on, so I like them.
B
You like all the new ones?
C
Yeah.
B
Is there anyone that you're not loving on the cast?
C
Well, he's gone now, but yeah.
B
Jt.
C
Yeah.
B
And have you always not gotten along with him or is this a new development in the season?
C
This is new. Brand new. I mean, I actually thought he was good for the show because everyone needs that one, like, crazy ass person. He made me look, like, completely normal, so I enjoyed him being on the show.
B
What are the things that viewers are going to be surprised about this season? Like, why is this a good season? Because you can tell it's going to be good. Why is it juicy?
C
Oh, I don't. I mean, one. We're getting a lot of episodes, so that's when you know it's going to be good. But we've got a messy group this year. You know, it's messy, and nobody. Everybody wants, you know, to be number one. So you'll see a lot of that.
A
How do you guys navigate that from a competition? Like, do you. Is there jealousy? Does it feel like it's a competition? Is it like, hey, that person got more camera time?
C
I mean, I think the guys feel that way. I don't. I don't really.
A
You'll do. The girls do, too, probably.
B
She's been kind of an effortless star.
A
Like, it hasn't been my issue.
C
Yeah, it hasn't been my issue.
B
But, I mean, I don't know that she's the right person to ask that.
C
I will say I went from being forbidden, like the forbidden fruit of the group to now being the narrator and the voice of the show. So I. Yeah. Very proud. You know what?
B
That's evolved, though. That's so cool.
C
Yeah, I love it.
B
Yeah.
C
I mean, I'm living, like, my dream life in the sense of, you know, I was working six days a week doing hair and things like that, and now I'm able to be home and be present and travel and do all the things.
B
What is your day to day that's not shown on the air? Like, what is the normal moments for Madison?
C
Okay. So I do flowers every Monday. Like, I cut flowers in my house. I'm a little, like, homemaker. I don't know if they're gonna show a lot of that this year, but that's like.
B
I see it from your house. Yeah.
C
But I think the. They show me very stern, and I'm a little soft, and in my home, at least, so I'm in my feminine energy for once.
B
That's really funny that you say that. I was doing an interview, and I said that exact same thing. I'm super masculine, but when I'm home, I'm like. It's like you get, like, a totally different version.
C
I know. You have me listening to jazz music and stuff. I mean, I'm like.
B
I'm like. I want to, like. I bake brownies and, like, light incense and just listen to Christmas jazz. It's. I feel like you have to have that balance, though, because you, you do have a masculine energy. Like, I relate to that. And it makes total sense that at home you're more feminine. What are other normal moments? Like, are you. Are you taking Hudson to school? Like, what are you doing throughout the day? Are you building another business? Like, what are you doing that we wouldn't see maybe on the show?
C
My husband and I, we're going into business together, but we. I know I need all the tips, so I wanted to do a pajama line because I wanted something that was like, comfy and feminine but still reasonable. Because sometimes when I post, you know, these pajamas, my girls are like, madison, come on, I'm not paying $200 for pajamas. And I was like, you don't need to. I'm just going to make some that everybody can afford and do. And that's kind of been exciting to see that come to light. It'll be called lacroix under my last name. So I'm excited and kind of trying to navigate that has been very interesting. So from what perspective?
B
I'm a pajama connoisseur and I will be the first to wear your pajamas. I love pajamas.
C
Oh, I can't wait to send you a big box.
B
I can't wait to try your pajamas. Are they colors or prints or silk or whatever?
C
So we're going to start just like, solid.
B
Okay.
C
Nothing too crazy until I get into, like, seasonal stuff, but. Yeah.
B
What's been the back end of building that business?
C
Well, I didn't realize how. How many opinions my husband had on styles. That's been the most interesting part about it. He's like, yeah. I was like, woo. Okay. I was like, I hate that. But it's been good. I don't know. I. So it's going to be hard, I think, but overall, the vision that we both came up with I think is going to be really good.
B
So this is what I'll say. It's the most challenging thing. No, it's the most challenging thing to work with your partner, especially when they want to blab about it every second.
C
Yeah.
B
But it's super rewarding if it works, and I do think it will work for you guys because your personalities seem very synergistic. If you were both, like, if you were both one way, I think it's harder. That's my opinion.
C
Yeah. No, I mean, you're, you're, you're right on that.
B
I mean, he knows. He's like operations and logistics, and I'm more like I. The visionary.
C
Yeah.
A
Or at least that's how you see it.
B
All the ideas.
C
I see that. No.
B
And all the aesthetic.
C
Yeah.
B
And you just stick to the back room.
A
If I could give you any advice. We were good at defining the lanes early on.
C
Okay.
A
Like, I will have a perspective and an opinion on aesthetics sometimes, but then like, I'll share it. And at the end of the day it's like she's final say. Right. But if, like on the other side, like, if it is operational or financials, like, I'll listen to her opinion, but then I'll have fun. We, like, we kind of got. I think when you say, like, everybody's got an equal say in everything. This is my opinion as someone who's worked with my spouse, I think that gets dicey because then it's like, like I look at it like this. If you're running a company and I feel this way whenever I see co CEOs, I'm like, oh, that thing's not going to go very well. Like you need to have somebody that's like the final say in something. And so for her business, like, she's the CEO for the Dear Me, like, you gotta have that. Because if not, then it gets to the point where you're fighting all the time.
C
Yeah. I kind of was like, just give me your money and I'll handle it. But that works.
A
Are there any, are there any portrayals that you think are unfair at this point that wish they would change or that you could speak to or you feel like it's kind of now you've done it for long enough that it's all kind of come out and evened out?
C
Yeah, I mean, like, I imagine, like.
A
Are there seasons that you finish and you're like, that season was unfair and I didn't get to like, bookend how I'm either looking or feeling. Does that make sense?
C
Well, I only see it the day before the public, so I really don't know. I have no control over it. So it was almost like, this is what you're given. Take it or leave it. And.
B
And you know, you haven't seen it yet.
C
I know.
A
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B
I like to have something cute that I take my kids to to school and in Austin right now it's freezing in the morning and I found the cutest fleece half zip up. So you want to get I think a size up if you can. So I got it in medium. Sometimes I would go small, but for this I would go medium. I got it in black and I also got it in white. It's so cute. It's by Travis Matthew and it's just a really plain, simple chic zip up. It goes with everything. Sometimes I'll wear a vest over mine to drop my kids off at school. Sometimes I'll wear it with a legging. You can take it to the gym. It's really simple, it's relaxed, it's very like trend forward. So I feel like it's it fits right, it looks very youthful and it's also very flattering. And they also just make sure that you feel confident in what they're wearing. And what I like about it is it's very simple so there's not like a ton of prints. I'm someone that likes very, very simple. I like to keep it monochromatic. They have navy on there. They have all the colors I love and it's such a good one to throw on in the mornings when it's cold. Even if it's not cold, they kind of have something for everyone. Consider Travis Matthew your holiday headquarters and discover the perfect gift for everyone on your list. Visit travismathew.com and receive 20% off your order with Code Skinny. Give the gift of Travis Matthew this year and make every celebration even more memorable. Discover the perfect gift for everyone on your list by visiting travismathew.com and get 20% off your order with Code Skinny.
A
So are there any seasons where you've called him and, like, that's not fair. That's not cool. Change that? Or has it just been like, shit, it is what it is.
B
What's she going to do?
C
Yeah, I mean, you kind of can't do anything. But a lot of times I'll look at a. I'll look at an episode. I kind of wait till the season's over before I give my opinions, because I think of it as, like, if I'm going to phone a friend, like, my higher ups that I'm going to complain to, I'm going to make sure that, like, they realize, like, this is the problem. And I never want that to happen again or be portrayed in that way. And they normally will listen, but I think it's the person that calls after every episode that they end up pinning to look bad.
A
Yeah. You know, I. Cause obviously these. These episodes that we do, they get clipped. And I never care if somebody sees something out of context on the Internet, like in a clip, and then they see it and they, you know, have a perspective, because I know that the full context always lives in the long form that we produce. Does that make sense? Yeah, but I would imagine I would be super frustrated if I was and things were being pulled out of context and then they never got to see. What do you mean?
B
That's the whole show.
A
No, I know that.
C
Well, the trailer is.
A
But even, like, the episode that comes out, I imagine there's stuff that they just don't show or context that doesn't get seen ever. We're here. Like, the full context always lives. Does that make sense?
C
Right. Yeah. I mean, it's one of those things you kind of sign yourself to the devil. I mean, you're like, we own you and we're going to say and do whatever you want. Sometimes I've even said things in the past and I'd be talking about something completely different, and then they would pan it to a whole nother story. And I'm like, but wait, I didn't. That's not how I said that or who I was even talking to.
A
That's exactly what I'm saying. Like, someone could pull some clip of me, but then if they go back to the full. It's in full context with you. Like, they can literally take something and mash it to something else. That's not even the same conversation.
B
It's like, the gag.
C
Yeah. I just wonder how the heck they do it because. Because it ends up like I'm talking exactly about that one thing that they're.
B
What's the worst moment you've had on air and your proudest moment?
C
Obviously. I feel like my reunions can sometimes be my worst moment. I mean, I like them.
B
Yeah.
C
They're really. I don't like that feeling of feeling ganged up on, especially when you have, like six people coming to you at one time. I know I'll end up being fine, but it's just uncomfortable because you can't just get up and run away, which some people do. But I think my proudest moment would be becoming the narrator. Narrator of the show. Has been a really proud moment.
B
Yeah, that's a good one. Yeah, that is a good one.
C
Because I'm like, listen up, bitches.
B
Yeah, I can't wait. You've been so open about plastic surgery. I appreciate it so much because I was just having this conversation with my friend Katie on air, and she's like, she's. She was talking about how all these celebrities are getting face lifts and brow lifts and neck lifts and no one's honest and everyone just thinks they're using filler.
C
Yeah.
B
And you've been so honest, and I think it's so cool. What has the reaction been like? I'm going to guess it's been positive.
C
Yeah. I mean, my following is 98% female.
B
Okay.
C
So I'm just. It's like me talking to the girls when I'm telling them, hey, listen, I got to my lowest weight. I had a 10 pound, 9 ounce baby. My skin was loose and I needed a tummy tuck. So that's why.
B
I didn't know you talked about a tummy tuck.
C
Yeah.
B
Oh, I didn't hear that one. That's not what I was talking about.
C
Mommy makeover. Never a face lift.
B
I know you didn't get a facelift. I'm not talking about Madison. Do not pull that clip publication. I'm talking about other celebrities that I talked about on a podcast, not Madison. I was actually talking about your boobs. Yeah.
C
Yeah.
B
Tummy tuck. Tell me about that.
C
Oh, it's brutal.
B
Does it hurt?
C
Yeah.
B
Would you do it again, though?
C
Oh, yeah.
B
So you love how it looks.
C
Yeah.
B
So here's.
A
Why is it painful? What do they.
B
What do you mean, why is it painful?
C
I mean, you know, let me take.
B
Your balls and throw them over your shoulder, Michael.
A
Doesn't seem like the same thing.
C
Yeah. Or to your butt. Crap.
A
Ow.
C
So when you gang up on your neck.
A
Well, I'm just wondering. I'm just.
B
Wait, I need to know about a time tuck. So it hurts a lot. And what's, like, what's the whole process?
C
So I did breast and tummy tuck at the same time. So small implant with a lift. Yeah. And then I. Like I said I was. I was probably like 10 pounds lighter than I am right now when I had this surgery. So it wasn't like this thing where people think, okay, you're removing fat. That. That wasn't the reason I was doing the tummy tuck. It was just the skin from the baby and they just sew it. They pull it down, sew it right back up, and you're kind of stuck like this.
B
Wait, I have this weird question that I think about, like, every day. Why don't they do it up?
C
That's what I said. Because you want the belly button to go up, right?
B
I like everything to go up.
C
Me, too.
A
Is there a scar?
B
That's what I'm wondering. I'm just the scar.
C
But I was like, well, if you're going to do the boobs, why not just pull the up and then stitch it from the underneath? Thank goodness. I'm not a doctor, but I.
B
Maybe there's something. Anatomy.
A
I've been doing it wrong this whole time.
C
Use your brain.
B
So here's my question. You've talked about maybe wanting to get pregnant again.
C
Yeah.
B
So do you have to get another tummy tuck? Not you, but like, oh, I tell you, you have to get another tummy tuck after you get pregnant again.
C
Well, first off, I am. That's why I'm terrified of being pregnant. I know it's worth it. Like, I feel like. Like, you know, I've been in shape before. After a baby, I can do it again. All that kind of stuff doesn't bother me, but it's more of, like, it is tight, you know? So to think to have a baby, which I'm praying for, like Thumbelina or something. Not really, but I'm going to be very mindful. Tinkerbell. I'm not going to be very mindful.
B
The micro dick I saw before Michael. Oh, my God.
C
But, yeah, I'm scared of that. But I will be doing a tummy tuck again.
B
Okay. So. So it's one of those things that if you get, like. I'm just wondering, like, if I was gonna have more kids, you wouldn't get it. You know, I guess you could get it done, but then you get it done again.
C
Yeah.
A
Did you do this before. I mean, I'm ignorant of this. Did you think you were. You were done having kids and now you.
C
Okay, yeah.
A
So you. So now you're like, I was finished, but now you might be going back into it.
C
Yes. And I'm looking at my husband like, boy, you're crazy. He's.
B
He's ready to go back into. To it.
C
Oh, yeah, that's.
B
It's. That's a gnarly endeavor to think you're done and then go. You have to kind of wrap your mind around it.
C
Yeah, that's crazy.
A
You had your first child at 22. That's really. I mean, I know people do that, but that's very young. I mean, because we. We had ours at 33. So.
C
Yeah, I'm 34 now, so I'm gonna start all over.
B
Does he want one or five?
C
Well, one, he would be fine, but I'm like, if I'm gonna ruin it all over again, might as well have two.
B
Yeah. You could throw twins in there.
C
No, like I said, I don't know how. How am I even going to be able to.
B
You're going to do great. And you are. Like you said, you already know what to do. I also will tell you, my first pregnancy, I didn't know anything about weightlifting and gained so much weight. And then the second pregnancy, I did know about weightlifting, and I was able to do it the whole pregnancy, and it was a completely different experience.
C
Yeah, See, I've never done weightlifting pregnant because.
B
So it's different. It will be different. So don't feel. I hope your baby's not ten pounds, though.
C
Yeah, no, like I said, I'm going to be on my same diet that I'm on right now. Not diet, but mindful eating, you know?
B
Yeah, great. They're going to pull the clip. Madison lacroix says she's going to diet while pregnant and smoke cigarettes. What is the best advice that Patricia has ever given you? And you could give us a lot of pieces. I. I think it's such a special relationship that you guys have.
C
Well, a lot of the things she tells me I couldn't say on here. I'll let her do that. But she always told me, you are single until proven engaged. So until the man tells you, like, listen, I'm going to marry you, blah, blah, blah, you know, don't close off opportunities for somebody who is ready and et cetera.
B
I like when she says, I'm no shrinking violet.
C
Everything she says is just iconic.
B
I studied her book, the Art of Charm. She Tells you what stationery to buy, what sheets to get, what linens. I mean, she's really an incredible taste.
A
You know, we did an episode with.
B
Her at her house, and we went to the house.
C
Yeah. She talks about ut. I told her I was coming here, and she's like, oh, tell them I said, hello.
A
I haven't seen. We haven't seen her. I would like to see her again. We haven't seen her.
B
I'm her biggest fan.
C
Oh, she loves you.
B
I'm her biggest fan. I think she's absolutely fabulous.
C
She is. I mean, and stunning. I mean, I gave her her first spray tan one time. And let me just say, the woman, I'm like, you have the fountain of youth back here. Let me get a little, like, swig of that.
B
Oh. When I went on to interview her, I was like, let me look in your bathroom. Bathroom?
C
Yeah.
B
I was like, Dr. Dennis Gross pads. I mean, she's really like, she has gorgeous skin.
C
Yes.
B
Speaking of skin, you got to give us some beauty and skin tips. I feel like, you know. Did you do your own makeup today?
C
No.
B
Oh, well, you do do your own makeup and hair.
C
I feel like I do.
B
Okay, you have the tips.
C
Give us the tips. Okay. Good skincare, obviously, to start. Flawless makeup number one. I do think that as I get older, less is more. When it comes to foundation and things like that, powder can be a little harsh. But when you're in camera and things like that, obviously we're piling that on. So day to day, be light handed.
B
I agree. It's youthful.
C
Yeah.
B
The too much makeup look, it ages you.
C
Okay, can I tell you something? I was like, am I gonna get a spray tan? And then I was like, I don't know. I think spray tans are going out. And then I was like, I was like, wait, Lauren's not. She doesn't look like tan like a spray tan. I was like, it. I'm not getting a spray tan. So I'm out here raw, tight, son.
B
I like how it looks. I like how it looks.
C
It does. It looks better, right?
A
Lauren's absurd. She'll be like, don't use any cologne. Which is fine. I don't. And then she'll have somebody once in a while come in with like a giant paint gun.
B
I haven't gotten a spray tan in a while. I. I do think that it makes you look sometimes long in the two.
C
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
A
But the person, it's like you're going through a person. She's like, don't spray that cologne. And there's, like, this person's, like, with, like, a giant spray gun.
B
Okay, well, your hairspray is atrocious.
A
I don't use it. I didn't use hairspray.
B
Okay, well, give us what's some juicy gossip about the boys of Southern Charm. What's something funny about them?
C
I feel like they are what you see on TV is what you get in real life.
B
Okay.
C
I mean, they are that crazy and. And funny.
B
They remind me dramatic. The three, like, three characters from, like, a Disney show.
C
Yes. It's like. Yes. I was going to say, like, hocus pocus, but I'm trying to think. What? I don't know. They fight, they get back together. They're all just, like, in love with each other.
B
Yeah. It's almost. It's, like, so endearing.
C
It's like, just be together.
B
Yeah.
A
We should go down. We should go back to Charleston.
B
We're going to go back to Charleston.
A
We keep saying we're going to do.
C
Yeah, Come on.
B
You know, my doctor and my favorite skin person is in Charleston. If you don't go to the conversation.
A
Do you know the Conovers?
C
No. Is that your. Funny enough people.
A
Dr. Craig Conover is the same name as Craig Conover, but this is Dr. Craig Conover, and he's in Charleston.
B
Not to be confused with Craig.
C
Don't tell him that. He'll start calling himself doctor at Kelly.
B
Conover's office every week. I'm going to introduce you to her.
C
Oh, my God, Please.
B
Not that you need anything. No, I do, but she's a. Her skin is so fabulous. Us.
A
She's like, they're the best.
C
Are we doing nad now? Have y'all.
A
I get it from Dr. Craig.
B
We get it from Dr. Craig.
C
Bingo. That's all I need to know.
A
He's there. He's the best in his.
B
I'm gonna put you on text with them.
C
Okay.
B
You. They do, like, anything youthful.
C
Okay.
B
They're the best.
A
I'm ready to go down there and make a cameo on Southern Char.
B
No, we're gonna.
C
We're gonna come down party.
B
I think that the next interview with Madison is at Patricia's house.
A
Let's invite ourselves over.
B
Yeah. Over martini and caviar. And we do a whole interview with both of you guys.
C
We would love that.
B
Yeah.
C
And then you guys can tell us how we get started on our podcast.
B
I'm going to tell you before then. You guys tell you that before then.
A
We'll tell you that.
C
Okay.
B
And you will crush it, which I'll tell You off air before you go. How do you make a Madison taco? I saw this TikTok. I don't know if it was a taco or a wrap. Excuse me, how do you make a Madison wrap?
C
Oh, I was like, ooh, I don't know if I would make tacos.
B
A wrap. It's a wrap.
C
Okay, well, now with all the listeria, I don't really eat deli meat anymore. But I know listeria from the deli meat. Yeah. Have you not seen the boar's head? Everybody's dying.
B
I don't read the news.
A
We're gonna be the first ones to go. Lauren's like a major.
B
I drink raw milk, so.
C
Oh, I mean.
B
Okay, tell us about the listeria meat wrap.
C
Okay. How enticing.
A
How enticing.
C
No, I mean. Okay, so the wrap starts with, like, a spinach wrap. Wrap. Turkey, lettuce. You could throw a pickle in there if you're getting crazy. A little spicy mustard, and that's kind of it.
B
And you make this wrap after you work out all the time on TikTok. Michael, it looks so good.
A
It sounds good. It doesn't sound that groundbreaking, to be honest.
C
It's not.
B
It's pretty groundbreaking.
C
I will say I am like. I'm so plain when it comes to, like, the things that I eat now. It's one thing if I'm gonna go, like, make a meal for my family and stuff. I'll get, you know, more intense with it. But for me, I'm just like, I just gotta get through. I don't live to, like, eat is my thing.
B
I just take fuel aware. That's how Michael is too. I think that you should try my bowl of beef. If you're. If you're scared of deli meat, I think you should switch. You tried my bowl of beef? Just do exactly what you did with the wrap, but do it in a bowl of beef.
C
Okay.
B
Yeah, Like a force of nature ground beef.
C
Yeah. Mine was tasting really gamey. I don't know why.
B
Did you use ancestral blend Force of nature?
C
I don't think so.
B
Okay, that one is like. There is.
A
There's some heart and liver in that one.
B
There's some heart and liver. Liver. But heart and liver is so good for your hair and nails. I feel like if you just put some cheese on it and.
C
Oh, yeah, yeah.
B
Sauce. You just get it down.
C
Okay, I'll do that.
B
I'm just show you the right one.
C
Hold up on the deli meat until, you know, they give us the clear. But don't try.
B
I'm not really, like, a follow the news to listeria kind of person. I feel like I'll still eat it.
C
I will say this. If I die from eating deli meat, just know I'll be pissed off. Like, I mean, I would be living.
A
It's not a good way to go out.
C
No.
A
You know, imagine, like, all the things you've done in your life, and then, like, the headline is, like, deli meat took her out.
B
I could see Lauren Bostic dying from raw milk.
A
That would be a turn of events.
B
Madison, where can everyone find you? You guys go watch all her Instagram story highlights.
A
They're so if you die, am I moving to Charleston?
C
Sure.
B
What's the ratio for.
A
Ratio's pretty good. Ratio is pretty good.
C
Yeah.
B
Yeah.
C
8 to 1.
A
8 to 1.
B
8 to one.
C
I mean, listen, I know you'd be exhausted, hurts.
A
It would just be like me, and I'll take a picture with your gravestone and be like, this is Lauren, my ex. Yeah.
B
And here you could be the fourth guy on.
A
I'll adopt an accent real quick.
B
Do your accent. Yeah, no, you can do it. Come on. Do your. Do your Southern accent.
A
If you have one.
B
You do it in the car. All I can only do.
A
I can only do it if I'm around somebody talking for a while.
B
You just were around someone.
A
No, no, I need, like, three days.
B
He does it. I'm gonna record it when he's doing it.
C
Okay, good.
B
Madison, where can everyone find you? Support your pajama line. Where. Where can they follow you on Tik Tok? Tell us all the things.
C
Follow me@atison. Lacroix.
B
What is in Madison? Lacroix's bag.
A
It's a weapon. Look at that thing.
C
Well, this is like Mary Poppins. You're going to be shocked when you see everything. Okay, we have lip liner by Lawless.
B
Love her lip liner.
C
We have a hair tie lanage. Is that how you say that?
B
Yep, yep. Love that one.
C
Okay. An elixir. You know, a good little.
B
Okay.
C
Lumify. I didn't bring any money, but phone charger just in case. Tide pin keeps going, man.
A
A lot in there.
C
Little toothbrush.
B
You do got a lot in there.
C
Two bobby pins because sometimes you just need to throw up an update. And some little perfume.
B
Love it.
C
That's all.
B
Madison, thank you for coming on the podcast.
C
Thank you for coming.
A
Thank you for doing this. Thank you for making the trip.
B
And you crushed your first podcast.
C
Oh, really? Thank you. Thank you. Y'all made it so comfortable.
B
This brow peptide has changed my brows and my lashes. You can shop it now@shopskinnyconfidential.com. that's shopskinnyconfidential combination.
Podcast Summary: Madison LeCroy Tells All: Southern Charm Drama, Cast Conflicts, Diet & Fitness Routines, & Famous DMs That Blew Her Mind
Release Date: December 12, 2024
Podcast: The Skinny Confidential Him & Her Podcast
Hosts: Lauryn Bosstick & Michael Bosstick
Guest: Madison LeCroy, Cast Member of Bravo's Southern Charm
In this engaging episode of The Skinny Confidential Him & Her Podcast, Lauryn and Michael Bosstick welcome Madison LeCroy, a vibrant and dynamic personality from Bravo's Southern Charm. Madison shares her journey from being a behind-the-scenes glam artist to becoming a prominent cast member, offering listeners an unfiltered look into her life on and off the reality TV show.
Madison recounts her initial role in Southern Charm as the show's hair and makeup artist. Her dedication and flair quickly caught the attention of the producers, leading to her transition in front of the camera.
Madison [03:08]: "They were like, wait, this girl. We've got to get her in front of the camera, not behind the camera."
Her foray into on-screen drama began when she started dating one of the cast members, a move she describes as both exciting and foreboding.
Madison [03:42]: "I knew instantly he wasn't, like, husband material. Sorry."
Madison opens up about her personal life, highlighting her experience as a single mother and her subsequent marriage. She shares heartfelt insights into co-parenting and the profound impact her son has had on her life.
Madison [03:39]: "I was married for four years. I had my son when I was 22, so I was very young. He's 12 now."
Discussing her marriage, Madison emphasizes the importance of balancing personal life with the demands of reality TV.
Madison [16:06]: "We just kind of threw ourselves into it. And we just knew that the main focus was obviously our marriage."
A significant portion of the conversation delves into Madison's dedication to fitness and mindful eating. She candidly discusses her past struggles with overworking out and undereating, and how she now prioritizes feeling good over extreme fitness regimes.
Madison [00:25]: "The focus is just to feel good and that's the main thing that I try to do day to day."
Madison explains how weightlifting served as her therapeutic escape, replacing traditional therapy sessions.
Madison [00:25]: "Instead of going to therapy, I would just go lift weights. That was like my escape."
When asked about her diet, Madison outlines a typical day’s meals, emphasizing simplicity and nutritional balance.
Madison [27:08]: "I do cottage cheese, tomatoes, hard-boiled egg, cucumbers, avocado in the morning. I do ag1 greens."
Madison discusses the influx of messages from celebrities on her social media platforms post her rise to fame. Initially skeptical, she describes the surprise and eventual discomfort upon realizing the authenticity of these interactions.
Madison [14:11]: "I got huge celebrities DMing me. Is it flattering? Are you going on dates with them? Are you grossed out?"
She candidly shares her mixed feelings about receiving DMs, balancing intrigue with a sense of being overwhelmed.
Madison [14:41]: "I was like, am I being catfished? Like, I'm just a girl from the south that's like, small town. Like, there's no way that these A-list celebrities are interested at that point."
Madison opens up about the emotional turmoil following her father's passing and her husband's health challenges. These personal hardships were interwoven with her experiences on the show, adding layers of complexity to her public persona.
Madison [16:23]: "This year's my most emotional year I've ever had. So I'm dealing with, like, my dad had just passed when I started airing with this."
Her resilience shines through as she discusses the support system her husband provides during these trying times.
Madison [17:11]: "My husband has obviously just been there a thousand percent."
Transitioning from reality TV, Madison shares her entrepreneurial spirit by launching a pajama line with her husband. She details the challenges and rewards of building a business together, emphasizing affordability and comfort.
Madison [42:17]: "We're going to start just like, solid. Nothing too crazy until I get into, like, seasonal stuff."
The initiative reflects her commitment to creating products that resonate with a broad audience, balancing style with practicality.
Madison offers a nuanced view of reality television, distinguishing between her authentic self and the curated portrayals on the screen. She emphasizes the genuine friendships and the real emotions that underpin the on-camera drama.
Madison [07:49]: "It's pretty real. I mean, obviously, there's going to be situations that I wouldn't put myself in, but it is real from that point on."
She discusses the inevitable conflicts that arise when personal life collides with scripted scenarios, highlighting the importance of maintaining integrity.
Drawing from her expertise as a glam artist, Madison shares practical beauty and skincare advice, advocating for simplicity and embracing one's natural features.
Madison [59:58]: "Good skincare, obviously, to start. Flawless makeup number one. I do think that as I get older, less is more."
Her approach underscores a minimalist philosophy, promoting a youthful and natural appearance over heavy makeup layering.
Madison courageously discusses her experiences with plastic surgery, including a tummy tuck, to address postpartum changes. Her openness serves as an empowering message for women navigating similar decisions.
Madison [55:04]: "I had a breast and tummy tuck at the same time. The tummy tuck was to remove the excess skin from the baby."
She reflects on the physical and emotional aspects of her surgeries, advocating for transparency and self-acceptance.
Madison imparts heartfelt advice to single mothers, emphasizing the importance of allowing their children to grow authentically without imposing their own aspirations.
Madison [32:07]: "Don't kill their spirit. There are things about Hudson that are quirky or say if he's, you know, I just let him be him."
Her guidance highlights the significance of supportive parenting and fostering individuality.
Madison [00:25]: "The focus is just to feel good and that's the main thing that I try to do day to day."
Madison [03:42]: "I knew instantly he wasn't, like, husband material. Sorry."
Madison [27:08]: "I do cottage cheese, tomatoes, hard-boiled egg, cucumbers, avocado in the morning. I do ag1 greens."
Madison [16:23]: "This year's my most emotional year I've ever had. So I'm dealing with, like, my dad had just passed when I started airing with this."
Madison [32:07]: "Don't kill their spirit. There are things about Hudson that are quirky or say if he's, you know, I just let him be him."
Conclusion
Madison LeCroy's candid revelations offer a multifaceted view of life as a reality TV star balancing personal hardships, fitness ambitions, entrepreneurial ventures, and motherhood. Her unfiltered conversation with Lauryn and Michael provides listeners with inspiration, practical advice, and an authentic glimpse into the challenges and triumphs of navigating fame and personal growth.