so we got her and robert duvall and dwight yoakum -- people i'm real close to. tavis: for something that you didn't want to do, did you find this in any way cathartic, therapeutic at all? >> i did, yeah, particularly stuff about growing up. that was nice. also, the couple of chapters where i talk about the social network and how i think that's kind of dehumanizing us and everything. that was - tavis: i'm going to get to that, too, i promise you. i really am fascinated. that was, for me, the more fascinating part of the book, your thoughts about -- how might i put this -- the decay of our civilization and the devolution of our culture. we'll talk about your thoughts about that in a second. but i want to start at the beginning. i am always fascinated by people's parents. there's so much, i think, to learn in the starting place for any real conversation about how humanity starts, i think, with our mother and our father. i have a friend that says all the time that we are who we are because somebody loved us, and the older i get, i added to that, or didn't. >> yeah,