Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
Bollywood

Q&A: Lilly Singh Tackles Passwords, '13 Reasons Why,' Auditioning For Hollywood

Darpan News Desk, 01 May, 2017 01:51 PM
    TORONTO — YouTube mega-star Lilly Singh didn't want to pen just any old self-help book — she wanted her advice to rock the shelves.
     
    So when she embarked on writing "How to Be a Bawse" — her slang for an epic "boss" — it was an all-or-nothing affair.
     
    "I never do anything less than 200 per cent," she says, "which is both amazing and slightly problematic."
     
    When you've already conquered the Internet with 11.5 million YouTube subscribers it gives you some freedom in the publishing world. Singh wanted her debut to have a certain sheen and the book has it with a glossy magazine-like paper stock and colourful pages punctuated by pops of vibrant hues.
     
    "When I read books the esthetic is the large part for me," she says. "Everything down to how the pages feel."
     
    Singh talked to The Canadian Press about making a foray into a new medium, tips for managing digital distractions, and her future.
     
     
     
     
    CP: You pack the book with tips for readers trying to balance their busy lives with the plentiful distractions in today's social media world. One of the best tips you suggest is getting a friend to change your Netflix password when you need to focus, and only letting them reward you with the new password when you've completed the task. How'd you come up with that?
     
    Singh: I had a friend once who told me to change their Facebook password. And then I forgot it, so she really just had to restart her account. But it goes down to the fact sometimes we can't control ourselves and we're disappointing ourselves, so the best thing is to put it in someone else's hands. The easiest thing is passwords, (they) control everything we do in life. I barely remember my own password, as is.
     
     
     
    CP: You talk about Netflix a lot. Are you addicted?
     
    Singh: I'm just an addict to everything that has good content — so YouTube, Netflix, HBO, all of that. If I have a creative block when I'm writing a (YouTube) script, I will watch an episode of a new show. More often than not, I will think of at least two script ideas.
     
     
     
    CP: So what have you been watching?
     
    Singh: I just finished "Santa Clarita Diet," Drew Barrymore's new show. It's a comedic zombie show and I'm like, "I want to do something zombie on my channel."
     
     
     
    CP: Have you seen the series "13 Reasons Why"? It's generating a lot of controversy over its portrayal of suicide and how one teenager's classmates were totally oblivious to her mental state.
     
    Singh: I actually just started watching it. I'm like four episodes in. I definitely resonate with the idea that you don't always know what's going on with someone's life. Sometimes even being in the public eye I get that a lot. I get people who meet me for all of 10 seconds and make a judgement call on who I am, and have no idea what the rest of my day is like.
     
     
     
    CP: You address your own depression in the book; highlight your state of mind in 2009 at your lowest and frame it against a more recent moment when you felt success. Why was addressing that important?
     
    Singh: I wanted to show ... that I have been through some challenges. I didn't find it important to talk about what those challenges were, just the fact that I've been through a really tough period. I wanted to talk about that so people knew they were taking advice from someone who's actually had to pick herself back up.
     
     
     
    CP: You talk about dreams of acting in films but recount a particularly stressful Hollywood audition. Have you set aside that goal for now?
     
    Singh: I hate auditions so much, but I understand they're a necessary evil and I do them. After my book tour is done I'll probably do a lot more.
     
     
     
    CP: What would be your ideal role?
     
    Singh: It would definitely be a Khaleesi — "Game of Thrones." I just wanna kill people, ya know? I wanna be powerful. I wanna ride a horse. And I'd like to behead someone on TV. I think that's very fun. Dragons? I mean, come on.
     
     
     
    CP: You finished the Canadian leg of your book tour and will embark on a run of global dates throughout May. What's next for Lilly Singh?
     
    Singh: Immediately? Pad Thai. After that, I'm going to dominate the world in one way or another.
     

    MORE Bollywood ARTICLES

    The Mahabharata: UAE-Based Indian To Invest Rs 1000 Crore In The Epic Multilingual Film

    The Mahabharata: UAE-Based Indian To Invest Rs 1000 Crore In The Epic Multilingual Film
    UAE-based business honcho B.R. Shetty on Monday announced that he will invest Rs 1,000 crore to produce the costliest ever Indian film titled "The Mahabharata".

    The Mahabharata: UAE-Based Indian To Invest Rs 1000 Crore In The Epic Multilingual Film

    Nasir Saab The Only Man I Ever Loved: Asha Parekh

    Yesteryear actress Asha Parekh says the late filmmaker Nasir Hussain was the only man she ever loved.

    Nasir Saab The Only Man I Ever Loved: Asha Parekh

    Poonam Pandey Says Google Banned Her App

    Actress Poonam Pandey says her newly launched app, which she promised would have "bold" content, has been banned by Google.

    Poonam Pandey Says Google Banned Her App

    Twinkle Khanna Says Her Father Rajesh Khanna Knew She Would Be A Writer

    Twinkle Khanna Says Her Father Rajesh Khanna Knew She Would Be A Writer
    Former actress and now writer Twinkle Khanna, famous on social media as Mrs Funnybones, says her father and late legendary actor Rajesh Khanna wanted her to be a writer.

    Twinkle Khanna Says Her Father Rajesh Khanna Knew She Would Be A Writer

    Ayushmann Khurrana Used To Sing In Trains And Collect Money

    Ayushmann Khurrana Used To Sing In Trains And Collect Money
    Bollywood actor-singer Ayushmann Khurran says he used to perform in express trains from Delhi to Mumbai and collect money during his college days.

    Ayushmann Khurrana Used To Sing In Trains And Collect Money

    Gurmeet Choudhary Approached For Indonesian TV Show

    Gurmeet Choudhary Approached For Indonesian TV Show
    Gurmeet Choudhary, who was last seen onscreen in "Laali Ki Shaadi Mein Laaddoo Deewana" has been approached to feature in an Indonesian television show. The actor says it came as a surprise to him.

    Gurmeet Choudhary Approached For Indonesian TV Show