Timothée Chalamet, Kendrick Lamar Super Bowl interview

In the crossover we never knew we needed, Timothée Chalamet and Kendrick Lamar connected in front of the rapper’s Super Bowl and half -time performance to discuss their creative approaches.

In a three-minute, black and white clip sent on the NFL Network’s “Good Morning Football” on Friday, the Oscar-nominated actor and Grammy-winning rapper ran around in a gnx-for what ors got really about embrace failure and the importance of being vulnerable in art. On Sunday, Lamar appears at the break, while Kansas City Chiefs is facing the Philadelphia Eagles in New Orleans.

Lamar started the convo by asking Chalamet about his preparation process and how he bends his plays in between projects. “That knows is if you don’t have an audience, it’s just a kind of insanity. And you’re just what are you doing? “Said Chalamet. “So I definitely try to warm up, and then you know, that self -awareness will lose when you finally get back out there. But it takes time. ”

He added, “I always try to embrace failure – you talked about this during the day – the most important part of a bad day is the way you leave it. If you can leave a bad roof or a bad day with a positive attitude, you have nothing to fear. ”

On his part, Lamar said he “is always locked inside and always tries new things” even if they don’t end up going anywhere. “I have to keep the pen moving. That’s my kind of reason, ”he said. “And it has also given me the opportunity to teach myself, you know, find out who I am.”

Lamar continued that you have in writing “to sit and go through the emotions and be vulnerable to it.” He added, “Many of these items, I write, man, a lot of things that I would probably never have expressed or even known about myself if it wasn’t for an instrumental behind it.”

In a serious moment, Chalamet said to Lamar: “Just being a fan of your music forever and knowing, see where you are now, man. It’s just crazy, Super Bowl Halfime Show. And you just keep climbing, bridge. It’s like amazing. ”

Chalamet, currently ready for an Oscar to play Bob Dylan in “A Complete Unknown”, has long been an avid rap and sports fan. He has previously said that rapper Kid Cudi inspired him to become an artist and the two eventually met and became friends. The chalamet also has deep in the genre a bit himself, with videos of him rapping an original song for math class called “Statistics” and acted as Nicki Minaj in a high school talent show that goes viral. As for sports, he is a lifelong New York Knicks fan and surprised viewers last year when he appeared on ESPN’s “College Game Day” as a guest picker, which properly predicted that Ohio University would interfere with Miami University in the Mac championship.

See the full conversation below.