Bradley Cooper is ‘totally’ fine with being naked around the house — he used to shower with his dad
Not leaving much to the imagination, are we?
Bradley Cooper revealed that he is “totally” comfortable walking around his house in his birthday suit since his late father “always” did the same thing while he was growing up.
Cooper, 49, appeared on Monday’s episode of Dax Shepard’s “Armchair Expert” podcast where the host admitted his family was “naked all the time.”
“Me too,” Cooper replied.
“And by the way, I was like that,” the “Maestro” star continued. “Not with my mom but with my dad. My dad was always nude, always took showers with him.”
Shepard asked, “And you’re quite comfortable nude?”
“Totally,” Cooper confirmed.
Shepard proceeded to tell Gigi Hadid’s boyfriend that he and wife Kristen Bell’s daughters, Lincoln, 10, and Delta, 9, regularly “file in” to the bathroom to talk during his “poopy time,” which Cooper could also relate to.
“My bedroom, the bathtub, and toilet, and bed are all in the same room,” Cooper explained.
“It’s 24/7, dude,” he told the “Employee of the Month” alum about his unbothered lack of privacy from his and Irina Shayk’s 6-year-old daughter, Lea. “There are no doors… The stairs go up and it’s all one floor.”
“Do you find that your daughter doesn’t care at all?” Shepard asked.
Cooper replied, “Yeah, no, no. We talk where I’m on the toilet, she’s in the bathtub; that’s sort of the go-to.”
Although Cooper and his daughter are now built-in bathroom buddies, “The Hangover” star bluntly admitted elsewhere on the podcast that it took him until Lea was 8 months old for him to realize that he really loved her.
Cooper explained that during the first few months of Lea’s life, he didn’t understand when fellow parents would say, “I would die in a second for my kid.”
“It’s dope. It’s cool. I’m watching this thing morph,” he recalled thinking during her first months of life. “That’s my experience — fascinated by it. Loved taking care of it. But would I die if someone came in with a gun?”
Thankfully, by month eight, Cooper recalled, “Then all of a sudden, it’s like no question,” calling his daughter a grounding, “massive anchor” in his fast and flashy life.
“I’m like, ‘Why? We’re speeding! I just got an upgrade on the boat, and I know where the wind’s coming in.’ They’re like, ‘No, no, no, there’s a tsunami coming in, and you need an anchor and we’re gonna drop it,” he said.
“Because this is gonna dictate everything you do from now on. Your DNA is going to tell you that there’s something more important than you.”