Celebrities
The Playboy Interview: George Carlin On what would have been his 89th birthday, revisit George Carlin's first Playboy Interview.
As our guest Playboy Advisor, the author and entrepreneur addresses love, sex, sobriety, and so much more.
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BunnieXo has lived a million lives, from high-end escort to podcast host to stepmom of musician husband Jelly Roll’s two children. Now with a new memoir, “Stripped Down: Unfiltered and Unapologetic”(Dey Street Books), she lays it all bare, continuing a career built on unflinching honesty and undeniable charm—which makes her the ideal woman to answer all your toughest questions on love, marriage, jealousy, and everything in between.
I actually had to go through that whenever I got sober, and it’s definitely a journey. You have to give yourself time, and you have to give yourself grace, and you have to relearn what you like sober, because what you like when you’re drunk and what you like when you’re sober are two different things. Go take an art class. Go dabble in something where you have to meet people and there’s not alcohol—anything that’s not in a bar setting. Go to church—go somewhere that you’re able to mingle with other people but not be tempted to drink.
In my experience, confidence in bed isn’t about being extreme; it’s about being present and hon- est. You don’t have to match her intensity overnight. Ask what she loves, try what feels exciting to you, and say no when something doesn’t. Enthusiasm is hotter than performance.
My biggest thing with building my relationship with my bonus baby— don’t use the word “step”—is let them come to you. Don’t force your love on them. Don’t force your opinions on them. Don’t be too overbearing. Just be that soft, solid, strong point in their life, so that they are drawn to you. They’ll naturally start gravitating towards you and feeling safe when they see that you’re consistently the same person.
Sounds like you need a new group of friends. Tell them to grow up.
Make a woman laugh. Looks are not everything. I’ve never dated a man for their looks. I’ve always dated a man for how he made me feel. If a woman is only dating you for your looks, you need to find another woman, because looks fade, especially when you get older. If you’re going to grow old with somebody, not everybody’s going to be hot when they’re old.

When I kept relationships private, it was either to protect them or to keep options open, and those are very different motives. You’re allowed to want clarity about which one it is.
When it comes to sex, slowing down after weight loss and Ozempic can be tricky. Big body changes mess with your head and hormones. Add a medication that blunts appetite and it’s not shocking libido dips too. It’s likely an adjustment period, not a permanent shift.
When I dated after leaving the industry, I had to unlearn the idea that income equals power equals worth. If your discomfort is about ego, that’s yours to unpack. If it’s about ambition, then grow because you want to, not because you feel replaced. A partnership isn’t a scoreboard.
I don’t think you need to lay it all out on the first date. But definitely start dropping tidbits on the second date, because you also don’t want to build a false pretense with somebody. If you know somebody has a hard boundary with certain things, you don’t want to, one, waste each other’s time, but, two, you also just want to be honest with who you are and what you’ve been through. If the person’s right for you, they’re going to love you and all of your darkness.
When I dressed sexy, it was rarely about men and almost always about how I felt in my own skin. The only thing that mattered was whether my partner trusted me. Other men looking isn’t betrayal; secrecy and disrespect are.
This only works if the rules are crystal clear. Blurred boundaries always cause drama. If you’re uneasy, it means the agreement isn’t defined well enough yet. That’s a conversation, not a crisis.
Confidence is calm and specific, not sexual and not pushy. If you’d be OK seeing your message on a billboard, send it. If you wouldn’t, rewrite it. Curiosity beats cleverness every time.
The biggest mistake I see is people thinking they have no transferable skills, when in reality they’ve learned branding, boundaries, negotiation, reading people, stamina, and self-management at a level most corporate workers never do. You don’t find the next path by thinking harder; you find it by trying small things until something clicks.