Hey, Josh.
What's happening?
Thank you!
Well, I usually listen to my music.
This is what I do in the car.
I have an eclectic taste in music.
It depends on the mood: whether I want to be inspired,
or whether I just want to...
thump it out.
Hit me!
A God Like You - Kirk Franklin
# How y'all doing this evening? #
A God Like You - Kirk Franklin
A God Like You - Kirk Franklin
# How y'all doing this evening? #
# Do y'all want that bounce? #
Because sometimes you need to bounce before you do something.
# That bounce? #
# Everybody wanna be like you #
# They want power and praise like you, but #
# See there is no god like our God #
# There's no one like you #
# There's no one like you #
# There's no one like you #
Hey.
- Wow. - Got to have a book cake.
Get a picture of our book cake.
Oh, my goodness!
- How do they do this kind of stuff? - I wonder who did this?
Don't touch it!
Don't touch it, lady!
She's going to touch it. Go sit down.
- Ma. - ...these stairs.
- Yep. - Oh, I can see.
I got you, too.
OK, now, you all, we can walk a little faster.
OK. All right, big stuff.
It's full. I mean, like, the rafters...
I just saw my family
and I got a little...
and I got a little...
...verklempt.
Heavenly Father, thank you for this moment
Thank you for all you've done to bring us to this point.
It's a privilege to have this opportunity,
and we know that you have a greater purpose for all of this.
- In Your name we pray... - ...amen.
You OK, Mel?
Mel's crying.
All right. I'm not going to touch your clothes.
- Love you, sweetie. - You, too.
Way to go.
You don't have to keep it together.
You don't have to... You can cry your eyes out.
- I can't do that right now. - No. OK.
Hello, Chicago!
She served our country
as the 44th First Lady of the United States.
She made us always feel
like the White House was really our house,
the people's house.
She is your hometown girl
from the South Side of Chicago.
Welcome, Michelle Obama!
OK, everybody.
- We're home. - We're home.
Yeah, feels good.
I've got to say...
can we talk about leaving the White House?
When you got on the helicopter, did you think, "Free at last.
Free at last"?
- Yeah. - Or was it bittersweet? What was it?
That whole day was a trip, first of all,
you know, for so many reasons.
So what was happening on our last day
was that Sasha's and Malia's friends,
who had grown up in the White House,
came to me that night and were like, "We want to sleep over."
And I'm like, "What?
You want a sleepover?"
"Yeah, we...
We're going to miss being here.
We want our last breakfast."
Because you can get what you want to eat at the White House,
so all those girls were like,
"I think I'll have the fried chicken biscuit."
"I'm going to have a waffle."
So we're trying to move,
and then they wake up, and I've got to get them out.
"Come on, wake up. The Trumps are coming.
You've got to get up,
get out,"
you know?
And there are tears, and there's crying, and the staff is crying,
and I'm trying not to cry.
I said, "If I walk out there crying,
they'll swear I'm crying for a different reason."
Yeah, for sure.
So I'm like, "We have got to get it together."
So it was a very emotional day.
But then we got on Air Force One,
and when I got on the plane,
I think I sobbed...
You did?
...for 30 minutes.
And I think it was just the release of eight years
of trying to do everything perfectly.
One day, you're a normal family.
An election happens,
and your life changes instantly.
It's like we were shot out of a cannon.
We didn't have time to, like, adjust to it.
Being the First Lady has been the greatest honor of my life.
But how many people are in that position
where the entire attention of everything is you?
Every gesture you make,
every blink of your eye, is being analyzed.
You have the world watching every move you make.
Your life isn't yours anymore.
The whole idea of doing the tour
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