How old is patrick seton oconnor
Being a dad is unbelievable. So cool. Parenting is not without struggle for Seton — juggling busy careers, new projects, work-related travel and appearance demands make quality time together a challenge.
If my family is happy and it feels right, it usually is. The Danettes respect, understand and like each other. The game is simple: I give Seton a common parenting issue and he tells me which Dad-Danette is most capable. Todd is the nicest, kindest, big teddy-bear-of-a-guy.
Kieran was riding on a half-pipe at 3 and was on a two-wheeler by age 4. He can already pull some tricks that are both terrifying and so sick. I reached out to several personalities whose artwork caught my eye during their shows to ask them about something that can be at times both intensely personal and what they want to speak about the most. They opened up about the meaning behind their pieces, the oft-meandering relationship with tattoos and what, if any, impact they have had on their careers.
These conversations revealed disparate experiences and approaches to having one's body serve as a canvas. Go look at Charlize Theron. First Name Patrick. Though they are all different -- they share a place in a club that may turn out to be made up of trailblazers as time passes and attitudes change. I can't say there was any trepidation. So for it to be an issue on a show with someone who I'd gotten tattoos with just seemed so foreign to me to consider. Patrick O'Connor Popularity.
More August 24 Birthdays. Even in the year , with so much changing, visible ink stands out, especially on exposed arms. TV Actor. SOC : I got an updated version of a sacred heart on my right arm. Great visit with tommyhelmart and the good people of empirestatestudio. The new place is DOPE! KK: And how many do you have total? SOC: I probably have a dozen, maybe more.
I'm not really sure. KK: Why did you have such a big gap between 18 and your thirties? SOC: I got a few right out of the gate, up until I was Then I took some time off. Mostly because I was really broke and getting into the business, trying to build a career. I didn't have a ton of money to spend on tattoos. Once I was a bit more stable, I got back into it. KK: Are you happy that you waited until you were a bit more formed to get the more visible pieces?
SOC: I'm certainly more confident in myself as a person and my place in life. I can't say I like all the tattoos I ended up getting as an adult and in my thirties. Some I want to cover up and change because of the quality of work or I just want to go in a different direction with my arm or something like that. KK: What does it feel to have a tattoo that you don't like?
How often do you think about it? It can't be great. It's more of it was supposed to look like an eagle and it kind of looks like crap. I think at a certain point when you're getting a lot of tattoos, at the beginning everything has to have all this meaning, you put all this thought into it thinking it's going to be the most epic tattoo ever.
Then the more you keep getting them you're like, eh, screw it , just put it on there. I'm at the point where I want them to have meaning and look good but I'll just get another one for fun.
Super stoked on my new piece. And thank you to dropkickmurphys for the inspiration. KK: That's interesting. I only have a few so if there's any blemish or imperfection it drives me insane. I'm putting way too much pressure on myself. Guess that's the difference between making, like, your third Major League start and your 30th. I need to become a veteran. SOC: My most recent one is on my left arm and it's a skull wearing sunglasses and instead of saying Bad to the Bone it says Dad to the Bone.
I have a year-old son and my life revolves around him and taking him to soccer practice. We just thought the phrase was hilarious, especially with a skull and sunglasses. Ultimately the tattoo is on there for me and not really other people.
KK: That's the most extreme length I've heard someone go for a dad joke. You were pretty much at the pinnacle of a career in terms of places you might want to go when you got your more visible ones.
But was there any trepidation about showing them on the simulcast? Do you remember any discussion at all about it?
SOC: It was sort of part of the simulcast. It was really more of was I comfortable showing my tattoo, not so much are we allowed to show them. It was part of the content of the show, so to me it was just as relevant to the show as football is because it's a show about us as people living in the sports world.
I can't say there was any trepidation. You know, Dan has tattoos. The way I really got to know him was traveling to different sporting events and producing the radio show there.
So for it to be an issue on a show with someone who I'd gotten tattoos with just seemed so foreign to me to consider. KK: Does he have a lot? SOC: A handful.
He's got one on his ring finger, one on his wrist. They're pretty small. KK: Have you gotten any negative feedback from viewers? SOC: There's people that you know don't like you, just like in any job. It's mostly shots like you think you're so tough or cool because you have tattoos when it's the furthest thing from the truth.
One guy called me the Motley Crue of metal. KK: Really? You don't really seem like an easy enemy in sports media. SOC: Any time that you put yourself out there, there are going to be people who don't like you.
And me being the only guy on the show who has tattoos makes me an easy target. KK: What about positive feedback?
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