Matthew McConaughey tells the book “Lost Bass,” Poetry and Prayer.”

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Toronto – Matthew McConaughey has a reputation for being a good-looking and cool guy. For those still on the fence, there is new evidence of that fact. The man wrote a poem about the ideal time and place to poop in the morning.

In his small life lesson, he is called “Deuce” (of course), and McConaughey recalls that at 6am he drove “the knot in his stomach and the prostate in a pinch” and found the “roadside Lou” in the cleanest way.

“We were all there!” He will be taking part in an animation interview with USA Today. “It doesn’t matter if it’s Portapotti or Shangri-La. Baby. As long as it’s the first ass of porcelain, amen.”

His new book, “Poems & Prayers” (Out Now), featured “Ditties” on Oscar-winning actor Pens Pro’s words, lyrical prose, and a variety of topics, from love and life to time and faith. Based on the 2018 California fatal campfire, it’s not like he’s yet giving up on day work.

His character, School Bus Driver Kevin McKay, can probably use some of McConaughey’s helpful Bon Motts. Kevin suffers from both his family and occupational life as he strives to securely pursue his safety through power lines, nasty gusts of wind and unpredictable flames, receiving an appeal to win a class full of family children and their teachers (Ferrera of America).

“The guy can’t take a break and every time it gets difficult, he’s out the door,” says McConaughey. That setup says, “In the end he’s more dramatic.

McConaughey compared him to having “his own small amusement park” and learned how to drive a school bus for that role. He navigated through explosive fires, random curbs, fallen electric poles, first doing it on the real bus, then one day later with a stunt gimmick with his younger co-star.

“We couldn’t be there when I was driving from hell like a bat,” he says. “I got where the stuntman goes, ‘Yeah, you got this,’ and I stayed in that bus seat.

Making a film means that you usually only have one job, but the joy of creating a book for McConaughey has a lot.

“I’m writing it, I’m directing it. I’m a director of photography. I’m an editor. I’ve worked with the editor and I’m ‘Oh, yes, I agree. Let’s cut this,’ says McConaughey. “It’s a wonderful, lonely process, and I always thought I would be a monk for a while, and that’s what I write.

Follow-ups of his 2020 memoir “Green Light” and 2023 children’s book Just Why” feature poems inspired by his daughter’s mobile game “Candy Crush.” There are serious and deep thoughts, but there are also hilarious confessions, including McConaughey telling the story of once smoking “Mexican dirt weeds.”

Why so many? “I don’t know,” McConaughey says with a laugh. “I was sitting crying on the song. I thought it was more important than celebrating my birth. And I came in. Everyone was leaving the party they threw for me.

By writing “Green Light,” McConaughey is forced to deal with his past for the first time, and he continues his self-examination with “Poetry and Prayer.”

“For the first 14 days of sitting down looking at the journal, I was full of shame, shame and regret. “I began to realize, ‘Well man, you’re in a position to humiliate and learn your lessons next month.” Instead of feeling embarrassed and guilt, I started laughing and saying, “That’s how life goes, right?”

“It’s like how most of our lives go. There’s a rhythm. It has lyrics.”

Whatever you believe, Matthew McConaughey says, “We can use it more.”

Finding rhythm is a big part of McConaughey’s overall presence. In the book, he writes about how people always say, “You’re so laid back and so cool,” but that’s by design: A-Lister prepares and plans to allow him to do “Santa” rather than compete for it. He says he had a “somewhat appearance” of that way of thinking as a teenager, but became concrete while “not in a good place” living in Australia at 6pm.

“It was a year when I had to wake up every morning and go. No, I’m going to trust that I will find a song if I dance through these flicking raindrops and keep it,” recalls McConaughy.

“It’s a great way to think about life,” he thinks. “Even when we are confused, lost or not certain, we can find rhymes, and it can confirm our way.

They check if he’s on the school bus, but McConaughey is filming “poetry and prayer” on the road for a “revival” book tour. The musicians perform while John Bon Jovi of Brooklyn, John Mayer of Los Angeles, and John Bon Jovi-McConaughey of John Baptiste reads the work and plays spoken language songs.

“I’m selling my beliefs,” he says. “I think we lack that. And what about it is, our belief in God, our belief in yourself, our belief in your child’s future, whatever it is, we can use it more.”

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