Seth Rogen no longer feels 'uncomfortable' admitting he doesn't want kids

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By VT

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Seth Rogen has opened up about having once felt "uncomfortable" admitting that he doesn't want kids.

Speaking on The Howard Stern Show, The Guilt Trip actor, 39, and his wife Lauren Miller, 38, said that they are "psyched" not to have kids.

What's more, Rogen doesn't believe anyone could get as much happiness out of their children as he and Miller get out of not having any kids to care for.

Check out the moment Seth Rogen opens up about having felt "uncomfortable" admitting that he doesn't want kids:

He told Stern: "I wouldn't be able to do all this work that I like. It's something I think I was uncomfortable answering before. But [people] were like, 'How do you do so much?' and, like, the answer is I don't have kids."

He then went on to say that he and his wife are in complete agreement on the topic of children, saying: "I would say she wants kids less than I do."

When Stern asked the Superbad star if it would be a "deal-breaker" if Miller had wanted to have a baby, Rogen said it wouldn't have been, adding that he would be able to "wrap my head around it, but she's just like, 'no', which is great."

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Credit: Kathy Hutchins / Alamy

He continued: "We have so much fun. I don't know anyone who gets as much happiness out of their kids as we get out of our non-kids."

He went on: "We're f***ing psyched all the time. We're lying in bed Saturday morning, smoking weed, watching movies naked. If we had kids we could not be f***ing doing this.

"There is no one whose child is giving them as much joy as we are right now getting because we don't have a kid."

Seth Rogen talks about Yearbook, his very first book:

Elaborating further, Rogen admitted that parenting simply doesn't sound "fun" to him. The actor and director also stated that "there are enough kids out there" and that we do not "need more people".

He added: "Who looks at the planet and thinks to themselves, 'You know what we need? More f***ing people. That's truly a confounding thing to me."

Featured image credit: Jeffrey Mayer / Alamy

Seth Rogen no longer feels 'uncomfortable' admitting he doesn't want kids

vt-author-image

By VT

Article saved!Article saved!

Seth Rogen has opened up about having once felt "uncomfortable" admitting that he doesn't want kids.

Speaking on The Howard Stern Show, The Guilt Trip actor, 39, and his wife Lauren Miller, 38, said that they are "psyched" not to have kids.

What's more, Rogen doesn't believe anyone could get as much happiness out of their children as he and Miller get out of not having any kids to care for.

Check out the moment Seth Rogen opens up about having felt "uncomfortable" admitting that he doesn't want kids:

He told Stern: "I wouldn't be able to do all this work that I like. It's something I think I was uncomfortable answering before. But [people] were like, 'How do you do so much?' and, like, the answer is I don't have kids."

He then went on to say that he and his wife are in complete agreement on the topic of children, saying: "I would say she wants kids less than I do."

When Stern asked the Superbad star if it would be a "deal-breaker" if Miller had wanted to have a baby, Rogen said it wouldn't have been, adding that he would be able to "wrap my head around it, but she's just like, 'no', which is great."

size-full wp-image-1263107673
Credit: Kathy Hutchins / Alamy

He continued: "We have so much fun. I don't know anyone who gets as much happiness out of their kids as we get out of our non-kids."

He went on: "We're f***ing psyched all the time. We're lying in bed Saturday morning, smoking weed, watching movies naked. If we had kids we could not be f***ing doing this.

"There is no one whose child is giving them as much joy as we are right now getting because we don't have a kid."

Seth Rogen talks about Yearbook, his very first book:

Elaborating further, Rogen admitted that parenting simply doesn't sound "fun" to him. The actor and director also stated that "there are enough kids out there" and that we do not "need more people".

He added: "Who looks at the planet and thinks to themselves, 'You know what we need? More f***ing people. That's truly a confounding thing to me."

Featured image credit: Jeffrey Mayer / Alamy