Michael Strahan is a true star at Good Morning America — but it looks like another Michael got all the praise recently.
On April 2, the former NFL player welcomed actors Michael B. Jordan, Hailee Steinfeld and director Ryan Coogler to the ABC series as they promoted their new film, Sinners (out April 18). While the conversation was mainly about working on the movie, Strahan had to cut in and share a surprise on-air confession. Turning to Jordan, the TV host revealed that while he was talking into the building, he initially thought all the excitement was about him coming to work. But it turned out, people were really celebrating Jordan being a guest on GMA.
“I was so excited when I came in this morning. I walked in and people were screaming ‘Michael!'” Strahan began in a clip posted on Instagram. “I was like, ‘they love me!’ Then I realized you were here! But I’m glad. At least one Michael’s getting the love.”
“I appreciate that,” Jordan replied upon hearing his unexpected snafu. “You’re getting love too — cut it out!”
This content is imported from instagram. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.
Advertisement – Continue Reading Below
When folks witnessed the hilarious interaction between the two, it caused quite a frenzy in the social media comments.
“We love both Michaels,” one person wrote. “Love them both,” said another. So many more people were simply speechless because it was so funny, so they just dropped a bunch of laughing and crying emojis.
Despite it being such a quick moment, it’s clear Strahan and Jordan have nothing but love for one another. And that’s also the case for Jordan and Coogler, whose bond stems from working on films like Black Panther and the first two Creed movies.
“[Our friendship] is like what brothers would be,” Jordan noted. “You know what I’m saying? Checking in on one another. Ryan’s pretty busy with his family … I’m always trying to touch base with him and get advice from him. I’m pretty ambitious and always working as well, so I’m always tapping in with him to get his thoughts and feelings on certain things. It’s a genuine mutual love for each other.”
We love to see it!
News
MY MOTHER TOLD ME NOT TO BRING MY SON TO EASTER AGAIN—THEN MY 13-YEAR-OLD DAUGHTER STOOD UP AND SAID WHAT NONE OF THE ADULTS WOULD
Chapter 1: Don’t Bring Him It happened at a rented folding table covered in deviled egg crumbs, pastel napkins, plastic forks, and the shiny foil wrappers from Easter chocolate. The April wind moved through the dogwood trees behind my aunt’s…
MY FAMILY USED ME AS AN ATM, Until They Sold My Anniversary Gift and Learned I Was Done Paying
Chapter 1: The Good Daughter The smell of peppermint rinse and sterile latex was the permanent weather of my life. As a dentist, I spent my days working inside the smallest rooms of other people’s fear. I knew the exact…
MY HUSBAND GAVE ME AN “ALLOWANCE,” HIS MOTHER AUDITED MY GROCERY RECEIPTS—THEN THEY DROVE TO MOCK MY “TRAILER PARK” HOUSEWARMING
Chapter 1: The $3 Receipt Friday night in the Miller house always felt like a trial. Not dinner. Not family time. A trial. The kitchen table, a scuffed pine monster Linda insisted was “perfectly good,” was covered in crumpled receipts,…
MY NEWBORN WAS TURNING BLUE—MY HUSBAND LEFT FOR HAWAII AND SAID I WAS “JUST DRAMATIC”
Chapter 1: Blue Lips “Stop being so dramatic, Elena. He’s just coughing.” My mother-in-law said it like I had interrupted her breakfast, not like my three-day-old son was turning blue in my arms. Beatrice Vance stood in the middle of…
MY BILLIONAIRE FATHER DISOWNED ME AT MY OWN WEDDING—HE HAD NO IDEA THE “TRASH” HE MOCKED WAS ABOUT TO BECOME HIS BIGGEST REGRE
Chapter 1: Disowned Have you ever wondered what it feels like to have a billionaire father? Trust me, it is not the fairy tale people imagine. My name is Fiona Ashford. I was twenty-eight years old when my father stood…
My Parents Paid For My Brother’s Tuition But Said To Me ‘You Don’t Need Degrees Just Find A Husband’
Chapter 1: Only Son My name is Myra Mercer, and I spent thirty-two years as the invisible daughter in a family that only saw value in sons. When I was eighteen, my parents wrote a check for one hundred eighty…
End of content
No more pages to load