Kate Hudson has “humbling” kids.
The actress admitted to “Not Gonna Lie” podcast listeners Thursday that her little ones are “very much clued into the thing that [she’s] doing” style-wise.
The “Running Point” star said that sons Ryder, 21, and Bingham, 13, as well as daughter Rani, 6, will ask her, “Is that what you’re wearing?”
Moreover, if the Golden Globe winner’s outfit is “a little see-through” — or, she noted, “Very see-through with me” — they tell her, “That’s gross. What are you doing? … Don’t wear that.”
Hudson, 45, has also been called out by her kids over “wearing a dark lip.”
Host Kylie Kelce commiserated with the singer, saying that her eldest daughter, Wyatt, can’t find a “nice way to say, ‘Mom, can you wear a ponytail?’”
Instead, the 5-year-old will tell Kelce, 32, that she doesn’t like her bun and the hairstyle “looks bad.”
Jason Kelce’s wife, who is pregnant with baby No. 4, said that she’s “shared a number of humbling things [her] daughters have told [her] over the years” as they feel she was “put on this Earth to embarrass them.”
Hudson agreed that it happens “all the time” in her home since her children think she’s “so cringe.”
However, the Oscar nominee clarified that this criticism mostly comes from her sons as she and Rani have a “totally different” dynamic.
“Rani and I are like Velcro,” she explained.
However, Hudson’s daughter made headlines in January for “pick[ing] apart everything” about her Golden Globes look.
Rani labeled the midnight blue Carolina Herrera gown a “power princess” ensemble and made sure her mom “wore the right” diamond necklace.
“She’s all over it!” Hudson joked to Entertainment Tonight at the time. “She’s the girl!”
The previous year, the “Almost Famous” star revealed to People that she has an “extensive archive” of clothing saved for when Rani grows up.
“Not all of them I’ve gotten to keep over the years, but the ones that I [can], and the ones that are custom and all that, I hold onto them,” she explained to the outlet in March 2024.
At the time, Rani was already “going through [her] shoes,” “opening [her] closet doors” and “peering into things.”
Hudson quipped, “One day I’m sure I’ll start to see things go missing.”
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