"One thing we want to say on this show is I am who you think I am," she told reporters last week during a virtual press conference for "The Drew Barrymore Show." "I struggle, I fail and I think one of the most important things I want to teach my own kids and myself as I grow with them is that change is so important — change in the world, change in yourself. I am a self-examiner and I've never pretended to be anyone I'm not." A former child actor turned multi-hyphenate, Barrymore's eponymous talk show begins Monday with a "Charlie's Angels" reunion with Cameron Diaz and Lucy Liu. Barrymore's frequent co-star Adam Sandler is also set to appear. In keeping with the daytime tradition, Barrymore's show will also hit the human interest angle, with segments like"Designed by Drew" and "Drew's News.""I am not one person, I am not one mood, I am not one thing, I am such a mixed bag myself," she said. "I want a show that represents all of the different things that we are interested in."Barrymore joins an increasingly crowded daytime TV field. Superstar singer Kelly Clarkson has had great success with her own talker, which launched last year. Legacies Rachael Ray and Ellen DeGeneres are also returning for new seasons this month.Though her name appears front-and-center in the title, Barrymore is hesitant to take full credit for it. She said she never refers to it has "her" show because she sees it as a collective effort. "I grew up on sets — that is the family I grew up with and those people become your families. You spend more time with them than you do your own families sometimes," she said. "I'm never coming in jaded, I'm never coming in inexperienced, I'm coming in as a member of the team, and that's why I'll never call this my show. Because I don't think I deserve to call it my show. That's belittlingRead More – Source

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