Bob Odenkirk had no clue that he comes from a line of royals.
In a clip of an upcoming episode of Discovering Your Roots, got by way of Rolling Stone, host Henry Louis Gates Jr. defined to Odenkirk, 61, that he's King Charles III’s eleventh cousin.
“That is crazy,” the Higher Name Saul actor mentioned within the video.
Previous to his revelation, Gates Jr., 73, shared that he traced Odenkirk’s royal roots again 5 generations to Friedrich Carl Steinholz, Odenkirk’s super grandfather who used to be born in Germany in 1755. Steinholz used to be born out of wedlock to Maria Chatharina Bein and the Duke of Plön.
“I’m an American. I’m not a monarchist. I don’t believe in that,” Odenkirk quipped. “You know, I feel like it’s a little twisted. I understand why society built itself around monarchs and leaders, and they passed them down through generations.”
Odenkirk went on to mention he understands that monarchy “goes through every society,” however he believes we’ve gotten to a “better place with democracy.”
Odenkirk added that “we should keep going down that road” sooner than joking that he would possibly “change [his] mind” after finding that he used to be associated with royalty.
Gates Jr. has in the past published loopy connections to celebrities and ancient figures.
In January 2023, Edward Norton gave the impression on a season 9 episode of Discovering Your Roots the place he realized that Pocahontas used to be in truth his twelfth great-grandmother.
“I understand that was family lore [you heard growing up],” Gates Jr. advised Norton, 54, on the time. “Well, it is absolutely true.”
Gates Jr. defined that Norton’s circle of relatives lineage may well be traced again to John Rolfe, an English settler who married Pocahontas. Norton used to be amazed by way of the marvel connection.
“This is about as far back as you can go unless you’re a Viking,” the Improbable Hulk actor gushed. “Makes you realize what a small piece of the whole human story you are.”
In the similar episode, Norton additionally found out that his 3rd great-grandfather, John Winstead, as soon as owned slaves in line with the 1850 census of North Carolina.
“The short answer is these things are uncomfortable, and you should be uncomfortable with them, everybody should be uncomfortable with it,” Norton mentioned. “It’s not a judgment on you and your own life, but it’s a judgment on the history of this country and it needs to be acknowledged first and foremost, and then it needs to be contended with.”