Tom Holland and Zendaya Join Michelle Obama on the IMO Podcast
Tom Holland and Zendaya appeared as guests on IMO, the podcast co-hosted by Michelle Obama and Craig Robinson. Insurance brand Progressive was credited with making the booking happen.
The IMO podcast’s official Instagram account marked the occasion with a public shoutout. “We would like to give a special shoutout to Tom Holland and Zendaya. Thank you to Progressive for bringing us this fun moment,” the account posted.
That language is worth examining. The direct credit to Progressive suggests this was a sponsored segment, not a standard guest appearance arranged through the show’s booking team. Brand-facilitated celebrity pairings have become a normal part of how major podcasts land top-tier guests. What’s less common is naming the sponsor publicly in the acknowledgment post. It makes the logistics visible in a way most audiences don’t typically see. It also raises a reasonable question: how much do sponsorships shape which guests end up sitting across from which hosts?
Holland and Zendaya are among the most recognizable working actors right now. Holland established his profile through the Spider-Man films in the Marvel franchise and more recently through the Mission: Impossible series. Zendaya built hers through Euphoria and the same Spider-Man films. They’re also a publicly known couple. That gives any joint appearance a double draw: the professional credibility and the personal familiarity audiences already carry.
Michelle Obama and Craig Robinson bring a different kind of platform to the table. Obama’s public work since leaving the White House has revolved around her memoir, advocacy, and media projects. Robinson occupies a different spot entirely. He’s built a career across comedy, film, and television. IMO, the show they co-host, is built around conversation and the exchange of perspectives.
What this appearance says about where IMO is headed is hard to read from a single thank-you caption. The post doesn’t describe the conversation topic, the segment’s length, or the release date. Those details will tell the more meaningful story.
What does stand out is the specific combination of worlds being brought together. Holland and Zendaya’s public profiles are shaped largely by franchise films and a younger audience. Obama’s platform is built on something different. It centers on policy legacy, post-presidential writing, and a more reflective tone. Robinson connects those worlds without fully belonging to either.
Whether that contrast produces a good episode is unclear. Conversations between people from genuinely different worlds can go well. Neither side has the same assumptions to lean on. That difference can open things up. Or the combination might feel like what it is: a sponsor-facilitated booking rather than a natural pairing.
The episode, when it’s released, will settle that question. The thank-you post places the participants and the sponsor on record. The conversation itself is the more important thing to wait for.

Hollywood’s Jason Statham Calls Michael Venom Page ‘The One And Only’
Jason Statham doesn’t throw around public praise. On Wednesday, he tagged British MMA...
Jamie Foxx Is Taking Applications for a Sports Coaching Job
Jamie Foxx asked his Instagram followers a question Tuesday: “What team should I coach?” Three...
Jason Statham Attracts 250,000 Likes With Zero Words and Zero Reshares
Jason Statham posted a photo or video to his Instagram account Monday without any caption,...
Lizzo Celebrates Pride 2026 with the Kind of Greeting Only She Could Deliver
Lizzo kicked off Pride Month 2026 the way she handles most things – loud and completely...