“Beau and the other boy will have each other to play with so they won’t have to bother her, which may or may not be true. But that’s at least what we’re telling her.”

Want to get the biggest stories fromPEOPLEevery weekday?Subscribe to our new podcast,PEOPLE Every Day,to get the essential celebrity, entertainment and human interest news stories Monday through Friday.

Dia Dipasupil/WireImage

Nev Schulman and Laura Perlongo

RELATED GALLERY:Who’s Due Next? Celebs Who Are Expecting

Perlongo, 35,opened up on Instagram last monthabout the struggles of her first trimester, calling the period “a 3 month rainy day with no Gene Kelly in sight.”

“Being pregnant with two kids, there’s very little time or energy to feel anything really,” Schulman says. “And lucky as we are to be having another kid, that doesn’t mean that you’re always excited and always feel great about it. It’s overwhelming, and it’s daunting. And there’s something about it that is scary because it’s like, ‘Well, now I’m going to have another kid, how and when am I going to find time for myself and to still feel like I have my own identity?’ There’s a lot of emotions attached.”

As for the two kids they already have, “Beau is probably hitting the terrible twos a little bit harder than Cleo did,” theDancing with the Starsseason 29 finalistsays. “But at the same time, Cleo was an only child then, and we had all of our attention and time for her. And so I get why it’s definitely different for Beau.”

Schulman has regular dance parties with Cleo, whom he says “was obsessed with"DWTS.

“[She] loves telling people I was on it and asking when I’m going to be on it again,” he continues. “We also got her in ballet class, which she loves. We’re a pretty dance-y family.”

The new episodes of Schulman’s current showCatfishsee him and co-host Kamie Crawford continuing to uncover the truth about online relationships via Zoom.

“There’s always more to the story,” Schulman says. “And you have to push people because it’s tough to talk about yourself and to open up and reveal things or admit when you’re wrong, especially under the conditions of a television show with strangers.”

“I find myself, very often, just speechless. I don’t know what to say. I know it’s my job to say things, but sometimes I just don’t know what to say,” Schulman says. “I don’t want to judge, but the situations are just so unique and specific and unpredictable that I’m at a loss.”

Image

Schulman expects a catfish boom in the coming months thanks to the COVID-19 pandemic keeping people inside for the last year-plus — and offering a solid reason not to meet up IRL.

“I feel as though there will be a wave of stories that come in over the next few months because people who met over the last year — who understood that with the pandemic, meeting up wasn’t a responsible thing to do or couldn’t travel — will now start to say, ‘Well, why won’t you meet me now?’ " he says. “They’ll start to realize that maybe it was not so much just the pandemic, but maybe it was something more. I hope I’m wrong, but at the same time, for the sake of my job security, I hope I’m right.”

source: people.com