The Make-Believers is available now.

Ive always been so impressed with their creativity, the media personality toldSouthern Living.

Despite everything, they are still dreamers.

Ryan Seacrest & Meredith Seacrest Leach

Credit:Katie Klochany

There are still things they want to accomplish and do.

She said writing a book that celebrates imagination felt right.

Blankets can become capes and spatulas can become microphones…

The Make Believers

Credit:Simon & Schuster

Sometimes boredom is a good thing.

It makes you be creative.

And we want to celebrate that.

Simon & Schuster

Turning spatulas into microphones is something the Seacrest siblings are familiar with.

I would readThe Atlanta Journal-Constitutionout loud at a desk and my sister would videotape it.

It looked very official at nine or 10 years old.

Decades later, he now recognizes those moments for what they were.

I didn’t understand what I was doing back then, about putting things out in the universe.

In hindsight, I wonder what I would be today if I hadnt pretended like that, Ryan said.

It was a way to manifest reality in a passion that i loved.

But they hope thatThe Make-Believersreminds parents and kids to rely more on imagination.

Things are different today, Meredith said.

There are so many options, whether it’s electronic devices or video games.

Theres something nice about the simplicity of make believe.

The Make-Believersis currently available wherever you buy books.