Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Hey, what are you doing here? Oh my god, I'm
feeling a little bit like a hupple puff right now.
I've been adulting super hard this week and I just
broke my live laugh love mug hashtag don't talk to
me until I've had my coffee? Am I? Right? Um?
Curly your millennial showing what what do they even mean?
You're choogy getting here? My name is Curly and I'm Maya,
(00:27):
and welcome to the Super Secret Club podcast, A super
secret club where we talk about super secret things a
super secret more time. In each episode, we'll talk about love, friendships, heartbreaks, men,
and of course our favorite secrets, the way we struggled
(00:50):
to get everything together. I know we were adult ing.
I think it's um the weather, l a right now,
I'm so hungry, and there's the all of the above.
Are you on your period? Are you on your period? Usually?
Oh then I'm not. I just finished too because exactly
(01:14):
like if you were. If not, then no, I'm not
on my period. Um, but today we're gonna be talking
about what Maya. Oh, millennials versus gen zs and some
of the discourse and just like slander, gen Z has
(01:35):
made across the board on the internet and it's not fun.
It's I'm like, I actually get upset about it. I know,
my like sent me a bunch of tikes hawks and
we had like she had, we were having we're both
having it. But I will say that you were having
a little bit of like a spiral moment. I think
Monday morning was Yeah, we're like, oh my god, all
(01:57):
these different taketarks are coming out and taking and it's
interesting because we've actually talked about this topic before, like
me and you personally, and I think I brought it
up a while ago and you were like, I don't
think it's that big of a deal. I think it's
like the internet like making it up, and a lot
of people actually were saying that it's the media perpetuating
this battle that's not real. So but then like you
(02:18):
were like, there's all these TikTok's coming up making fun
of millennials, like just roasting the ship out of them.
And granted, it's kind of funny, and I know it's
all lighthearted, and I know it's like, you know, it
is cringe e like this type of the things that
they're saying. And we'll get into that, but first I
(02:39):
want to let the audience know, like, what is the
millennial range and what's the gen Z range in years? Yeah?
What is it? Sources like very but it says like
one too or basically like the eighties to like the
mid end of the nineties and then gen Z is
(02:59):
nineties into two twelve. Those boats only horrible years to
me for gen Z is when Ginger Spice left the
Spice Girls and two thousand and twelves when the world
ended technically. So yeah, that's that was like my first
year of college two twelve I graduated to wow, um,
I feel like I graduated two five. Wow. I'm definitely
(03:26):
like a millennial. I remember, by the way, when people
were talking about millennials as like the new edgy generation.
Millennials are doing this paper towels, diamond businesses and houses
are going down because millennials just zunk. Yeah, and we
were considered edgy. We were on the top of the world. Curly,
you're on top of the world, and now it's like
(03:47):
gen Z. So my whole thing is like it feels
like feels like a feeling that everyone will inevitably feel,
but like, okay, so with things like the Internet and
things like the dawn of TikTok and BuzzFeed articles um
talking about these things, these like beefs between generations. I
will say that I feel like these generations, the beef
between generations has been around for forever, Like nobody ever
(04:11):
like Fox with their older generation, like they're like, you
sucked up, you did this thing, and we're the smart ones,
were the revolutionaries, were the one that's changing the world.
And I do want to start off by saying that
gen Z is really cool. This is not going to
be a bashing of gen Z. I really love how
gen Z has really run with a lot of things,
whether it's coming with um, whether it has to do
(04:33):
with gender identity or like political stuff or even like
economic stuff. Like gen Z is very like, um, excuse me,
They're very much like the of the human race. I feel, yeah,
very creative about it and outspoken. And although you know,
the same thing for me, I'm like not here to bash,
Like there's I love gen Z. That's why I was
(04:55):
like so heartbroken when I just saw all these TikTok's
and I was like, oh my god. I've said that
there's like the millennial zoom that they keep making fun
of and I'm like, what the freaking heck I was
born in ninety three, what you're really born? Um, I
was born in eighties seven, which, by the way, it's
so weird, Okay. I remember when I was I was
(05:15):
like telling me about I was won eighty seven and
I used to be the youngest one in the room.
Like people be like, oh my god, eighty seven. He
was born in eighty seven and he's a baby eighty seven.
And now it's like I remember, yeah, I remember when
I got to Feddle, like and I was like the
youngest one there, like you know, you guys called me Maita.
No one has ever called me before until I got
(05:37):
there because I was the youngest, and like, not no more,
I'm not. So basically what I said earlier about like
gen Z kind of running with these things and changing
everything around. I think that they also kind of get that.
(06:01):
Millennials really pushed a lot of that too in the beginning.
I think that the thing is is that people and
generations tend to forget that in order for people to run,
other people have to crawl, right, so, like you know,
in order for them to be in order for people
to get to the point where they want to change
their identities and they want to be open about it,
and they want to be more open about being queer,
(06:22):
like the generations before us that dealt with stone Wall
or like even like the Black Cat here in m
l A, like revolutionary queer movements, like they had to
happen to like so many things had to have happened
in order for people to be where they're at. And
so for me, I get a little huppy about this
because I feel like there's no um honoring of the ancestors,
(06:47):
if you will, there's it feels like there's no energy
turning around being like, thank you so much for what
y'all did, but now we're going to do it this way. Um.
We have like a little bit of like a list
here in terms of like what people what gen Z
makes fun of us about. Yeah, so they basically, you know,
make fun of people saying adult ing, which I feel
(07:08):
like I said like maybe once or twice in my
life when I first turned like twenty something, when I
was like holy sh it. And I feel like the
background of like adulting is the fact that, like you know,
we first of all have went through so many different
economic changes, Like we lived through recessions. So like adulting
(07:29):
doesn't necessarily mean like, oh I'm an adult. I think
it just means like, holy sh it, like now we
have to deal with these things that are different and
we get to figure out like what they are and
we get to define them, and like, you know, because
it's it's the generation before us was what gen x Um, Yeah,
they I believe. So I always feel like it's a
(07:51):
generation that gets kind of like forgotten, like everyone's like, yeah,
they're like the cool ones that people are. They're like
the chill middle sister that people are, like whatever, I
don't know if middle sisters are chill. A don't Yeah.
And then there's also I don't have any sisters at all.
So anyway, um, they say, you know, remember the whole
side part and middle part thing. I had already changed
(08:11):
my middle part by the way long time before they
started saying all that stuff. Okay, here's the things here.
This is where I get really happy because I'm like,
I like so many of those things. Like I go
into the cultural stuff too, because I remember, for me,
a side part is not so much like what Jennifer
Anderson was doing on Friends. A side part for me
is what like the Latina and the black girls were
(08:33):
doing that I grew up with, where they would like
get their bangs side party, get it really tight, tuck
it behind their ears, behind the back of their head,
and then pull their curls over it. Yes, or they
would like tie it and get get really cute, like
get the get the side part bang slick slick down,
and then they would have the rest of its slick
back and like a high pony or whatever. So for me,
(08:54):
it feels really cultural because I'm like, you know what,
the side part is still cute actually, okay, And that
that's what I mean a lot of our arguments, a
lot of our arguments have to do with like American whiteness,
like colonialism, like all that ship because like I did
the side part in that way where it was very Latina,
where I would strain my bangs and I would have
curly hair. Um. But I think what they're talking about
(09:18):
is the side part as in like the Emo era
and like the alternative era which I wasn't, which I
was a part of also, Okay, So it's like the
big kind of bang. But it's like I associate that
with kind of people who have straight hair and I
used to get made fun of a lot for my
curly hair, and I would straighten my hair to look
(09:38):
like them. So it's just kind of like I got
bullied out of my curly hair, and then I tried
to look like them, and now I'm getting bullied for
having to like for wearing that. Yeah, the whole thing
for me, I've said this over and over again, and
I am dumping a little bit of head right now.
But like, I feel like the argument of the younger
people may give an older people as it's giving Western culture,
(10:01):
it's giving whiteness colonialism to me because I feel like
in my family, when I've talked to my younger cousins
and even the way that I look at my older
cousins and my aunts, my uncle's like there's a lot
of respect. Like I don't look at my aunt and
be like, oh my god, needs you look at how
you used to wear a lip liner, how embarrassing? Or
your hoops how embarrassing? Look at your side part, Like
(10:22):
I'm like, oh my god, that's so cool. You guys
were so cool, you know. Like, and my cousins look
at me and they do the same thing where y'all
were so cool, y'all were doing this was what you did,
Like there's an honoring of the ancestors and the people
that came before us, And to me to see that
kind of disappear in on the Internet is kind of
upsetting because internet culture is still very new and it
(10:45):
seems like there isn't like an honoring of the people
who um have either created content or just people that
came before them to begin with, Yes, because our and
I will say, like everything that is kind of like,
you know, cringe e to the younger generation are the
reason why I think a lot of us did it,
(11:06):
or people even you know older than me did it
was because it was almost out of rebellion in a way.
Every single thing, because we've had too and every single
I feel like, every single little like cringeing thing has
to do with some sort of generational trauma, collective generational
trauma from whatever society was going through then. So it's
like I agree for them to like ship on, like
(11:28):
millennials or any generation that you should on, it's like
you don't you have to understand the context of what
they were going through at the time. They weren't just
doing this just because and especially because our relationship to
the Internet is different than gen Z's relationship to the Internet.
Both are very valid, But we were one of the
first people to create content on the Internet. And I'm
(11:51):
really not trying to get all like, you know, like
we did it first, and we did it because everyone
is inspired by everyone, you know, like nobody is the
originator of anything. So like our relationship looks different to
the Internet than their relationship. Yeah, one hundred. I also
think too, like, um, it's interesting to see how as
(12:13):
much as we get bash, millennials get bash. Um, the
younger people love our fashion. Like they are recreating looks
that we were rocking in the two thousand's when we
were like five years old. Yeah, they're like recreating like,
um so they're mad at like our side parts right now,
but they're doing like our rhind stone crop tops that'd
(12:35):
say pretty. They're doing like the makeup or the earrings
that we were doing, like everything that you see in Euphoria,
which is like a huge Euphoria, the show on HBO
that is a huge success, like all around our looks
that people were rocking when we were coming up in
the two thousands. Um So it's like a thing where
I'm like, well, which one is it? You know? And
(12:55):
I feel like like every generation kind of does that
to the generation before, Like I know there was something
that millennials had like copped from previous generations. I loved
dressing like eighties like in my twenties, I wanted shoulder
pads color, if I could look like Grace Jones, if
I could look like uh boy George Cyndey, Lauper Madonna,
(13:19):
like I was like all of it. My big ones
were what were the hip hop kids wearing in the
eighties like run dmc l O cool j um. And
then it was what was boy George doing? And what
was Grace Jones doing a prince? You know? Those are
my things? Um so like what did the internet look
(13:40):
like in our time versus like what it looks like
for them now? And it's also like we're not that
far off. I'm three, It cuts off at I mean,
look picture this. You sit down in front of a
large computer with a large I guess like the technical
(14:00):
term would be like a tower next to it, right
where you can put your CDs. The tower, you click
on your little a L thing or your little Internet thing,
and the first thing you hear is a dial of home.
You know, you're sitting, it's all you're waiting, and then
the door opened and you're welcome, You've got mail. You've
(14:22):
got mail, and you're like, wow, that was good, and
you're like, I'm in um here we are. So then
you're like, who's online? You check if your crush is
on there, you see if your little friends are on there.
By the way, that's if you had all because if
you had a I M. It was like it was
like the door and then when somebody would leave it, Yeah,
(14:43):
I had that. Yeah, well we should like, well, we're
really talented. Do the closing of the door, but don't
come dumb below. We're really talented. Yeah. As far as
(15:09):
like thank you. As far as content creation, like I
I see content creation as like my Space days where
we were literally coding. Well this is what I'm saying right,
like we were there like in the beginning where there
wasn't even content creation. It was like an email, our
content creation with somebody who created an email that was
like if you don't send this to sixty two people
in the next sixty two minutes, you're going to have
(15:31):
bad luck like bam emails and curse emails were our
content creation exactly exactly. So then like that's what we
saw as kids, right, and then I think as we
got older, You're right. My Space was really kind of
the beginning of everything for me. I mean friends there,
we had friends, but my Space is when my Space
(15:52):
is when I started to kind of go a little
like get a little popular online. Were you popular on
my Space and Space? Yeah? I said, it's your popular
on my Space. Um not like in the thousands, but
I would get like h five hundred six d like
likes on a photo on my Space, like very would
you do those? Like horror trains right way? The trains?
(16:16):
The horror trains? What is that? It's like when you like,
when you like add a bunch of people. It's like
when you change your stuff. You might be too old
for that. What is that? People will know what it
is if I say it, just google it, Okay, I'll
(16:37):
google it. No. I just so my thing was like
I got very lucky that I found a bootleg version
of photoshop, So I learned photoshop very early on. I
was photoshopping my photos. Um, and I would do like
photo shoots in my house, like just high concept. What
we're saying is we did not have the tools to
create great things. We had too even when Vine came
(17:01):
out and YouTube, Like I mean, we all learned, and
I know gen Z also, we all learned how to
create content with the tools the free ship that we had,
you know, even like I remember my family got a
MacBook and we would all or just like a Mac computer,
we would all spend time on the Mac computer because
it had garage band, it had like UM editing software,
(17:24):
It had like a you know, a photo booth where
you can record. It was all in there, so we
all just learned. My entire family learned how to edit
through that. So it's like we didn't have some of
the tools that gen Z has nowadays, where it's like
you can like edit your videos in the app like
it upload them. When I was on Vine, we could
(17:45):
only press our finger on the screen to record. That
was it. That was how it made videos. And it
was six seconds. So like imagine how fucking hard that
was to do six seconds and all you and then
later on you were able to like upload, and that's
kind of how when the culture died. But like what
I'm saying is like our internet was about like I mean,
(18:09):
what how can we be creative? How can we do
all these things? And then I feel like the next
generations gen Z, because we were doing all these tutorials
and showing what it's like to create content, they took
that and it was like, how can I use this
to like make a point or call somebody out, call
somebody in like and be and be an activist or
(18:31):
an advocate for these things. Like That's where I really
feel like gen Z has stepped up, is like they
are really really smart in like not let any not
letting anything slide and like calling things out and making
a change, which I love, But like you got to
give some credit to the millennials who got you there.
If you think about it too, it happens everywhere across
(18:53):
the board. It happens in fashion, it happens in like
style music where generations will kind of look in each
other and be like, what are you listening to? Like
for me, you know, my favorite genre of music to
listen to it is like hip hop. Right, So I've
always been kind of like I've loved wrap and hip
hop my whole life. And if you think about how
rappers are wrapping, then the eighties and the nineties, I
(19:14):
mean in the eighties versus how they were rapping in
the nineties, you know, when like gangster rap started to
pop off. And then in the two thousand's when like
club hip hop started a hit really hard, where you
have like all the dance beats and the Neptunes clips
and everybody who had a fat beat, fat beat look
at me a bit. So yeah, So it was like
(19:42):
those whole things. And then I remember Will Smith came
out at some point with his album and he was
he was fine about how Will Smith was saying how
he felt like hip hop had changed so much that
he didn't want to do it anymore. And the only
reason that he got back into it was because the
Food Jis had released an album and there was a
whole big thing back and forth about like where's hip
(20:02):
hop going, what's hip hop doing? And so I feel
like you see it now an internet culture of like,
well we did it better, Oh things have changed or
what is it? Because now I listen to hip hop
and I'm like, it's like a trap beat, like and
it's like somebody like I don't know they're gonna come
for you. It's even like, um, I just it doesn't
(20:23):
for me, Like it doesn't hit as hard as like
a beat that um farrell would be working on that
had like Foxy Brown and featuring Kalise on the background.
So you know what I mean, Like like, did you
do you know the drama with Palise and Beyonce and
for all? Yeah, of course I'm like a Palie stand
(20:43):
then what happened? It's a long story, Okay, but here's
here's what I'm gonna say. Here's what I'm gonna say
about Colie Palice. People think that police would care about Beyonce.
Police want to jail over fighting the cops for her man,
She don't. She's not afraid of anybody. She's not afraid
of a little fan, a little Beyonce fan. She's not
afraid of cops. She's not afraid of anybody. She's five
(21:05):
ten from New York, afro Asian Latina. Okay, do you
think we have more in common with them than we think?
You know? I was reading this article and it was
talking about um basically how there are some things that
we do have in common, like even down to like
(21:26):
brand things like brand loyalty, like the way that gen
Z and millennials consume products. This is according to Forbes
dot com, by the way the way that we consume products,
were very conscious about morals, like how are these companies
treating their employees, How are these companies showing diversity, how
are they doing better for the world. We are more
(21:46):
inclined to spend money on companies that are doing something
that is good versus a company that we feel like
it's detrimental to the future of humanity, which I think
is pretty cool that our generations care about those things.
I honestly truly believe that for the most part, millennials
and and gen Z, you have more things in common
than we think we do. And even though we bicker,
(22:07):
we all want a better environment. We all want to
see people have like rights, like equal rights across the board.
I think most of us are down for new concepts
like you know, for me, when I was growing up,
it was androgyny. I was called androgynous. And now it's
like people are non binary, and I'm like, yeah, that's amazing,
But what about you? What do you think about that? Yeah?
(22:29):
I think gen Z has helped me with their like
expression with identity, like come to terms with my own
queerness because they just like, not only did our generation
do that as well, but gen Z kind of made
it more just don't I don't want to say normal
because normal is such a problematic word, but just kind
(22:49):
of like, you know, this is it, and like it's
not as big of a deal as like it you
know it is. And that's what I needed at the time,
was to kind have come to terms with that, like
it's all good, Like you know, you can see that
you're queer, because literally everyone, I do believe like everyone
is queer. You know what I'm saying. I think, Um,
(23:12):
I do think we have a lot in common. I
think I just get um wrapped up in not only
being a woman and having to deal with like the
whole body clock have babies at a certain time, thing
like agism, ship and not only that, like on top
of that, you know pressure that's already there. Then I
(23:33):
have these like gen Z ears, some of them telling
me like I was inspired by your videos. I remember
people would say I watched you growing up and we're
like whoa, which is cool and I love that because
like how you're you're two years younger than me, calmed out,
(23:57):
but like, which is so flattering and I'm so on
heard because I see some of these creatives that have
told me that make fucking fire content, and I'm like,
that's awesome that there was some influence because I remember
being influenced by like Ashley Perez at BuzzFeed. But I
would never make fun of her and say that she's old,
because she's not. Like that's what I'm saying. The difference
(24:18):
is like I honor Ashley Perez and I honor like
some of the buzz feeders and um, just the content
creators Colleen Ballinger, like all of them on YouTube who
have really paved the way. I'm not going to make
fun of them because they were doing their little thing
when it was hot and they're still hot. But it's
just like there's I just hate when people are like, oh, yeah,
(24:39):
that's so out, We're not doing that anymore. And I
think because the internet is so fast now, my A
d D is on fire right now. Sorry. I think
because the Internet is so fast now, we're constantly like
throwing things away like trends, songs, outfits, makeup styles, hairstyles
and just getting the next one in and then throwing
that out and like so it's like I feel like
(25:02):
I have a fear of being thrown out mm hmmm,
of being forgotten. And honestly, the delusional girl in me
is like that doesn't exist, that can never happen. Like
I am infidente, I will live forever, like I don't care.
Age is just a number who cares. Like whatever. Well,
one thing that I always say, and I always say, like,
(25:24):
you know, rest assured that aging, growing, aging out of
anything is inevitable for everybody. It is like an inevitable truth.
And whenever I find that people who are younger than
me want to call me old or want to like
make fun of me because I've said something or done something,
I always say the same thing. And you already know,
(25:46):
and it's you two will age. You two will someday
feel old and you will not look as good as
I do right now. It's a curse. I'm cursing people
when I say that. I say, like, best part is
I look better than you do now, and when you
get to be my age, you will not look this good. Trust,
(26:08):
I have a full head of hair, I'm looking great,
and anything that isn't looking great, I have enough money
in the bank to pay for it. Okay, okay for
you now, is this Chuggy is Welcome to the astrology
(26:45):
portion of the podcast. We have the question of the century,
who is the chewiest out of the signs? And a
reminder chuggie is a word that I think gen Z
made up UM to call us like cringe basically, which
is whatever. But what does chog exactly mean? Though, like cringe,
(27:06):
I googled it. It says Wikipedia. Corney. Wikipedia is as
a pejorative description of trends associated with the early twenty
tens and millennials. Um. This aesthetic has been described as
quote the opposite of trendy or quote trying too hard,
fucking shit ass. Fuck y'all for that fucking dumb ass,
(27:29):
stupid ass word. First of all, the word is choogy itself.
The word is cringe e itself. Okay, it's ugly to
look at I don't like looking at it. So what
do we think is that gets out of the signs? Well,
first of all, I'm gonna say me like I even
before anything, I'm going to be like I'm I live
and thrive in the world of choogy, Like I am
always obot of trendy and I'm always I don't know
(27:52):
if I'm trying too hard. I don't care mine. Um,
I have to argue with that. First of all, don't
talk about my best friend that like that. Okay, we're
gonna have We're gonna have some beef with that. You
have been ahead of your time every single time, and
I have seen people literally carbon copy your style. Anyone
(28:12):
who's ever known you knows that. And if they don't,
if they say opposite, they're fucking lying because they have
copped your style as well in some way. Anyway. I
think as far as like, it doesn't even have to
be styles, but I think like, who's maybe like the
cringest stunt of the science. I'm gonna say aries, I'm
gonna throw I'm gonna throw my own name in there,
(28:35):
like I really love see I disagree. I think that
for me, aries are like trendsetters, trailblazers, Like you know,
I was doing this thing where I was talking about
some of the top entertainers of our time who are
doing well. Kylie isn't is a leo. I think she's
a fire sign um lost. I think it's an aries
(28:55):
that God has an aries, um carries an area. A
lot of areas are kind of like like people who
are ahead of their time and not although what if
you put Lady Gaga dancing next to Beyonce dancing who's
a virgo lady. I don't think we need to talk
(29:16):
about that at the moment. I remember that video where
Gaga is like, I look like one of your backgund dancers. Yeah,
and she did and she owned it. That's the thing
about us is that like we do too much. We do,
and but we'll own it that, like, Okay, I did
too much. That was a little bit you know, cheesy,
because I know sometimes I'll be like lom Mama, like
(29:37):
just really out there, and I'll be like, pull it back, girl,
Like you don't need to you don't need to show
that you're like I don't know if I also have
like a lot of pisces in me, so I'm like
very shy sometimes so me so just mes can also
be chuogy because they can kind of get really cheesy
(29:58):
and corny and the things that they like to do,
um cancers. I feel like I can be very chuggy.
I think, yes, I think they're chuggy in the way
of their emotions and in the fact that like they
think that nobody can suss them out. But it's like,
I know you're mad. Yeah, I agree. Virgos are the
same way too, where Virgos think that they have everything
(30:20):
together and you're just like Virgo, like, I know that
you're going crazy in your mind, like you're not. You're
trying too hard to keep it cool and swaggy, and
you're like, that's why Virgos like to keep their distance
from people, because we don't want you to actually know
that we're like actually wild inside our head. We can
see it on your face, like it shows on your
face before you even have to say anything. But you
(30:40):
think that you're being all cool and collected, but the
fact that your face just went like stone cold tells
me that you got your feelings hurt. Oh my god,
in my face. Whenever I'm mad or over something, I
just have no emotion. I'm like, what I remember? Um,
what about scorpio. Scorpios are too cool. I feel like
scorpios are just always cool. I don't know any scorpio
who's like, maybe they're like let me, but I don't
(31:02):
think that's trying too hard. Okay, problematic capricorns are cool,
you know. On today's episode of The Super secretsty Clip,
I will not drag Capricorns. I will say that Capricorns
are actually pretty cool. They got a little swaggy going on,
(31:23):
and they got they have a little you know, Dolly Parton.
Dolly Partons a Capricorn, Elvis was a Capricorn. You have
Dolly Parton and I share the same moon sign and
mercury sign in venus sign. Well, I say, I shared
the same sun and moon with Beyonce Um and so
I think we're both Ergo. I'm not sure that's right.
(31:47):
And then I feel like Capricorns are very swaggy, like
the problem with the reason why Capricorns aren't trying too
hard it is because they don't care about anything. And
then what about like Sagittarius. I feel like Sagittarius care.
Yea Sagittarius can be a little cheggy. They care a lot,
but I think they're cool about it. Also, I think
(32:09):
they're very much like I don't care that I show
that I care, like but my mom, Yeah, I think
my mom can be a little but yeah, Sagistaries actually,
but Sagistoris also have a level of swag that you're like, huh,
it's like choose, It's like a virgo cheek, where like
once you get to know them, you're like, there it is,
I see it. It's like they hide it a little
(32:31):
bit better. Geminis are cool, I think GM. Well, yeah,
because I don't know who I'm meeting today, so exactly mysterious.
We love mysterious, and Libras are oh yeah, we can
do tours or Libra yeah, well, group tourists Libra aquarius. Wait,
(32:54):
I think tourists can be choogy for sure, for sure,
for sure? Oh my god, probably who are you talking about? Well,
my mom and my sister, my, um, the guy that
is a Taurus, the guy that I'm seeing right now, tourists,
August tourists. Um, I think it's definitely like maybe they're
(33:19):
the most I would say, they're really close to being
the chucky guys. Those are fighting words. Oh my god,
I guys do anything to say? Do you have any
reply back? No? I agree anyway. Libra's you know what
(33:49):
I I know a Libra specifically who I used to
live with unfortunately the worst time in my life, who
is chug chuggy and would also would would appropriate and
wear a lot of like Latina stuff and talk in
like uh vernaculars that were in hers. So I'm like
(34:13):
the chest I told you on every if you listen
to this this podcast enough Maya will drag sucking who else?
And the girl that she diated was also chickies Because
I'm just saying, like, when you live with somebody like
and you know, they can say whatever they want to say.
(34:34):
No one's going to hear it, but they can say
it if they want to. Also to just to go
back to tour us, it's really fast. I think that
it's because they care a lot and that's what makes
them checky, because they actually really really care a lot.
I think that when it comes to getting something done,
a tourist tries very hard to get it done. So
I think it's like a positive thing. What did we
miss any signs? We did Gemini, we did Libra Aquarius.
(34:57):
They don't care. A Couarius is like they don't care. Yeah, curious,
isn't that they don't care? Which is cool. They're not chuggy,
they're not well. That concludes the astrology portion of the podcast. Again,
don't come for us at all. And whatever I say
may or may not apply to me or may not
do so by okay, see yeah, and whatever I have
(35:17):
to say to blame Maya. Thank you. I am a
paid actor and I am just reading off of the
script that Maya husband for me. Thank you. Well, guys,
here we are at the end of yet another episode
of The Super Secret Besty Club. Listen, my A D
(35:38):
D was on fire today. I feel like I talked.
Did I say words? Maybe? Could you understand them? Maybe
at sometimes not always, But in conclusion, I feel like
I honestly really do respect and admire gen Z and
everything that they do. I think there's such trailblazers. My
(36:00):
issue is that, like I mean, yes, you know what,
I will admit, like I would make fun of the
generation before us, or remember Curly, I would say some
stuff and you would tell me like just wait, and
now I don't have to wait any longer because it's here,
and I got it back. I got a double fucking
serving back, and I don't like it. I told everybody
(36:20):
just the way you told me, just wait, and I
see it, and yeah, I think, like, honestly, you allow
people to like make you feel upset. So you know,
if I think some of the things that gen Z
is saying is true, then yeah, it's honestly gen Z
like whatever y'all made bad Baby popular. Anyways, Guys, thank
(36:46):
you so much for listening to another episode of The
Super Secret Bestie Clip Podcast. Make sure to hit us
up on our social media to let us know what
you want to listen to on a future episode. Curly,
how can they find you on social media? I forgot
we do that? You can find me on social media
at the Curly V Show, on TikTok and Instagram, maya,
we can people find you. You can find me at
(37:07):
the Chuggiest cheog e cheggy dot com, dot org, dot uol.
You can find me at by the moment m a
y a in the moment on all social media platforms.
Even saying social media platforms makes me cringe. Oh my god,
you're spiraling so hard by y'all. Make sure to hit
(37:30):
that subscribe button to hear more episodes every single week.
The Super Secret Bestie Club Podcast is a production of
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