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May 25, 2025 • 29 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
The following is a paid commercial by Black Girls Sunscreen.
The views expressed are those of the sponsor and not
iHeartMedia or this station. Welcome to Shamelessly Chantey with your
host Chante Lundy Unreal ninety two to three.

Speaker 2 (00:21):
Good morning. You're listening to see Chante and I'm your host,
Shanta Lundy. So, yeah, I have talked about being in
a neighborhood watch group chat it was. It didn't start
off as like a neighborhood watch, but then it became
a neighborhood watch. So anyway, my street has really bad

(00:41):
cell service. But when you enter the neighborhood in the
beginning of the street, you can still have your phone conversation,
but when you get deeper into the community, the phone
call drops. Okay, so I needed to take an urgent
phone call. And my house also doesn't have phone service either.
It's really really spotty, pretty ghetto, right, Francis, Yeah, okay,
so I have to get in the car and go
take the car. So anyway, lately, I've been going down

(01:05):
the street to take my calls and I'm just sitting,
you know, on the side of the road in my car.
And I saw one day that somebody put in the
group chat like whose car is this, who's white whatever?
Whose car is this? And I'm looking like they're talking
about my car? Did they take a picture of your car?

(01:26):
And hold on, hold on? I'm like, they talking about
my car because I'm the only person in the neighborhood
with this car. I'll leave it alone because why are
you talking about my car? And I was very very
busy that day. Okay, same day, y'all. I drive down
the street because I got to take one more phone call.
So it's about like nine o'clock at night and I'm

(01:46):
looking at my phone and I see my fun my
car go in the group chat. I'm like, these people
really watching me and they put my car in the
group chat in the neighborhood watch, y'all. Okay, So a
man and a woman come around the corner and they're
like waving, like and my car is tended all the
way around. So I'm acting like I'm not even looking

(02:08):
at them. I'm just steady having the call, like yeah,
and watch this because they about to I'm telling the
person who I'm talking to, like, yeah, these neighborhood watch people,
they come into the car, y'allah. Blah blah, Right, listen
to this, right, So I keep her on speaker and
the guy he comes to the side window because I've
ignored his front wave side window. He's like this, So
I put the window down. He's like, what's your name.

(02:30):
I'm like, what's your name. He's like, you're parking in
front of my house. I said, I saw you just
put my car in the group chat. I live up
the street. So what's your name. He's like, my name
is bleep. Oh okay, Well listen, everybody that drives this
type of car with tinted windows is not a criminal.
Put that in the group chat, sir, please. I got

(02:54):
that from the robot. Y'all know who the robot is.
So because I didn't want to be rude, but I
also wanted them to get to the point of stop profiling.
Stop profiling. Don't don't do that most people that live
in the neighborhood. First of all, you have to live
in the neighborhood to even take the highway to get
where you're going. And I think that some of the

(03:15):
neighborhood watches they make people afraid more than they should be. Yeah,
And that was really my sentiment, right, like hey, I
literally wrote, well, the robot wrote this. Not everyone that
drives these cars have bad intent. It was really snappy
and classy though. Yeah, and it was like carry on

(03:35):
the neighborhood watch with the car and then the eyes.
I loved it. Nobody liked it, though, But but how
dare you come up to my car and ask me
what's my name? He did? He did, and then he
misspelled my name in a group chat. No, and that
I got a profile in a group chat and I
was like, asterisk, asterisk, this is how you spell my name.
I love it and left it because if you're going

(03:57):
to do it, do it right. So was that petty?
Was that a petty story? No? Okay, because I think
our next guest is a little petty. She she is petty.
She is petty. Huh, but we like that petty. I
like her. Was that a petty? So you don't think
it was a petty, But you don't think we should
ask her if we think it's If it's a petty story, okay,
because I don't think it was petty because they deserved it.

(04:19):
They did, and that's why I don't think it's petty. Okay.
Any pettiness happened in a Black Girl Sauce screen. No good.
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(05:05):
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(05:28):
even know if I want to put anything on my baby,
I'd probably be so afraid, like nothing, no lotions. I
don't even know. If I want to use a wipe
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(05:50):
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(06:13):
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(06:34):
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Speaker 3 (06:47):
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your Black girls sunscrewing.

Speaker 4 (06:58):
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Speaker 3 (07:04):
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Speaker 2 (07:15):
Okay. So we have amazing, amazing human sitting next to us.
We've had the pleasure of getting to know her over
the last year and a half or so, and I
can't wait to hear what she's talking about, because I
think we could we could talk about some juicy thangs.
I think, so you want to do some juice thangs?

Speaker 1 (07:33):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (07:34):
Okay? So who we got? Who is she? Okay? Who
has helped us? Today's guest is a radio rock star
with a fearless streak. She went from college intern to
hosting a nationally syndicated show, then took a leap and
she moved to La with no job and built it
all back. Now she produces five shows for iHeartMedia. She

(07:59):
hosts had Ish and she keeps seamlessly, chante, sound, and sharp.
Please welcome the Unstoppable, Kayla Austin, don't put that big
plus and there welcome.

Speaker 5 (08:17):
Although you have been in this room several times, every
time you're in the room, I'm in the room.

Speaker 2 (08:23):
Okay, and I love it. Okay, I love it. So
were you waiting for the day to ask us, for
us to ask you to be on the show.

Speaker 5 (08:28):
I was like, oh, black girl Sunscreen has a show
in the building, and I haven't met these people yet
and I'm only like one of seven black people, black
women in the building.

Speaker 2 (08:37):
And it was just like, when is my time? When
is my time?

Speaker 1 (08:40):
It is now? No, no, no no.

Speaker 2 (08:42):
It started when she started working with her. Yeah, that's
why I see that.

Speaker 5 (08:47):
And yeah, I met I met this dynamic empire of
a of a brand and you all have been amazing
to me ever since since, ever since I met you, guys, girls, women.

Speaker 2 (09:02):
Okay, so okay, love you are on the mic right now? Yeah,
normally you are behind the mic. Yeah, in most situations.
But I know you have podcasts, is that right? Yes?

Speaker 1 (09:14):
I do.

Speaker 5 (09:14):
I have a petty Ish a Kiss FM podcast with
my best friend Kayla, and I also started my own
podcast because of this inspiration, Sex in the City of Angels,
where it's a rewatch Sex in the City podcast.

Speaker 2 (09:26):
Okay, I do want to get to that. But do
you prefer to be behind the camera or in front
of the camera. Oh?

Speaker 5 (09:33):
You know, when I was in New Jersey, it was
a very small market, so I didn't mind being behind
the microphone because we didn't get that much traction. But
now that I work with iHeartMedia with some of the
biggest names in the game, and I see the mail
and messages that they get, and I'm just like, that
would make me want to crawl into a ball and
cry a lot. So I kind of be in the

(09:55):
mail like they're dms or you know, talkbacks that we
get through the iHeartRadio app. If you just hit the microphone,
you could talk back to any show. And some people
are really really mean in this world.

Speaker 2 (10:05):
Give us an example.

Speaker 5 (10:06):
Oh Jesus, the amount of racist talkbacks I get and
I'm just the producer is crazy. I've been called the
N word numerous times. I've been called less than smart
a lot of times because of my opinions on things.
Only idiots like you believe that like things. People are
so ballsy behind the phone.

Speaker 2 (10:28):
It's crazy. They wouldn't say it's audacity, the audacity or
is it another word? It's the other words. I think
it's the word. Yeah, that is okay, okay. So so
how do you overcome that right because we're in a
space where we don't It's like, you want to have

(10:50):
an opinion and an opinion that is real to you,
but you don't want to be judged based off of
your opinion. So how are you overcoming that?

Speaker 5 (10:58):
Well, I I have always been raised really close to God.
I went to church every Sunday with my mother growing up,
I went to private school. God has been a staple
in my life since before I can remember. So I'm
really grateful to my mother for introducing me to God
because whenever I get stressed, I find me a church
and I connect with higher power. Because if you live

(11:20):
for the praise of Manuel, die by their criticism. So
if God's for me, it could be against me. Like
I don't really you know, it is what it is.
And I know a lot of the people that say this,
I wouldn't be their friend in the street. I probably
won't look at them twice. So why would I allow
that to get me too too down? She's just like,
all right, let me just go to church for on
this and remind myself whose daughter I am, and the
father gets me right every single time.

Speaker 2 (11:42):
Okay, So I'm gonna ask you a really hard question. Okay,
whose show is your favorite?

Speaker 1 (11:49):
Well?

Speaker 2 (11:50):
Oh, my bad.

Speaker 5 (11:54):
To produce and be a part of. I love you guys, shameless,
I really really do. And I don't get the chance
or opportunity to work with many black women. So this
is such a blessing. However, we knew it was coming,
Let's do it. I've been the only reason I'm in
this building is because of doctor Wendy Welsh, who was

(12:14):
just on this show and she literally said, there are
no black women producers in this building. I need a
black woman producer. And that's what got me in the building.
And not only did it get me into my industry
again after not working in the industry for almost a year,
it also she also took me on as like a daughter.

(12:35):
And when you move across the country to a new
state where you know nobody, you have no job, and
I've never really lived away from my family.

Speaker 2 (12:42):
Was my first time. She has been my family. Like
I can call her for anything, anytime of day.

Speaker 5 (12:47):
She's going to show up for me. She's going to
go above and beyond for me. So me and doctor
Wendy aren't just coworkers. I think that we're family. So
I'm going to have to say, doctor Wendy.

Speaker 2 (12:56):
I love it. It's a sweet story. How do you
feel like you relate to her?

Speaker 5 (13:01):
I didn't at first, because you know, we don't have
much in common. But she studies the science of psychology,
and I think that she's just a very comfortable person
to talk to.

Speaker 2 (13:12):
And it took a long time for me to like
not be like who does she think she is? Like
what are you saying?

Speaker 1 (13:18):
Like who are you?

Speaker 5 (13:19):
Are you taking back by sometimes yeah, yeah, because I
didn't realize I didn't really know too much about her,
her heart or or where she's coming from. And you know,
racial tensions could be high at times, especially in this
political climate, so it's just like.

Speaker 2 (13:31):
Are you trying to be are you too comfortable right now?
But she never she never was. She just genuinely is
passionate about the cause. And it took me a while
to accept that. But I think it's her. She can
make anybody feel like she can relate and understand you.
So if it's not her right because you have this
special relationship, how are you dealing with women that get

(13:51):
a little too comfortable?

Speaker 1 (13:53):
You know?

Speaker 5 (13:53):
To be honest, I have been really fortunate, and I
have to give shouts to God again because I really
haven't had too much crazy stuff happen, especially in LA.
Everybody that I've met or rubed elbows with has been
in my corner. And helping me win and trying to
see me when I haven't had too many haters or
people try to tear me down or people get too comfortable.

Speaker 2 (14:14):
That hasn't really been something I've dealt with too much
in LA, So I'm super grateful for that. That's nice. Yeah,
you're like, you know, I don't have to be like
a hater though. It could just be something just very
comfortable because they might have a family member. Okay, Yeah,
So I am the youngest of five siblings and the

(14:35):
youngest of thirteen grandkids, so I've always had a mouth
on me because Lord knows, I had to defend myself
growing up a lot. So I'm really witty, like I
come back with the comeback. So it depends.

Speaker 5 (14:46):
I can't think of a specific scenario right now, but
my tongue moves past than my brain sometimes, like ooh,
probably should have said that.

Speaker 2 (14:52):
So ierson, Yeah, when was the last time I got
you in trouble? Ooh, oh Jesus mm hmm in trouble.
See that's relative, but yeah, because you could be on
a date or something. Oh, these men, God bless them all.
I I do give it to the men, and I

(15:13):
do regret it sometimes I felt I was dating somebody
recently and I felt that they tried it one too
many times. Even I, you know, consulted with chat GPT
what to say.

Speaker 5 (15:28):
Yeah, and they said, that's kind of aggressive, that's a
little bit. So I sent it anyway because.

Speaker 2 (15:32):
We're now, we're not letting the robust exactly. I mean,
I can be though, you know, I know that's the thing,
but I genuinely can be. So I tried it. Could
be the jersey in me, could be the jersey in me.
But are you put put what I want to say,
here's the scenario, here's what I want to say. Oh

(15:53):
that's a little bit much. Maybe you can word it
this way? Nah? Yeah, yeah, yeah. And I got cut off.
I got cut off. He came back. Okay, they came back.
They always do. I don't want them to.

Speaker 5 (16:11):
Sometimes you do, especially when you mess up, because I'm
a woman that can I was wrong.

Speaker 2 (16:16):
I was wrong. My bad, not bad. I should listen
to the robot all right.

Speaker 3 (16:27):
If you want to protect your skin, Crane, make sure
you get some black girls sign scream black girl, urin
gunandgem sign bab. Justlant on your black girl sign scream.

Speaker 4 (16:38):
Black right, black don't crack it doesn't black people get
signed burned too.

Speaker 3 (16:44):
As my cousin, you want to protect your skin, crane,
make sure you get some black girls sign screen black girl,
young Gunde sign bab just lit on your.

Speaker 2 (16:54):
Black girl sign scream. Okay. So you're in this industry
for how many years?

Speaker 1 (16:58):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (16:59):
I would say when I start twenty thirteen, twenty fourteen,
so a little over time. Yeah, So give the listeners
some tips on if they want to be behind in
in front of the camera.

Speaker 5 (17:08):
So I've worked every position possible in radio in the
past ten to twelve years, and there is no cut
in clear formula. I have plenty of close friends in
radio who went about it a completely different way. I
genuinely think that your network matters is not as much
what you know. You do need to know what you're doing,
but how you treat people and who you know, I

(17:30):
think is equally as important. So I would say foster
really good relationships because people will get you far in
this industry, especially in this town. And I have a
really good reputation because I treat people with respect and love.
I don't think there's many people that go into other
room and say oh kayla ew I dealt with her
and she was awful, Like, that's not a thing that
you're gonna hear about me. So I would say, foster

(17:51):
good relationships, learn the industry, and be willing to change
with the industry, because the industry, even though I've been
in a short amount of time compared to others, has
changed so much since I first started. So you got
to be willing to roll with the punches as well
as keeping your network strong.

Speaker 2 (18:05):
But know in the industry what's changing. I think it's
not so much an auditory medium anymore. It doesn't matter.

Speaker 5 (18:12):
The audio doesn't matter as much as the visual because
our senses have changed with social media, our attention span
has changed, so people can't really listen to a voice
as long as they could have back in the day.
So I think you got to be able to incorporate
social media, You got to be able to incorporate visuals.
You got to be able to, you know, make your
brand relatable to a lot of different people in creative ways.

(18:34):
So and when I first started, it was just turning
on the microphone and just being silly. Second date update,
no way news ha ha ha ha. That's not even
like a thing anymore.

Speaker 2 (18:42):
It's okay. Like you said, you've been kind of all
over within radio. What's been your favorite, what has What
do you not like about it? Also?

Speaker 5 (18:51):
Okay, I do see. When I first started the morning
show was so fun for me. It was like, you
wake up early in the morning and you just talk
about your opinions on silly stuff. You laugh, you go
home at eleven am, you eat your nap, you prep
for the next day, and it was just that was
so much fun for me in my early twenties.

Speaker 2 (19:09):
I was like a little local, little local celebrity in
my town. It was pretty cool.

Speaker 5 (19:13):
What I dislike is when people feel like they know you,
because people get too comfortable and it's like, I don't
understand that you probably don't know me.

Speaker 2 (19:21):
Say exactly, you don't know me and too comfortable. So yeah,
that Jersey going through and through. So yeah, that would
be my least favorite and my favorite. That's fair. Oh
I thought she was gonna keep up first I didn't
have anything. Yeah, all right, So if you were on

(19:43):
radio or behind the scenes, what would you be doing.

Speaker 5 (19:49):
Actually being in la I feel like there are so
many opportunities and everything is married to each other. So
I've actually been dabbling in a new realm that I'm
really excited about that I don't want to say too
too much about, but it's about it's live shows, and
it's more on stage performance rather than on you're gonna
be on to play Oh Jesus, now bigger.

Speaker 2 (20:15):
Broadway. Okay, never in the Broadway, but it's pretty it
is pretty huge. I'm very excited for this. Okay, Okay, well,
uh huh, only manifesting the best for you. Thank you.
I want to go to your podcast, Sex and the City. Yes,
Sex and the City, Sex and the City of Angels.
Is that the intro?

Speaker 1 (20:35):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (20:36):
Yes, So to the intro, I say, welcome back to
Sex in the City of Angels. And then the cost
and we start our stuff. Okay, so what do you what?
What is what is going on? Who is your favorite
character in Sex and the City? Are you even own
enough to be watching Sex and.

Speaker 1 (20:56):
Well?

Speaker 2 (20:56):
I watched it after its prime okay because I was
a baby there. But that's the thing about Sex and
the City.

Speaker 5 (21:02):
It's definitely one of my comfort shows that, you know,
after a long day, you just want to unline with
some mindless television. Sex and the City is one of
my go tos, and I got four single women in
their thirties dating in the City of Angels and where
we're watching rewatching the show and seeing what kind of
dating epic dating aspects are still applicable today, what's outdated,

(21:23):
what's like totally not okay to say in twenty twenty
five that they just were so comfortable saying in the nineties,
early two thousands, And unfortunately it's still very, very relatable
in twenty twenty five. I think even more so with
dating apps and social media. It's even harder nowadays. So
that's what me and my girls kind of get into.

Speaker 2 (21:41):
Weeks to week. Oh my goodness, I'm just realizing that
they were all like dating and like looking for love.
They were, but they all found it. Spoiler alert, Yeah,
because we're you know, they're all grown and kids, and
I forget what it's called and just like that, Yes
it's been off, Yes, yes, yes, I'm waiting for it
to come back off, come back on. So who is

(22:05):
your favorite character?

Speaker 5 (22:07):
Samantha is my favorite, not that I can relate to her,
but she is just, I think, a good friend and
unapologetically herself and inspirational. She's such a boss. Uh, But
Carrie is probably the one I relate to the most.

Speaker 2 (22:21):
Unfortunately, why is that? Uh, because she's a little crazy.
It is a my I can bid.

Speaker 1 (22:30):
You know.

Speaker 5 (22:30):
You tell yourself a story, you commit to the narrative,
your mind gets in your way. Sometimes it's like, wait
a minute, he's trying to play me.

Speaker 2 (22:36):
But mister big wasn't worried about your girl, and she's
just showing up to his house acting all crazy.

Speaker 5 (22:41):
Not to show up to me house. I'm not showing
up to your house. But I think I might have
never never never, You have to think about it.

Speaker 2 (22:48):
Though.

Speaker 5 (22:48):
I was in a relationship for six years where we
lived together and I was a stepmom and that was
a little bit toxic.

Speaker 2 (22:55):
That ended in a restraining order against him. So I
may have not been my best self at that time,
but I don't think I ever popped up. Maybe maybe maybe. Yeah. Yeah,
early twenties was a wild time trial ear all these
twenties was a wild time. Wait, so you can't people's cars?

Speaker 1 (23:14):
No.

Speaker 2 (23:14):
I got my car key though, and I got all
four of my tires flatten. Oh yeah, he was crazy.
Oh it was crazy. You know it was him for sure.
I know it was him. Yeah, yeah, yeah, he was.
He was nuts. He helped me drive around and look
for the person that did it, knowing it was him,
he didn't feel like you can definitely know he was
a psycho, like certifiable. I don't know what he's doing,
but he should be under the jail somewhere. Oh yeah,

(23:36):
oh yeah, he's dangerous. Yeah, let's let's pivot. Let's pivot
from that. We're not gonna give him too much energy. No, no,
we're happy over here in Los Angeles. So you have
the Sex in the City of Angels And what's your
other podcast, Patty Ish? That's my kiss, Petty. I can

(23:58):
be oh, I can. What's those prettiest thing you've done lately? Lightlight?

Speaker 5 (24:03):
I can't think of anything light light, But what the
most petty thing I've done that I liked to?

Speaker 2 (24:08):
You know, I'm really proud about. I go to bed
smiling at this one.

Speaker 5 (24:12):
A restaurant was treating me really really badly back in
the days when I was a waitress, and they were
just super mean. So I called ten minutes after I
was supposed to be there, let them know I got
another job.

Speaker 2 (24:25):
I'm not coming in. I quit and good luck with
your future.

Speaker 5 (24:29):
And then I went there to go eat with my
girlfriends because knew they were a service short and I
just wanted to get under their skin.

Speaker 2 (24:34):
You pulled a Julia Roberts. Julia Roberts, No, but you
know in the movie when she went shopping woman, Pretty Woman,
Yeah I did. I did see Pretty Woman. Yes, as
you were talking, that's what was playing in my hand.
Oh it was a sweet revt and sweet revenge. I
don't even know if I would serve you if you
came into the restaurant. I Blake and somebody else get that.

Speaker 5 (24:56):
In hindsight, they probably did something to my food, like
that really was dirty, right, or like do something?

Speaker 2 (25:07):
Hello, you won't play a game? Yes, so you know
the rules game called nah give me a Yeah? Nah,
got it, got it? Got it? Okay, So the first
question talking to yourself in the mirror.

Speaker 5 (25:20):
Yes, you need the advice from somebody realing magical scene.

Speaker 2 (25:27):
That was cute. I talked to myself, not in the mirror,
but I talked to myself very often. Yeah, I talk
to myself in the mirror. Not enough. I need to
do it more. Texting on my way and you haven't
even left yet. Yes, I'm sorry.

Speaker 1 (25:44):
I do that.

Speaker 2 (25:45):
Nah, I will text on the way when I get
in the car. Never. I don't do that either. Wearing
the same outfit twice because no one saw it the
first time, because.

Speaker 1 (25:54):
You got it.

Speaker 2 (25:56):
I don't do that. But even if we did, whatever,
go ahead? Sorry, no, y'all good? Yeah, yeah, I do that.
Wait do I wash it though between? I'm just wearing
it twice?

Speaker 1 (26:07):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (26:08):
Why would I wear?

Speaker 1 (26:10):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (26:10):
Okay, not often though, yes, okay, saying grand rising no, no, ma'am.

Speaker 1 (26:23):
No.

Speaker 2 (26:26):
Standing up as soon as the plane lands. No, I
can't stand that. Where you go with calm down? Where
you go give me anxiety. I hate that. I hate
that so much.

Speaker 1 (26:37):
You do that.

Speaker 2 (26:38):
I'm usually at the front of the plane, so you
know there's an expectation here. You gotta keep the traffic moving. No, No, okay.
Wearing sunglasses indoors no, yeah, yes, that's the hide to hangover,

(27:00):
asking who's all over there before accepting an invite, No, nope, no, yes.
Banging the remote to get it to work instead of
changing the batteries. No, I roll the batteries in the
back a little bit, I mean off. Did the remote

(27:24):
have batteries still?

Speaker 1 (27:25):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (27:27):
Oh, I don't use the remote. I have somebody change
the channel for me. Yes, all the time, turning off
your camera on zoom because you have a bad hair day.
Now that I got locks, I don't have bad hair days,
so I know that's right now. I'm not doing a
zoom with the camera off. Yes, sliding into a guy's

(27:49):
dam no, mm hmm. Watching someone's story just to let
them know you saw it. Yes, Yes, Patty, I'm gonna
give it a like. How about it? Really, I'm the opposite.
I just don't watch it. I don't care. I'm gonna

(28:09):
say yeah, saying happy birthday at eleven fifty nine PM.

Speaker 5 (28:13):
Yeah, I remember it's your birthday. You'll get a text
whatever time that is. Okay, this is next day, heavy
blade in my bad.

Speaker 2 (28:20):
I'm not telling somebody happy birthday at eleven fifty nine
on the same day. No, yeah, no either, Okay, office potlucks.

Speaker 1 (28:28):
Nah.

Speaker 2 (28:29):
I haven't done one on in a while, but I
wouldn't be a posed negative Kayla. Well, it was nice
to have you on as a guest and be on
this side for this episode. Thank you so much for
blessing us what you're voicing your stories. I feel as
that you are inspiration for folks that want to be

(28:49):
where you are. Thank you so much, it was so
fun being on this side. You're welcome, so keep it up.

Speaker 1 (28:54):
Bam.

Speaker 2 (28:54):
Thank you, love and to get the full scoop, tune
into Shamelessly Sean t his YouTube channel. Are you listening
to say musy chante bye?

Speaker 1 (29:05):
Yeah? Yeah, yeah, I can't yeah. The proceeding was a
paid commercial by Black Girl's sun Screen h
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