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June 1, 2025 69 mins

Special thanks to Isabella for being a part of this episode of Unattainable Podcast Show 

We explore the contradictions in modern dating culture and share stories from the high-stakes world of bottle service, while discussing Isabella's journey from club life to real estate in Los Angeles.

• Red flags in dating often include people who immediately start talking about their exes
• The "three loves theory" suggests we experience puppy love, toxic love, and finally find our soulmate
• Bottle service culture involves absurd displays of wealth, with clients spending hundreds of thousands in a night
• LA dating scene features name-dropping, fake wealth displays, and surface-level connections
• Moving from small towns to LA creates both challenges and opportunities for personal growth
• The evolution from appearance-based jobs to skill-based careers represents important personal development
• Car culture and status symbols play different roles for men and women in dating dynamics
• Finding authenticity in cities known for superficiality requires discernment and self-awareness

Follow Isabella on Instagram @bellacbruno to keep up with her journey.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
I feel like there's a lot of like contradiction when
it comes to like, when girlslike get the ick, or like
they're deal breakers, whatever.
Yeah, girls just be likegetting free shit, free shit.
I love the way g-wagons look.
Scorpio, the most toxic of allof them watch out.
I think I do attract toxic,though, because, from from the
look of my past, absolutely ifthere's no toxicity.

(00:24):
I think it gets a little bitmore when I hear a guy, if I
talk to a guy, and number one Ithink that when you first start
dating someone or if you're likegoing to your first date, you
shouldn't talk about your exes.
Exes are exes.
For a reason like why are webringing them up the dating
scene out here like, makes mescared for my life and pretty
privileged, like one under likejesus, dissecting men like that
has been quite a challenge,because welcome to unattainable

(00:50):
glad to have you with us.

Speaker 2 (00:51):
I'm your host, zach Evans, and first of all, thank
you to all of our listeners.
We've been getting a ton of uhexplosive engagement over the
last few weeks and we got tothank you guys for that.
Today we got a special guest onthe show.
This is Isabella.
Isabella, why don't you ahead,introduce yourself to the
audience, name what you do andyour star sign?

Speaker 1 (01:09):
Hi guys, I'm Bella, I do modeling and real estate and
I'm a Scorpio.

Speaker 2 (01:17):
Scorpio, the most toxic of all the water signs
Watch out.
Do you have a lot of red flags?

Speaker 1 (01:24):
Do you end?

Speaker 2 (01:25):
up in toxic relationships a lot.

Speaker 1 (01:26):
I would say they're all like pretty orange you know
or?
Like fuchsia, pink maybe, butnot necessarily red.

Speaker 2 (01:34):
You know, I think if there's no toxicity, I think it
gets a little bit boring, yeah,like where's the fun at?
I think you need a little bitof toxicity.

Speaker 1 (01:43):
I think I do attract toxic though Cause from from the
look of my past.
Absolutely, but yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:51):
I used to be very toxic Not anymore.
Now I'm very shy and romantic,but back in my villain era.

Speaker 1 (01:56):
Yeah, yes, the villain era.

Speaker 2 (01:58):
Villain era.
I would say but I was like aprofessional fuckboy, not like
these amateurs you see nowadays.

Speaker 1 (02:03):
Oh, you had a license for it.
I should have.

Speaker 2 (02:06):
You're a professional , they should require a license
at this point.
Yeah, y'all be falling fordudes that have a bed that
touches two walls.

Speaker 1 (02:14):
Oh yeah, not noted nightstanders.

Speaker 2 (02:15):
No bed frame at all, the fuck, but one of my friends
is dating this guy that she metoff Hinge.

Speaker 1 (02:23):
first of all, First of is dating this guy that she
met off hinge.
First of all, first of all, getright, that's the first red
flag hinge.

Speaker 2 (02:28):
Yeah, right.
Second of all, his first.
His first picture was ashirtless selfie that he took at
le fitness that's like his, his, uh, his main pick.

Speaker 1 (02:36):
Yeah, like grow up.
No, that's already shirtlessselfies at equinox like an adult
no the shirtless pic like,especially even if it's in like
the other ones.

Speaker 2 (02:44):
If you can like, look at more photos, that's still
douchey, but the profile pic,that's pretty bad, yeah,
although I will say a lot, of alot of girls say, oh it's cringe
, oh it's douchey, and then I'llsee the new guy they're dating,
shirtless selfie right, they'redating and I'm like I feel like
y'all don't really care thatmuch there's a lot.

Speaker 1 (03:00):
I feel like there's a lot of like contradiction when
it comes to like, when girlslike at the ick or like their
deal breakers, whatever yeah itkind of like, is mirrored of,
like what they have alreadydated or what they say they hate
, but it's like they're theironly vice, like their vice yeah,
or whatever yeah, I like to sayI never ask girls for

(03:23):
relationship advice unlessthere's a few girls I trust that
are like gonna be real with me.

Speaker 2 (03:27):
Instead I say, oh, tell me about your exes.
And I find that ex that they'relike, yeah, fuck this guy.
He's so annoying, he's asociopath, and I I'm like that's
a red flag too.
I'm like I can tell that you'rein love with him.
Still, yeah, I'm like what wasthat guy like?

Speaker 1 (03:42):
tell me about that relationship that's funny that
you say that, because you'relike that's your perception of
like when a girl says that.
But to me now, like when I seeit, when I hear a guy, if I talk
to a guy and number one, Ithink that when you first start
dating someone, or if you'relike going on your first date,
you shouldn't talk about yourexes like that really should be.
You know like yeah, and like,even then, like I feel like exes

(04:04):
are exes for a reason like whyare we bringing them up?
you know, unless and people thatdo bring them up, they're
either still, you know, involvedwith them in some way or have
some kind of relationship withthem, or they're they're they
like, when guys are like she wasso crazy, like, oh my god, my
ex blah, blah like usuallythat's a red flag to me that
that guy is like he's theproblem and he's like making

(04:26):
this girl to look like this,like monster, but he really is
the, the one that was like themost toxic in the relationship.
That's like personal experienceof what I've, uh, like people
that I've met and guys that I'vedated and I hear how they talk,
you know, and I'm like it'salways like the guy that that is
that is wrong.
That's like has the most to say.

Speaker 2 (04:44):
You know what I mean I mean when I was in my fuckboy
phase.
I will say from experience thatI had a lot of girls block me
and at some point, there's asatisfaction.

Speaker 1 (04:54):
Though you love that feeling, I'm not gonna lie to
you.

Speaker 2 (04:56):
Okay, I told someone this, they, they couldn't
believe this that I was sayingthis.
I said if a girl says, behindmy back, if she told somebody
somebody, zach, he's such asweet guy, he's the best guy,
you should definitely get toknow him, he's so amazing I
would take that as an insult.
But if a girl says like, ohyeah, zach, he's a fucking

(05:16):
narcissist sociopath, he's afuck boy, I would take that as a
compliment.

Speaker 1 (05:20):
Because the first one they're basically saying like I
wouldn't date this guy, butlike he should deserve a nice,
like like six you feel like youlike left your mark for a reason
, like a, like there's a yeah,like if a girl's talking shit
about you and blocks like youdid something, you know that
means she was in love with youyeah, if a girl breaks up and he
was like yeah, no, like he'sgreat, he's so amazing.

Speaker 2 (05:42):
It's like nah, that means they weren't really in
love with you.
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (05:45):
Okay, I guess I see what you're saying, kind of like
when they're like when peoplehate on you on the internet,
whatever when you.
That's how you know you've madeit.

Speaker 2 (05:51):
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So that's you with your exes.
Pretty much, pretty much,pretty much.
Mm-hmm, I'm sure you are MrPisces.
What was your last?

Speaker 1 (06:09):
relationship.
It was detrimental to my life.
It was not a good one,interesting.

Speaker 2 (06:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (06:17):
He was like the narcissist.
He was like the Bowser of thecastle, Like you know when you
have to like get Princess Peachat the end.
He was like the bowser of thecastle.
Like you know, when you have tolike get princess peach at the
end, like the last you know uhuh level of the game, whatever
it's the most difficult.

Speaker 2 (06:31):
He was the boss.
Yes, thank you.
But, but, but um, have youheard the three loves theory?

Speaker 1 (06:37):
um, I think.
So wait, like when it's thethird.
The first one's supposed to belike in high school you don't
know what the fuck you're doing,it doesn't really count.
Second one is like the toxic.
And then the third you havefree love.
The first one's supposed to belike puppy love, you don't know
what the fuck you're doing.

Speaker 2 (06:45):
It doesn't really count.
Second one is like the toxic.
And then the third one is likeyour soulmate, the true love,
blah, blah, blah.

Speaker 1 (06:50):
So maybe this was like the second.
He was my third like long-termrelationship and but I have
heard that of that theory, but Idon't.
I'm wondering if maybe mysecond relationship wasn't love,
because it was like the mostlike.
When I look back, I'm like I do, I say nice things about him.
I'm like I wouldn't talk shitabout him.

(07:12):
So I'm like I and that's theonly one that I ended the other
ones like it was you know I waslike fighting, you know, um,
almost like not to like hate onmyself, but like not like I
shouldn't have just let thesepeople go, you know, but I like
really wanted to to fight forthese guys that were not um,
that were not that great, but um, the second one, maybe I it

(07:35):
wasn't a real love, so maybe itis like that, like my third one
technically was my second toxiclove I see, and now we're just
waiting.

Speaker 2 (07:42):
So you're just going through a couple of the toxic
ones before the soulmate.

Speaker 1 (07:46):
Yeah, but I'm not gonna lie to you.
Since I've moved to la, it'sgotten more horrendous of course
the dating scene out here likemakes me scared for my life, so
I I choose not to date that much.
I've really found um peace andquiet within myself and
happiness, like I love me andgoing out with my girls and I've

(08:06):
gone on some crazy like somedates where I'm like I should
like write a book about some ofthe guys that I've been out here
tell me some stories just dudesthat are like it's.
So you know, like the who do youknow?
Here, or like yeah, who do youknow like that?
The, la name dropping, I justcan't, yeah, and I'm like I
don't care about, like what youre-com business is and all your

(08:28):
okay, what tarot?

Speaker 2 (08:29):
I have some pro advice.
Anytime a guy says he has acrypto company, he has an e-com
business if you have an e-combusiness.

Speaker 1 (08:36):
He has a day trading stock.

Speaker 2 (08:39):
It's, it's all bullshit.
99 be like.
Show me your.
Let's see if there's spellingerrors on this motherfucker
Cause there probably is, if youeven have a website.

Speaker 1 (08:48):
No, and God forbid, so like.
So we have this thing inScottsdale that um cause I've
met more people that actually dohave money out here than
Arizona, of course, but we, um,when I was working in the 30 000
millionaires and they're likeguys that would like save up
their life savings just for onenight, like one week, yeah, and
they like rent a, they'd rent a.

(09:08):
There's a place literally calledrent a vet um in old town,
scottsdale, and people like guyswould like literally rent a
super nice, like sick car forthe night, just to like pull up
to the club.
They'd have like their moneyand they spend everything like
literally just for for what?
Like for an ego boost or for tofeel cool for the night, like
it's so sad but, like those guysthat you're like, you have to

(09:28):
like know like what to catch onthem.
So if you're like going on adate with a guy and he's like
you know it's all facade like,and then you go back, if you
like god forbid, go back totheir like house and they like
they they're sleeping on liketheir mom's couch or something
and they're like I don't knowand like it has, to match it has
yeah, yeah.
So you have to kind of like Idon't know, it's like dissecting

(09:51):
men, like that has been quite achallenge because everybody's
different.

Speaker 2 (09:54):
There's no actual like blueprint is it that much
of it like?
Sometimes I have a friend whogot a lambo he obviously he's
leasing it yeah, and he lives inlike a shitty apartment and I
I'm like okay, maybe the girlthinks they're cool but
eventually she's going to seeher apartment and then like or
do you always go to their place?
Like I don't understand.

Speaker 1 (10:12):
His priorities are fucked up.
You know like I don't thinkthat.

Speaker 2 (10:25):
Like the clout disappears the second they see
your sad.
I used to date this girl.
It's like early covid,everybody's blowing up on
instagram or on tiktok, I meanum, so she had like million plus
followers.
Every story was like yachtprivate jet taloon, blah, blah,
blah, blah, blah.
And I went to her house onetime and she lived like have you
been to the valley much?

Speaker 1 (10:41):
I mean, yeah, that's like what, like studio city and
like over the hill.

Speaker 2 (10:45):
Yeah, like over the hill, yeah over the hill.
Okay, yes, I'm still learning.
Okay, yeah, my mom's fromstudio city, I see that's makes
her a valley girl.
Yeah, but the valley's verylike it's like.
Have you seen the lion kingmovie?
Lion king?

Speaker 1 (10:59):
yeah, yes, like the disney movie.

Speaker 2 (11:00):
Yeah, yeah, I have mufasa and simba on pride rock.
Uh-huh, he's like simba.
He's like everything the lighttouches is your kingdom, and
then he's like those dark,shadowy areas.
Never fucking go there.
There's crackhead hyenas yes,okay, yeah she was in the part
of the valley that's like theshadowy areas because the
valley's like the weird.
There's like graffitieverywhere bars over the wind.

(11:22):
There's like yeah, f childrenscurrying around in the sewers.
Like it's very sketchy, feralchildren.
And I like go up to her place,I open the door and you know her
three roommates are sitting onthe couch or whatever.
And I'm like, yeah, like giveme the tour, you know.
And I'm thinking she's likemade it A million on TikTok.
Well, she cardboard box.

(11:47):
Yo, I opened the two-storycardboard box get a nice one.
And it was literally like I waslike this is a nice, like
walk-in closet.
She's like, zach, this is myroom.
I looked down no, there's justa mattress on the ground, no
fitted sheet, just like a flat.

Speaker 1 (11:57):
Oh my god, I can't my ears.

Speaker 2 (11:58):
I go like this I can touch both of the walls.
But the craziest part, wherewas?
Like it was just a bed in theroom, a bed, and then there's
not even dressers, there's likethe cardboard moving boxes which
is like clothes and like somehangers in it and we start
watching.
We start watching hulu on onher laptop because she doesn't
have a tv no, and she is sorry,I shouldn't be laughing.

Speaker 1 (12:21):
I heard that, but that's just funny advertisements
.

Speaker 2 (12:24):
I was like you were on a private jet yesterday.
You have Hulu withadvertisements.
I'm like this does not fuckingmatch, like what is your life?
It's like crazy.
It's like advertisements.
It was like the ultimate, likeit was like a lifestyle catfish.
You know what I mean.

Speaker 1 (12:39):
Yeah Well, I mean like okay, in her defense.
I mean I don't know this girl,but I'm just going to like in
her defense, girls, just be likegetting Free shit, free shit
Like you.
I mean she could have met theguy at like Circle K you know
what I'm saying and he couldhave been like yo.
Do you want to go on this?
Yeah, we got two extra seats.

(13:00):
You had a girl like like, andshe'll be like yes, and then she
probably has nothing to bringyou know except herself, and
like maybe like a change ofclothes or something, and then
she, and then you go, and thenyou come back and I think it is
unfair sometimes, like for Idon't know girls just be like
flexing.
I mean like I'm not gonna sayit's unfair because, like you

(13:21):
know, it's.
It's a great time for me as well, but I see it though, when I'm
like girls just get like.
It's not that hard for girlsmost of the time I mean, here's
the thing.
So I'm a straight white male.

Speaker 2 (13:31):
I'm already up here and I'm a pisces, so I'm like
yeah, I'm like the top level.
The only thing that beats me ispretty privileged like and
privilege, and pretty privilegedlike one under, like jesus.

Speaker 1 (13:42):
You know what?

Speaker 2 (13:43):
I'm saying just like the lifestyle's insane, yeah,
but it lasts like 10 years.
Then you gotta figure shit out,like you know what I mean.
So like the problem is, what alot of girls do is they have
this like insane lifestyle.
They get so used to it but thenthey never develop a skill set
like you're doing real estate,you're like actually building a

(14:05):
skill set that will be worthsomething in the future.
Yeah, but a lot of girls neverdo that and then at the end it's
like, oh shit, my privilegepretty privilege is running out
and now I have zero skills, Ihave zero career path and I just
have to marry a rich dude, likethat's my only option and like
fine, like if you find somebodyat that point.
But but sometimes I meet oldergirls that they almost seem like

(14:27):
desperate and jaded.

Speaker 1 (14:30):
Yes, because well, that's what I was gonna say
because, like that, that's afear of mine or has been where,
especially even with bottleservice too, where I'm like I
don't want to live, like most ofmy youth, especially like my
20s, in a job or a situationwhere I'm just relying on other
people.
Like I am, I am dependent onpeople spending money to make

(14:52):
sure that I can, to take care ofmyself, you know, or support
myself.
So that's why I mean, like it isthe evolution, like we talked
about the evolution of thebottle service girl, where she
climbs up to a real yeah, it'slike the end of the evolution
chart to be a real estate agent,but if you think about it it's
the same mentality, it's thesame kind of id like idea of a

(15:12):
type of job, like that hustlertype of thing.
If I can sell, you know, a tenthousand dollar bottle of
champagne, I can, I can probably, I can probably uh sell someone
a house, you know actually it'sthat same kind of it's
interesting you say that becauseI've always been.

Speaker 2 (15:27):
This is something that has never made sense to me,
because you watch SellingSunset, whatever.

Speaker 1 (15:32):
That's a fake show.
By the way, that's so fake.
A lot of those women apparentlydon't even have real estate
licenses.
I definitely believe that it'sstaged for a show.
It's Hollywood.

Speaker 2 (15:42):
But even in just the real estate scene in general,
there's definitely adisproportionate amount of
attractive girls that are realestate agents.
And the bizarre thing to me butactually I think you might've
explained it to me is I rememberthinking like, okay, I get like
a hot girl's like I don't know,working at like H&M.
She says you look good in ashirt, oh, maybe I do.

(16:12):
Okay, I'm going to buy like a$15 t-shirt because it's hot
girl, whatever.
But I'm like what guys aregoing to buy a $10 million home
because, oh, this hot girl wasin there.
But I think it's what you said.

Speaker 1 (16:16):
It's more of the same thing.
Why are men?
Guys, I don't think it's whywhy do men come into the club
and literally they buy, just tostart the like, the lowest end,
a bottle of cheetos.
If you buy that at fries, it'slike what?
Like 40 bucks, like 30 bucks,it's 800 at the club.
And like, not that like,because I would never be like

(16:38):
you know, arguing that, you know, while I was working there,
because I'm like, that makes memoney but I'm like on my own.
If that was my own money, likethere's no way in hell I would
walk into a club, spend 800 on abottle when I could go home and
and and make my own drink for40 bucks, you know, and have
that and have multiple drinksout of that bottle for 40 bucks,
you know.
So it doesn't like that's thatsame kind of mentality.

(17:00):
A guy comes in and he'sspending like tens, twenties,
hundreds of thousands of dollarsat clubs on bottle service with
champagne for the show theywant, like the the bigger that
yeah, the bigger the bottle youget.
You know, you get a car.
The girl comes out and like aand like, we had cars that were
like g wagons or like mclarens,like, and we would be like these
are these like differentpackages?
Um, if you want your name to beon the sign, it's another, like

(17:23):
you, you have to at least spend4,000, or blah, blah, blah.
Like there was all thesedifferent things and the guys
would be like you know, ifsomebody else was spending, then
they would be like, oh, I'm notgonna let that guy like, you
know, like taught me.
So then people would have, likeyou know, like ego wars between
tables and strangers.
So I mean I don't think it'slike that intense, like with the
real estate thing, becausethere's not going to be.

(17:45):
I mean there could be withpeople like making offers and
stuff.

Speaker 2 (17:47):
Imagine they start figuring out that like hey, to
sell houses that actually likethey walk and they like bottles
or they're like sparklers Iactually thought of that I was
like wait, that's actuallyhilarious.

Speaker 1 (17:58):
That would be hilarious it makes me laugh at
that show, the selling sunset.
I've seen memes where it's likeabsolutely nobody and then it's
like real estate, uh, women onuh at 10 am on selling sunset
and they're like in like abright yellow, like jumpsuit
with like their nipples almostout, like the one girl's like
pregnant she's got like a bellychain on it and they're like
showing a house at like 10o'clock in the morning.

(18:19):
So like that's so unrealisticbut they literally just go
around here's the bathroomhere's the bathroom by the way,
did you hear about, like whatcrystal did that's?

Speaker 2 (18:28):
like it's literally just tea the whole show.
Yeah, yeah, it's like nobodyreally cares what the hell.
It's just kind of as the excuseto have the show.

Speaker 1 (18:34):
Someone's like I want to make an offer.
They're like hold on.
We're like we're talking rightnow, like, by the way, like her
husband is so ugly.

Speaker 2 (18:40):
I see the dudes all the time at equinox.
Oh, you do.

Speaker 1 (18:43):
Yeah, the two guys oh yeah, because the the what is
it called oppenheim, oppenheimerit's like down the street, it's
like right next to equinoxsunset yeah one time they were
filming, when they like expandedit used to be like that one
small one they opened it up andI looked so I just got done with
soul cycle.
So I think you can imagine likewhat I look like.
I was like literally drenchedin sweat and my hair was like

(19:06):
wet and I look like a tomato andthey were filming and people
were like walking but they hadto just go behind.
But I was like I'm gonna crossthe street at the light and I'm
not gonna like let the godforbid be like in the, in the
background of the show.

Speaker 2 (19:20):
I'm just over there with like my just like hooding,
like, get out of here yeah,that's so la though what is the
most?

Speaker 1 (19:28):
somebody spent on bottle service when you were
working um okay, well, I havelike two answers for that one
guy.
There was one that, like ittechnically didn't count,
because this guy was like this,this it went down in like
history, whatever.
Like he was a con artist.

(19:48):
He was a dude that was put likepushing through transactions
for a company, um, and he wasspending like hundreds of
thousands of dollars.
Like at one point he startedoff small but then he started um
spending more and more all atonce and then the transaction
started getting declined.
So he would like have this codethat like the credit card
company is supposed to have whenyou know you get fraud alert

(20:09):
and it declines it, whatever.
Like they're supposed to likepush, like be able to have the
say he was like a.
He was like a computer, yeah,scammer, like con artist person,
so yeah, and he was like he wasa character for sure.
And um one night he came it was, I remember, I remember this it
was mother's day, or it waslike mother's day weekend.

(20:30):
I think it was actuallymother's day, which is a sunday
usually right, he's trying tomake his mom proud.

Speaker 2 (20:36):
It makes sense, yeah no, he.

Speaker 1 (20:37):
But he came in like I .
It was like really exciting forme because I brought him in.
I was like he was my book forthe night so yeah and I'm like
whatever like I.
So I got to have like extrahours on the clock.
You know, every girl gets aboutlike five, whatever like I was
gonna get like like eight, sevenor eight or something.
And this man, he cleaned outour fridges from our other
properties that night and he wasbuying like three liters and

(20:59):
like three liters of ace rosewhich are like those are like
twenty two thousand dollarbottles, like they're.
If I'm okay, I'm not, don'tquote me on that, but I'm pretty
sure like they're yeah, I knowthey I'm trying to remember like
the sizes on.
It might have been I think therewere three liters, but they
might have been like six liters,but they were like in between,
like 10 and like 20 000 like perbottle, and they're like
dumping, like spraying them likeit was so disrespectful, like

(21:20):
people's, like college tuition,like spraying all over the club.
And, side note, like if you getchampagne in your eyes
especially, um, I got like acerose because someone was trying
to like pour it into my mouthwhile I was like laying down and
they missed and they poured itstraight into my open eyes and I
like I literally thought that Ilost my eyesight.
I was convinced that I wasgoing blind.
I was like this for like 15, 20minutes but, yeah, he spent, I

(21:44):
think like 400 000 dollars thatnight and it got charged back
like we never got paid for itgotcha yeah so like that was
like the most, because that'slike an absurd amount yeah 400
grand in one night, and thenthere was tip on top of that, so
like 20 included there's peoplethat make that their entire
life I know, and that's why I'mlike, that's why it's insulting
you would have made like 80 K inone night If it had gone
through, I think I would havemade.

(22:05):
No, I would have.
I think I was supposed to makelike 9,000, like walk out the
door with 9,000, but like younever do when it's like a lot of
money, like if the girls aregoing to make over a couple of
grand you don't keep thatusually.
Um, I learned that because, likewhen he was spending a bunch,
you know, like like a monthprior, like weeks prior, we were

(22:27):
like getting payouts, whateverwe were getting paid for a
minute, but then all the moneystopped, like I think he ran out
like we never, we don't knowbut, since then I don't know the
most I think I've ever.
It was like 100k in one night,like one table was 100k and, um,
I think it was like new year'sor something a couple years ago,
um, when the year that 20 was2021 because the covid was

(22:51):
lifted yeah, and then peoplewere like ready to like lose
their mind again yeah, and thosepeople were like actual money,
the people that weren't affectedby covid.
They were just continuing tomake income while everything was
shut down.
You know what I mean?
It didn't like they didn't needto like work nine to five to
like make income whileeverything was shut down.
You know, what I mean.
It didn't like they didn't needto like work nine to five to
like make income.
So these people were like justitching to like get back into
the club.
So auto service was like lit.

Speaker 2 (23:14):
Like it was so crazy.
My main business is all onlineand my sales tripled for no
reason.
I didn't do anythingdifferently For no reason Just
randomly, just like triple.
I was like okay sick and I feltbad for everybody else.
But I'm like man, this wasalmost like, and then on top of
that I wasn't like going to anyrestaurants or anything, so I
wasn't spending any money.

Speaker 1 (23:32):
So yeah, you're just like.
Yeah, it's like literally onlypositive money over covid.

Speaker 2 (23:36):
I got kind of lucky in a weird way, yeah.
So so, being a bottle servicegirl, is there some point of
like you that gets like I don'twant to say jaded, but almost
like it's your job to kind offinesse guys and I don't mean

(23:58):
finesse in a bad way, becausethat's part of the job they're
paying for.
Okay, pretty girl, come up tome.

Speaker 1 (24:03):
No, yeah, it is finesse 100 yeah, so, but like
some people I feel like it'sjust like, whatever their moral,
like the person they are, it's,it's different.
Like some girls are like, notlike they they don't care about.
Like sometimes I would,sometimes I would, it would work
against me at my job because Iwould be like I morally cannot
do this to this person and I'mlike I'm gonna get, I'll get in

(24:25):
trouble for my manager if Idon't.
You know, like, do like the like, treat this as a business
decision but sometimes I wouldbe like you don't gotta, you
don't gotta get another bottleand I'd be like, because I want
that, like a lot of times, likeyour retreat, your return rate
yeah, you want them to come back, like if you like, absolutely
fuck somebody and like make whenthey wake up and they like want
to die because they're like youknow, you just strip me of

(24:47):
everything in my dignity.
That's like that is the worstfeeling I can imagine.
I'm like I mean I've never likedone that before, but like I
can imagine what that feels like.
And we've made like long-termfriendships with a lot.
I still like a of my, myclients that I would book that
were my regulars.
I'm still good friends withthem and when I go visit arizona
I see some of them.

(25:07):
Some of them live here and Ijust feel like characters at
some point.
That's another reason why I gotout of it is because I just
couldn't like, if you want to dowell, you kind of have to like
allow bad things to happen.
Like if you see something, youhave to kind of like and it was
difficult for me, like it would.
It would.
It would kind of like take atoll on me and doing certain

(25:28):
things, but then at the sametime I'm like there, I'm not
gonna get a schedule if I don't,you know do your job if I if I
speak up about something that'swrong, like every, every like
it's a dirty business,everybody's like people will
push you under the bus to maketheir extra penny, you know, and
you have to kind of like.
You have to like realize that,like I used to get my feelings

(25:48):
hurt, I'd be like, oh my god, Ithought that girl's my friend
and like it would be like orlike my manager, like it's
cutthroat, it's literally likeeverybody for themselves kind of
thing.
so like I learned when I leftalso that like who my real
friends were.
It was kind of sad because Ilearned like all these people
that I thought were like youknow, like close people to me
girls and guys I hadn't heardfrom them, whatever I'm like, do

(26:10):
you learn like who your realpeople are when you get outside
of like that kind of likeatmosphere, that kind of scenery
?

Speaker 2 (26:18):
You know what I mean.

Speaker 1 (26:19):
Like in that industry , especially for a job.
You know, club industry iscrazy.
I've never been more blessed tolike, not be.
You make a ton of money, butit's yeah, that's what I'm
saying Like it took six yearsliterally for me to get out of
that, and I literally had tomove.
But, it was the best choice Iever made, and people were like,
oh my God, LA is so why do youlive in LA?
I'm like I don't know.
I don't know why I love it here.

(26:55):
I don't my grandma always saysthat she's a cancer, she's like
I need to be by the pacific.

Speaker 2 (26:57):
It's it's grounding for me.

Speaker 1 (26:57):
I just think la has.
So I'm from wisconsin, which isa conservative small town kind
of what.
What part milwaukee area.
My dad's um born, born inmilwaukee, shut the fuck.
You know where monona grove isof course my dad's from monona
grove I'm from brown deer.

Speaker 2 (27:05):
It's like right out the suburb of milwaukee but it's
like same shit.
Do you know?

Speaker 1 (27:09):
who um pat mcchesey is pat mcafee pat mcchesey no
he's like the mayor of cottagegrove okay, no, he's like a
family.
I don't know if you knew he waslike a legend apparently, for
he owned all the popeyesfranchises there, yeah he had.
Like a popeyes.
He visit us.
We'd like swipe the card at thedrive-thru.

Speaker 2 (27:30):
But yeah, did you live there at all or no?

Speaker 1 (27:31):
No, no, no, no, okay, like, barely like even visited.

Speaker 2 (27:35):
I mean there's not much to go there for?
Yeah, no, and it's cold, thecheese, the Packers, it's cold.

Speaker 1 (27:39):
Like I'm lactose intolerant, it's not my beer.
I'm like, yeah, literally,there's nothing for me in
wisconsin, like literally, andit's freezing, I mean in the
winters, obviously.
And um, when we went there Ilearned that, like in wisconsin
homes it's normal to have like aplate of like cheese spread

(28:01):
like where you like.
You spread the like it lookslike cream cheese, but it's like
yeah, yeah, I'm not a big fanof that cheese.

Speaker 2 (28:07):
That is a normal thing, though, but every, every,
room like I went to go visitfamily.

Speaker 1 (28:11):
Every single room had a cheese plate on the table,
like as a as a as an order.

Speaker 2 (28:16):
Yeah, you're talking about like during christmas, or
just it was like it was like anormal house.

Speaker 1 (28:20):
We'll have that like during christmas, no it was
every place we went and I don'tknow if it's like maybe I'm
italian, like my family, butlike it wasn't even like a nice
charcuterie board with this.
It was like what are thosecalled?

Speaker 2 (28:34):
Slim Jims.
It was like Slim Jims.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, Like thelittle sausages.

Speaker 1 (28:38):
What are those called ?
The something sausages.
They're like in a can.
They're so nasty.

Speaker 2 (28:43):
Yeah, I know what you're talking about.
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (28:45):
Vienna sausages Literally disgusting.

Speaker 2 (28:55):
Like talking about, yeah, vienna sausages literally
disgusting, like it's like spam,but like sausage, yeah.
Yeah, wisconsin is not like amoney state, it's like not, it's
, it's literally like no.
My dad worked at this factory.
I'm working at the same factoryuntil I'm 65 and hopefully
there's social security.
So I have something to live on,or you like own a farmland or
whatever you have like.

Speaker 1 (29:05):
We had a my, my cousins they own this company
called the ground guys and theirjob like dead ass, was like in
the winter time they would goplow people's driveways so they
could leave to go to work.
And I'm like that, like beingfrom arizona, I'm like what,
like what, the literal hell likeI'm, you would never think of
needing a service like that hereI think wisconsin was like back

(29:26):
in the day, like 1800, whateverthe fuck.

Speaker 2 (29:28):
There's like a group of people back in the day like
1800 or whatever the fuck.
There's like a group of peoplethat in the summer they like
migrated north, they're likeit's great here, and I think
winter happened and then theygot stuck and they're like, well
, I guess we're staying here.
And then they just kind ofstayed and they're like what the
fuck?
I don't know Winter.

Speaker 1 (29:52):
I still remember scraping the ice off my
windshield at like you like, youlike, forget your gloves.
Your hands are freezing.
Then you touch a stirring.
It's like that's like the norm,like for like growing up there.
I see like I would like that's,I'm so.
I'm so blessed that I didn'thave to explain, but more so it.

Speaker 2 (29:58):
It boggles my mind because that's why, like I love
la too.
Right, because I get it.
Yes, people are fake.
Yes, like people are cloutchasers, whatever, but at least
there's like this, like energyfor life, that people are
hustling.

Speaker 1 (30:13):
No, that's what I love I, I agree, and I, I lived
in 2020.
I lived in, I moved to newportwhen, like, the world was ending
everybody thought likeliterally the world was gonna
end.
I was like I am not dying here,in, like in, I call it satan's
lair arizona.
It's just hot, it's like ovendirt.
I'm like I want to be by theocean if I'm gonna go down, you

(30:33):
know.
So I literally like when covidgets me no, and I believe
everything happens for a reason.
I'm begging in um likemanifestation, all that type of
um, all that type of, you know,spiritual.

Speaker 2 (30:47):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah yeah, that's for sure.

Speaker 1 (30:50):
But I finally was like I'm going to kick, like I
wanted to do it back when I waslike 18.
I was in a relationship with aguy.
I was like kind of dependent onhim and I never did it and I
regretted it.
So now I'm like we're doingthis, I put the feelers out
there, like I kind of like youknow, spoken into existence and

(31:11):
for some reason, like duringCOVID, when like things were
shutting down, like I gotapproved for an apartment, like
I was not getting my um, whatwas it called?
The, the unemployment we weren'tgetting, like I couldn't figure
out how to like get it figuredout or whatever to get paid
every month.
So I I had like a bunch ofweeks backed up of like making
nothing.
So I was like I was, you know,speaking into existence, like

(31:32):
praying, whatever, and itfinally like hit my account all
at once.
After that I got approved forthe apartment and like like 12
grand like hit my account,whatever.
It was like that many weeks orwhatever for for the
unemployment and I packed up, myshit literally moved and I was
so.
And then I was with my secondboyfriend and something in me
said I wanted to break up withhim, but I didn't know how and

(31:55):
that was like he hated it whenwe came here.
So I was like sayonara,brethren Brethren.
This is Game of Thrones, yeahliterally I was like it was a
good run we had.

Speaker 2 (32:07):
Sayonara, tyrion.
Yeah, he had his.
It was a good run, we had Signour attorney.

Speaker 1 (32:09):
He had his moms come and move him out, so I removed
myself for that.
That's the one I'm like.
I don't want to say bad thingsabout him, but it just needed to
end and I think this was thestart of my independent journey,
finding Bella journey and itstarted in Newport, which was

(32:31):
amazing and I I loved newportand it was very conservative
during that time, yeah, so I waspretty lucky when I would call.
Yeah, when I call my parents,I'd be like, oh my god, like
we're still like, and I'm likeI'm on a boat right now.
Exactly the same way I'm on ayacht or I'm on a duffy, like
I'm in the harbor.
I'm drinking like I'm drinkingchampagne.
Sun is shining there, shining.
There's Trump statueseverywhere.
People were like super, therewas just a lot of like old white

(32:53):
conservative money out there.
Yeah, great, but I wasn'tmaking any money.
I was hanging out with allthese people that had like
family money.
So they'd be like, oh, let's doa beach day.
And it was like every singleday and I'm like coming, like I
literally pack my shit, I go,and then like two weeks would go
by and I'm like, damn, I haveno money right now yeah, we
didn't give a fuck.

Speaker 2 (33:10):
We had some of the best super spreader events, I
mean and super what superspreader events.
What is that, you know?
Super spreader, like they say,like any party during covid.
They're like oh it's a superspreader event.
Everybody's gonna get covid.

Speaker 1 (33:22):
Honestly, I'm sorry where my brain went when you
said super spreader.

Speaker 2 (33:25):
I was like this is inappropriate oh, like legs
spreading ass, cheeks orsomething.
We're very moral.
We spread covid, yeah sorry,yeah, yeah, you're like
spreading open bible exactlyflipping the pages, yeah, yeah,
um okay I didn't get covered asingle time oh, you didn't so
it's either a tequila killsbacteria and it kills the covid

(33:48):
virus.

Speaker 1 (33:49):
That's possible not true or b um or else I grew up
drinking tap water.

Speaker 2 (33:55):
So my immune system's fucking strong I did too,
though I got.

Speaker 1 (33:59):
I got covid like really bad, like where I thought
I was gonna die in a bottle.

Speaker 2 (34:03):
I need a bottle.
You know.
You know the first people whowanted water in a bottle Fucking
babies.
Mommy, mommy, I want my bottle.

Speaker 1 (34:11):
Fuck that shit Drink it out of the tap like a fucking
man.
They gave milk in a bottle.
Oh, whatever, same shit.

Speaker 2 (34:16):
Yeah yeah.
So I don't play those games,you know.

Speaker 1 (34:20):
He said mommy, mommy, I want a bottle.

Speaker 2 (34:23):
Is this true though?

Speaker 1 (34:24):
No, it was Kanye, remember.
He said when's the first timethey asked you you want
sparkling?
But I do.
I grew up drinking tap wateralso.
Sometimes tap water like tasteslike home, I'm not gonna lie,
but I drink tap water all thetime.
I I would like there arecertain apartments, but there

(34:44):
are some places that I wherethey like they're like tap water
is like not safe to drink.

Speaker 2 (34:47):
Everybody tells me that freaks me out and I'm like
they're like tabloids, like notsafe to drink.
Everybody tells me that freaksme out and I'm like kill my
third eye or something like killyour third eye yeah, oh, I
thought it was like parasites orlike bacteria that'll like make
you sick.
Everything's bad for you.
Nowadays, I don't believenothing that's true they told me
when I was growing up that thebottom of the food pyramid,
which is like you're supposed tohave the most of it, was like
pasta.
Pasta, like it was like allcarbs.

(35:08):
It was like you need to havelike all carbs and a little bit
of like protein.
And now I'm like, wait, y'allwere just lying to us that whole
time.
I don't fucking know what'sreal anymore.
Everything's fake.

Speaker 1 (35:18):
They also.
At one point they were likebutter is terrible for you,
margarine.

Speaker 2 (35:21):
Yeah, margarine is good for you and now I just like
eat whatever the fuck I want.
I just work out, just fuckingwork out work, yeah, and have
everything in moderation.

Speaker 1 (35:41):
Diets I think are crazy.
People need to understand likecan't just like go cold turkey
on something to to achieve orgain something.
You're a beast well like, butit's not, it's not send it it's
not sustainable, though, forlike the future, if you want to
like, continue that, becausethen like once you, you know you
like starve yourself fromsomething for so long and you

(36:02):
get back into it.
And then you like gorgeyourself, you know, because
you're like oh, my god, Ihaven't had this for so long my
brother has been doing it.

Speaker 2 (36:07):
Have you heard of this thing called the carnivore
diet?
It's all meat All you eat islike fucking steak.
It's called the.

Speaker 1 (36:13):
Atkins diet.

Speaker 2 (36:15):
Right, atkins.
I think Atkins is just no carbs, but you can have anything else
.

Speaker 1 (36:20):
This is literally just meat.

Speaker 2 (36:29):
It's just like fucking medium rare steak every
day.
I feel like that's like.
It's like even that like anexcess, is not?
I mean, it seems bad.
He lost a bunch of weight likehe's looking good.
But yeah, high protein,long-term health, I don't know,
like there's probably gotta havelike a little like every couple
.

Speaker 1 (36:37):
I'm like really big on intermittent fasting I did
that for a while.

Speaker 2 (36:40):
Yeah, I do it every day.

Speaker 1 (36:41):
Oh, you still do it yeah, I don't eat like the
latest.
I'm not gonna talk about likeif I go to like a dinner or
something, but I don't.
I typically will book it likeearlier, like I make sure, like
if we're gonna do dinners, likeI'm like that the grandma, I'm
like let's get there at like 7,7, 30 and then I eat um, I don't
like eat carbs or food orwhatever, like physical um

(37:04):
calories after nine but it ispretty crazy that like what's
normal is like dinner at 9 pm,like that's actually dinner at
nine.

Speaker 2 (37:14):
No, I know, but that's normal.
What is this?

Speaker 1 (37:16):
miami.
No, I know, and it's no.
That's like when you're onvacation in miami, like that's
the only time, it's okay.
But basically it's like if I,if I do eat later, I just like
push um the hours later the nextday because it's just like a 12
to 14 hour time of not eatingand I it's usually like while
I'm sleeping and then in theearly morning so I usually don't
eat like noon or like one, butI mean it works.

(37:39):
I mean it's working for me.
I used to be thicker than Ihope how old are you?

Speaker 2 (37:44):
you're very confusing .
I'm 28 interesting because Iwas gonna say like 31 in
personality.
You look like you're like 20with a fake id.
I'm like, I'm like.
Do I talk about like?

Speaker 1 (37:56):
investing.
I look, I, I don't.
You said I, the way I sound is31.
Yes, not the way I look yes,you look like you're.
Oh, my god, I don't know whetherto talk about doing molly at
disneyland or like fuckinginvest yeah, my, my grandma told
me and my like, when I was born, my grandma was like she's an
old soul.
I've been I think I'm like alittle bit beyond my years, but

(38:16):
I'm like so pleased to hearpeople tell me that I look
younger than my age because Inever had a complex about age
until bottle service.
It was my 25th birthday and Iwas like it was my birthday.
They were like we had these twotables, mind you, mine, the
guys were spending my friend'stable, like they were side by
side.
These guys, the guy thatdecided to make a comment to me,

(38:38):
he was he had just bought aball of titos and so I'm like
it's always like the ones, likethe brokest ones, like has the
meanest shit to say to people inthe club.

Speaker 2 (38:46):
This one, yeah, like he was spending he was like not
making his minimum.

Speaker 1 (38:50):
I shouldn't make it about like the money part, but
he was just a douchebag and Iwas so excited.
I was like all my friends cameout.
I was like when, the when I hitmidnight, whatever, they're
like happy birthday and I waslike working and the guy was
like oh my god, how old are you?
and I was like 25, like themusic was playing.
I was like so excited, I waslike so in the moment, and he
was like oh you, uh, you're outof your prime.

(39:12):
And I was like no, I literallywas like.
Leonardo DiCaprio.
No, I literally was like whatthe fuck?
I was like what did you say tome?
Like I couldn't hear you.
I was like trying to clean myear.
I was like I'm sorry what?
And then after that I was likewait, and I remember like all
you know all the.
You're like you want to beolder because you want to like
get into the club.
Like when I had my fake ID.
I was like I was dying to be 21.

(39:33):
And now I'm like dying to belike 18 again.
Like I would kill to like notbe allowed into a club.
I would kill for that and allmy friends out here, people.
Sometimes I lie.
I'm not even lying.
I'm like I'm surprised actuallyat myself that I put my age on
my cake this year and I postedit.

(39:57):
But I've been like I've beenlike gatekeeping it since 26.
I've been gatekeeping.
No, I literally lie down whenpeople like I, literally, I'm
like I'm going to come cleanabout it.
I used to like lie to peoplewhen I first moved out here
because the comments that peoplewould make about being old and
all these TikTokers.
I first moved out here becausethe comments that people would
make about being old and allthese tiktokers.
I'm like watching a tiktokerwith people like millions of
followers, like so funny people.

(40:17):
I watch every day and I'm likein my head I'm like that
person's totally my age.
Like because they like act like.
I see myself and them on thesame level and then I find out
they're like not even, theycan't even drink.

Speaker 2 (40:25):
They're 20 and I'm, I'm like yeah, and then my
girlfriend, literally.

Speaker 1 (40:29):
So I've been friends with this.
This girl Shout out to NayaLove you, baby, it's Aquarius
season.
She just had her birthday, likea week ago, and I've been
friends with her for like a yearand a half and I knew when her
birthday was.
I just never asked, I never,never.
The age number never came upand it was her birthday.

(40:50):
I was like how old are youactually?
And she was like I'm turning 23it's my jordan year.

Speaker 2 (40:52):
I was like, literally , I'm like, get the fuck out of
my face.

Speaker 1 (40:55):
So I was like damn, I can't believe I'm that much
older than you, but we seem likewe're the same age.
You know what I mean.

Speaker 2 (41:00):
So I don't know.
It's confusing because, like,okay, people have told me that
I'm young for my age and I'mtall for my height, and I think
that age is largely likepersonality, like I had a, so my
brother is one year older thanme.

Speaker 1 (41:15):
Right.

Speaker 2 (41:16):
And I showed one of my, my friends, like our family
picture, and he was like oh, isthat your uncle?
How about your brother?
Yeah, it's not that he evenlooks old, it's just he dresses
old, his personalities likeeverything.
But he just it's not that heeven looks old, it's just he
dresses old, his personality'slike everything, does he?

Speaker 1 (41:30):
frown a lot Like.
Is it like cause I've, like youknow, facial expressions.
I don't know, it's just likeyou can just tell You're very
like you have, like a lightnessaround you, like your aura A
halo Right yeah.
Yes, beyonce around you, butsomebody noticed, yeah, but I

(41:52):
don't know.
I feel like, yeah, it ispersonality exactly.
You could have like a more,maybe more extroverted people.

Speaker 2 (41:55):
I don't know, I just I just feel like there's a a
point in life.
I don't want to shit onmarriage too much because some
people probably happily married,blah blah.
But I think some people likeit's almost like they just give
up on life and just like what'sthe next step?
Oh, my sheep brain told me thatthe next step is your sheep
brain had.

Speaker 1 (42:13):
The overlord said we, I'm supposed to yeah,
everybody's like by the book andeverything like this is how?

Speaker 2 (42:19):
how?

Speaker 1 (42:19):
man has been doing this, you know, for for years,
after years, or whatever yeah, Ithink that's starting to break,
though I'm gonna be honest, Ithink it is too.

Speaker 2 (42:26):
I like it especially in big, like big cities, where
it trickles down to the smalltowns eventually, but like, like
tradition is being broken or orwhere things like have always
been, just because we're likewhy do we do this?

Speaker 1 (42:37):
because everybody just says like this is what
we're supposed to do.
There's one person's like Idon't want to do this, like wait
, you can do that, yeah, but youcan say no, you can just be so
with your life.
Cool, I went back to Wisconsinand most of my friends are
married at this point ordivorced.

Speaker 2 (42:57):
One of the two and I'm talking to them and they're
like you know, zach, you knowyou're missing out when you're
going to get married.
You're getting older, you're 32already, blah, blah, blah, blah
, blah.
And I remember later in theconversation I was like like,
what's like your best day,what's like your dream day.
And then when I was like, yeah,you know, my wife's mom takes
the kids, my wife goes out withher friends.

Speaker 1 (43:18):
It's so sad.

Speaker 2 (43:19):
The boys and like watch the game.
I'm like that's every day.
Your greatest existence is mynormal right the fuck are you
talking about?

Speaker 1 (43:27):
you don't even have to try, you just have to wake up
and you have his greatest day,literally.

Speaker 2 (43:32):
It's like bizarre to me, but I'm like that's why I'm
like kind of scared of marriage.
I probably will get marriedsomeday, but I'm like a little
bit scared of it.

Speaker 1 (43:39):
I mean, I feel like I don't know.

Speaker 2 (43:43):
I think eventually this generation.

Speaker 1 (43:45):
I'm kind of this, this generation, though I feel
like we're doomed a little bitlike I'm, I'm gonna, I'm kind of
scared.

Speaker 2 (43:48):
Are you?
Are you gen z a millennial?

Speaker 1 (43:51):
uh, I think I'm millennial.
I think I'm like the last yearof millennial okay yeah, but and
honestly, even if I'm not I Iidentify as millennial.

Speaker 2 (43:58):
I do not oh yeah, I do not associate.

Speaker 1 (44:00):
No offense, you fucking gen z.
I would never ride a fuckingbird scooter I still can't do a
tiktok dance and I'm gratefulfor that, like I will not.

Speaker 2 (44:10):
I refuse to get a perm in my fucking hair a perm,
yeah you know all the tiktokers.

Speaker 1 (44:14):
They have a little perm hair, a little curly okay
well, when you said perm, Ithought of boomer, because perms
are like so oh, I see.

Speaker 2 (44:22):
I don't know if people are using they're using,
like it's called the overnight.

Speaker 1 (44:25):
What is it called the heatless curls?

Speaker 2 (44:26):
are you talking about girls or guys?
You know, guys, the tiktokers,they all have the hair that goes
like.
It's like curly, but it kind ofgoes like that.
Oh, you know, I'm talking aboutthe hairstyle that all the
tiktokers like the douche theones that, like, do the stupid
faces and they're trying to behot they're like being serious,
like one dangly earring curly,oh yeah, like the cross, yeah,
yeah yes, and they literallyjust like.

Speaker 1 (44:46):
They haven't graduated high school yet.

Speaker 2 (44:47):
Yeah, yeah, those guys, when.

Speaker 1 (44:48):
I find that out, I'm like holy fuck like you.
Literally, you just got yourlicense.
It's terrifying.
No it is, it is crazy.

Speaker 2 (44:58):
What's um?
Okay, so you're 29, but you'rebasically 28, 28, slow down
there there.
So, yeah, what's the, what'sthe, what's the oldest?

Speaker 1 (45:15):
and the youngest you've dated in relation to your
age at the time, uh, okay.
Well, my first relationship wasin high school.
I was like 15, I think, and wedated for like five years and we
were the same age and both ofus were children.

Speaker 2 (45:25):
It was like the biggest waste of my adolescence
you know, I know, but like I wasfive years but I didn't even
like because it was like theyears were like I needed to like
.

Speaker 1 (45:33):
They were like growing years.
So I think that like was a hugepart of like, why I needed
therapy, part of the reason youknow what I mean.
But, um, yeah, because I didn't.
I didn't get the sameexperience, you know, being 18
or going.
I was with this.
It was not that good.

(45:54):
You know, after we stayedtogether like we should have
ended it like two or three, butwe stayed until like five and it
was just a mess, but anyways,moving on from him.
Then, once we broke up, I waslike single for a minute and I
like learned how to be likesingle as a 20 year old or a 21
year old and I was scary.

(46:15):
And then, and then I starteddating.
I think he was the oldest, yeah.
So the second guy he was 30, 29the first year and then the
second year.
So, yeah, the first year wewere together.
So I was like 22.
And I think he was like 28 or29, I can't remember, okay, but
he was older yeah and then.
But I got on like dates.
Actually I dated like for ashort period of time.

Speaker 2 (46:38):
Um, he's in prison now jesus, uh, when I lived out
here, you like the bad boys?

Speaker 1 (46:44):
huh, no, this dude had I'm gonna peg your type it's
tattoos motorcycle no, but thisguy had to get on his tippy
toes to like kiss me oh, shorter, short king.

Speaker 2 (46:53):
Well, yeah, like I'm, I don't I?

Speaker 1 (46:55):
don't just I don't discriminate like you should see
my past of dudes that I dated,or like my um, what are they
called my exes?

Speaker 2 (47:04):
no suitors you might be boomer I know I don't even
think he qualifies millennial Iknow I was he was courting me.

Speaker 1 (47:18):
Yeah, I don't know exactly, I don't know why that's
the terminology I went for, butanyways, um, he was like
they're like late 30s and he waslike cool and all he like had
like I don't want to get toolike deep into his thing because
for legal reasons, because he'sscary, but um, I thought he was
, he was chill, but he turnedout to be like super, not, and

(47:39):
yeah, he's in prison now uh, butthat was just like one of the
la guys that were like, I mean,nothing like bad happened to me
out of that, but shows you likewhat.
I did not know anything aboutthis person and like what they
were actually doing in theirlife, and he used to like give
me clues.
All the time he'd be like, oh,I have this hate reddit group.
I'm like why do you have a hatereddit group?

(48:00):
Like they hate him or like hehas a huge community of people
on reddit that despise hisexistence so much they.

Speaker 2 (48:06):
They want him to die.
Is he like famous or aninfluencer?
He?

Speaker 1 (48:09):
was like kind of, yeah, like he was famous, he
used to.
I mean he was a.
No, it's fine Like I'm notbound to any like contract but
he sold.
He was a watch in like jewelry.
He was a watch dealer.
He like owned this company thatwas based out of here I'm
pretty sure it was in BeverlyHills, but he turned out to be

(48:31):
doing some not very legal stuffwith it.
Yeah, but it's about how itlasted.
I got to experience fun carsout of that relationship.
That was a good time, becauseI've always been someone where
I'm like I don't understand whyguys have a huge boner.
They're freaking out over avehicle.
I didn't get it until I, like,sat in a you will know this,

(48:55):
probably, since you're a dude,maybe I don't know.
It's like a Lamborghini, but ithas, like, the Italian flag on
it.
You know what I'm talking aboutyes it's like a, it's like a
$275,000 car, it's likeliterally a house on wheels,
yeah.
And I was like, oh, and when helike pulled up in it and like
we went down like hollywoodboulevard, we're gonna go to
lakers game, I got in and I'mlike, and in my head I'm like

(49:15):
this is like so girl.
I mean I was like it's souncomfortable to get into
because it's like so low to theground and I was like wearing
heels and shit.
I was like, okay, this isannoying.
And then we like pull up to astoplight and people are like
running from the sidewalk tolike take photos and they're
like taking selfies, that'scrazy.
I'm just in the background likeand then people in the freeway,
like guys are like telling me toroll the window down, they're
like sick dude, like sick car,but when he's like, thank you

(49:38):
and I was like I didn't get thehype until I and then I googled
it I was like oh damn, that'sactually kind of sick.
And then they would have, likeyou know aps, you know rolexes,
rich is Richard Mills, whateverall those washes.
I learned about that too and Iwas like, okay, it's a little
interesting.

Speaker 2 (49:54):
It is interesting so I got a car about a year ago
where the doors opened upinstead of sideways.

Speaker 1 (50:00):
The butterflies yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 (50:01):
So to make sure people know I'm not a peasant.
Oh yeah, and I get so manycompliments from dudes.

Speaker 1 (50:11):
Yeah, all the time we're like at a stop and
somebody's like sick car bro.

Speaker 2 (50:15):
You're like you guys.

Speaker 1 (50:17):
kiss I've never gotten a single girl that's like
, oh hey, nice car, you know.
Yeah, because girls don't givea fuck.
No offense, like I don't knowand we're uneducated, I agree
and I disagree.

Speaker 2 (50:25):
Okay, it's not so much where, like I like pull up
and I'm like yo, what's yournumber?
Oh my god, the cool car, yeahhere's.
It's not like that, but I dothink that it matters when you
like pick up a girl on a dateand then all of a sudden she
sees the car, it's not like uh,oh my god, you're the most
amazing.
But it like it gives you like a10% boost.
It gives you a boost it has tobe.

Speaker 1 (50:47):
I think in that scenario at least it was for me
like in that scenario where itlike clicked for me because, if
it's a stranger, I don't reallycare, because I don't know about
your car yeah, and to me likeyou're a stranger so you're
automatically a douchebag.
If you like, rev your likeengine and make that annoying
ass noise like hot, like itsounds like gunshots going off
in the street, I'm like you're afucking douchebag like
congratulations, like on yoursmall penis, and they're like.

(51:10):
They're, like you know, dragracing or people are racing.

Speaker 2 (51:12):
If you're annoying everybody trying to have a
conversation, what's the thing?

Speaker 1 (51:16):
on the back, like a spoiler yeah, okay, spoiler
number one, no, number two.
So somebody's pulling up.
They got a honda civic.
They add a spoiler.
I'm like I don't know thedifference between these other
cars.
I mean, I like a little bit donow, but to me every car is a
honda civic with us.
If I see a spoiler, they're allhondas.
I'd like you're.
You look so stupid.

(51:36):
It's like that's what I'm,that's what I'm used to from
high school.
I'm like I know that your car,literally you just went to a
body shop and had them like,literally, like super glue on or
Gorilla Glue on this fuckingthing on the back.
That does nothing for yourspeed.

Speaker 2 (51:49):
Yeah, and they're acting like they go fast enough
for that actually.
Because what it actually doesis it if you're going like super
fast and make sure your cardoesn't like lift off the ground
and make sure it actually itactually pushes the car down on
the ground.

Speaker 1 (52:05):
But nobody's going that fast.
But let's be honest in yourHonda Civic, like you're not,
you're going to maybe be able tohit like 80 miles an hour.

Speaker 2 (52:11):
Yeah, I mean granted you'll be like economy efficient
, yes, so it's smart.

Speaker 1 (52:20):
Good resale value also that has really good resale
value and, like your stealingrole, may not, like you know,
jerk as much on the freeway or10 and 2.
Make sure like 10 and 2 at alltimes of course but um, what's
that car like I tiktok hastaught me about this one?
I feel like I like tell my age alittle bit when I'm like what
the kids are talking about youknow, but the hellcat car I just
can't jump on that I just can't, because I'm like what is a

(52:42):
hellcat, because I see it onthere and I'm like what the like
that car looks like a hondacivic like, or what is it a
charger?
Yeah no, it's a challenger.
The same thing to me.
I'm like same exact same.
So yeah, so it's like so thesame car, yeah, um, and they're
apparently like really expensiveand they're like I'm gonna get
a hellcat.
I'm like why is that your goal?
Why is your goal to get a carthat's called a hellcat?

Speaker 2 (53:04):
number one story yes I felt like it was like a movie
quote.
There's this guy like I don'tknow that much about cars.
My dad, like, is really intocars.
Never taught me I don't knowwhy the fuck, but this guy's a
hellcat.
I'm like, okay, it's like acool car, but like I didn't know
it was expensive either.

Speaker 1 (53:19):
Right do you like the way it?

Speaker 2 (53:20):
looks not really.
I'm not into like.

Speaker 1 (53:22):
I would rather drive an odyssey like a, like a
minivan, I'd rather drive so.

Speaker 2 (53:26):
So I have a bmw i8 which is like it has the exotic
car look it looks like a lambokind of.

Speaker 1 (53:32):
It looks like a lamp.

Speaker 2 (53:32):
That's why I got it because I'm like it looks
fucking like.
If I'm gonna get a sports car,I want it to look like a fucking
sports I know I want it to looklike a fucking audi, like oh,
it looks like a toyota, but youput a different sticker on the
front.

Speaker 1 (53:42):
You know, did you get like a wrap on it, like, or
what color is it?

Speaker 2 (53:45):
no, just the what the panda.
So it's like white with theblack, white with the blue
stripe.

Speaker 1 (53:49):
Yeah, I knew someone that had like a, a matte uh,
olive green, like a forest greencolor one.

Speaker 2 (53:54):
It was kind of sick I do love that in general.
Uh, I think I'm gonna get a gwagon for my second car and I'm
gonna get matt black because itlooks fucking sick.

Speaker 1 (54:03):
I know like this, like I I regret saying this, but
also don't but just what the gwagon is?
I genuinely I think, like myfavorite car is a g wagon.

Speaker 2 (54:13):
Don't tell me that I love the way g wagons look I
like that square like the boxykind of has like an old, vintage
look to it.
I'm telling my friend aboutthis and I'm like I'm thinking
about G-Wagon, range Rover orthe Tesla Model Y.

Speaker 1 (54:27):
Tesla can suck like a huge chode.
I hate Tesla.
I'm going to say this for allyou listeners out there Tesla,
no, those cars are so not like.
I'm like ready, like not to be aKaren, but I'm like so I'm this
close to writing a petition toUber because I've had two
experiences in a Tesla where,like, I got picked up from my

(54:50):
ride, so, like this was the mostrecent one I had.
I was on my way to work and Iwas like going to make it like
with it just within a couple ofminutes that I needed to be
there, like I didn't have anyextra like out added time to my
trip to account for.
And we're getting on thefreeway it's like 8.30 at night,
almost 9, like 8.45.
And we're getting on the 101freeway heading towards like

(55:11):
Burbank or going through Burbank, and the guy's like, oh my God,
I need to charge my Tesla.
And I'm like, okay, like duringthe uber, during the uber, he
picked me up.

Speaker 2 (55:22):
That's fucked and the uber I was supposed to be take
like 30 minutes exactly.

Speaker 1 (55:25):
So he goes like he said can I pull right?
I need like 30 minutes, like 30minutes, and I was like just 30
minutes, I'm like I need to beat work, like in 30 minutes,
yeah.
And he was like, okay, well,and then he, he dead-ass,
dropped um god off their freeway.
Think, thankfully it was inlike a, not it was in burbank,
it was like right by umuniversal studio, so it wasn't
like the worst area, but stilllike for single.

(55:48):
Look like in my early 20s andyou're a young lady.
Yeah, and it's night time I'm in, um, I'm in like a crop top leg
with, like you know, sweats onlike my mid-dress, whatever he
pulls over and he like makes meget out of the car on like the,
on the path, like the thehighway, like passage road that

(56:09):
like isn't even on to the nextstreet I'm just like on a weird
ass street in the dark and I wasso like what the fuck?
and I had to like sit there andwait for a uber or whatever.
I ended up only being like afew minutes, like maybe like 10
minutes late to work, but likethat alone I was just like damn,
like why?
So if you knew that you neededto charge your car, like why are
you picked?
Why are you accepting a rideand picking?
Me up, yeah, and that'shappened to me.

(56:32):
That's happened twice.

Speaker 2 (56:33):
The first the second time.

Speaker 1 (56:34):
Never happened to me, but I'm like maybe maybe I have
some weird like someone yeahsomeone put some weird shit on
me and that's why it's happened.

Speaker 2 (56:41):
Multiple times, but elon saw your tweet and he got
pissed at you.

Speaker 1 (56:46):
Well, now I hate tesla, and you know that if the
car dies, I know like they havesome thing I learned, uh, like
some escape route thing like,but the car is electric.
So if, like, the car dies,you're like locked in the car,
no way.
And I heard this story.
I don't know if this story isfully true.
It's about a girl from my, frommy hometown.
Okay, I I ended up hearing thatthe story like this.

(57:06):
I may not be telling itcorrectly, but this is like one
of the rumors I heard about thisnight that they got picked up
um on a night after like afestival, whatever, and they
were like going home, um on likenew year's or something, and
the driver ran out of gas andlike it stopped on like the the
light rail tracks and like theycouldn't get out of the car

(57:26):
because they were locked in andlike they got hit by the train
and the car yeah, like the, thelight rail and it and next and
it's insane that, but the soundof that, about that, yeah
but someone told me like thatwhole in-depth story and I was
like that's fucking crazy.
And they were like, oh, she'sin the hospital.
So I was like, oh my gosh,she's like alive.
And they're like, oh, she's ina back brace, whatever.
And it was like a few months.
But then I heard that she likemade like, someone made like.

(57:56):
I heard other stories wherelike it makes sense, because if
it's an electric car you have touse the electric thing to like
it's that button that you pressto get out.

Speaker 2 (58:02):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that freaks me out.
I do hate the handles.
Yeah, you gotta push it,because if you're holding
something Like my nails In onehand and you're like, I can't,
Doing this so, um, yeah.
So anyway, I was debatingbetween those three and the
g-wagon was my it still is myfavorite.
But one of my buddies, he waslike, oh, don't get the g-wagon,

(58:25):
that's a girl car.
And I was like, what do you?
Mean he's like he's like askany girl what's their dream car.
Like 50 of them say g-wagon.

Speaker 1 (58:33):
Ask any, ask any armenian or persian I mean that
I've ever known out here likethey all drive g wagons yeah
with like orange interior, likegray dial, like gunmetal gray or
black I'm a huge.
I'm a huge fan of that car.

Speaker 2 (58:51):
Range rovers are cool too, though, um yeah, I just
like okay, you know how they saypeople once told me they're
like you know someone who'sreally got like old money.
It's like they don't try toflash, they'll get like a mod,
like they'll get like a modestcar that doesn't look flashy but
it's actually really expensivefor the same with clothes.

Speaker 1 (59:09):
Yeah, like adam stanler, the way adam stanler
dresses yeah, yeah, basketballshorts like I'm not at that
phase.

Speaker 2 (59:17):
I'm still new money.
I still want people to like Iworked hard for this shit.
I want people to fucking know.
So like, yeah, even a rangerover is like it's expensive,
that much different than like,just like, whatever the toyota
rav4, whatever the fuck.
Oh the forerunner, where's likea g wagon.
It's like that's a fucking gwagon, like people.

Speaker 1 (59:34):
Yeah, you know it's got it looks like.
The only word I can think of is, like it's vintage the white
one with the black trim.

Speaker 2 (59:40):
It's just cute.
I don't like the white one asmuch.
No White with, like camel andterrier, matte black 100% Matte
black is cool too.

Speaker 1 (59:47):
I would especially you know, I'm not one to be like
picky and choosy about it I'mlike I would take either a black
or a white.
Yeah, yeah, but, yeah, yeah.
But if I, if I, if I had itlike that where I could just go
and shop around for it.
I would get the.
I would get the white with theblack trim interesting and then
I'd have like a little.
I might even like adopt like alittle dog that like has a a

(01:00:09):
designated like little doggyseat on the front seat.
I've seen that like a little.
I really want one of thosedachshunds.
Have you seen those, theminiature dachshunds that have
like long hair and they havelike little floppy ears and
they're like, they're like theyhave like munchkin legs and
they're so cute and they havelike some of them are like
spotted and they have like oneeye as a different color.
Um, I, I, some girl, broughtone up to like a rooftop bar a

(01:00:33):
couple weeks ago and I've beenobsessed you have officially
become an la girl I know it's sobad, made it avocado, toast and
molly is your diet from now on?
yeah, or what's the other one?
Arowan and arowan.
Yeah yeah, did you know thatarowan is nowhere backwards?
That's why they named it thatinteresting.

Speaker 2 (01:00:54):
I did not know that I learned that recently everyone
is too far out of the way for me.
It's like Whole Foods is likeon the way to the gym and back.
Trader Joe's is close by.
I got Sprouts on the corner.
It's just like it's too far.

Speaker 1 (01:01:05):
I'm like wait, where are we right now?
Like at the crossroads.
I'm trying to think we're likeLa Brea and Santa Monica.

Speaker 2 (01:01:18):
So the Fair, the grove yeah it's like and like.
If I go to the gym, I usuallygo to like equinox, so it's like
right on the way to whole foodsand there's like a bristol
farms there too on the way, solike, oh yeah, bristol's farms
is good bristol farms is theyhave?

Speaker 1 (01:01:30):
they have a good bagel there.
I'm not like a bagel person,but I had a bagel randomly there
like bagel and cream cheese.
Yeah, yeah I mean, I don't know,have you ever been to aj's in
scottsdale bristol farms?
Is like the.
The equivalency of aj's likethe I like they have.
It looks the same on the insidetoo, but they don't have the

(01:01:50):
teas there.
That's like the aj thing.
You go there they have like adollar tea and you get like I
always get like an ornel palmerwith like with um passion fruit
tea and an orange.
They don't have that here butarowan though that hayley bieber
smoothie I've never had it, tobe honest, you haven't.

Speaker 2 (01:02:08):
No, I'd usually just get like you like have to.

Speaker 1 (01:02:10):
I mean, if you're a girl maybe I've been.

Speaker 2 (01:02:12):
I've been to arowan that much.
I've been a couple times.
It's just out of the way it'slike very.

Speaker 1 (01:02:17):
I wish I could say it's overhyped but you like when
I had it, I was pissed at howlike I'm like I will spend I
will spend I will spend 22 or 18, whatever.
I think it's like 22 after taxfor a fucking smoothie.
Yeah, it's so good, it reallyis that good.
And I'm like and I saw somebodypost the other day that they
like you know the membershipthat they asked you for like

(01:02:39):
they're like, oh, do you haveyour membership?
Whatever people pay you like abunch of money, like a year, to
be a member and they give youone free smoothie a month.
But the smoothie this girlposted it's like this big.
That's not the most la shitI've ever seen that is the most
la shit.
It is not gonna give yousomething free, but like there's
no ice and like half of it'sgoing to be air.

Speaker 2 (01:02:59):
It's crazy to me, like how good the marketing is
that if you go to a moreexpensive restaurant, they give
you less food.

Speaker 1 (01:03:06):
Like think how genius the marketing is it's more
exquisite Like hey, we're goingto charge you more and give you
less, but the food's higherquality, that is true.
Well, it depends on when itcomes in little courses like
that for mexican oh yeah cheaptaco truck.

Speaker 2 (01:03:20):
Tacos is better than any expensive place that I've
ever been like it's like, solike street tacos I tried birria
out here for the first time.

Speaker 1 (01:03:27):
I've never been there actually.
No, like birria, like it's akind of meat.
Oh, he said, I've never beenthere no, it's birria, birria
it's like yeah, I'm birria.
It's like, yeah, um birria.

Speaker 2 (01:03:41):
It's like birria, I'm not even asada.

Speaker 1 (01:03:43):
No, no, no, it's birria, it's like it's like when
they dip it in, like the redsauce, like that and it's like,
and it's like.

Speaker 2 (01:03:48):
It looks like pulled, it looks like shredded beef.
It's not tomato sauce, but it'slike the tomato stuff or
whatever kind of kind of yeah,but that's what.

Speaker 1 (01:03:56):
That's what birria is .
I'm pretty sure it's like thesauce that it's in and it's
soaked in it.
So the meat is super dare I saythe word moist, but it is moist
.
It's good, though, and they putthe Mexican white cheese on
there I don't know what it is,manchego or something.
It's fire.
And there's this place calledMr Tiempo on Hollywood Boulevard

(01:04:19):
.
I used to walk there all thetime and they have those like
chicharron pork belly bites andyou dip it in honey and
guacamole.

Speaker 2 (01:04:27):
My ex used to take me to this place, nothing better.

Speaker 1 (01:04:28):
That was in downtown LA in like the sketchiest part
and it was just like this tacotruck and like it was so fucking
good, oh in DC and like it wasso fucking oh, in dcla, yeah, oh
yeah, you have to like, have aknife on you or like a you have
to like have a weapon on you togo.
Yeah, it's like pretty sketchin broad daylight too.
Yeah, I got, I was mugged hereor attempted.

(01:04:48):
When I first moved out here, um, because I didn't understand my
mom was like really stressedwhen I told her I was moving out
here I kind of moved like alittle abruptly.
But some friends of mine theyhad a high rise in um downtown,
downtown, and they had like athird bedroom like a den.
They were like, yeah, you cancome stay with us till you like
start working, whatever and, youknow, make some money.

(01:05:09):
And it was my best friend atthe time, his name's sherwin, he
, he, uh, we ended up gettingour own place like in hollywood
at um.
That place I told you about andmy mom was like he lives in
downtown and she was likefreaking out.
I was like what's wrong withdowntown?
But it's been years since I hadseen how different downtown was
, like after covid, I did notknow.

(01:05:30):
And she was like be careful,like you know, like don't walk
around during the day.
And I was like what do you mean?
And there was one day where Igot up and my flight was at like
8, 30 or 9 at the airport.
So I was like what do you mean?
And there was one day where Igot up in my flight it was at
like 8, 30 or 9 at the airport.
So I was like getting into myuber like 7, 30 in the morning
or 7, like it was like the sunwas shining already.
I was crossing the street andlike a uh, a walking dead type

(01:05:53):
of human came up to me and triedto grab, grab my bag off me.
Like scratched my shoulder withhis nail or whatever was on his
hand and like I was freakingand my uber driver had to like
fend for me because he was likewe were like doing this, we're
playing tug of war that's crazy,yeah I had like all my money,
like I was like it was like myairport bag you know, and then
like then you gotta like get anew, like cancel your credit

(01:06:14):
cards, get a new id.

Speaker 2 (01:06:15):
It's like fucking well, what is?

Speaker 1 (01:06:16):
yeah, but the guy was like you should have seen what
he looked like like, I swear,like his eyes, like he looks
like that guy from like thegoonies.
The guy that's like who are youlike his?
His head was like half shaved.
He had like one shoe on hisshirt, was like just exposing.
Yeah, he like looked like helike rolled around in dirt
before he came up to me like hewas just like from, like from

(01:06:36):
the depths, from the depths oflike the alley, so like it was
really a lot.
And so when he touched me likehe like grazed my shoulder.
I was like on my plane, like Ithought I was like I have MRSA,
like I have some sort of disease, like his fingernail touched me
, like what's under that?

Speaker 2 (01:06:53):
Like I was freaking out, you like?

Speaker 1 (01:06:54):
slowly turned into scared, like that I was.
It was gonna be like that show,um, but yeah, so then I learned
.
Then I was like okay, la is alittle bit different than
arizona.
You have to be careful,especially in downtown no, for
sure my uber driver was such a g, though it was like almost like
he had done it before he waslike jumped out of the car.

Speaker 2 (01:07:11):
He's like this ain't my first rodeo.

Speaker 1 (01:07:13):
He like had a cape on , he like hurled out of his car
and like hit the dude, like gotmy bag.
He was like in, in, in, in.
He like opened the door for meand I like jumped in the car and
then I was like adrenaline likepumping.
He was like oh like, he waslike that was crazy I know I was
like what the fuck?
I'm about to get on an airplaneright now.
It's insane.
So we moved out of downtowngood move, smart move there's

(01:07:36):
not.

Speaker 2 (01:07:36):
There's still similar stuff going on in hollywood I
mean like right outside myapartment, you gotta come more
west.
The more west you get, thebetter hollywood.

Speaker 1 (01:07:45):
I learned that too.
So when I moved, like I mean myfriend, he was already living
in downtown but I just didn'tknow that the the different
parts of the of los angeles, youknow, yeah, like well enough to
know like what pockets, whatneighborhoods or whatever, but
it was fun being like close tohollywood boulevard yeah like I
was never bored.
If I like was like if I wantedto see something interesting,

(01:08:07):
all I had to do is like walkoutside and go like past mel's
drive-in and just see somebodytalking, like having like a
full-on, like conversation withthe air literally or like
fighting a brick wall.
It's pretty crazy.
Yeah, it's crazy, it's actually.
Yeah, I mean some of it'sentertaining, but most of it's
like pretty sad.

Speaker 2 (01:08:27):
Yeah, yeah, all right , we're about out of time.
We'll have to have round twosometime.
You seem to have a lot ofstories and probably a lot of
untold ones as well.
Uh, where can people find youany shout outs to instagram?

Speaker 1 (01:08:40):
uh, my instagram, actually all my socials, are the
same name.
It's bella c spelled with s e,bruno b-r-u-n-o.
Um yeah, instagram, not reallytiktok, but we're getting there
when the kids teach me, you knowthe youths yeah, teach me their

(01:09:01):
way.

Speaker 2 (01:09:02):
All right, thanks for watching.
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