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MomCave LIVE
Zarna Garg | Stand Up Comedian, Indian Immigrant, Lawyer and MOM | MomCave LIVE
Meet Zarna Garge šStand-up Comedian, Mama, Indian Immigrant, and Former Lawyer... Yeah, she's all that.
Sometimes called the "Funny Brown Mama." You're gonna love her!
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Here's a bit of a transcript. You can read the full interview at MomCaveTV.com:
The #momlife can be stressful, but today weāre bringing the laughs with comedienne Zarna Garg. Listen as we talk (and laugh!) about screen time, dating kids, and (yes, we go there, mothers-in-law.)
Jen: Welcome to Mom Cave Live where we may have lost our minds, but we havenāt lost our senses of humor. Iām Jen and my guest this week is Zarna Garg.
Iām so excited to talk to you, Zarna. Hey!
Zarna Garg: Thank you so much. Iām so excited to be here. And Iām so happy that Iām not the only one struggling til the last minute. And why donāt Facebook and Instagram work together? What is the deal there?
Jen: Who knows? And I donāt have time to figure that out. And, like five seconds before weāre supposed to go live, my husbandās upstairs working on his computer. It wonāt turn on. So heās like, āHelp!ā And then my son is home sick from school and he wants to log into Amazon Prime to watch a TV show and he canāt log in. And weāre doing like⦠the enter the codes and all. Finally, I was like, āYou know what, you guys, I got to go talk to Zarna. When Iām done, Iāll deal with you!ā This has a time. We made a time.
Zarna Garg: So this you know what? And havenāt we learned that if we donāt say I have to go, their needs will never end? Theyāre like my mother-in-law. Thereās something new every minute.
Jen: Totally. Thatās what Iāve learned. So. I want to introduce you and give you a proper introduction, but itās so hard because you make me feel like an underachiever with all the things. So let me give it a try, okay
OK, so Zarna was originally a lawyer. And she is an Indian immigrant to the United States with three children.
Zarna Garg: Yes, thatās right.
Jen: Children, ex-lawyer. And then you became a standup comedian and an award-winning screenwriter.
Zarna Garg: Yes and yes. Thatās all right.
Jen: Those are all the thingsā¦
Zarna Garg: Thatās the face of desperation, that thatās not an achievement. Thatās like when youāre so desperate to get something done. Thatās what that looks like.
Jen: Right. You try all the things. I understand.
Zarna Garg: And I donāt highlight my failures on Instagram. Maybe I should so people know how much I failed before they can read this little list.
Read the rest at: https://www.momcavetv.com/zarna-garg-life-and-laughs-m
Jen: Welcome to Mom Cave Live where we may have lost our minds, but we havenāt lost our senses of humor. Iām Jen and my guest this week is Zarna Garg.
Iām so excited to talk to you, Zarna. Hey!
Zarna Garg: Thank you so much. Iām so excited to be here. And Iām so happy that Iām not the only one struggling til the last minute. And why donāt Facebook and Instagram work together? What is the deal there?
Jen: Who knows? And I donāt have time to figure that out. And, like five seconds before weāre supposed to go live, my husbandās upstairs working on his computer. It wonāt turn on. So heās like, āHelp!ā And then my son is home sick from school and he wants to log into Amazon Prime to watch a TV show and he canāt log in. And weāre doing like⦠the enter the codes and all. Finally, I was like, āYou know what, you guys, I got to go talk to Zarna. When Iām done, Iāll deal with you!ā This has a time. We made a time.
Zarna Garg: So this you know what? And havenāt we learned that if we donāt say I have to go, their needs will never end? Theyāre like my mother-in-law. Thereās something new every minute.
Jen: Totally. Thatās what Iāve learned. So. I want to introduce you and give you a proper introduction, but itās so hard because you make me feel like an underachiever with all the things. So let me give it a try, okay
OK, so Zarna was originally a lawyer. And she is an Indian immigrant to the United States with three children.
Zarna Garg: Yes, thatās right.
Zara Garg on MomCave LIVE
Success
Jen: Children, ex-lawyer. And then you became a standup comedian and an award-winning screenwriter.
Zarna Garg: Yes and yes. Thatās all right.
Jen: Those are all the thingsā¦
Zarna Garg: Thatās the face of desperation, that thatās not an achievement. Thatās like when youāre so desperate to get something done. Thatās what that looks like.
Jen: Right. You try all the things. I understand.
Zarna Garg: And I donāt highlight my failures on Instagram. Maybe I should so people know how much I failed before they can read this little list.
Jen: Well, really, to gain any level of success, you have to have failed a bazillion times. This is what I keep telling myself.
Zarna Garg: Oh, and itās completely true. And Iām telling you, I failed more than a bazillion times. So many times Iāve lost track.
Jen: Right. So I feel like I failed enough times that Iāmā¦
Zarna Garg: Itās hard for people to see that itās because also I donāt show it. So thereās that.
Jen: Also, youāve learned to be all like, yeah, you have the great āfacade of success.ā Anyway, so yesterday I listened to a standup set that you had online, I think it was at Carolineās on Broadway. And the only time I ever get to listen to anything is when Iām driving alone.
Yeah. Because if someoneās in the car with me, they have to listen to their thing or theyāre talking to me. So I had my twenty-minute drive to go pick up the kids from school. And I listened to you do your set.
I knew nothing about you. And I should preface this by saying that my husband says I have a German humor because he says that I never laugh out loud. So weāll be watching the most hilarious thing. And Iāll be like, āThatās funny.ā Just a statement. And heās like falling off his chair, laughing. Heās like, āWhy arenāt you laughing?? And I say, āI get it. Like intellectually, itās really funny.ā
I actually laughed out loud three times in my car at your set and had to pull over.
So I told my husband that as soon as I got home and I was like, āIāve discovered somebody that made me laugh out loud. And Iām going to interview her tomorrow!ā So Iām going to have everyone laughing.
Zarna Garg: Listen, I think we should end the interview right here. Iām not topping this. This is amazing. I know exactly what youāre saying. I laugh out loud, but Indian people, in general, are very reserved with their laughs.
So I have to work really hard, extra hard. And, you know, I know how to get people now. Itās been a process, but I am so happy that I made you laugh.
Itās everything right now with the kind of life weāre all dealing with and all the complications. If I can make you laugh, especially a mom who is dealing with all the mom stresses, my job is done, honestly.
So excited to hear that.
Jen: So tell me, like, when did you make this transition from lawyer to an entertainer?
Zarna Garg: I am a lawyer. I was a practicing lawyer before I had my first kid. Honestly, I quit law when I was about to deliver my first kid. I couldnāt figure it out. Iāll be honest with you, I couldnāt figure out how to have a corporate job in New York and have a kid and have a husband. A very demanding situation, and run a household all by myself. We have no family in New York. I mean, for the first time, I was like, I should have gotten an arranged marriage in India! Whatās wrong with me? Right. Why did I make it so hard for myself?
Jen: You could have got somebody to pick you out a rich husband. We donāt have that. I was just stupid enough not to pick a rich husband.
Zarna Garg: Yeah, itās stupid enough to fall in love. What?
Jen: I know. Yeah, I know. Crazy.
It Takes A Village
Zarna Garg: I mean, motherhood hit me like like like an express train. It really was the first time it hit me that youāre alone in this. Like, honestly, I feel like every mother is alone. And I know in America they say like it takes a village. I donāt think that personās ever been to a real village.
Jen: Right. No, no, no. I donāt think we have villages in America.
Zarna Garg: I was like, where are the villages?
Jen: Yeah. I want to be able to hand this baby off whenever, however. To trust the person and be like, āI got to get the hell out of hereā or even āI just have to take a shit.ā We need that.
Zarna Garg: Exactly. So I spent many months, in the beginning, thinking Iām in the wrong village. I need to find me the right village.
Jen: Well, are you in Greenwich Village?
Zarna Garg: And is it West Village? Where is it?
Jen: No, no. That village doesnāt exist. So.
Respecting The Moms
Zarna Garg: So I know it was harsh⦠I quit law when I realized, like, really, Iām going to bring this baby home and itās me and her. Yeah. So and then for sixteen years, I was a stay-at-home mom that couldnāt figure it out.
Iād be like, Iāll tell you, I tip my hat to all the women in America who figured it out. It is hard, hard, hard to be a working mom and to be a mom and to be, in my case, would have been a wife.
You know, I just couldnāt work for six years. I was living under a rock and all I did was mom stuff.
Jen: Oh, my God.
Zarna Garg: But Iāll be honest with you, I was dying inside. I was just dying and couldnāt wait to do something for myself. It seemed like I was doing everything for everybody. But like inside me, I was not happy.
And this is nothing. Do not take anything away from stay-at-home moms because I have nothing but respect for that job. But itās lonely.
Jen: Itās the hardest job. Iāve done both. And I think staying at home is the hardest because thereās no break. Thereās no lunch hour or clock out. Or just when you go to the bathroom in an office, people donāt follow you and talk to you. And need you. That part of it.
Zarna Garg: And I think as a stay-at-home mom when you do get a few moments alone, youāre so desperate for it that youāre doing all. I mean, I remember listening to people āWhen you have time, do yoga.ā āYoga?!ā I havenāt watched The Bachelor. It would be great to watch TV, too. You know, I mean, Iāve done watching Teletubbies. I want to watch something. I want to take a nap. For me, not for the kid and the other kid⦠So even when youāre like full-on mom mode with little kids, every minute that you get for yourself, youāre thinking of every bad thing. I was saying, I want to drink wine and eat cake and watch TV and binge everything in five minutes all at the same time, right?
Jen: Yeah. And yet youāre supposed to be doing things like self-care, whatever the hell that is. Yeah. Meditating, cleaning your house. No.
Zarna Garg: And then, you know, Iāll tell you that a lot of mom blogs will be like, oh, women in India. Iām like rolling my eyes. āAll women in India meditate.ā Yeah, I donāt know who youāre talking to.
Jen: Theyāre not all like enlightened in India with the yoga and the meditation?
Zarna Garg: No. And theyāre not breastfeeding like itās their job. Like, I donāt know who theyāre talking about. Itās all imaginary stuff for the most part. Women in India are going through the same hassles and trying to just transition to formula A.S.A.P. so they canā¦
Jen: Give me my life back. Yeah. Yeah, I think that American women have a tendency toāwhatās the word?āromanticize other cultures because theyāre, like, ours isnāt working. So the other ones must be idyllic.
Zarna Garg: Yeah.
Jen: And I think motherhood is just never quite idyllic.
Zarna Garg: No, I think, look, the challenges are different, but there are challenges there, too, as here, like, you know, there youāre not so starved for help. Itās plenty of help. But the system itself is designed to not help women. Overall, a mom is never going to come out ahead. So either way, there are going to be challenges. And I found that here people tend to, I agree with you, romanticize it. And I used to just laugh when I used to see those things. But like many women in India, no, no, no, no, no, no. Theyāre sleeping, theyāre taking a nap, theyāre drinking wine, and theyāre doing the same stuff for different reasons.
Jen: Yes. Yes. One of the things in your standup routine that made me laugh was when you said about you were talking about yoga, you had several funny jokes about yoga. You said, āIf you are rushing to get to yoga, youāre doing it wrong!ā
Zarna Garg: Right. Right. But you know how it is life. Listen, I get it. Iām rushing to do everything all the time. But it is, by definition, supposed to be like to help you dial it down. Help me find a way to squeeze in 30 minutes of yoga and squeeze in 20 minutes of meditation.
And I donāt know. Itās just these are all funny observations. You got to do what works, right?
Jen: Yeah. I havenāt mastered not feeling rushed. Every single thing I do is rushed. And I just got used to doing that. So even the other day, I actually shouldnāt have been rushed. It was a Saturday morning. My husband said, āIām going to go play with the kids for a while.ā And Iām in the shower and Iām rushing. And I realized Iām like, why am I rushing? Like, no, thereās no reason for me to be shaving my legs like that. Iām just used to rushing. I feel like thereās never enough time. I can never get enough done.
Zarna Garg: Exactly. Aināt that the truth. And I think after a while, you just get used to rushing, like you said, you donāt even know why youāre rushing anymore, because youāve been running on the on the ten-level setting for so long that you donāt even know you have a lower setting.
Jen: Yeah. I donāt know. It just feels wrong to sit down and do nothing because there are so many other things that you could or should be doing.
Zarna Garg: Right.
Mother-In-Law Laughs
Jen: You have some great material about your mother-in-law.
And we all, Iām sure, have material about our mothers-in-law. Thereās like the stereotype of the Indian mother-in-law, which Iām sure a lot of people have seen. And you play into that very well. But the fact that you are able to make fun of this mother-in-law, and yet youāre still here and youāre still married, as far as I know. How did you make that work. Did you get her permission?
Zarna Garg: Yeah. Yeah. I wouldnāt go after her like that. I mean, she is totally on board. My husbandās on board. Itās all fun and games. Iāve been part of the family for too long and they know how I really feel.
And she, you know, listen, I wouldnāt shock me if she comes out with a standup set of her own, about me as a daughter-in-law. At this point, I put nothing past her because she you know, she couldnāt speak a lot of English. This is a true story⦠Until last year. I mean, on my birthday, I would get like a balloon emoji on WhatsApp, you know? And this year she texted me. Sheās like, āI have an agent.ā Yeah, because sheās, like, āYouāre going to need me. Youāre doing so much material about me, youāre going to needā¦ā So, listen, itās all fun and games. And sheās totally on board. We have an excellent relationship. And, you know, thatās the only way I could have done that.
Thatās the truth, you know, I love her. Sheās somebody I deeply respect. She raised two boys in India in very hard conditions. So, you know, I have tremendous respect, but I donāt believe that anything is off-limits.
See, our culture has not done family humor ever. Yeah, it exists as a genre in America. It does not exist in India. So I wanted to be the person that takes us into that new space and enjoy that world with my people and invite them to make their jokes.
And, you know, they would also be living at the end of the joke. No oneās going to die from it.
Jen: No. And I mean, everybody has things we can make fun of them about. So we yeah. We all just have to loosen up.
Zarna Garg: I find a way to poke a lot of fun at myself. I mean, Iām not off-limits. I mean, some of my biggest TikToks and Instagrams are me being a completely exaggerated version of me.
Jen: Yes.
Zarna Garg: You know, so itās all good, you know, and Iām still here.
Screens
Jen: Iām glad weāre still here. Youāre right. Iām just going to pop over and say hello over on Instagram. Someone saying thereās no noise. I donāt know if they can hear us. I wish that someone watching this one day would be like, āOh, hereās how you do all of this. Iāll be your tech person. āSoon, I think maybe my one of my kids could.
Zarna Garg: Yeah, the kids do know, I mean, I used to have my kids help me and then frigging school came along. That was the best part of the shutdown for me.
Jen: How old are your kids?
Zarna Garg: So I have an 18-year-old, a 15-year-old, and a nine-year-old. My nine-year-old is the tech guru. Yeah, he knows. Heās like after a year and a half of remote learning, he literally figured it all out.
That is so easy. I used to have three tech support people floating around and now, they have to be in school.
Jen: Oh, school. They have to go learn. I donāt know. Thank God for school. Because if my kids werenāt in. It was tough when they werenāt in school.
Zarna Garg: How old are your kids, Jen?
Jen: So I have an 11-year-old and a six-year-old, and the six-year-old is very, very spirited. Sheās one of those little girls they write the memes about. Like sheās driving me to drink, but sheās going to be fierce when sheās an adult.
I just wish sheād stop being fierce with ME. Yeah. But my 11-year-old is like your nine-year-old with the technology. And itās so funny because he hasnāt had as much technology as most kids his age.
My kids both go to a Waldorf school, which has a no-screens policy, which sadly weāre breaking a lot, but a lot less than most. And yet he still has figured out how to do the things and like grab a phone out of my hand and fix the thing.
Zarna Garg: Itās completely intuitive to how the kids work. The thing is that these things are designed to collaborate with how their brains are originally wired because they donāt need likeā¦.. like I donāt know where is the button.
We look for that stuff. Theyāre not even looking for them. Their fingers fly on these things they know.
Jen: So if they can invent technology that works like that with their brains, why canāt they invent an app to discipline them? Iām not because I feel like I donāt know what to do.
Zarna Garg: Yeah. Yeah, I think itās called the shutdown mode.
Jen: The shutdown mode?
Jen: Yeah.
Zarna Garg: Thatās the only thing that scares that was like shut the thing down. Thatās the only thing my kids are a little fearful of if I shut everything down. And by that, I mean literally I have to shut the family wi-fi down. Right. Because Iāve lost track of all the devices, Iāll be honest with you. But so I just have I fly down and act like weāre all Mormon. Sit around the candlelight.
Jen: From Hindi to Mormon.
Zarna Garg: Yeah.
Jen: I donāt know. Do Mormons meditate? I donāt know that much about Mormons.
Zarna Garg: They must do something. I mean, how much can you do without electricity?
Jen: Thatās not Mormons. Mormons have electricity. Youāre thinking of Amish. Amish donāt have electricity.
āFriendsā And Romance
OK. So back to the role of mother-in-law. I donāt know. My sister actually married an Indian man, and we knew nothing about this culture. She moved to New York City and I was helping her find an apartment. And we happened to find an apartment in guess which neighborhood? In Jackson Heights. It was a basement apartment of a house. And in the house lived a young man and his mom. And this I mean, it could be a sitcom.
I swear it was like the biggest clash of cultures because my sister is like this blonde, kind of ditzy, silly girl from the south who didnāt even know⦠Not even close. So anyway, she falls in love with her landlord. As weāre moving in, Iām like āYour landlordās kind of cute,ā you know, and she falls in love. And they had the whole, like, they had to hide their dating from his mom and to us, it was soā¦
Zarna Garg: So we waitā¦for real? She fell in love or youāre just saying like fall in love?
Jen: No, this is true. My sister married her landlord. Now this southern girl from the south marries this man of Indian descent. He had moved from Tanzania. So Indians that lived in Tanzania and moved to America and I know that in your culture, you canāt show public displays of affection as easily and you talk about that some with your husband, how you donāt tell people you love them. There were years of my sister and this guy, like NOT holding hands until they were two blocks away and figuring the whole thing out.
So when you came into this American culture of crazy people who show too much emotion, what was your impression? And have you changed in the way that you interact with your husband?
Zarna Garg: No, Iām not changing how I interact with my husband. That wiring goes too deep. I know heās also very comfortable where we are with that. When I first came here, and through my years of being here, I made a lot of observations about how people show love here.
I thought the show āFriends,ā the TV show āFriends,ā was horrifying. That show was horrifying to me. And it is, you know, to a lot of immigrants. They may not know this because it was like every episode was you know, he loves her. No, he loves her. No, theyāre not together. They are together. They broke up. It was a break. Oh, my God.
Jen: It was so much drama.
Zarna Garg: Like our world is like my mom said, āI have to love you.ā That was the end of it.
Jen: Iām going use that on my kids now.
Zarna Garg: Yeah, exactly. I honestly, I actually still say to. me kids, āI have to love you because I think itās the law in America.ā Mm hmm. Yes. So, you know, itās a lot of my jokes come from that space because love is such a big word in this culture and itās practically non-existent⦠And itās not just India.
Iāll have you know this. Thatās really the big discovery of my comedic journey has been how many cultures outside America relate to that? In my shows, Iāll have like South American people, people from all over and say, āHey, we donāt say I love you, too.ā This is an American thing. And, you know, listen, Iāll tell you this, though. I have said I love you once and really meant it and totally spontaneous. This is how I know Iāve become American.
I said it to an Amazon customer service rep. And my daughter overheard. And she said, yeah, sheās like, āMom, you just said, āI love youā to Amazon. Youāve never said I love you to me!ā And I told her, I said, āSo you never help me find a missing package. We donāt have that relationship.ā
Jen: Yeah. Like, give me all the things that I want within two days at a reasonable price.
Zarna Garg: Or sooner at a discount. And Iāll love you even more.
Kids And Dating
Jen: Are any of your kids dating yet?
Zarna Garg: Yes. Yes, both of my older ones. But my daughter was dating and now sheās in college and heās at a different college. So itās complicated, letās just say.
Jen: Yeah. And are they on a break?
Zarna Garg: Yeah. I donāt know.
Listen, Iāve stopped asking because my simple brain cannot process it. I mean, just tell me when you want to get married, because Iām, you know, because itās too much for me, you know, and then everything I do becomes meddling, which of course I want to.
Jen: Tell her, āI made you; I made I brought you into this world. Iām going to meddle in your life.ā
Zarna Garg: And you donāt know what youāre doing. You think you do, but you donāt know. I mean, these kids, youāll see when they get older, you know, the bigger kids, bigger problems or whatever. That saying is completely true.
Like you pine for the days when all you had to do was put them in a playpen.
Jen: Yeah.
Zarna Garg: Yeah. And then he can do it. My son, now he drives a city bike, or rides, a city bike all around. That is scary AF. But he wants to be cool and the girls like seeing cool rides and he needs to get places and itās a thing.
Jen: I love that. A cool ride is a city bike??
Zarna Garg: It is in New York. It is a cool ride. Like Iām not even kidding. Like downtown, like, āOh, you have your bike? I have my bike.ā And we live in a city with a big subway system. The whole reason.
But, you know, now they all want to ride bikes.
Jen: Oh, my gosh. Yeah, yeah, yeah. My kids are not old enough to date yet, but my son is just getting in that thing where like he and his friends donāt know it, but weāre overhearing them talk about girls.
And you want to jump in. Oh, my God. I heard them saying āso-and-so is hot. Sheās the hottest girl in the class.ā Man, youāre in fifth grade, her hotness in fifth grade? They should be like, āShe has the coolest Xbox.ā
But, you know, not that sheās hot.
Zarna Garg: I donāt think they even fully know what hot is at that age. I donāt think you know what I mean. Like what? I donāt even know what hot is. I think they just itās part of the lingo they get.
They go with the flow. I donāt think I mean, I think at that age, a date anyway is going to get a cupcake. So I think, I donāt know. I hope, at least in my imagination, thatās whatās happening,
Jen: I just want to say like, āStop worrying about whoās hot. I think I wasted so much time on that kind of stuff. And then I married your father, who⦠I did not marry him because he was hot. I married him for other better reasons. And weāre still together like 20 some years later. So forget the hot. Hot guys are trouble.ā
Zarna Garg: Yes, but they have to discover it themselves. Mom saying it is not going to happen. You know, you are watching them make the mistakes.
Yeah, you have to be playing the other side for a while. Like my when my daughter went out with the guy who was completely wrong, I would be like, āNo, this is amazing. Yes. āItās not some cool kid. Why not? See, you know what I mean? āRuin your life and see where it goes.ā This is scaring the shit out of my daughter. āYouāll end up like, letās get some images of people whoāve done drugs. Like, letās look⦠like Iām sure they look amazing.ā
Jen: Yeah. Tell her, you care so much about your skin and your teeth⦠You donāt want to do drugs.
Zarna Garg: Itās all that yoga.
Jen: Mhm. Yoga can not compete with cocaine.
Zarna Garg: But you do have to let them discover a little bit themselves. I learned that because if you just tell them it means nothing.
Jen: No, I think, in fact, theyāll just do the opposite. Yeah, Iām very concerned. My husband is very one way politically, and Iām concerned that my child is going to become extreme in the other direction. And so every time Iām like āJust donāt let them know how strongly you feel about that because they just rebel!ā
Kids Are Too Smart
Zarna Garg: I know these kids are too smart. You canāt keep them. You know, they know everything anywhere. Listen, if we learned one thing in the last year and a half is that you canāt control anything. Honestly, thatās my big lesson of 2020 and 2021 as a mom, like, how many years did we-you and me both as moms-spend keeping the kids away from the screens?
Jen: Oh, my. Iāve worked so hard.
Zarna Garg: And then 2020 happened. You donāt know how to log in. Whereās your password? You havenāt really reset the password. We were we literally went a full 180 in a day.
Jen: Why didnāt I teach? I couldnāt. So, the first day that we logged in on a Zoom for Distance Learning. To have what was a third-grade Waldorf teacher on Zoom, and anybody who knows about Waldorf schools, they literally really do have a no-screen policy. They expect you not to NEVER have your kids use screens.
The kids learn to knit. They do woodworking. You know, itās very holistic. And then this one day, all of a sudden theyāre like, āLog in on Zoom.ā And these kids had never seen this. They were just looking at each other and anyway, it was crazy.
Itās A Wrap
I do these MomCave Live interviews once a week with funny moms. And I always try to keep them, you know, below like 20 minutes. But Iāve already gone over several minutes because Iām having fun and I just want to talk to you.
But I donāt know if everyone in the world wants to keep watching us talk. I definitely want to do this again. And I would love it if you could, I donāt know, do some funny things for the MomCavers at some point where we can talk about that.
And before we sign off, tell everybody about your next live show. How they can see it, where they can see it. Oh, I think I have a picture. Hold on. Watch. Iām going to get fancy.
Zarna Garg: Oh, yes. Thatās it. Wow. So fancy, Jen. I know. Yes. So this is my show. It is part of the esteemed New York Comedy Festival. Itās going to be happening on November 12th at West Side Comedy Club in Manhattan.
I would love to invite all your viewers, all my viewers, Instagram, Facebook, everywhere to join us. This particular show is going to be a night of female empowerment. Sorry, guys.
Jen: Guys can come, but youāre going to be made fun of.
Zarna Garg: Probably. Come for that. You know what? Come for that. But itās going to be a really fun night of female empowerment. And my fellow winner of Ladies of LAUGHTER 21 is going to be doing a set and Iām going to be headlining.
So Iāll be doing my full set, forty-five minutes. And I would love to see everybody there. I have had a lot more material to work with because my mother-in-law has said a lot more crazy things to me.
Jen: Oh, great. And I hear that theyāve opened up the airports now. So your mother-in-law could be coming at any moment?
Zarna Garg: Yes. Thank you, Biden, for that. Not.
Jen: Yeah. And only if only all of the airports could keep away the annoying mothers-in-law.
Zarna Garg: Yeah. I mean, I wish we could selectively give them a list of no-fly people. That would help.
Jen: Yes. They should be on the no-fly list. Yeah. Yeah. Unless we have just had a baby and we need them to come and help us.
Zarna Garg: OK, thatās a different matter. Then we take them off the list.
Jen: The selective village. Thank you, everybody, so much for watching. You can find Zarna on all of the platforms. Pretty much. Youāre at Zarna Garg, right? Yes, thatās right. TikTok is huge. Iām going to go and watch some check some of your TikToks tonight and go down that rabbit hole.
I want to talk to you more. Iām still thinking of all of the funny things that I heard you say in your set. And I wish I could just play that right now, but that would be crazy.
So go check her out, look at her videos, and letās do this again soon. I hope that you have an awesome show at the New York Comedy Festival. And thank you. Thank you for being here and laughing with me.
Zarna Garg: Thank you. Thank you for having me. This was such a fun job. Thank you for inviting me to your community. Namaste. Everybody have an amazing day.
Jen: And I must say, Iām not going to go meditate, OK?
Zarna: I know.