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DRUNK ABOUT SOMETHING: THE TULSA MASSACRE RECAP

Jendsey Season 2

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A bustling Black business district, a rumor on an elevator, and a city ready to ignite—our deep dive into the Tulsa Massacre follows Greenwood from its remarkable rise as Black Wall Street to the coordinated violence that tried to erase it. We walk through the misaligned elevator landing that sparked a lie, the headlines that fed a lynch mob, and the moment Greenwood’s veterans arrived armed to defend due process. What followed was a rolling gunfight, fires that devoured homes and businesses, reports of incendiaries dropped from private planes, and a fire department turned away at gunpoint.

We unpack more than the blaze. We look at the systems that turned a tragedy into a lasting wound: insurance denials, mass detentions of Black residents by the National Guard, and the rezoning that redirected wealth away from survivors. The Red Cross records reveal the human cost—thousands displaced, injuries and deaths, pregnancies lost, and a community forced to live in tents for over a year. We also highlight what endured, including the Vernon AME Church, and why naming this event a massacre matters when truth has been buried under decades of silence.

This story isn’t just history; it’s a lens on how rumor, media, and policy can work together to punish success. We connect Tulsa to other suppressed events like Rosewood and the long path toward civil rights, and we share resources so you can explore primary documents, photos, and survivor testimony for yourself. Join us to honor Greenwood’s builders, confront the machinery of erasure, and keep this history alive where it belongs—at the center of American memory. If this resonated, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review to help others find the show.

LET US KNOW WHAT YOU THINK!!!

Ready to explore more shocking true crime cases with us? Subscribe to Drink About Something for new episodes every Friday, and visit drinkaboutsomething.site with links to see all our content, including visual evidence from the cases we cover. 

AS ALWAYS D-A-S

Drinks, Banter, And Setup

SPEAKER_01

Hey Lindsay.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, you caught me off guard.

SPEAKER_01

I did. Hey Lindsay. Hey. Hey, how's it going?

SPEAKER_00

How are you? Oh, let me turn my microphone this way.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

unknown

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

It was my turn.

SPEAKER_00

Your turn?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, yeah, it was my turn.

SPEAKER_00

Well, what are you having to drink right now?

SPEAKER_01

This is like crowned vanilla and uh one of those uh uh pineapple, what do you call them? They're pineapple. Vista bay. Vista bay? Vista bay. Yeah, that's what it was. Pineapple vanilla something. I don't know. Let me test it. I didn't even know.

SPEAKER_00

So vanilla crown with pineapple vista bay.

SPEAKER_01

I haven't tasted it yet.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, okay.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, this is on the rip, dude. Like, I don't know if this is cool or not.

SPEAKER_00

We're hearing this. Alright, so this is uh raw, uncut, and unedited drunk about something, where we recap last week's episode.

SPEAKER_01

Can I hear that?

SPEAKER_00

I think so. I don't know. I can hear it through my headphones.

SPEAKER_01

It was bubbling.

SPEAKER_00

And I'm having a lime, natural lime, this today.

SPEAKER_01

Not bad. This isn't bad. A little strong.

SPEAKER_00

A little strong.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. But now this is drunk about something. Yes. Oh, hey everybody. Um, I'm just trying this out. I want to do something. Who we got live going on over here?

Greenwood: Black Wall Street Thrives

SPEAKER_00

We got live. We're on YouTube. So today we are recapping uh the Tulsa massacre.

SPEAKER_02

Yes.

SPEAKER_00

That happened in 1921. So we start off. Um so Tulsa really hadn't been, or excuse me, Oklahoma hadn't really been a state for too long at this point.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, no, and I wasn't sure about what purchase had happened on that, but no. Um it was no, yeah, it was not, it hadn't been there since uh the early early 1900s it was purchased, right?

SPEAKER_00

Yes, I think it was 1906.

SPEAKER_01

Wow.

SPEAKER_00

And um even though the black community had, or the you know, the black men of America had went off and fought in World War One, they come back and they are still segregated. Now in Tulsa, they had their own district, which was called Greenwood. And they were thriving.

SPEAKER_01

They were very much so in every community around those times. They never had a real chance to build back. I feel like this happened all across the United States.

SPEAKER_00

It was a lot, and it it all like just kept getting being brought down. So in the Greenwood area, they had their own medical professionals, they had their own like big buildings. I don't know if you looked at some of the pictures I posted on the story.

SPEAKER_01

Story, like five, six-story buildings, big buildings, yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Big buildings. Um, they had a very, very well-established industry. Um, and they were doing the thing. Like they had their own nightclubs, they had, you know, juke joints, nightclubs, um, what uh theaters, uh, restaurants, everything. Everything that you needed.

The Elevator Incident Explained

SPEAKER_01

Are like I said about Rosewood, they would have probably never even experienced depression because they had a whole thriving ass community, and it was all self-sustainable. And that's what they fucking stripped down in the middle of this bullshit because of a little boy that had to go piss.

SPEAKER_00

That's what I was just about to say. So um Dick Roland was a shoe shiner from the Greenwood district, and he was kind of funny with these headphones and my cowboy hat and my little straw hat. Good luck. No, just fine. So Dick Roland had to go use the restroom, and the restroom that was segregated for him to use was at the top floor of the Drexel building. So he went, went up the elevator, which was operated by a white woman, gets to the top floor, and it's speculated that he pretty much tripped because when you got to the top floor, it didn't level out properly.

SPEAKER_01

It was a cable elevator car. Right. And she was the operator, and he's like, probably like this. Yes, sorry, ma'am. And she's like completely appalled, probably. Um just touched a white a little her white arm. Right. You're not allowed to do that. Not back then. Why? I don't know, but he had to run, dude.

Arrest, Mob, And Tense Standoff

SPEAKER_00

Well, he was seen running out of the elevator, and another uh department store clerk in that building um heard Sarah supposedly scream and went to find out what was going on, and she was supposedly distressed. So even though she did not want to press any charges and said nothing happened, uh violence still ensued. So he was arrested. Dick Roland was sought out and arrested, brought to you know, the the county jail, which was in the courthouse. Then a huge mob forms around the courthouse demanding that he be released and lynched. What the fuck for? Exactly.

SPEAKER_01

He bumped somebody in the elevator. Hell, I farted in elevators. Nobody said shit to me. No, I mean, but that is a crime, sir. That is a crime. But there was no justification for what went down, and for them to mob up and then people have an uprising about this was the complete full-on misunderstanding by the black community, too, because they showed up armed thinking that there was a whole revolution fixing to go on. And of course it was. They were all up at arms trying to lynch somebody over bumping into somebody in the elevator.

SPEAKER_00

Well, the Greenwood men, they came to the courthouse armed because they were under the impression that they were ordered to do so. They felt like they were just doing what they were told.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

So when 50 to 60 black men showed up, this mob of a thousand white men uh felt like that this was an uprising.

SPEAKER_01

And so people for the lives that are just now joining, we're recovering. Recapping. Recovering, recapping, recapping. We're recapping something that happened.

SPEAKER_00

Tulsa. I do have it in the uh description. Yes.

SPEAKER_01

I don't know all the ins and outs. Lindsay does great on that. Yes, thank you. I mean, I mix and do things, but you do things. You know, you drink and you know things.

SPEAKER_00

I do.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

I know too much. Some days. Whoo! And Jesse knows nothing. Uh like Jon Snow.

SPEAKER_01

So can I be Jon Snow instead of the hound? I'm gonna be Tyrion. You're gonna be Tyrion? And you're Jon Snow. No, come on.

SPEAKER_00

I'm gonna be Tyrion.

SPEAKER_01

Can I be Grey Worm and you be Melisante?

SPEAKER_00

Who's Melisandre?

SPEAKER_01

Melisante.

SPEAKER_00

Melisandre.

SPEAKER_01

Close enough.

SPEAKER_00

Something like that. Whatever.

SPEAKER_01

We're probably we're recapping. Yes, we're recapping. Check all the other stuff out too.

Armed Confusion And The First Shots

SPEAKER_00

Well, we are recapping our episode about the Tulsa massacre. Yes. So continuing on. And I'm gonna take continuing on.

SPEAKER_01

Yes.

SPEAKER_00

Now, the sheriff in town, he did not want violence to happen. So he formed a barricade, and orders were for you know his men, his deputies, whatever, that anybody that crossed that barricade was to be shot. He did not want violence to happen. And Dick Rowland was incarcerated, yes, but he was safe. And you know what's crazy is like I can't find anything that happened to Dick after all of this went down. Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

So, anyways, they're they're fixing to decimate a whole fucking area.

SPEAKER_00

So the black men from Greenwood come in, they're armed because they were under the impression that they were supposed to be. The white men get offended that the black men are armed. So they start like firing basically warning shots like all night long. Then there's a couple of a lot of this is lost to history. So there was one account that you know somebody did open fire, so a gunfight started. And then there was another account that a white man tried to disarm a black man from Greenwood who was a veteran. So there's line more.

SPEAKER_01

There's lines drawn. There's lines drawn in the middle of this. And it just took just a little spark for this son, bitch, to blaze. Blow up. Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Blow up. And so when this black man was being disarmed, um, it was said that like six men, you know, were in six white men were involved. So black men from the Greenwood businesses came in to defend him. And then like a whole and it's quoted that after that all hell broke loose.

SPEAKER_01

And we're we're talking a bunch of post-World War I people. Lot of people going on.

Retreat To Greenwood And Pursuit

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. Still a lot, still tons of segregation, unfair Jim Crow laws, just absolute bullshit. Uh, one law was that like, so say you live on a block and you're the only, or maybe one to two black families live on that block and the rest is predominantly white, you were forced to move, or vice versa.

unknown

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Not fucked up.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. It had they wanted the all the same race to be on the same segregated completely. Fuck up. So after this open fire goes on, um, you know, a few uh white men are killed, black men are killed, and then the Greenwood men, which were the black men, they decided to retreat and go back to Greenwood, and then the white mob, which is a thousand. Let's let's remember this is a thousand to fifty to sixty. The Greenwood men are going back to Greenwood. The white men are following them, and it's like a rolling gun fight. And then, excuse me, I'm getting choked up here.

SPEAKER_01

I'm choked up over the recap on it, really. I mean, I'm thinking, I'm picturing all this going down. They're mobbing, they're going to take out a whole community over one dude. Just trying to go to the bathroom. Trying to go piss.

SPEAKER_00

Just trying to go pee. Spent all his day shoes shining. And lawyers and and like predominant gentlemen in that area vouched for Dick Roland and were like, no, there's no way that he would have assaulted a white woman because that was what was speculated. Even though the op the the actual lady said no, nothing happened, and I don't want to press charges.

SPEAKER_01

No, by God, we're gonna take and do do ba do ba-doo-ba-doo. We so I'm just imagining the conversation.

SPEAKER_00

And I did forget because the white the black men had showed up armed, the white men went and retrieved their own guns. They armed up, they broke into an armory, like there was a whole that was a whole thing.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, they thought they were going to fucking war over this shit.

Fires, Planes, And Destruction

SPEAKER_00

Literally, yeah. So at this point in the story, the green women have retrieved, the white mob is chasing them, and then they start lighting shit on fire. They're looting the Greenwood businesses, they are uh lighting oil rags, oil soaked rags, and just setting everything ablaze.

SPEAKER_01

You can Google Molotov cocktails just burning shit.

SPEAKER_00

You can Google images of this, and it is absolute just fire and smoke everywhere. The fire department was turned away at gunpoint. They were not allowed to help.

SPEAKER_01

Now, and like you had said earlier, like in the podcast, you had said they had planes.

SPEAKER_00

Planes started dropping firebombs.

SPEAKER_01

Tulsa Aeronautical. What was the one the podcast we talked about with the Tulsa Aeronautical uh school?

SPEAKER_00

Was that was that the toy box killer?

SPEAKER_01

Was it the toy box killer? That was still there, that was there then. That's why they had all the planes.

SPEAKER_00

Well, okay, because yeah, I was wondering myself. I did I mean, I do the research and I look things up, but sometimes there are little factoids that I don't deeper dive into, and I was wondering where all these fucking planes came through.

SPEAKER_01

It kind of clicked. It was like, okay, we talked about this the aeronautical school of engineering, right? Is that the same thing?

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, because he he was in Tulsa and then he went to New Mexico, if I can remember correctly.

Detention, Red Cross, And Silence

SPEAKER_01

Oh my god. Was the aeronautic in so World War I, they used the biplanes and the slope, the 40, 50 mile an hour planes. They used them in battle, you know, in Europe and everything. They had a surplus of planes probably sitting there. People could buy them for like what you know, four or five hundred dollars. You could probably buy a plane, fly it wherever the fuck you wanted because there was no aviation requirements. There was nothing. They didn't care.

SPEAKER_00

Well, so they're dropping firebombs on all these businesses and all these residents, and the National Guard gets involved, and uh they start taking all people of color into custody, even the ones that worked in white homes as housekeepers and cooks and and whatever else, they were taking them into custody for like detention. Um, I mean, I have to say they were probably keeping them safe, but they were just being snatched up for no reason, really, you know, because Dick Rowland was at the courthouse. Yeah, he was the only supposed, you know, defendant.

SPEAKER_01

Two more hours and or assailant, whatever you want to call him, that he didn't do anything in two more hours with him in that courthouse, and then brought brought her into the courthouse and been like, no, this is just a little bump in, and dude ran for his life, nothing happened, it would all have been over with. But we can't do that.

SPEAKER_00

That took an upright home for a day because the headlines in the newspapers were were saying this man attacked this white woman and he needs to be lit.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

So that's when all the white mob showed up.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, but I mean, honestly.

SPEAKER_00

So fuck the media still back way back in 1921.

SPEAKER_01

Didn't they feed it? Yeah, they fed it. Oh, yeah. Because that went, I mean, globally. Really, this went globally for a little while and then got tucked under the fucking rug, right?

Legacy, Memorials, And Black History

SPEAKER_00

Well, so the National Guard comes in, they detain all people of color, all residents of Greenwood, um, and employees. And um, so things subside, and then the Red Cross comes in as well. And so now they're caring for these victims of this very senseless crime. Again, once again, I have lost my notes. Is that there my girl?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, she keeps hiding her notes from herself. Oh, use Silas's notes for it. It's okay. You're allowed to.

SPEAKER_00

So the Red Cross, they document all the people that were injured, um, murdered, uh, had who had miscarriages, and it ended up being about 10,000 people were displaced from their homes and had to live in tents for over a year. There was no real payout to these people to restart. They just had to start from scratch again.

SPEAKER_01

Of course, they waited fucking like so many years.

SPEAKER_00

For so long. Yeah, for so long. And that district, the whole Green Road district, was not given back to the people properly who originally lived there. It was rezoned for an industrial area.

SPEAKER_02

Right.

SPEAKER_00

And this went silent, what did I say, into the 70s? Because Rosewood had gone silence into the eight or silent into the 80s.

SPEAKER_01

It went like 90 years in Rosewood, wasn't it? 70.

SPEAKER_00

70 years of silence.

SPEAKER_01

Fuck. People living in fear and they're not wanting to talk about it because it could be more backlash, just like Yeah, they were scared to talk about it.

SPEAKER_00

They were scared of what could happen to them for decades.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

And then uh, so Tulsa, you know, these people were not given back what they deserved to rebuild their livelihood, to rebuild their community, everything that was taken from them and burnt to the ground for absolutely nothing.

SPEAKER_01

Right. And in in memory of every black American activist, you know, we just had we just lost Jesse Jackson this week.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

Show Format, Music, And Community

SPEAKER_01

We're wanting to share all this stuff. We're wanting to let this all be awareness. Where, you know, Emmett Till was like almost the dawn, right? Of everything for of the civil rights. Of civil rights movements and everything, you know.

SPEAKER_00

And these massacres, the Tulsa Massacre, the Rosewood Massacre, and there's many more that we're gonna talk about later on uh next year in Black History Month.

SPEAKER_01

And I even shared a little something about Lake City, which was kind of cool. Just history, right? Not you know, true crime, but still it's history.

SPEAKER_00

Just history, yes. And that was really cool because it's really cool. We weren't taught about that.

SPEAKER_01

Well, we weren't taught about that in our own. Share all this stuff in your own.

SPEAKER_00

We're gonna talk about Queenie later on, too, who was right up the road in the city.

SPEAKER_01

I would think that Tulsa, Oklahoma, fucking shares this story every year to everybody.

SPEAKER_00

Well, they have uh I do share on the pod that they have a website dedicated to the memorial or to the memory or to the information. It's a it's a it's basically like an online library.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, inquiring minds can find all this stuff for sure, but let it be also just spoken a little bit, you know.

SPEAKER_00

There's pictures, um, artifacts, uh, audio recordings, all kinds of things that you can find on that. And we'll link that in the notes on this page. I'll find the link. Yeah. Remind me on this on this video. I got you. Thank you guys for the lives.

SPEAKER_01

Thank you guys for coming in here. Lindsay.

SPEAKER_00

So they did, well, they did rebuild a little bit, uh, but it was nothing to like it had been previously. And there is one landmark left standing, which is, I think it is, I said Vernon AME Church that is left standing in Tulsa in the Greenwood district, which was called Black Wall Street. Now, when you think of Wall Street, you think of a thriving, prosperous area, and that's what this was. It it was, and then they just brought it down.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, and we rightfully so called it a massacre because that's rightfully what it was, I feel like.

SPEAKER_00

But I mean, it's also called the Tulsa Race War, um, Black Wall Street Massacre. There's many names for it that you can look up if you want to do a little bit more um research into this horrific happening. But make sure you listen to our coverage on it for sure. What else do you want to talk about? We got some time here.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, well, I mean, tying in everything and wrapping up all of Black History Month. I just want to say thank you so much for letting us have this platform and sharing all this, you know? Um rest in peace, Jess Jackson. Yes. Uh I'm wearing this hat though for Robert Duval.

SPEAKER_02

Yes, we lost Robert Duval this week. Um, we're losing so many cool American icons.

SPEAKER_00

2026 has not been kind at all so far.

SPEAKER_01

Isn't that crazy?

SPEAKER_00

Yes. And then you've got we've got everything that's been coming out with the same phone.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, all the stuff. It's on fire. We try not to pull in too many political stuff in here, but that's rightfully so. But everybody is does need an uprising. And well, it just needs awareness, you know, and we we need to not let anything ever recede back to any of this ideology. How did I say it? I I did how do you say it, Lindsay? Ideology? Ideology.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, I think that's the correct term.

SPEAKER_01

Ideology? Yeah. So just awareness and all that, sharing all that and taking a little bit of time with uh your children and people around you, you know, every once in a while is a good thing. And spending um sharing, sharing things like this. Yes. At at whatever level that they need to be at. Just share that everybody's equal. We need uh a little bit more awareness than that, always throughout humanity, no matter what, they're you know, you judge people by character and just you know do the right thing.

SPEAKER_00

And things that were silenced for so long just need to come out and be everywhere. Everybody needs knowledge of it. This needs to be taught in history, this needs to be everywhere, yeah, completely.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, sharing this is a great thing. Thank you guys so much for sharing all of our stuff.

SPEAKER_00

So if this is your first time hearing us, uh what we do is I tell Jesse a story of true crime. And then this past month we've been covering history, we've been covering black history, things that have happened in the past that were unfair, and we want to talk about them. We never want to forget this these horrific things that are being forgotten, being silenced. There we go.

SPEAKER_01

I was letting you try to pull it out because I'm we're on the same page, and I feel like everybody that listens to us. And supports us, they're on the same page. We just we want to share our true crime stories. Well, Lindsay, she tells the stories. I don't know anything about them. No.

SPEAKER_00

Isn't that crazy? I know.

SPEAKER_01

I've known this much.

SPEAKER_00

So even the one that we just recorded, Jesse literally shared information about this person who was already on my list. I have a very large list.

SPEAKER_01

I I I sent them to you without looking deep into them. I always do. I have. And I've sent you a couple of them from here in town, literally a block away from us. Yeah, literally a block. We'll be talking about that maybe next week.

SPEAKER_00

As soon as we can find some more information.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, that's true. We might have to go get some uh you don't go in Lake City. You ain't find a shit in the street.

SPEAKER_00

So get some public records. We can we can press.

SPEAKER_01

We're gonna go games again.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, so anyways, I tell Jesse a true crime story that he usually knows nothing about. And then at the oh, we have some drinks, by the way.

SPEAKER_01

I'm here for this.

SPEAKER_00

We are called Drink About Something.

SPEAKER_01

I see the music.

SPEAKER_00

Um at the end of the episode, he plays a band that he has gotten permission to play on our podcast to feature. Oh my goodness. We are so appreciative of that because we get we just find really cool talent, or you find, not we. You find the talent and we listen to it every week.

SPEAKER_01

You are the talent.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, shut up.

SPEAKER_01

No, you are. Leave us alone, and we all know it. Yeah, I feel like you really are very talented in this.

SPEAKER_00

Thank you.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, I'm just floating, dude. I'm just the turd that won't flush.

SPEAKER_00

Oh my god. That's what I am. No, you do a lot of work. Jesse is our editor, and he gets these cool bands to agree to let us play their music every week.

SPEAKER_01

A lot of it's metal music because we love heavy music, but I have to. But we love all genres.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

We we've covered pretty much every genre, and I keep reaching out and I want more genres. I think I'm gonna go some bluegrass here in a little bit.

SPEAKER_02

Oh, that's gonna be crazy.

SPEAKER_01

Because I love Appalachia. That's where I'm from. Can't help it.

SPEAKER_02

Appalachian roots.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, I won't say Hill Willy, because that is a derogatory word toward people of that area. You know that? Did you know that? I did. They use it so loosely. More awareness, right?

SPEAKER_00

More awareness. Well, maybe we'll deep dive into that one day.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. Maybe I can say it and get away with it and nobody else can.

SPEAKER_00

Maybe.

SPEAKER_01

I don't know. No, I don't give a shit. But no, uh, we're not about that. We just want to share uh, you know, real history and awareness and not let any of this stuff happen again. There's so many crazy stories, so many things to look out for and keep protecting yourself and other people around you from, you know, and that's what we're here to do. And thank you for sharing.

SPEAKER_00

And we're on what episode are we on? We have so we have like over 60. We're almost on 70 episodes, so we have a lot of content you can listen to. So we have 70 proper episodes, plus we have recaps that we have published, side stories, trip stories, things like that. Lots of content you can listen to.

SPEAKER_01

We went to Maine. Did we we went to Maine?

SPEAKER_00

We went to Maine in fact, and we we documented it on and we talked about it.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, and everybody and everything right now, we're fixing to do a little honeymoon vacation, and we're gonna cover some stuff on that.

SPEAKER_00

Anniversary. Anniversary, not honeymoon, anniversary, anniversary.

SPEAKER_01

Every anniversary should be your honeymoon.

SPEAKER_00

So we're yeah, yeah. So we're coming up on 14 years of being together, two years of being married, and Lindsay.

SPEAKER_01

Cheers. All the ups and downs and everything's boing. We are shining, dude. We're shining.

SPEAKER_00

Shining.

SPEAKER_01

Thank you guys so much for letting us shine with you. Right? It's all about the shining. Ooh, I do love the shining. Yeah, I do love the shining. Yes. Hello, Mr. Tar. Was it Mr. Tarres? With his finger. He's all talking. Mr. Tarrant. Mr.

SPEAKER_00

Tarrence. Is it Tarrence?

SPEAKER_01

Something like that. Talking with his finger. Yes. Yes. Red Rum. Rad Run.

SPEAKER_00

Anyway. This is what we're about. So we're gonna talk about our plugs real quick, and then we're gonna sign off of here. And so we are drinkaboutsomething.site is our main website where you can find all of our little little little platforms that we're on.

SPEAKER_01

Everything's on there.

SPEAKER_00

Uh Instagram, drinkabout something, gmail, drinkabout something pod at gmail.com, YouTube, just type in Gen Z, J-E-N-D-S-E-Y, and you'll find us right there.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, you see our faces too.

SPEAKER_00

You see our faces. Hello. And then what am I missing? Oh, TikTok. Hey, TikTok.

SPEAKER_01

Hey, TikTok.

SPEAKER_00

So drinkabout something pod underscore Lindsay. And where you can see our lives every week.

SPEAKER_01

So dude, your earrings are so fucking cool and very hippie. I want to wear them. Can I wear them?

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. Same size gauges.

SPEAKER_01

When we get off here, I can wear them?

SPEAKER_00

Absolutely. Lunchrade.

SPEAKER_01

Maybe the next podcast I'll be wearing them.

SPEAKER_00

Okay. The next live. Yeah, we have the same gauge size. So it's my little dangles. My little dangle.

SPEAKER_01

Y'all won't make fun of me if I wear that.

SPEAKER_00

Absolutely not. You can wear whatever you want.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. Uh keep sharing, subscribing, liking, do the things, right? And we'll see you guys next week because we love you so much.

SPEAKER_00

Well, and listen, listen, I mean, definitely listen to our episodes, but share all this information so that it never dies, never goes away. And we are all aware of the horrific things that have happened in the past so we don't do it again. Yep. And we love you guys so much. We thank you for all of our listeners all the way all around the globe. We are so appreciative. Uh we never thought that that would happen. Our little voices uh here right here in our kitchen.

SPEAKER_01

And as always, like when we get done with this, we usually kind of hit up the lives a little bit for a minute. That's always fun, right?

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, absolutely. Yeah, we hang out with the lives for a little while. We we plug a little bit more.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

You might have to pull up your phone to uh to share some more content just because mine's plugged in.

SPEAKER_01

We're gonna do that. Yeah. We're gonna do that. So we'll see you guys next week, though. Check us out on all the stuffs.

SPEAKER_00

Check us out.

SPEAKER_01

Thank you for uh drunk about something.

SPEAKER_00

And I will say Raw Uncut and Unedited every Wednesday. We'll see you next week. Love you. Bye. Bye.

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