Laughs without Lager
Laughs Without Lager is a podcast about life beyond alcohol—honest, heartfelt, and lots of laughs. Hosted by Ali and Meg, two Australian women living alcohol-free, they explore the real experiences that come with choosing freedom from alcohol. From early challenges to deeper conversations around trauma, healing, and identity, this is a space for growth, connection, and support. Their conversations are honest and authentic. Whether you’re alcohol free, sober-curious, or somewhere in between, you’re welcome here—no judgment, no hangovers, just real talk and shared stories.
Laughs without Lager
Navigating events Sober
A bag of manure, a wrong funeral procession, and two friends laughing so hard their faces hurt—this is a story about how fun didn’t vanish when the wine did. We crack open the invisible rules that used to run our lives: the bar tab at weddings, the “you deserve it” drinks after pregnancy, the designated‑driver resentment, the “check your texts” dread. Instead of preaching, we talk honestly about what changed: connection got louder, shame got quieter, and ordinary Sundays started to feel like a win.
We contrast the quiet respect of a Greek funeral with the rowdy Australian wake, and what it meant to be present—truly present—when a 6 a.m. call brought scary news. We revisit messy nights (tequila at a school fundraiser, anyone?), the paranoia and people‑pleasing that alcohol amplified, and the relief of drawing boundaries and leaving toxic friendships. Along the way we explore sober curiosity, alcohol‑free socializing, hangover recovery, and how the joy of missing out can replace FOMO when you choose clarity over coping.
Sober fun isn’t a theory here; it’s a quiz night with belly laughs, a Thailand trip without the logistics of booze, and Sunday rituals that restore instead of repair. We share practical wins—better sleep, cleaner relationships, fewer apologies, more energy—and the small comforts that help: a big pot of curry, football, and delightfully trashy TV that doesn’t require a recovery day. If you’re rethinking your relationship with alcohol, craving fewer hangovers and more real connection, you’ll find stories, strategies, and a lot of heart.
If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs it, and leave a quick review—your support helps others find an alcohol‑free path to real joy.
Contact Us:
https://www.meganwebb.com.au/podcast-1
Ali
insta: https://www.instagram.com/idontdrinkfullstop/
Meg
website: https://www.meganwebb.com.au/
insta: https://www.instagram.com/meganwebbcoaching/
bookclub: https://www.alcoholfreedom.com.au/unwinedbookclub
Connect AF: https://www.elizaparkinson.com/groupcoaching
Hey Allie, how are you going? Hey Maggie, great, thank you. Woo-hoo! What have you been up to? What have you done that on the weekend? I've had a pedicule. Oh, nice.
SPEAKER_02:And I was the only one in there. It was so weird. Oh, yeah. It was a Friday lunchtime. Um, I was on my roster day off from work, and I looked down at my tinkle toes and went, oh my god, they need some serious sorting out. So yeah, I went into my local um shop and I was kind of like sitting there. I was a bit annoyed because the massage chair was not working. Oh yeah, that's annoying. And she kind of was just like fobbing me off, and I'm like, oh lady. Um, so I I just ended up watching the um big screen across from me, uh the what's it, City Just City Surf? City Beach.
SPEAKER_00:City Surf.
SPEAKER_02:Sorry, City Beach Surf Shop, whatever it's called. So and then I kind of like dozed and then I yeah, she really actually did a great job. So that's what I did on Friday. And then last night I went to a quiz night. Oh and actually won something, a bag of manure. Oh, a bag of shit. And I was like, oh, that's the win jam.
SPEAKER_01:I know and jam. That is just jam, shit and jam. Oh, that just shows how different our um parts of the world are. I love that. I love it. Shit and jam.
SPEAKER_02:Shit and jam, mate. Um, so yeah, I then had to carry the fucking thing all the way to the car. So it was just like stinky poo's. Well, imagine if you'd won that drunk. You wouldn't have had a car to put it. No, I just sort of said, mate, shove that up your ass. You would have um I'll just take the jam and you know, re-gift it. But also there I did notice when I walked in, I must say there was a lot of alcohol for the prizes.
SPEAKER_00:Ah, yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, so it was good. Like my boss, she won a bottle of wine and a bunnings out bro uh voucher, and I got the manure. So, you know, synchronicities are perfect, and mate, we laughed. Fuck we we got the Dunce Prize, so I ran down and did like the Tom Cruise, slid across the old hall floor and grabbed a bag of smarties. We're not smart, but I'll take it.
SPEAKER_01:Oh, that's awesome. Yes, it sounds fun. I thought the shit would have been the Dunce Prize.
SPEAKER_02:No, mate, no, no, it's I know it's it's good stuff. It's old, it's good stuff, good for the garden, grow stuff, and especially being on the new moon. Oh quite fitting, yes. So, yeah, that was what I did. What about you?
SPEAKER_01:Well, I had a funeral on Friday, which was a friend's family member, so I didn't really know him, but it was a Greek, so I hadn't been to a Greek funeral before, and quite the opposite, there was very little alcohol actually. So it's always interesting just seeing how different people, different cultures are. So after the ceremony, then the burial, then back to the church, they had the wake, and the only options for alcohol were very, they were like tiny shot glasses and just a little bit of alcohol in them. Um, and there was the same for coffee, just little shot, and you could have water and soft drinks. So but they were big normal ones like cans of soft drink.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah.
SPEAKER_01:Um, but I don't I didn't see anyone drink more than just a sip because it was just a sip's worth. And I asked my friend who's Greek, do people get smashed? And she said, Oh no, no. So that was interesting. Very, very different to an Australian funeral.
SPEAKER_02:Oh, my dad's funeral, mate. I thought I can yeah, well, it's a license to drink, right?
unknown:Yeah.
SPEAKER_02:And I mean, you know, dad was a bit of a drinker, so but you know, that's all we knew. That always all about the freaking booze.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_02:And you know, a bit of finger food, but it was like make sure that tab on the bar is I can sorted. So yeah, I I yeah, got absolutely blackout, blind drunk for dad's uh bird funeral, and that was normal.
SPEAKER_01:Yeah, totally. I've been to a couple at crematoriums and uh since I've been sober, and I I haven't that definitely, yes, alcohol. Well, it's at the place, there's alcohol, but um there's also been pretty good food, so I just jump into that. I haven't noticed, but I know back in the you know, further back, um there there was one funeral that everyone was smashed. But I actually had a my daughter was young, so I I left. So I don't think I've even been to a funeral where I've drank.
SPEAKER_02:Oh shit, that just reminds me. Actually, I don't know why we're talking about funerals, but just when you said that about your daughter, my my daughter was three months old. Oh my god, she was three months old, and I my best friend at the time, her dad passed away funeral. Like, we were all humongous drinkers again. It so I left her with a good friend who's who was her neighbour, and fucking honestly, mate, like I got home, picked her up, I think, you know, in the early afternoon, evening, because I'd expressed so yeah, but I remember I was at my friend's house till 3 a.m. And my husband cracked the shit and came with me with the baby and basically skull dragged me out of there. Fucking yeah, I can't believe it. And then I yeah, I mean, that was she was three months old, and I was literally up until 3 a.m.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah.
SPEAKER_02:Just like far out, yeah, reminiscing and just dribbling shit, and you know, but that's all I you know, alcohol was so ingrained.
SPEAKER_01:Well, you know, where I did that almost when my daughter was the same age was her christening. Because after we came, like this is 27 years ago, we came back to my mum's house and everyone just got smashed, and I hadn't drank. She was probably six months, and I hadn't drank since having her, and I just did drink, and I remember trying to feed her, and she was screaming. I was like, I just didn't care, yeah, I just did not care, I just wanted to drink, yeah. But yeah, like so. That's interesting that most the things like it wasn't funerals, it was yeah, other things, but um just so normalized. It's it is such a normal part, anything like christening, wedding, funeral, you name it, and it's all when you have a baby, the first thing they you know, the boys go wet the head, baby's head, what an excuse.
SPEAKER_02:And I but they all brought in my family bought in Guinness, yeah, because that's good for your iron. Yeah, I didn't give a shit. I just cracked it, and then another friend gave me, you know, a bottle of shampoos, and I'm literally sitting in there on my own, well, you know, with visitors drinking, and that was completely not even that was normal, and it just is a downhill. Well, for an a pie said like me, I yeah, it was really hard to stop at one, even though you've got a little baby. So that's how much I was, you know, addicted to it.
SPEAKER_01:Yeah, yeah. Well that feeling. Yeah. And also it's like, oh well, you've been pregnant for nine months, you deserve it. You know, you can't oh my gosh, you've gone so long without it, even if you've had a drink or two along the way, you know. It's just this mentality of you better, you better celebrate by having alcohol.
SPEAKER_02:And the red wine, you know, it was just yeah, just how much um, yeah, like r iron for goodness, you know, iron and then red wine for your heart. I remember that messaging.
SPEAKER_01:Oh wow.
SPEAKER_02:Um, and then I remember when it was she was only I think when we were pregnant, my you know, that I found it really tough because I I didn't, but I did. I mean, you knew you couldn't drink because you had something growing in your tummy, but then whenever you you know, to be the designated driver, I was I was a salty fucking person. Oh I was salty ass because I had the partner that was a freaking piss head, and I'm like, you bastard, you know.
SPEAKER_01:When I was pregnant with my second daughter, my husband at the time had a work function and it was big, it was gonna be like a wedding. Well, I tantrumed, I was shitty. First of all, I didn't know anyone. There is nothing worse, or there was nothing worse, than going to an event where you didn't know one, didn't know anyone, and I couldn't drink. Yes, like I couldn't even go and meet people in the toilets, like because I was drunk. Yeah, yeah, I was so angry. I cried before we went, and I think hormonal, we carry the bloody baby, let's face it, we do a lot more. Um, it wasn't fair. I was really stuck in a this and it was at this almost castle in Sydney. It's um I don't know what it's called, but it was a big thing, and there I am just sitting there watching everyone get smashed, and I was like, Including your your partner. Oh yeah, because of course I was driving, so yeah, not by choice, I mean and that's the thing, isn't it?
SPEAKER_02:How weird, like just but that's what how we thought you couldn't have fun sober, yeah. It was resentful, like poor me, why can't I um yeah, yeah, like just that that's why we ne I that's why I never gave up because I never thought um you could do anything without having a drink in your hand.
SPEAKER_01:Well, exactly. I mean, at that time it wasn't um a choice, so it wasn't like I was going into something thinking, yeah, I choose this, it's gonna be fun. We were going in thinking this is not fair, and I do meet a lot of people that struggle with that. Um, and I did it at some point on my giving up, you know, journey at one point, but um it's kind of working to the point where it's like actually I choose this and I embrace it, and it's not the jo the fear of missing out now, it's the joy of missing out on drinking. I don't it's just such a different mind headspace to be in.
SPEAKER_02:I mean, how you know, how cool is that? Like all of this, you know, what sobriety gives us like last night at that quiz night, um, you know, it's you know, it like people were drinking and stuff, and as I said, there was so much alcohol. But mate, we laughed so hard, like we couldn't even feel our faces. And and I'm sure those I mean, look, it was an older crowd, but you know, like running down doing the Tom Cruise thing, they probably they may have assumed that I'd be drinking, but yeah, yeah, I think I really just surprised myself as well, like that I could actually genuinely and authentically fucking have a blast, like our holiday in Thailand. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah. And all of that thing would have been like this the old alley going to that quiz night, it would have been all the rules around who's gonna drive.
SPEAKER_01:Mm-hmm. Yep, yep.
SPEAKER_02:And you know, putting yeah, not enjoying the actual quiz night. It's all about the eskey, the fucking who's gonna drive, the rules, and then come home and then try not to, you know, have another nightcap and stay up and ring someone. Like I we went to bed, well, I went to bed at I don't know, eleven after eleven. I was, you know, completely and utter high on life, and then wake up this morning and you know, you just think, fuck yeah, like I'm not hungover. I didn't actually have a great sleep, but that's fine. And then I actually got some shitty news this morning of that my daughter was in a car accident on her work last night, and I actually didn't sleep very well. I don't know whether that was part of you know just me being connected to her, but you know, she rang me at freaking six something o'clock on a Sunday morning and bam, hello. Uh, because she was on night shift, so I didn't think anything was wrong. But mate, you know, that would have gone through to the fucking keeper, and I would have picked up this call, you know, whenever I freaking woke up, and then I'd be like, oh shit, and I know shit, I would have been drinking right now because of that terrible news, and I had to soothe myself, and I had to, oh my god, make all this fucking bullshit about me, and oh you know what I mean? Yeah, and I she rang me first and just said, Mum, and you know, we had a little cry because she's my only child, and you know, and I just said, Honey, you're yeah, like just so proud and present and grateful that you know I didn't, you know, that could have been a different would have been a different story a few years ago, mate.
SPEAKER_01:Like oh totally. I mean there's so many positives, and I leave, like you said, you know, you got home high on life. That's even after a funeral, and I'm not saying I was high on life, but in a way, I was really grateful for friendship, for life, for being I was I felt privileged for being part of a special day for my friend, you know. There was and I went home and I thought that's connection because I could be there authentically. Um, I wasn't there just waiting till the drinks came out. Yeah, which yeah, and so even for something like that, you can I just have so much more gratitude for things. Oh but if it's a fun event, more often than not, I come home pumped, and I think it's because of connection, which I really when I look back at drinking and I think what were the best times drinking, they were connecting. Like, so take away the alcohol. We've got can it's better connection now. So it's such a good feeling.
SPEAKER_02:And also, you're you were telling me before we hit record about what you happened at the funeral. That was quite funny. Where you were ended up at a different funeral.
SPEAKER_01:I'm just looking at you going, Menopause brain has kicked in again. I'm like, oh god, what was it? Yes, it we oh my gosh, my Greek friend was not with us, obviously, because it was her dad's funeral, but my other Greek friend had come along, and so we'd gone in her car to the berr to the cemetery, and um, she got lost in the cemetery, and then we realized well, then she pulls over and she's like, Why won't any of these people let me back in? You know, this is our our church, our procession, you know, it's why are they not letting me in? Well, we realized as we hopped on the end of the line that we were in the wrong funeral procession and it was a Lebanese one, and they just weren't very happy with so we were laughing, going, Oh my gosh. We're like, how do we find where we're going? And it was it was a an experience, I'll tell you that. But um, it was funny. It was funny, but yeah, it was just nice to come home and reflect that we were there because well, I was there because I wanted to be, you know, for my friend. I didn't have any ulterior motive. Um, because there are there are times that in my past that I would go to a something because I knew I'd get alcohol.
SPEAKER_02:Oh, one of my friends whose friend, the the person that uh her dad passed away, mate, like she knows a lot of people, and it got to the point because she's still an active drinker. We would just be like, Are you actually going through the newspaper to find out who the hell's passed away? Because all the time she was at a freaking funeral. But I think it would in like she was definitely going for the booze, let's face it. Um, but a hundred percent, I mean, weddings, I mean, we'd get invited to you know, your partner's freaking wedding, and I didn't know anyone, didn't give a shit. And I'm like, is exactly it's like free booze, free food, free entertainment, free fucking drugs, whatever it is.
SPEAKER_01:Yep.
SPEAKER_02:I didn't give a shit. I just wanted to know, right, let's get dressed up and get smashed. Yeah, exactly. You know, and then and then it's like, oh happy wedding, whoever you are, right at the end of the night. Like, please. And my own wedding, far out. I was inviting ex-boyfriends and shit like that. My fucking guest list was like about 200 people. And I mean, I am from a large family, but you know, if my ex was just like, what the fuck? You know, why are you inviting that person? I'm like, alright. But you know, we it was all you know, I mean, it was a beautiful venue and all that, but yeah, it it was all that money was literally going towards the bar, and that was for other people, not us. I know, I know, you know, so everyone else would get drunk and have a good time because that's where you do, right?
SPEAKER_01:And it's so like I reflect, and and it's not because I don't drink that I think this, I I think I always thought it, but it's not it's like, why do we want to get smashed at these things? So, for example, at the funeral, I found it a really respectful funeral because we were all there for the person. There was reflection, there was um togetherness and support uh without alcohol, you know, and I I just feel that that's really um honouring the person. Whereas just getting smashed, I it just never I never got it that weddings, feels all those things are just it's non-genuine, right? It's not genuine. Because then have have you heard that some people will have dry weddings and then there's big, big complaints around that? Yeah. I mean, imagine if I'd been invited to a dry wedding when I was a drinker, I would have been shitty.
SPEAKER_02:I wouldn't have gone. Oh, I would have had a hip flash, fucking I would have someone I I would have had boosters.
SPEAKER_01:Totally, but the attitude that how dare they, like which would have been me, is just so bad, isn't it? When you're spending that much money, it should totally be the groom the bride and groom's choice, but um it don't go down well.
SPEAKER_02:It goes down like lead born a bad martini.
SPEAKER_01:Well, a bad a bad um alcohol-free martini is how it goes down.
SPEAKER_02:Yeah, true, true. It's like uh it's the teeny without the martini without the tequila. Is that right? Actually, that was one of the questions. Oh really?
SPEAKER_01:The um I don't even know what goes in what.
SPEAKER_02:What is in what's the basis of a dry martini? And I'm like, never drank them. I but I don't know uh for everyone, it's tequila, and I was like, tequila, I didn't I actually didn't I didn't drink many cocktails because I couldn't tell you what's in any of them.
SPEAKER_01:Uh they were too expensive for my budget.
SPEAKER_02:Well, also tequila was I mean, back in the day, you know, tequila slammers, you know, when when we were drinking, it was affordable to a point. But you know, that just can go so many ways that people most people don't genuinely like tequila because they've overdosed on it, like I did, you know, like it's just like fuck that people say tequila and it's just like nah.
SPEAKER_01:Yeah, well that was me and vodka for about 20 years after I was 18 and got sick on it, couldn't even say the word. But I have I'm having a tequila memory at a school quiz night. What are they called? What are the quiz nights called? Blue light disc no, no, um spelling B? No, you just get someone in who asked questions. It's not called but we didn't call it a quiz. Oh no, I don't know. I'm having mental blank, but it was a school function, it was a fundraiser, and one of the girls had a hip flask on her pocket with tequila, and she was shooting it into people's mouths. And I don't remember the end of that night. Oh because she wasn't actually drinking much of it, I was. But it it was messy, and I remember waking up embarrassed and thinking uh not only overthinking, but actually people saying, Oh, you know, when you don't want to know what you did, but people are sort of going, oh, you ended a bit, ooh. I never want to tell you. And I think basically I just got extremely sloppy and messy, and I got loud and obnoxious, and I never wanted them to tell me. I just always woke up wishing I could have stopped at some point, but you can't. Not when you get not when you pass your three drinks. Your horse is bolted.
SPEAKER_02:Oh, and I mean when you're young, I mean shit, you know, it doesn't it's it's it's kind of like that's that's the the go that's the the norm, right? Because you're only little and you're only you know, you you're you know, to spew and to make a tit of yourself or even to have sex and all that sort of stuff, you know, that's just the the training wheels of I guess progression of alcohol, but yeah, yeah, um, you know, that you get credit for that.
SPEAKER_01:Well, this is when I was a mother at the school, so right.
SPEAKER_02:Oh right. I was forty. Oh, so you were an adult.
SPEAKER_01:Yeah, about 40.
SPEAKER_02:Oh, sorry, I see what you mean. I thought you meant that high school you had a um No, well, I never drank till I was 18.
SPEAKER_01:No, the quiz night was a school fundraiser.
SPEAKER_00:Right, yeah, yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_01:And it was tequila, my friend had tequila, more as a part of the costume because it was a dresser, but yeah, and most people weren't taking the sh some people had a shot, but she squirt it in your mouth, but I just kept going back. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I just had no off switch, which we know a lot of people don't. I wasn't the only one, but I still somehow went further than most.
SPEAKER_02:Oh, I see, I see, I see.
SPEAKER_01:I hated and then woke up with all the shame and blame and embarrassment and and looks and comments and but even Oh, the school pickup the next day. Oh, yes, and I didn't Oh I hated that so much. I just and then sometimes even beyond that age, like heading more to mid-40s, I'd get if if I'd been out with friends, I might get a comment going, Do you remember what you said last night? Oh my god. And I'd actually say, Don't want to know. I just and this is so G8. Oh, I I I did not want to know. No way. I reckon some of it was probably me saying to people, you're so mean to me, you're such a bitch, or whatever. Like, oh god, it makes me sick to cringe. Think about it. Yeah, anyway.
SPEAKER_02:I just wasn't, I don't know, I just wasn't that I don't know. I think the people pleaser in me was just still I just would never be that. I used to have that to me, like a one particular friend was just so, so awful when I it was always after I'd have a bloody bit of marijuana, and I was completely, you know, the end of the night, and she'd just fucking come in from left field and just you know, say some really horrible, hurtful things, and I just was so kind of like blase about it that I was just blindsided as well as just like, oh, I just had no courage to stand up for myself.
SPEAKER_01:Well, I think mine was it was courage, but it wasn't that mine was more that I'd be saying, you two talk about me, and you're so mean, and I can't believe you talk about me, and then they'd call me paranoid, and then I'd get paranoid, and it was just a horrible so I was it wasn't I mean uh that's as far as I can remember, you know, but I did have toxic friendships, and so some of them liked prodding me.
SPEAKER_02:Right.
SPEAKER_01:Um, and thankfully now I've ended toxic friendships for the most part.
SPEAKER_02:Absolutely, yeah.
SPEAKER_01:They weren't very nice, you know, but then I'd get quite paranoid and and look, I'm sure I could have been mean at times, but I think it was more a defense of things that I wouldn't have said normally. And so you know, but ugh, ugh. I'm just glad to be here.
SPEAKER_02:I know we don't have to I yeah, we don't have to worry about that. You alcohol freedom. Yes, you're so good.
SPEAKER_01:Oh, it's so good. And to wake up and know you don't have to check what you said or did or check your texts. I mean, that's my favorite thing. That and not feeling like shh, just physically sick all the time. I used to say, I don't even get hungover. That's because I was in a constant hangover. You don't have time to come out of a hangover when you drink the next night or the next afternoon. Like I wasn't not hungover, I was just hungover all the time.
SPEAKER_02:Yes. Yeah, yeah, just tired and just hung over. And yeah, no, it's uh yeah, today would have been a definite day to be uh drinking the vodkas for me and getting stoned and trying to just decipher and just think that that was helping me. And oh I know it's just not. And look at today, you know, I went for my walk and then now we're doing a potty, and then my my twin who I live with, um, they're cooking a roast and we're gonna watch the football. So uh we better wrap it up, Megsy, because I reckon that's um yeah, I think that's a good way to end footy, friendship, roast dinner, Sunday afternoons.
SPEAKER_01:I'm having some jealousy there. It sounds really nice. I'm gonna go to Cole's and get some food and cook dinner. What are you gonna cook? Maybe maybe a roast, Sunday roast? You know what? A roast sounds really good, but my I'm actually gonna do a curry, like I green curry or yellow curry, because then I'll have leftovers and then um the kids all like that. So just gonna do a big chicken curry, and then I'm just gonna chill out and watch some Netflix. It's a bit of a chilled, it's a Sunday here, so chilled Sunday.
SPEAKER_02:Are you watching anything good on Netty? Anything to share or any trash?
SPEAKER_01:I just watched four seasons with Steve Carell, and it's it was good, but it was a bit sad at the end. I'm like, I didn't expect that, but it was good, it's just one season, so people have a look at that if you haven't. Um, and then I'm really into thrillers and um true crime and not true crime, just crime. Whatever it is.
SPEAKER_02:Well, I'm the complete opposite. I'm love is blind.
SPEAKER_01:Oh no. Have you watched Perfect Match?
SPEAKER_02:I have indeed.
SPEAKER_01:Loved it, and it's not the Australian Perfect Match from back in the day. This is American trash, and I love it.
SPEAKER_02:Loved it, and that chick's still on there. She was off the ultimatum, which is coming up again season, whatever it is, because my daughter's ex now ex-boyfriend that lasted five minutes. Yay! He has fortunately left a Netflix on my TV. Brilliant, so I'm like smashing shit until he realizes like because all of his shows that he watches is all like you know, the freaking uh just boy stuff. Yeah, so he what you won't and then there's my sprinkling of Love is Blind. That's awesome.
SPEAKER_01:Oh no, I love reality tracks.
SPEAKER_02:Oh, and binge, I've got binge, so I've been watching oh nine, I've been watching The Last Resort. I have 90 Day Fiance.
SPEAKER_01:The Last Resort. Oh my gosh, you've got to watch it. I've seen it. I've seen it. Which one is it?
SPEAKER_02:It's okay it's the la well it's tell oil part two, the tell oil, tell oil.
SPEAKER_01:Oh my god, oh tell oil. I just said it too.
SPEAKER_02:Um The Last Resort of The Last Resort, which is what with um Gino. Oh no, I haven't. Is it is it really good?
SPEAKER_01:Oh my god, watch it. Oh, okay. Everyone watch it. It's okay, great. Thank you so much. It was worth talking about this. I have a new show, and so everyone listening might have some ideas there too.
SPEAKER_02:It's the 90-day fiance spin-off, and it's the couples that are in crisis go to the last resort. Oh, okay, and it's really good. Okay, I'm up. I'm freshy, and yeah, I love it. So I'm gonna mind numbing and it is really great. Exactly. Yeah, no guilt that I'm hungover, I can just do it without having to be hung over and still chill out and numb out. Which is amazing. It is great. So, anyway, have an awesome Sunday.
SPEAKER_01:You too, and we'll see you next time for our next step. Next step. Stay tuned. Stay tuned, everyone. See you soon, Megsy.