Slightly Unsupervised | Best Friends Podcast | Real Talk on Female Friendship

Best Friends, Bloodlines & Blunt Truths: Debbie & Ashley’s Wild Ride — Part 2

Jennifer Hobbs & Jackie Schroeder Season 1 Episode 9

Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.

0:00 | 26:52

Send us Fan Mail

Episode 9 Part 1 gave you a peek into Debbie and Ashley’s aunt-niece madness, Part 2 is a full-blown backstage pass. Recorded in a Vegas hotel room, Jennifer and Jackie dive back in with these two ride-or-dies for even more outrageous stories, vintage fashion regrets, unexpected celebrity run-ins, and the kind of funeral pep talks only they could pull off.

From accidentally watching vampire porn with Grandpa to inhaling a fart bomb (and calling Poison Control—twice), this episode proves that Debbie and Ashley’s bond is part comedy duo, part emotional lifeline, and 100% chaos. They share why they don’t let outsiders mess with their vibe, how music became their shared love language, and why even the weirdest family moments become the most cherished memories.

In This Episode:

  • The night a “scary movie” turned into something… much stranger [02:15]
  • When $40 cost Debbie her entire vintage wardrobe (and a $5K dress) [07:40]
  • Why Brian Setzer, Duran Duran, and Sublime are part of their friendship DNA [12:20]
  • The cat wedding that counts as someone’s “biggest trauma” [18:05]
  • How to sneak into a sold-out concert Vegas-style [21:45]
  • Their unshakable dark humor—and the funeral toe incident [26:10]
  • The shopping carts full of “stuff we’ll never buy” [32:30]
  • Why you can’t sit these two together when it’s supposed to be serious [36:15]

If you’ve ever loved someone so much you can’t decide whether to protect them or prank them, this episode is your people.

 Bonus Segment: Rapid Fire Bestie Questions—Part 2 Closing Song: Definition of a Best Friend by Brooke August & Hannah Rose Follow Brooke on YouTube: @brookeaugust Follow Slightly Unsupervised on Apple Podcasts, drop a 5-star review, and send this episode to the friend who’d watch a weird movie, eat a pup cup, and crash a concert with you—no questions asked.

#SlightlyUnsupervised #Bestiemony #RideOrDie #UnlikelyBestFriends #FamilyByBloodFriendsByChoice #TruthTellers #VintageWardrobeRegrets #ConcertCrashing #FartBombStory #DarkHumorHealers #FunAndDysfunctional #FriendshipPodcast #VegasVibes #ChooseYourPeople #BestFriendEnergy



Chickology Podcasts
Bold podcasts by women, for women. Real talk. Real growth.

Bestiemony®
Honor your forever friendship with a Bestiemony®.

Rhinestone Wedding Chapel
Weddings, Elvis, & Bestiemony® ceremonies—only in Nashville at Rhinestone Chapel.

Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.

This episode of Slightly Unsupervised was brought to you by the creators of Bestiemony®—the original friendship ceremony that proves soulmates don’t always come with a marriage license. Hosted by Jennifer and Jackie: best friends, business partners, and co-founders of the movement celebrating real, ride-or-die love.

💍 Book a Bestiemony: rhinestoneweddingchapel.com/bestiemony
📱 Follow us on Instagram at @Bestiemonies
📩 Got a bestie story to share or a subject request? Email us at ChickologyPodcasts@gmail.com

Jennifer

Hey there, I'm Jennifer and I'm Jackie, and welcome to Slightly Unsupervised. We're best friends, business partners, and the chaos behind vestimony, a ceremony we created to celebrate the kind of soulmates who don't come with a marriage license. This podcast is all about the friendship energy, the deep stuff, the messy stuff, and the laugh tell you snort stuff. So whether you're driving, folding laundry, or hiding in your car for some peace and quiet, you're in good company. Let's get slightly unsupervised. Welcome back. This is the part two of the Debian Ashley story. Enjoy. Okay, so you have a story, Ashley. Tell us your story.

Ashley

So um I how old was I? Like 12? 13, maybe. Which one is it? Wait, wait, what story is this? We went to the video store. Oh, yeah. And we rented bordellos. Oh my god. It's 12.

Jennifer

Is that like a scary movie?

Ashley

I don't think anybody knows that. I don't think anybody's in our families heard this. I was with my papa, her dad, and her. Yeah. I was 13. We went, we're like, let's get a scary movie, the bordello of blood. When I was young, my papa, we played Chubby Bunny. We tried papa. Yeah, we put out the marshmallows in your mouth. She was pants while she was doing it because she was laughing so hard. But we put on this movie, and it's a full-on like bordello of um vampire sex people. So it's like with my grandpa and my aunt. I'm 13, but I'm drinking a little bit. So it was like funny, but it was still like I'm watching this sex movie with my aunt and my grandpa. My aunt just shit her. This is a relationship that we had. Oh my god. Yeah. So we all we almost watched a porn with my grandpa. Okay. Yeah. But like every, you know, every weird, like sexy, we were like, where her and I would like exit the room. We're like, yeah, that's probably why she pooped your pants. Because she was like, oh no, my dad's here. Did anybody in her family go? Oh my god, what are we watching? My grandpa was always like how I said we watched scary movies together, and he made it funny. He just made it funny. Like, what are you watching? We're like, you rented it in your name. So that was a good thing. I miss him. I miss him. Good for you. I miss him. Good for you. Good for you. We have a real weird family. Yeah. That you actually have like such great family stories. If you ask any of our like I don't know, friends that stay the night, we have like stories like this. Okay, next question.

Jennifer

Who takes longer to get ready?

Ashley

Probably me, but we're both pretty quick.

Jennifer

Are you? Don't spend a ton of time at it.

Ashley

Oh, not at all. Like if you're like I look homeless most of the time. Yeah.

Jennifer

That's me. That's what I look too.

Ashley

Like what Kita said to me, like put on like 12 different homeless outfits or more. Homeless is this? That's a trap. That's how it is. My son is totally homeless. Yeah. No, because okay, I have to tell a story about her son. He walked in, he walked into um the antique mall, antique mall America, where we have our booths and stuff like that. And they were like raid radaring, and they're like, um, sitting there saying, hey, there's some kids walking around. Can we watch them? And I was like, okay. And I was like, they were in one of my friend's booth. And I'm like, okay, let me run over there and I'm gonna get I'm gonna go get him. And I was like, oh my God, it's my freaking nephew. And they were like, no, no, but they think they said they said he looks homeless. I go, wait a minute, his pants, I just bought them. They're $500. And they were like, I'm like, I'm like, he probably has three thousand dollars on right now. You can buy $80 shirts on uh line that are hold. Yeah. Yeah.

Jennifer

It's the look. Yeah, it's a look.

Ashley

It's a look shirt that's been used and torn and this is the fab. Yeah, it's the homeless look.

Jennifer

Really? Yeah. It's actually a thick.

Ashley

Yeah, okay, yeah.

Jennifer

So how long has that been going on? Because I don't even know if I I mean I'm into it. I don't know.

Ashley

You have to worry, like holy bee combined all on Etsy. Etsy, yeah, yeah.

Jennifer

We were talking about that today. We saw a guy, I saw a guy, and he had a pair of shorts on that was like a different pattern, and then he had a different shirt on that has like little like like cherries on it or something, and then that's it matched, none of it matched, and it was like hideous patterns. And I was like, which is true. We ironed everything, everything had to match. It was like, I don't know if you were so into that, but like just like kind of the the preppy kind of vibe that we used to have in the 80s, like we ironed. I mean, everybody in the 80s knew how to iron. Did you did you spend a lot of time ironing?

Ashley

Um you were kind of both. I kind of I I couldn't press in a lot of a lot of my um a lot of my clothing because they were really from the 30s, 40s, and 50s and stuff like that. But you couldn't press anything in mine or anything like that back then. Oh my gosh. Yeah. So when I moved to Vegas real fast, when I moved to Vegas, I kind of was like, was like, I don't know, I got into the whole gambling and all that kind of stuff. And um I gathered all my clothes from the I mean, all my vintage clothes. And I went and sold them at one of the um vintage marts here, and he's like, and I had 20 trash bags. And I was like, I was like, okay, I just want to get rid of all this. How much? He's like, 40. I'm like, sure. Shut up. You sold all your and I told my husband, I was like, I just sold everything for 40. He's like, what? We went down there. He was yeah, he's like, we want to get it all back right now. So he went, we went, we I walked in and one of my dresses were was for $5,000. It was, yeah, it was anima Marcus 1950. So I was like, oh my gosh.

Jennifer

Did you get it back?

Ashley

No. Oh I couldn't afford it. Yeah.

Jennifer

Wait, did you get back any of the clothes you sold in the house?

Ashley

No, they were like, they were like, no, this is ours now. But no, that's how all the clothes I had in high school. Yeah. I I sold when I got here. I know, and it hurts till this day. Yeah, all the clothes we had back then. I know, right?

Jennifer

I have one dress and a spree dress, remember? Spree? Oh, yeah.

Ashley

Oh my gosh, I have an espree. I just got a spree, like Harrods. Did you?

Jennifer

Yeah, like well, I have one that I in fact uh a friend of mine had to say why, but it's like an old vintage. I don't know why I still have it. I have one dress that I don't want it or anything, but I just keep dragging it around everywhere I got it. Because I'm like, I don't think esprit's even around anymore. Yeah. So I have one espree dress that's from the 1980s. And it's a pretty good shape.

Ashley

Uh yeah, I know.

Jennifer

That's sad that you sold all those because you have the coolest vintage clothes.

Ashley

I know. It's like in the days of like every single, like every single skirt, every single shirt, everything was like remembrance of my dad. Like I remember one time I was like um shopping in um Let It Rock. It was called Let It Rock. It was on Melrose Avenue. Yeah, Melrose. And um, I'm shopping. Yeah. And I'm like going through the clothes. My dad's like all sitting there going, okay, get whatever you want, baby. And I'm like, okay. And all of a sudden, Brian Setzer walks in.

unknown

Really?

Ashley

Oh my god. That was like that's from Brian. That's right. That's like was my heart right there. Like, I just that was like my heart. And so all of a sudden it was just like like Brian Setzer walked in, and he my dad like went and engaged the whole conversation with him. He's like, Hey, what's your next gig? Did he really? Yeah, I'm sorry. Your dad knew who he was. Oh, yeah, because Brian was like all over my walls and stuff like that. Um, so did you say anything, or were you just like I couldn't even, my dad like fully like hammed the whole conversation? Of course, had to. And I was like, I was like, I couldn't even speak because I was like, I just but here's the diet.

Jennifer

You have the pit you have a vision of him, you have him on your wall, whatever, and you saw him in person. Like, was it the same person, or was he a different? Like, you know how it's like you see somebody, you're like, Oh, like I was shorter than I thought, or taller. Oh, he was the same, he was the same.

Ashley

We saw him what a year ago. Oh, he was the same. Really? And yeah, and actually, I was like, I'm so in love with this. I'm not like a straight cat, like, but it was really the same because I'm way younger than her. Sure. I like them, I know them, but we went and saw them, and I was like, Oh yeah.

Jennifer

So you fell in love too?

Ashley

Of course, yeah. We had a blast.

Jennifer

Did you?

Ashley

Oh, so now you that's what's cool about Ashley and I is like we'll go, we'll go somewhere, and it's like, um, and it's like we'll go somewhere together and we'll experience something that like I love and she'll feel it. Right. Like um, we went to like Duran Duran. We we had a we had a private uh concert with Duran Duran. We were in the front row. Yeah, and she was like it was it was it was amazing, and she like felt it because I was like, this is my favorite. Oh yeah, and like the same with Brian, and then um, and then like when Sia, like the day we went, we went to Sia, and I was just like yeah, because I don't even know who Sia is.

Jennifer

Who is that?

Ashley

She's a senior.

Jennifer

Oh, is she? Okay, so she reciprocated.

Ashley

She went back and she did it with me, right? So she could feel my love for your love. Got it. But Sia wrote a lot of songs like the genre music that she did. My gosh, she's almost like pop, maybe. She looks beautiful, she's gotta listen to her. Okay, got it. She wrote chandelier, like that one song was uh Rihanna sings it or something, or like I was who is it sings chandelier? Chandelier. She does it. No, but somebody else like did it or something. Oh, it's a remake of something. Yeah, something. But anyway, she wrote a lot of songs and stuff like that. I don't know what it was. Is she still uh is she still an artist? Yeah, she's the one that wears the wig with the blonde and the black. Oh like she couldn't see her face for so many ears. Oh yeah, I guess I guess.

Jennifer

I don't know. Anyway, okay.

Ashley

Well, sublime. Sublime. I know it's blind. Oh, we've seen sublime a million times. We actually they were sold out tickets. I bought her cherry. Was it cherry pop and daddy's? Yes. We went to no, it wasn't. Yeah, it was cherry pop and daddy. I bought her tickets for her and we went, and there was just a bunch of old people there. Right. Where are you? I'm helping some blind guy in the bathroom. And I'm like, we're sitting back next to a guy with an oxygen tank. It was crazy. So we left. We went to Mandalay Bay because we knew Sublime was playing. I couldn't get tickets because they were sold out, right? She went to the front of the line and said, We had tickets, but we lost them. It's my birthday. And they were like, Okay, come on in, girl. You so you're on Sublime? Yeah. Well, it was Rome. It wasn't, it wasn't, it wasn't Brad. Brad was dead. But we got to see Rome with Sublime. So I grew up on Sublime with her. Sure. Yeah, Sublime is huge. I kind of shared a lot of my music with her. Of course. Of course. Of course. That's like weird. Yeah. Like her kids nowadays don't even think that. I'm like, wait a minute, I didn't play I planted that for me. Do they? Yeah. And I was like, wait a minute, I planted that in her. Yeah. I'm like, I want some little credit of this. Yeah. Well, music for you, I think. Always. Always a music thing. Yes.

Jennifer

Yeah. Because it like in the way you dress. Like it was all based on. It was. Always. Was your dad a musician? No. No.

Ashley

But every single one of my friends was a musician. Really? Yeah. They had like, yeah, from like bands to everything. Like anybody hang out with? Was it music to see? Yeah. Then we we um we when we first moved to Vegas, um, I think it was like in 2000. I know I was a little man on my throat. But we we opened a venue here and we did a lot of the underground hardcore and stuff like that. And we did we signed a lot of the bands like Escape the Fake and The Cap and Panthe Disco and a lot of bands that you see now, they were like they they started with you. Yeah, they started with us and stuff like that. That's awesome. That was a cool, that was a cool thing. She missed that whole thing because I was being a mom. Oh yeah, pregnant. It's weird. I know that was weird. We we did lose a lot of touch there when I was just crazy. She kept the pop the puppies out. She's so cute. Like I started when I was 20. She's fertile. Like I prayed again. I was like, what the 20, and I had my I had three kids by 32. It was like a 10-year period. You were just like dominant. She's like, No, I can't come. I'm breastfeeding. You were no fun.

Jennifer

I was breastfeeding friendless.

Ashley

You're like 21. I was breastfeeding. And you know what? And her kids didn't like they didn't jive with me when they were young. Oh, that's her. That's too loud. He's too loud by daylight right now. But she's a little too loud for them, too. Yeah. Well, with a fart face, what is it? The bag, the little fart bag, yeah, up to my face. Did you ever see a fart bag where no? You buy them from the ice cream truck. Remember? So you push them and then they explode and they smell like a fart. Really? Well, she wanted to bite it to open it. I don't know if you're going to be able to do it. I'm gonna open it with my mouth. Exploded her mouth, fart. We had to call um poison control. And they're like, they're like a phone. I know, but it was my dad. What was it? Grandma's grandma, grandma's the phone. Like my daughter, and they're like, How old's your daughter? And they she was like 42. And then Papa was like, Don't laugh. Yeah, don't laugh. She's hurting because it like exploded her mouth. But that was the that was like the second time we called poison control. Yeah, but then but then but then but then um Jacob was in the back because he might my uh my nephew my nephew, her brother is like a guitarist. He's like Bart fade. He seen this song in the background. I'm like, yeah. What was the first time we called poison control? That was the second time. My dad, they were like, put your sister on your lap. No, it was for your dad. Dad got something in his eye. He was like, We call it poison control. My mom called poison control. They're like, okay. They're like, I go, no, I did. I I called poison control. It goes, something got his eye, blah blah blah. They're okay. Put your little, just put your brother on your lap. I'm like, he's poison control, totally 86 times.

Jennifer

All right, you're done. Oh my god. I gotta know the end of the fart thing that was in your mouth. Was did you have to go?

Ashley

I was fine. She smelled like a fart. I mean, that's normal for her. So did they like tell you, like, go rinse her mouth out? Yeah, girl, go and rinse your mouth out and stuff like that. And but then all of a sudden, I'm like, they were like laughing. Then my dad was getting my dad was getting mad. Because he's like, this is serious. No, you guys have no idea. Like, this is normal, like for us. Oh my god. This stuff happens like like through a whole life.

Debra

You guys, you guys don't even know, like people it's iceberg.

Ashley

Yeah, people tell us we should have a camera following us because this stuff is like all this is going on. So it's like a big comedy show that's gonna be our whole life, our whole family, our whole family everybody gets into it. Like, yeah, do people like want to hang out with you guys just to have this like good time?

Jennifer

Just to get in the aura of all this fun, like yeah.

Ashley

People are like, what does your family do into that? Like, but but we don't like people, you only like each other. This is it. Whoopsie. No, I mean we don't like it's not like we don't like people, it's like it's like you have enough between the you're you can't ever find anybody like each other, right? Yeah, right, yeah.

Jennifer

We've tried to venture out to other friends, like you've like brought some people in, you're like, yeah, this one might work for us, yeah, and then they don't.

Ashley

And then and like when we've like gone out with people, or like you know, like different friends might not like us, or yeah, like a soum. That's when we're like but then when they uh when like we either break up and stuff, they like miss our family more than they miss us. I got you, yeah.

Jennifer

So it's really just like trying to get in on the whole like vibe of the fam. Like, just let let me join that, and then you guys are just like the yeah catalysts to get in there.

Ashley

Yeah, we put the fun and dysfunctional, yeah. I it sounds like uh my nephew, her brother was like, we were at the table, we were like, Cindy, you gotta tell a story. Come on, tell a story. Okay, so um we've all been through like traumas in our lives. Okay, so we've had like serious traumas in our lives, and we're like, yeah, we've all been through all these traumas. My brother grew up like in a Christian family, like no trauma. Oh, so he's not used to this. No man, he didn't go through what I went. She went through or anything, and he was like, Oh my god, my biggest trauma was when Debbie and her roommate married their cat. And we were like, we were like, that's your biggest trauma? Like, we eat that for breakfast. Just like the potatoes. And then and then Ashley's like, Oh, did she at least put outfits on them? He's like, Yes. I was like, Well, that's great. Yeah, you're like, I thought that would be fun, but that was his trauma growing up. Well, bless his little heart. Both of you married the cat, or it's just like no, the cats got married because they couldn't have sex before they got married. It was a little bit weird. It was I totally got it. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Jennifer

So then they got married, and you guys said, okay, and then they had babies. Yeah, and so it was they sold the babies. So yeah, there's Did you make sure that the other cat, the other cats got married?

Ashley

I'm no. No, they didn't. Yeah, what happened to both cats? Yeah. They didn't get married and have babies. Wow.

Jennifer

All right, so let's get back to our questions. We've only got a couple more. Okay. I mean, you two can we can do this all night long, I think. All right, so who's got a cart full of stuff they'll never buy?

Ashley

Oh, we both do. She probably will buy it though. That's the thing. I don't buy anything. Yeah.

Jennifer

So do you like get in your like like Amazon is my old like I'm an Amazon all the time and I put stuff in there because then I lose track of it and then my husband puts it, save it for later.

Ashley

Yeah.

Jennifer

And that's how we, you know.

Ashley

I never buy anything. So she does buy way more than I do, but but she does put stuff back a lot too. Yeah. Does she? Yeah. But I do have a whole Amazon cart that I wish somebody could just buy for me. Right. Yeah. And it's like a this was like a treasure chest.

Jennifer

And you're like, oh, put all my stuff in there. You're never gonna happen. No. Is it because you don't like to shop or because it's you know probably because I just really don't need it.

Ashley

You don't need it. Yeah, but she she'll buy it probably. Like if I'm like, hey, you really want this, she'll buy it for me. Oh, that's sweet. Or should mention that, oh, I want this. And I'm like, okay, I buy this morning. I'm like, I'm thinking about going to Starbucks. She's like, here's ten dollars. Oh, you shouldn't have on my stuff for the pup cup. Send me pup cup corn.

Jennifer

Yeah, to get that in the pup cup. That's awesome. All right, good. It's like to do for fun. Oh, sorry. Sorry, it's a joke. So, um, all right, this is not even, I don't even know if this applies to you, this situation at all, especially your family. But who's most likely to laugh in a serious moment? Oh all of you? There's gotta be.

Ashley

We just went to a sorry, we went to a funeral on Saturday. One of my on the way there, I was one of her really good friends. I knew her, but not as good as she did. But the way there, we're like, we can't laugh, we can't do anything weird. Like, we had to prepare ourselves for this. Did you? Like a peptop. Yeah, okay, and then after we were done, she was like, Did you see that guy next to us? He had really weird toes. I was looking at him, I'm like, Thank God you didn't tell me because we would have been laughing about it right the whole time. Right, yeah. So you guys have to prep for no no damn.

Jennifer

Is it one of those things where we have to avoid looking at each other at all costs?

Ashley

Yeah, yes, yes, but it's like sad things, they're not funny, but we tend to laugh at them because that's what we do. Yeah, and we're still sad, right? We laugh, but you laugh, right? It's like a really weird laugh. So it's really hard for us to go to a funeral together, but we did really good. We did, we did, yeah. She didn't tell me about the weird toes sitting next to her. And she was the only one that noticed them because she's like, Yeah, I'm like, thank God he didn't tell me because we're really weird. We almost laughed a few times though, during it. Yeah, we did, but we had to like look away from each other. Did you guys? So we can't look at each other. Yeah, yeah, don't look at me. But it's not that we're not sad, like we we have hearts, sure totally, yeah. And you cry, you all right? I'm a crier. I cried the whole funeral. She did she did, yeah. She really didn't as much as I did. Really? And she and you didn't even know her as well as you exactly. I thought you so she you're crying. It's hurting for me. I was instantly. I was like, yeah, because when I when I go through something really, really, really serious, I laugh. Do you like I try to make a joke out of it? Yeah, always like always pause. Yeah, but that's maybe like a family dynamic that you've learned over the years. Like probably. Rather than like grandpa, yeah, yeah. He taught you. Your movies are funny, yeah. Death is funny. I mean, yeah. Sapphire porn. Samphire porn is funny. Porn is funny. Now we can't even we can't even watch it. Sad for real now. It's not it's not just funny. Porn is funny. Porn is funny now. But grandpa, yeah, dad. I mean, yeah, we're so you know, but it's weird. Scary movies, porn.

Jennifer

Are you just kind of bored with them?

Ashley

Because it's like no, we like that we we like the same, like the most stupidest movies that nobody else thinks is funny. You guys are just dying over there laughing. Oh my gosh, we're like, it's like the most stupidest common humor. Like you don't like obvious humor, do you? Like when everybody else is laughing. We like kind of dark humor, but dark humor. Obviously, obviously, yeah. But when somebody else is just sitting there and like, we're like like nacho libre, we like we we like literally pissed our pants during the whole thing. Yeah, it's great. Like nacho libre, everybody's like, we're like I mean blood be laughing. Isn't that Tony Banderas isn't it? Yeah, yeah. He was like that's something we gotta tell you. And then he played pussy boots. And then he played pussy boots. That was Sharma's favorite. She wore pussy boots for a whole year. Oh my gosh, pussy boots. She put a full pussy boots costume every other week. That's Spider Man pushes over there in the back. Yes. Children go through that. Yeah. Yo, Gabba Gabba. Yo Gabba Gabba is like that's right.

Jennifer

And the homeless look. Everybody check out the homeless look. Evidently it's a vibe now, so and you can check it out. I'm sure you've got homeless clothing probably that go to the vibe. There's it out. Yeah. Yeah. Awesome. Yeah. Well, you guys, this was probably, you know, way more fun than even you guys imagine this might be. I mean the longest podcast you've ever had in your life. Well, yeah. I mean, it's okay. We'll figure it out. Take out take out the part where you had a lot of sex during the day. Just so maybe you can share it with your family. I don't know. Like, I don't know. But you know, it's it's very refreshing to see that you guys are super tight. I always love that energy. You know, you guys obviously are definitely you guys are definitely like a yin and a game almost. Like it's awesome.

Ashley

So thank you for coming. Uh no way. Just don't tell our family that. Don't tell like that that we're not gonna share. That we're not that tight. We won't share it. Girls, don't share. Don't share. We're not that tight.

Jennifer

Okay. All right. If this episode hit you in the fails or made you laugh way too long, we consider that a win. Be sure to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with your white ride or die. And when you're ready to book your friend, make your friendship official, book your best and audi at rhinestoneweddingchapel.com. Because the best love stories don't always come with a ring.

Song

We stick together at a die to the moon, and no amount of space could ever come between us two. Reuniting's like we've never been apart, and every single time we're out of eye and heart to heart There's not enough worse to describe what you made me through heartaches and ups and downs in this life. You've stayed right next to me. I'm about to make you laugh, don't you cry? Look up at everything under the moon. The definition of a best friend is good. And we'll keep dancing through the rays, we're ever connected, same page, we're writing our story. Every day we'll keep on going, ever changing. What you made a made. Through heartaches and ups and downs in this life, you've stayed right next to me. I thought it'll make you laugh till you cry. Don't come up with everything under the moral. The definition of a first friend is you trust that loyalty. You and me love trust that says loyalty.