3 Peas On A Pod

TELL ALL: PART 1

3 Peas

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0:00 | 34:55

Sisterhood!

You're going to want to sit down and take a deep breath for this one. This is PART 1 of the Three Peas TELL ALL. Black at a PWI never sounded so thrilling. Join us as we call back to some iconic (is that the right word to use?)  stories of Bri's time at the school. All the trials. All the tribulations. All the tea.

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Stay updated on all things 3 Peas by following us on our socials! Dominique is particularly desperate for people to engage with her tweets.

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SPEAKER_02

Welcome back, y'all, to three peas on a pod. We're qualified or not, we're gonna talk about it. Welcome back. Welcome y'all. What's this? The beginning of our long-awaited whoa, okay. Well, yes, we'll get there. We'll get there. But well, no, we're not ending. We're not ending. It'll be the end of season one.

SPEAKER_01

End of season one. Trust will be back, y'all, with Avengers.

SPEAKER_02

Trust. You will still be hearing from us, and that is a threat. Absolutely. Oh wow. Absolutely. But no, it is the start of our long-awaited tell-all of the school. No, everyone should be scared. Everybody gets scared. Of stories from the school that all three of us went to for various times of our lives. Some more longer than others. And we're really excited because we have lots and lots of funny tales to share of our time at this school. So the first episode we're gonna focus on my stories predominantly, but the OG.

SPEAKER_01

The hamper. What are you calling the guinea pig? I must say the hamster. The guinea pig.

SPEAKER_02

Oh gosh. Yes, as the oldest IA was the guinea pig. Um, so let's briefly just talk about how we even got here. So again, we're not gonna, you know, there'll be no names, no specifics mentioned, but if you know.

SPEAKER_00

We are afraid of legal troubles.

SPEAKER_02

We are not, but we still just, you know, wanna whatever. So all we're gonna say is uh the three of us went to an all-girls private school. Dominique and I went there for middle and high school, and then Courtney went there forever. Right, she was actually born.

SPEAKER_00

And then immediately was enrolled. Immediately, immediately. They tested me for potential. That was that was how young I was. They were like, Do you know what shape this is? I said a triangle and they let me in.

SPEAKER_02

Period. So anyway, um, yeah, private all girl school, how we ended up there, um, because that was not at all on the radar, in the plans, ever. Like, that's not what our family was giving at the beginning. We was chilling at our local public school.

SPEAKER_00

I know, I can't even imagine us giving that. Court that we had. I just can't even imagine that.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, Courtney never wrote a yellow school list.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, that's but basically one of our family friends, our close family friends, had a daughter who went there, and uh they were telling us about the school and how much they loved it, and it was so good, you know, the the academics, the education is so top-notch, blah, blah, blah. And that we should apply. And our parents were like, that's really expensive. Um, but they did have at that time, you know, really decent financial aid. So we were able to use that. And that's so I applied, I was again, was the first one, so they applied with me. I got in, and they're like, All right, Godspeak.

SPEAKER_00

And then we've been starting the journey ever since.

SPEAKER_01

We started the journey in 2009.

SPEAKER_02

2009.

SPEAKER_01

And that is just ending last week. 2026. It's crazy. That's actually crazy when you think about that. Yeah, yeah. And and granted, yes, I mean the academics insane.

SPEAKER_02

For the most part, the teachers, I love the teachers.

SPEAKER_01

We'll get into how some of them were, you know, uh-oh, spooky. We'll get into that. And we'll get to that. But like, yes, academics-wise, opportunity-wise, name-wise, like getting you into doors and like whatever. Oh, yeah. Absolutely worth the money. Absolutely worth the money.

SPEAKER_02

Was it worth the trauma and the stress?

SPEAKER_01

That's a different experience. As a black girl, it's a different question. Is it a different experience? And we're gonna get into it.

SPEAKER_00

We're gonna really analyze this and we're gonna come to the conclusion. Should black people go to PWIs? That's what that's gonna be the question that will be answered at the end of this.

SPEAKER_02

Okay, we just finished the Twitter topics. We can't wake that one up. We can't wake that one up.

SPEAKER_00

No, but that's the conclusion. That's the conclusion we're gonna come to. We're gonna come with the final decision by the end of all these episodes.

SPEAKER_01

Okay. Sure. Okay. Well, let's go ahead and get started. We're not gonna do a uh a topic today. Current event. You forgot what it is.

SPEAKER_00

How are you gonna forget what you call your thing?

SPEAKER_01

Whoa.

SPEAKER_00

My bad, we ain't recorded in a while.

SPEAKER_01

I've been busy style. I'm just we're not gonna do a current event since this is a special episode and we have a lot to discuss. So let's just go ahead and jump right into it.

SPEAKER_02

Okay, yes. So, my first story. So I started at this school in sixth grade. Um, so I was like 11 or something like that. Um, so February of I guess it would be 2010, um, we had a Black History Month assembly. Which, okay, sure. That's such a beautiful thing. Shout-outs to black people and our history. So I said, okay, again, this is like my first experience of Black History Month at this school. Tell me why. Tell me why. One of the aspects of the assembly or whatever, I don't remember exactly what everything else was. But there were, it was like three or four white girls came out on the auditorium stage and did a dance in like neon clothing, you know, like neon like workout, because that was a big thing back then, you know, wearing like neon like shorts and leggings and like shirts and bows, whatever, did a dance to single ladies. And that and that was the black history. Because that is black history, bro. That was right.

SPEAKER_01

When you think about it, that is what Martin died for.

SPEAKER_00

No, Loki. I said, Where is going on? Because he said, What was it? The little black children, the wool little white children will play together. That's exactly what he meant. Right. But mind you, was there anyone black on that stage? No, they should have thrown one in there.

SPEAKER_01

So they Yeah, they should have thrown one in there.

SPEAKER_00

Marianna, come on, get up here. No, actually, why didn't you dance with the people?

SPEAKER_02

You know, listen, and that's a question I ask myself every day. Hmm.

SPEAKER_01

No, like black history, no, especially the MLK stuff, and we'll also have another story in this, but it was really just a talent show. Like at the end of the day. People were just getting up there and performing.

SPEAKER_02

Now that we're actually like spoken word. Now that we're okay, Dominique, actually briefly tell um your since we're on the topic of Black History Month assemblies, briefly about how a certain teacher who actually was black refused to okay.

SPEAKER_01

We had we had a a teacher who was in the role of like I don't know.

SPEAKER_00

DEI Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion. Like the chair.

SPEAKER_02

Well, that wasn't that well, yeah, but it was called something specific.

SPEAKER_01

Whatever. Yeah, but basically the chair of diversity. Whatever. You know, she was That's me.

SPEAKER_02

Whatever that, huh? Whatever that means.

SPEAKER_01

Whatever that means. And during one of the Black History Month assemblies, like at the last minute, she was like, okay, so we're gonna change the wording and call it American History Month. And we were like, what? She was like, when you think about it, Black History Month is American History.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, she wanted them.

SPEAKER_01

And no, exactly. Let's wake that up. Yeah, we were so confused. I don't remember if if the person who was like starting off the presentation ended up actually switching to American History Month. I don't remember if if she did, but I know she didn't want to. Yeah. Um, I don't remember if she ended up rebelling and saying Black History Month, anyways. But yeah, like that was what we were doing.

SPEAKER_00

The fact that that was rebelling is crazy.

SPEAKER_01

No, literally. And mind you, that was supposed to be our representation. Right. That was our our our representation was telling us to switch it towards. Literally. So like in again. Maybe she was in their pockets.

SPEAKER_02

And that, like, again, so many, specifically on the subject of like Black History Month assemblies, like it was very much not that.

SPEAKER_01

It wasn't that. Whatever you think it was, it wasn't. Whatever you think we were celebrating, we weren't celebrating.

SPEAKER_02

We were not actually celebrating Black History. Let's okay, let's talk about that. They did not want us celebrating that.

SPEAKER_01

Oh my gosh. Oh my gosh.

SPEAKER_02

Okay, so then my next story, same year, actually, so my and then my other stories are in high school. But the same year, um, I had gone on a trip and had come back and had to make up a couple tests. Um, and so my advisor, you can think like an advisor is like a homeroom teacher. Um so I met with her every day, and she was also my orchestra teacher because I played violin at the time. She knew that I had to make up this test. Because again, like I saw that lady every day in homeroom, whatever. Um so she knew I had to make up this test. Tell me why it was a math test, so like I gotta do that. Tell me why I had missed orchestra practice to take the test, which I had told her before. I come back, I'm so I'm late. I again I'm not I didn't miss the whole practice, but I'm late to practice, as she knew. I come in, like I'm just trying to, you know, sneak in the back, open my little violin case, you know, trying to get myself together.

SPEAKER_00

Get my little corny. Give my little hello!

SPEAKER_02

You start hearing dun dun. Give my little resin on my bow, you know, waking up a little bit. And she starts yelling at me, like in front of the entire orchestra about how disrespectful I am, and I'm not respecting her orchestra. I don't need yelling at the moment. I was like, I was 11 at the time. Like, I like I remember going home and like crying to our mom that day just about how rude she was. Again, in front of everybody, yelling at me, saying how disrespectful I was, how I didn't respect her orchestra and her time and everybody else's time. And again, she knew what was. Right!

SPEAKER_01

Mind you, that lady ended up hating all three of us for very separate reasons. Somehow she actually did. She hated all three of them.

SPEAKER_02

That's so true.

SPEAKER_01

She did like very different stories, but all came to the same conclusion.

SPEAKER_02

The Buford girls were not her friends.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, she saw Buford on that and then she.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, it's all your fault.

SPEAKER_01

And I didn't make it any better. By the time it was Courtney over. I literally I didn't nut the rock card. That's the Courtney. You inherited that before. Ah, yeah, me and that lady have beef.

SPEAKER_02

So yeah, that's just like another example of again, for the most part, I really did appreciate and love the teachers that we had, but there would be times like, and you just know. I'm like, you the way you're talking to me right now, as an 11-year-old child, like I know you would not be talking to other little girls like that. And it's because I'm black. Like it's crazy. Like, why are you talking to a child like that?

unknown

Right.

SPEAKER_02

Like, I was so scared. Last two stories of mine, um, both come from high school, so I'm a little bit older now, still dealing with a lot of you know, bull at the school. Um okay, but the first story so we had something called uh the what is it? Student diversity, student diversity board. Um in high school. It was the only thing at high school. Um we would have with that board, we would have, I think, monthly conversations, monthly like a optional meeting. Again, it was all optional for students to come, they would pick like a topic related to some sort of issue, current event, something related to either always the same people pulling.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, it really was it would always it was always the welcome. It really was. It really was. The people who needed to be at those conversations.

SPEAKER_00

We're not there. They were not there.

SPEAKER_02

They were not there.

SPEAKER_00

I only ever came to those things for the free food.

SPEAKER_02

I feel like by the time that you came up though, there were so because and and when I was there, like we used to actually have like some some good, like some good. Like some display with water down.

SPEAKER_00

We talked we talk about fast fashion.

SPEAKER_02

Right. So, yeah, no. Like we were having like real, again, like I said, it was optional. So it was not but it was the people who were there. Like, you know, we're talking about issues on like race, gender, sexuality, class, all those.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, we wasn't doing none of that. We talked about um dating, was it like today?

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, see that and that's again, honestly, it really is so different. Like it's not, like it's a lot of it is the same, but so many of the changes that have happened between me and Dominique being there in high school and then Courtney coming up, they have just snatched so many things.

SPEAKER_01

Woke was in back in the day.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah. Yeah, woke was out. Right.

SPEAKER_01

Woke is out.

SPEAKER_02

But anyway, so at one of these uh they called them forums, I think. It was around I don't remember which, you know, because who you know, lots of unarmed black men, black boys, um black people in general being shot by the police. So it was one of those well after one of those incidents, uh, it was around the time, and I remember they like switched the topic like because it was around the time they like wanted us, you know, to come and how have that space to talk about it, whatever. Again, this is optional, like this is whatever. So we're all in there talking about it, whatever. And this teacher, he who shall not be named, but he was a little spooky and may or may not have gotten escorted off the campus by police a few years later. But we're not going into that. Hit it hit us up separately for that story.

SPEAKER_00

Um we can't we can't talk here. We can't talk about it. Email me, we can't talk here.

SPEAKER_02

Email me.

SPEAKER_00

Email me, we can't talk here.

SPEAKER_02

But anyway, this teacher showed up to the forum on his own free will, like he did not even need to be there. And we're discussing, you know, police, blah blah blah. He proceeds to raise his hand and is like, I have something to say. Like, let me play devil's advocate. And again, mind you, most of the people in this room are like black students, other students of color.

SPEAKER_00

Because that's the only people that would go to this.

SPEAKER_02

No, exactly. So it's like facts. Also, I I we didn't kind of talk about this in the beginning. Like, it was very few, obviously, black students at this school. Like, I mean, you're kind of getting that, but I just also just want to reiterate just how many of us how many did y'all have in your grade by the end? Yeah, there were nine black students in my grad class. I think we had ten. I think we had 11, I think. Maybe. And it was for it was nine out of 123 for me. I don't know.

SPEAKER_01

Nine was ten or eleven, whatever out of one hundred and nineteen.

SPEAKER_00

It was like eleven out of one twenty six.

SPEAKER_02

Wait, y'all were both 119 and 126? That's so cute. That's so nice. I just realized wow, we should have cut some people from my grade to get one six.

unknown

Anyway.

SPEAKER_02

Okay. Um, so okay, it's because it's all high school, so like a lot of the black students from high school, so it's like, you know, and other students of color, so like 40 or 50, whatever, black students, other students of color. And this, he was Caucasian, right? Of course, um raised his hand and was like, I'm gonna play devil's advocate for a bit, and just like went on this long rant. Like he did not, like he talked for a minute just about how um, you know, like we actually need police and people need to respect, and like just if you just listen to them, um, then like none of this would happen. Like, just like you, you know, you know, if you know, you know. It's it was nothing like it was all typical stuff that you would hear in response to these events happening, but he just said it all. Like, and he I remember he talked for a while. Um and my thing was like, okay, we were all like it was crazy, like we were pissed, like it started a whole whole thing that the next several days at the school. But I'm like, as a teacher, why do you feel like in that space, right?

SPEAKER_00

This nobody asked you to talk, you know?

SPEAKER_02

No one asked you to talk. Like nobody was like, hey, what's your opinion? Because he didn't have to be there because we had faculty sponsors over the student diversity board. Obviously, he was not one. No, he was not one. Um, because those teachers were actually pretty cool, at least when I was there. Um, but like I don't it's just again, things like that, that it's like, why did you feel in that that this was your space and time to do it to do this? And that again, this is not we're not saying that any of our experiences, like obviously, if you're black and you grew up, you know, you around white people like this, you know, in schools you've had similar experiences. But I think again, it's just crazy for us to think back all the years that we've been at the school to be like, hmm, some really spooky things happened. Like, and the school's just like, yeah, this is fine. Like, yeah, like okay, I don't know why you're having any problems. Like, this is actually okay. I know why you're complaining.

SPEAKER_00

We are really sorry that happened to you.

SPEAKER_02

But they're not even saying that half the time. Like, it's either, yeah, it's either like no apology or like a half apology.

SPEAKER_01

Um, I'm sorry if you were offended.

SPEAKER_00

I'm sorry if that made you feel that way.

SPEAKER_01

And then when we react and they're like, yes, lead us into Brianna's story.

SPEAKER_00

And no, get into your last story. Get into your last story.

SPEAKER_01

Because that story was we left the most the last one for the crazy, the most crazy story for the last one. Cause this would rock our world as a family. Nobody was in.

SPEAKER_02

Yes, this is the iconic Brianna. I almost said the name of the school. Oh my gosh. Oh no, the Loki, me too. The the I the iconic Brianna story at this school.

SPEAKER_00

Brianna redacted story.

SPEAKER_02

So my senior year, so my last year at this school, it was fall of senior year. Um, me and Dominique had gone to a football game at uh the brother school, who will not be named um Spooky Spooky.

SPEAKER_00

Definitely not naming them.

SPEAKER_01

They are a whole new level. Yeah. Okay. Horrible.

SPEAKER_02

Anyway. Um so it was a thing after the after the football games, you they would offer there would be these things called spirit parties that um would have again they're like school-sanctioned house parties, basically. Um like the parents would be involved, um, be like in a backyard, um, whatever. So that there was a rule that you had to be at the party. In order to be let into the party, you had to be like I think it was 30 minutes after the game, just you know, because they didn't want to have, you know, risk, you know, underage drinking, whatever, like a whole bunch of time in between the game and you being allowed to come to the party. Um so me and Dominique, we pull uh, I'm driving, we put we're on like a on the on a residential street, I pull over to the side where like there's so many cars on the street, all parked, and I'm like right behind one of them. Um this lady and again, there's I will say there are like multiple cars that are able to like drive past me, like all these issues or no issues. But then this lady um pulls up, I was like trying to drive past or something. She actually wait, had she parked or was she driving past us? No, she was driving past.

SPEAKER_01

She was driving past us, she was trying to get past, and she was scared we were gonna scrap, like her car was gonna get scraped.

SPEAKER_02

She was like saying all this stuff like, I just got this new car, like, you know, and I was like, I at first, you know, I was starting out quite calm. I was like, no, no, you're good. Like there have been so many cars that have passed, like you're good, just like this big old pickup truck passed. Okay, because it was a big SUV that she had, um, but it was like again, she had space to drive through. And she was like, No, like I can't, like, y'all need to move this car. You can't park here.

SPEAKER_01

First of all, and mind you, we have been looking for parking forever.

SPEAKER_02

So she's like, Y'all need to move this car. You can't park here. Saying, I said, mind you, you're not even trying to park. Like, we not, you don't live over. I mean, she probably lived in the area, but like, what do you mean I can't park here? Yes, I can. Yes, I can. Yes, I can. And so then now we're starting to get into it. And yeah, one thing about me, like, I'ma I'ma get you. Okay. One thing about me, like, I again, I I start out very respectful, but if you start with me, I fear I'm coming back with with some the same energy that you give to me. Like, I there's only so much calm that I can have, and then I'ma I'ma get a little loud, okay? Because why are you yelling at me and my sister when w we were totally in the right? So me and this white lady are going back and forth, like yelling, yelling, yelling at each other, and then it kind of gets the attention of um the person who was living at the house outside that we had parked at. Again, totally unrelated to this lady. He comes out, it's like asking, oh, like what's going on, blah blah blah. She's saying, Oh, these they can't park here. They're like illegally parking, they're about to hit my new car, blah, blah, blah. They're not moving. And then he's talking about calling the police. Like, then so then they're Yeah, he's like, I'm just gonna call the police.

SPEAKER_00

Like, is that always like their answer to everything?

SPEAKER_01

Oh, we're I'm like, it's me and Brianna in this very wealthy white neighborhood. It's so our parents are out of town.

SPEAKER_02

It's so it's late at night. Who was I?

SPEAKER_00

Who had me?

SPEAKER_02

You were a tiny babe. Yeah, but you said your parents weren't home. Oh, and one of our aunts was in town. I remember. Oh.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, you said. Who had me? We went home and talked to her about it.

SPEAKER_02

Yes, yeah, yeah. They didn't, we weren't home alone, whatever. Um so like, yeah, he was like, I'm just gonna call the police. And she was like, Yeah, like yeah, yeah, yeah, like egging him, like, yeah, let's call the police. Let's call the police. And then now I'm pissed.

SPEAKER_01

Like, I'm like yelling, like I'm and and that's when I had to step in because me, our personalities are very different. Me and Brianna, you know. So Brianna's over here, like, yeah, she's about to go to war. She's like, Yeah, call them. Like, let's do it. Let's do it. And me, I'm like, Brianna, let's just go, please. I like I'm on the verge of tears. I'm scared. I'm shaking in my boots. I'm scared for my loop. And Brianna's like, no, no, I earned, like, I found this spot. I'm not, and I was like, Brianna, and I like looked at, I was like, please, let's just leave.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, yikes.

SPEAKER_01

So I think she realized after my second or third time, she was like, Okay, my little sister is severely scared. Okay, all right. Let me let me let me be quiet. So we did end up leaving.

SPEAKER_02

And we found another party. And then we found another by that time that whatever the grace window was was up. The grace window had and we couldn't get into the park.

SPEAKER_01

You can't get in. So after all that, yeah.

SPEAKER_02

And I'm like trying to explain to them what happened. I'm like, no, like we did not go and like drink or do drugs. Like I was dealing with the racist white lady who was threatening to call the police on me. And so we didn't even go. So then we just had to drive home, and it was I was pissed. So then let's get to the actual story. Oh, yeah, we haven't even gotten to the story yet.

SPEAKER_00

That's just the backstory. Literally, that's literally just the backstory.

SPEAKER_02

So I get home, I'm still pissed. Like I'm heated. I take to twitter.com.

unknown

No!

SPEAKER_01

Do not take to social media if you go to the school. Actually, they will get no bro. We can have a whole episode. We have so many stories.

SPEAKER_02

On how snaky so many of the people we went to school with were like they love a good screenshot. They love yes.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, yeah, babe. They gonna get you with that screenshot.

SPEAKER_02

So I took to twitter.com. Uh can I say the can I say the city? Can I say exactly what I said?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, go ahead. Um or no. No. I'm gonna nix it. I say yes. You you can say it and then I'll bleep it out. Okay. Okay, yeah. Okay. Just so the flow is good. Okay. Okay, yeah, that's good.

SPEAKER_00

That's smart.

SPEAKER_02

That's hard. Okay. So I got on Twitter.com and I tweeted people are the worst. So we just bleeped it, but I just put the city white people, the city white people are the worst. And so I tweeted that, went, you know, thought nothing of it. A few days later, I get um, I don't even, I think it was an email. I don't know. I got notified by like They said come to the dungeons by the head of our high school. So like the principal of the high school. Because we had, because again, it's it's like elementary, middle, and high school. We have like a whole head of school, and then we have like individual principals. Um, so I got first contacted to the office of our high school principal, and she's telling me, um, it has come to our attention that you put some not-so-kind things on Twitter and are making this whole big deal about it, and are telling me like I have to meet with the head of our entire school and that she's not really happy about you know what I tweeted, and they're not. Okay, so also context. I was senior class president. Um, so that was like a huge they're like, I don't think that that like represents, you know, like you should as class president should be tweeting things like that. And again, like no.

SPEAKER_00

No, they were getting tons of calls from parents being like, Y'all need to take care of this.

SPEAKER_02

No, literally. And I just I still again I still don't know who it was probably multiple people. But the thing is, because I feel like Twitter at that time, I feel like a lot of the like I didn't I followed several of the black students on Twitter, but like I'm going my Twitter was public at the time. Like, let's I'll be clear about that.

SPEAKER_00

Um Maybe you had like an enemy and somebody was just waiting for you to slip up.

SPEAKER_02

Probably. But like I I don't know like which who did who screenshot it and like sent it to them or whatever. Um but anyway, so then I got I had to go talk to the head of the whole school, and she's like saying how you know, like, we're so disappointed, and this is not representative of the school, and should you even be um student class person? Like they threatened to take my position away. Um and mind you, like it's college application season, like that really could have messed me up. Like just saying, like, I just all these like threatening me, like threatening me quite a bit with different things that they could do in response to my tweet. And mind you, mind you, both of these conversations, no one ever asked me like why I tweeted, like what happened, like why I tweeted this. Cause I'm trying to explain, like, this was really crazy that me and my sister went through this for trying to park our car, and no one ever asked us or like asked me like what happened, like they did not at all care about why I did, like, ask any questions to get any context. So I remember that after the first conversation I had, like, because I just I just was so angry and like upset because they weren't talking to me and asking me when I get really like upset and angry like that, I cry honestly. Um, and I remember calling our dad um at school and like sobbing on the phone just about how Yeah, because they didn't even involve me. No, at first later they got involved, but at first, like they did not even call like talk to my like they just called me to the office both times and like were basically like yelling and threatening me. Um and I'm like so scared. Mommy was mad that she didn't get involved in the movie. Our parents were pissed. Um like that that day, because I think honestly, I think both the conversations happened. Yeah, they happened the same day now that I think about it. I had first met with the head of the high school, and then I that same day met with the head of the whole school. So it was just a lot, and I am like crying on the phone. Um, and because they again they don't know what because it happened so quick, so they're like, What is going on? Like, what is happening? Um that's when yeah, again, our mom, especially like was pissed, got in contact with the head of school and was like, We need to have a meeting, like all four of us, because that's you know, not okay. Um, so then we, you know, we had a meeting, and that's thing, you know, like my parents were able to help explain and talk to them about like, okay, like maybe okay, if you're saying that she shouldn't have tweeted this, whatever, but y'all did not talk to her at all about what happened and why she was so upset.

SPEAKER_01

Having the cops threatened to be called you while you're trying to go to a school.

SPEAKER_02

And I'm trying to park, and I know I know a hundred thousand percent I was in the right. Like, I know I was not parked wrong at all. Um, and just having like these two people late at night trying to call, like calling the police on us. Um, and they like did not care about that at all. Um so my punishment um ended up being I had to go talk to eighth graders about the dangers of social media. I didn't know that. Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

That's hilarious. Isn't it?

SPEAKER_02

Okay, this is what we're gonna have you do. But it was it was honestly.

SPEAKER_00

That's actually so funny. Like, I'll talk to some eighth graders about the danger of social media.

SPEAKER_02

Like that situation really, really upset me. Don't let them catch you. Say what you want, okay?

SPEAKER_01

This is a say what you want, but be discreet.

SPEAKER_00

But be careful.

SPEAKER_01

Say what you want, but private your private your accounts.

SPEAKER_02

So, yeah. So those are um my stories.

SPEAKER_01

Brianna specific stories.

SPEAKER_02

Again, just I would just say, okay, kind of to answer your qu or your question that you posed a little bit. One thing that I thought was interesting, did y'all do exit interviews, Dominique and Corney? Corney.

SPEAKER_00

Um, I decided not to do one. This is my exit. I don't know, like I just had a lot going on. And actually, I don't know if they still did them. So they do.

SPEAKER_02

So we they would do they did exit or they do exit interviews with seniors, which I think in theory is a good idea. What they do with them, probably nothing.

SPEAKER_00

But they throw away Sperby, they take those. They ain't write down nothing. They ain't write down.

SPEAKER_02

But you get to choose, you get to choose.

SPEAKER_00

They say, oh, these little kids are so annoying. That's what I think.

SPEAKER_02

We got to choose who the teachers were that sat with us in our exit interview. Yeah, I got to do that. Yeah, we got to choose two. Okay. So I so I chose like some a couple teachers that I really, really loved. Um, I think one was on my dance teacher who was a black woman. And I forget. I think I chose um then my Spanish teacher, who I love too. So I had the two of them, and we had great conversation. But one of the questions, I think it was the last question they asked um at the end, is like, okay, if you had a daughter, would you send her to this school? And they were like, no. I was like, hey, no.

SPEAKER_00

I would not low key unpopular opinion, I would. For character building your daughter.

SPEAKER_02

Character building or trauma. But yeah, so after all of that, and again, there, you know, but after all that, I remember I was like, absolutely not. I would not. No.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, yeah. And and to say this, like, this has absolutely nothing to do with our parents sitting sending us to the stuff. Not at all. They were going through the battle with us. We were all in the trenches handing it. Everybody was fighting. Our parents were right there with us fighting.

SPEAKER_02

I have another, like, I'm not gonna tell the whole story, but like I've had another story with like an issue with the my eighth-grade teacher. Um, let's are we gonna we need to meet or are we gonna have a problem? Um that teacher that teacher that teacher got herself together quick. Okay, so trust. We they was fighting with us, so they were fighting right alongside us.

SPEAKER_01

Shout out to our parents.

SPEAKER_02

Yes, shout out to them. We love y'all. But yeah, so that is the end of my adventures. Um, and next up we have Dominique, so stay tuned for that. Stay tuned, y'all. And we will talk to y'all next time. Bye! So I'm gonna have to edit that out. Okay.