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The heat is disrespectful, Prime Week is annoying, and we’re both one weird interaction away from snapping, so we’re channeling it into something useful and way more entertaining. We start with real life updates (Nicole moves, Heather is melting on the route) and then get oddly practical about summer survival: what to say to your mail carrier, what not to say, and how a cold drink can change somebody’s entire day.
From there, the conversation takes a sharp turn into true crime with reactions to Maternal Instinct, including the gut-punch details that raise big questions about accountability, warning signs, and what happens when institutions hide behind rules. That naturally opens the door to a second kind of outrage: the recycled claim that women are “too emotional” to lead. We talk emotional regulation, double standards, and why the world might look different if leadership actually valued listening and restraint.
Then we build a July 4 “on this day” timeline that doubles as a Gen X nostalgia hit: early Independence Day celebrations, Jefferson and Adams dying on the same date, slavery ending in New York, Walt Whitman, the Statue of Liberty, Casey Kasem’s American Top 40 debut, Two Live Crew’s Banned in the USA free speech fight, and Hotmail launching on July 4 as internet-era “freedom.” We close with beach town fireworks memories, traffic realities, and the kind of chaotic water park stories that only make sense if you grew up the way we did.
Subscribe, share with your favorite Gen X friend, and leave a review. What’s your most memorable Fourth of July story?
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#genx #80s #90s https://youtube.com/@likewhateverpod?si=ChGIAEDqb7H2AN0J
https://www.tiktok.com/@likewhateverpod?_t=ZT-8v3hQFb73Wg&_r=1
By Heather Jolley and Nicole BarrThe heat is disrespectful, Prime Week is annoying, and we’re both one weird interaction away from snapping, so we’re channeling it into something useful and way more entertaining. We start with real life updates (Nicole moves, Heather is melting on the route) and then get oddly practical about summer survival: what to say to your mail carrier, what not to say, and how a cold drink can change somebody’s entire day.
From there, the conversation takes a sharp turn into true crime with reactions to Maternal Instinct, including the gut-punch details that raise big questions about accountability, warning signs, and what happens when institutions hide behind rules. That naturally opens the door to a second kind of outrage: the recycled claim that women are “too emotional” to lead. We talk emotional regulation, double standards, and why the world might look different if leadership actually valued listening and restraint.
Then we build a July 4 “on this day” timeline that doubles as a Gen X nostalgia hit: early Independence Day celebrations, Jefferson and Adams dying on the same date, slavery ending in New York, Walt Whitman, the Statue of Liberty, Casey Kasem’s American Top 40 debut, Two Live Crew’s Banned in the USA free speech fight, and Hotmail launching on July 4 as internet-era “freedom.” We close with beach town fireworks memories, traffic realities, and the kind of chaotic water park stories that only make sense if you grew up the way we did.
Subscribe, share with your favorite Gen X friend, and leave a review. What’s your most memorable Fourth of July story?
Send us an email
Support the show
#genx #80s #90s https://youtube.com/@likewhateverpod?si=ChGIAEDqb7H2AN0J
https://www.tiktok.com/@likewhateverpod?_t=ZT-8v3hQFb73Wg&_r=1