4.8 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 11 January 2024
⏱️ 103 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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Sarah Hepola, author of Blackout: Remembering The Things I Drank To Forget, sits down with Bridget to discuss their longing for the 90s, how they're considered "the good old days" by kids growing up today, the privilege of not giving a crap about politics, and their similar experiences with partying and drinking. They discuss why the peak drinking year was probably 2005, why the iphone was the great disruptor for partying, the drunk driving laws of the 70s, how they both stumbled into journalism, the truth about dating in middle age, Sarah's realization that she'd never have kids, the trials of IVF, and why they never would have listened to anyone else telling them to stop drinking - they needed to get to that point through their own experience. They also cover dating etiquette, the breakdown of trust in dating, why we need courtship rules, and how you can’t really know something’s a cope until you’re on the other side of it.
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Bridget Phetasy admires grit and authenticity. On Walk-Ins Welcome, she talks about the beautiful failures and frightening successes of her own life and the lives of her guests. She doesn’t conduct interviews—she has conversations. Conversations with real people about the real struggle and will remind you that we can laugh in pain and cry in joy but there’s no greater mistake than hiding from it all. By embracing it all, and celebrating it with the stories she’ll bring listeners, she believes that our lowest moments can be the building blocks for our eventual fulfillment.
Beyond Parody with Bridget Phetasy is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
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0:00.0 | This week on the podcast we welcome writer Sarah Heppola. |
0:04.0 | My mid-40s, you know, I was starting to realize that I was never going to have a child and it was really |
0:12.0 | heavy for me. I had not meant to be that person. |
0:17.3 | You know even in my 20s when my friends were kind of like I'm never getting married |
0:22.4 | I'm never having kids like |
0:24.8 | F the patriarchy I was like well I am I want to like I used to work in daycare like that was my job through college |
0:30.6 | I was starting to realize that that wasn't going to happen and it was it hit really heavy for me and so and I also wasn't married I had never been married and I could see myself as part of this like growing |
0:45.6 | demographic of people that you know people kept treating me like these were choices |
0:52.4 | I had made. |
0:53.4 | This is Walk-In's Welcome with Bridget Feticy. I'm Br, rate, comment, share, reach out, tell your friends, send smoke |
1:16.3 | signals, whatever. We love your feedback and we want to hear from you. |
1:20.3 | If you like our work and want to support us, the best way to do that is join FETC.com. |
1:25.5 | You'll get access to behind the scenes content, outtakes, discounts on merch, |
1:30.8 | and the ability to submit questions for some of our upcoming guests. |
1:34.8 | Support your favorite scrappy little internet heroes at fetacy.com. |
1:40.0 | Walkins Welcome is brought to you by Patriot Gold. |
1:45.0 | Call 888 614 9238 for a free investor guide today. |
1:55.8 | All right, I'm with Sarah Heppola everybody. Welcome to Walkins. |
1:57.0 | Welcome. |
1:58.0 | Thank you. |
1:59.0 | I'm so excited to talk to you about all the things. Oh, mostly when is your next book coming out? |
2:06.0 | Is that a source of it? |
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