anything goes with emma chamberlain - the new LA phenomenon
Episode Date: October 29, 2020The Saddle Ranch has morphed from a tacky Western-themed bar in LA that people rarely went to, to a TikToker, YouTuber, and paparazzi hot spot. Emma talks about why she kept going back (and how it was...n't good for her), getting filmed through an entire dinner, and chats about the paparazzi culture in LA. Plus, what's the most romantic thing someone's ever done for Emma? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey guys, welcome back to anything goes.
I hope you all are having an amazing week.
I decided to record spontaneously today because I had an idea for something that I wanted
to talk about.
To be honest, I've been blank in my brain for the past few weeks.
Just actually no longer than that.
The past few months because to be completely honest with you guys My life has been kind of a mess
Anxiety wise like my anxiety's been pretty bad, but besides that everything's going really well
Which means that I don't have drama to talk about you know what I mean?
I'm not learning any life lessons nobody's burning me
so
It's not like I can come on here and be like, don't trust anyone ever.
Like, that's I feel like what I've been doing
in the beginning of this podcast and like,
throughout, I've just been spewing out the life lessons
that I've been learning, but I feel like I haven't really
been learning much.
This episode is brought to you by Squarespace.
Squarespace is more than a website builder.
It's an all in one place to make an online space that's entirely your own.
Their all-in-one platform allows you to customize everything from the fonts and color scheme to your domain name.
All you have to do is choose from one of their beautifully designed templates as a starting off point.
Then, at whatever you need to show off your ideas to get your side hustle on, you've got
all the tools you need to sell products, schedule appointments, and send email campaigns
to your mailing list.
Plus, everything is optimized for mobile, so it looks just as good on a phone as it does
on a desktop.
Check out Squarespace.com for more features and inspiration, and when you're ready to build
your site, use the offer code Emma for 10% off your first purchase
of a website or domain. This episode is brought to you by Bumble. Bumble believes that what's
truly sexy is an act of kindness. Isn't that just true? Playing hard to get, having a too
cool type of attitude, not hot, opening the door for someone, giving someone a shoulder to cry on, that's hot.
But sometimes kindness can be as simple as just a compliment,
and that's why Bumble launched their new Compliments feature.
So now when someone's profile catches your eye,
you can let them know with a compliment.
Try it for yourself and download Bumble today.
Except for that, I did recently figure out
the importance of communication even when
it seems unnecessary.
And actually, you know what, I'm just going to get dig into this real quick before we
get into our main topic because like, I used to be somebody that would hold on to little
things that bugged me because I didn't want to create an issue.
Like one little thing would bug me. And I wouldn't bring it up because I was like, you know what, I want to create an issue. Like, one little thing would bug me.
And I wouldn't bring it up
because I was like, you know what,
I want to see him unbothered.
I want to see him chill, right?
But recently, I've been really trying to, like,
keep everything all out on the table all the time
with everybody
parents friends Etc. If something's bugging me I now refuse to hold on to it and let it like
Grow resentment in my chest. I refuse and the reason for that is I
Don't want drama. I don't want to have resentment in my heart towards people.
So as hard as it is, I've been really making it a priority
to like communicate anything that I don't fuck with,
anything that makes me uncomfortable,
anything that bugs me.
Instead of holding on to it and growing
this unnecessary resentment, I just bring that shit up now.
And let me tell you, it's changed my life and it's changed my relationships.
I feel like my relationships with people have been so consistently good because of that.
I don't let anything go unnoticed anymore.
And it's uncomfortable sometimes, but it's changed my life and my relationships truly.
Having that, like, not only does it make my relationships
as people stronger, but it also makes me feel good.
Like when you get something off your chest,
even if it's so small, like even if somebody
just did something a little bit off,
or even if you think somebody's doing something
behind your back, or you think that somebody's mad at you,
even if they're not.
Like being like, hey, are you mad at me?
Like, did I do something wrong?
Even if it's irrational and stupid,
bringing it up when it's bugging you
literally solves every problem,
and I can guarantee that unless somebody's up to no good,
they're usually gonna be like, no, you're totally good.
Like, why?
And then you just be like, oh, I don't know,
I was just fucking paranoid about nothing. Like, thanks for, you know, good. Like why? And then you just be like, oh, I don't know, I was just fucking paranoid about nothing.
Like, thanks for, you know, humoring me or whatever.
Like, thanks for letting me get that up my chest.
And then you move on.
I used to hold on to shit for my entire relationship.
I could be friends with somebody for two years
and have something that they did that bugged me
and never bring it up.
And it would bug me for the whole two-year friendship. But now I'm like, no, we're 2020, we are quitting on that. And so that's something
that I learned this past week, but I just really realized that that's something I've been doing
more recently that I hadn't done before because I was talking about it to my parents and I was like,
you know, I'm just like done with like hiding my feelings,
whatever, and they were like,
Emma, that's huge growth.
Like you have never been like that prior in your life.
And I was like, word.
So I don't know, something to think about,
having an open communication and being honest
with the people in your life feels really fucking good.
So try that out, but that's not what we're talking about today.
Try that out, but that's not what we're talking about today. We're talking about a new LA phenomenon, phenomenon, whatever it is.
I asked you guys on the AG podcast Twitter if you knew what this thing was, and a lot of
you guys didn't know what it was, but I think that you guys do, you just don't know that you know what it is.
Okay.
Today we're going to be talking about saddle ranch.
Let me give you a little background.
Saddle Ranch is a tacky western style bar restaurant located in Los Angeles, California
on the sunset strip right in the heart of West Hollywood. It is the tachiest restaurant you could possibly imagine.
There is a bowl that you can ride in there.
The whole thing looks like a fucking saloon that you would see in some sort of pirate movie
or something.
It's just like, it's so beyond tacky that it's unreal.
But recently, it started to get this crazy amount of attention
from influencers and celebrities alike.
And it never had in the past.
Like, it was always fun, and I know, like, you know,
people always went there here and there.
I know there was a decent chunk of YouTubers that used to go there a few times a week,
just because it was fun, and not a lot of people were there, and it was easy to get in,
because it wasn't super exclusive or weird.
It was just easy to go, because it was the tacky place.
So it wasn't going to some sort of super expensive L.A.
bougie bar.
It was the complete opposite.
And I think that's why I was appealing to some YouTubers
or whatever because it was like, okay,
this is a chill place that we can go
and have a similar experience, except there's not
all the bougie dumb shit involved.
And so that's why it was popular.
And then quarantine hit and then, you know, whatever.
But since it reopened, it has turned into something
completely different.
If you've ever watched a Hollywood Fix interview,
Hollywood Fix is basically the paparazzi
for YouTubers, TikTokers, anybody,
but normally YouTubers and TikTokers.
It's a YouTube channel.
You can go watch them.
They're very entertaining.
I watch them all the time, unfortunately.
And they just basically, the Hollywood Fix dude,
it's just one dude and he just finds people,
and he interviews them on the spot,
paparazzi vibes, whatever.
If you've watched any Hollywood Fix interview,
I can guarantee it was probably one outside of Saddle Ranch.
This dude waits outside of Saddle Ranch.
His name is Fletcher, the paparazzi guy.
Everybody knows him.
It's this weird thing.
Like there's this weird,
like culture and like weird,
like it's so bizarre to me.
Like everybody knows the Hollywood fix, dude.
And that's such a new thing.
Like I doubt 10 years ago,
celebrities, like Brad Pitt would like know the first name of the paparazzi that
harasses him all the time.
You know what I mean?
But now that we're in this weird influencer culture phase of life, it's crazy how like
everybody is very normal, I think.
And so everything's so on a personal level.
Yet it has the impact, or maybe even the views of say,
like a paparazzi Brad Pitt interview from like a while ago.
It might actually get the same amount of views,
which is mind-boggling.
But you know what I'm saying?
I don't know if that's true,
but I feel like that actually might be true.
Back to Saddle Ranch.
Saddle Ranch is basically the influencer capital
of Los Angeles right now.
Every single night of the week,
every single take talker that you see on your free page
is at Saddle Ranch, including a lot of YouTubers too.
There's a lot of YouTubers there, TikTokers, I even saw Megan Fox
and fucking machine gun Kelly there once,
like everybody's going to saddle ranch,
and it's the craziest thing ever.
And the way that it's laid out is that there's
this big outdoor seating area that is fully visible
from the street.
So anybody can kinda like look in to like,
what's going on at saddle ranch at any given evening.
It's like a fucking zoo.
And it's like everybody is seated at the tables
at saddle ranch are the zoo animals
and everybody outside can look in and see who they can find.
And you can only imagine the field day
that the paparazzi are having, you know,
they're zooming in on people eating.
This has
happened to me. Like, they're, you know, they get infinite content of seeing like, you
know, TikTokers interact with each other and YouTubers interact with it, whatever. And
it's like a fucking zoo, okay? And I remember when this first became a thing,
I was like, this is so kind of dumb.
Like this is dumb, and that's truly what I thought I was,
like this is so dumb.
Like I don't get the point of it.
Like it seems like it's just an anxiety fest for me.
Everybody's being filmed, hanging out,
and everybody that you know is there,
and there's a decent chance that you're gonna see
some sort of fucking ex best friend
or some sort of fucking ex boyfriend there,
ex girlfriend, whatever the fuck.
There's a very good chance you're gonna see someone
like that while you're there.
And there's a decent chance that some sort of drama
is gonna ensue based on whether or not you go over
and say hi to them or not.
That seems like a nightmare to me.
I'm out.
I don't wanna be a part of this.
Well, I got sucked into it for a few weeks. This episode is brought to you by State Farm.
There's no instruction manual when it comes to being an adult. Sometimes I lay away
at night rehashing something I said earlier that day, or lay in bed at night thinking about what
the future holds. I know I'm not the only one going through a lot of what ifs.
Like, what if I get into a fender bender?
Or what if my home gets broken into?
But State Farm can help you with some of those big what ifs.
They're available to answer your questions day or night.
You can reach them 24-7, file a claim on the State Farm mobile app
or simply call your agent to ask what's on your mind.
Like you good neighbor, State Farm is there. Call or go to StateFarm.com for a quote today.
This episode is brought to you by Squarespace. Squarespace is more than a website builder.
It's an all-in-one place to make an online space that's entirely your own.
Their all-in-one platform allows you to customize everything from the fonts and color scheme
to your domain name.
All you have to do is choose from one of their beautifully
designed templates as a starting off point.
Then, at whatever you need to show off your ideas
to get your side hustle on, you've
got all the tools you need to sell products,
schedule appointments, and send email campaigns
to your mailing list.
Plus, everything is optimized for mobile, so it looks just as good on a phone as it does
on a desktop. Check out Squarespace.com for more features and inspiration, and when you're ready
to build your site, use the offer code Emma for 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain.
My friends and I got very bored.
And there was something funny and appealing about the idea of just going and seeing what it's all about.
Because every night we just kept seeing everybody
who lives around us that we relatively know,
going to the same restaurant.
And it was like, and everybody was there at the same time. And it was like, and everybody was there at the same time,
and it was like, it became the thing to do here.
And nothing else is open,
and they have a nice outdoor seating area
that's like, you know, regulated.
It just seemed like, okay, well, there's no harm in this.
Like, let's just do it.
Let's just go.
We're bored.
Let's just go and see what we see. See what drama ensues. Like, whatever. Like, let's just do it. Let's just go. We're bored. Let's just go and see what we see.
See what drama ensues.
Like whatever.
Like let's just see what happens.
So I probably went to Sado Ranch 10 times over the course
of a few weeks and I became addicted to it.
Like I wanted to go every night and here's why.
Every night there was some new drama,
there was some new person that walks in that was like,
you know, oh my God, like I can't believe they're here.
And it became like a literal nighttime activity
that I looked forward to,
where it was like, who am I gonna see?
And it was almost like going to Satellar Ranch
was like scratching an itch in my armpit.
Like, you know, when you just have like a really bad itch,
and it like, you know that if you itch it,
it's just gonna make it worse, but like,
you wanna itch it.
That's what going to saddle wrench was for my friends and I.
We hated it.
We hated the fucking stigma around it.
We hated the drama that came with it.
But we kept going because there was something so satisfying about it.
And I mean, one night sticks out to me in particular.
It was this night where we all went and we were sitting at this table.
This was the thing that set me over the edge. We all were sitting on a table and we were eating and the entire dinner, the entire hour and
a half, two hours that we were there. You know, we were filmed the whole time. The entire time
through the little window thing, the little divider from the outside street
into the inside, it's see through.
And we were being filmed the whole time.
And that was the thing that like sent me over the edge.
I was like, I can't do this anymore.
Because then I had to like go home,
and then I had to go to bed and wake up the next morning
and watch the dinner that I had had the night before
and I hated it.
And I was like, what if I looked bad?
What if I had a booger in my nose?
Like, what if, what if, what if, what if,
what if I did something bad on accident?
Like, what if I fucking picked a wedgie or something?
Like, what if I, like,
what if they accidentally caught me slapping my friend
in the face on camera?
I didn't do that.
But you know what I mean?
Like, what did they catch?
Like even though I know it's like I know I'm being filmed.
So I'm like, and also I'm not doing anything fucking weird anyway,
but like it's just it makes you think, right?
Like what's going on?
That was what sent me over the edge.
And so I stopped going.
And once I stopped going, I was kind of able to reflect on my time at Saddle Ranch.
And just see the immity that I was,
it was an immature thing for me to do.
And I'll explain why.
In the moment, it seemed fun and harmless,
but looking back, it was very immature of me.
And here's why.
Every time I would go, I would go home
with this crippling feeling of anxiety.
Number one, because, you know,
the paparazzi situation was crazy.
Number two, because there was a bunch of people
that I like half know, not like fully know them
on a personal level, but like, people that I've
dappled with, you know, people that I've hung out
with a few times, people that I've like talked to
for a little bit,
like shit like that and that's all there.
And you don't know who's gonna show up,
but like the fact that those people were around me,
I wouldn't anticipate them being there,
but I also deep down knew that that was a possibility.
And yet I would choose to go there multiple times a week,
knowing that I was gonna see people
that I would be uncomfortable around.
Yet I chose to do that because there was something exciting about it,
but then I would be anxious for the next 48 hours until we would just go again.
And it would all start over again.
I would say that a decent part of my anxiety came from me going to saddle ranch religiously
and seeing people that I didn't want to see.
And that I had no reason to see, I have no reason to be seeing these people.
It's not necessary.
They're not in my life anymore.
I don't know these people very well.
I don't want to have a weird awkward conversation with someone that like I've hung out with four
times a year ago.
Like I don't want wanna have those conversations.
Yet I was making the conscious decision
to go to saddle ranch with my friends
instead of just hanging out and ordering food in
to my fucking house.
Instead of doing that, we're like,
no, let's go to this restaurant that every TikTok
goes to and every fucking influencer goes to,
let's do that instead.
Why?
When I knew that that would make me uncomfortable yet
I was doing it anyway because it was like
Scratching an itch for some reason it was there's something so satisfying and fun about it
Even though it was bad for me and even though it would harm me and I knew that and I wonder if all the other
You know kids that are going that are
I wonder if they're all thinking the same thing.
Like, this sucks, but yet I can't not go
because there's something so fun about it.
And I think it's also like,
because it's like a fucking lunch room.
It's like you know everybody,
and it's fun to like see everybody.
There's something fun about that.
You know what I mean?
Knowing that there's gonna be 20 people
that you know there. There's something interesting about that. You know what I mean? Knowing that there's going to be 20 people that you know there.
There's something interesting about it. And even inviting I'd argue. And so, you know,
I don't know. It's just, I stop, I'm glad I stop going. It was harming me literally in my head. Like, it was starting to make me feel like
the internet was my real life because my one interaction with people outside
of my two friends, being at this restaurant
where I'd see people from, you know,
however many feet away, like me looking around the room
at Saddle Ranch and seeing my entire Instagram
explore page for like multiple weeks on end, ruin my mental health.
It ruined me.
So I'm glad that I stopped.
But I wonder when Saddle Ranch will die.
Is this gonna die and everybody's gonna stop going
or is this just gonna be something that, you know,
we all waste our time with forever?
And that's the question I have.
I don't plan on going again anytime soon
But then again, I haven't been in probably a month or two maybe a month
Maybe three weeks. I don't know I haven't been in a while. I don't plan on going anytime soon. I really
Think that
It was super toxic for me and it was so
It just wasn't like it was so
toxic for me. And it was so, it just wasn't like, it was so, it was not a positive thing. And I don't regret going because it was like kind of funny. And there was like some funny
memories from it. And like, I think my friends and I had fun with it for a few weeks until
I just got, we all were just anxious messes from it. And so we stopped. And I've been a lot happier since.
But it's just interesting how everyone congregates
to like one area.
And like 90% of the people sitting in the saddle wrench,
fucking at the saddle wrench tables, 90% of them,
the ones that all know each other from social media
and shit, I'll hate each other.
I hate talking about it like this,
because it's like, it's just such a weird community.
And I don't like talking about it as a whole,
because it's like, just seems so dumb, right?
But at the same time, it is this weird LA community
of like, influencer like influencer TikTok or YouTubers
that like, and it's so interesting how everybody knows each other.
And like, even when they don't seem like they know each other
because nobody like follows each other above a wall,
everyone knows each other and it's so bizarre to me
and I will never get over it.
And that's why the whole saddle ranch thing is just even more toxic because it's just like,
everybody knows each other,
but half the time some people don't even want to admit it.
And it's just, it's just not.
It's very, very, it's a very avoidable thing
that like you could have a lot of fun without.
Someone said it's sourdrench full every night or is there a specific day in which everyone
goes, literally everyone goes every day.
Like you can go any day and you're going to see everyone.
And like now it's hard to get in.
It used to be something where you could just get,
it was so not exclusive at all.
Now you have to wait in like a five hour line
to get in unless you have a reservation
or you have some sort of like,
or you know someone or something.
And it's like, y'all, are we, this is a fucking,
there is a mechanical bull inside
and it looks like something from the Wild Wild West.
Why are we waiting in line for this?
Although they do have the most amazing tater tots, so like I would wait for those, but
this episode is brought to you by Liquid IV. Liquid IV believes everybody needs hydration every day.
It's not just for athletes or that one time you try to hot yoga class, staying hydrated is essential, whether you're just taking a stroll through your neighborhood, traveling or slogging through
back-to-back meetings.
And with just one stick of liquid IV's hydration multiplier, you can hydrate two times faster
than water alone and get three times the electrolytes as leading sports drinks.
I have been drinking liquid IV actually for many years now.
And I've used liquid IV for so many different things.
When I'm hungover, after a long plane ride,
when I'm really dehydrated,
when I have a headache sometimes,
I'll sip on liquid IV and it can really help.
When I'm sick, when I just need a little boost, liquid
IV is almost always in my bag, almost always.
And my favorite flavor, if anyone is wondering, watermelon and passion fruit, although there
are a lot of great flavors, but those are my most commonly consumed.
And the interesting thing about liquid IV is that my preferred way to drink it is to pour it into a water bottle with lukewarm water and chug it.
So not sure what that says about me.
Grab your liquid IV in bulk nationwide at Costco or you can get 20% off when you go to liquid
IV.com and use code anything at checkout.
That's 20% off anything when you shop better hydration today using promo code anything at liquid
IV dot com. This episode is brought to you by liquid IV. You might think that hydration is only
necessary after intense crazy activities like working out. But if you think about it, running errands
is still running. That's why liquid IV powder hydrates you two times faster than water alone, with three times the electrolytes
of traditional sports drinks.
I am a big fan of liquid IV.
I drink liquid IV after workout.
I drink liquid IV after a long day of sweating
in the sun during the summer.
I drink liquid IV if I just feel a little bit dehydrated.
You know, maybe I have a little headache,
I feel a little off, I love it.
It's so easy, you just rip the packet open,
pour it into a bottle of water, shake it up,
and gulp, gulp, gulp.
I always keep a liquid IV in my bag
because I never wanna feel dehydrated again.
My favorite flavors are the passion fruit in the watermelon. And I actually
think they're delicious. It's so easy to chug water when there's a liquid IV in it. It's
so simple to use. Just rip open a stick and pour the powder in some water for a boost, because
real life is extreme enough. Liquid IV, real people, real flavor, real hydrating. By stick
of liquid IV at a store near you or head to liquidIV.com and use the code anything
for 20% off your order.
That's liquidIV.com with the code anything.
Tap the banner or visit this episode's page to learn more.
Oh, people are now talking about boa.
Okay, so somebody said who wins the saddle ranch or boa?
Who wins the battle, saddle ranch or boa? Who wins the battle saddle ranch or boa?
So let me tell you about boa. I don't go to boa
Boa is like the other place. So there's two saddle ranch is like
the light-hearted
fun
place that everyone goes
to like see everybody that they don't like and to get
popper-aughtsied. That's saddle ranch. Boa is like the exact same thing except
it's a steakhouse, it's down the street, it's close, it's a steakhouse where
give a little bit more privacy but it's very overpriced. And the food is like fine,
but it's not that great.
Like it's good, but it's like,
okay, you could definitely go somewhere else
where you're not gonna get harassed
by the Hollywood fixed outside.
Like, you know what I mean?
It's, you're not,
I don't think people are going there
because they like the food.
That's what I'm saying.
And it's the same thing with saddle ranch.
They're going for the drama.
You don't go to saddle ranch or boa
to like eat the food when you're on social media.
I'm being straight up about it.
You just don't.
You're going for either the drama
and to see people you know and to see what's going on
and to see like, you know,
to kind of like experience the
the fucking culture of it. to see, like, you know, to kind of like experience the,
the fucking culture of it, or you're going to get pop-arazzi and there's no one between.
Personally, I don't like getting pop-arazzi.
I'm more there for like the drama of it all,
just to like see kind of what's going on
and it's just like fun to people watch.
It's for me, it's fun to people watch.
I don't know if that's what everybody else is doing for it.
I doubt it.
I think for everybody else, it's more of a lunchroom situation.
I agree with that, but I tend to kind of keep to myself
when I'm at saddle ranch and I just like to watch.
Like, you know when you go to Disneyland and you sit down
for a second with your churro and you just like to watch
like moms do embarrassing shit with their kids.
Like they're just like, you know, talking baby,
talk super loud to their baby, right?
And that's fun to watch at Disneyland or you're seeing like some sort of, you know, talking baby, talk super loud to their baby, right? And that's fun to watch at Disneyland,
or you're seeing like some sort of, you know,
15 year old couple that's like all over each other,
and it's like weirdly entertaining,
even though you don't know who they are
and you're never gonna see them again.
It's the same thing at Saddle Ranch.
There's this people watching element that's priceless.
There's nothing better than seeing
everybody on your for you page interact.
There's something very interesting about it.
That's why the fucking Hollywood Fix interviews do so well.
And there's nothing negative about it.
For anyone else, I would say, I think it's fun.
You know what, if you like seeing other social media people
around, and if you like getting poperatsied,
I don't see a negative thing about it.
I don't think it's hurting anyone.
It just hurts me because my brain doesn't like this shit.
So that's why it's not good for me.
And it makes me anxious.
And I was just scratching an itch and people watching.
And like, but I didn't enjoy the elements of it that I was literally walking straight into.
It's almost like I was better off watching
just the Hollywood fix,
but I knew that I could just drive 10 minutes
and I could be there.
And I wanted that because I was like,
this is fun because I like watching
these Hollywood fix interviews.
I'm just gonna go live it.
But it really ended up ruining my life.
And there it is.
Somebody said, is the food actually good at saddle ranch?
It's not bad, but it's like you could eat good food anywhere.
That's not what it's about.
And I think that that's what I kind of wanted to talk about today.
It's like almost I wanted to have a confession moment and be like, I've never gone to saddle
ranch for the food. I go to saddle ranch for the food.
I go to the saddle ranch for every other element
and I had a few weeks where I was guilty of it
and listen, I might go back again.
Don't, if you see me, if you see me at saddle ranch
someday again, don't yell at me
because there's a decent chance that one night my friends and I are gonna be like
It kind of sounds fun right now. Like let's do this like this kind of sounds like it'd be an interesting thing
It's an interesting activity. You know what I mean to do. It's like interesting
But I can tell you it's not for the food
Somebody said do you go to get popper Aussie?
Personally, I don't because I don't like it
and usually it makes me very uncomfortable.
But at the same time, when I go, I know that it's a potential
and sometimes it doesn't happen.
But a lot of the times, especially towards the end
of me going there, it started happening almost every time.
And that's when I was like, you know what, I don't like this.
There was many, many times where I went and it never happened.
It was more just a people watching experience.
It was fun, it was entertaining.
You know, it's lighthearted there.
You're always gonna see someone you know.
You're always gonna run into somebody.
It was fun, it was like entertaining, whatever.
And there was no paparazzi element.
But it started to get really bad towards the end
of me going there.
And so then I stopped going.
Because of it, because I was like,
this is just like, I don't number one,
I don't like it, I don't like walking into it
and I also don't, I was like,
like, it doesn't make me feel good.
It gives me crippling anxiety to watch it the next day.
So I wanna avoid that at all costs.
And yeah, so no, not me,
but I do know some people probably do,
and that's totally fine because it's kind of,
some people enjoy it, and I totally get that too.
And I think that a year or two ago,
if I would have gotten paparazzi,
and I would have enjoyed it, but now I don't anymore. And so I mean,
I don't know if I ever enjoyed it, but I think it never used to happen to me. So
if this would have happened to me like a year or two ago, I probably would have
thought it was the, I would have like enjoyed it or whatever it wouldn't have
created an anxiety for me, but now it does. And so no, I no longer want to participate.
All right, we're gonna move on from questions
about saddle ranch.
I'm done talking about saddle ranch.
I just needed to like, I needed to get that off my chest.
Like I feel like nobody's talking about the truth
about saddle ranch and I just wanted to be the one to do it.
And, you know, I hope it was relatively interesting,
but for some
of y'all who don't know about it, go watch the Hollywood Fix interviews, go check it
out, go see like how crazy it is there. It's just so weird. Actually, somebody just asked
me a good question about, you know what, maybe we'll just keep on the fucking Salah Ranch
topic. Okay, maybe we'll just make this a Salah Ranch episode. Somebody said, does the Hollywood fix just hang out in the same spots because the TikTokers
don't get creative and just chill around the same three blocks or does he actually go find
where you guys are going?
Okay, here's my conspiracy because I don't know the truth.
I think that there's a few spots that he knows that he can wait and he'll succeed.
This is just with paparazzi for influencers in general
because it's very different.
It's like the paparazzi for like actual like, you know,
actors or like models and stuff like that.
I don't know how that shit works.
That's a totally different world.
I don't know shit about that.
But when it comes to like the weird,
new paparazzi on YouTube
for influencers and TikTokers,
it's a very, I feel like it's a different game.
It's like a different thing.
And it's so interesting to me that it didn't even exist
because when I started YouTube, it didn't exist.
So the whole thing is just crazy to me.
But I feel like he waits, he goes to Boa,
he goes to Saddle Ranch, and he goes to, those are the main two, I feel like,
that he waits outside of knowing that TikTokers
and YouTubers and any type of influencers
are gonna go there, because it's almost like
this mutually agreed thing subconsciously,
that everybody knows that he's gonna be there,
and he knows that everybody's gonna be there. And he knows that everybody's gonna be there.
So it's like this perfect thing, right?
Where everybody wins.
They know where to find him, and he knows
where to find everybody.
So that's that.
As for like day to day stuff, like if you find somebody
at like a restaurant during the day at lunch or something,
I feel like that's more something
where people are calling it on themselves.
Because I don't know how he would just know
that someone's coming out of their, you know,
fucking doctor's appointment, like, you know,
at 11 a.m. in Beverly Hills. Like, it's so random.
I just have a hard time believing that he just knew that.
So I think that there's a decent chance that when it's not at the main locations
that everyone knows are like, a stablished Hollywood fixed spots.
Like, I feel like that's planned.
I've actually always wondered like, I feel like that's planned. I've actually always wondered, like, I've always wondered
like how that works.
Maybe I'll call the Hollywood fixed on myself one time
and like pre-plan it and just see how that process goes
just so that we can all kind of like know
how that shade even works,
because I've never called it on myself.
Ever, although one time he found me at my,
I kid you not, he found me at my apartment once.
And I'm convinced that someone gave him my address. I'm like, how the fuck did you find me there?
Because I did not call it and you can fucking see it in my face too. I was like, there is no way
you just found me here. But I also think he might have followed me home because I was at
a popular location
Right before I don't know. I don't know. I always wonder that but I want to know like how that works like you DM him
Like I don't know kind of fun. Maybe I'll try it just for a social experiment for all of us
Somebody said do you think LA is overrated?
It's crazy because I feel like recently
LA has gotten a little bit.
It's changed a lot since I first moved here,
especially over the past few months with quarantine.
Like a lot of things have changed about it.
I feel like a lot of stores have closed,
a lot of permanently, a lot of people have moved out of here.
A lot of people have moved here.
In the first, I mean, so it's been like both.
A lot of people are moving out,
but a lot of people are moving in.
And it definitely has a different feeling
than it did when I first moved here.
And I miss the old feeling that it had,
when everything was bustling
and there's so many people here,
and there's still a lot of people here,
but I feel like so many people are leaving
and a lot of people are over it,
and I get it because I'm kind of there too.
It just feels kind of like sad,
and dreary, and dead right now to me.
And I don't know if that's just because of the fact
that we're in a pandemic or whatever,
or if it's just because maybe coronavirus
kind of killed LA a little bit,
because there's so many, there's been so
many closings, a lot of things have closed. Like a lot of stores, like you go down Melrose
which is one of the main cool shopping streets in LA and like so many things are closing
permanently and it's so sad to see. And it just feels kind of empty now. Somebody said, what's one influencer that
you really want to collab with? I guess we're doing kind of an influencer. Influencer,
saddle, ranch, truth of it all, episode. The truth about collabing with other influencers
is that I think that you assume that you're gonna get along with
somebody because they do the same thing as you, but the truth of the matter is
that's usually not the case and it's usually, I mean, it can be a very pleasant
experience, it can be fun even, I mean, for sure, but I've found that like it just
doesn't always click and that's why I don't like to collab because I feel like when you structure a video
and you collab in a way that's super structured
with somebody who you don't genuinely feel
like you get along with, it just,
it makes the whole experience miserable and it's fake.
And personally, I just don't wanna be fake on any front.
If I've ever collabed with somebody, I'm friends with them.
At least at the time, right?
And so, it's not like I'm collabing with people that I don't know on a relatively personal
level.
Like, it's usually somebody that like, I've at least gotten a chance to get to know.
And I don't know, like, I just have a hard time with collabs because I feel like I also don't want there to be
some sort of toxicity in the fact that when you collab
with somebody, it could benefit one party or both.
And with growth, right?
I think a lot of people don't realize that a big part
of collabbing is for, I think a lot of the times it can be because it's fun and I don't realize that like a big part of collabbing is for, I think a lot of the times it can be because it's fun
and I don't think that that's,
it's always for the number element,
but I've seen so many people in this space collab
just for the numbers of it all,
not because they actually genuinely like the person
or not because they genuinely think
that it would be fun to collab with this person.
It's more of just like a business move.
And I've never done that because I don't believe in that.
But I also don't bash people that do it
because this is something that's, it's entertainment, right?
Like a lot of people are doing the stuff
for entertainment purposes.
And so sometimes it makes sense to do maybe
a surface level collab because like, you know,
that might be what makes sense for their business
and their, you know, the business side of their YouTube,
whatever.
For me, I just don't like looking at it like that.
And so that's why I've avoided that at almost all costs.
And that's why you don't see me collabing with a lot of people
or even having guests on this podcast
because I'm like, I just get anxious about,
you know, making sure that that's an authentic choice. Somebody said, oh, this is interesting.
Someone said, what's the most romantic thing someone has ever done for you? Okay, this
is so off topic and has nothing to do with like anything that we just talked about. But I have an opinion that I want to share.
This has been something that's been on my mind.
I don't like romantic things.
I was just talking about this one, my friend,
who's a lot older than me, and she's been in a relationship
for a really long time.
And I was talking to her about, how do you keep things
interesting in a relationship
when you've been dating somebody for like five, seven years?
Like, does it get boring, like whatever?
And she was like, no, it doesn't get boring
because there's obviously ruts
while you're dating someone for a long time.
But like, if the relationship feelings
don't fizzle, then it is always exciting in a weird way. And I get that. I get that. And,
but it also made me think like, because I was kind of asking, like, do you have to start
doing, like, fluffy ass shit, like start doing breakfast in bed and shit after seven years,
because you need to keep things romantic and exciting.
I was kind of asking that and you know her answer was kind of no.
And I think that that's really interesting because I don't really think that romantic, super romantic,
traditionally romantic things are like for me.
I just don't care about that. It's just so not my love language. And part of me
wonders, you know, are super romantic actions? Are they overcompensating for a lack of something
in the relationship? Does that make sense?
Like, don't get me wrong.
I think it's really nice when somebody does something
heartfelt for you, surprises you with like a gift
or something.
Like that, that like means something, right?
Like that means something when it's like heartfelt
and thought out in spontaneous and random.
Whereas like when somebody's just like buying you flowers,
it's just because to me that kind of makes me feel like
it's because there's a missing part of the relationship
that needs to be filled with some sort of like meaningless gift,
like a flower or like a fucking breakfast in bed,
or like, you know, some sort of like meaningless gift.
Like, I feel like that's filling a gap in a relationship.
And that's always how I felt,
because like, for me, like, I don't like that stuff.
I don't need that stuff.
Like, it could be like my 10 year anniversary with somebody,
I feel like that I am with.
And literally, I'd be fine with just having a normal day.
I feel like every day,
you do little things like that.
And like making some big romantic episode
like about an anniversary or about whatever. I wonder if that's just maybe
some people's love language or if that's genuinely just over-compensation for a
lack of maybe even connection. I don't know. I don't know. Maybe it's just that
that's just simply not my
love language.
You know?
Who knows?
Because I just feel like that stuff doesn't work for me.
Like that's just, I would be happy just sitting with a guy that I'm with
and talking about nothing for hours.
I'd rather do that than
Like be surprised with flowers
Like
I've been with a guy and they got me they were shopping and
They found something for me that like related to
Something that I care about.
They got me, they found, they were thrifting and they found
something that they knew that I would like because it had a personal connection to me and they gave that to me. I literally cried about it because they were just out doing their own thing and
then they thought of me and they found something for me that they thought I would like and then they brought it to me and then it was so personal. Like that to me is so much more
meaningful than like a fuck like my girlfriend's mad at me. I'm just gonna go bring her flowers I
guess to like make her happy because like blah blah blah. Or like I feel like I've been a bad
boyfriend recently. I'm just gonna bring my girlfriend flowers. Or like, whatever, I mean, maybe it can be cute.
Like, if it's like, they had a bad day
and you just wanna do something.
I don't know.
Maybe I just have a jaded view on like,
I think that sometimes I associate like,
a large romantic effort with like,
over-commentation for like, bad behavior.
So maybe I'm just jaded.
I think that romantic things for me
are more like the kind of small mundane things.
Like that's the stuff that I will shed a tear over.
Not like some sort of picture perfect shit.
Do you know what I mean?
I don't know, I don't know.
Anyway, I have a hair appointment.
So I'm gonna go do that.
I'm gonna go get my hair redied blonde again.
It's gonna take probably three hours
and I'm gonna have a lot of back pain
and it's gonna be shitty.
But thank you guys for listening
to my little saddle ranch rant.
I know that that's like so random,
so I hope that that's not too far-fetched
for you guys to understand or listen to
if you guys have no idea what the fuck that is,
but it is really interesting.
So go do a little saddle ranch research
and kind of look at the culture that it has somehow
on the Hollywood, well, I don't even show you and be fucking promoting that well I don't even
should even be fucking promoting that.
I don't know.
It's very interesting.
So I hope you guys enjoyed this episode.
I love hanging out with you guys.
Feel free to tweet at the AG podcast Twitter.
Topics that you want me to talk about.
I'm always open to what you guys want me to talk about.
And I wanted to be stuff that you guys give a fuck about to it
So go on the Twitter at AG podcast leave us a little review on Apple podcasts leave a five stars if you fuck with it and
I love you all so much and I appreciate you guys coming back every week to listen and
Yeah, I have killer week
Here's the saddle ranch.
Bye y'all.
This episode is brought to you by the all new
2024 Chevy Tracks.
Pack lightly.
It's okay if you didn't.
In the all new 2024 Chevy Tracks,
you and all your family, all your friends,
all your kids, all your pets,
have all this space and versatility you deserve in need for your next big adventure.
With large modern display screens, wireless phone connectivity and affordable pricing, this small SUV is actually kind of a big deal.
And with the option to choose between stylish designs like the cool, confident
active or the ultra-sporty RS, you're sure to find that the all-new Chevy tracks fits your budget
and whatever your style may be. Visit Chevy.com forward slash tracks to learn more.