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April 14, 2025 28 mins

Tiffany Moon stepped away from the OR to join Tamra in the Twot Seat!

Why did Tiffany not vibe with the ladies on RHODallas? Which Housewife did she call out for having a fake bag?

Plus, Tiffany reveals how she made Below Deck history.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
To teas in a pod which Teddy Mellencamp and Camra Judge. Hi, guys,
welcome back to another episode of The twat Sea. Today
we have Tiffany Moon, a mother, a wife, entrepreneur, and

(00:23):
a pseudiologist, a TV personality, and we are going to
get into everything with her, including her new book. Well hello, hello, hi, Hi,
I am tired. I will you look amazing? So I
just want to really get into it with you. What
is new? Tell me everything?

Speaker 2 (00:46):
Mostly right now? Where knee deep in book launch mode?

Speaker 1 (00:50):
Yes, I saw that.

Speaker 2 (00:52):
Yeah, so Joy Prescriptions May sixth. It's a memoir. It
took me almost two and a half years to write,
so really a labor of love. It's basically a memoir
with like a self help message and there's a chapter
about real housewives in there because people always want the
tea on that of course.

Speaker 1 (01:12):
So do you miss the show? Do you miss it?
Or you're like, girl, No, no much drama.

Speaker 2 (01:19):
It's too much drama, which I should have known before
I started, but I was really naive, and I really
thought that it was going to be fun and I
was going to make all these new girlfriends and it
just wasn't.

Speaker 1 (01:29):
That Usually isn't. I'm not usually, isn't.

Speaker 2 (01:34):
I look at some of the ladies on the other
franchises though, like Yours and Beverly Hills and Miami, and
I just I always think to myself, like, if I
could have been on a different franchise, like things could
have turned out differently. I just didn't really gel with
the Dallas ladies.

Speaker 1 (01:49):
It all depends on the cast, for sure, right absolutely. Now,
who out of the ladies do you still talk to?

Speaker 2 (01:56):
Just Deandra? Really?

Speaker 1 (01:58):
Oh? Really? So no one else.

Speaker 2 (02:00):
I never really got close to anyone else.

Speaker 1 (02:02):
So you did you know them prior to filming? Oh
so it's not like you guys were like these great
friends that you're like, no kind of falling out with
or something.

Speaker 2 (02:11):
No, Like I was literally like thrown in there as
the single newbie and you know, like think or swim
kind of situation.

Speaker 1 (02:19):
Yeah. So, your book, Joy Prescription is coming out May six.
Now you talk about how you learned to not be
a perfectionist and live your life. How do you do that?
I need advice.

Speaker 2 (02:35):
I think when you grow up with the mentality that
like you have to get straight a's and everything has
to be perfect, it just doesn't leave very room much
room for like exploration or creativity. Right, Like, if you
have a fixed mindset and you think, oh, I can't
learn new skills or I don't want to embarrass myself,
then you will never put yourself out there, even in

(02:56):
terms of like starting a business or being on social media.
Like I had to give up this pretense of trying
to be perfect or else I would have never done
those things.

Speaker 1 (03:05):
Now you're a big presence on TikTok, Like I love
watching your tiktoks.

Speaker 2 (03:10):
Yeah, it's funny. I just started that in twenty twenty
because of the pandemic and I was bored, Like I
never thought that it would surmount to anything.

Speaker 1 (03:20):
Well it does now. Now. Do you feel like becoming
a mom has changed your perspective on life?

Speaker 2 (03:27):
Yeah, I think becoming a mother taught me a lot
about patience and a lot about, you know, letting things go,
like learning to pick your battles and not harp on
every single little thing, and to sort of like, you know,
enjoy the moments for what they are instead of trying
to make them picture perfect. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (03:46):
I feel like you're a little bit of an overachiever.
I really do. You are right? Yeah, all the things.
You can't sit down, can you?

Speaker 2 (03:54):
I can't. It's just it's not in my nature.

Speaker 1 (03:57):
You're quite the entrepreneur, so are you. I try, I
really do, and I listen to you talk and I thought, God,
there's so much more that I could do, because you
know you do. I don't think you're like this, but
you get to a point where you're like, yeah, this
business is doing well. Yes I have a podcast, and
you're like, I'm comfortable. But I think you're the one
that's like, what's next? What can I take next?

Speaker 2 (04:18):
I think when you're comfortable, then you're generally not growing right,
You're stressing the system. And so every time I get comfortable,
you know, I became a doctor. That was very difficult residency.
I'm learning so much, But then after doing it for
like seven eight years, you pretty much have a handle
on things, you know, and I'm like, Okay, I need
something else to like stimulate me, something else to learn,

(04:39):
something else to be challenged by, because I just I
feel like if you're acclimated to what you're doing, you're
not learning anything new.

Speaker 1 (04:46):
Yeah I'm not sure that you covered this, but what
do you think somebody can do? Just start living their
more authentic self.

Speaker 2 (04:52):
I think people need to stop carrying so much what
other people think. I think our society cares way too much.
I think social media is large lead to blame for that,
because everyone has their you know, best face forward on
their feed, so when you're looking, it seems like everyone's
living this great, fabulous life, when in fact they're not,
or perhaps not, but they're just putting out the best

(05:12):
parts of it for you to see.

Speaker 1 (05:15):
So I think I always say it's like your filtered life.

Speaker 2 (05:17):
Yes, I always say it's like their greatest hits, you know,
and you can't compare your every day to somebody else's
greatest hits. So I think people need to stop the
cycle of like compare and despair, always looking at somebody
else and feeling like you're not good enough, or someone
else's business is farther along than you like. It's just
it's a zero sum game to constantly compare yourself to
other people because somebody's always going to be doing better,

(05:39):
And I just don't think that should be what motivates
you to move forward, you know.

Speaker 1 (05:43):
I agree with that. Now, what are your thoughts on
social media? Just the hate and the stuff that goes on.

Speaker 2 (05:51):
So you're fighting behind this screen name that has like
a picture of a dog or like a Bible verse
and just out there.

Speaker 1 (06:00):
That's so funny that you say that it's always an
animal and a Bible verse. Yes, And I'm like, oh,
and I love my grandchildren right right.

Speaker 2 (06:08):
And they're like, you need to go back to China.
And I'm like, oh my god. Like it's just people
take social media way too seriously, like it's not meant
to be your actual life. It's just supposed to kind of,
you know, be something that we truck, you know. But
people like live and die on social media and I'm like,
you need to go outside and touch some grass, or
like you need to be in the real world and

(06:29):
get off of Twitter because this is not good for
your mental health. But when you ask about the haters
and stuff, when I first became like well known, right
when you know, Real Housewives of Dallas was showing, and
by then I had a couple hundred thousand social media followers,
I used to take those really mean comments to heart,
Like I would cry because someone called me ugly or

(06:51):
said my voice was so annoying, Like why do you
talk like that? Do you think you're a Kardashian, and
I'm like, I don't know why I talk like this, Okay,
Like this is just how I learn English and this
is how I sound.

Speaker 1 (07:01):
I don't. I don't see that comparison to the Kardashian. Yeah,
I feel like they draw fry.

Speaker 2 (07:08):
Yeah it's well, I don't know, Like I don't.

Speaker 1 (07:10):
I don't.

Speaker 2 (07:11):
You're not like that, I hope not. I mean, I
speak professionally on stages, like people pay me to give
keynotes and stuff, so I hope that my voice isn't
that annoying. But I just I think those people always
have something to pick on, you know, because they're such
miserable human beings that they actually, you know, get pleasure

(07:33):
from trying to bring you down, Like, oh, how dare
you be a smart, successful woman who's confident and knows
her value, knows her place in this world? Like how
dare she be so content and happy? I'm going to
say something to try to knock her down a notch,
And I just think that's a terrible, terrible way to live.

(07:54):
So now, you know, a lot of times, now that
I have a social media manager, I don't even see
a lot of those comments because I think she to
them before me and blocks people, but I gave her
free range. I was like, look, if someone comes on
my page like social media, my page is my house.
If you want to come in and misbehave, you will
get kicked out. You will get picked immediately. And like

(08:15):
I don't want to hear anything about it, you know
what I mean? Like, this is my space. You come
into my space, act in a fool, I'll kick you out.

Speaker 3 (08:22):
Yeah, as you should.

Speaker 1 (08:35):
I learned that you were asked to join the Real
Housewives of Dallas in season four and you declined yeah,
and then what changed your mind to accept season five?

Speaker 2 (08:44):
I don't know. It's kind of like a guy that
keeps asking you out and you're kind of like, I
don't know, and then he asked you out the third
time and you're like, fine, buy me dinner or whatever.

Speaker 1 (08:52):
You know.

Speaker 2 (08:53):
I didn't even when I was trying out for season five.
First we had a zoom interview, then they flew me
out to LA. I didn't actually think I was going
to get picked, honestly, because I'm not like super glam.
I was working full time as an academic anesthesiologist with
twin toddlers, and I kept saying during my interviews, like,

(09:14):
thank you for this opportunity, but I'm not sure I
can commit to doing the show, like it's kind of
a lot. I don't know.

Speaker 1 (09:21):
I always thought about, like even Nicole on Miami, Yeah, yeah,
she was, she's an anesthesiologist, And I'm like, you guys
work like these long shifts, and like, how do you
find it would be hard to film a show like Housewives?
Is it so demanding and actually have a job where
you go and spend hours at a time.

Speaker 2 (09:42):
Yeah, No, it was rough. I was working full time
while filming, and so for dinner parties, I told production,
I was like, I have a heart out at ten
pm because I generally wake up at like five thirty
six and I have to be in the hospital by
like six forty five.

Speaker 1 (09:59):
Now you're a response well for keeping people alive.

Speaker 2 (10:01):
Right, And so I told production, I was like, I
have a two drink maximum and a ten pm cut
off on weekdays where I have to go to work
the next morning. And production was cool with it. They
were like very respectful of it, while my castmates were not,
and they were like egging me to drink more, calling
me boring, making.

Speaker 1 (10:21):
Any of them have jobs. No girl, No, Well, I
know Carrie is a works with her husband. But the
other girl is like, do they any of them?

Speaker 2 (10:31):
Harry was not working? Oh Carrie Duber, Carry Duber wasn't
on my season.

Speaker 1 (10:36):
She oh, she wasn't.

Speaker 2 (10:38):
And after so Carrie Duber and I never filmed together.

Speaker 1 (10:41):
I think she would understand because I know that she works.

Speaker 2 (10:44):
Yeah, but even I mean, she's an injector for her
husband's plastic surgery practice, do you know what I mean.
I'm not downplaying that. I think she probably does great work,
but like if she can't take patients or has to
move them to past eleven am or something, it's fine.
Like I have to be in the operating room at
like six forty five, and I'm putting it's a sleep

(11:04):
like being.

Speaker 1 (11:05):
It's a very demanding career.

Speaker 2 (11:06):
Yeah. Sure, I can't dial it in and be like, oh,
I was out late last night, like you know what
I mean. Like, I also knew that my work was
not entirely supportive of my being on the show, and
so I was under a microscope at work, so that
if I came in late or wasn't on my A game,
they'd be like, oh, it's cause she's filming for Housewives,

(11:27):
you know what I mean. Like I knew that they
were watching me very closely, so I was like sure
to you know, go there early, like never take a
long lunch break, like on my best behavior, because I
knew they were looking for me to make a mistake
so they could be like, oh, this is why we
didn't want you to do the show. You know that
kind of thing.

Speaker 1 (11:44):
Well, I could you imagine like if you were like
drunk and sloppy and messy and all the things I
am on the show, and then you go the next
morning and you're like, Hi, I'm Tiffany, I am you're anesthesiologist,
and they're like, no, uh uh this thing, this girl,
I'm putting me to sleep right right. It would have
had your career.

Speaker 2 (12:01):
No, I told them, I told production, and I told
my work my hospital job will be my number one priority.
Filming will not get in the way of it. And
all the ladies like made fun of me because I
had this alarm that would go off on my phone
at like nine thirty so that production could call an
uber for me to get back home and they'd be like, oh,
her alarm's going off again. Tiffy's alarms going off again.

(12:22):
So the ladies like made so much fun of me.

Speaker 1 (12:25):
Were you ever able to explain this? Like I have
like tell them, like I have a job.

Speaker 2 (12:29):
I mean, it shouldn't be that hard to explain.

Speaker 1 (12:31):
Well, yeah, I agree, it's.

Speaker 2 (12:33):
It's not a complicated concept.

Speaker 1 (12:35):
So do you do you think that you would do
another reality show or you're like no.

Speaker 2 (12:39):
You know, if you had asked me, like right after
Dallas got put on hiatus, I was like, hell no,
I don't want anything to do with it. It's so toxic.
But it's been like four years, and I think a
lot in my life has changed, so now I think
I'm like warming up to it again. Maybe, like if
they were to reboot Dallas, especially if there were like
almost all new people and I didn't have to film

(13:01):
with the old people that I didn't get along with,
or if there was another show that wasn't Housewives. Somebody
told me that I should go on Traders.

Speaker 1 (13:13):
Oh I was going to ask you about that. I mean,
the only thing about that that's like a month long commitment.
So you would I know, you you have kids and
you have a full time job, Like could you get
away for a month.

Speaker 2 (13:25):
If I knew ahead of time, I could like smack orientation. Yeah. Yeah,
it's like the planning, you know, like our vacation schedules
are scheduled out six months in advance, so I would
need to know like, okay, these three weeks, like I
really need off because they film in Scotland, right, Yes,
did you have fun?

Speaker 1 (13:42):
No? Oh, now it's a long story. I got really sick.
As soon as I arrived. I got COVID so bad,
like I thought I was going to be on a respirator.

Speaker 2 (13:52):
But then once you felt better and you actually started
doing the game show, like was it fun.

Speaker 1 (13:57):
Yeah. By the time I started to feel well, they
put me on some really strong antibiotics. And I have
intestinal issues. I've had surgery, and I started getting really
bad pains in between my rib cage, and that's the
pains I had from other intestinal problems, so I knew
something was going on. I got Thank god, I actually
got murdered as soon as I started to feel like

(14:19):
the COVID stuff go away. And then by the time
I got home, I was in the hospital. I got Yeah.

Speaker 2 (14:24):
Yeah, so you didn't have like the full experience, really.

Speaker 1 (14:27):
No, I didn't. I did not have the full experience
like I had. So I was at the hospitalized because
the antibiotics they gave me over so strong that they
put inflammation in my intestines and it was just horrible.
So I had that whole thing down my nose. Yes,
it's so funny. They told me. They're like, I'm so
sorry I have to do this. This is horrible. I
hate doing this to people. I just sat there and

(14:49):
they did it, and they're like, what, I've never seen
this happen before, Like people gag, people.

Speaker 2 (14:54):
Are gagging, jagging, pull it out. Yeah, And I was just.

Speaker 1 (14:58):
Like, I'm a freak. I'm a freak. What if your
your kid said, hey, mom, I want to be on
a reality show, would you say.

Speaker 2 (15:18):
I mean, it depends on which show. I think reality
TV is not all bad, you know. I think there's
a lot of good things. Certainly. I'm grateful to have
been given the opportunity, you know, as a super big
dork doctor, to have become a real housewife like I.
It's been a really great experience for me. I just

(15:38):
I just wish like it didn't have to get so toxic, because,
you know, one of my castmates and her family because
like you know, the husbands get involved, and the brother
in law got involved. I was like, Jesus, it's husband's
It's so icky when like that is it? Yeah's sock.
My husband does not get involved, girl mine does not either.
He would like do his little husbandly parts that he

(15:58):
had to do his scenes, and then he's like I'm
out of here, you know, right. So one of my castmates,
her husband and his brother got involved and like tried
to come after my job at the university that I've
worked at for like over a decade, like tried to
get me fired from the hospital. And I was like,
are you fucking kidding me? Like it's a reality TV show,
Like we were fighting over chicken feet. It's like the

(16:20):
stupidest shit ever. But like for you to actually come
after my job, my career, like everything I've ever worked
hard for. But I guess I don't expect them to understand,
you know. That's what put like a really bad taste
in my mouth at the end of the show, because
I thought that we would just have like little girl
fights and then like make up at that.

Speaker 1 (16:39):
Well, that's the way it should be. It should be
kind complex resolution. But when they start doing things like
that where they you know, contact like either your sponsors
or your business or you know, try to get you fired.
That's where those people should be fired. I don't care
who you are on a cat, you know, on the cast,
if you're popular, if you're a whatever, if you're doing
things like that off camera, you should be gone.

Speaker 2 (17:01):
Yeah. So then you know, I had to get lawyers involved,
you know, because they're coming after my job.

Speaker 1 (17:08):
I feel you girl.

Speaker 2 (17:09):
Yeah. Then Bravo got involved and Bravo actually posted a
statement like backing me up.

Speaker 1 (17:15):
So I felt like that that was good that they did.
That was good, Yeah, because I feel like if they
start getting rid of people that do stuff like that,
then it's going to put a big statement out there,
but they're not going to put up with it, right Yeah. Yeah, Well,
if they brought Dallas back tomorrow, would you sign on?

Speaker 2 (17:33):
It depends on who else cast is gone. Don't you
think like if it was a women who you know,
worked and had businesses and knew what it was like
to function in the world, versus you know, being like,
you know, bragging that they have never paid a bill
in their lives. Like, I just can't get along with
women like that. As much as I've done and everything
that I promote about uplifting and empowering women, Like I

(17:57):
just it's not nineteen sixty, you know. Can we Dallas
so diverse? Surely they can find a group of diverse
women to actually be on the show. I don't know.

Speaker 1 (18:08):
Well, I do believe that that was Dallas's problem. It's
all in the casting. Yeah, so if the casting doesn't mesh,
then that's just it shows. Yeah, And I was shocked
that they just completely do you have you heard anything
about it ever coming back?

Speaker 3 (18:22):
Is there? Oh?

Speaker 2 (18:23):
Once in a while, I'll get post, I'll get tagged
on a post or something that there's like a rumor
that it's coming back, And I'm like, that's news to me.
Ain't nobody called me? I have no idea. But I'm
also not over here holding my breath for it, you
know what I mean. I'm moving about my regularly scheduled programming.
But I think I think I would give it a try.
Like it's so funny, like four years ago it would

(18:44):
have been Hello. Then the year after that, like no,
I don't think so. And it's like as the time,
it's like childbirth, Oh my god, you like forgot how
terrible it was, Yes, the baby, and you're like, oh,
it's so cute, like maybe I could. It's like our brain,
uh like protects us.

Speaker 1 (19:00):
It's a little bit of a drug kind of like
it's like you get a high from it and it's
exciting and then it's scary, and then you don't want
to do it anymore, and then you do want to
do it. It's crazy, it really is.

Speaker 2 (19:13):
It is. And I will say the time when I
was on Housewives, not filming, but when it was airing
on TV, I was so self centered. I was like
checking what people were saying in the comments and all this,
and it like makes you be so self centered, whereas
normally I'm not out there like looking to see what
people in the world are saying about that.

Speaker 1 (19:31):
But you need and I think all newbies need to
understand this, and this is something and social media wasn't
huge when I started seventeen years ago, so I mean
we had MySpace. Is that the newbies tend to get
consumed with what's on social media and then they start

(19:53):
self producing themselves or start talking back to the negative people,
trying to change their mind and getting up obessed with
that than talking to bloggers trying to get them to
do stories like positive stories and all that stuff, and
none of that stuff pans out. It does, like just you,
but it's a learning process. Nobody, nobody in normal life

(20:13):
deals with this until suddenly you're on a reality show
and you're like, holy shit, I'm getting attacked. I'm getting this,
I'm getting that, Like what do I do? And you
try to, you know, protect yourself, and it it doesn't
work out. So you have to learn to just it
is what it is. And people are gonna say what
they're gonna say. Does it hurt? Yeah, it hurts, but
you can also think of it like who are they?

(20:35):
Like what kind of person does this? When was the
last Yeah, yeah that was the last time I got
on their car dashings you know, Instagram and started calling
them names, and you should do this, like who does that?

Speaker 2 (20:48):
Really awful? People who need a job? Help, yeah, help help, Yeah,
they need to find some joy in their lives.

Speaker 1 (20:56):
Yeah, so you were on below deck. I just found
this out. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (21:01):
The below deck thing was just like not even I
don't know, like I didn't go on the yacht to
go on below deck, Like I wanted to experience what
it was like to you know, be on a yacht
for several days. And I generally don't ever do cruises
because I get really sea sick, so I was hesitant
about going on the yacht. But it was in our

(21:22):
one filmed in Abiza, which I was told is pronounced ibitha.

Speaker 1 (21:27):
And I was like, well, that's weird. I don't know
that either.

Speaker 2 (21:30):
Yeah. I was like, oh, I've been saying it wrong
my whole life. And it was so much fun, but like,
I don't I was on TV for like maybe two
minutes out of that Below Deck episode. It's so weird.
They shortened it. Instead. We had a one night charter,
but it wasn't it was a two night charter. It
was like very odd what they did with post production.
But we weren't like a very rowdy bunch, like we

(21:50):
went to sleep at a normal time, like no when
you got drunk. Nobody was rude to the staff, and
so we were like a pretty boring charter I think
for a below Deck, which is probab probably why when
it aired they're like, oh, the next charter is only
here for one night. I was like, no, we were
there for two. There's probably so boring they didn't have.

Speaker 1 (22:09):
But for a two night charter, you tipped twenty five
thousand dollars.

Speaker 2 (22:14):
I'm a big tipper.

Speaker 1 (22:15):
Okay, you made housewife history and below tack history. Were
you trying to put the other charter guests to shame?
Because that was a great tip for two nights.

Speaker 2 (22:25):
I actually don't know what a normal tip is. I
had asked them, and they said, the normal amount of
this charter for like the three days, two nights for
six people would have been like one hundred ish thousand dollars, right,
but we only paid like half of that, right, because
you got a discounted rate because you're from a hollow
deck or whatever. And I, you know, even when I

(22:49):
get discounts, or I go to a restaurant and they
give me appetizers or a round of drinks or whatever,
I always tip on like the full price it would
have been. And I generally tipped twenty five percent, like
when I, you know, go get a facial massage, go
out to eat, like that's my standard rate. And so
I was like, if it's one hundred thousand dollars how
much it would have been, then I'll just tip twenty
five Like I didn't even think anything of it. And

(23:12):
then later when the show aired, which was like, oh
my god, we taped in We filmed in June of
twenty twenty three, and I think the show aired like
a year later. It was really long.

Speaker 1 (23:24):
What were people's response to the tip? Were people making
a big deal about it.

Speaker 2 (23:27):
Yeah, they were like, oh, this bitch only spent one
night on the yacht, but tip twenty five thousand. I
was like, first of all, it wasn't a one night,
it was a regular length charter, and I didn't think
that twenty five thousand dollars was a lot. Like I
literally just tipped twenty five percent of what the cost
of the trip would have been. And then everybody was like,
oh okay. So some people were like, oh, that's great.
She's so classy, like, you know, she respects service people

(23:51):
and yeah, always like very polite. One of our guests
was like a little bit rude to one of the
service people, but actually not at all, Like our group
was very well behaved. So some people were like, Oh,
she's such a classy queen, you know, big tip or whatever,
and then some people were like, oh, she's such a
show off.

Speaker 1 (24:05):
And I'm like I was gonna have it. There, we
have it.

Speaker 2 (24:08):
You can't wait. You know what I'm saying. You can't
make everybody happy like you tip too little. They call
you a cheap skate. Oh she must not be as
rich as she wants us to think she is. You
tip big? What you know? What I thought was actually
just normal. And then some people think you're great, and
some people think you're trying to show off, and I'm
just like, and this is what it's like.

Speaker 1 (24:26):
Yeah, let's talk Burken since we're talking money. You have
quite the collection, right.

Speaker 2 (24:33):
Yes, ma'am. I have. I've been collected like forty what Well, okay,
this is the thing. I got my first Burkin in
two thousand and eight, so like now it's super trendy,
like everyone wants one. There's so many fakes on the market.
I see fakes all the time, like in the street,
and I'm like, that's a fake. But I started in

(24:54):
two thousand and eight, right, so almost twenty years ago,
and I at first would get like two bags per year,
But now I go to Paris and I have my
home store, so I'm basically getting like four bags a year.

Speaker 1 (25:09):
Oh my god, I won't be you now you did
you talked about fake and you stirred up quite the
social media when you you called out Marisol. You called
out Marisol for having a fake bag, and social media
went crazy.

Speaker 2 (25:25):
If you're filming for Housewives, like, maybe that's not the
best time to bring out your fakes. You know. I'm
sure she has some real ones, like use those or
borrow one from a friend, but it's just I just
feel like.

Speaker 1 (25:38):
It, or don't have one at all. Just don't have
one at all, That's what I say. Like, We've had
girls on our show that wear like total fake designer
clothes and I've called them out. I'm like, just don't
try to portray yourself as somebody, you know, because all
when you're wearing logos everywhere, you're just showing people to me,
it's like you're being flashy. Look at me. I have

(25:58):
money all these things. But when you're wearing fake ones,
that is that gives me the biggest eck. Yes, because
if you can't afford it, don't buy fake ones. It
doesn't make you look any better. But most people out
there would never know.

Speaker 2 (26:13):
Yeah, no, I can. I can spot a fake.

Speaker 1 (26:16):
Well, if you have the reil, you can spot a
fake that's for sure. Yeah, people don't care.

Speaker 2 (26:22):
And it's just so sad, like no one cares, you
know what I mean. Like if you're hanging out with
people who are judging you by what handbag you carry,
like you need new friends, Like I truly love the
b Burkin as a timeless piece of craftsmanship, you know
what I mean. But I also like all open bags,
Like I like bags that are structured that when you

(26:43):
sit them on the floor, like they don't flop. So
I would never get like a go yard toad or
like an lvy never fold. Not because I don't like
those companies, but because I like my bag to sit
up straight when I set it down, and I don't
ever close it, like I like reaching in and getting stuff.

Speaker 1 (26:57):
How many bags overall do you think you have?

Speaker 2 (27:00):
Probably like a hundred? Nice.

Speaker 1 (27:04):
Is there anybody else out there that we should know
that's carrying fake bags?

Speaker 2 (27:10):
Oh? So many. There's so many influencers that carry fake bags.
No housewives that I know of, But there's this account
on Instagram called the Fake Birkenslayer, And yeah, it's so funny.
Somebody accused me of being the fake Birkenslayer and I
was like, I'm so flattered, but I don't have that

(27:31):
kind of time. And they basically post screenshots of people
on Instagram who are with fake bags. It's a lot
of influencers, you know, these influencers who like look a
certain way, and they have heard that. They rent out
this private jet that's grounded, but they take pictures inside
the private jet to make it look like they're flying somewhere.

Speaker 1 (27:53):
Well, guys, stop doing that. You'll be better off if
you just stop now. Your book comes out May six
got in is there any place particular you want to
direct them to?

Speaker 2 (28:06):
They can get it on Jason. They can also get
it on Joyprescriptions dot com. And because pre orders are
so important, we have over three hundred dollars worth of
bonuses that they get if they get the book before
May sixth.

Speaker 1 (28:19):
Well, congratulations, I'm so happy for you. I'm glad that
I finally got to meet you virtually.

Speaker 2 (28:25):
No, I'm going to come visit you one of these days.

Speaker 1 (28:28):
Yes, absolutely, come on out. Love to meet you, go
to dinner, yes, bring all your bork in. So I'm
just kidding. Anyways, thank you so much and have a
great day. Thank you, Bye bye, Tiffany
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Hosts And Creators

Teddi Mellencamp

Teddi Mellencamp

Tamra Judge

Tamra Judge

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