Georgia
👤 PersonPodcast Appearances
Everyone characterized her as a European top model, which because we lived with her, we knew that she was struggling and that was really not the case. Both of us were like, absolutely no.
We all just thought she must have been one of the party girls that were kind of hired to be at this house. And she was very fortunate that she managed to get a picture with him.
She seemed very innocent at the beginning.
She spoke very softly and she had a very angel-like face. She didn't drink. She would never go out. So I think she kept this aura of being very down-to-earth and innocent.
So she was getting a lot of catalogs and not a lot of high fashion, well-paying jobs. She wouldn't have as many castings, apparently, as the other girls.
What she told me was that she was very young, living in a favela in Rio, and she was very beautiful. And a man who was a lot older saw her in the favela and fell in love with her, and her family agreed. to give her away to this man and said that she ended up marrying him. And they moved to a very big house in Rio where she spent three or four years of her life living with him.
She was a victim of domestic violence with him. And one day she decided that she needed to run away. So she didn't tell her family and she went to a Model A agency, managed to get a contract to Milan and she left only with the clothes in her body and she left all this very wealthy life behind and that was how she ended up in Milan.
And she used to say that he adopted her like a daughter. So this was something that I found strange because it's like you have this guy that treats you like a father and sends you money when you need.
So I think now that this guy might have been her sugar daddy and he was helping sustain her lifestyle. I don't think she was doing prostitution, you know, but I think she had this weird relationship with these men.
And so me and her roommate, we instantly messaged and we were like, do you think that's a possibility?
Hi, Georgia. Hi, David. What do you think the world needs more of?
Yeah.
Hi, David. What do you think the world needs more of?
Yeah.
Hi, Georgia. Hi, David. What do you think the world needs more of?
What do you think the world needs more of?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Hi, Georgia. Hi, David. What do you think the world needs more of?
Yeah.
Hi, David. What do you think the world needs more of?
Yeah.
Oh, I'm excited. I think Jimmy's about to whoop some butt. Okay, that's not good.
Trevor here, would you like the microphone? Angel to mock up for you. Sure. Please. I think Jimmy's about to do great. Bam ain't going to do anything. I hope Steph comes out and plays. I'm sorry, Heat, but Jimmy's about to give y'all some whooping. All right.
Yeah, hi, what's your name? My name is Georgia.
Uh-huh. Okay.
Let me see what I can do.
Yes, it's Mother's Day, though. I realize we have a thousand reservations.
Hi, my angel. My name is Georgia. My query, quandering, thought, you know, thing is I'm in my 20s. I'm 26, almost 27. And the thing that comes to mind a lot is that I'm really dreading becoming irrelevant. I'm actually super excited to age and go into my 30s. And like, that feels like a big gift, especially with so much shit going on in the world, just to age.
But it seems like women from 40 to 65 are considered irrelevant in society. How do we integrate them into our world? I'd love to hang out with some 40-year-old women. Like, they actually seem really cool. They just seem overlooked. I'm not excited for that part of my life. I'd love to, I don't know, make it more fun or not irrelevant. Okay. I love you guys. That's all. Peace out.