Two Voices. No filter. Talking Truth from Italy

Guilty Pleasures: Nothing Productive About It

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Summer Series: The Real "Guilty Pleasures" (No BS Included) We’re diving into our summer series with a massive dose of honesty, because let’s be real, we all need a break from pretending we love meditation (kidding). This week, we’re exposing our actual, unfiltered guilty pleasures. Here is what we’re diving into * The Italian TikTok Drama Rabbit Hole: Valentina breaks down the wild, endemic Southern Italian fights taking over her feed (yes, we are talking about the infamous "pink artisan" Ozempic ER scam). * Trashy TV vs. True Crime: Why Valentina cleans her kitchen to old people fighting for love on Uomini e Donne (Trono Over is the only one that matters, let's be real) and why Georgette is utterly obsessed with the diabolical web of the Scamanda podcast. * The Guilt-Free Escapism: Why we need to stop treating reading list titles like celebrity name-dropping, why it's a total pleasure to just say "I don't know" instead of having an opinion on everything, and the books we genuinely can't put down. RESOURCES MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: Podcast: Scamanda (The mind-blowing story of Amanda Riley), https://shows.acast.com/scamandaTV Show: Uomini e Donne (The iconic Italian dating show by Maria De Filippi) Books: Strangers by Belle Burden (The unputdownable memoir about surviving a calculated, diabolical ex and the sudden demise of a marriage, Yesteryear, the book everyone is talking about in the Trad Wife world and Kate Hash "Gracie Harris is Under Construction" https://www.kate-hash.com/books-by-kate-hash and her newest book "The Mother-in-Law Book Club". 💬 JOIN THE CONVERSATION:What is your ultimate, unglamorous guilty pleasure? Trash TV? Blind scrolling? Let us know in the comments below! Don't forget to LIKE, SHARE, and SUBSCRIBE to Two Voices No Filter before we head out on our August break! * ⚠️ VERY IMPORTANT NOTE: We love you, but we love a proper rest more. We will be completely breaking for the month of August to escape the Florentine heat, touch some grass, and actually recharge. No episodes, no filters, just vibes until we see you back here in September!

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jakson Guilty Pleasures: Nothing Productive About It kansikuva

Guilty Pleasures: Nothing Productive About It

Summer Series: The Real "Guilty Pleasures" (No BS Included) We’re diving into our summer series with a massive dose of honesty, because let’s be real, we all need a break from pretending we love meditation (kidding). This week, we’re exposing our actual, unfiltered guilty pleasures. Here is what we’re diving into * The Italian TikTok Drama Rabbit Hole: Valentina breaks down the wild, endemic Southern Italian fights taking over her feed (yes, we are talking about the infamous "pink artisan" Ozempic ER scam). * Trashy TV vs. True Crime: Why Valentina cleans her kitchen to old people fighting for love on Uomini e Donne (Trono Over is the only one that matters, let's be real) and why Georgette is utterly obsessed with the diabolical web of the Scamanda podcast. * The Guilt-Free Escapism: Why we need to stop treating reading list titles like celebrity name-dropping, why it's a total pleasure to just say "I don't know" instead of having an opinion on everything, and the books we genuinely can't put down. RESOURCES MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: Podcast: Scamanda (The mind-blowing story of Amanda Riley), https://shows.acast.com/scamandaTV Show: Uomini e Donne (The iconic Italian dating show by Maria De Filippi) Books: Strangers by Belle Burden (The unputdownable memoir about surviving a calculated, diabolical ex and the sudden demise of a marriage, Yesteryear, the book everyone is talking about in the Trad Wife world and Kate Hash "Gracie Harris is Under Construction" https://www.kate-hash.com/books-by-kate-hash and her newest book "The Mother-in-Law Book Club". 💬 JOIN THE CONVERSATION:What is your ultimate, unglamorous guilty pleasure? Trash TV? Blind scrolling? Let us know in the comments below! Don't forget to LIKE, SHARE, and SUBSCRIBE to Two Voices No Filter before we head out on our August break! * ⚠️ VERY IMPORTANT NOTE: We love you, but we love a proper rest more. We will be completely breaking for the month of August to escape the Florentine heat, touch some grass, and actually recharge. No episodes, no filters, just vibes until we see you back here in September!

Eilen36 min
jakson The Italy Summer Survival Guide (From People Who Actually Live Here) kansikuva

The Italy Summer Survival Guide (From People Who Actually Live Here)

For those of us in Florence, we are all hiding in our respect cave like offices and homes from what is a very very hot June. So how do we deal with summer? Let's get into it! The city is currently sitting under Italy's maximum heat alert, bollino rosso, alongside Rome, Turin, Bologna and Brescia as the health ministry escalated heatwave warnings to the highest level for those cities as intense, early‑season heat spreads across the country. The culprit is an African anticyclone meteorologists have nicknamed "Cerberus," which is producing temperatures with little variation between day and night, with nights offering little respite as minimum temperatures fail to drop below 24-25°C in many areas. Meteorologists warn this spell of anomalous heat could potentially rival the extreme summer of 2003, with conditions not expected to ease significantly until early July, and it's part of a wider pattern [https://www.travelandtourworld.com/news/article/6yw6fc2g5pnu/], with red alerts also in place across the UK, France and Spain as a fresh bout of extreme heat pushed temperatures beyond 40°C this week. Georgette and Valentina kick off one of the lighter, summer-adaptable episodes promised ahead of Season Two — and the conversation opens with a blast from the recent weather past (we recorded this in May) an overnight swing from coat weather to coat-and-flip-flops weather, and what that whiplash says about how unpredictable Tuscan seasons have become. From there, it's a full breakdown of how to actually survive, and enjoy, an Italian summer, dolce vita fantasy not included. In this episode: — Dressing for Italy vs. dressing for Instagram: why "main character energy" linen and lemon-print dresses don't survive a sticky Florence city bus (don't do it!), the case for comfort over costume, and a defense of getting pooped on by a bird. — The summer mental shift: how the city's rhythm changes once spritz season starts ("summer water," not alcohol, obviously), why outdoor evenings become mandatory, and the actual survival kit: light less synthetic fabric, So much water, a fan, sunscreen, and a hard no to booking anything between 12pm and 6pm — Vacation, the Italian way: roughly 31 paid days off a year, why three weeks at the seaside hits differently than two, the French right-to-disconnect law both hosts have unofficially adopted, and the gap between how Europeans and Americans actually turn work off — A day at the seaside: Valentina's real itinerary for a family beach day near Piombino: alarm at 7am, beach by 9, home by 4 for a shower and a nap... plus a crash course in free beach vs. paid bagno economics, and why Italians get surprisingly strict about beach parking in July — Card game culture: Scopa, Scala 40, and the steep learning curve of Burraco (best learned over a four-hour lunch with someone's 83-year-old aunt) — Ferragosto, properly explained: the Roman emperor it's named after, the agricultural reason it landed in mid-August, the 6th-century Catholic layer laid on top (the Assumption of Mary), and the Mussolini-era train tickets and Fiat factory shutdown that gave it its modern shape — with the obligatory disclaimer that no one here is a Mussolini fan — What Ferragosto actually looks like: the grigliata, the watermelon tradition, the supermarket panic the week before, and why anyone visiting Florence around August 15th should expect a city running on chiuso per ferie — How to actually survive the heat in the city: free water fountains (Piazza della Signoria is your friend), the wet-bandana trick, which parks and pools are worth it (Boschetto, Villa Vogel, Anconella, Cascine's Pavoniere, Bellariva, plus day-trip pools in Chianti [https://www.virtusbuonconvento.it/greve-in-chianti.html]and Mugello), and the exact window-and-shutter schedule Italians use to keep an apartment livable without air conditioning running all day (spoiler alert this only works when it is consistently not 40 degrees plus every day). — Secret spots and open-air culture: Bilancino Lake at sunset, Fiesole's open-air amphitheater festivals, Estate Fiorentina, [https://estatefiorentina.it/] and Florence's outdoor cinema tradition (ChiaradiLuna [https://chiardilunafirenze.cinemachiardiluna.it/] included) — Instead of cose a caso this week, Georgette and Valentina read real comments from you guys! Thank you Eileen (drawing a parallel between Florence and her own tourist town in Bend, Oregon), longtime supporter Jane Buzzard, The Redhead Vids, a Latin pun from SJ on carpe diem, and a kind note from Joe Andros to name a few. Keep those comments coming! Find Two Voices, No Filter — Two Voices, No Filter is hosted by Georgette Jupe (Girl in Florence) and Valentina Dainelli (Too Much Tuscany), recorded at ZOWorking [https://zoworking.com/] in Sesto Fiorentino, and produced by Vivace Media [sentiremedia.com] (new name!). New episodes every Friday on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and YouTube (though this week it is audio only!)

26. kesä 202647 min
jakson The Nonni Economy: Who Holds the Money, Who Gets the Keys kansikuva

The Nonni Economy: Who Holds the Money, Who Gets the Keys

Here's a question that sounds sentimental but isn't really aimed to be: do you have nonni (grandparents)? In Italy, whether you have living grandparents who own property, hold a pension, and are willing to share it is one of the most structurally determinative facts of your adult life, it many times can decide whether you own a home, whether you can afford children or childcare. In this episode, Georgette and Valentina map the Nonni Economy: how Italy's welfare state has at times been outsourced to grandparents, and what that means for everyone who doesn't have access to that private safety net. They cover: * How a generation that survived the war and, in Valentina's family's case, the 1966 Florence flood, built a culture of extreme frugality — and how nonni earned and saved money outside the formal economy * Why roughly 85% of Italians neither rent nor carry a mortgage, and the flip side of that: inheritance disputes, siblings who stop speaking over property, and the feeling that "that is due to me" * What it's like to parent without nonni nearby, on both sides — Georgette as an American expat, and Italians who didn't inherit a second property or extra space to fall back on * The "nonnamaxxing" trend, Blue Zones, and why you can copy the lifestyle but not the forty years of paid-off houses and inflation-indexed pensions behind it * The story of Giorgio Angelozzi, the 80-year-old who offered money to any family who'd adopt him as a grandfather — and what it says about elderly loneliness in Italy * Why neither host expects a traditional retirement, and what happens to the nonni economy in ten or twenty years when this generation is gone * And in Cose a Caso finale section: both hosts answer what their grandparents concretely gave them: Georgette lands on resilience, Valentina on a house and a lesson in dignity. Episode inspired by and crediting Elizabeth Petrosian's 2012 essay "The Nonni Economy" for Letters from Florence. [https://lettersfromflorence.blogspot.com/2012/02/nonni-economy.html] Two Voices, No Filter is produced by Sentire Media (Vivace Media) and recorded at ZOWorking, Sesto Fiorentino.

19. kesä 202644 min
jakson Why We Fall: Cults, Groupthink & the Dark Side of Belonging kansikuva

Why We Fall: Cults, Groupthink & the Dark Side of Belonging

Both Valentina and I have always been drawn to shows about cults or groups that mask as a community but hide something a little more dubious. And it's worth nothing that most people don't aim to join a cult. What they are really serching for is a community. To find a sense of purpose, a leader who seems to have answers, a group that finally gets them. In this episode, we get into what actually draws people into cults and groupthink, and why the human need to belong is both beautiful and exploitable. We cover: * The difference between a cult and something "cult-adjacent": and why shows like TLC's Sister Wives sit in that uncomfortable grey zone * FLDS, Warren Jeffs, and what happens to a movement when its leader goes to prison (spoiler: it doesn't stop, it just finds a new prophet(s) * Bill Gothard and the Institute in Basic Life Principles (IBLP) — the belief system behind The Duggars, and what happens to kids raised inside it * Ruby Franke and Judy Hildebrand: how a Mormon momfluencer and a self-styled therapist built a closed loop of control, public normalisation of abuse, and a following that defended it * Twin Flames Universe: the couple-founded "spiritual" program charging money to help people find their soulmate, and what that actually looked like in practice * Why cults almost always position women as secondary, and whether you can name a single cult founded by a woman where the men were the ones expected to obey * The role of shame, isolation, and lifelong conditioning in making it nearly impossible for people born into these environments to leave. Mentioned in this episode: Sounds Like a Cult [https://podcasts.apple.com/it/podcast/sounds-like-a-cult/id1566917047?l=en-GB] (podcast, Amanda Montell & Iza Medina) · Elisa True Crime [https://podcasts.apple.com/it/podcast/elisa-true-crime/id1628126740?l=en-GB] (podcast) · Indagini [https://podcasts.apple.com/it/podcast/indagini/id1616476688?l=en-GB] https://podcasts.apple.com/it/podcast/indagini/id1616476688?l=en-GB(podcast) · Sister Wives (TLC) · Trust Me: The False Prophet (Netflix) · Evil Influencer (documentary) · Escaping Twin Flames (Netflix) · The Worst Ex Ever (Netflix) · 90 Day Fiancé (TLC) Two Voices, No Filter is produced by Sentire Media [https://www.sentiremedia.com/] and recorded at ZO Working [https://zoworking.com/], Sesto Fiorentino.

12. kesä 202656 min
jakson School's Out: What Nobody Tells You About Education in Italy kansikuva

School's Out: What Nobody Tells You About Education in Italy

Every family arriving in Italy often asks the same question: which school? Public or private? Liceo (classic high school) or technical? And to be fair, the answer is never simple — and navigating it can be overwhelming for the best of us because we all want the best for our kids and it all feels so high stakes. In this episode, Georgette and Valentina do a full breakdown of how the Italian school system actually works, from nido (nursery) to maturità (getting your high school diploma), including the bits that nobody warns you about: the brutal homework jump between primary and scuola media, the persistent stigma around vocational education, why Valentina has been a class representative since Eduardo was two years old, and why the WhatsApp group chat for school parents is, in Georgette's words, what Dante had in mind when he penned the Inferno. They also get into what the OECD data actually says about Italian student performance (spoiler: better than the reputation on some things, worse on others), why eight-year-olds are already using AI to summarise books, what Georgette's dad handing out American flag stickers at school has to do with Italian education reform, and whether being a philosopher might be the most AI-proof job of the future. A great listen whether you're raising a child here, working inside the system, or just trying to understand why your Italian colleague still brings up their maturità grade from 2003!

5. kesä 202654 min