Two Voices. No filter. Talking Truth from Italy

Two Voices. No filter. Talking Truth from Italy

Two Voices. No Filter.
Valsts Itālija
Valoda EN
Epizodes 11
Jaunākā 17.07.2026

Georgette, an American, and Valentina, an Italian, have unfiltered conversations about living in Italy, covering both the beautiful and frustrating aspects. They discuss life, culture, and modern womanhood from their base in Florence, offering a realistic view beyond the typical tourist postcard.

Epizodes

  • Relationships: What Actually Keeps People Together 17.07.2026 48min
    While you could dare say that two married people talking about relationships isn't the sexiest premise for an episode, stick with us here. Georgette and Valentina get personal about how they met their partners after painful breakups — and the sixteen (and twelve) years since. Valentina shares how she met Mario after her husband walked out with zero warning, the votive candle that led to her pregnancy three months later, and the "pomodoro technique" she used to survive the heartbreak. Georgette talks about leaving a codependent relationship, meeting her now-husband Nico as a friend first, and why going slow for once actually worked.They get into love languages (Gary Chapman), the different ways they fight (writing vs. talking, silence vs. calm discussion), navigating family backgrounds as different as Naples' Camorra and a Texan-Mexican divorce, and why no relationship, however long, is ever finished being worked on.As usual we welcome your comments and remember this is part of our special summer series. You can follow Two Voices, No Filter on Instagram and leave a review: it helps more people find the show or wherever you listen to the podcast. New episodes every Friday (we will be breaking in August) but back in early September with our weekly rotation. Special thank you to Vivace Media for producing our show And Zoworking, our wonderful studio in Sesto Fiorentino.
  • The Travel Trends Taking Over 2026 (And Why Some People Think You Should Just Stay Home) 10.07.2026 51min
    Are you traveling for real reasons — or just to escape your own life? No shame just curious!This week on Two Voices, No Filter, Georgette and Valentina go through 2026's weirdest travel trends: dead zoning (disconnecting completely, no signal, no Wi-Fi), glow-cations (traveling abroad for cheaper wellness treatments — Turkish teeth, Albanian surgery, Korean skincare), and the rise of "why-cations" — trips built around a personal need instead of a destination.They also get into the uncomfortable question at the center of it all: does travel actually change you, or are we just using it to avoid fixing our lives at home? Is it all too much?Plus: over-tourism in Florence, dark tourism ethics, why AI trip-planning still gets it wrong, and the books that stuck with them longer than the trips themselves.Dive in with them and let them know why travel and if you've felt compelled to discover places in a different way.You can follow them on Instagram, or Substack, Vale's Substack, and special thanks to Vivace Media for producing our show and Zoworking Studio for facilitating this dream.
  • Guilty Pleasures: Nothing Productive About It 03.07.2026 36min
    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 intoThe 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!
  • The Italy Summer Survival Guide (From People Who Actually Live Here) 26.06.2026 47min
    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, 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 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, and Florence's outdoor cinema tradition (ChiaradiLuna 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 in Sesto Fiorentino, and produced by Vivace Media (new name!). New episodes every Friday on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and YouTube (though this week it is audio only!)
  • The Nonni Economy: Who Holds the Money, Who Gets the Keys 19.06.2026 44min
    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 economyWhy 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 onThe "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 itThe 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 ItalyWhy neither host expects a traditional retirement, and what happens to the nonni economy in ten or twenty years when this generation is goneAnd 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. Two Voices, No Filter is produced by Sentire Media (Vivace Media) and recorded at ZOWorking, Sesto Fiorentino.
  • Why We Fall: Cults, Groupthink & the Dark Side of Belonging 12.06.2026 56min
    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 zoneFLDS, 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 itRuby 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 itTwin Flames Universe: the couple-founded "spiritual" program charging money to help people find their soulmate, and what that actually looked like in practiceWhy 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 obeyThe 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 (podcast, Amanda Montell & Iza Medina) · Elisa True Crime (podcast) · Indagini (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 and recorded at ZO Working, Sesto Fiorentino.
  • School's Out: What Nobody Tells You About Education in Italy 05.06.2026 54min
    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!
  • Mental Health and the Silence That Costs Lives 29.05.2026 55min
    Italy has a "non e niente" (it's nothing) problem.You've probably heard it before. Someone tells you they're anxious, burnt out, not sleeping, barely holding it together — and the response is a breezy: non è niente, cut out caffeine, change your diet, MANIFEST. It's nothing. Move on. And the thing is, it's not unique to Italy. But in a country that still routes a lot of emotional processing through the Catholic church, the family unit, and the concept of "bella figura" (presenting yourself well) — the consequences of that cultural architecture of not talking are real. This week, Georgette and Valentina go there. Fully. In an episode that covers postpartum depression, millennial burnout, childhood anxiety, the psychiatric revolution that started in Trieste in 1971, and what it actually looks like to navigate the Italian mental health system — from both an expat and a native Florentine perspective.Let's start with the numbers. In 2024, 845,000 people received specialist mental health care in Italy — but an estimated 2 million who needed it didn't get it. Emergency psychiatric admissions rose to 636,000, up 62,000 from the year before. Italy invests just 3.5% of health resources in mental health, against an EU benchmark of 6%. Women account for 55.9% of those in care, with depression rates nearly double those of men (46.5 cases per 10,000 vs 27). None of these stats exist in a vacuum. That conversation goes to hard places. A trigger warning is given in-episode before Valentina shares the news story that prompted this episode — a 46-year-old mother in Catanzaro who died by suicide alongside her two youngest children, her oldest daughter left fighting for her life. Both hosts have personal connections to postpartum depression. Valentina shares her own experience after her son was born. Georgette reflects on what it felt like to become a new mother in a country not her own, without the extended family support system that Italian culture assumes you have, but that not everyone, especially immigrant women, can access. Finding your village is decidedly harder than it sounds. From there, the episode covers:Why burnout is so easy to miss, and why the moment someone from outside your life names it is often when you finally see itAnne Helen Petersen's concept of errand paralysis and how millennial burnout builds into an inability to do even the simplest tasks. How Valentina's decision to quit smoking opened a Pandora's box that led her to EMDR therapy — and why she's only told her family members about it in the last yearWhy Georgette used the act of staying BUSY and being the helper in the room as a way to avoid her own stuff for yearsThe anxiety statistics that hit hardest: 83% of children and 87% of teenagers in mental health treatment in Tuscany report anxiety as their primary symptomDigital addiction, reported in 68% of children and teenagers in treatmentThe Trieste model — how one psychiatrist's decision to close the asylums in 1971 created a community-based, dignity-first mental health framework that became a worldwide reference point, and why it's now under pressure from budget cutsHow to actually access the public mental health system in Italy (spoiler: start with your GP, or just Google the national association of psychologists)The case for treating therapy like maintenance, not crisis interventionThe episode ends with Cose a Caso — lighter, but connected. Valentina on art therapy and walking without a destination. Georgette on weekly library trips with her daughter and the genuinely therapeutic effect of just chopping vegetables.So while this might be a heavier episode, it's one that we know people need to hear. Just two women who've been through it, talking honestly about what it costs to not ask for help, and what it looks like when you finally do.Resources mentioned or relevant:Salute Mentale (Italian Ministry of Health) — for official national statisticsEuropean Psychiatric Association / IALGA report, October 2025Ordine degli Psicologi della Toscana — 2024 monitoring reportTelefono Amico / Telefono Azzurro — free helplines (Italian) https://azzurro.it/#:~:text=La%20Linea%20di%20Ascolto%201.96,h24%2C%207%20giorni%20su%207.BetterHelp — English-language online therapy (international)The Florentine — English-language list of Florence-based therapists https://www.theflorentine.net/2022/01/28/mental-health-services-florence/American Consulate Florence — list of English-speaking mental health professionals https://it.usembassy.gov/wp-content/uploads/sites/230/2026/01/List-of-Doctors-Jan-2025.pdfChildren's Lending Library, Florence (Via Olaf / near Porta al Prato, St. James American Church basement) — Thursdays and Sunday morningsAnne Helen Petersen on millennial burnout (Substack / Patreon) — recommended reading https://annehelen.substack.com/p/how-millennials-grew-up-and-burned
  • The Italy Stereotypes We're Actually Sick Of 22.05.2026 52min
    We know you've seen it. The tiktok accounts that make STRONG claims about Italian culture or push stereotypes based on films they saw 10 years ago and as people living here it really can be too much. It also means that when people come to visit, they arrive with a script already written and most of it is wrong. NO cappuccini after 11am, pasta and pizza at every meal. While stereotypes can often come from a grain of truth, it can also be harmful for a myriad of reasons. For example seeing the mafia as something to romanticise, the myth that healthcare here is free (it isn't — someone is paying, it just might not be you but it is definitely us), the idea that Italy is cheap (cheap compared to what, and for whom?), and the assumption that Italians are living on pizza and pasta while the rest of the world looks on with envy.There's also something worth saying about double standards. Mocking Italian culture: the food rules, the mamas' boys can be considered harmless banter, even charming. Try applying the same energy to almost any other ethnic group and see how far you get. We also get into the geography problem: Italy being flattened into Rome, Florence, Venice — and why cramming Cinque Terre into a day trip is bad for you, bad for the villages, and honestly just not a good time overall. This is not an episode against loving Italy, because we love it. It's an episode that pushes against lazy takes on a country that deserves better. Due Voci, Nessun Filtro.
  • La Burocrazia: & Purgatory: Two Freelancers Tell the Truth About Italian Red Tape 15.05.2026 52min
    Italy has 57 billion reasons its bureaucracy doesn't change. We know because we live here.It may surprise some, but Italy is the 8th largest economy in the world and ranks 34th out of 43 European countries on ease of doing business. Another fun fact? Italian businesses apparently spend 238 hours a year on tax paperwork alone. Valentina's take: "I feel like that's a modest number."In Episode 9 of Two Voices, No Filter, two freelancers with Partita IVAs, permessi, commercialisti, and TRAUMA go through the full picture: why it's this complex, who it serves, and why every government since the 1990s has tried to fix it and failed. Valentina's voting "tessera elettorale" story involves three different offices, two colleagues who contradicted each other, and a messo comunale she had to chase down the street.Georgette has left the Questura crying many a time. The ATECO code system still does not know what a content strategist is. The SPID app exists and nobody remembers which one they actually go through. It's not all doom and gloom, we laugh, we commiserate and close with "Cose a Caso" and hilarious real reviews of Italian government offices.⏱ Chapters in case you want to skip to the juicy stuff00:00 — Intro & the numbers08:00 — Partita IVA: ATECO codes, regime forfettario, and the commercialista who says no16:00 — The permesso di soggiorno (aka Dante's seventh circle)22:00 — Valentina's tessera elettorale saga28:00 — SPID, PEC, and the apps you forget until it's too late34:00 — Why it never changes — and who benefits42:00 — Digital nomad visa: honest assessment47:00 — Cose a Caso: expat reviews, live reactions53:00 — If Italian bureaucracy were a person…🎙 Hosts Georgette Jupe — Girl in Florence / Friday Notes from Florence https://georgettejupe.substack.com/Valentina Dainelli — Too Much Tuscany https://valentinadainelli.substack.com/?utm_campaign=profile_chips📻 Listen on Spotify · Apple Podcasts · wherever you get your podcastsProduced by Sentire Media - https://www.sentiremedia.com/ Recorded by Zoworking, the coolest coworking spot in Florence https://www.zoworking.com/
  • Weird Italian House Things — And What They Actually Mean 08.05.2026 1h 14min
    Italian home life is one of the most misunderstood things about actually living here and and nobody is going to explain it to you. The cold bathroom, the Sunday lunch you're not sure you're allowed to leave, the windows that open every which way. This episode is the one that explains all of it.This week, Georgette and Valentina use Mario Monicelli's 1992 black comedy Parenti Serpenti as a cultural X-ray, because if you want to understand what Italian family life actually looks and feels like, beneath the linen tablecloths, that film is where to start. What we cover:The weird Italian house things nobody warns you about: the unheated bathroom and why comfort was never the point, the missing toilet seat and the surprisingly circular logic behind it, the tinello versus the sala da pranzo (one is where life happens, one is a promise), the bidet (which are in fill support of), the tapparelle The Italian-English domestic translation problem: the passeggiata as social infrastructure, the hierarchy of coffee, and the three words that explain more about Italian social life than anything else: non si fa.
  • Myths In, Tips Out: What You Should Actually See in Tuscany 03.05.2026 1h 25min
    Tuscany is one of the most documented regions on earth which means everyone has an opinion on it and the "best place to go". Consider this episode a course correction for your itinerary since we are all tired of the same places promoted over and over.This week, Georgette and Valentina take a blowtorch to the "SEO Tourism Complex" — that self-perpetuating cycle of viral reels and recycled listicles that has quietly turned beloved local landmarks into interchangeable tourist traps. We move well past the typical clichés to talk honestly about what happens when the "undiscovered" hill town becomes oversaturated — and which places actually deserve your time and attention.What we cover:The Tuscan spots we genuinely love — Certaldo, Mugello, Lunigiana, Gambassi Terme, and the Val d'Elsa in general as well as pretty Marradi. We talk about the Sagra delle Ciliegie di Lari (running May 30–31 and June 1–2 and 6–7, 2026 — don't sleep on it), the Cambio project in Castelfiorentino, which is doing something genuinely interesting by bringing culture, art, theater, and good food — via the restaurant Corale — to the surrounding area. And Pitigliano, built dramatically into volcanic tuff cliffs, with its layered history and the flower festival Infiorata celebrating the Corpus Domini every June. Wine and Villas we Love — Chianti is great. It is not the only place to go. Valentina makes a case for the Colline Lucchesi DOP near Lucca (and specifically recommends Villa Reale di Marlia as a place worth visiting — note it has extraordinary closures May 18 to June 13, so plan accordingly), Tenuta Mensanello in Colle di Val d'Elsa, and the superb natural wine haven of Enoteca Marilù in San Miniato Alto.Florence - We love it, we get annoyed by it but we will tell you all of the things, places, special openings for art, that are genuinely worth your time, both Valentina and Georgette share our top picks!Cose a Caso our segment where we talk random things — this week we read the most unhinged one-star TripAdvisor reviews of Italian monuments, including the person who said this about the Ponte Vecchio "A bridge full of gold shops. Genuinely unclear why this is famous "Enjoy and please share with anyone you know visiting Tuscany in the near future!
  • Do Italians Need New Friends? Debunking Friendship and Why It's so Damn Hard 24.04.2026 51min
    Everyone who has lived in Italy knows the feeling: the coffee is great, the conoscenti (acquaintances) are plenty — and yet after two years, you're still waiting for that dinner invite to the inner circle.In this episode, Georgette and Valentina unpack why Italian friendship isn't a personality flaw but a structural system, built in childhood, consolidated for life, and not exactly designed with arrivals in mind.They get into the "conoscente" ceiling, the loneliness tax of moving somewhere that doesn't know your backstory, and what it actually costs Italy when its social architecture is too rigid to let people in.Let's go!
  • The Good Mother Myth: Italy's Motherhood Ideal and What It Costs Women 17.04.2026 1h 4min
    The Italian mamma is one of the most recognisable images in the world. Warm, self-sacrificing, the center of everything really. But who decided that — and what does it ask women to give up?In today's episode, Georgette and Valentina get into the beautiful and the suffocating: the genuine intergenerational closeness Italy gets right, and the structural reality underneath it — wage penalties, invisible labour, and a career system that still treats motherhood as a private problem. One of them grew up inside this culture. The other watched it from the outside but both are parents who have a lot to say on this topic. Honest, occasionally awkward, and ending with a tally you'll want to take home and try yourself!
  • When Your Tuscan Life Becomes Content: Drawing Boundaries 10.04.2026 48min
    When does sharing your life become performing it? In this episode, Georgette and Valentina get specific about what it actually costs to build something public in a city the size of Florence — where the bar you photograph is the bar you drink at, and neighbours know who you are before you've met them. Drawing on Sasha's Substack smoke a vogue and a Vogue Business deep-dive into the era of radical honesty, they talk through what they protect, what they've given up, and why vulnerability as a strategy is a very different thing from vulnerability as a reality. No neat answers. Just an honest conversation about where the line is.
  • The Influencer Reckoning: Chiara Ferragni & the Wild West of Content 03.04.2026 54min
    The court said she wasn't a criminal. The audience had already decided she wasn't trustworthy. Which verdict cost more? We're talking about Italy's most famous influencer and the wild west of content creation as a whole. Georgette and Valentina go through the full Ferragni timeline,-- the pandoro, the apology that backfired, the empire that nearly collapsed — and get into the disclosure and claims rules that most creators don't know or pretend not to know.
  • Florence Is So Beautiful. But Why Does It Also Feel So Hard 27.03.2026 52min
    Florence is one of the most beautiful cities in the world and it's not necessarily the easiest place to live in full time as a resident either. In this episode, Georgette and Valentina get honest about what the numbers reveal and what they've lived firsthand: soaring rents, disappearing neighbors, artisan shops replaced, and a generation of young Florentines packing their bags.We look at some real data—housing costs, Airbnb saturation, tourist footfall, the wages-vs-rent gap — and then we get personal. What does it feel like to love a city that seems to be pricing out the people who made it worth loving in the first place?But this isn't a rant. We also talk about what's actually working: the communities holding the line, the policy experiments worth watching, and the people who found a way to stay without selling out.If you've ever felt the tension between Florence's beauty and its contradictions — this one's for you
  • An American, an Italian, and the Conversations We Keep Having 20.03.2026 37min
    Two women. One bed in Sansepolcro on a blog tour. That might have been an awkward way to kick off a friendship but in this pilot episode of Two Voices: No Filter, Georgette and Valentina introduce themselves properly — their backgrounds in media and content, why they're in Florence, and why they got tired enough of the filtered version of everything in Italy to finally start talking on record. Pull up a chair and join the fun!