I saw an interview with Lucky and he said on the other side of her calm and beautiful cooking videos, what we don’t see is complete chaos, counters full of cooking stuff. And he said he’s usually the one that cleans up all the mess after she films (I’m sure he was exaggerating that part, he laughed when he said it).Anonymous wrote:Her account makes millions a year. Take it for what it is. It’s not about real life; it’s a lifestyle illusion. Of course we don’t see the kids or the mess or the clock. The whole vibe is aesthetic homemaker meets fashionista perfection, not reality. It’s stylized storytelling.
She has said she doesn’t consider herself Mormon and that she did not get married in the Mormon church.Anonymous wrote:She and Lucky are Mormons. This is Mormon TikTok for that audience the homesteading, multiple babies by 25 is nothing out of the ordinary.
Anonymous wrote:Never heard of her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She and Lucky are Mormons. This is Mormon TikTok for that audience the homesteading, multiple babies by 25 is nothing out of the ordinary.
This. They're wealthy people cosplaying the homesteading lifestyle to make an income, just like Ballerina Farm.
Anonymous wrote:She and Lucky are Mormons. This is Mormon TikTok for that audience the homesteading, multiple babies by 25 is nothing out of the ordinary.
Anonymous wrote:I am not triggered and I don't get the MAGA angle. But I do find her ludicrous and so outside the realm of human reality that it took several people to convince me that the whole schtick was not intended as satire.
It's just bizarre. I think it's strange that people are inspired by her because what she does is silly, but I watched one too many backyard-chicken-coop-homesteader reels on Instagram and started getting "the moon isn't real" reels in my FYP, so I know that there's a lot of bizarre corners on the internet.