Can't Quit Those Big Tits (2025-2027)

You don't have to quit the big lifestyle to be a good person. You don't have to cancel HBO Max and live in a yurt to prove you have your priorities straight.

So, go ahead. Binge the show. Scroll the vacation vlog. Buy the expensive candle (just this once). The big lifestyle and entertainment industry isn't going anywhere—and honestly? Neither are we. can't quit those big tits

We can’t quit these shows because they validate our own chaos while aestheticizing it. It tells us, “Your life is a mess, but imagine how chic that mess would be with a marble countertop.” In 2024, having "no money" is not a flex. But having "good taste" is. We stay tethered to the big lifestyle because it gives us cultural currency. We watch the three-hour director’s cut so we can have an opinion on Twitter. We keep up with the fashion week drama so we feel relevant. You don't have to quit the big lifestyle to be a good person

The truth stings a little:

When you watch a “What I eat in a day” video from a celebrity chef, you aren't calculating the calories; you are dreaming of the lifestyle. It is a two-minute vacation from your spreadsheet. Until we can actually afford to fly first class, we will never quit watching those who do. Entertainment has gotten smarter. We are no longer just watching successful people; we are watching complicated people with beautiful things. Shows like Succession , The White Lotus , or even Bridgerton have taught us that angst looks a lot better when you are wearing a cashmere robe in a penthouse. Binge the show

We tell ourselves we want the minimalist life. We want the capsule wardrobe, the 10-step skincare routine that only uses three ingredients, and the silent retreat in the woods. But if that is truly what we want, why is my cart still full of vintage home decor? Why are my watch histories never-ending? Why do I keep planning extravagant dinner parties?

The Guilty Pleasure Paradox: Why We Can’t Quit Big Lifestyle & Entertainment