![markly uncomfortable markly uncomfortable](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/07/bb/68/07bb68b8442dc6680619a226eefc73f3.jpg)
So I tried a different sort of approach of being a bit sarcastic." "But you can’t argue with them because it doesn't get you anywhere – they’re so set in their ways. "You see Trump supporters online and you see Trump and you feel like you know what they’re about but it's something else when you’re literally standing 2 centimetres away from them and they’re shouting in your face about gun control. A visit to a Tea Party rally and a conversation with a group of walking Make America Great Again hats – who tell her that liberalism is "a mental disorder" – leave her a bit shaken. While she says she didn't get high with Tyler Markle at the marijuana expo in California, she did immerse herself in a much less palatable, but no less deniable facet of American life in Meet the Markles: staunch Trumpism. He’s just taking his time – playing hard to get." I know some people who know some people… and I can get my way in, it's gonna happen. " I want to film a documentary about me getting Drake on Chicken Shop Date.
![markly uncomfortable markly uncomfortable](https://www.awedbymonica.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/A15I8871-5995.jpg)
" Honestly, I’m gonna go to Toronto ," she says.
#MARKLY UNCOMFORTABLE SERIES#
She currently has another season of the YouTube series in the works, with rapper Lady Leshurr set to be her first guest ("I want to interview more women") and she is intent on fulfilling her longtime desire to get hip-hop megastar Drake down to a Morley's (other chicken shops are available). So I’ve always been interested in being able to prise something out of someone.” They know that when they watch Chicken Shop Date they’re gonna see their favourite rapper or online personality in a way they’ve never seen them before. “I’ve always thought that, with Chicken Shop Date, I show the different side of the person – that’s why I love doing it, and that’s what gives it its originality and why people watch it. “That’s in no way the real me,” she says of the YouTube alter ego, though, she adds: “there’s obviously parts of myself in it.” The documentary is a fine advertisement for her talents, which extend far beyond what we’ve seen in 3-4 minute long episodes of her online series in which, she says, she exaggerates “quirks of a middle-class white girl.”
![markly uncomfortable markly uncomfortable](https://media.gannett-cdn.com/29906170001/29906170001_5660404275001_5660386218001-vs.jpg)
“The looks that I do, and the awkward silences and the pauses – I think you can say so much with that, and they add so much,” Amelia says. The tricks she employs – uncomfortable silences, forthrightness, deadpan humour – come in handy here too, and she gets Samantha to open up over the Floridian equivalent of fried chicken: deep-fried alligator nuggets. Kudos must go to the presenter here, who is best known for disarming grime stars with awkward banter in her YouTube series Chicken Shop Date. Her appearance gives the narrative an emotional heft, because she just seems like a normal lady who is upset to have fallen foul of her sister. If an invite to the wedding is Amelia's white whale – she asks every family members she meets to hook her up – Samantha, who has sent many vitriolic tweets directly and indirectly addressing her sister and her fiancé, is a big, juicy consolation carp. “I was intrigued to actually go and meet these people in real life instead of just reading these things on Twitter, and find out about Meghan from the people who know her.” “From what we’ve seen in the media in the UK, it’s been quite full-on and distorted,” Amelia says.