Bama Rush (2023)

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Bama Rush (2023)

Post by bunniefuu »

[ Chanting in distance ]

Delta is the one for me!

[ Chanting ]

So I just have a couple

of thoughts regarding

this supposed HBO Max

documentary on Bama Rush.

Okay, you guys, we have

more tea coming through about,

is someone filming

Rush this year?

I have gotten a couple

of reports...

They haven't went up

against this college yet,

and I'm telling you,

you don't want to

go up against

the University of Alabama.

Not to be dramatic,

but this HBO special

could be the end of Greek life

as we know it.



[ Chanting in distance ]



[ Chanting ]

[ Overlapping chanting ]

- Hey, y'all.

- Hey, y'all.

Hey, welcome to day one

of Rush week.



We're getting ready to rush.

Like, look at the people

already starting to line up.



[ Screams ]



Love it!



Is anybody else way too old

and has too many kids

to be this invested in

Bama Rush TikTok?

Like, if Katie

does not get the Delta Zeta bid,

she is going to be devastated.

I've never smoked crystal meth,

but this is how I would imagine

one would feel on

a 72-hour crystal meth binge.

This is officially

becoming a problem.

This is me, two days after

watching Bama Rush Tok.

[ Chanting ]

Bama Rush sisterhood

day one OOTD.

Jewelry is from

Vivienne Westwood, Tiffany.

You know the vibes.

Blouse is from...

We did it. We did it, Joe.

I have been picking my outfits

since January. January.

And my shoes are Dolce Vita.

- These earrings from...

- Amazon.

[ Screams ]

I think I'm gonna be

different than everyone else.

Wish us luck. Roll Tide.

I'm gonna ask for y'all to

pray for me.



[ Crowd cheering ]



[ Screaming ]



They are doing the Lord's work.

I'm losing it!

Roll Tide.

[ Women breathing hard ]



[ Haunting music playing ]

Hi!

[ Muffled cheering ]







Got my little finger on it,

and I think

it's my acceptance thing,

but I don't really know...

Or acceptance or decline

or whatever it is.

[ Exhales deeply ]

Really scared.

I'm shaking really bad.

[ Paper tears ]

[ Gasps ]

[ Crying ]

Pretty emotional day

there when we got that, so...

[ Laughs ]

- Oh!

- Oh, my gosh!

[ Screams ]

[ Chuckles ]

Stops here.

Oh.

Those are all

my Alabama T-shirts,

so the obsession is real.

Gotta love it.

I've had these since, some of

them, like, freshman year.

I'm not even 100%

sure how she found it,

but once she found it,

she was in 100%.

She knew it's where

she wanted to be.

She's our first person

in the family

to do a full four-year college,

so excited for her

for that, too.

I can tell a million people

that I'll be going

to the University of Alabama,

and they'll be like,

"You're totally meant

to go there.

She's so bubbly

and outgoing, like,

she definitely needs to be

in a sorority."

Alabama hair ties.

Three people,

three different people

decided to give me these

for Christmas, 'cause they know.



Probably the part of my life

that I am most proud of

is my adoption story.

So I was adopted

at four days old,

and I started

a nonprofit organization

called Fostering Hope

where I help foster children

and foster families

in the state of Illinois,

and that's something

that I'm super proud of,

but that's just

a little bit about me.



Let's be honest,

I probably would not be going

to the University of Alabama

if it did not blow up on TikTok.

Just because I saw it so much,

so I looked into the school.

Being in a sorority

will kind of help me figure out

who I want to be,

help me be surrounded by people

that will always have my back,

no matter what.

I've always needed a thing

to be a part of, like,

as part of my identity.

It's been really hard

for me to find, like,

a sense of, like, you know,

self-worth

or, like, pride in something

because I feel like

I don't really know

who I am, you know?



[ Music playing from phone ]

Not like this.

I remember doing a tequila shot

with this DILF.

You had a f*ckin' hard hat on.

- Ally?

- Yes?

I'm so sorry for

whatever I did last night.

- You actually weren't that bad.

- Was I not?

Okay, I actually

want to be president.

So I'm gonna, like,

work my way up

in the governmental system.

I think I'm gonna be, like,

a governmental lawyer,

like, something on that track.

I'm not, like, 100% sure

what I do to get there yet.

Can you tell us how many jobs

you're working right now?

I work at a nutrition shop,

so, like, Herbalife,

and then I also work

at a tanning salon.

Oh, my therapist also called me

a workaholic.

I was like, "Whatever, girl.

At least I work."

"Hayley..."

or for like, Miss USA,

if I, like, won Miss Alabama,

I'd be like, "Hayley Holliday,

Miss Alabama."

I did pageants

like at 18 months old.

Walking on the stage is the best

feeling in the whole wide world.

I get a high off of winning.

[ Chanting in background ]

We're walking to our retreat.

Oh, my gosh.

Look at our retreat.

I got into my sorority.

Like, I was living the dream.

This was, like,

everything I've ever wanted.

Like, I was, like, in the

sorority with my, like, sisters

and I had friends,

and then I wore

the wrong sorority sticker

and got dropped. [ Chuckles ]



- For wearing a sticker?

- Yes.

For wearing

another sorority sticker.



Like, I would rather a guy

tell me that I was ugly

than get dropped by a sorority.

[ Laughing ] I was so humbled.

I thought those people

were my very best friends.

Like, this was my home,

this was where I belonged.

And it does scare me going into,

like, next year's Rush.



- Oh.

- 'Sup?

Oh, probably 9:30

would be better.

What time are we waking up?

- Huh?

- I don't know.

I've actually been going to

class this week.

I'm actually in a really good

mood today.

Very rare for me.

I feel like I didn't rush

freshman year

because I need

to find my place here.

When I first moved here, like,

it was just all, like, too much.

But I do regret not rushing.

I did feel really left out.

When did you know you wanted

to be in criminal justice?

Well

when I was in high school,

I really wanted to be a coroner.

[ Laughing ]

I was very weird.

I got interested

in criminal justice

'cause my dad

was a police officer.

I was 13

when my dad passed away,

so I was in seventh grade.



Yeah.

He would be glad I'm here,

but I don't know about rushing.

He has always wanted to keep me

in a little bubble

and protect me.



Sororities really started along

with co-education.

In 1883, a professor at Harvard

wrote a book called

"Sex in Education."

The basis of his argument

is that if women studied,

then the blood would go to their

brains and not their ovaries,

and that they would shrivel up

and... and the women would die.



Imagine it's in this environment

that these women

are going to college,

and in the face of that,

they're coming together

to form these early sororities.

The emphasis was very much

on showing that women

could succeed

in higher education.

They were feminists in many ways

before that was a word.



And into the early 1910s,

more and more women

are coming to campus.

The first generation has proven

that they're successful.

In the second generation,

the sororities become

more focused on parties,

on socializing,

and on showing that they are

the best representatives

of true womanhood on campus.

The whole notion of Rush came

because they were rushing

to show themselves

as the best sororities on campus

to attract the best members.

They would meet the trains

that the new students

were taking to get to campus,

literally whisking them off

and trying to woo and win over

the best members

of the new class.



So this is my Rush binder,

because I have OCD,

so it's just going to be

organized by each sorority,

with each recruitment letter,

and then I'm probably

gonna have a mock-up

of my recruitment letter of

how I'll send it out

to each person in here as well.

I'm definitely going to do

Google slides of my outfits,

and I'm gonna have them

pre-planned and packed

in a separate bag,

so that way, if I still need

to unpack some stuff

after my parents leave

or while I'm rushing,

like, at night time,

I can unpack that,

but I want to have all

my Rush stuff ready to go.

When did you know you wanted

to be in a sorority at Alabama?

Yes, so I started watching

Gracie O'Connor,

who's on YouTube.

It made me want

to go there even more.

She was like,

so adorable and fun,

and I was like,

that looks like so much fun

and I want that.

Here it is. It's my final look.

Got this super cute

tassel earrings,

bracelets, and the necklace.

When Bama Rush Tok blew up,

you know, I had plenty

of people commenting,

"Don't forget the OG,

Gracie O'Connor."

And I'm like, me?



At the University of Alabama,

Rush consists of four

highly competitive rounds

that give sororities

and potential new members

the chance to make

the best possible impression

on one another.

And during these rounds,

the sororities vote

on their top PNMs,

and the PNMs vote

on their top sororities.

They're trying to find

the perfect match.

[ Indistinct conversations ]

Basically what happens

is there's multiple girls

that gets to talk to one PNM.

That amount of girls

will get to vote on her.

If she gets high enough votes

or if we like her,

then she'll come back.

Over the course of the week,

the girls return to

fewer and fewer sororities,

whether they were dropped

or chose to drop

certain sororities

along the way.

Active members are

looking for girls

that we can see futures in

and that are going to, like,

literally uphold our chapter

and make us better

in all aspects,

whether that be grades or, like,

how we present ourselves

to the universe.

If you're not meeting

a certain criteria,

you'll kind of just be dropped.

After the final round,

PNMs choose their top sorority

and the sororities select

their new pledge class.

It comes down to, like,

crunch time, and no one wants

to make any decisions

on anybody's girl,

but someone has to.

And so we're just, like,

crying through the process.

Like, it's never easy.

That part sucks.

[ Crying ]

It's way more dramatic

than you're thinking it is.

[ Laughing ] Like, it's way...

And I'm not going to tell you

how hard it is.

I'm so sorry. I can't.

This all leads up to Bid Day.

The PNMs meet at

Bryant-Denny Stadium

and open envelopes containing

the name of the sorority

that they've been

invited to join,

and hopefully,

it's their top choice.

After the PNMs

open their invitations,

they run back

to their forever home

with the new sisters

in their pledge class.



Rush has gotten so competitive

over the past decade

that I really saw a need

for our services

and what we do to help

prepare girls to go through Rush

and hopefully get them

into the house of their dreams.

I remember when we were going

through recruitment at Georgia,

we would all be looking

at what Alabama was doing.

Yeah, they're just

the trend setters.

And I think that's why so many

out-of-state girls

decide to go to the

University of Alabama and Rush.

It's just this beast,

because Greek life is

everything at Alabama.

The University of Alabama

is the top sorority recruitment

in all of the country,

and it's a huge school

with tons of money

rolling into it

for their football program.

The girls are, like,

glammed to the gods.

It sucks you in.

Rush at

the University of Alabama

traditionally

has kind of a bad rap.

It's kind of

a cutthroat process.

It's just uniquely,

uniquely Alabama,

which doesn't really make

much sense, but...

[ Chuckles ]

I'm still holding out

that we're gonna be able

to get into those houses.

What do you think?

Oh. Probably not.

Getting inside those houses

is like, absolutely not.

They're very protective of it,

and rightfully so,

because of the misconceptions

that people want to expose,

like, these sorority secrets.



Hey, who are you filming for?

Okay, ma'am, I'm going to have

to ask you to, like, leave.



Tell me more about what you hope

to get out of

being in a sorority?

I've had a really hard time

finding someone

that can love me no matter what.

I have, like, my friends

from school who love

the, like, crazy fun,

sneaking into school at midnight

and jumping in the pool

kind of girl.

And then there's my family,

who loves the sweet and caring

and, you know,

really involved person.

And I feel like no one knows

me fully and loves me fully,

and I feel like

that's really something

I want with these girls.















[ Laughing ]

You know what? Let's just go.

[ Vocalizing to self ]

[ Over phone ] Weird?

Why you being weird to me?

[ Speaking along ] You said you

wanted to get married.

"When I say that?"

When you had the leg up,

up, up, up

I have a serious question

for, like, everyone,

and everyone has to answer this.

If you were a fruit, what kind

of fruit would you be and why?

I would be a strawberry.

- Why a strawberry?

- I don't know.

I just... everybody

loves strawberries

and I just, like,

want to be loved

by everybody, because

I low-key, like, see...

Like, I don't like

when people don't like me.

Makayla, what about you?

A watermelon.

Why?

Because I act hard

on the outside,

but I'm soft on the inside.

Aww.

'Cause, I mean,

I moved out at 16, so

as soon as my dad died, I.

[ Snaps fingers ] hit the hay.

I think that's why

we also bond, too,

because we're missing our dads.

Trauma bond! [ Laughing ]



[ Groans ] This hill!

Dang!

There's some fresh bodies

over here.

Why are we seeing

my dad's grave on Halloween?

Why? [ Laughs ]

Oh, my gosh.

Your dad's grave is so pretty.

My dad loved his job so much.

Everyone talks about

how he was the best police.

My dad would even give

my mom tickets. [ Chuckles ]

He was serious about the ticket.

He liked to mess with her a lot.

My dad was such a jokester.

Like, yeah, so he was,

like... I don't know.

[ Crying ]

It just is exhausting

having to hold everything in.

- You don't have to.

- That's how I was raised.

I know.

I was raised the same way.

But me and Abby are

always here for you.

Yeah. [ Sniffles ]

I'm just a very,

like, to myself person

about this kind of stuff.









Whoo! Whoo!

[ Speaking indistinctly ]



[ Music gets louder ]





Hey, y'all.

Alabama recruitment day three,

outfit of the day.

Shirt is a personal gift

from Jeff Bezos.

Jeans are from an internment

camp in San Francisco.

Earrings are a gift from my

grandma from beyond the grave.

Bracelets are from Applebee's

and shoes are from Target.

You know, something

that's ingrained in us

early on is that,

yeah, you're a person,

but you're a Sigma Kappa first.

You're a woman, but you're

a Sigma Kappa woman first,

and that's a lot of what being

in a sorority is.

It's branding.

That's, you know,

every single Greek organization.

That's kind of one of the things

that we sign on to

when we join one.



...for a roll call

Queens of the Row, check

Good grades on exams, check

Where them ZTAs at? Yeah

Should I put on lip gloss?

[ Laughter ]

- Yeah.

- Okay, ready?

- Does it look bad on camera?

- No, it looks pretty.

[ Lip-syncing ]

Oh, no, I lost my pen.

With social media,

with recruitment,

people, like, literally look

at you like you are in college

majoring in sorority,

almost like a little doll

in your fake

University of Alabama world

in your little sorority

doing your,

you know, tiny little tasks.

Everyone's putting

their best out on social media.

I'm not going to post that,

"Oh, I... You know,

I got a C on my chem test,

even though I studied

for 12 hours.

Boo."

Should we hang it

over the balcony right here?

- That's I was thinking.

- That's funny.

- Like this.

- Yeah, look at her.

- Three...

- I can't see the phone.

- Oh.

- I lost something once.

That's good. That's so funny.

- I lost something once.

- [ Laughing ]

- It's so perfect!

- I lost my pen.

People assume what

you're gonna be like

- as a woman in a sorority.

- Yeah.

"Oh, why are you trying so hard?

Like, you should

just get a husband."

I'm not only a sorority girl.

I'm a woman in a sorority.

- Yeah.

- And it's not the same thing.

Honestly, what makes me mad

is that in our sorority,

like, we're so understanding,

and it's the people that,

like, hate on us,

and they stereotype us

I'm like,

y'all are the mean ones, not us.

Like, we don't do anything.

What do we do?

Sit there and eat

our chicken sandwiches together?

Like, what?

We don't do anything.

We put a lot...

A lot of pressure on ourselves.

Example, right here

of my sweet little girls.

- Are you editing us?

- Yep.

- So, like, let's just say...

- Let me look at that.

We want to make

Lauren's arm smaller.

We can go like this.

We can make it smaller,

we can make it smaller.

Let's whiten her teeth

a little bit.

And then let's make

Kaiya's head big for fun,

just so you guys can see.

- Like, just so you can see.

- You want to do me dirty?

- Like, a child could do this.

- It's so easy.

If you want to make

your waist thinner

to make yourself feel better

about posting it online,

I understand,

but the problem is,

is that these women with

millions of followers

14-year-old girls are gonna

look at that and be like,

"Why don't I look that way?"

Post that and act like

it's real.

The things that I say to myself

and think to myself

about my body, I would never say

that to someone else.

You know, when you're living

with other women

and, like, you're around

other women all the time

that, you know, I think

are very beautiful girls...

You know, I would k*ll to

look like any of my friends.

You know, it's hard to be like,

"That's okay

that I don't look like them."

Everyone has, like,

their important qualities

that aren't affected

by how prettier

you think your friends are

or, like, how you want your hair

to look like her hair.

It doesn't change who you are

and who... like, what people

really value you for.

Okay, great. So there's just

a few more questions

and we can, like, go through.

Well, interim question that

has nothing to do with this,

- but just out of curiosity...

- Yes?

Nobody in my family is even,

like, bald from just

being an older man.

Do you put sunscreen

on your head?

- Yes!

- Yes, right?

- That's what I thought. Yeah.

- So much.

So much, because, like,

I could never get

skin cancer on my head.

- Yeah, what would you do?

- This is my whole thing.

Right. That's terrible.

It's actually

stressful at the beach.

I can... Right?

You must have to do a hat, right?

With summer, yeah,

I do hats and I do turbans.

Mm-hmm.

Okay, I think I know where

I'm going with this.

Between Katie,

this smart, beautiful girl,

telling me that she wishes

she looked like her friends

or she compares herself

to other women

and the endless scrolling

of these OOTDs,

it hit me.

I feel like I rushed, too.

And just stay with me on this...

In these OOTDs, these girls

are showing us their earrings,

their necklaces, their outfits

that they put on

to look like

they belong in a sorority.

And I feel like I rushed

because I have alopecia

and I wore a wig for 14 years.

I wore a different wig

every year.

I wore a mullet, a bowl cut,

a blunt cut, a body wave,

a perm... I wore a layered look.

My Rush looked different.

I was trying to get into

the sorority of

all of the girls

in the world who have hair,

and it felt like an impossible

sorority to get into.

I was going to compete

for my position,

and my wig was a secret.

If you found out

that I wore a wig,

if you even questioned

that I wore a wig,

it would shatter me.

So I know it's not exactly like

the Alabama Rush,

but it's like,

not that different.

I think the competition

mostly comes from

the rankings of sororities,

trying to get in one of those

top or middle-tier houses

and not getting into

a bottom house.

I visited the

University of Alabama,

observing

the sorority Rush parties.

I probably saw

five or six houses.

Rush is a social

stratification ritual bar none.

Stratification in the sense

of organizing people

and groups of people

into tiers of power,

of status, of prestige.

It's a proving ground

of competitive femininity

and the contemporary performance

of the Southern belle.

- Hey, y'all.

- Hey, y'all.

Hey, y'all.

Do you think I would get

into a top-tier house?

You wouldn't get in

with those shoes.

You got to have cute shoes.

[ Both laugh ]

Who determines the rankings?

I have no idea, to be honest.

Actually, I'm going to give you

my potential thoughts on it.

I think a lot of the times

people like to rank...

And by people,

I usually mean fraternity boys

or boys in general,

I feel like they're like,

"Oh, this house

has the hottest girls,

so they're a top house."

Like, "These freshmen

are the hottest freshmen,

so they're going to be

considered a top house."



The potential new members

are trying to get in,

but also, these sororities

are trying to get,

like, the best girls.

- For sure.

- What does that even mean?

Yeah, so, the ranking system,

I truly believe it's based

on the fraternities.



So essentially,

they have a social calendar,

and they get to mix

with certain sororities,

but it's only a limited amount,

and the fraternities want to be

mixing with the hottest

sororities, of course,

'cause, you know,

they're 20-year-old males.

So that's kind of where

the ranking system comes from.

They want to make sure the girls

who are wearing their letters

are up to their standards.



The hierarchy of sororities

that exist here

really determines

how your experience

in the Greek system

is going to be.

There are a lot of things

that you're entitled to

when you're

in a top-tier sorority.

You're entitled to test banks

that are going to help you

on your exams.

You're entitled to people

in your sorority

that have better connections,

whether their parents

are richer or more connected.

You're entitled to a male gaze

that might be a little bit

more beneficial to you.

And so, you know,

being in a bottom-tier sorority,

I have to understand that

at some point, there's nothing

that I can do to change

institutionalized rankings.

You know, Sigma Kappa,

we've done all the right things,

but we'll never be

anything but bottom tier

for at least

the next 20, 30 years,

because that's just

how it works here.

You guys,

as far as we have heard,

are considered

like, a top-tier sorority.

- I...

- I mean, I'm not going to lie.

Like, whenever I tell someone

what sorority I'm in,

and they're like, "Oh, wow,"

that's flattering.

I think it's hard.

We kind of have to tiptoe

around this question,

because we would be naive

to deny that lots of people

recognize us as a top tier...

"top tier" house.

But do I think there are

other great sororities?

- Absolutely.

- Absolutely.



[ Dog barking in distance ]

[ Engine shuts off ]



So this is basically

the Shelby Taj Mahal.

That's what my family calls it.

But these are awards

from dance competitions.

I volunteer with children with

special needs and we race,

and the girl that I raced with

got first place.

Look, I got the Super Style

award in fifth grade.

I think Rush is a week-long

adrenaline rush like no other.

The Olympics, that's what

we should call it from now on.

I definitely think it's

a sport. Definitely.

So this is my pageant binder.

This is my life

when I competed in pageants,

so it's kind of

why I wanted to do

the sorority Rush binder

for myself.

I will have kind of the similar

things in here for Rush.

I'll definitely have

a motivation tab of just

a ton of quotes

and stuff for me to look at.

I like the paper copy because

I like to be able to feel it

and really look at it,

'cause sometimes

when you're in the moment

and you're stressed out

and you're worried,

you forget all the things

that you've been taught.

I feel like I fit in perfectly

with the way that they dress...

Not because I've chosen

to be that way,

but just because, like,

that's who I am.

I don't think you want to wear

anything that's too scandalous,

or as we call it, scandy.

You don't want to, like, have

a bad reputation for yourself.

You want to keep it

the three C's...

Classy, calm, and cool.



The biggest thing is that,

because it started so early on,

like, maybe 1800s... 1898.

Zeta Tau Alpha

was established in 1898.

There's kind of like

those really old-timey,

strict rules

of what the group is.

You have a lot of rules

you have to follow,

which, some of them

I really agree with.

Some of them are like,

"Oh, are you kidding me

right now?"

We are not allowed to drink

in our letters whatsoever.

I don't think in any of

the sorority houses,

- you can have alcohol.

- Why is that, do you know?

It must be a Panhellenic rule,

because fraternities are

always allowed,

and the amount of alcohol

in that house is disgusting.

[ Laughs ]

Another rule that I just

thought was really dumb...

No wet hair in the house

on the first floor.

I know there was one house

that my roommate

was in freshman year.

She told me that they literally

could not leave the dorm

unless they had two

out of three done,

which was either you had to

have your hair done,

makeup done, or outfit on.

All it takes is one person

to know what chapter you're in

and like,

to reach out to somebody,

and you can be

in trouble the next day.



Like, as far as our rules,

we have just

the longest COC

in the entire universe,

our code of conduct.

The ones I usually

get in trouble for

are like,

disrespecting a sister,

which is such

a subjective thing,

and really makes

our standards process

kind of a joke sometimes.

So essentially, what happens is

you go to the standards meeting.

There are six girls

that like to play judge

and they like to reiterate that

you're innocent

until proven guilty,

but you're... you're guilty

until you prove yourself innocent.

Is that my standards? [ Laughs ]

"Specify the issue or concern."

"Member had a video of her

wearing her Sigma Kappa letters"

misspelled.

"The video seemed to put

Sigma Kappa

and Greek life in

a negative light."

And since coming here,

I've changed in ways

that I don't f*cking like.

Roll Tide, though.

Did I lie? Did I lie? Did I lie?

I didn't lie.

I wasn't talking shit

about Sigma Kappa

or like, the Greek life.

I was saying that, like,

the culture at Alabama

is f*cking weird.

And you know what? It is.

So die mad.

This is my ministry,

lightweight-type chemistry

Going to Italy,

like it, you feeling me?

Playing with my racks,

a n*gga att*cks

f*ck with me crucially,

you catchin' disa

Playing with my racks,

a n*gga att*cks

f*ck with me crucially,

you catchin' disa

Are you serious?

They're literally wearing

someone else's sticker.

And I got in trouble

for wearing another sticker?

Are you kidding me right now?



I just felt like they were

looking for a reason to drop me.

Other girls went upstairs

in fraternity houses.

Other girls slept

at fraternity houses,

and they're still

in the sorority.



I know who tattled on me.

I'm not going to say.

And it's fine, like, you know,

I just wish nothing

but happiness for her

and I hope she's having, like,

the best life in DZ as she can.





I've been meeting every week

with a sorority consultant.

Her name's Sloan,

and she's the best.

I love her, and I feel like

I would be

absolutely lost without her.

You have to remember

who's recruiting you

19-year-olds, 20-year-olds,

and 21-year-olds.

- Yeah.

- Do they...

Are they looking for you

to talk about a specific topic?

- No. No, they're not.

- Yeah.

So what they are looking for you

is just to stay away

from five topics.

And they're called

the five B's, and that

I don't know who

came up with that,

but it's just a great way

for you to, like,

kind of remember.

So, Boys.

It just means fraternity boys

and talking about like, swaps

or mixers or anything like that.

But if they bring it up,

it's okay to talk about it,

just you don't want to, like,

initiate that conversation

and be like, "What fraternities

do you guys hang out with?"

The next one is Booze.

Just don't talk about alcohol.

Bible.

All they mean is like,

asking about their religion,

what church they go to

or anything like that

puts someone in a corner.

The next one is Bucks,

so, money.

So you don't want to be like,

"Does your dad own a yacht

off of the South of France?"

or anything like that.

Or you don't want to bring

that stuff up as well.

And the last one is Biden

is what they're probably

referring to now,

and all it means is, politics.

And again, you're more than

welcome to talk about diversity

and Black Lives Matter

and if you're, you know,

a political science major

or anything like that,

going to law school,

Elle Woods, whatever.

But you just don't want

to ask them specific questions

about their

political affiliation.

So, "What are your thoughts

on inflation?

What are your thoughts on Biden?

Do you think Donald Trump

should have won the election?"

It just puts people in a corner

and it makes them uncomfortable.

- Yeah.

- That's all it is.



So my experience

was pretty typical,

and I definitely had

my ups and downs.

I got dropped by a sorority

I loved on Pref,

and I was really devastated.

I was literally crying

in the Miller Learning Center

at Georgia,

and I wiped the mascara

from under my eyes and said,

okay, I'm going to give these

two sororities one more chance,

and Pref completely changed

my mind on the sorority

I ended up joining.

I met this incredible woman,

and she was just so fun.

Like, it was the first time

during sorority recruitment

where I didn't put pressure

on myself

and I was just able to open up

and talk to her

and she was so fun.

Luckily, they liked me enough

to make sure

that I was on the Bid Day list.

What's giving me anxiety

is my anxiety,

'cause I'm like, what if I,

like, break down?

Like,

what if I have a panic attack?

What if I start

to get really nervous

or I mess something up

and, like, it causes me to,

like, totally,

you know, spiral?

So I'm on medication and stuff,

but just,

do you have any tips to make me,

like, less anxious?

And I think the main thing

that will cause like, anxiety

is if like, I think I messed up

or if I say the wrong thing

and I get really like...

you know, just, like, nervous

and have a panic attack.

Do you have any, like, tips

on how to, like, not freak out?

Great question.

So we'll have a ton of practice.

- Okay.

- We'll figure out your answers

and practice your conversations,

so you will be

hitting your points.

- Yeah.

- Good.

But also, the members

are there to reassure you.

You'll know if you had

a good conversation.

- Uh-huh. Yeah.

- Also, I'm a phone call away.



I have always been, like,

an anxious person.

I would be so anxious

that I would cry myself

to sleep every night.

I always kind of struggled,

like, with my body

and, like,

with feeling confident.

These girls would make fun of me

every single day

in the locker room,

like, about my body and make

comments while I'm changing,

you know, comments about, like,

not eating, like, I shouldn't

eat or if I, you know...

Wear this, then I look fat,

or stuff like that.

And [Voice breaking] it sent me

into a really bad relationship

with food.

So for like a full year,

I was living with, like,

an eating disorder.

And I hope by the time

I'm in college,

I will be in a lot better place, mentally.

Isabelle reminded me

that the locker room

is a terrifying place

for a girl.

In the summer between

fifth grade and sixth grade

at day camp, this girl...

Let's call her Sally Steinberg...

Cornered me in the locker room,

and she said,

"I know you're wearing a wig."

And I said, "No, I'm not."

And then she said,

"Yes, you are."

And it was devastating,

and it was frightening.

I was mortified.

It felt like she was saying,

"You're not one of us,

and you'll never be,

and I know."



So I, like...

So you know how I was talking

about my eating disorder?

- Yeah.

- For years... If I can ask...

- Can I ask you a question?

- Sure.

Okay, so for years,

did you, like,

stand in the mirror for, like,

hours and just, like,

look at yourself and like...

I do that all the...

And like, even if I pass

a mirror now, I'm like...

And I, like,

have cellulite on my legs now

from working out and stretch

marks, and I'm like... [ Sighs ]

But, like, they're so beautiful

because it shows, like,

I'm overcoming something

and growing.



I'm just jealous

of your hip flexors.

It's like, my quads and stuff

are bigger now

'cause like, they've got,

like, all the muscles

flowing into them.

[ Sighs ]

[ Groans ]

I'll show you

the before and after.

Yeah, show us.

Okay, that was a bad video,

but it's fine.

How much do you think

it has to do with looks?

Great question.

This is something I have thought

about for years,

to be completely honest,

how much looks matters

during sorority recruitment.

And I think it matters

to a certain extent.

Again, you have to be

"pretty enough" to get in.

I would say they only really,

truly matter at round one.



Just from talking to women

all over the country,

I have realized

there's four main steps

that really

help women stand out.

First one is all about

getting your name out there,

because you want people

talking about you

before sorority recruitment starts.

The second step I always take

my clients through is mindset,

because sorority recruitment

is an emotional journey.

You immediately get

in your head.

What happened?

Am I not pretty enough?

Am I not cool enough?

Like, why did these

sororities drop me?

The third step is

the most important one,

I believe, is small talk.

We figure out your answers to

the questions through a formula

because there really just

is a simple formula.

And the last step

is optimization strategy,

which is just playing the game.

Sorority recruitment's a game...

You have to know how to play it

to keep

sororities interested in you.

If you're getting

an average score,

you're not getting invited back.

Some girls get

their second choice.

Some girls have been dropped

so much in the process,

and they just settled.

And some girls, they get calls

right before Bid Day, like,

saying, "You've been dropped

from sorority recruitment."

Which is hard.



Do I look Southern?

Definitely there,

they don't like girls

who look "too Northern."

I look very Northern.

Like, that's not going

to change that much.

Okay, I saved this one for last

because, oh, it is so unique,

and I love to be unique,

and this is definitely

just a great, unique dress.

Tomorrow I'm gonna go pick up

my sorority dress

for my sorority,

and I'm rushing my sorority.

What sorority do you want

to be in?

The sorority I want to

be in is to not...

To not be discussed,

because that brings bad luck

if I tell you guys.

Those boys are fine.

That one... not the one

with the long things,

but the mixed one

with the curly hair.

- No, bro.

- What?

When we rush, it's gonna be like

real crazy.

Hey. Hey! Hey, hey! Hey!



If you thought Alabama Rush

was crazy,

just wait until you hear

about The Machine.

Burglary, cross burning, vandalism.

You are deep into it

that you have found out

about The Machine.

Congratulations.



Have you guys heard of

this thing, "The Machine"?

Do you know about that?

For...? For sororities?

No, it's like, for all

Greek life in Alabama

and it's on the Internet,

and I was like, what is this?

I don't think I know.

[ Laughing ]

Like, I don't think

it's an actual thing.

We always get asked this.

People ask us this all the...

Because it is on social media.

All my friends

from home think...

- They're like, ooh.

- Yeah.



What's the deal

with The Machine?

No, I can't talk about that.

- Can't talk about it.

- Yeah.

It'd ruin, like,

a lot of stuff for us.

Even our life, honestly?

- Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

- It's deep.



Mnh-mnh.

We would never get

into a sorority again.

- No. Danger.

- Okay.

I'm John Archibald.

I've been a journalist

in Alabama for...

God... 36 years now,

and I got my start

at the University of Alabama

because of The Machine.



It's a secret society.

I believe that the phrase was,

"little is known,

and what is known is secret."

Something very similar to that.

So The Machine

is the Greek system.

They go synonymous,

they're hand in hand.

It's the exact same thing.

They control everything

on this campus.

So if there's an election,

The Machine's rigging it.

If there's a Homecoming queen,

it's The Machine candidate.

You're going to look at awards

and different jobs and networks,

it's all going to The Machine

kids that run their own thing.

Even the most trivial things

like football seats,

it's going to The Machine kids.

Every Greek house

that's a member of The Machine

each have Machine representatives.

These representatives

form a council that meets

in fraternity basements

to discuss student politics,

and then they report back

to their house

and their student politicians

within those houses

and tell them how to vote.

You know, I wish that

I could say that I had never

gotten involved with The Machine

in the first place,

but like, I did.

I really did try

to be a good Machine senator,

But at the end of the day,

something just felt

really dark and ugly about it.

We slowly make our way over

to the Kappa Alpha house,

and we go downstairs

into the basement,

and I kind of peer in

and can see

this circle

of people standing around

in this kind of like dingy,

smelly fraternity basement.

I'm asking myself,

"What have I got myself into?"

Because I'm like, number one,

why are we meeting

in a basement?

Number two, why are we meeting

at, you know,

10:00, 11:00 at night

on a Tuesday?

What are we hiding?

The individual

leading the meeting,

he was like, "This is just

an opportunity for you

to see each other's faces.

This is, like,

the group of people

you're going to

be working with."

Up until that point,

I didn't understand

that I was essentially

going to be a figurehead

that was going to do what

my Machine rep told me to do.

And, you know,

every time I did something

that she wanted me to do,

I always received

positive feedback.

I always received praise.

In that moment, I felt like

I was doing something good,

but I really wasn't doing

anything at all

except, you know,

being a puppet.

I think it's ridiculous that

sororities require you to send

a screenshot

of your voting receipt, right?

Others want the e-mail

of your voting receipt, like,

and if you don't send that in,

some sororities fine you.

My sorority reacted

very negatively to the article,

because The Machine

is the Greek system.

I think it was perceived as me

going against my own sisterhood

and my own sorority.

Only a handful of

independent candidates

have successfully gone against

The Machine and beat them.

The university actually

had to shut down

the Student Government

Association from 1993 until 1996

because of The Machine's

alleged activities.



The Machine systematically

made sure that a minority group

on campus of "elite people"

who got special treatment,

who lived in special homes,

who came from the most affluent

and powerful families,

got an advantage

on everyone else.

It's a way better teacher

of how to do

nefarious things for power

than you could ever get

in a political science class.

But I think it's a threat

to people's hopes and dreams

that they may not be able

to fit into the crowd

in maybe the tax bracket

they want to fit into.

I think the danger

is not belonging,

it's not being one

of the chosen people.



[ Singsong voice ] Okay.

Little update for you guys.

I'm so excited.

We are 139 days from me

attending the University

of Alabama and rushing.

It is so nice to see,

like, an actual copy

in my hand

of my sorority rsum.

I've had three different

people proof it.

I need to tweak a few things.

I'm going to bring

this light pink down.

And then I also have

my headshot.

I probably look my best

in this photo.

It's honestly been really

therapeutic doing this rsum

and just creating this.

I've been super stressed out

with school

and just life in general and

my anxiety has been really bad,

so honestly, what's been

pushing me through each day

is reminding myself

that I get to go to the school

that I've wanted to go to

since my freshman year,

and I also get to rush

and meet a bunch of new people.

On the days when I feel

super lonely at home,

that's what I think about

constantly, is how I get to

go to a new school

and meet new people.

So if you're feeling down

right now,

just think of the future

and think of the positive,

'cause that's what

I've been doing.

Just an update for y'all.

[ Laughing ]

[ Up-tempo music playing ]



Hey

Am I normal enough?

So why do you think

you need a Rush consultant?

Just 'cause I didn't have

anyone in my family

that's been through

the Rush process,

so going to her would help,

like, get all my stuff in order.

So when I walk in the house,

you know, like in

the open house or whatever,

and you meet them and like,

I'm talking,

having a conversation

and then I run out of,

like, things to say

and I'm just staring back

at them, like,

what am I supposed to do?

I can help you be prepared

for that awkwardness,

and so you're not

going to have it.

Somebody else can be awkward.

You're not gonna be awkward.

Just sayin'.

So does that answer

your question?

That make you feel

a little bit better?

Mm-hmm. Yeah.

So we do rsum and pictures,

and then we start working

on your recommendations.

I used to be

a professional photographer,

so I can sh**t a few pictures

of you today if you want.

Look up at me.

[ Camera shutter clicking ]

I really want to do one with you

laying with your feet

crossed behind you.

Hold on.

[ Camera shutter clicks ]



I've lived one of their

worst nightmares.

I can still smell

the smells of the dorm room.

I remember this girl

was sitting,

leaning against the wall,

reading a book, like,

while she was

waiting to find out.

And I was like,

"How can anybody

be that confident

that they're getting in

the sorority?"

This girl got into

a sorority and I didn't,

and I was just weeping

for hours.

I was embarrassed.

What did I do? Am I ugly?

What is it about me

that I can't be getting ready

to go to a social tonight?

I went back through Rush

my sophomore year

and got my first choice,

but it has made me

uniquely understand

the feelings

that these girls are having.

I can recall that feeling

just like it was yesterday.

From that experience, that's why

I started this business.

Now do, like,

a really big smile.

[ Camera shutter clicking ]

[ Birds chirping ]

[ Clicking continues ]

God, you are so perfect

for this.

Hold on, one second.

[ Camera beeps, shutter clicks ]

Everyone here thinks

I'm everything but Black.

Like, I'm white and Black.

They think I'm everything.

Like, this one guy thought...

Like, he was...

He swore that I was just white

and just really, really tan.

- Tan.

- Yeah.

I was like, can you not tell,

like, I'm mixed?

Everyone here just look at you

if you have any color in you.

It's just, like,

really awkward, I guess.

I feel like a black sheep.

If I'm too white,

then I'm whitewashed,

but if I act too Black, then

I'm not white enough.

Like, what am I supposed to be?

'Cause I'm both races.

Why can't I just act myself?

I'm not acting a race.

You can't act a race.

I'm just split in two,

my whole life.

I'm just gonna be split.

Society's dumb.

So at the University of Alabama,

the Panhellenic sorority

are historically like, white,

and the Divine 9 here

is historically

a Black sorority.

What's the difference between.

Black sororities

and the white sororities?

I don't really know much

about the Black sororities

that much,

because I haven't

actually looked into it,

because I just wanted to be in

the other one.



To be in a D9 sorority,

I feel like there is

a tie to history

that you need to have.

Even had I become

more comfortable

with who I was

in a racial sense,

I still feel like

I wouldn't fit in there,

because I was raised

by white people.

I think that they

would have accepted me,

but I wouldn't have

accepted myself enough

to get the sorority experience

that I would

have been happy with.

So in my sorority, I haven't had

any overt r*cist experiences,

but I have had some weird things

that people feel empowered

to say to me.

I was at chapter for

formal chapter.

So we have to be, you know,

in business casual, essentially,

and I...

there were a group of girls,

and there was one girl

in my sorority that,

she is [sighs]...

She... she wants so badly

to be progressive

and to be like "woke"

or whatever.

She goes, "Oh, my God, Rian,

your hair is curly."

I'm like, "Yeah, yeah, I haven't

I didn't straighten it."

She goes,

"Did your relaxer wash out?"

I'm like, "Oh, my God.

Oh, my God."

Like, what does that even mean?

Like, what...?

It's that she, like,

wants to, like, flex that

she, like, has an understanding

of Black culture

and she, like, knows

what a relaxer is,

but, like, bestie girl.

What?

The same girl, probably

every time that I, like,

sit down and I talk to her,

she's like, "Remind me.

Which one of your parents

is white?"

I'm like, "It's still my mom.

It is still my mom.

Every single time

that you will ask me,

it's still my mom."

She's not getting any darker.

Like what?



So I attended

the University of Alabama

from the fall of 1983

through the spring of 1987.

I started law school in '87

and graduated in '90,

so I was there for two tours.



So you would think that progress

would be made more quickly,

that it wouldn't take

until the year 2013

to integrate the sororities,

but when you think

about the history

of the sororities themselves

and the history

of the state of Alabama

and just

the undercurrent of racism

that has been so prominent

in our history,

it really doesn't surprise me

that it took that long.

I didn't necessarily see it

as an option or a choice

to rush Panhellenic.

I didn't see any women that look

like me in those organizations.

It's a busy time at Alabama.

It's time for sorority Rush.

Girls brimming with excitement

at the thought of being chosen

to move to Magnolia Drive.

But there's another

group moving in...

The Alpha Kappa Alphas.



We were the first

African-American sorority

on Sorority Row.

We integrated Sorority Row.

One, two... three, four

A-L-P-H-A K-A-P-P-A

A-L-P-H-A

Alpha Kappa Alpha

A-L-P-H-A K-A-P-P-A

A-L-P-H-A

Alpha Kappa Alpha

One night after we were at a...

At a fraternity party,

we were driving by

and we noticed a smoldering

cross on the front lawn.

We were terrified.

And anger crept in later,

after we got beyond

the shock and the dismay

of the entire situation.

Now, I grew up in Alabama,

so hearing that crosses

were being burned

is something that

I grew up hearing about,

but I had never personally seen

a cross being burned.

And once you see that,

you can't unsee it,

and it sticks with you

for a lifetime.



I have come to know and love

the people in my sorority,

and to know that they wouldn't

have loved or trusted me

40, 50 years ago,

it makes me feel upset.

And I... I honestly,

for my own self-preservation,

don't really like

to think about it.



[ Indistinct chatter ]





- [ Water splashing ]

- Little bit more?

Just a little bit more.

On Bid Day, we sat outside,

and we could hear, like,

all the screams coming from

the stadium

whenever they opened their bids.

- And it was just crazy.

- Oh, my gosh.

My friend sent me a snap,

and he was like,

- "The ground just rumbled."

- Literally.

[ Indistinct chatter ]

I'm gonna rush in the fall.

I'm rushing in the fall,

for sure.

- And then what about Abby?

- I'm not planning on it.

It just... it's lot of money

and a lot of time commitment

and just a lot of work,

it seems like.

So there's like, almost

250 calories in my bowl,

because the meat and seasoning

and everything.

How do you know that?

'Cause that's why

I count out the chips,

so there's exactly 10 chips

in my bowl.

Wait, I didn't even see you

do that, though.

'Cause I... when I was

shaking it, I counted it out.

I just have this image in

my head that I need to be

- like, tiny, I guess, 'cause...

- You are tiny.

Well, I don't...

I really don't see myself...

Like, when I look at myself,

I see myself, like, as fat.

Like, I know you guys

say I'm not,

but, like, I see myself as that

and I can't help it.

I feel like I would never have

had an eating disorder

or anything

if the boys growing up

didn't say what they said to me.

Yeah, it is...

It really is the men.

I feel like women are like...

Like, you grow up to,

like, cater to men,

and it's sad.

Have the three of you

ever gotten in a fight?

- No.

- I don't think so.

We... like, last night, okay,

I get overstimulated sometimes

really easily and, like,

I just break, like,

I'm just like,

"Oh, my God, Stop. Like,

everything just needs to stop."

And so last night,

I got a little overstimulated

and I yelled at Makayla, and

then she was like, "We're good."

[ Chuckles ]

It was bad, but we're good.

Yeah, I wasn't listening to her

when she

was yelling at me, either.



Hardcore Southern Baptist.

We're all Baptist?

I didn't know that.

I think when you're

raised in Alabama,

you're kind of forced to be.

I don't know, there's a lot of

people in my town

that are, like,

Presbyterian and stuff.

What's your relationship

with God like?

I really think He's just

the anchor in my life,

that I need to, like, keep,

'cause life be getting

real difficult sometimes.

And the fact that He

risked His life...

Like, He died for us

and, like, just for our sins.

I don't know,

that's just really comforting

to know that someone

would do that for you.

[ Laughs ] Hold up.

Like, if I could do anything

ever again,

it would be Rush week.

- The experience is worth it.

- Yeah.

Like, because everyone talks

about how, like, cool it is.

I just want to do it.

Feet are, like, on the wall?

Well, that's the thing...

Makayla does that all the time.

- I'm like...

- You don't think it'd be weird?

I don't mean it to be stretchy.

Like [ Laughter ]

I did that too well, though.

Yeah, you did.

You've gone that way before.

- I'm like...

- No!

No, me and Makayla were like...

[ Breathing hard ]

- We were like, "Hey."

- "Heyyy."

Makayla was like, "George Bush!"

Did I tell you

she did that to me?

[ Laughing ]









Hey

We got roofied at a bar.

[ Chuckles ]

So, this guy ordered us sh*ts.

One of the bartenders was

telling us how, like,

when they went back

in the video footage,

he, like,

slipped it into all of them.

So it's nice.

We love that for us.

The last thing I remember

is looking at Makayla,

and I was gone, and my, like,

friend found me in the woods.

We took Makayla to the hospital,

and she had, like,

dr*gs in her system,

and we don't do dr*gs,

like, at all,

and I was with her

the whole night.

But they did find him,

and he did get beat up

really bad. [ Chuckles ]

Do you think he'll get,

like, criminal charges?

If we... If anybody

pressed any, but I'm not.

I don't know, I just don't...

Honestly, I don't want to go

through the whole court case,

'cause I've only been through

that court case.

I don't want to go

through it again. It's annoying.

- Have you been roofied before?

- Mm-hmm.

Like, three times before.

[ Dogs barking in distance ]

Oh, I could give you

the pageant walk, but...

[ Laughs ]

It's so, like, fierce, though.



Heyyy

[ Laughs ]

It's hard to be a perfectionist,

because you want everything

to go in order,

and sometimes it doesn't.

And when there's multiple things

that just don't go right,

it really stresses me out.

And my adoption, like,

it triggers some of

my depression and my anxiety.

When people are,

like, going distant,

it really makes me nervous

because I

I have trust issues with people,

and I get nervous that people

are gonna leave me.

I accidentally found out

about me being adopted.

I'm really close with

my grandparents,

and my grandpa had handed me

a paper, and he was like,

"Do you think your parents

still want this paper?"

And I was like,

"I don't think so.

Like, let me just read it,

though."

I was more concerned

about my homework,

and I'd read it after,

and it had talked

about me being adopted,

and I was like...

I thought they were joking

and, like,

I thought it was a joke,

so I was waiting for, like,

the laughing,

and there was no laughing.

Like, he was just focused

on doing his own thing.

He didn't even know

that it said that.

So it... it turned

my world upside down.



Basically, I thought I knew

who I was,

and then it completely changed.

I've been in therapy

since I was 13,

and then last year, I started

doing some trauma treatments

for just trauma that I didn't

even realize that I could have,

but it was making my anxiety

and my depression so high.

I used to be able to not even

take a test in class

without almost passing out.

So I'm really hoping that

when I get to Alabama, like,

I can just always have

an open heart and an open mind

and just let myself be me

and not let my triggers,

like, affect me

and take over my life there.



Just like Shelby,

I was really looking forward

to freshman year of college.

It's a new beginning.

My big plan was that

I was going to take the wig off.

But when I got to college,

I was too scared.

I couldn't do it.

I couldn't even tell my freshman

year roommate that I wore a wig.

So I slept in my wig

every single night that year.

I was convinced that,

if you knew I was bald,

you wouldn't want

to be my friend.



- [ Turn signal clicks ]

- I don't know.

I always said I was

never going to dye my hair.

And then I started, like,

I got highlights

and now I just can't stop.

Like, every time I love

to just go lighter and lighter.

Every time she asks what I want,

I just say, "Okay, blonder."

- Which one of the dates? August?

- Yeah.

We have Open House

and then Philanthropy.

And then there's

Sisterhood Preference Day,

and then there's Bid Day.



I had a whole spiritual

awakening while you were gone.

You don't even understand.

During finals,

I definitely had, like,

a blinding revelation.

Like, I sat myself down

in front of a mirror

and was like,

"How you've been acting lately

is not you,

that's out of character,

and you need to

pull it together."

The stuff I've been doing,

like, going out how I have been,

you know, I shouldn't be

doing that on a Wednesday.

I need to be focusing

on my studies.

Like, I'm there to build

my career, make money,

and build an empire.

I'm not there to

see who can drink the most.

Like, that's just not me.

I just need to grow up.

I'm not trying to force

anything anymore.



Holliday: Hey,

what are you doing?

Driving.

Are you okay?

Oh, I just wanted

to talk to you.

I got a text last night

and someone was telling me

about how you

and Kirsten were just,

like, trashing me and

talking, like,

really bad about me

and I just want to talk to you

about that because

I don't really understand...

Who said that?

Huh?

- Who said that?

- Emma.

If I was in your position

I would be like,

who am I to believe Makayla

'cause she could

just be saying that

and she is actually

just doing that.

Well. Um.

Kirsten literally told Emma

that you said

I was psycho and clingy.

And I just had one

of Emma's friends...

That was with her last night...

Confirm that Kirsten said

that you said that.

This is... [ Sighs ]

This is so annoying.

I just want to be

out of the drama.

(CALL ENDS)

I don't know who to believe

anymore 'cause

I feel like everyone just lies.



[ Cellphone rings ]

[ Cellphone beeps ]



All she does is

hang out with Kappas,

and so she just ignores me now.

It's just a sorority

she wants to be in.

Well, I'm upset about it,

but, like, I... oof. Ugh.

I hate emotions. [ Chuckles ]

I do.

I'm so emotionally unavailable.

It's so sad.



[ Cellphone buttons clicking ]





I was leaving a place,

and I, like, stopped

'cause I heard my name.

Like, tell me how many people

on this campus

have the name Holliday?

Yeah, zero.

So I was eavesdropping.

I'll be honest.

I was being nosy.

I was eavesdropping.

I hear these girls

and they're like,

"Is that Holliday girl

going to rush, do you know?"

And then this other girl goes,

"Well, I hope not,

since she's blacklisted

from every sorority."

And I was like,

"Alright, that's cool."

Like, I'm not gonna waste

my time and money.

Like, if that is like

you know, people are going to

blow smoke out their butt,

but like, if that is true,

I'm not gonna waste my money.

Like, there's no point.

I just, like,

don't think mentally

it would be best

for me to rush again,

like, and going through that.

Like, 'cause

I didn't realize, I guess,

until my therapist pointed out,

like, how much of a mental,

like, stress it put on me.

And I don't need that,

because when they say,

like, your freshman year

is a very humbling

and, like,

growing-up experience,

they truly mean that.



There has been a few nights

where I couldn't sleep at night.

Oh, seriously?

'Cause you were scared of

what I was gonna...

Not really afraid of

what you're...

It's just how we're

gonna be perceived.

The world we live in

right now is, like,

- very much cancel culture.

- Judgmental, yeah.

People are going to feel

how they're going to feel,

and I have to keep on

trucking along.

Yeah.

I just don't want

people to, like, hate us.

Or, like, hate me.

I don't want them to hate me.

- Or us.

- And, yeah.

But you're likable!



So, with Instagram

and all social media,

we first do a pre-screen.

So once you register,

they have your name,

and if they have your name,

they have the ability

to find you anywhere...

And these girls are like...

Should be in the FBI,

creating fake accounts

and, like,

making sure they find you,

so they'll figure it out.

So we just want to make sure

your tagged photos

aren't anything

that would be labeled

as "a standard concern."

And I'm not seeing anything.

So what they'll do is they will

come sit right in front of you

and just start talking to you.

Okay, so we'll start with

the first question.

What made you pick

the University of Alabama?

So I'm going into advertising

as my major, actually.

They have

an amazing advertising program,

like, one of the best

in the country.

I think the biggest thing is

going to be the conversations.

Isabelle, you know,

is really good at small talk.

The only thing that I'm worried

about is that lead of getting

to that next part and, like,

her thinking one step ahead,

and that just comes

from practice.

- Do you dye it?

- Yeah.

Like, all that is,

like, blonde now.

And... But we're only doing

a little bit lighter at a time

so it don't fall out.

There is a look

that is well put together

and showing confidence,

and you have to blend in

without crazy sticking out.

You don't have to be

like everybody else,

but you just need

to not stick out.

Not trying to follow the crowd

or the trend,

but while also fitting into

a certain kind of mold

just for Rush.

You don't want to give sorority

a reason to cut you.



What if you just naturally

stick out?

I'm thinking about myself,

because I have no hair.

- Right.

- But, like,

how would you

approach a situation like that

with somebody who just

automatically stood out?

There, how I would approach

someone who

automatically stands out,

and especially

in a place like Alabama,

we have a lot of clients

who stand out

for whatever reason,

but I make sure

that they're willing to listen

and they have to trust me.

They have to trust that I

am not going to

steer them wrong.

If you own it, I think

you're... you're great.

This girl is not owning it.

This is me freshman year,

in my wig.

The only time I took

my wig off that year

would be in the privacy

of the shower stall

in the bathroom.

I would take my wig off and let

the water pour over my head,

and then I'd put my wig

back on and I would wash it,

and I would go into my bedroom

at the dorm

like nothing had happened,

like everything was normal.

Eventually, my sophomore year,

the pain of not being myself

became greater

than my need to fit in.

I finally took my wig off.

It was just a simple action.

Just like... Whhhh!



But I felt like

a thousand-pound helmet,

and it was the hardest thing

I have ever done

in my entire life.

And I did it,

and I took my wig off,

and I never put it back on.



[ Voice breaking ]

And I owned it,

because I'm a bald girl.



That's it.

Hi, guys.

I'm rushing at the

University of Alabama this fall,

and I'm going to show you guys

what is in my Rush bag.

Static guard, scissors,

tweezers, Tide To Go pen,

a first-aid kit, mints,

breath strips,

sunglasses, portable charger,

and then a yoga mat.

And I didn't cut it in case

anybody else needs a seat.

I wanted to be able to share

with them, so I didn't cut it.

And that is everything

in my Rush bag, so...

This is the kind of woman

that you want to marry.

This one right here, okay?

She is more prepared

to take my three children...

This girl is the equivalent

of a CVS receipt.

I want to be stuck

with this girl

if we're all going down.

Because of this girl,

I'm inspired now to dive deep

into sorority TikTok.

[ Insects chirping in distance ]

Now, here is a hard copy

of your rsum

with that picture.

Do you like that picture?

That's the one you sent me.

[Quietly] Yes.

And that's the one that

you want to use for that?

Do you think

we should change it?

- Mm-hmm.

- Yeah.

I think we should change it.

Super important that

you look friendly,

engaging, and really excited

to be doing this video.

Smiling the entire time

you're talking.

It's a necessary evil, so...

[ Beeps ]

Hi. My name is Makayla Miller.

I'm going through recruitment

as a sophomore.

Authenticity is

my number one core value.

In a sorority, like in life,

connecting and finding

true sisterhood can only be done

by being authentic.

Respect is also a key value.

I think sisterhood involves

[inhales deeply]...

Sisterhood involves

respecting your sisters

in all they do.

I look forward to meeting y'all,

and Roll Tide.

More?

Oh, we're going to do

a few more.

I don't know if this is

a little too va-va-voom,

but that's an option.

So, do you have a different

dress for each round?

- I mean, each day of Sisterhood?

- Mm-hmm.

I don't have all of them yet,

but I have, like,

ones that I've been

looking at all summer.

I just don't want to look like

everyone else either.

Because I know I'm gonna show up

wearing the same thing

as someone else.

I do not want that.

Hmm, I don't know

about this place.

It seems like a store

my mom would like, though.

She now sort of looks

like a Disney princess.

A Disney princess!

But taking it and wrapping it,

so you get some tension

and, like...

Tension and keeping it straight.

That's pretty comfortable,

isn't it?

It's not bad.

You could sleep with that

and not look too crazy.

- Beautiful.

- I need to empty this out.

[ Indistinct chatter ]



Hey, guys. I am hoping

you're having a great day.

Not a good day. A great day.

It's about damn time.

Rush is back, b*tches!

Here we go. Bama Rush, Season 2.

Much like everyone else

in America this week,

I will not be doing any work

at my corporate job,

and instead,

I will be allocating

every thought and conversation

I have to Bama Rush.



Oh, this is my little chair.

This actually goes here.

[ Laughing ]

Everyone made fun of me

for this, but it's nice,

because we sit on my carpet,

so, like, if my friends

are sitting on my carpet,

I can sit on the pink chair.

I'm really big on crystals.

It's a little piece of home,

but there's like,

a lot of bad energy

being carried on these.

Like, when I first got

all these, I felt really happy,

and then just a lot

of bad things happened,

and I just feel like

I need a recharge.



Two weeks before I came to

the University of Alabama,

I was sexually assaulted.



[ Voice breaking ]

When it happened, like,

I blamed myself

and blamed myself

and blamed myself.

But I was, like, you know,

like, that was the moment

I realized, I was like,

I need to become

my biggest protector.

And, you know, I feel like

I'm a very trusting person.

And I was like,

it is good to be trusting

and it is good to look

for the best in people

and it's good to love others,

but, like,

you need to protect yourself,

because at the end of the day, like,

I'm the only one that was there

for myself at, like, all times.

And, you know,

I know the person that I am,

and the way that people saw me

was not the way I was,

and they treated me

how they thought I was,

and they treated me like

I was trash.

And I was really, really hurt.

And it was really hard.

I had a really hard few weeks

before I came here,

because

I didn't feel like myself,

and I would look

in the mirror every day,

and I would just see the things

that been done to me.

[ Sniffles, chuckles ]

I hate being emotional,

but it's just like

I feel like it was really weird,

just, like, coming here,

because, like, literally,

like, a weight was, like,

lifted off my shoulders,

because I was free from, like,

all the, like,

ideas about me that I had once.

And I saw who, like, I truly was

and that, like, God showed me,

like, who I really,

truly could be.



I can, like, rewrite my story.

My story can start here.

I've been placed with a lot

of just really amazing

female mentors.

My therapist,

she is one of them.

My mom is one of them, and my

church leaders are some of them.

All these women, like,

have really just like,

just shown me, like,

the person, like, I want to be,

which is exactly what

Greek life is about.

Every single girl

in all of these houses

has gone through some amount

of struggle in their life.



These are really strong women

who want to get involved

in their school

and who are passionate about

building each other up.

Like, it is a sisterhood,

and that's why I want to rush.



I'm "nervited" [chuckles]...

Which is, like,

nervous and excited.



What's the thing on TikTok...

Have you ever watched the one

that's like...

[ Chanting, singing ]

Boom, boom, boom, boom

I wanna go to...

[ Both laugh ]

I want to go Delta Zeta...

dun, dun, dun

It was something like that.

It was...

Boom, boom, boom, boom

- Zeta Tau Alpha.

- Yup. They're huge.

And that's Sigma Kappa.



[ Sighs ]

I should have did this

last night.

Rachel,

what's the triangle mean?

The triangle is

Delta and the Alpha...

Gamma Delta.

Yeah. AGD.

We're going to need, like,

a whole alphabet.

I'm gonna carry it around

with me.

I found it.

Yes, Zaya.

This one goes with that.

There's a grand piano.

Like, right?

Yeah. So, like, the stairs are

going up on either sides.

It's actually really pretty.

[ Indistinct whispering ]

So I just have a couple

of thoughts regarding

this supposed

HBO Max documentary

on Bama Rush that's...

Hulu or HBO Max,

whatever it is, like, TV shows.

Okay, you guys, we have more

tea coming through about

is someone filming Rush

this year?

So, Bama Rush update.

I guess we'll address the

elephant in the room real quick.

So I've got to bring it

to you guys,

but I have gotten

a couple of reports

going back to potential people

or a handful of PNMs

being miked up.

Not to be dramatic,

but this HBO special

could be the end

of Greek life as we know it.

The rumor on TikTok

is that they were

wearing microphones

in bracelets.





Okay.

All the rumors are flying

around here at Bama

about HBO or Netflix.

Supposedly, it's HBO that has

about 20 girls they're paying,

and the girls will be miked up

going through Rush.

I don't understand.

They're just going to have

audio, if this is true.

They're not gonna have

any visual recordings.

Um.

I don't get it.

I'm quite puzzled.

What do they think they're going

to gain by recording girls

going through Rush?

They haven't went up

against this college yet,

and I'm telling you,

you don't want to go up against

the University of Alabama.

I am not... I'm here working.

I'm a fraternity mom.

I wouldn't go up against

the University of Alabama.

No way. They call them

The Machine for a reason.

I wouldn't go up against

the University of Alabama.

No way. They call them

The Machine for a reason.

[ Indistinct whispering ]





This is a rumor that started

on social media

that has led to an article

in The New York Times

that my film that you are

watching right now

miked 20 potential new members

to record what goes on inside

the walls of a sorority house.

Anyone who makes a movie...

I'm going to wait for sound.

See, the air conditioner,

for example,

is going to interfere

with our sound.

So we're going to hold.

[ Air conditioner whirring ]

If an air conditioner

is going to interrupt

the quality of sound

for this film,

putting microphones

on girls in houses

where they're all screaming

to hear each other

is also [Chuckling]

not gonna work.

Just...

This is what we're dealing with.

And not only is there

a New York Times article

about this idea,

later in the day,

we received a letter

from the president

of the University of Alabama,

and he CC'd me

and basically the Feds.



But who started the rumor?

That's what I'm curious about.

These accounts

don't even look real.

Another rumor that goes along

with all of this

is that a PNM

has already been disqualified.

[ Crying ]

I kept tucking it, because...

This girl was rushing.

They caught her

with a black hair tie

tied around her T-shirt.

She got kicked out of Rush

because they thought

it was a microphone.



We've never met this girl, ever.

When the execs pulled me over,

I immediately knew

that that could be

the reason that they pulled me.

So I immediately showed them

and they said that they weren't

"at liberty to check me"

or they weren't "at liberty"

to look at anything.

So they said basically

this was a final decision made

before I even had

any chance to say anything.

And I called

the dean of students,

and I called the...

Ambassador of Panhellenic,

and they basically said

there was nothing I could do

and that it was

a final decision.

Little black thing,

so I kept tucking it because...



[ Indistinct whispering ]

You haven't lived until you are

waiting for a text message

from an 18-year-old girl.

We lost Shelby.



It strikes me as being

very Southern,

because we have

a long history of silence.

What's was the first rule

of The Machine?

"What is known is kept secret."

No talking to the media.

I could probably reach too deep

and say that you probably

represent the carpetbaggers

coming down to teach us

what's right and wrong.



[ Sniffles ]

[ Sighs ]

I think they believe that I'm

trying to ruin their tradition.



And I think there's, like,

really good things

about your traditions here,

and I think there's

really toxic things

about your traditions here

and really confusing things

about the traditions here.



But I came into this like,

literally, Roll Tide.

Now that this New York Times

article has named me,

I'm really paranoid.

Like, everywhere I go,

I'm looking over my shoulder.

Our producers are requiring

that we hire a security detail

to be with the film's crew

at all times,

because

they're actually concerned

for our physical safety

at this point.

Because if you

Google "Rachel Fleit,"

the first image that comes up

is of a bald girl,

and I haven't seen

another bald girl in Tuscaloosa

since I started filming here

a year ago.

And if I'm going to keep

filming with my subjects,

I don't know what to do.







Do I need more curls?



"This is insane.

This literally can't be real.

Stop feeding into it."

What do you

feel like when you see that?

I don't know why they are,

so obsessed with it.

The mike...

Well, if we have mikes in there,

that would pick up nothing.

Plus, the conversations,

for the most part,

really are, like,

not that interesting.

What I'm looking most for

is, like, not all,

like, the TikTok stuff.

And at the end of the day,

I want best friends,

and I want to have fun,

like, literally

helping the community,

which is what people

don't see, like,

people don't see all of the good

that sororities do.

It's not just Instagram posts

or, like, pretty girls.



Seven houses tomorrow,

and then I have two houses

on the next day after that,

and then I have one house today.

So I got ten houses back.

Everyone has, like, told me

about how extra the girls are,

like, in the door song

and stuff.

And when I saw that, I was like,

what in the world?

Like, I was sitting there,

like, laughing.

I was like...

[ Chanting, singing ]



[ Chuckles ]

I was like... I was like,

dude, can I really do that?

'Cause I was like, I don't know.

I was talking at both houses

and my lip would get stuck,

like, to my teeth because

there is no spit in my mouth

because I was talking so much.

'Cause they give you, like,

these little water bottles,

and I heard if you drink them,

that it'll, like,

give you bad luck

for the rest of the, like, time,

so you might get dropped

or something bad will happen.

So I just suffered.



I really think you're going

to get your top seven.

- Okay.

- I really think,

and then Pref, it all depends

on, like, what they're thinking.



I realize that,

since being a sophomore now,

you don't have to be in

a sorority to enjoy your life.

It's just me, personally,

I don't think I can do it,

but I know other girls

that love it.



And when I withdrew yesterday,

with my Rho Chi,

she was so, like, supportive.

She just kept telling me

how she was so proud

that I had, like,

an open mindset.



In Atlanta, all the dresses

looked so boring.

- It wasn't your style.

- Yeah.

It felt like I was being, like,

forced to like them, too.

It was annoying.

Did you tell Trisha yet?

- Yeah.

- What'd she say?

Well, she just texted and said,

"Okay, I'm here if you need me.

I'm always in your corner."



I don't really care

about disappointing anyone.





Highlight of my day

was going to AD Pi,

and we're just talking about

making genuine conversations

with people and genuine friends.

Throughout this, like, journey,

like, I've changed so much.

I really have, like,

been finding myself as a person.

This feels more at home than

I've ever felt in a long time.



You can still feel pain and

you can still be angry or sad

at what's been done to you,

and that doesn't

have to go away,

but knowing that

there's, like, a hope

and there's a plan and that

all of the power is within you

and God, like,

really just has given me

so much, like, will to live.



Rush is about being yourself

in these houses,

and I think that

whatever house I choose,

I might not realize

why I chose it in the moment,

or I might not realize

the reason

for everything right away,

but one day, it will all click.







10... 9

8... 7

6, 5, 4, 3

2... 1...

[ Screaming ]

[ All screaming ]

Yes!

[ Indistinct shouting ]



On Bid Day, all I could

think about was home.

So I was just freaking out

and crying

and going back to like

a place of self-hatred

and, like, not knowing who I am.

And then... this sounds so,

like, weird and fake and stupid,

but, like, I... literally all

I could think about was AD Pi

and the girl, McKenna,

that is now, like,

she was my Bid Day Big.

Like, she was all

I could think about,

and I just... she brought me

this sense of hope

and the sense

that I could, like, be myself

and that I finally have

not just a home,

but a place where I belong.



But now I'm here,

and it's so freeing.

And I feel just so, like,

not only at peace,

but, like, hopeful

for the future.



I worry about the...

The reception of all of this

by my sorority sisters,

because I think a lot of them

are going to understand it

as like a betrayal.

It's like, no.

But I also want

these organizations

to be less concerned

with tradition

and more concerned

with the well-being

and the individuality

of their members.

I would like to join

an alumna chapter,

if they'll have me after this.

[ Chuckles ] I would like to.

Like, the people that I met

in my sorority experience

are just the best people

I've met in my entire life.









It's good to be back.



How do you think you've changed

since we've met?

Everything about me has changed.

Like, my outlook on life,

my outlook on this school,

on Greek life.

Like, everything.

I've grown up for sure.

My mom used to have

this photo of me

and I was like,

throwing up a sorority sign.

I was like, "This is the

sorority I'm going to be in."

When I was younger, that's,

like, all I wanted to do.

But I just want to be

my own person.

And I feel like they all try to

mold us to be, like, one person.



What do you think now,

being on the other side of Rush?

Well, I think it...

Like, when you're born,

you automatically are

wanting to belong,

'cause you're just

sitting there, crying,

you're wanting, like, comfort,

like, when you just got out of

this womb to this scary life.

So what else are you

supposed to do?

You're always going to need to

want something.

You're just going to sit there.



[ Laughing, screaming ]

[ Screaming ]

[ Screaming continues ]



Seriously,

we're making a memory.

This is a...

This is a core memory.

- Core?

- Yeah, co-o-o-re.





If you a ZTA

at the University of Alabama

Please come to the stage

for a roll call

Queens of the Row, check

Good grades on exams, check

You can't go a day, check

Without saying "ZLAM," check

Where them ZTAs at? Yeah

- Where them ZTAs at?

- Yeah

- Shout-out to Malik

- Yeah

- Shout-out Momma Deb

- Yeah

- Hottest on the Row

- Yeah

- Top house every year

- Yeah

Where them ZTAs at? Yeah

Where them ZTAs at?

If you a ZTA at

the University of Alabama

Please come to the stage

for a roll call

Queens of the Row, check

Good grades on exams, check

You can't go a day, check

Without saying "ZLAM," check

Where them ZTAs at? Yeah

Where them ZTAs at?

Zeta Tau Alpha,

throw your crowns up, hey

She in Zeta Tau Alpha,

throw your crowns up, hey

Where them ZTAs at? Yeah

Where them ZTAs at?

OOTD! Okay, we... we both have

these cute Zeta shirts

from Zeta.



[ Music fades ]
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