Tri Delta CEO Mindy Tucker, Southern Methodist, along with fellow Tri Delta sisters and Executive Office staff members Lexi Leggs, Millikin, Meredith Davies, Rhodes, and Avery Sadler Hill, Mississippi, are in the TV Room and back at it again, dishing up some hot topics! It’s fun, fast-paced, informative and always entertaining. It’s real talk—with a Tri Delta twist!
Catch up with the ladies in the TV Room as they dive into today’s hot topics. First up is Nike’s new slogan, reintroducing “Just Do It” to a new generation with the launch of its latest campaign, “Why Do It?” The conversation explores what this new slogan means and whether Nike hit the mark relating to today’s generation. Next, the group unpacks all the feels in the hit series “The Summer I Turned Pretty.” Why are we so connected to it? The series and books take us back to those teenage years and the lessons they bring, making each of us stop and reflect on our own journey.
Hear our hosts’ takes on how these topics connect to women, relationships and life as a member of Tri Delta. Plus, don’t miss a conversation where the hosts share their favorite Tri Delta moments—including some awesome awards!
[Tri Deltas in the TV Room Transcript]
This transcript was created using automated technologies and may contain errors.
Hello, friends, and welcome back to another episode of the Trydeltas in the TV Room.
I'm Mindy Tucker. I'm Trydeltas CEO, and I'm really happy to be back here with you.
I feel like it's been a while since we have been together, and sitting down with
these and talking all things tri -delta and other things is really one of my
favorite things. So I'm glad to be back. If you're new to our podcast, welcome.
Here's what to expect. This is where we dive into current events, trending topics,
pop culture, which I will likely know nothing about as the older person in the
room. And we look at all of it through the lens of tri -delta sisterhood and our
shared experiences. It's sort of real talk with a tri -delta twist. It's very fun.
If you've been with us before, welcome back. If you're new with us, we're so glad
to see you as well. As always, I am joined by these three lovely women, some of
my favorite tri -delta sisters and teammates here at our Executive Office staff, Avery
Hill, Lexi Legs, and Meredith Dapies. And we're going to dive into our topics. Okay,
do we want to do quick introductions here of everybody just in case we have some
new listeners out here? Who are we? Why are we here? That kind of thing. I'm, as
I said, Mindy Tucker, Tridelta CEO from our chapter at Southern Methodist University,
and I'll pass it off to Avery. Hi, everyone. My name is Avery Hill.
I am our Housing Development Manager, and I am a Tridelta from the University of
Mississippi. Hotty -totty. All
right, Meredith. Hi everyone, Meredith Davies. I joined Tridelta at Rhodes College and
I now serve Tridelta as brand support manager partnerships. Stepped into a new role
this August. Really excited to be here. Terrific. Hi everybody.
Yes, Lexi Leggs joining you all here from Dallas, Texas. I'm a Tridelta from
Milliken University and my new title is the Chapter Success manager for operations.
- Love it. We've had some shifting around since this group's been together last.
Meredith and Luxie both have new roles as we've aligned our executive office staff
to be able to execute against our strategic plan in a more effective way. So
congratulations to you too on your new roles. That's very exciting. All right,
we're gonna do hot topics today. I'm excited about the hot topics. I've seen the
list. I'm ready to jump in. I'm going to go first. I am really interested.
I love sociology. So anytime somebody like looks at the world and what's going on
and then steps into it in like a really unique and innovative way. So I'm looking
at Nike's new campaign around their long time just do it campaign, which is
basically just do it. What if you don't do it anyway? And it's stepping into this
space where they know that this new, this next generation coming up is so anxious,
so much anxiety. We see it in our data. We know that the women entering college
today come in with a high level of anxiety and just all of the mental challenges
that causes. And I love Nike sort of stepping into this and saying, "We know you're
scared. We know you're anxious. We know you're thinking but what if I what if I'm
not able to what if I'm not successful and then telling them to do it Anyway, and
it's one of those lessons. I've learned in life. I think around like the journey
being more important than the destination Oftentimes getting there. It's not really
where you're going. It's it's about getting there and it's about what you learn on
the way And I think this dovetails with that nicely because it's really not about
am I gonna win or am I am I going to be the best? Am I not? It doesn't matter.
Just do it. Just have the journey. Have the experience. I don't know if you guys
have seen the ad. If you have thoughts on it.
I have a lot of thoughts on this. On my vision board, on my desktop wallpaper, it
says do it, scared. I can be a nervous person.
I can be an overthinker. You all know this about me. me. But I always like to
remind myself like to not live with what ifs. And a lot of times that means doing
something scared and doing it anyway. And so I'm a big fan and I definitely
resonate with the way they're saying this now. And I've always loved to do it. But
that's like, oh, maybe I needed that when I was a 13 year old athlete trying to
figure out how to compete and not be scared.
- As a non -athlete, I still resonate with it. I really appreciate that reminder to
find your intrinsic motivation, I think, is also what that Y kind of reminds me of.
And I know when talking about generational norms, like that really resonates with
this generation. So, I mean, a big win for Nike to be right ahead of their curve
and right there meeting them and reminding them of, like you said, it's not just
important of of that result, but how are you getting there and the why behind it
and what motivates you? I love that so I can resonate with it even if I'm not
that athletic, it's okay.
- Yeah, I definitely think knowing your purpose behind something is important and that
can help you face those fears. Like your purpose and why you're doing it might just
be to do something uncomfortable. Mindy, as you mentioned the anxiety thing, it made
me think of the comfort seekers. That is one of those personas that we see in this
new generation of college women, is this group of comfort seekers not saying it's a
bad thing, but it's probably easier for them to not do it. But when you are able
to find that purpose and dive into that, you're able to say, OK, this is why I'm
going to do it, and I'm going to do it anyway.
I think that goes back to recruitment, like how many things you think about as a
PNM? What if it doesn't work? What if I don't get what I want? What if you do?
What if you just tried? What if you went for it anyway? I think maybe that is a
great a great thing that we can share with comfort seekers and with any any woman
thinking about going through recruitment or even our members as they look into
leadership roles as they as they recruit and people don't like to recruit.
you believing in yourself for a minute and how empowering that can be.
So yeah, I love it. I'm a fan. I'm gonna give it a thumbs up, so. - I saw it on
TV after we were going over this and we had gotten our topics for this episode. I
saw it on TV, I was like, oh my gosh, that's what I'm supposed to be talking
about next week. Yeah. - There you go. I love that. - Seated (laughing)
- Marina, take us, take us some more fun here. - Pita, of course. I,
we have to talk about summer. I turned pretty. The finale came out Wednesday
morning. I did watch it before work to be-- - No spoilers.
- No spoilers. - No spoilers. - No spoilers. (laughing) - No purposes, but I've never
seen any of this before. This is all gonna all gonna be new to me, so. - When you
need to have like a brain rot weekend, just watch the whole show. That's what I've
been telling people because it would be such a gift to start it again and not have
to wait a week for every episode.
- I like to bring shows that way. - How long has it been out? I didn't know there
were three seasons and I thought it was on Netflix. So I was all over the place
last night trying to find it, but I think it started in summer of 2022. And I
think there was maybe one summer when there wasn't a season, but I'm obsessed.
I did not watch the first two seasons when they aired, watched them all last summer
over the course of three days and became completely obsessed. But Whitney Gillian,
Tridelta's director of alumni growth and I, we both watch it every Wednesday morning
before work. And it's the first thing we do in the morning is talk about this
show. And Whitney is a little bit older than I am. I am definitely not a teen who
these books were written for or the show was written for. But we feel really
connected to it. And I was just thinking about that recently, like, why,
why do all these women with, with children or who are married or just living a
different stage of life than the characters in the show are living, like why do we
care so much? And we thought a lot about what brings us together and I think a
lot of us see ourselves in this young woman, Isabel Belly. She is a scrappy young
woman who's trying to figure out how to be a good friend, how to fall in love as
a teenager, what first love feels like, what heartbreak feels like, and really just
takes you back to that time in your life. And every a while ago, we were talking
about reading the books, because these books were out when we were tweens and teams.
Yes. Okay, so I just actually, because I've run out of other things to watch on.
Streaming services just started somewhere I turned pretty last week before knowing
that we were going to talk about this. So I'm very thankful that I did. But I
when I was in middle school, I was not a reader. I still, if you know me, reading
is on my New Year's resolutions list every year. I'm like a one buck book every
four months kind of person. When I was in middle school, my best friend and I
would stay in the same place for like weeks at a time. We would have multiple
night slumber parties and she would read me these books before we would go to bed.
So I wouldn't read them. She would read them out loud to me and I would listen to
them. And then when the show was coming out, I think I was visiting her. She had
gone to grad school in Virginia, which this timing makes sense based on what you
said, Meredith. She was like, "Oh my gosh, Avery, we have to watch the show and I
don't think I was as prepared for it because she was the one who was actually
reading them to me. I think I did end up reading the third book by myself but it
really is bringing back these like middle school feelings that I had when we had
this like shared time together not only were we reading this as friends but then
also like you said Meredith like experiencing all that stuff it's it is a brain rot
But in a very sweet way, and I love Belly's character.
I did laugh. Like, so you've seen this now that you've seen episode one. Belly's
mom described her as a feral cat in one of the first episodes. And I was watching
it with Greg and I was like, if my mother ever in an endearing way called me a
feral cat, I think I would run out of the room like you've got to be kidding me
but I'm only on episode seven of season one but I'm loving it it's great that
comes up again later on and it is a positive thing and I think we could all we
could all be the same feral cat sometimes I I think I'm sometimes a feral cat um
but like I even think about my mom Like I'm trying to get her, she watched season
one, trying to get her back in to watch the rest of the show. My mom watched all
my shows with me growing up. And I'm like, I think that I'll probably be this kind
of mom. I think that I will still, and like it won't be just because I feel like
I need to watch what my children are watching so that I can keep an eye on them.
I think I'm still gonna feel like a girl in my heart. I think I'm still gonna
care about those same things. And I think that-- - It's not even girls. The number
of shows I get hooked into with my kids, especially when they were younger and they
watched Disney and that kind of thing, they would be like, are you watching this or
are we watching this? And they're boys. So it's not just girls. I think there's
something endearing about the teenage years and the memories we have of them and
what, you know, you don't remember the hard parts. I think you, looking back, you
just remember your friends and the the the weights of life that you didn't have
back then and you know it's a it's a special time so i'm in now i'm gonna have
to watch it so we have to i think all of our chapters probably every single one
is having a watch party every single week for these episodes coming out and i mean
the connections that just yet that our members have made just watching this show and
spending that time together, that shared love of something, you know,
kind of silly, but really, really sweet is the warmth of my heart. - You know what
I like about that that's also interesting, and I don't think I realize this until
you said it, that they are releasing these one week at a time, like back in the
day. This is not a binge. I mean, I can binge season one now because I'm so
behind, but - Yeah, it creates that community experience as well. Like you can watch
this with your friends because you know it's all happening at the same time. Not
like, oh, I'm on a Saturday all by myself doing the whole season, even though
that's what I'm doing. That's not what hopefully people who are up to date are up
to date. And that's sweet that they, like just to have that time together. I'm
thinking of me and my friend reading the books together if only I stayed with her
and on Wednesdays but you know having that shared experience with your friends. Yeah
with your sisters. I remember it kind of reminds me of like the couch nights with
the Bachelorette that was always our thing in our chapter and everybody would sit
out on the couch and that was like we talk about big R ritual and little R ritual
that was our little R ritual was couch nights with the Bachelorette so I imagine
the summer I turn pretty is probably very popular at Delta Epsilon. I love that.
- All right, I'm in, it's on the list now. So any other hot topics for us?
- On the topic of documentaries, has anybody seen the unknown number documentary? Have
you all seen that or heard of it? - The unknown place. - It's the catfish one.
- No, okay, so Mary, I'm kind of scared too. - It's slightly,
it's abrupt. - Yes. - With the moment for sure. - Yes. - Yeah.
- I did see it. It don't watch it. It's so, it's like, oh, it's like it. - Once
you find out, I think once you find out the answer, then after I saw the answer,
I turned it off. But if you have not seen it, talk about a plot twist. It, I
feel like that has been the talk of the social media and just everywhere has that
documentary. But yeah, I agree. It's, it's kind of a hard watch. Once you get the
answer, that's all. It's, it's interesting. It's interesting.
Everyone just be more careful on the internet. Everybody, older people, younger
people, we're all being, we're all being lied to on the internet. We all just need
to be a little bit more careful. We'll get this. I get a call from my grandmother
last night Who said she's like I've tried to call you your sister and your mom
I've been I've gotten ten calls today from unknown numbers and I finally answered
and I was talking to this person I was like do not answer those she goes. Yeah, I
finally saw it said spam risk I'm like do not answer a spam risk call, but they're
out people are out to get It's easy. It's easy to answer them when you're curious.
Yeah, - Yes, it's hard. - And sometimes they'll use your same area code. So then
you're like, oh, is this someone who I have their number and don't have anymore?
- Yeah. - Yeah. - It can be misleading. - Be careful. - I think I'm up to probably
20 spam calls a day that come in. I just hit, you know,
I don't answer them. It says spam, but somehow I got my number.
There's an app. I was telling my grandmother, apparently there's an app you can get
that will silence all of them. If it, you know how your phone tells you spam risk
or whatever. There's an app, I think that sensor. So if it sees that that'll come
up, it will silence your, that phone call, which I'm about, when I see my
grandmother this weekend, I'm going to download on her phone to make sure she
doesn't answer anymore. - Please do. - Well, now I'm gonna have to look that up.
- It's important.
- All right, so Lexi has us totally disturbed.
Any other hot takes? No. All right. I think we're easing into the school year here.
So, you know what else I wanted to hear from everybody about was their favorite
most recent tri -delta moment. I feel like we all have them on the staff in really
unique and different ways sometimes and sometimes they're personal to just our
experience as a tri -delta, but sometimes they come from work and I think we get
these vantage points to these special moments sometimes that not everybody gets.
So I wanted to do a little round robin on, what was your favorite most recent tri
-delta moment? who wants to go first.
- I can go. - Oh, go ahead. - Oh, mine's the least recent, I think, out of all of
us. It was in August, but as I mentioned at the beginning, I am the Housing
Development Manager, which is a really fancy way to say that I work on our housing
campaigns. So right now we are under construction at Texas A &M. They don't have a
house. It is being built as we speak. I'm excited. I get to go actually in a few
weeks. That might be my new favorite memory on October 3rd. But I got to go for
work week and they recruited out of a tent which was unconventional and very
creative and it ended up being great. But it was so fun to work with this group
that had great attitudes about it. Overall, I think there are, you know, some bumps
in the road when the air conditioning goes out in Texas in the summer. That's
tough, but they made it look lovely. I keep telling people don't think of a camping
tent, think of a wedding tent, it was glam. Tell the story about what they did
with the house with the front side. Yes, this is so great. So where we are in our
construction phase, we actually have the exterior rendering, So, working with our
housing team, Betsy Graham helped immensely with this and our production company.
We were able to print out a gigantic canvass.
I don't even know what material we're going to reveal is what it's about size like
yes of the exterior rendering to put on the house. So it at least gave that feel
when new members were walking in of this is what you will be entering into next
fall. I just think that they did a great job with the whole thing, making it as
cozy and making it like there's so much just your head, the chance were still
happening, the one -on -one conversations were happening, bumping was still happening.
It was so fun to watch them practice. I was only there for work week, not
recruitment, but it was great to work with them and work the kinks out and they
had a successful recruitment, so It was great. - There'll be a picture in the
upcoming trident. So hopefully you've all paid, all our listeners have paid their
dues and are getting their trident on the regular, but there'll be a cool picture
of that in the trident coming up this fall. So,
all right. Lexie and Meredith. - I can go. Mine is kind of two.
Well, since we mentioned we've switched roles and part of my role responsibilities is
supervising our team of CDCs. CDCs. Meredith and I both served as consultants fresh
out of college, so it was kind of interesting being able to step into the role of
supervising them. They went through a long month of training and hit the road about
four weeks ago, but I think that was a really exciting moment for me because just
seeing them during training with all of the questions that they had and just the
knowledge that they were trying to receive from everybody to now developing that
confidence week after week in our 101s, checking in and hearing them solving problems
and developing chapters and all of those good things. That's really cool to see. It
kind of is just as fulfilling as being a teacher again. So I really love that. And
then my other one is I learned and was pleasantly surprised to learn that I won
the AFA Award. It is the Gail Webb New Professional Award. They award it to one
campus professional and one headquarters professional. So My colleagues and sisters on
staff here, coordinated together and nominated me for the award. And then I found
out that Gail Webb is actually Tridelta. So that made it even more exciting to know
it was named after Tridelta. Now I'll get to accept it. I really do love the work
that I do. So this really was just kind of like a bonus, but it was very
surprising. Honestly, I got on the call and they were like, you won an award and I
was like, me? So good times. But yeah, I'd say the award goes to my thanks. - Can
you share with our listeners what AFA is? - Yes, AFA. - It's all the acronyms here.
- Right, and I am probably gonna mess it up. The Association for Fraternity and
Sorority Advisors. But it's a conference for both campus -based professionals and
headquarters professionals that work in the industry. So they typically have a big
annual meeting in December of every year, folks from all over the country, probably
all over the continent, if I'm imagining. come in to just collaborate and learn ways
to advance the industry, idea share, crowd source, it's a really cool experience.
So I've gone once as a professional a couple of years ago, I didn't get a chance
to go last year, but I'm going back this year to accept the award and then to
collaborate with colleagues and hopefully learn some new things that we can bring
back to help try Delta too. - I love it. Well, congratulations. Well deserved, well
deserved for sure. All - Okay, Meredith, speaking of awards. - Yes,
we also tried to also received an award for our work on Young Alumni Giving from
the Foundation for Fraternal Excellence, similar to AFA, but the foundation version,
we worked on a submission prior to our staff transition.
I was really excited about it. I'm excited about young alumni giving in general, the
last three years working on young alumni giving, getting that to where it is now
has just been the most amazing work I could have done as a young professional to
work with women my own age, bring them into Tri Delta in unique ways, get them
plugged back in so that they feel compelled to give to the foundation. I love doing
it, Avery, and I've been working on for a year or so this this was really really
a sweet a sweet thing for us and I've been working on something else at home that
day like out running around we were we were sending little PR boxes to Arizona for
recruitment and I get a random FaceTime from Avery at like 6 30 I look like a
mess and she's holding holding the award and it was it was really really special
special special thing for us. If you don't know, our young alumni and collegiate
giving has grown
exponentially 300 % or more. I was trying to pull these sats up and I didn't have
them pulled up in the last three years. And, you know, we submitted for this award
the foundation did, but really this award belongs to the women who helped make this
possible and give to the foundation. It, it sounds cheesy but it truly wouldn't have
been possible without you. So thank you. We're so grateful and hope you continue to
get. Thank you for all the work you put into it. It really I think has made a
difference in bringing younger women into just knowing what our foundation does and
how powerful it is. And I wanted to let you do a plug really quick for the
Friendship Society, what it is and where people who are listening might go to check
it out. Yeah, I would love to. The Friendship Society is our Young Alumni Giving
Society for members who are 33 and younger. The gifts to the Friendship Society
start at a very, I think, I think it feels like a pretty easy monthly amount of
$11 a month, which is $133 a year. And those giving levels are designed to grow
with you as you advance in your career in your 20s and early 30s. So at that
first level, the blue level, the silver level, you're giving $19 a month and the
gold level, you're giving $33 a month, which is right around $400 a year. So that
really just grows as you're able to give more. Tridelto wants to be there for you
and support you in your philanthropic journey and all of the money that you're
giving through the Friendship Society, supporting the work of Tridelto's Foundation to
provide scholarships, emergency financial assistance, and our transformational life
changing programs for our members. And your support really is making a difference as
we work to support our members in every possible way. As college becomes more and
more expensive, our members have crazy things happen to them in their lives somewhere
along the way, we want to be there for them whenever that happens, wherever they
are in life. And our donors are making that a reality. So thank you. Awesome.
Well, very happy for the award. Congratulations to you. I'm really bummed you weren't
there to get it in person. Thanks to Avery for, you know, modern technology helps
us be in a lot of places. So I love that. Well, for me, you know,
I had the opportunity to be with our executive board last weekend and we did our
board meeting in Berkeley, California, and went to visit our chapter there. And it
was made a little bit more special because we've recently been through a leadership
transition in tri -Delta. And our past president, Elizabeth DiMartino,
has joined the staff, which we're all really excited about. She's our new Chief
Engagement Officer. So all things fraternity, membership, engagement will be under her
purview and I think she's going to bring great vision and excitement to that. But
that required us to look at our bylaws and see how do we replace a fraternity
president. And the LCSE, which is the Leadership Cultivation Selection Committee,
helped us do that. And Libby Lefler -Hogan, who went to Berkeley, was in our chapter
there, is our new fraternity president. And so it was really fun last weekend to be
there with a brand new fraternity president from their chapter. The women were so
excited. They made her a sign. It was so cute. They were just so proud to have
somebody from their chapter be in that position. But I also got to watch Elizabeth
hand the president's badge to Libby, sort of the passing, you know, it's that ritual
of passing the baton, passing the gavel, but literally handing the badge. The
president has a special badge in Tridelta and it was a really special moment and
just nice to be there and watch the continuity of leadership with so many amazing
leaders in Tridelta and the process for selecting them, you know, is so careful and
thoughtful and the people that do that really take it seriously and it was just
nice to see that continuity and have that be such a happy moment, especially for
Libby at her chapter to be able to celebrate with them. So it was pretty fun.
Going to a chapter anytime is really fun. Also, just being with our collegiate
women, so. Avery,
are you talking? We can't hear you. Oh, we've got sound problems.
Uh -oh. Oh,
there we go. Yeah. I want to plug if y 'all receive hopefully everybody received
this September let's talk Trydalta email the past president's panel from VLC brought
me I'm so thankful I got to watch it in person the truly brought me to tears
talking about leadership it is first of all it shows you kind of the history try
Delta in a way from, I was thinking about, they were talking, Jackie Clark was
talking about starting the body image program, like the very early stages of that.
And I think it was Sarah Lindsay who was talking about the first few days with the
St. Jude partnership, like all of, and I hope I got those people right, but you
really get to hear like how our collegians are affected Now by these decisions that
these leaders made so long ago and it was it was just such a cool eye -opening
like jaw -dropping. I don't have all the words for it because it was incredible, but
it's on YouTube now. I sent it to my friends yesterday. I I just loved it and I
started watching it again because I thought it was so good. That was definitely one
of my favorite panels that I've experienced at a Tridel Tridelta event, just to see
that much history, but also humility, like the amount of just, they were like, yeah,
at the time, like this was a monumental change, but I was just doing what I
thought I was doing for the fraternity and it was just so, again, yeah, I echo
everything that you said, Avery. I love, love, love that panel. So I will be
watching it again on YouTube. - Yeah, incredible women. My favorite moment of that
was Eve Riley, who sang Tridelta's values. I didn't know it at the time when I
pledged, but I know now tri deltas values are all you need in life, like they will
get you through and I thought, oh, what a moment I just want to cut that little
60 second split piece and share it with the world. Just such great wisdom and fun.
They're such amazing women. We're really lucky to have them. Yeah, we're just going
back and forth between laughing and crying for like a whole hour. It was just a
roller coaster. And I mean, they're such wonderful, treasured members of our
organization. And Avery and I have been so fortunate to work with Jackie Clark on
the foundation staff and, you know, speaking to her before and then speaking to her
after. I felt different. At first, I was just talking to Ms. Jackie. And then I
was talking to, like, this famous Tridel to icon, like just one hour later. But I
think that will be something I treasure forever, being in that room with so many
past leaders. It was, yeah, definitely one of the greatest tri -delta memories ever.
We'll make sure to put a link in the notes for this podcast so people can click
on that and enjoy all of that just like we were able to. Well, I think that does
it for month or this week or when however often we're going to do the for this
episode. Thanks for thanks to these three for always being game for a fun
conversation and their sweet Treadalta hearts. I appreciate each of you and thanks to
all of you for joining us today. We're so glad that you came to see us. Dave
giving is coming up. Woohoo. Let's Meredith just talked about the power and the
impact that Tredeltas Foundation has September or sorry not September September now
but November 11th is Tredeltas Day of Giving. We hope you'll mark that day in your
calendar and make sure to head to our website or find us on social media that day
to make a donation to Tredeltas Foundation. There is a little bit of a competition
around chapters and who raises the most money And I may or may not be part of the
chapter that does win that every so often. A little bit of gloating here.
Last year, we got knocked off our top spot, but we plan to come back strong this
year. So show up for your chapter that day and make a donation to the foundation.
We're also heading into Founders Day. So I hope everybody will go to Triedelt's
website or their local alumni chapter and find out Then the Founders Day event is
happening near you. It's our 137th Founders Day, 137 years that this amazing
organization has been around since Sarah and Eleanor and our friends got together in
Boston and made this a thing that we all now share. Make sure to check out where
you can go to celebrate with your sisters for Founders Day. We hope you will like,
subscribe and rate our podcast. We have three stars in our crescent, but we love
those five star ratings, so bring them on. Thanks for joining us today and until
next time, Delta Love.