Latest news with #Tazzy


Daily Mail
17 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Daily Mail
Sydney's nightlife slammed by local woman - as she exposes major problem
A fiery young woman has unleashed on Sydney 's youth in a brutal social media rant, accusing them of killing the city's nightlife - not because there's nothing to do, but because they're too boring to enjoy it. Sydneysider Tazzy explained her rant was going to 'really piss a lot of people in Sydney off' but was something that needed to be said. The 30-year-old said Sydney's nightlife was often described as boring however the root cause was not a lack of interesting things to do but rather the people who go out in the city. 'You hear people say all the time that Sydney's nightlife is boring,' she said in a video shared to social media. 'But we need to address the problem at the root. It's not the nightlife that's boring. People from Sydney are insufferably f****** boring.' Tazzy said the demographic included Sydneysiders aged between 18 and 34-years-old who were supposed to be having fun but are not. She said some blame the cost-of-living crisis as the reason they don't engage in Sydney's nightlife as often. But Tazzy believed that was not an excuse, as young adults across the world were also struggling with the cost of living but still managed to have fun in their cities. Tazzy claimed Sydneysiders were 'well adjusted,' and that meant their prime years were boring. 'We have a good education system, so everyone gets raised pretty well adjusted. What you end up with is a bunch of 18 to 35 year-olds who are relatively well adjusted, and that just means that they're extremely f****** boring,' she said. She added that Sydneysiders are obsessed with fitness and health, which becomes their only hobby. 'If you ask most people in Sydney, they don't have any special interests. They don't have any passions. They don't have anything interesting that they can talk to you about,' she said. 'They actually just don't even have things to f****** say, because they are so f****** well adjusted. Their only hobby is physically working out.' She suggested that for many Australians, grabbing a coffee and walking their dog is often the highlight of their day. 'That's why it's all about dogs, because, like, that's the only interesting thing that they have to in their life,' she said. Tazzy said there are only four interesting groups of people who enrich Sydney's nightlife: creatives, queers, drug addicts, and ethnics from out west. She claimed cities like New York, Paris, and London stood in stark contrast to Sydney, as the 'sheer diversity of people' made the environments 'electric.' The music producer added Sydney's creative industries were suffering as a result, with not enough creative people in the art and music scenes to support new artists. She ended her rant by saying she was exhausted trying to make friends in Sydney. Many social media users agreed with Tazzy's scathing assessment of Sydneysiders, with many claiming the city was socially empty. 'Fully agree! 95 per cent just walk around like NPCs (non-player characters), all dressing the same, doing the same things, same music etc,' one person commented. 'This is so true, I moved here four-ish years ago and when I met people they're asking where I went to school. Mind you we're in our 30s,' a second person wrote. A third said, 'This is so real. I moved here about 18 months ago and honestly, I've never experienced a city that feels so socially dry. 'It's just crowds of insufferably straighty-180s. There's almost no eclectic energy, no sense of play or vulnerability. There's no spontaneity, no vibrant third spaces, and no creativity unless you really go hunting for it.' A fourth added: '100 per cent agree. Moved here four months ago from Tassie and can't wait for my contract to end. It's objectively pretty here but soulless and like 80 per cent of the content from Sydney I see is just 5am run clubs in Bondi. Nothing else.' Others disagreed with Tazzy, suggesting that if she didn't like the city, she should move elsewhere. 'Girl why are you so pressed, just move,' one person commented. 'I agree to a degree. We exist where we do have more interests. You just haven't found your people yet,' a second person wrote. A third added: 'People just have different priorities, it's not that they're boring. You just have to find your people. I personally won't find my people out in the clubs every weekend, that doesn't make me or my kind of people boring.'


Daily Mail
19 hours ago
- Business
- Daily Mail
Aussie slams infuriating act at gym: 'This is a charade'
A woman has ripped into a major gym franchise and accused staff of giving her the 'run-around' after she asked about membership prices. Sydney woman Tazzy said she had just moved to a new area and was doing research on which local gym would be the 'right fit' for her. She then called Anytime Fitness to ask about the price of membership before she was dragged into a '20-minute conversation' about her goals and motivation. The frustrated lawyer claimed she was roped into a tour of the premises, where she was asked to fill out a form and answer more personal questions like how many hours a night she slept and how much water she drank. 'Anyone that wasn't as clued up as me would have been fully into it, but at this point I see where this is going,' Tazzy said in a TikTok video on Thursday. 'This is a charade to distract me from some information you're about to give me that's going to make me definitely not want to join this gym.' Tazzy claimed she spent over an hour speaking to the staff member and still had no clue what the membership price was. The employee finally revealed new members were subject to a $149 enrolment fee and $99.95 access fee. Sydney woman Tazzy (pictured) said she had just moved to a new area and was doing research on new gyms in the area and which one would be the 'right fit' for her Tazzy claimed the gym offered her two types of memberships: $32-a-week for a 12-month commitment or $30 for 18 months. She explained she was interested in a monthly membership and as a rule she doesn't commit to 12-month contracts in case of unforeseen circumstances. 'I'm not signing anything that requires me to pay for an amount of time as long as 12 months,' Tazzy said. 'S*** happens, I could move out of the area, my financial situation could change.' The lawyer was told Anytime Fitness doesn't offer monthly memberships. Tazzy branded the gym 'ridiculous' as she explained she declined to join due to their pricey enrolment fees and refusal to offer monthly memberships. Social media users were divided, with many agreeing it was annoying the staff member was not upfront about the prices at the start of the conversation. 'Normalise putting membership pricing on the website,' one wrote. 'I don't want to talk to anyone ever.' 'They got me with the $80 fee for the access card, then told me immediately after I signed the contract I could just download the app and tap my phone,' another wrote. 'No physical card needed.' Others defended the gym, saying they did not share the same experience as Tazzy. 'I've never had an issue,' one commented. 'The anytime fitness near me was so transparent with pricing that was my first question and they showed me all the different options, holy heck I'm sorry about that experience girl.' 'Mine was $0 joining fee, no access fee and $15 a week. No idea why it was expensive for you,' another agreed.