Love Language

Love Language

Plug into a heart-to-heart you didn’t know you needed. Two lifelong best friends Anahita from India and Jesselina from Nepal, take their everyday phone calls online—and you're invited! A podcast where personal meets political, each episode peels back another layer of life's drama, exploring the deeper meanings behind their everyday experiences. The BFFs, now in LA and New York, dive into the politics of sex, culture, society, identity, and everything in between. Through the messiness, drama, and heartbreak, they find comfort in each other’s stories, which is now their "Love Language."

  1. Jun 26

    Why Is Everyone Obsessed With Off Campus! Is 2000s TV Finally Making a Comeback?

    Everyone is watching Off Campus. Your millennial colleague, your younger cousin, that friend who swore she was done with college dramas. Anahita and Jesselina have a theory. Tracing back their years in boarding school and the unlikely education that happens in the in-between spaces. When you're told you're not good at something you've put your heart into. When Cosmopolitan is contraband. When there's one television, the seniors have the remote, and you squeeze yourself onto a shelf just to catch an episode of One Tree Hill and quietly begin imagining a life far outside those walls. And it turns out those shows were doing more work than anyone gave them credit for, which is exactly why shows like Off Campus and Heated Rivalry feel refreshing and important right now, not just as good television but as a genuine counter-offer to a culture that has lately been writing young people with so much spite and so little empathy. The mean girl trope, the toxic bad boy, more stereotypes and less character arc. A light-hearted conversation that will make you glow with nostalgia, and quietly hope that the future is possibly coming around, to a good rom-com, to better storytelling, and maybe, just maybe, to the idea that 2000s nostalgia is having its moment for a reason. PS: Don't miss Jesselina's Hindustani classical music audition from 2007. Gandhari, a Monologue and Anahita’s Stardom (02:43) "You're Not an Actor But You Could Be a Narrator" (06:23) Jesselina’s Hindustani Classical Music Audition That Cannot Be Undone (08:15) Cosmopolitan, Mills and Boon and the Sex Education Our Mothers Started (11:16) The Hot Pink Flip Phone Heist (14:51) Friday Nights, Plastic Chairs and the Senior Who Always Had the Remote (16:32) One Tree Hill, OC, Friends: The Shows That Raised Us (19:32) The Delayed Consumer Theory: A Psycho-social Analysis (29:00) Off Campus and Heated Rivalry - The Radical Act of Writing Young People Well (32:38) Friends Got Us Through Our Darkest Times (49:52) Humor Is Intelligence and We Will Die on This Hill (48:10)

    Why Is Everyone Obsessed With Off Campus! Is 2000s TV Finally Making a Comeback?
  2. Mar 27

    A Dummy's Guide to Surviving Long Distance Relationships

    What does it really take to survive a long-distance relationship without losing your mind, your identity, or your will to live? In this episode, Anahita and Jesselina get honest about the emotional chaos, quiet resilience, and very specific kind of character-building that comes with loving someone across cities, countries, and time zones. From cheating paranoia and mismatched communication styles to control, individuality, marriage, and the politics of not shrinking yourself for love, they unpack the things long-distance relationships tend to expose rather than create. This is not a neat guide, and definitely not an expert one, but it is full of lived experience, contradictions, and the occasional hard-earned insight. Call it a dummy’s guide, call it a survival manual, call it two women oversharing for an hour, but this one is for anyone who has ever tried to hold on to love across distance and come out with themselves intact. (00:35) We’ve been MIA, and Ana is graduating (05:39) Why people fear long-distance relationships so much (06:14) Is long distance really the problem, or something else? (08:14) Why women should not give up dreams just to avoid distance (12:16) Cheating fears, trust, and why control guarantees nothing (14:24) Live locations, passwords, and the illusion of security (19:39) Navigating Different communication styles  (26:22) Marriage, career choices, and being open to distance again (30:06) Are couples who cannot do long distance fundamentally weaker? (38:05) Marriage, surnames, and the politics of losing yourself (47:01) How to keep the spark, when you are so far away? (53:52) Should every relationship survive a long-distance test? (59:29) Ambition, movement, and not fearing distance (1:01:06) Long distance is not ideal, but it is not always the villain

    A Dummy's Guide to Surviving Long Distance Relationships
  3. Jan 23

    Episode 16: Where the hell have the Rom-Coms gone?

    What if romance on screen once held our hands through feeling and belonging, and now lets go? In this episode, we linger over the slow disappearance of the romantic comedy in Bollywood and Hollywood, tracing what has been lost along the way. From starry-eyed classics to today’s hardened heroes, we ask how cinema stopped believing in love as something soft, sincere, and transformative. Moving between nostalgia and critique, Anahita and Jesselina unpack the rise of hyper-masculinity, the flattening of emotional vulnerability, and what that shift reveals about our cultural moment. This conversation drifts through old films that shaped a generation of romantics and lands firmly in the present, questioning why heartfelt storytelling now feels so radical. It is full of yearning for better love stories and for a cinematic language that dares to make us feel again. (00:00) New Year reflections and our grandma hobbies (03:12) Where did all the rom-coms go? (09:03) Perfect actors and sanitized scripts (16:41) Pyar Dosti Hai: how storytelling shaped social dynamics (22:53) Early-2000s journalist women leads and their influence on women in media today (23:46) How young people learned about desire and intimacy through rom-coms (28:42) Missing young adult and teen stories fueling hyper-consumerism (39:01) Rom-com gaps filled by hyper-masculine, nationalistic cinema (45:09) The future of romantic storytelling: what needs to change

    Episode 16: Where the hell have the Rom-Coms gone?

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
6 Ratings

About

Plug into a heart-to-heart you didn’t know you needed. Two lifelong best friends Anahita from India and Jesselina from Nepal, take their everyday phone calls online—and you're invited! A podcast where personal meets political, each episode peels back another layer of life's drama, exploring the deeper meanings behind their everyday experiences. The BFFs, now in LA and New York, dive into the politics of sex, culture, society, identity, and everything in between. Through the messiness, drama, and heartbreak, they find comfort in each other’s stories, which is now their "Love Language."