These Australian twins have gone viral after speaking in synch

Do you recall the prime early days of YouTube? When a video making the rounds was so strange, remarkable or unbelievable that it soon became ubiquitous in meme culture?

This week proved that those specks of stranger-than-fiction internet magic are still here, a reminder that David Lynch’s spirit can still be found all around if you look hard enough.

Who are they? The Twinnies, gosh darn it!

  • Their names are Bridgette and Paula Powers, identical twins from Queensland, Australia. They were interviewed on 7News Australia on Monday to share their account of a reported carjacking that involved their own mother.
  • This isn’t their first time in the spotlight. In fact, the Powers sisters have a decades-long career in Australia for their nature conservation work.
  • The two got their start after dropping out of school due to health issues. One day, as they were helping a green sea turtle stranded on shore, they met Steve Irwin — of all people. After meeting them, Irwin offered them employment at the Australia Zoo.

What’s the big deal? Just watch the video.

What are people saying now? The clip went viral on both TikTok and X, and people had thoughts.

So, now what? Following their employment at the Australia Zoo, the sisters started their own nature rescue called the Twinnies Seabird and Pelican Rescue. They’ve been helping animals and preserving their habitats for more than 20 years.

Transcript:

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

It seems like every week there is a new main character, someone or something the internet is obsessed with. And on any given week it’s a toss-up whether I know who it is or not. Luckily, I have seen our producer Mia Venkat’s average daily screen time, and it is alarming. So I know that the internet’s main character is inevitably on her radar, whoever or whatever it may be. Mia, thank you so much for putting your phone down, stopping the scrolling and taking a moment to come into the studio.

MIA VENKAT, BYLINE: Oh, my God (laughter).

SHAPIRO: Too harsh?

VENKAT: (Laughter) You’re welcome, Ari.

SHAPIRO: OK, so who’s this week’s main character?

VENKAT: OK, Ari, this week’s main character is actually two main characters. It’s the Twinnies.

SHAPIRO: Oh, do you mean the Australians who talk at the same time?

VENKAT: Yes (laughter). Yes.

SHAPIRO: OK, I admit I scrolled past their video. I might have watched it once. Why are they the internet’s main character?

VENKAT: So it’s Bridgette and Paula Powers, and they went viral this week ’cause they were interviewed by 7NEWS Australia since they witnessed a carjacking.

SHAPIRO: I feel like we need to paint a picture. They’re, like, women of a certain age, blonde…

VENKAT: Yeah.

SHAPIRO: …May or may not be natural blondes.

VENKAT: (Laughter) They’re in their 40s. They have this, like, very curly hair. They also wear identical outfits all the time.

SHAPIRO: All the time.

VENKAT: And they were also wearing identical outfits in this news interview that they did. And I’ll say, like, there’s nothing funny about the actual content of the interview – they’re talking about a carjacking – but people just couldn’t get enough of what they sounded like.

SHAPIRO: Right.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

BRIDGETTE PETERS AND PAULA PETERS: And he goes, I’ll shoot you. She goes, hang on, I’m here to help. And mum distracting him to make him look the other way. And he looked the other way. And mum ran into the bush behind the fence, fence.

SHAPIRO: (Laughter).

VENKAT: Right, OK, so, like, I feel bad laughing because…

SHAPIRO: Right.

VENKAT: …It’s a very serious subject. But also, I watched that interview, like, 12 times. I couldn’t tell you a single detail from this carjacking ’cause they’re – it’s so distracting just watching them.

SHAPIRO: It’s giving “The Shining.” What did the internet do with this viral interview?

VENKAT: Yeah, so, obviously, people are obsessed with the fact that these twins talk in sync. A bunch of creators recreated videos, kind of, like, cloning themselves…

SHAPIRO: (Laughter).

VENKAT: …As the twins and, like, talking. This creator, Madison Humphrey, did one. The caption was, those twins trying to convince everyone that they have to speak at the same time.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

MADISON HUMPHREY: (As Bridgette and Paula Peters) And we were calling for help, help, for our mum, mum. And we were scared, scared.

VENKAT: A lot of the comments and a lot of people are like, I don’t know if I really believe that they…

SHAPIRO: Right.

VENKAT: …Talk in unison. And, like, you can tell in some of the videos, one person will basically say an entire sentence, and then the other twin…

SHAPIRO: And then the other jumps…

VENKAT: …Will just kind of, like, land it.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

B PETERS AND P PETERS: All I was thinking about when we were running, I hope he doesn’t fire, fire. Yeah, and we were so blessed, blessed.

SHAPIRO: Who actually are these two women, besides twins who talk at the same time and dress alike?

VENKAT: Right. So they actually run a, like, wildlife sanctuary in Australia. It’s called the Twinnies Pelican and Seabird Rescue. This is, like, their life’s mission. They’re very passionate about it. And this isn’t even their first brush with fame. They’ve been interviewed before about the fact that they are twins that speak in unison, that kind of…

SHAPIRO: I can imagine them being on the Australian version of, like, “Wendy Williams.”

VENKAT: Well, they were even on – they were on “Good Morning Britain” with, like, Piers Morgan…

SHAPIRO: Oh.

VENKAT: …Eight years ago. And on that show, they got asked if they prepare their answers ahead of time.

(SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, “GOOD MORNING BRITAIN”)

B PETERS AND P PETERS: We don’t know how it happens. Like, some people go, do you rehearse a conversation? And we said, no, how can you rehearse a conversation? It’s a bit stupid.

VENKAT: I personally love whimsy, and I want to believe that they always talk at the same time, and it’s not preplanned.

SHAPIRO: OK, Mia.

VENKAT: Yes.

SHAPIRO: We’re not twins. We’re not even siblings.

VENKAT: (Laughter).

SHAPIRO: We’re not even in the same room right now. But do you think you and I could do this?

VENKAT: I think we could. What if we just try the goodbyes, the typical NPR goodbye?

SHAPIRO: OK.

VENKAT: But I’m going to kind of take the lead on what you would say, and let’s see if you can guess what I’ll say.

SHAPIRO: Yeah, sure.

VENKAT: So…

SHAPIRO: Mia…

VENKAT: Mia Venkat…

SHAPIRO: …Venkat…

VENKAT: …That was…

SHAPIRO: …That was…

VENKAT: …Perfect.

SHAPIRO: …Perfect.

VENKAT: Best interview…

SHAPIRO: Best interview…

VENKAT: …Of my life.

SHAPIRO: …Of my life.

(LAUGHTER)

VENKAT: Thanks for joining us.

SHAPIRO: Thanks for joining us.

VENKAT: Ari?

SHAPIRO: Ari? Oh, it’s my turn now.

(LAUGHTER)

SHAPIRO: You are the greatest…

VENKAT: You are the greatest…

SHAPIRO: …Interviewer…

VENKAT: …Interviewer (laughter)…

SHAPIRO: …In the…

VENKAT: …In the world.

SHAPIRO: …World.

VENKAT: You’re welcome.

SHAPIRO: You’re welcome.

(LAUGHTER)

SHAPIRO: And inevitably, we have to go out on music by NSYNC.

VENKAT: I was going to say “Birds Of A Feather”…

SHAPIRO: What? (Laughter) Come on.

VENKAT: …’Cause they love birds.

SHAPIRO: Because you were born in the ’90s.

VENKAT: (Laughter).

(SOUNDBITE OF NSYNC SONG, “BYE BYE BYE”)

 

Migrants deported from U.S. to Salvadoran prison remain under U.S. control

The government of El Salvador has acknowledged to United Nations investigators that the Trump administration maintains control of the men who were deported from the U.S. to a Salvadoran prison.

DHS ends Temporary Protected Status for thousands from Nicaragua and Honduras

Some 76,000 people from Nicaragua and Honduras were covered by TPS, which provides protection from deportation and grants work permits to people from certain nations affected by war or natural disasters.

BRICS nations push back as Trump warns of tariffs

Leaders of the BRICS group of emerging economies meeting for their annual summit had hoped to downplay any differences with the U.S. But even a toned down group proclamation drew the ire of President Trump.

DOJ says no evidence Jeffrey Epstein had a ‘client list’ or blackmailed associates

The two-page memo outlines the "exhaustive review" the department conducted of the Epstein files in its possession, and also reiterates that Epstein died by suicide, contrary to some conspiracy theories.

Floods are getting more dangerous around the country, not just in Texas

The deadly floods in Central Texas were caused by extremely heavy rain. Climate change is causing even more rain to fall during the heaviest storms.

Near old Montana mine, special clinic for asbestos-related illness fights to survive

The Center for Asbestos Related Disease in Libby, Montana, closed in May after a court judgment. The clinic's federal funding is also threatened. Patients with scarred lungs worry about what's next.

More Front Page Coverage