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Baddies Midwest Baddies Gone Wild Auditions Part 1 - Brokensilenze May 2026

Of course, no Baddies release goes without controversy. Comment sections under the BrokenSilenze video are already split. Purists argue that the auditions feel too scripted this time, with some women clearly rehearsing “iconic” one-liners. Others are thrilled, claiming that Baddies Midwest has the potential to be the most violent season yet due to the “no-flyover-state nonsense” attitude.

BrokenSilenze has promised that Part 2 will drop later this week, teasing a clip at the end of the video that shows security physically dragging someone out of a hotel lobby in Milwaukee.

For the uninitiated, BrokenSilenze isn't a production studio or a network plant. They are a digital archivist—a historian of reality TV fights, leaked auditions, and behind-the-scenes drama. In the world of Zeus Network fandom, BrokenSilenze is the go-to source for raw, uncut footage that the official promos are too polished to show. Of course, no Baddies release goes without controversy

When "Baddies Midwest Baddies Gone Wild Auditions Part 1" dropped on the BrokenSilenze channel, the view count didn't just climb; it exploded. Why? Because BrokenSilenze doesn't edit out the awkward pauses, the security interventions, or the crying in the parking lot. They show the real audition.

Running just over 22 minutes, Part 1 features a montage of hopefuls from cities like Detroit, Chicago, St. Louis, and Cleveland. Here’s what stood out: Others are thrilled, claiming that Baddies Midwest has

1. The Return of “Nasty” Energy From the first clip, it’s clear producers are looking for the same volatile chemistry that made Baddies East and Baddies Caribbean hits. One auditionee, who goes by “Kash Doll (not the rapper),” immediately throws a drink at another contestant during a group interview. The reason? “She looked at my man’s chain.” It’s vintage Baddies—petty, loud, and ready to trend.

2. The Midwest Grudge Unlike the coastal or southern seasons, the Midwest auditions carry a distinct chip on their shoulder. Multiple women mentioned that the Midwest is “overlooked” and that they have “something to prove.” One memorable clip shows a woman from Flint, Michigan, delivering a two-minute monologue about surviving harsh winters and even harsher streets, ending with a challenge to Natalie Nunn: “Tell her pull up to the East Side. We don’t fight with words here.” They are a digital archivist—a historian of reality

3. The BrokenSilenze Edit True to form, BrokenSilenze doesn’t just post raw footage. The channel overlays dramatic background music (often phonk or heavy 808s), adds slow-motion replays of every slap or hair pull, and includes on-screen captions that highlight the most outrageous quotes. In Part 1, a moment where a woman silently stares into the camera after being called “mid” has already been turned into a viral GIF.

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