Charli XCX, Kylie Jenner, and Aidan Zamiri teamed up for a relaxed and surprisingly candid conversation in a new episode of Instagram’s Close Friends Only, giving fans a glimpse into the personal side of life online, from their earliest posts to the small details that shape their everyday routines.
The episode leans into nostalgia as the trio looks back at their first Instagram posts, reflecting on how much the platform and their own lives have changed since those early days. What began as a space for casual snapshots has transformed into a cultural engine that shapes trends, careers, and public perception, something all three guests understand firsthand.
Charli XCX, who has built a reputation for constantly reinventing herself creatively, spoke about how social media has influenced the way artists connect with audiences. Rather than seeing it purely as promotion, she described it as a space for experimentation and personality, a way to show different sides of herself beyond the music.
Kylie Jenner approached the conversation from a different angle, reflecting on the way Instagram has documented her growth in real time. For someone who has lived most of her adult life in the public eye, the platform acts almost like a digital diary, capturing moments that fans remember as milestones but that she experienced simply as life unfolding.
Aidan Zamiri, known for his visual work and creative direction, added another perspective, discussing how imagery and storytelling on social media have evolved into an art form of their own. For creatives, Instagram isn’t just a platform, it’s a canvas.
The conversation wasn’t all serious reflection. One of the lighter moments came when the trio compared their go-to orders at In-N-Out, a detail that fans often love because it humanizes celebrities in a way polished interviews rarely do. It’s these small, ordinary preferences that make episodes like Close Friends Only feel more like a casual hangout than a formal interview.
What makes the series appealing is its tone. Instead of focusing on headlines or controversies, it centers on the quieter stories behind public figures, the first posts, the memories, the habits, and the moments that don’t usually make the news but shape who they are.
For viewers, that intimacy is the draw. Seeing major cultural figures like Charli XCX and Kylie Jenner talk about something as simple as their first Instagram photo or a favorite fast-food order reminds audiences that behind the massive followings and carefully curated feeds, there are still very real people navigating their lives one post at a time.
