Miami Mean Girls - Randi Wright Amp Goddess Har... May 2026

If the assault was the spark, the leaked texts were the wildfire.

An anonymous Instagram account called @MiamiMeanGirlsExposed published screenshots of a group chat titled "The A-List Hive." In those texts, Goddess Harlow allegedly referred to other Miami female entrepreneurs as:

The texts revealed a systematic bullying strategy: ice out a target, get them blacklisted from local yoga festivals, and spread rumors about their "unstable mental health" to destroy their sponsorships.

Randi Wright went live on Instagram, tears streaming down her face, holding a folder of printed texts. "This isn't spirituality," she said. "This is Mean Girls set in Miami. She’s Regina George in a latex corset."

If you’re hunting for a track that captures the heat, defies expectations, and empowers the listener, hit “Miami Mean Girls” on repeat. Whether you’re:

this collaboration hits all the right notes. Miami Mean Girls - Randi Wright amp Goddess Har...

Bottom line: Randi Wright and Goddess Har have created a timeless summer anthem that’s equal parts glitter, grit, and goddess‑level swagger. It’s more than a song—it’s a cultural shift, a visual feast, and a reminder that Miami’s heat is as much about the energy we bring to it as it is about the weather.


By: The Miami Vibe Desk

MIAMI, FL – In a city built on transient fame, luxury rental scams, and spiritual grifters, it takes a lot to shock the collective conscience of South Florida’s social scene. But in the scorching summer of 2024, a feud erupted that cracked the polished facade of the city’s "high-vibrational" elite.

Dubbed the "Miami Mean Girls" saga by TikTok sleuths and Reddit forums, the conflict centers on two polarizing figures: Randi Wright, a prominent digital creator and self-defense instructor, and Goddess Harlow (often searched as "Goddess Har"), a dominatrix-turned-spiritual life coach.

What started as a private falling out between friends has exploded into a firestorm of leaked text messages, assault allegations, defamation lawsuits, and a profound cultural question: Is Miami’s wellness scene just high-school mean girl behavior wrapped in sage smoke? If the assault was the spark, the leaked

By: [Author Name] Dateline: Miami’s Brickell Avenue & South Beach

In the ecology of Miami power players—where social currency is measured in Instagram story views and table service at E11even—two names have emerged from the glittering swamp of influencer culture with a reputation for calculated cruelty. They are Randi Wright, the strategic queen bee, and Goddess Har, the esoteric enforcer. Together, they represent a new breed of "Mean Girl" for the Magic City: one part luxury lifestyle, one part psychological warfare.

Randi Wright steps off the bus onto a sun‑drenched campus that looks like a postcard. Palm trees line the walkways, the pool shimmers like a mirror, and a low‑rider beats a bass line that vibrates through the air. Randi, 17, is the first in her family to earn a full‑ride scholarship to the prestigious Miami International Academy (MIA), a magnet school that promises elite education and a ticket to Ivy League dreams.

But the moment she’s handed her schedule, a whisper slides across the hallway: “Watch out for the Goddess Squad. They run this place.” Randi brushes it off—she’s here to study, not to join a clique. Yet the first week quickly proves otherwise.

The Spring Gala is the Academy’s biggest fundraiser, attracting Miami’s elite: CEOs, socialites, and the city’s most powerful donors. The Goddess Squad has always secured the headline sponsor, but this year a rival group—The Beach Club—has entered the game, threatening the Squad’s monopoly. The texts revealed a systematic bullying strategy: ice

Haru tasks Randi with a high‑stakes assignment: infiltrate The Beach Club’s summer pop‑up lounge on Ocean Drive, extract their sponsor’s contact list, and feed it to the Squad’s “strategist,” a tech‑savvy senior named Jax.

Randi, nervous but determined, dresses in a bright tropical dress and a straw hat and walks into the lounge. She quickly befriends Michele, a charismatic influencer who works for the rival sponsor, Sunset Spirits. Randi feigns interest in a “collaboration” and, after a night of drinks and music, gains access to the back‑office where the sponsor’s spreadsheet is saved on a sleek MacBook.

She copies the file onto a thumb drive and slips away, her pulse pounding. The next morning, she hands the drive to Jax, who grins:

Jax: “You just gave us the winning hand. The Goddess Squad will own this gala, and you… you’ll be the one who made it happen.”

The music video (directed by visionary Lena Vargas) is a kaleidoscopic love‑letter to Miami’s glitz, its underbelly, and an otherworldly pantheon of beach‑goddesses. Highlights include:

Visually, the video is a statement: the “mean girl” trope is reclaimed as empowerment, not bullying. It flips the script, positioning these women as architects of their own narrative.


When Randi Wright, a scholarship‑bound freshman from Ohio, lands at the glittering Miami International Academy, she discovers that “the queen bee” isn’t just a girl—it’s a living legend. To survive the cut‑throat social hierarchy, Randi must out‑wit the city’s most feared clique, the Goddess Squad, led by the enigmatic Haru “Goddess” Nakamura, before the summer heat burns her ambition to ash.