Cuban explodes over Miami traffic: "I'm about to take a bus or trains to see if I can get to places faster."

"I feel like screaming."


Cuban content creator @flavi.lovely, whose name is Flavia, shared a video on her TikTok account where she expressed her frustration with the heavy traffic in Miami.

Onboard her car and clearly agitated, Flavia confessed to having reached a critical point after more than an hour stuck in the congested streets.

"I'm at a point where I don’t know right now whether to cry, get out of the car and scream, or crash myself into a pole," she commented a few weeks ago in the video, filmed while trying to vent with her phone.

According to what he said, the journey from Miami Gardens usually takes him a little over 30 minutes, but that day he had already been traveling for an hour and 15 minutes without reaching his destination.

"Oh my God, relax... I'm about to take a bus or trains to see if I can get to places faster," he added sarcastically, referring to the traffic collapse the city is facing, especially with the return to school.

"But well, I'm not complaining, I thank God for being in this country; relax Flavia, everything flows, everything influences," said the young woman at the end of the video, who is currently on vacation in Spain, from where she has continued to upload videos to document part of her stay and the things that catch her attention.

The frustration of her experience in Miami traffic resonated with many users, who quickly shared their own experiences with the city’s traffic: “This is how I feel every time I go to and come back from work, I also live in Miami Gardens and now with school it's worse”; “Girl, the same thing happened to me in the morning and in the afternoon, I took the back roads through the condos... but it was a struggle to get out of mine”; “Here in Hialeah, one day I'm going to have a heart attack, they cut in front of you, they don’t respect the stop signs,” said some.

"Thank goodness you weren't complaining," joked a user, while another commented: "The traffic in Miami is crazy." To which Flavia responded: "Crazy is an understatement."

Other users expressed solidarity by suggesting that she shout to relieve stress or avoid public transportation. However, in general, the comments revolved around the shared experience of dealing with traffic, and one user even proposed an innovative solution: "I'm going to buy a drone because this is getting critical."

What do you think?

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