Farrah Abraham’s derangement has no limits, and she is here to remind Teen Mom OG fans that the show can never be the same without her.
In fact, she says that she can never be replaced on the show, trashing Bristol Palin and seeming to not be fully aware of the current cast.
Farrah, in practically the same breath, also blasts women who don’t support other women. As always, with zero self-awareness.
Always keeping her fans in mind, she has whipped up a massive serving of word salad for her fans.
Does she make sense? No.
But we’ll do our level best to walk you through what she had to say about Teen Mom ratings, Amber Portwood’s relationships, and more.
Farrah will never change

Farrah wants everyone to know that Teen Mom is crumbling without her — just as civilization itself would surely fail without her, we guess. She may not be on MTV anymore, but it seems like nothing will stop her from spewing word salad all over her “fans.”
She’s talking about her favorite subject!
In a lengthy, rambling video, Farrah talks all about herself, how “great” she is, and all of the people whom she believes have wronged her.
She says fans are DEMANDING her return to TV
Farrah say that she finds herself “bothered and bombarded” to return to reality television by fans. How frequently? Well, in Farrah’s words, fans ask her “every day, if not weekly” whether she is returning to Teen Mom. What must it be like in Farrah’s mind?
Teen Mom’s “record low ratings” are because of one thing
Farrah insists that it’s not just her removal from the show that caused ratings to plummet, but the person whom they selected to replace her.
It’s Bristol Palin’s fault?
” think that the ratings are low because maybe Exhibit A, which is Bristol Palin,” Farrah accuses, “who really had trouble, you know, with dealing with press and news about filling my shoes.”
Farrah says she can’t be replaced
“I think even with Bristol some of the other girls they had put in there â I think there was three at a time to fill my shoes, maybe there was four or more, I have no idea,” she at least is willing to admit. “Really you could take the whole cast try to fill my shoes and yet, not fill my shoes.”
Farrah’s brain really broke with this one

“⦠And you also have somebody whoâÂÂs been on speaking panels with us for teen pregnancy who also tried to film my shoots and who couldnâÂÂt, as well moved to where I live and was like really weird and thatâÂÂs like, White Girl Interrupted ⦔ Farrah rambles. She seems to have merged Girl, Interrupted with Single White Female, but that’s one of the MORE intelligible parts of that statement.
Then she takes aim at Amber

“⦠If you have to keep giving men lie-detector tests and theyâÂÂre always lying to you, I think maybe sometimes itâÂÂs time to like, break apart from where you are,” Farrah expresses, “which is surrounding yourself with where youâÂÂre stuck and just kind of stop doing the whole lie-detector testing thing and you know, free yourself.” Farrah … is actually right.
The Teen Mom producers? They deserved how Farrah treated them

“I really react in a way to those people who, I guess really rode on my coattails, really didnâÂÂt respect a motherâÂÂs voice that they were supposed to document and show eloquently they definitely failed to do that,” Farrah accuses.
She says they were lucky she gave them a job

“I still look back and I see, you know, people on the crew really overstepped by boundaries,” Farrah reflects, “really not respect a motherâÂÂs voice and I think somebody who gave them all jobs and at a time where they were kind of lucky to be on an international franchise.”
And, of course, they were “hateful”
“I think really just respecting, really being hateful and again, just not having any sense of documenting true television goes to show I really wasnâÂÂt working with the quality of people who I should have,” Farrah complains.
She’s proud that she was so mean that she got fired
“I can only say I attempted to work with my main core story producer who, even though there was challenges and you know, she wasnâÂÂt a parent at the time and I think as an amazing parent that I am now and I look back at that, IâÂÂm actually so proud of myself that I didnâÂÂt even understand the degree of manipulation and hatred towards myself and being a stand-up, strong, single mom who, even when her parents donâÂÂt understand the dynamics of filming or what is being plotted against their daughter and them and their grandchild,” she rambles.
She thinks that they deserved worse
“I am so proud of myself for actually being tolerant and as kind as I can be to people who really did not deserve it,” Farrah asserts.
Farrah is SUCH a good mom, apparently

“Kudos to me, being a single teen mom and really just being track of a whole crew that was against me, you know,â Farrah raves … about herself. âÂÂKudos to me, being an amazing mom.”
WILL she return to Teen Mom?
“I understand everyoneâÂÂs pain, I understand everyoneâÂÂs feelings, I get it. You want me to come back to âÂÂTeen Mom.âÂÂâ Farrah says as if she reassuring a crowd of eager fans. âÂÂI have to say though, itâÂÂs kind of great feeling wild.”
TV is all about business, or something

“Like, being challenged, growing up from being on a TV show encapsulated, which by the way, like, all I knew was TV, like, that was my life and you know, my life is still TV but in a business way and in an entertainment real business way to not be taken advantage of or manipulated against,” Farrah rambles in an unhinged, borderline-gibberish manner.
How is Farrah so calm and balanced?
“And you know, I am so lucky that I got all the therapy and more in the world so that I could truly come out balanced and stronger than my TV time,” Farrah says. LOL!
Farrah’s just grateful that she’s not a loser like the Kardashians

“You know, some families get stuck there, like, you know, a Kardashian, like they are stuck in TV,â Farrah opines. âÂÂThey donâÂÂt ever imagine their selves outside of TV. I wouldnâÂÂt want to see them outside of TV. I think TV is awesome for them. I never thought I could be strong enough to take a break and go be my real, wild self and grow myself.”
She sees herself as more of a talented legend
Farrah compares herself to Christina Aguilera and music legend Britney Spears: “I really emulate and I am thankful for some of the things that IâÂÂve seen, how their strengths and you know, how their careers have exploded and gone so much farther.”
She also trashes Maci Bookout, specifically

“IâÂÂm not succumbing to a manâÂÂs mediocrity or writing in my storyline like, thinking MaciâÂÂs an achiever when really itâÂÂs Farrah Abraham whoâÂÂs the achiever,â Farrah decrees. âÂÂAre you a New York Times Best Seller? Somebody had to switch to a different degree or just drop out of college because of me.”
Her real enemy? Internalized misogyny … in other women
“You know, itâÂÂs sad to see women hate on women, but itâÂÂs also sad to women reverse psychologied against you by males and vice-versa, so I am so blessed that now I see why thereâÂÂs sometimes a negative stigma towards me because itâÂÂs allowed by the casting and other people of [âÂÂTeen MomâÂÂ],” Farrah babbles.
The best women, she says, are men
“I would love to see a woman like me on TV again,â Farrah expresses. âÂÂI would love to see a woman like me who can be the man and the husband in the family, who really cares for a better relationship with her daughter, who cares to actually be a role model to other people in this community all over, whether, you know, all different formula families.”
Bullying makes her feel strong

“I think others who feel intimidated by me, whether thatâÂÂs men, whether thatâÂÂs women,” Farrah says, “and they all have to gang up on one person, I think that just shows how strong of a person I really am.” That’s one interpretation.
Wow!

Farrah’s word salads are infamous, to the point where we kind of feel bad making fun of it too much. Farrah’s a terrible person, but whatever is going on in her mind that makes her words incoherent. Is it treatable? We have no idea. But Farrah will never find out, because she will never admit to herself or anyone that her words are scrambled.