Aquarius Sun · Aquarius Moon · Rising Unknown
February 4, 1992 · United States
A note on data: There is no confirmed birth time for Boze, which means the 12:00 PM on the source chart is a default. No Rising sign, no house placements. The Moon at 25° Aquarius could shift by several degrees depending on the actual birth time, though it almost certainly stays in Aquarius for the full day. Everything else is stable. And what’s stable is more than enough to work with — this chart is stacked.
If you’ve ever wondered why Boze — the true crime streamer with 1.2 million subscribers — feels different from every other creator in her niche, her birth chart has the answer. Born February 4, 1992, Ericka “Boze” Bozeman is a double Aquarius with a Capricorn stellium and one of the most psychologically loaded charts I’ve read. Here’s what her astrology reveals about why she does what she does.
Boze’s Sun and Moon: Double Aquarius Explained ✦ The Seasonal Stack
Without a Rising sign, we’re working with two climates instead of three. But when both of them are in the same sign, that tells its own story.
Sun in Aquarius — The Orientation Climate
Sun at 15° Aquarius. This is the sign of the observer. The one who watches the room before joining it. The one who studies human behavior not from inside the herd, but from a vantage point slightly above and to the left of it.
Aquarius gets misread constantly. People think it means “quirky” or “weird” or “doesn’t care what anyone thinks.” That’s not it. Aquarius cares deeply — about systems, about patterns, about why people do what they do. It’s an air sign, which means it processes through the mind. It’s also a fixed sign, which means once it has a framework, it holds onto it. The Aquarian mind doesn’t just observe — it categorizes. It builds models. It watches someone’s behavior and thinks, what is the operating system underneath this?
That’s the Sun placement of someone who breaks down interrogation footage for a living.
But here’s the thing about Aquarius Sun that people don’t talk about enough: the distance isn’t always a choice. Fixed air can become a fortress. The ability to observe human behavior with clarity is often born from having needed to observe human behavior for survival. You learn to read the room because at some point, reading the room was how you stayed safe. The intellectual framework isn’t cold. It’s a defense mechanism that became a skill that became a career.
Moon in Aquarius — The Regulation Climate
Moon at 25° Aquarius. Same sign as the Sun. This matters.
When the Sun and Moon are in the same sign, there’s a unity between what you are and how you cope. The orientation and the regulation system speak the same language. There isn’t a war between the public self and the inner self — there’s a coherence. What you see IS what’s happening underneath, more or less. People with Sun-Moon in the same sign often get told they’re “a lot” — because there’s no filter, no translation layer between the core identity and the emotional response. It just comes out as one undiluted frequency.
For Boze, that frequency is Aquarius twice. Which means the intellectual distance, the pattern recognition, the need to understand — that’s not just how she presents. That’s how she survives emotionally. She regulates through analysis. She processes feelings by thinking about them, framing them, putting them in context. The livestream isn’t just content — it’s processing. Talking through a case, breaking down why someone did what they did, narrating the psychology in real time — that IS the emotional regulation. The “slumber party vibe” people describe? That’s an Aquarius Moon creating community around shared understanding. The intimacy comes through the analysis, not despite it.
Moon in Aquarius people don’t do well with unexamined emotion. They need to name it to feel it. They need to understand the pattern before they can sit with the feeling. Which is why a double Aquarius doing deep dives into the criminal psyche isn’t a contradiction — it’s the most natural thing in the world. She’s doing externally what her chart does internally: watching, naming, understanding, and then — only then — allowing the emotional response.
But 25° Aquarius is a late degree. Late-degree Moons carry a “been through it” quality. This isn’t a young Moon, intellectualizing because it hasn’t been hurt yet. This is a Moon that has been hurt — significantly — and built the framework BECAUSE of the hurt. The analysis came after the wound, not before it. And the wound is visible elsewhere in this chart. We’ll get there.
Boze’s Mercury-Saturn: The Mind Behind the Analysis ✦
Mercury at 9° Aquarius. Saturn at 9° Aquarius. Same degree.
This is the tightest major aspect in her chart. Less than half a degree of separation. When two planets are this close, they don’t just influence each other — they fuse. Mercury IS Saturn. Saturn IS Mercury. You cannot separate them.
Mercury is the mind — how you think, how you communicate, how you process information. Saturn is structure, discipline, rigor, and also pressure, self-doubt, and the fear of being wrong.
Mercury conjunct Saturn is the aspect of the person who does not speak until they have done the research.
This is not the chart of someone who riffs. This is the chart of someone who studies. Who builds a case. Who reads the source material and then reads the counter-argument and then reads the original again before forming an opinion. Mercury-Saturn people are terrified of being intellectually careless. They’d rather say nothing than say something they can’t back up.
In Aquarius — the sign of systems, patterns, and human behavior — this conjunction becomes a machine for psychological analysis. Mercury in Aquarius already wants to understand why people do what they do. Saturn on top of it says: and you better be rigorous about it. No lazy takes. No surface-level reactions. If you’re going to analyze someone’s psychology, you’re going to do it thoroughly or not at all.
This is the aspect behind her “peeling back the layers” approach. The detailed interrogation breakdowns. The focus on behavioral red flags, on detective tactics, on the structure of manipulation. That’s not just interest — that’s Mercury-Saturn in Aquarius. The mind (Mercury) is disciplined (Saturn) toward understanding systems of human behavior (Aquarius). It’s the perfect analytical engine for what she does.
But — and this is the shadow of Mercury conjunct Saturn — this aspect also creates a brutal inner critic. The same rigor she applies to her analysis, she applies to herself. There’s a voice in the Mercury-Saturn conjunction that says you missed something, you got that wrong, you’re not smart enough to be talking about this. Saturn on Mercury can make the mind feel heavy. Can make speaking feel like a test you might fail. Can make the person second-guess their intelligence even when everyone around them can see it clearly.
The “love of learning” people describe — the math, the Russian history, the statistics — that’s Mercury conjunct Saturn in its purest form. Learning isn’t casual for this aspect. It’s compulsive. It’s the only thing that quiets the voice that says you don’t know enough. So you keep learning. And learning. And the irony is that the more you know, the more Saturn tells you it still isn’t enough.
This conjunction is also her voice. Mercury-Saturn people have a specific communication style: they sound certain. Even when they’re exploring an idea, there’s a structural quality to how they present it. A scaffolding. They don’t meander. They build arguments. This is why her breakdowns feel like analysis and not just reaction — because Mercury-Saturn literally cannot help but organize information into frameworks before delivering it.
At 9° Aquarius, this conjunction is also conjunct her Sun (at 15°, within 6°). So the identity, the mind, and the discipline are all fused. She IS her analysis. The work isn’t something she does — it’s something she is. When she’s breaking down a case, she’s not performing a role. She’s being her chart.
✦ Moon Square Pluto: The Wound That Drives Her Work
Moon at 25° Aquarius. Pluto at 23° Scorpio. Square aspect. Two degrees.
This is the aspect I need you to understand, because this is the one that explains not just WHAT she does but WHY she does it.
Moon square Pluto is one of the most intense natal aspects a person can carry. The Moon is your emotional body — how you feel, what you need to feel safe, your earliest experience of being cared for. Pluto is the underworld — power, control, trauma, transformation, and the things that happen in the dark.
When they square each other, the emotional body and the underworld are in permanent tension. The person cannot have a simple emotional life. Feelings are never just feelings — they’re deep, they’re consuming, they’re connected to something primal. Moon-Pluto people feel everything at the level of survival. A normal hurt becomes an existential crisis. A normal betrayal becomes a study in human darkness. They don’t get to have shallow emotions. The dial starts at 7 and goes to 15.
This is the classic aspect of someone who is drawn to psychology, to the criminal mind, to understanding what lives underneath the surface of human behavior. Because Moon-Pluto people live underneath the surface. They have no choice. The surface was never available to them.
In Aquarius (Moon) square Scorpio (Pluto), the tension is between the mind’s desire to understand objectively and the emotional body’s insistence that the darkness is personal. She can analyze a case with intellectual precision — that’s the Aquarius Moon. But the reason she’s drawn to the case in the first place is Pluto in Scorpio. The fascination with the “dark side of personality,” with narcissism, with why people manipulate and destroy — that’s not academic interest. That’s Pluto.
Boze has been open about childhood trauma. About using the internet as escape. About “escaping the influence of dangerous people.” Moon square Pluto is the natal signature of a person who had early encounters with power dynamics that were unsafe. The Moon (early environment, nurturing, safety) was disrupted by Pluto (control, darkness, survival). And the way the psyche responds to that kind of disruption is by becoming an expert in it. You study the thing that hurt you. You become the analyst of the wound. You break down interrogation footage because interrogation footage is about power — who has it, who’s trying to take it, how it’s wielded, how it’s survived.
The true crime career isn’t a coincidence. It’s Moon square Pluto, metabolized into content.
The square aspect means this isn’t easy or resolved. It’s a tension that doesn’t go away. Squares push. Squares demand action. A Moon-Pluto trine might let her process the darkness quietly. A Moon-Pluto square makes her do something with it. Make the video. Do the breakdown. Name the red flags out loud so that other people can see them too. The audience isn’t just an audience — it’s the Aquarius Moon’s need for collective understanding meeting Pluto’s demand that the dark stuff be dragged into the light.
This aspect is also why people describe her analysis as having “authentic vulnerability.” Because it does. Because Moon square Pluto people cannot fully separate themselves from the material. When she talks about the psychology of a suspect, part of her is always talking about psychology itself — the real thing, the lived thing, the thing she knows from the inside.
✦ Boze’s Capricorn Stellium: The Career Engine
Underneath all that Aquarius — the observation, the analysis, the intellectual framework — there is a massive concentration of energy in Capricorn:
- Venus at 12° Capricorn
- Mars at 19° Capricorn
- Uranus at 15° Capricorn
- Neptune at 17° Capricorn
- North Node at 7° Capricorn
Five placements. Five. In the sign of work, ambition, structure, and the long game. This is the engine room of the chart. Aquarius is the mind that analyzes. Capricorn is the body that builds.
Let’s take these in meaningful clusters:
♀ Venus conjunct Uranus (3° orb) — The Unconventional Aesthetic
Venus is what you’re drawn to — in love, in beauty, in values, in creative taste. Uranus is disruption, rebellion, and the need to be different. When Venus conjuncts Uranus, the person is attracted to what’s unusual. Conventional beauty bores them. Conventional relationships bore them. They want something that surprises them, that challenges them, that doesn’t look like what everyone else has.
In Capricorn, this takes on a specific flavor: she’s drawn to unconventional things, but she approaches them with Capricorn seriousness. True crime content that’s also a psychological deep dive. A “slumber party vibe” that’s also a masterclass in behavioral analysis. She makes the unusual into something structured and professional. Venus-Uranus wants to break the mold; Capricorn wants to build a business out of the broken mold.
This is also the aspect of someone whose creative aesthetic defies easy categorization. Is it true crime? Is it comedy? Is it psychology? Is it streaming? Venus conjunct Uranus says: yes, all of it, and I refuse to pick one.
♂ Mars conjunct Neptune (2° orb) — The Intuitive Fighter
Mars is how you act — your drive, your aggression, your assertion. Neptune is imagination, intuition, and dissolution of boundaries.
Mars conjunct Neptune is one of the most fascinating and complex aspects a person can have. The warrior and the mystic, fused. The person whose instinct is informed by something other than logic. Mars-Neptune people don’t just react — they sense. They read the energy of a situation before they read the facts. They pick up on what’s unspoken.
In the context of what Boze does professionally, Mars conjunct Neptune in Capricorn is the ability to watch an interrogation and feel into what’s happening beneath the words. It’s the detective-level intuition she brings to her breakdowns — the part that isn’t just about tactics and structure (that’s Mercury-Saturn) but about sensing when someone is lying, when the energy shifts, when a suspect’s mask is slipping. Mars-Neptune is the psychological radar.
The shadow? Mars conjunct Neptune can blur the line between your fight and someone else’s. It can make boundaries around anger and assertion porous. Sometimes you don’t know if the rage is yours or if you absorbed it from the story you’re telling. For someone who spends hours immersed in footage of violent crime and manipulation, Mars-Neptune is both the gift (the ability to empathize with and understand the players) and the cost (the emotional residue that doesn’t wash off when the stream ends).
This is also the aspect of the “animated passion for justice” fans describe. Mars (fighting) fused with Neptune (the ideal) in Capricorn (applied practically). She doesn’t just analyze crime — she cares about it. Neptune gives Mars a cause. It’s not just intellectual exercise. It’s righteous anger filtered through empathy.
♅ conjunct ♆ — The Generational Backdrop
Uranus and Neptune are both slow-moving planets, and their conjunction in Capricorn is shared by everyone born in the early-to-mid 1990s. This is a generational signature: the dissolution (Neptune) and reinvention (Uranus) of structures (Capricorn). But in Boze’s chart, this generational conjunction is activated by personal planets — Venus and Mars sit right on top of it. Which means the generational energy isn’t just background noise for her. It’s personal. It’s in her body (Mars), her desires (Venus), her daily life. She is, in a very literal astrological sense, someone who personally embodies the generational project of reinventing structures through imagination and disruption.
A Twitch streamer doing true crime psychology for a million subscribers IS the reinvention of structures (Capricorn) through disruption (Uranus) and imagination (Neptune). She’s not just living through the shift in how media works — she’s being the shift.
✦ Jupiter in Virgo — The Expansion Through Detail
Jupiter at 12° Virgo. In an exact trine to Venus at 12° Capricorn. Within 3° of trining Uranus. Within 5° of trining Neptune.
Jupiter is where you expand, where things come easily, where growth is natural. In Virgo, Jupiter expands through detail. Through precision. Through getting the small things right. This is not Jupiter in Sagittarius, expanding through grand philosophy. This is Jupiter saying: the more meticulous you are, the more the universe rewards you.
The exact trine to Venus means that what she values, what she’s drawn to, and what she creates (Venus in Capricorn) is naturally supported by this Virgoan attention to detail. The “deep research” people associate with her content isn’t just discipline (though Mercury-Saturn helps). It’s Jupiter in Virgo saying: the research IS the expansion. The details ARE the abundance.
Jupiter trine Venus is also one of the classic “lucky in creative work” aspects. Things flow. Opportunities appear. Not because the universe is handing her things for free, but because the work ethic (Capricorn) and the precision (Virgo) create a natural pipeline between effort and reward. Earth trines are slow and steady — they don’t make you an overnight success. They make you a ten-year success. A building-something-real success. A one-point-two-four-million-subscribers-through-consistent-output success.
✦ Putting It All Together: The Architecture of This Mind
Here’s what this chart says when you read it as one system:
The mind (Mercury-Saturn in Aquarius, exact conjunction) is rigorous, structured, and built for analyzing human behavior at a systemic level. It wants to understand the operating system underneath the person.
The emotional drive (Moon in Aquarius square Pluto in Scorpio) compels her toward the dark. Not because she’s dark — because she’s been touched by darkness and the only way to metabolize it is to understand it. The true crime fascination isn’t morbid curiosity. It’s a Moon-Pluto square doing what Moon-Pluto squares do: transforming pain into knowledge.
The engine (Venus, Mars, Uranus, Neptune all in Capricorn) builds the structure. Shows up. Grinds. Turns the psychological fascination into a career, a brand, a body of work. The Capricorn stellium is the part of her that treats the art like a job and the job like an art — because in Capricorn, there is no difference.
The intuition (Mars conjunct Neptune) is the part that can’t be taught. The feeling into the footage. The sensing of what’s beneath the surface before the facts confirm it. This is the part that makes her breakdowns feel different from other true crime content — because it’s not just analysis. It’s analysis informed by a body that absorbs the emotional reality of what it’s watching.
The expansion (Jupiter in Virgo, trining the Capricorn stellium) rewards the precision. The more detailed the work, the more it grows. The more she trusts the Virgo instinct to get it right, the more Jupiter says yes.
And underneath all of it — the thing that ties it all together — is the double Aquarius. The observer. The one who watches humanity with love and distance and the unshakable need to understand why. Every interrogation breakdown, every “Karen” bodycam reaction, every deep dive into the psychology of a killer is the double Aquarius asking the same question:
What is happening underneath this person’s behavior, and what does it tell us about being human?
That’s the question her chart was built to ask. And the career she’s built is just the chart doing its job.
✦ Why Boze Is Loud Online and Quiet at Home
One more thing, because it matters and it’s written all over this chart:
People describe Boze as “big and boisterous” publicly but “very domestic” privately — cooking, cleaning, sewing. This confuses people. It shouldn’t.
The Aquarius is the public energy. The air. The intellect. The big personality that fills a stream.
The Capricorn is the private energy. Four planets in an earth sign. Earth signs don’t want to be ON all the time. They want to be in their body. They want to make something tangible with their hands. Cooking is Capricorn. Sewing is Capricorn. The quiet satisfaction of a clean house is Capricorn.
Venus in Capricorn specifically is a Venus that loves simplicity in the private sphere. She doesn’t need luxury. She needs order. She needs the home to feel solid. She needs to come back from the stream — from the Aquarius performance, from the Moon-Pluto deep dive into someone’s worst day — and do something grounding with her hands.
The loudness and the domesticity aren’t contradictions. They’re two different parts of the chart, serving two different functions. The Aquarius broadcasts. The Capricorn rebuilds. Both are necessary. Both are real.
✦ What This Doesn’t Cover
Without a birth time, there are no houses — which means I can’t tell you where these energies specifically activate in the departments of her life. A confirmed birth time would also give us the Rising sign (which would add a crucial third season to the framework), the Midheaven (career point), and precise house placements for every planet.
The Moon degree could also shift slightly with a confirmed time, though it stays in Aquarius for the vast majority of February 4, 1992.
A full Seasonal Blueprint would also include: the North Node in Capricorn (her soul’s direction — toward mastery, legacy, and building something that endures), Pluto in Scorpio’s generational context and its personal activation through the Moon square, and a transit forecast mapping the year ahead.
This is the architectural drawing. The full version is the building.
✦ Want yours?
The Seasonal Blueprint is ~40 pages of YOUR chart. Your placements. Your aspects. Your seasons. Written with the depth and specificity your chart deserves.
