The more than 30,000 women in the Bills Mafia Babes Facebook group have at least one thing in common, their love for the Buffalo Bills.

“This event today is to bring everybody together,” said Suzanna Prong, co-host of Rochester’s Bills Mafia Babes Global Meetup.

Bills fan Suzanna Prong comes from a big football family.

“I learned from a young age when to ask a question, don’t walk in front of the TV,” she said. “I learned a lot of the rules, but a lot of women never did.”

And for the first time ever they are getting together all around the country, with 50 meetups taking place on Sunday throughout the U.S. and Canada.

“We have a lot of women here today who, when they RSVP’d for the event said, ‘I’m way out of my comfort zone I never would go to something like this by myself and we are happy to have them here,” Prong said.

Bills Mafia Babes was originally created on Facebook as a safe space for women to ask questions and share their opinions and ideas about football.

“People enjoy football differently, but everybody has to find their people,” she said. “So we’re here today to help you find your people.”

Now it's giving women in the group the ability to not just meet and talk online, but offline too.

“It’s allowing women to enjoy what traditionally they didn’t enjoy in a different way,” Prong said. “To be able to have them ask questions and not feel foolish and be able to do all those crazy things that they like to do.”

Bills Mafia Babes works to raise money for Bills’ charities like Dion Dreamers and JoePro Life Camps, but the main focus is being a safe space for their fellow mafia babes.

“Be able to ask what the rules are, be able to ask what just happened in that play and not have anybody make fun of them or boo-hoo them for asking the questions,” she said. “We want to help them enjoy the Buffalo Bills.”

And with female NFL viewership up 26% compared to an 18% rise in men, their mafia is only continuing to grow.

“Now more are looking to learn about football and they’re looking to learn about the rules and they want to ask questions,” Prong said. “We want to let them enjoy it in the way that they want to.”