If you have a soft spot for English accents and maybe even love Hiberno-English a bit, Frankie's Irish accent is likely to make your panties wet.
“We Used to Tell Stories” explores how power shapes narratives. The video examines the evolution of storytelling from challenging authority to posting on Instagram. It questions whether our voices are truly free or merely performative.
“We Used to Tell Stories” explores how power shapes narratives. The video examines the evolution of storytelling from challenging authority to posting on Instagram. It questions whether our voices are truly free or merely performative.
On his YouTube channel Meditations for the anxious minds, he publishes short rants at fairly irregular intervals about the political, cultural, and sociological phenomena and oddities of our so-called civilized Western society.
This is sometimes funny because he brings randomly selected passers-by onto the street to serve as illustrative material for his theses. Here, for example, he elaborates on OnlyFans models, performative males, corporate girlies, and Berlin veterans, to name just a few. (I can confirm the authenticity of the latter 100 percent.)
Sometimes it's also a bit of a stretch. Especially for those who weren't born speaking English as their first language. His rants are fast-paced, intellectually dense, and usually so perfectly on point that a root canal procedure feels like a walk in the woods in comparison.
Sometimes it's also a bit of a stretch. Especially for those who weren't born speaking English as their first language. His rants are fast-paced, intellectually dense, and usually so perfectly on point that a root canal procedure feels like a walk in the woods in comparison.
I really appreciate Frankie's somewhat boisterous style of spoken political poetry, and the videos in Meditations for the anxious minds are among the few where subtitles are indispensable for me.