Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The NPR guy is Ira Glass, the host of This American Life. He actually did a segment on vocal fry, and it's worth a listen.
Yes I belive he addressed it on This American Life because listeners wrote in to say how f@cking annoying it was.
Yeah, but none of those listeners complained about Glass's voice, only those of the young female reporters.
I heard a piece on vocal fry on Fresh Air, and a linguist pointed out that one of the major groups that uses vocal fry is upper-class British men. And no one bitches about them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The NPR guy is Ira Glass, the host of This American Life. He actually did a segment on vocal fry, and it's worth a listen.
Yes I belive he addressed it on This American Life because listeners wrote in to say how f@cking annoying it was.
Anonymous wrote:The NPR guy is Ira Glass, the host of This American Life. He actually did a segment on vocal fry, and it's worth a listen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I find it incredibly amusing that you still think that a majority of people would care whether or not you would hire them for your stupid State Dept job.![]()
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+1!! Are we supposed to be impressed that you invoked the State Department? Please. Bunch of whiny bureaucrats quickly becoming priced out of DC.
Sadly, I have met a few millennial State Dept employees who have vocal fry. It makes me weep for the future of U. S. Diplomacy.
Anonymous wrote:
I find it incredibly amusing that you still think that a majority of people would care whether or not you would hire them for your stupid State Dept job.![]()
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+1!! Are we supposed to be impressed that you invoked the State Department? Please. Bunch of whiny bureaucrats quickly becoming priced out of DC.
Anonymous wrote:I'd much rather listen to vocal fry than listen to my teenage son's girl friends say literally all the time. It's becoming the new "like". Instead of "He like, called me yesterday!" now it is "He literally called me yesterday."
It literally makes me insane!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Am I the only person who will admit to having vocal fry? I have a Ph.D. I'm not sure if I've always spoken this way or if it's something new for me. I do listen to a lot of NPR-and I sound like an NPR commentator not a Kardashian. Or I may have unconsciously used the creak to lower my register when I started teaching.
I do too, and I also think it has to do with lowering my register for teaching.