@PmgEngelen Ha! Yes, I saw this recently, so good. He really couldn’t be more judgmental about it, but so many people are. I really appreciate how it concludes— that at the moment she gets passionate and pissed off and invested, her voice reconnects and the fry goes away. A great manifesto!
No one “naturally” has vocal fry.
That *creaky* speaking voice is caused by minimal breath flow at the vocal folds and a sagging, lifeless soft palate.
There is, quite literally, LESS LIFE in that voice. Which is why people stuck in #vocalfry are so often dehumanized.
I’d like to engage a NON-judgmental, hate-FREE conversation about vocal fry and will gladly offer my insights and tips for anyone looking to better understand and address it💥🤘
Fry tends to characterize the speaker as *cool* and *detached*.
Fine. But if you want to lead, create, inspire, and make an impact, your voice and ideas need to r e s o n a t e.
DARE to ditch that fry and speak with breath, passion, gravitas, and commitment.
I’m not in the business of claiming any vocal characteristics as *wrong* or *bad*.
Consider instead:
What is LIMITING you versus what is SERVING you when you communicate your important ideas out into the complexly biased world?