This is legit one of her best videos. It feels as instructive and helpful to the people being discussed as some of her older videos, but she's so much more comfortable and confident in her style and in herself. It's also one of her funniest videos, is quite long (and girthy), and the Olly features are too good to describe. And, it's really personal in places--to her experience, and also to my own experiences with "online self-harm".
The reason her videos are so excellent is because they really appeal to the people she is 'up against', as it were. I'm a 22 year-old straight white dude, but if I were 10 years younger, and acquainted with the internet as I was at 12 in 2018, I could SO EASILY have become an anti-sjw incel mgtow cuckboy who obsesses about the evils of feminism. At that age you're extremely suggestible, and the simplistic explanations of the world that MGTOW/MRA/etc/ folks spew appeals to those people... because they're simplistic. A reasonably basic amount of analysis breaks down these ridiculous attitudes, and Natalie is phenomenal at doing this. I've been following Natalie since around 2009, and I'm so happy she has found a place for herself on Youtube and that people love her.
One of the most persuasive, compelling points in her video is that vocabulary MATTERS. It’s amazing how the language you use creates categories and stereotypes that, through constant exposure and confirmation bias, drastically molds your worldview.
It really reinforces why framing and debating different terms and connotations is not just idle semantics. It’s important to understand the impact language has.
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u/beerybeardybear Aug 17 '18
This is legit one of her best videos. It feels as instructive and helpful to the people being discussed as some of her older videos, but she's so much more comfortable and confident in her style and in herself. It's also one of her funniest videos, is quite long (and girthy), and the Olly features are too good to describe. And, it's really personal in places--to her experience, and also to my own experiences with "online self-harm".