Why Emily Brontë Cared About Race | Wuthering Heights, Whiteness & Empire

Produced by Jessica Kellgren-Fozard
An analytic discussion of Wuthering Heights through race and empire, tracing Heathcliff’s ambiguous origins and Victorian whiteness hierarchies. It surveys outsider status, the Irish question, and whiteness as constructed power, citing postcolonial scholars while debating authorial intent and modern adaptations (Emerald Fennell’s film) and their racial focus.

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What the Rise of “Tradwife” Content Means for Queer & Disabled People…

Produced by Jessica Kellgren-Fozard
Video essay tracing the JoJo Siwa to Tradwife trend on TikTok and Instagram, examining what tradwife aesthetics signify culturally and for queer and disabled communities. It asks why some queer people find comfort in traditional styles, why others fear them, and how influencer economies reward femininities while marginalizing others. Sources.

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I was wrong about the age gap!

Produced by Jessica Kellgren-Fozard
A mother initially frets that a growing age gap with a potential second child could separate siblings. Yet she observes Rupert, now four, lovingly caring for his baby sisters, fostering bonds. The message: there’s no perfect gap or family structure—encourage relationships and teamwork, and let love grow.

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When flowers were code for “I see you” 👀🏳️‍🌈

Produced by Jessica Kellgren-Fozard
Explores pre-modern LGBTQ Valentine communication: coded messages, symbols, and secret cards used when coming out was unsafe. Highlights inventive queer traditions of connection and joy, contrasted with rainbow flags and dating apps. Encourages viewers to watch the YouTube video ‘Secret Queer Valentines Traditions’ and reflect on queer resilience.

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Vintage Marriage Advice Was Unhinged | Reacting With My Wife!

Produced by Jessica Kellgren-Fozard
A couple reacts to vintage marriage advice from 1909–1955, finding some thoughtful and many unhinged notions. They examine gender roles, disability, and queer relationships today, questioning whether traditional guidance belongs in the past. The video interleaves critique with ads, commentary, and musings on how marriage standards have evolved.

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Secret Queer Valentine’s Traditions You’ve Never Heard Of

Produced by Jessica Kellgren-Fozard
Discovery of historical LGBTQ+ Valentine traditions, from coded gifts and hidden expressions of affection to cross-cultural practices before Pride. The video cites diverse sources on queer history, language of flowers, and archival collections (e.g., Bronski, Boston marriages, GLBT Historical Society, Nyumba ntobhu). Note on terminology evolution in archival records.

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‘Experience Gifts’ are NOT practical

Produced by Jessica Kellgren-Fozard
The piece argues that while ‘experience gifts’ are appealing in theory, they’re impractical for parents. It invites agreement and ties to and themes, with a YouTube discussion linked.

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1950s Parenting Advice Was… Wild | Two Wives React!

Produced by Jessica Kellgren-Fozard
Two wives review a vintage 1950s parenting book, separating genuinely helpful tips from unhinged ideas. The video critiques strict feeding schedules and emotional distance, exploring how old-fashioned advice shaped modern expectations and which concepts belong in the past. The description promotes subscribing, merch, donations, and social media links.

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If you have kids: do you agree?

Produced by Jessica Kellgren-Fozard
A YouTube video titled ‘If you have kids: do you agree?’ examines the hardest parts of parenting—dinner, bedtime, and morning breakfast—and ends with a plea to kids to go to bed. It uses hashtags and .

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Why January is the worst month to ‘fix yourself’

Produced by Jessica Kellgren-Fozard
Video titled ‘Why January is the worst month to fix yourself’ includes promotional links: Surfshark VPN with code JESSICA for extra months; a new merch store; a baby-nappy donation request via Ko-fi; social media profiles; filming gear lists; sponsorship/join options; Ko-fi support; and Epidemic Sound credits.

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