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“Tired of Being Misunderstood: The Viral Creator Who Spoke Up on Accountability, Feminism, and the Internet’s Double Standards”

In a 20-minute emotional monologue that has now gone viral across multiple platforms, a young Filipina content creator poured her heart out about being “purposefully misconstrued.” Her voice trembled — not from fear, but from exhaustion. “I wasn’t excusing the actions of the kids of politicians,” she began, “I was not sympathizing with them.”

She had previously posted a commentary video criticizing the lavish lifestyles of politicians’ children. “It is wrong to frivolously spend and flaunt stolen money,” she said. “Their money is stolen, and a lot of them are insensitive and out of touch.” Her point, however, was not to defend them — but to remind the public that accountability shouldn’t stop with the offspring. “We need to hold the politicians themselves to the same standard we’re holding their kids to,” she emphasized.

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But nuance, it seems, has no place in the modern internet. Her statement was ripped from context, stitched into outrage compilations, and flooded with comments accusing her of “defending privilege.” The creator, visibly drained, admitted that this latest wave of backlash had pushed her to her limit.

“I’m so sick and tired of people twisting my words so they can have a reason to be angry at me,” she said. “It’s frustrating, and it’s tiring for people to constantly commentate on my life as if they know me better than I do.”

She announced that she would be taking a break from social media — particularly TikTok — citing mental fatigue. “Maybe I’ll be gone for a couple days, maybe a month. I don’t even know,” she confessed.

Yet before signing off, she launched into another topic close to her heart: feminism — or rather, how it’s been distorted by online culture. “Feminism is so misunderstood and misrepresented,” she argued. “There’s this whole trend of ‘my man better pay for this, my man better do that’ — and people call it girl power or feminism. It’s not feminism. It’s misogyny repackaged into a pink sparkly bow.”

Her critique was sharp yet grounded. She clarified that women can absolutely have preferences — wanting a partner who’s generous or financially stable is fine. But, she said, “Don’t put it under the disguise of feminism and girl power, because it’s not. If you were a feminist, you would believe you can provide for yourself.”

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She even anticipated the backlash. “A lot of people are going to call me a ‘pick-me’ for saying this,” she laughed softly. “But I go into all my dates expecting to pay for half the bill. Whether they decide to pay or not, I won’t hold it against them.”

The second half of her talk took a more reflective, almost academic turn. She dissected how mainstream media continues to undermine real feminism through image-making. “Look at Michael Phelps’ magazine covers,” she said, showing photos of the Olympic swimmer celebrating his achievements. “Now look at Simone Biles — half of her covers have her in a dress and full makeup. Why can’t we just celebrate her for her merit, for being one of the greatest athletes alive?”

Her message was clear: society still measures women’s worth by how they look, even when they’ve already proven their excellence. “We’re supporting misogynistic systems under the idea of feminism,” she said. “It’s the same thing that happened 50 years ago — except now we call her a ‘girl boss.’”

The creator argued that this warped presentation of empowerment is one reason why many people have begun to resent feminism. “They see it as abusing the power of oppression,” she explained. “Like, ‘We were oppressed back in the 1950s, so now you have to give me everything I want.’ That’s not what feminism is.”

Her closing words were simple: “Feminism is still very much needed. It’s just misunderstood.”

After the intensity of her monologue, the tone of her video shifted — almost like watching someone return to ordinary life after a storm. She filmed herself grocery shopping, hunting for Pecorino Romano cheese (“Where would I be if I were Pecorino Romano?” she joked), and laughing at the endless American bread varieties. She rode a bike — in heels — through city streets, talking to herself and to the camera, muttering “good luck everybody else” as she tried not to get lost.

It was funny, messy, and strangely intimate — a slice of humanity amidst online chaos.

Perhaps that’s what drew people to her in the first place: she’s opinionated yet open, confident yet self-aware, fiery yet fragile. And though she insists she’s taking a break, the final moments of her video — a small smile, a deep breath, and a quiet “thank you, bye” — suggest that even in exhaustion, her voice isn’t gone.

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