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Who Yelling Now?
Who Yelling Now?
Author: Olga Foreign
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Who Yelling Now?
Poet Olga Foreign delivers raw, unapologetic spoken word exploring memory, grief, identity, and survival in a world that keeps trying to erase us.
From, “Stolen” truths to healing, this is where poetry meets protest — and silence meets its match.
Listen loud. Speak louder, we shall be heard.
New episodes weekly.
Subscribe if, you ever felt invisible in your own story. If you know healing starts with naming the wound.
Want to yell with us? Leave a voice note or comment.
Because if you’re still silent, maybe you ain’t heard us yet.
Poet Olga Foreign delivers raw, unapologetic spoken word exploring memory, grief, identity, and survival in a world that keeps trying to erase us.
From, “Stolen” truths to healing, this is where poetry meets protest — and silence meets its match.
Listen loud. Speak louder, we shall be heard.
New episodes weekly.
Subscribe if, you ever felt invisible in your own story. If you know healing starts with naming the wound.
Want to yell with us? Leave a voice note or comment.
Because if you’re still silent, maybe you ain’t heard us yet.
38 Episodes
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When someone goes missing, silence takes over — and silence invitescontrol.In Episode 2 of Season 4, Olga Foreign explores what happens when aperson’s story is managed in their absence. Through the haunting transformationof Margaret — a woman slowly rewritten once she disappears — this episodereveals how memory is curated, complexity is softened, and truth becomesnegotiable.From families to institutions, this episode asks a deeper question:Who controls meaning once the original voice can no longer interrupt thenarrative?This isn’t about lies.It’s about ownership.And what happens when silence gives permission.#HistoryAndPower #WhoSpeaksForTheMissing #AbsentButRemembered #CulturalMemory #PosthumousNarratives #LegacyStories #AbsentVoices #HistoryRewritten
Season 4 Episode 1What happens after someone dies isn’t just grief.It’s negotiation.In this opening episode of Season 4, Olga Foreign traces the quiet moment when the past stops being inherited and starts being sold — not for money, but for comfort, cohesion, and control.Through an intimate bedside story and a widening lens, this episode asks a larger question:Is the past a commodity that can be sold to the highest bidder?From personal memory to collective history, Episode 1 explores how stories are edited once the original voice is gone — and how truth can survive, circulate, and still lose its power to interrupt.This is not an episode about lies.It’s about what happens when truth is known — and politely ignored.Season 4 begins here.
WHO YELLING NOW? — Season 3 Episode 13 Finale“I’m OK — I Know It’s a Lie”We say it every day.At work. To friends. To family. To ourselves.“I’m OK.”But what if it isn’t the truth—just the easiest answer?In the final episode of The Lies We Tell Ourselves,we explore why so many of us keep functioning, producing, and showing up whilequietly carrying exhaustion, loneliness, and unspoken weight.No crisis.No breakdown.Just the cost of always being “fine.”This episode isn’t about fixing anything.It’s about noticing what we’ve learned to ignore.If you’ve ever said “I’m OK” and hoped no one would askmore—this one’s for you.
Season 3 Episode 12 “The Refusal”What happens after you realize the system was never neutral?This final episode of Season 3 explores the quiet, radical act of refusal — not rebellion, not resistance, but stepping out of the line entirely.The Refusal examines: This episode closes Season 3 with clarity, not comfort —and asks the listener to consider what life begins when permission is no longer requested.
WHOYELLING NOW — Season 3, Episode 11“The GoodCitizen”What happenswhen you do everything right —and still never arrive?This episodeexplores the quiet psychology of the Good Citizen:the employee everyone depends on,the worker who trains generations,the professional praised but never promoted.The GoodCitizen examines: This is nota story about failure.It is a story about compliance inside systems that quietly rely on it.
Who Yelling Now? Season 3 Bonus.Christmas is the season of giving but its also the season when many of us sit with things we never asked for and were taught to call gifts.In this special bonus episode, we pause to ask a gentle but uncomfortable question: " How do you tell the difference between a gift and a burden you were taught to be grateful for?"This episode explores:Responsibilities handed down as love.Roles assigned without consent.Expectations wrapped in tradition.and the quiet permission to ask, what are you still carrying. Is This a Gift? Is not about blame or rejection. It's about awareness, honesty and giving yourself room to breathe, especially during a season that asks us to perform joy.A Christmas reflection for anyone who loves deeply, carries quietly, and is learning to ask better questions.
Season 3, Episode 10 — “If It Is Yours…”Why do we fight so hard for things that cannot stay —or for things that were already meant for us?This episode explores the tension between effort anddestiny,the inherited fear that drives overworking,and the quiet truth that what is yours cannot be takenand what is not cannot be kept.Featuring:• A grounding poem on effort and destiny• The story of a young woman fighting for a house she was never meant to earn• A series of reflective poems on regret, release, and receiving• A reminder that peace begins when we stop confusing struggle with purposeA healing episode for anyone tired from the chase.
WHO YELLING NOW — S3 EP9“The Things That Hide in Too Much Light” What if the brightest places in our world are the ones hiding the biggest truths?In this episode, Olga Foreign exposes the illusions that don’t hide in darkness, but in too much light — the ideas so trendy, so “obvious,” and so widely accepted that nobody stops to question them.Through a sharp, hilarious parable of a desert neighborhood ripping the roofs off their homes to follow a trend they can’t afford, Olga examines how society glamorizes ideas that collapse the moment the weather changes. And how our eyes, our minds, and our politics all get blinded by brilliance we never stopped to inspect.This is an episode about perception, imitation, responsibility, and the cost of following someone else’s vision without asking the one question that matters:“Can you afford their idea?”Stay tuned for the poem “The Blinded Room,” and a lesson in why light can hide truth just as deeply as shadow.
What if the Earth isn’t round or flat—but water-shaped?In this episode, Olga Foreign tells the story of Travis,a boy who grows into a man searching for the “edge” of the worldonly to discover that shape itself is a fluid illusion.Through travel, oceans, deserts, salt flats, and trench-deep pressure,he learns the truth:The world is held together by water, movement, and stories—not the rigid maps we were taught as children.Featuring a powerful poem, philosophical storytelling,and a deep meditation on unlearning the world we inherited.Listen now and redraw your map.
Episode 7 turns inward. After breaking the idol ofsuccess, we explore the myths we carry within ourselves — the stories wemistake for identity. Through the tale of a village whose personal books beginto blur in the rain, Olga Foreign unpacks how identity, trauma, family roles,and old narratives shape us… and how they can be rewritten. This is the momentthe season becomes personal.#WhoYellingNow #TheStoryOfUs #RewriteYourMyth#OlgaForeign
Episode 6 of Season 3 dives into one of humanity’sloudest myths — that success is worth any sacrifice. Through a golden idolworshiped by an entire kingdom, Olga Foreign unpacks hustle culture,generational pressure, capitalism’s demands, and the cost of confusing ambitionwith worth. This episode blends humor, truth, and poetry to reclaim success onour own terms.
We treat time like a finish line.But what if it’s a circle that keeps starting over — same mistakes, new packaging?In this two-hour cinematic journey, Olga Foreign drifts through the spiral of history and heart: where revolutions recycle, progress rebrands itself, and even love loops back to its own beginning.Featuring the myth of The Girl Who Remembered Before — a child born in the Fifth World wearing a yellow dress and carrying the full memory of every age — this episode asks whether we ever truly evolve, or just return wiser to the same truth.Poetic narration, humor, and haunting calm collide in this meditation on motion, memory, and mercy.Takeaway: To break history, stop running forward — breathe inside the circle.
Gender. The first story someone tells about us, and the lastone we ever stop editing.It’s not about who’s right or wrong, who wears what, or wholoves how.It’s about what happens when you finally stop auditioningfor belonging.You don’t disappear. You just take up your own light.This is Who Yelling Now, and I’m Olga Foreign —reminding you that sometimes the bravest thing you can wear is nothing buttruth
Gender. The first story someone tells about us,and the last one we ever stop editing.It’s not about who’s right or wrong,who wears what,or who loves how.It’s about what happenswhen you finally stop auditioning for belonging.You don’t disappear.You just take up your own light.This is Who Yelling Now,and I’m Olga Foreign —reminding you that sometimes the bravest thing you can wearis nothing but truth
In a world obsessed with having more, one man tries to own everything — until his possessions begin to own him.Elias, known only as The Collector, spends a lifetime gathering pieces of people, moments, and memories — all in the name of completeness. But when the silence in his home starts to whisper back, he’s forced to confront the truth: you can’t collect what you refuse to live.A poetic story about the illusion of ownership, the weight of memory, and the freedom that comes when you finally let go.Narrated and written by Olga Foreign — from Who Yelling Now, where reflection meets rebellion.
Episode 2 of Season 3, “Borders Are Bones of Imagination,” follows a group of children whose innocent chalk game becomes a war that divides their school and neighborhood. Through their eyes, Olga Foreign explores how imaginary lines become systems of power — and how a single act of compassion can wash them away. Borders don’t just exist on maps. They live in us.
Title: If We Are They, Then Who Am I?Description:Season Two of Who Yelling Now? closes with the ultimate mirror turn. After exploring villains, power, silence, and the collective we, Episode 10 asks the question that cannot be avoided:👉 If we are they… then who am I?Through humor, honesty, and epic spoken word, Olga Foreign wrestles with the comedy and tragedy of self-recognition. Am I the hero in blue with the “S” on my chest? Or the villain in bed hitting snooze after too much red wine? Am I savior, sinner, sidekick, or just background noise with snacks?This finale is a poetic reckoning with masks, contradictions, and the messy middle ground of being human. It’s funny. It’s sharp. It’s true. And it leaves us with one answer worth holding: maybe the real epic begins when we stop pretending to be heroes or villains—and dare to be human.Keep Yelling.
In Episode 8, we walked through the Garden of Evil and asked how villains are made.In Episode 9, we turn the mirror closer.We say they as if villains were aliens, as if oppressors fell from the sky. But the truth is harder: we are the they. We are the ones who crown idols, glorify wealth, worship power, and remain silent while injustice grows.This episode is not about pointing outward. It is about confession.Through eight poems woven together with transitions and a final solution-poem, Olga Foreign dismantles the human mental disease of them/they — the endless cycle of categories that divide us into heroes, villains, victims, and puppets.The message is sharp and unflinching: there is no they. There is only we. And until we face that truth, the cycle of dehumanization will never end.This is not just poetry. This is the mirror we can no longer look away from.Themes: Villains, Collective Responsibility, The Mirror Effect, Dehumanization, Breaking the Cycle
Garden of Evil: The Hidden VillainsWe’re told to fear the clown in the spotlight. But what about the ghosts behind him—the real villains who write the speeches, set the plans, and plant the lies? In this episode, Olga Foreign pulls back the curtain. Through raw spoken word and everyday truth, she shows how distraction keeps us blind, how fear is grown like crops, and why the fight isn’t against the mask but the machine behind it.This isn’t politics. This is humanity.Wake up. Be present. See the ghosts.
Who else has been called violent while living restraint?Who else has been called savage while teaching the world grace?Who else has carried centuries of abuse and still risen with song, with love, with mercy?In this powerful Episode 7 of Who Yelling Now?, Olga Foreign delivers an epic performance that reframes African Americans as the ultimate heroes without capes. From “Who Else?” to “Villain Today, Hero Tomorrow” and “We Did Not Retaliate,” this episode is a poetic journey through history’s cycles of injustice — and the people who broke them.It is a homage to resilience. A testimony of restraint. A declaration that endurance and love are stronger than empire.This is not just poetry. This is a mirror held up to humanity.And still, the yell is not finished.





