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/vt/ - Virtual Youtubers

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>> No.30632289 [View]
File: 380 KB, 445x760, nanoless.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
30632289

>>30626381
>>30627271
>>30628663
>>30631991
You know what, I decided to do another check just to confirm if my aversion to their speech patterns really wasn't a regional thing.
I'm just gonna break out the PT-BR for this because it makes things easier to explain since you're obviously a portuguese speaker yourself otherwise this discussion wouldn't have even started.
As a São Paulo native myself, I know that my paulistano accent influences how I hear people from other regions, and I assume that Batata is not from São Paulo. The thing is, out of all the other BR chuubas I know of, the only other one I know that has confirmed also being from SP is Nanoless.
This stream here is fully in portuguese, featuring her talking to chat constantly and all: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zCvvLXASuS0
Even though she's from São Paulo as well, she also has those quirks in her speech (or lack thereof) that bother me in Batata. They aren't as apparent, but they're definitely there. For example, they enunciate words in full instead of, how most people would do, place emphasis in a singly syllable or skip over letters of the word, or pronunciating "e"s in words as "i" (such as in words like "tarde")
Nano seems to go back and forth on this, but another obvious example is saying "você" in full instead of shortening it to "cê" when mid-sentence. This, like the above, obviously is related to my own accent, but there are plenty of portuguese dialects that do the exact same. I'm not saying that chuubas should speak like slum-living drug dealers, but there's a clear middle ground between speaking like that and being extra formal, and that middle ground is how most people speak to each other on a daily basis. The issue is that BR chuubas seem to skew towards the extra formal part, and I can't seem to find any reason why. I don't think even local news presenters speak like that.
I've watched plenty of fleshstreamers from all around the country and they all speak like normal people, so I honest to god don't understand why chuubas seem to have an issue with doing the same. It's not even like it's tied to kayfabe.
Anyways, apologies for the massive rant in response. I just don't really know how else to describe this thing nor and it was relevant to the topic at least. I know that at the end of the day it's just me being extra autismo but voice and speech are obviously some of, if not THE most important parts of how enjoyable a chuuba is to watch, and it feels like this problem persists throughout a huge slew of BR chuubas for some weird reason. It's frustrating.
I had originally written this in portuguese but the post kept being deemed as spam which is kinda funny

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