frank news is dedicated to storytelling across all mediums. A space for debate, discussion, and connection between experts and a curious readership. Topics are presented monthly with content delivered daily.

Founders

Tatti Ribeiro
Clare McLaughlin
Want to share your story?
Become a contributor
Contact Us
November: TBD
30th
No articles
29th
No articles
28th
No articles
27th
No articles
26th
No articles
25th
No articles
24th
No articles
23rd
No articles
22nd
No articles
21st
No articles
20th
No articles
19th
No articles
18th
No articles
17th
No articles
16th
No articles
15th
No articles
14th
No articles
13th
No articles
12th
No articles
11th
No articles
10th
No articles
9th
No articles
8th
No articles
7th
No articles
6th
No articles
5th
No articles
4th
No articles
3rd
No articles
2nd
No articles
1st
No articles
© Frank

news

Please Clap | Part Two

by franknews
October 7, 2020

franknews has been focused on debate since our launch. The first filmed piece for the site was an ethics debate between cadets at West Point to premiere in our inaugural month about the US Military. 

The belief was, and still is, that debate is critical to understanding an issue. Without debate, there's only preaching.

A year after our launch we committed March 2019  to Presidential debate entirely – interviewing those who operated at the highest level of debate – either through years of debate prep for presidential candidates, working within the party institutions at the DNC or RNC, working at the Commission on Presidential debate itself, or within the highest levels of academia. 

Please Clap is a two-part series synthesizing all this information – much of which has been repeated (and repeated again) on the news, in journals, and in print, long before we started doing this research ourselves. Which is really the whole point of this short doc – we know exactly what we can expect from the Commission on Presidential Debates, and there are many people, dedicated to politics and the research of American politics specifically, that know how to make them better and more effective in their primary purpose – educating the American electorate. We should listen to them & insist on more.