rockaction
Footballguy
While you used to be able to ignore your significant other (okay, ignore her) when her beach reading turned to the gossip section, now you're more likely to find a woke conversation on the other end. I've noticed that gossip tabloids have taken it upon themselves to report on the proclivities of those on social media, deeming it "news." This has gone on for a while, with CNN and other foolish news stations breathlessly reporting and retweeting what your idiot Uncle in Pensacola thinks, but this has gone even further. It seems like the tabloids are actively combing social media accounts and reporting on the general vibe or complaints contained therein, as if they were issued with critical authority or newsworthiness.
To wit: Licorice Pizza, the new film by Paul Thomas Anderson has been met with stern, serious reports by TMZ and the Daily Mail that contain the stunning allegations of adult/child romance and Japanese racism. Oh yes, seems like people took to social media (all four of them) to complain about the possible romance between a 25 year-old woman and a 15 year-old boy. There is also apparently a scene in which Japanese accents are mocked. While perhaps these are legitimate concerns, it is a period piece about 1970s California, and Paul Thomas Anderson has said he wanted to capture the spirit of the times rather than make it appropriate for a 21st Century lens.
Fair enough. My point is that what I've been seeing out of TMZ and the tabloids is a lot of divisive #### in the name of sales, maybe the same as other news outlets, but ten times stupider and crasser. Just an FYI if you're at the beach and she wants to talk to you about cultural appropriation.
To wit: Licorice Pizza, the new film by Paul Thomas Anderson has been met with stern, serious reports by TMZ and the Daily Mail that contain the stunning allegations of adult/child romance and Japanese racism. Oh yes, seems like people took to social media (all four of them) to complain about the possible romance between a 25 year-old woman and a 15 year-old boy. There is also apparently a scene in which Japanese accents are mocked. While perhaps these are legitimate concerns, it is a period piece about 1970s California, and Paul Thomas Anderson has said he wanted to capture the spirit of the times rather than make it appropriate for a 21st Century lens.
Fair enough. My point is that what I've been seeing out of TMZ and the tabloids is a lot of divisive #### in the name of sales, maybe the same as other news outlets, but ten times stupider and crasser. Just an FYI if you're at the beach and she wants to talk to you about cultural appropriation.
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