Allegations against the comedian are proof that women are angry, temporarily powerfulāand very, very dangerous.
I love that the author discusses her personal background and cultural viewpoint here. It’s certainly an interesting perspective on the #MeToo movement in the past six months. I’m quite curious to read the underlying source article. Until now I’ve not heard of babe as a source at all.
I went on a date with Aziz Ansari. It turned into the worst night of my life by Katie Way (babe)
Reading as follow up to the provocative article I read in The Atlantic yesterday. Iām a bit more interested in the cultural differences brought up by The Atlantic author and the millennial viewpoint in this article.
Iām often struck with peopleās seeming lack of ability to communicate verbally, and this seems even more apparent with the millennial generations. Also striking is āGraceāsā even more dramatic reaction to the encounter after sheād had time to discuss it more with friends. It almost reads as if she didnāt know what to think of things by herself without the filter of her friendsā comments and thoughts. Iām curious if this phenomenon is generational and what role the texting/sharing/social media environment of the past decade has or hasnāt done to impact this viewpoint.
Some thoughts about the journalistic perspective
I spent a few minutes looking into babe as a source and Iām even more curious how to take the story given the photo I found at the bottom of their article and the text from their āabout pageā which is given the permalink path ā/manifestoā. Their top menu rail includes the topics: ānews, lust, fads, looks, IRL, popā which makes me even more suspicious.
Given these and their apparent size and exuberant youth and lack of experience, I have to wonder about their journalistic integrity a bit. While they did seemingly go to some lengths to verify Graceās story with friends and back it up with apparent photos and texts, it almost plays as journalistic theater copying work and stories theyāve likely recently read out of The Washington Post and The New York Times. How does such a small publication get a story and choose to push it right after the Golden Globes in such a way? Are the editors or writer friends with the subject or even the subject herself? If so this should be mentioned for full disclosure in the article. Especially in the case where they may be trying to press such an article into the mainstream and thereby have some significant exposure and financial upside for themselves.
Page header on babeās āmanifestoā and found at the bottom of the story.
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