TGWTG Nostalgia Chick / Lindsay Ellis / TheDudette - aka Hotdogs in face girl

You know, instead of trying to transition to a novel writing career, she would have done better becoming a documentary maker, or maybe filming something original, then getting it on Netflix or Amazon Prime. But it was a publishing company that approached her so that's what she went with.
Lurker here, but this is the point where Lindsay sabotaged her career (IMO), and it bugs me because she should have known better. Internet careers are, in essence, small businesses. Barring incredible luck, it takes patience, consistency and a strategic approach over a period of years. Lindsay Ellis's idea of leveraging her internet fame as a stepping stone to writing, directing, etc., is standard, and it's one way for your business to grow. It's the way she tried to do it that's at fault.

There's no shortcut. A Youtube channel which was well known for a relatively short period of time when she signed the book contract will not translate into huge sales for badly written children's sci-fi. Keep going at what you do (don't segue into identity politics, it's not what you became known for), do your podcast, cross over with other channels, keep out of politics, start writing articles about film, and did I mention don't do political videos or get into Twitter wars?

You're asked for a manuscript? Well, your biggest success has been a documentary about a 20 year old movie - non-fiction should be the way to go. Get an experienced co-author and pitch a few ideas. Something serious about women in film? A New Zealand travelogue? A modern, light-hearted take on Disney heroines? These are just examples - ideally, it should be something a little different to, or an extension of, your normal output - familiar enough that your subscribers will want to buy it. If word of mouth is good, it introduces you to a new market and establishes you as knowledgeable in your field. In any case, you're not looking to make a fortune - you want to build your brand and, importantly, for your publisher to break even, so don't look for giant advances. They're doing you a good turn at this point in your career.*

I never really liked Lindsay's output, but I did get the impression she had a plan, which is why I was shocked at the type of literary "career" she was risking her channel for. It struck me as a cash-grab at the time, and its failure was inevitable.

*I don't suggest that this is the only means of success, but any guide to building a small business or Youtube channel will tell you to aim for gradual, consistent growth.
 
I’m considering reading Axioms Edge finally to see the actual criticisms everyone has throughly mocked and analysed from every possible angle, but I really feel uncomfortable at giving her any money at all if it’s okay s terrible (and probably is) as everyone is making it out to be. Is it worth it?

Also this might be the most TL:biggrin:R lolcow thread there is, but damn people really go into depth with how much they hate Lindsey and how she sucks at almost everything lmao it’s kind of admirable.
Hit me up in dm's i can send you her ebooks
 
Too slowly by any measure.

Wonder what finally broke her and made the need for backpats from her hugbox?
Well it's Christmas so it could be seasonal depression on top of everything else. Maybe seeing the posts her friends made of their kids playing with toys made her sad.

I never really liked Lindsay's output, but I did get the impression she had a plan, which is why I was shocked at the type of literary "career" she was risking her channel for. It struck me as a cash-grab at the time, and its failure was inevitable.

*I don't suggest that this is the only means of success, but any guide to building a small business or Youtube channel will tell you to aim for gradual, consistent growth.
I'd say the problem is she didn't really plan her literary career. She was asked for a manuscript and just went with something that she already had mostly planned out, assuming it would just be a stepping stone to something bigger, without considering that she'd do better to write something more on brand for her.
 
Well it's Christmas so it could be seasonal depression on top of everything else. Maybe seeing the posts her friends made of their kids playing with toys made her sad.
Maybe if Lindsay is lucky, it's not too late for her go looking for the baby she flushed down the drain.

I mean, The Penguin survived all those years in the sewers, so it's possible.
 
Wonder what finally broke her and made the need for backpats from her hugbox?
Her blue-check friends have been publicly kissing her ass along with the simp brigade. But it's never been enough for her-- IMO arrogance and ingratitude have always been her biggest issues (exacerbated by alcohol). The dopamine rush of tweeting a pithy, self-deprecating bon mot and having thousands of people like/comment/commend her cleverness has been her drug of choice for years. Hard to break that habit, even after a bad trip.
Also this might be the most TL:biggrin:R lolcow thread there is, but damn people really go into depth with how much they hate Lindsey and how she sucks at almost everything lmao it’s kind of admirable.
She should take it as a compliment, really. For all her snide remarks about 'diet nazis' in the Mask Off video, all she did was confirm or validate almost everything on this thread. Nothing was wrong, just mean lol. There isn't even that much visceral hate here but her hugbox everywhere else on SM is so sensitive that ANY non-positive, not even negative but any criticism at all of her work is met with huge pushback, wailing and gnashing of teeth by her simps. I don't hate Lindsay, I just don't like her or her work. It's not indifference and for that she should be grateful.
You're asked for a manuscript? Well, your biggest success has been a documentary about a 20 year old movie - non-fiction should be the way to go.
Agreed. Documentary production, editing, behind the scenes work would be the smart direction to move in her career. I said awhile back that she should work with Curiosity Stream as a content creator due to their partnership with Nebula. She's already got the education, infrastructure and team to produce video content, she just needs to not be the center of attention.
 
And I don't feel sorry for her one bit.
I actually feel a little bit sorry for the entire gaggle of trainwrecks who gained notoriety in the earlier days of the internet.

The way I look at it, it's like you're at a dance or something and the floor isn't open yet, then the second it opens a clueless retarded kid blunders their way out. Since they're the only person currently on the floor they get the spotlight and in their retarded head think "Wow, people really like me and think I'm a great dancer!", not realizing that in reality the only reason anyone's paying attention to them is because they happened to be the first out there, and now on top of it everyone can see them spaz out.
But then pretty quickly less retarded people who are way better dancers make their way onto the floor meaning not only does the retard get definitively shown up, but now everyone knows who they are and that they're a retard, and to make it even worse they were given the false hope that they were actually really good at something for once.

That's a very stupid analogy, but my point is obscurity would've been more merciful for these people. They never warranted a position of notoriety to begin with, and all having one did was give them false impressions of significance and point a spotlight at them to ensure that when they inevitably floundered and failed it would be as humiliating as possible for as long as possible.
 
This was going to be a YouTube video, but I just don’t have it in me to invite that kind of scrutiny, to be the last in the sick, sad line of YouTubers who get all weepy on camera and cry about how they just can’t do this anymore, boo hoo hoo. I had planned to move video content to Nebula, but I realize now that doing that is just keeping wounds wide open. My life ended nine months ago - what has been taking up bandwidth ever since then has been a ghost. It’s almost funny, how many people will insist that I have "lost nothing" (you know, because subscriber count is the only metric for success and cancel culture doesn't exist). One YouTube channel chugging along on algorithmic inertia is not success - it’s just an engine driving on fumes.

Many will say this is being melodramatic, that my life isn’t *over*, that there was absolutely nothing stopping me from brushing myself off, building back up goodwill and shutting up and playing the game. And I tried that; in a way I suppose it’s good that I did, because I needed to learn the hard way that that was never going to work. There is no un-fucking this. You can’t find the energy if there is nothing left to convert to it. You can’t be a better person if you are nothing but the hollow shell of one.

2021 has been the worst year of my life. I am traumatized by it. To this day I still have people scolding me by how I handled it, that I should have handled it differently, that I should have “controlled” my “stans”, as if I had the capability to know what any of these people were even saying to strangers on Twitter while I was shitting blood for weeks on end. The worst thing about this whole year is that I can’t even admit this trauma because of all the rhetorical devices people have already come up with to dismiss it. That centering my own pain is evidence of me “not listening” (does it occur to these people that you can listen, and disagree with other people’s conclusions?) That I’m weaponizing my “fragile white womanhood” or whatever to point out that having thousands upon thousands of people who you have never met hate you and say whatever will get them the most updoots about is, in fact, traumatizing. That people I used to know would flagrantly lie about me on Twitter dot com to the tune of thousands of retweets and tens of thousands of likes, and I just had to sit there and take it. My favorite are the people who dismiss any potential harm I might have incurred as justified because I am a “wealthy, white woman” (I am not wealthy), while these same people’s hearts positively *bleed* for Britney Spears.

These people don’t see how similar these talking points are to the same Boomer, bootstrap parenting style that I thought most of us had agreed was abusive - that you need to toughen up, accept your punishment, accept that even if the reaction was outsized that you did SOMETHING wrong, because where there’s smoke there’s fire. Grow a thicker skin. These same people who always crow about “believing victims” telling victims of public dogpiles that they do not deserve to claim their trauma, let alone to process it, because they deserved it. There is no such thing as cancel culture. There is no incentive/reward structure in places like Twitter to call people out. There are no updoots/favs/follows/retweets for hotting a take on whomever is trending.

I reread the 2015 essay “Hot Allostatic Load” for the first time in years last night, and I could not stop crying. Even reading some of these passages now, I can’t stop crying. This was written from the perspective of a trans femme and discusses some rhetorical devices used to demonize trans women specifically, which obviously does not apply to me, but some of it is spot on:

One of the most common tools of exclusion is through mobbing, which is rarely talked about because unlike rape, murder, etc, it’s not easy to pin it on a single person (or scapegoat). Mobbing is emotional abuse practiced by a group of people, usually peers, over a period of time, through methods such as gaslighting, rumor-mongering, and ostracism. It’s most documented in workplace or academic environments (i.e. key points of capitalist tension) but is thoroughly institutionalized into feminist, queer, and radical spaces as well. Here is why it is horrible:

1) It has an unusually strong power to damage the victim’s relationship to society, because it can’t be written off as an outlier, as some singular monster. It reveals a fundamental truth about people that makes it difficult to trust ever again. People become like aliens, like a pack of animals that can turn on you as soon as some mysterious pheromone shift marks you for death.

2) The insidious nature of emotional abuse: How do you fight ostracism and rumors? They leave no bruises, they just starve you.

3) Mobbing typically occurs in places where the victim is trapped by some need or obligation: work, school, circles of friends. This can prolong exposure to damaging extremes.

For these reasons, PTSD is an almost inevitable outcome of any protracted mobbing case.


The Isabel Fall case is almost a textbook example about how online mobbing harms people, and how the people who participate in these mobs never engage in any self-reflection — when some people read Fall’s “Helicopter Story” and questioned the trans bonafides of the author in early 2020, Twitter did what Twitter does and ruined Fall’s life, death by a million cuts, no one single person even beginning to question whether they did anything wrong by jumping to the worst possible faith interpretation of both the text and the author. After a profile written by Emily VanDerWerff was published late in 2021, were lessons learned about the way we use Internet mobs to tear down people we don’t know because of situations we don’t understand? No — one of Fall’s detractors, Neon Yang, became the new scapegoat du jour, using some of the exact same tactics used the prior year to attack Fall.

I’m not going to touch on Yang’s original comments about Fall or the pushback to them, but what was downright charming in its lack of self-awareness about that whole situation was the way people used Fall’s trauma to hurt Yang, the way they invoked Fall being checked into the hospital while Yang said whatever about Fall and “Helicopter Story”, all while having absolutely no idea what was going on in Yang’s private life. What’s particularly galling is how many people accused Yang of “Sending a trans person to the hospital with PTSD” while apparently being completely oblivious to the fact that they could be very well doing the same thing to Yang, a nonbinary trans person. There was no lesson learned on the nature of mindless dogpiling, just Twitter doing what Twitter does - failing to examine systems of abuse while continuing to perpetuate them by laying into a new scapegoat.

Again, a quote from Hot Allostatic Load:

Feminist/queer spaces are more willing to criticize people than abusive systems because they want to reserve the right to use those systems for their own purposes. At least attacking people can be politically viable, especially in a token system where you benefit directly by their absence, or where your status as a good feminist is dependent on constantly rooting out evil.

When the bounty system calls for the ears of evil people, well, most people have a fucking ear.


Something else that was also inevitable - I was going to quit YouTube. I knew I couldn’t do it forever, that I was running out of steam, that I was sick of the increasing dehumanization inherent, that I just didn’t have anything to say about movies anymore. The plan was always to end with Love Never Dies, since it seemed like the best place to end, with some semblance of energy rather than keeping on until I've withered away to nothing. What happened to me in March and April hastened it, but this was always inevitable.

My initial plan was to leave YouTube for Nebula, but I realize now that this is only entrenching myself in a more intimate form of harm rather than the broad, buckshot kind that YouTube invites. I won’t go into detail (not right now, anyway), but I can’t do video content for them either. I can’t make content period. I just can’t do this anymore. There is no healing as long as there is attachment to the thing that makes you suffer, and the thing in this case is being in the public eye at all.

What I wanted was to quietly disappear, but since this is a platform where people are paying me to make content, I feel like I have to make a statement. If it were just me by myself I would just sign off and say goodbye and that would be it, but I have a team who depends on my company for health insurance, and including dependents I supply full benefits for eight people, and here in the US employer-based insurance is often the only feasible option. Saying to everyone “sorry about your children, but they can’t have insurance anymore because Twitter makes me sad” just doesn’t seem like a fair deal (none of them incidentally know I’m posting this).

So the only thing I can do for now is keep this page active with the loose promise that someday I’ll figure out something in the future to make up for this, while asking you please stop messaging me apologizing for not being able to subscribe anymore. You don’t owe me anything. This Patreon is, like my own life and career, just running on fumes.

But all I know now is that being in the public eye at all is a losing game, and I regret all of it. I regret every time I’ve ever stood up for anyone - it always backfires. I regret every time I pushed back against something unjust - it was always just used to hurt me. I regret every time I ever stood up for myself - I never did it “correctly.” I regret every time I showed any vulnerability - just more ammunition to be used against me later. I regret every time I ever tried to play the game with peers and colleagues - they will drop you the second you aren't popular on Twitter anymore. It’s all hollow and brittle, and if there is one thing I have learned this year it is how eminently expendable I am. The good, progressive cis, straight, wealthy white men keep on trucking and coming out on top because deep down, they know that the systems they profess to stand against ultimately exist to benefit them.

And to all the people telling me I need to grow a thicker skin or remove myself from the conversation altogether - you are right. I don’t have it in me to do the former, so I shall do the latter.

Hope your new year is better than this.
Just in case she deletes it
 
She's quitting!

TL;DR is basically she's decided to leave the public eye because she can't handle it any more. Which she says in a very long form essay in which she admits that yes, Cancel Culture is a thing.
1640658384224.png


Edit: Last few paragraphs of this really do sound like a fucking suicide letter
I regret every time I’ve ever stood up for anyone - it always backfires. I regret every time I pushed back against something unjust - it was always just used to hurt me. I regret every time I ever stood up for myself - I never did it “correctly.” I regret every time I showed any vulnerability - just more ammunition to be used against me later. I regret every time I ever tried to play the game with peers and colleagues - they will drop you the second you aren't popular on Twitter anymore. It’s all hollow and brittle, and if there is one thing I have learned this year it is how eminently expendable I am.
The good, progressive cis, straight, wealthy white men keep on trucking and coming out on top because deep down, they know that the systems they profess to stand against ultimately exist to benefit them.
She cant help but end it being a good little ally demonizing whypipo, jesus christ Ellis, even in online death you still bow down to the people that have decapitated you.
 
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She's quitting!

TL;DR is basically she's decided to leave the public eye because she can't handle it any more. Which she says in a very long form essay in which she admits that yes, Cancel Culture is a thing.
That's a huge pile of words to say 'I got owned by the Social Media Beast'. Funny thing its the very beast she used as a shield and temporarily built her career off of. There were a few times I actually enjoyed some of her videos but her smuggery makes it hilarious.

Time for her to drink heavily as she rockets out of people's memory.
 
She's quitting!

TL;DR is basically she's decided to leave the public eye because she can't handle it any more. Which she says in a very long form essay in which she admits that yes, Cancel Culture is a thing.
Walking away from Omelas
This was going to be a YouTube video, but I just don’t have it in me to invite that kind of scrutiny, to be the last in the sick, sad line of YouTubers who get all weepy on camera and cry about how they just can’t do this anymore, boo hoo hoo. I had planned to move video content to Nebula, but I realize now that doing that is just keeping wounds wide open. My life ended nine months ago - what has been taking up bandwidth ever since then has been a ghost. It’s almost funny, how many people will insist that I have "lost nothing" (you know, because subscriber count is the only metric for success and cancel culture doesn't exist). One YouTube channel chugging along on algorithmic inertia is not success - it’s just an engine driving on fumes.
Many will say this is being melodramatic, that my life isn’t *over*, that there was absolutely nothing stopping me from brushing myself off, building back up goodwill and shutting up and playing the game. And I tried that; in a way I suppose it’s good that I did, because I needed to learn the hard way that that was never going to work. There is no un-fucking this. You can’t find the energy if there is nothing left to convert to it. You can’t be a better person if you are nothing but the hollow shell of one.
2021 has been the worst year of my life. I am traumatized by it. To this day I still have people scolding me by how I handled it, that I should have handled it differently, that I should have “controlled” my “stans”, as if I had the capability to know what any of these people were even saying to strangers on Twitter while I was shitting blood for weeks on end. The worst thing about this whole year is that I can’t even admit this trauma because of all the rhetorical devices people have already come up with to dismiss it. That centering my own pain is evidence of me “not listening” (does it occur to these people that you can listen, and disagree with other people’s conclusions?) That I’m weaponizing my “fragile white womanhood” or whatever to point out that having thousands upon thousands of people who you have never met hate you and say whatever will get them the most updoots about is, in fact, traumatizing. That people I used to know would flagrantly lie about me on Twitter dot com to the tune of thousands of retweets and tens of thousands of likes, and I just had to sit there and take it. My favorite are the people who dismiss any potential harm I might have incurred as justified because I am a “wealthy, white woman” (I am not wealthy), while these same people’s hearts positively *bleed* for Britney Spears.
These people don’t see how similar these talking points are to the same Boomer, bootstrap parenting style that I thought most of us had agreed was abusive - that you need to toughen up, accept your punishment, accept that even if the reaction was outsized that you did SOMETHING wrong, because where there’s smoke there’s fire. Grow a thicker skin. These same people who always crow about “believing victims” telling victims of public dogpiles that they do not deserve to claim their trauma, let alone to process it, because they deserved it. There is no such thing as cancel culture. There is no incentive/reward structure in places like Twitter to call people out. There are no updoots/favs/follows/retweets for hotting a take on whomever is trending.
I reread the 2015 essay “Hot Allostatic Load” for the first time in years last night, and I could not stop crying. Even reading some of these passages now, I can’t stop crying. This was written from the perspective of a trans femme and discusses some rhetorical devices used to demonize trans women specifically, which obviously does not apply to me, but some of it is spot on:
One of the most common tools of exclusion is through mobbing, which is rarely talked about because unlike rape, murder, etc, it’s not easy to pin it on a single person (or scapegoat). Mobbing is emotional abuse practiced by a group of people, usually peers, over a period of time, through methods such as gaslighting, rumor-mongering, and ostracism. It’s most documented in workplace or academic environments (i.e. key points of capitalist tension) but is thoroughly institutionalized into feminist, queer, and radical spaces as well. Here is why it is horrible:
1) It has an unusually strong power to damage the victim’s relationship to society, because it can’t be written off as an outlier, as some singular monster. It reveals a fundamental truth about people that makes it difficult to trust ever again. People become like aliens, like a pack of animals that can turn on you as soon as some mysterious pheromone shift marks you for death.
2) The insidious nature of emotional abuse: How do you fight ostracism and rumors? They leave no bruises, they just starve you.
3) Mobbing typically occurs in places where the victim is trapped by some need or obligation: work, school, circles of friends. This can prolong exposure to damaging extremes.
For these reasons, PTSD is an almost inevitable outcome of any protracted mobbing case.

The Isabel Fall case is almost a textbook example about how online mobbing harms people, and how the people who participate in these mobs never engage in any self-reflection — when some people read Fall’s “Helicopter Story” and questioned the trans bonafides of the author in early 2020, Twitter did what Twitter does and ruined Fall’s life, death by a million cuts, no one single person even beginning to question whether they did anything wrong by jumping to the worst possible faith interpretation of both the text and the author. After a profile written by Emily VanDerWerff was published late in 2021, were lessons learned about the way we use Internet mobs to tear down people we don’t know because of situations we don’t understand? No — one of Fall’s detractors, Neon Yang, became the new scapegoat du jour, using some of the exact same tactics used the prior year to attack Fall.
I’m not going to touch on Yang’s original comments about Fall or the pushback to them, but what was downright charming in its lack of self-awareness about that whole situation was the way people used Fall’s trauma to hurt Yang, the way they invoked Fall being checked into the hospital while Yang said whatever about Fall and “Helicopter Story”, all while having absolutely no idea what was going on in Yang’s private life. What’s particularly galling is how many people accused Yang of “Sending a trans person to the hospital with PTSD” while apparently being completely oblivious to the fact that they could be very well doing the same thing to Yang, a nonbinary trans person. There was no lesson learned on the nature of mindless dogpiling, just Twitter doing what Twitter does - failing to examine systems of abuse while continuing to perpetuate them by laying into a new scapegoat.
Again, a quote from Hot Allostatic Load:
Feminist/queer spaces are more willing to criticize people than abusive systems because they want to reserve the right to use those systems for their own purposes. At least attacking people can be politically viable, especially in a token system where you benefit directly by their absence, or where your status as a good feminist is dependent on constantly rooting out evil.
When the bounty system calls for the ears of evil people, well, most people have a fucking ear.

Something else that was also inevitable - I was going to quit YouTube. I knew I couldn’t do it forever, that I was running out of steam, that I was sick of the increasing dehumanization inherent, that I just didn’t have anything to say about movies anymore. The plan was always to end with Love Never Dies, since it seemed like the best place to end, with some semblance of energy rather than keeping on until I've withered away to nothing. What happened to me in March and April hastened it, but this was always inevitable.
My initial plan was to leave YouTube for Nebula, but I realize now that this is only entrenching myself in a more intimate form of harm rather than the broad, buckshot kind that YouTube invites. I won’t go into detail (not right now, anyway), but I can’t do video content for them either. I can’t make content period. I just can’t do this anymore. There is no healing as long as there is attachment to the thing that makes you suffer, and the thing in this case is being in the public eye at all.
What I wanted was to quietly disappear, but since this is a platform where people are paying me to make content, I feel like I have to make a statement. If it were just me by myself I would just sign off and say goodbye and that would be it, but I have a team who depends on my company for health insurance, and including dependents I supply full benefits for eight people, and here in the US employer-based insurance is often the only feasible option. Saying to everyone “sorry about your children, but they can’t have insurance anymore because Twitter makes me sad” just doesn’t seem like a fair deal (none of them incidentally know I’m posting this).
So the only thing I can do for now is keep this page active with the loose promise that someday I’ll figure out something in the future to make up for this, while asking you please stop messaging me apologizing for not being able to subscribe anymore. You don’t owe me anything. This Patreon is, like my own life and career, just running on fumes.
But all I know now is that being in the public eye at all is a losing game, and I regret all of it. I regret every time I’ve ever stood up for anyone - it always backfires. I regret every time I pushed back against something unjust - it was always just used to hurt me. I regret every time I ever stood up for myself - I never did it “correctly.” I regret every time I showed any vulnerability - just more ammunition to be used against me later. I regret every time I ever tried to play the game with peers and colleagues - they will drop you the second you aren't popular on Twitter anymore. It’s all hollow and brittle, and if there is one thing I have learned this year it is how eminently expendable I am. The good, progressive cis, straight, wealthy white men keep on trucking and coming out on top because deep down, they know that the systems they profess to stand against ultimately exist to benefit them.
And to all the people telling me I need to grow a thicker skin or remove myself from the conversation altogether - you are right. I don’t have it in me to do the former, so I shall do the latter.
Hope your new year is better than this.

https://archive.md/S71c7 Wonder if she's going to start a cycle.

View attachment 2833997

Edit: Last few paragraphs of this really do sound like a fucking suicide letter


She cant help but end it being a good little ally demonizing whypipo, jesus christ Ellis, even in online death you still bow down to the people that have decapitated you.
She;s making a real big deal of being a girl on the Internet. Can't wait to see if any of her Chez Apocalypse buddies signal boost this thing.
 
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Oh man, not gonna lie, I don't know if my grin or my erection is bigger from reading that.

Even now the cunt has to play the victim, and christ, the audacity to compare herself to Isabel Fall.

Bitch, Fall wrote a great work of military scifi and the same crowd you desperately wanted to join tried to lynch her for it. And you didn't say a goddamned word in her defense.

You made a rascist comment on Twitter, and got pissy when people called you out on it after taking your shit for years.

You were one of the key people who CREATED this monster Lindsay. You were PROUD to be a part of it, and poured gasoline on every pyre they built for targets far less deserving of contempt than you.

And now that the beast has turned on you, you howl and weep. A little pressure and the paper tyrant crumbles. That is beneath contempt - you made the beast, have some goddamned dignity while it tears you to pieces.

If this really was the worst year of your career I can only hope it gets worse from here.

The Internet, YouTube, PBS, and trad publishing will all be better places for your absence.

Don't let the door hit you on the way out.
 
I read her sob story and it’s hard to sympathize: for years she was part of the mob, never questioning The Narrative that she blindly followed and likely still follows to this day. When reading this essay, it doesn’t feel like she’s learned anything other than feeling sorry for herself that she was on the wrong end of the internet mob. For years people had spoken about the fickle yet vitriolic cancel culture but it totally didn’t exist…until it happened to her.

I’m skeptical that she will leave the internet, I can easily see her just setting up shop with a hugbox that she has total control of with only the most dedicated of simps.
 
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