AT&T actress Milana Vayntrub responds to online body shaming: 'You've lost the privilege of looking at it'

Seriously, you big-titted twat, lots of pics of you flaunting your fun bags. AT&T eats shit anyway. đź–• đź–• đź–• đź–• đź–•

AT&T actress Milana Vayntrub responds to online body shaming: 'You've lost the privilege of looking at it'​

Elise Solé
Wed, March 24, 2021, 1:23 PM


Milana Vayntrub — who stars in a long-running AT&T campaign— responded to another round of online sexual harassment following recent ads that air during the NCAA Tournament.

The 34-year-old actress, who plays AT&T saleswoman "Lily Adams" in the media company's advertisements and who has acted in television shows like This Is Us and Days of Our Lives, tweeted on March 20: "Been getting a lot of 'Why are they placing her body like that in those ads?' Well, I direct the ads. I place myself like that. And it’s because of the thousands of unwelcome comments I receive about my body. You’ve lost the privilege of looking at it until I feel safe again." (Boo-fucking-hoo. - JS)

In the ads, Vayntrub is sitting behind a desk, with her lower body concealed, unlike in previous spots in which she stood in front of the camera. The campaign promotes the NCAA tournament (for the National Collegiate Athletic Association), also known as March Madness, of which AT&T is a partner. Last year, Vayntrub showed off her directing skills in behind-the-scenes footage posted to her official TikTok page.


But Vayntrub's response activated even more sexual harassment in the Twitter thread, as users called her "sexy," "beautiful" and cute" and critiqued her hairstyle. "Based on her comment, 'you're beautiful' would be one of those unwelcome comments she mentioned and part of the point you missed," a Twitter user pointed out.

"Really impressive how many dudes think they should respond to this by commenting on her body," another noted. Someone said the tweets, many of which came from men, were "disrespectful and creepy." And one person speculated that Vayntrub chose to sit in the ads to conceal an alleged pregnancy.

Vayntrub, who declined to comment to Yahoo Life, faced the same harassment last year on social media, which she addressed in an Instagram Live video that was posted to Twitter. "I am not consenting to any of this," Vayntrub said in the footage. "I do not want any of this." The actress also said that decade-old photos of her that were shared by strangers on social media, were from a college pool party.

And she read aloud derogatory written comments that appeared as she spoke. "I'm hurting," she said in the video. "And it's bringing up a lot of feelings of sexual assault."

Jim Kimberly, director of corporate communications at AT&T tells Yahoo Life in a statement, "We will not tolerate the inappropriate comments and harassment of Milana Vayntrub, the talented actor and director who portrays Lily in our ads. Last summer, we disabled or deleted these comments on our social sites. We continue to fight to support her and our values, which appreciate and respect all women." A brand spokesperson reiterated the same message last year.


 
Vayntrub, who declined to comment to Yahoo Life, faced the same harassment last year on social media, which she addressed in an Instagram Live video that was posted to Twitter. "I am not consenting to any of this," Vayntrub said in the footage. "I do not want any of this." The actress also said that decade-old photos of her that were shared by strangers on social media, were from a college pool party.
>Post pictures on social media, leaves them open to the public
>The public looks at them

Pikachuface.png
 
Seriously, you big-titted twat, lots of pics of you flaunting your fun bags. AT&T eats shit anyway. đź–• đź–• đź–• đź–• đź–•

AT&T actress Milana Vayntrub responds to online body shaming: 'You've lost the privilege of looking at it'​

Elise Solé
Wed, March 24, 2021, 1:23 PM


Milana Vayntrub — who stars in a long-running AT&T campaign— responded to another round of online sexual harassment following recent ads that air during the NCAA Tournament.

The 34-year-old actress, who plays AT&T saleswoman "Lily Adams" in the media company's advertisements and who has acted in television shows like This Is Us and Days of Our Lives, tweeted on March 20: "Been getting a lot of 'Why are they placing her body like that in those ads?' Well, I direct the ads. I place myself like that. And it’s because of the thousands of unwelcome comments I receive about my body. You’ve lost the privilege of looking at it until I feel safe again." (Boo-fucking-hoo. - JS)

In the ads, Vayntrub is sitting behind a desk, with her lower body concealed, unlike in previous spots in which she stood in front of the camera. The campaign promotes the NCAA tournament (for the National Collegiate Athletic Association), also known as March Madness, of which AT&T is a partner. Last year, Vayntrub showed off her directing skills in behind-the-scenes footage posted to her official TikTok page.


But Vayntrub's response activated even more sexual harassment in the Twitter thread, as users called her "sexy," "beautiful" and cute" and critiqued her hairstyle. "Based on her comment, 'you're beautiful' would be one of those unwelcome comments she mentioned and part of the point you missed," a Twitter user pointed out.

"Really impressive how many dudes think they should respond to this by commenting on her body," another noted. Someone said the tweets, many of which came from men, were "disrespectful and creepy." And one person speculated that Vayntrub chose to sit in the ads to conceal an alleged pregnancy.

Vayntrub, who declined to comment to Yahoo Life, faced the same harassment last year on social media, which she addressed in an Instagram Live video that was posted to Twitter. "I am not consenting to any of this," Vayntrub said in the footage. "I do not want any of this." The actress also said that decade-old photos of her that were shared by strangers on social media, were from a college pool party.

And she read aloud derogatory written comments that appeared as she spoke. "I'm hurting," she said in the video. "And it's bringing up a lot of feelings of sexual assault."

Jim Kimberly, director of corporate communications at AT&T tells Yahoo Life in a statement, "We will not tolerate the inappropriate comments and harassment of Milana Vayntrub, the talented actor and director who portrays Lily in our ads. Last summer, we disabled or deleted these comments on our social sites. We continue to fight to support her and our values, which appreciate and respect all women." A brand spokesperson reiterated the same message last year.


Don't care, Lily is overrated.
 
vayntraub.jpg


She shows off her chest all the time.

She is also friends with Akilah Hughes and they had a short lived web series for Comedy Central, so that's you firm link into SJW poison where looking at your photos is sexual assault.
 
Vayntrub, who declined to comment to Yahoo Life, faced the same harassment last year on social media, which she addressed in an Instagram Live video that was posted to Twitter. "I am not consenting to any of this," Vayntrub said in the footage. "I do not want any of this." The actress also said that decade-old photos of her that were shared by strangers on social media, were from a college pool party.

And she read aloud derogatory written comments that appeared as she spoke. "I'm hurting," she said in the video. "And it's bringing up a lot of feelings of sexual assault."
"I show off my tits for money"
*someone makes lewd comment*
"I'M BEING SEXUALLY ASSAULTED!"
Shut your cockhole you neurotic butterface
 
I don't understand how this is body shaming. It sounds like they're all positive comments.

Making a positive comment about a woman's body causes her to think about her body, which for some women is very triggering.

"Love the new haircut."

Oh god he hates my new haircut. That was a microaggression. Why is he being so aggressive? Has he microaggressed me before? Wait, it's cute, there's no way he hates it. Is he hitting on me? Does he want to rail me from behind while pulling my hair? Does he want to rape me? Being cute isn't permission to rape me. I wonder how big his cock is. Should I report this to HR? Is this the "catcalling" thing I hear about? Or is it "gaslighting?" That's where they sexually harass you and you tell people then everyone calls you a dumb bitch and says it wasn't harassment, right? I don't want that to happen to me again. Maybe I need to add him on Facebook and read four or five years of Twitter posts, get a feel for him as a person and get a feel for how he harasses women.
 
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She shows off her chest all the time.

She is also friends with Akilah Hughes and they had a short lived web series for Comedy Central, so that's you firm link into SJW poison where looking at your photos is sexual assault.
She looks like a slightly bustier version of that Smallville chick who ended up being a human trafficker. Not a good look at this time.
Bitch you're not special. Anyone can get tits with a simple google search of "tits".
Elaine reynolds massive-tits-on-bed.jpg
 
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