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

wanna know what the part is that actually makes me laugh the hardest in all of this? it's actually the like ratio on the Youtube video itself in sharp contrast to Twitter not buying her shit + that insider scoop about other nominees being jealous bitches with sharpened knives for her.

because all this means is the following - Youtube is the ONLY place where this drunk wine aunt grifting ghoul can run back to! that's right, Lindsey! the place you utterly loathe and detest is the ONLY place that's willing to take you back, now that she's demonstrated an utter unwillingness to apologize and keep tapdancing and bloviating. :story:

somehow...I have a feeling this will sting even worse than if she was *also* ratioed on Youtube. because in that case, she'd at least be free to just throw up her hands and get a life. but not like this - can't leave simp money from Patreon and Youtube on the floor if they're still giving it away! so pick it up, Lindsey...while knowing that all the 'woke correct opinion' sacred cows will be distancing from you from this point on most likely.
 
I'm shocked people are buying this. Any hint that cancel culture is over-the-line or bad-faith usually gets them screeing. But the feint toward "well, it was engineered by 4chan" short-circuits their brains. Depressing.

She legit yellowed her face in most of these screengrabs. A sure sign her foundation is too thick / not matching a natural skin tone. But also, lol, yellow face.
 
1618526621490.png


Where the fuck are the closed captions, Lindsay? I want to show people what you're saying Ellis, do you hate deaf people too, you fucking ableist?
 
But I have a question for the Brave Souls who did, Does Ellis actually adress why she got "canceled", or she tries to "Pseudo-intellectualism" the "internet cancel phenomenon" and downplay what she has done and said by analysing it as one of the shitty video essays "look at me, i'm smart" she does? Also, in a insufferable self-satisfied smug attitude?

the latter, of course
 
So about two minutes in she explains that the term "cancelled", which evidently never existed in the tongue of man before, was used in some forgettable pop song and then fast forward today and it has, and I'm fucking quoting her,

"like 'woke' before it, it has gone from AAVE vernacular to right-wing buzzword"

AAVE, for all you uneducated Neanderthals, stands for African America Vernacular English. If you illiterate cave men think saying "African American Vernacular English vernacular" is retarded in it's redundancy then you is stupid and will never know where the white women at. If you only know AAVE as ebonics/broken English then you is racists an sheeeeeit and will never colonize a white woman with a puffy face and wine stained lips who claims to be a writer.

I actually agree with her on this. Stop using "canceled." Use more appropriate words like "purged," "exiled," "sent to Siberia," and "cleansed" to show the full extent of sins against the narrative.

Also, AAVE travels fast because it's the internet, a lot of the words are catchy, and no one knows what race you are online, so how the hell are they supposed to know what "culture" it came from? If they want AAVE to stop being appropriated, they need to log off and keep it as a sacred tongue not to be written down.
 
woke" came from black people when the etymology leads to a movie written by two white people.
Do you have a source on this?

Fuck Lindsay and I agree, it's pretty clear she's just trying to put us under the bus here, but I initially agreed with her

As a black dude, I thought we made up the colloquial definition of the term "woke" and I guess "cancelled"

Yes, the term cancelled obviously was a thing before and means "taking a show off the air"

But I'm pretty sure we came up the shitty Twitter term that we all use to deplatform someone, I'm pretty sure black / stan / ball Twitter made that up

Going back to Lindsay through, while I'm pretty sure we made up that term, I'm not entirely sure what was the point of bringing it up and giving a history listen

Personally, I never got brothered with black slang and memes getting popular and white folks starting abusing it, that's just how memes works

I only have a problem when we get blamed for something, when it was you guys fault (IE, blaming us for creating "woke" and "cancelled" culture, when really it's was annoying white folks and neolibs pushing that shit)

Either way, I don't understand at the end of day since black people was criticizing her too, so lmao
 
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Pure narcissism. All she had to do was ignore the twitter thing. Stay low, sleep in a bed made out of patreon money and after a month or two come back with an unrelated video. Her auduince doesn't really care. Simp money doesn't care. Nuking her twitter was the most intelligent thing she's ever done, but she couldn't handle the lack of attention and validation and made a bitch ass long video about it. How self obsessed can you be?
 
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Pure narcissism All she had to do was ignore the twitter thing. Stay low, sleep in a bed made out of patreon money and after a month or two come back with an unrelated video. Her auduince doesn't really care. Simp money doesn't care. Nuking her twitter was the most inteligent thing she's ever done, but she couldn't handle the lack of attention and validation and made a bitch ass long video about it. How self obsessed can you be?

"...but I AM on the list..."

That's how self-obsessed.
 
Is that where that came from? I wasn't familiar with the Matrix is all
In the Matrix, Morpheus offers Neo the opportunity to escape the Matrix and "wake up" by offering him the red pill, or to leave him in the Matrix and wipe his memories of their meeting with the blue pill.

Of course I'm sure you know the red pill meme that came out of that like 15 years later.

"Woke" is the sarcastic counter response to red pilling, as in "waking up from the Matrix" being used first against rightoids sarcastically for having wrongthink to imply they're deluded instead of aware, then those using it got swapped around as things of that nature often do and woke became a criticism of delusion for lefties. It's ironic because Morpheus describes the blue pill as "waking up" and the red pill as "staying in Wonderland."

1618528789555.png


Know Your Meme cites the source for it as a NYT magazine in 1962, but nobody used "woke" on the internet to call people delusional until the Red Pill took off online.

However, Urban Dictionary, which is cited in that NYM article, says this:

1618529543914.png


Also note that "woke" didn't see widespread usage until the 2010s and started inclining sharply by 1999.
1618529843309.png
 
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For those not watching the video, Lindsay gave credit to the term "cancel" to a song written by a black person called "Your love has been canceled", then showed a WP clipping that reads like this:

View attachment 2090637
The article that she's referencing
Lifestyle

The strange journey of ‘cancel,’ from a Black-culture punchline to a White-grievance watchword​

1618528251470.png


(Washington Post illustration; Warner Bros./Kobal/Shutterstock; Mauro Pimentel/AFP/Getty Images; Joe Raedle/Getty Images; iStock)
By
Clyde McGrady
April 2, 2021 at 6:00 a.m. EDT
One night in 1980 or so, the legendary songwriter Nile Rodgers went on a bad date.
He was out at a club with a group of people, he says, including Eddie Murphy and Rick James. Rodgers was big-time. His band, Chic, had topped the charts with hits such as “I Want Your Love” and “Good Times.” But at heart, he was still a humble kid whose parents had struggled with drug addiction and who felt fortunate to have made it as far as he did. So, when his date asked the maître d’ to remove people from a table so they could sit there instead, Rodgers bristled.

“She probably felt like she was rolling with Berry Gordy or something,” Rodgers, sporting his trademark beret and dreadlocks, told The Washington Post in a recent video interview. “I was just this lucky musician who was doing the job that I loved and got a hit record, and I was in my environment with all my good friends.”


Her attempt to use his celebrity to push people around was a dealbreaker. “No, no, no, I don't do that,” Rodgers remembered explaining. “I don’t play that card.”
Sitting at home one night, some time later, he replayed the bad date in his head. Rodgers, who is obsessed with television — he says he keeps it on in every room of his house, 24/7 — came up with some lyrics:
Watchin’ the late show
I made up my mind, oh
A love that is free like a love should be
Fallin’ behind, oh
Don’t you see you are the one
I couldn’t have begun
No, your love is cancelled

The song, “Your Love Is Cancelled,” which appeared on Chic’s 1981 album, “Take It Off,” was not a hit. But the metaphor Rodgers had invented — the idea of “canceling” a person for unacceptable behavior, such as a network executive pulling the plug on an unsuccessful TV show — has taken its own journey. Recently it turned up in Central Florida, in the mouth of a 57-year-old White Republican from Ohio.
“All right, who’s next?” asked Rep. Jim Jordan. “Who’s the cancel culture going to attack next?”
1618528261763.png

Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) is one of many conservative politicos who have decided “cancel culture” is a pox on American life. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)
Jordan, sans jacket, hiked up his pants and smiled at the young right-wing activists who had gathered in an Orlando hotel ballroom for the final day of the Conservative Political Action Conference. The congressman scanned the crowd before continuing. "You see last week they tried to cancel Kermit the Frog and Mr. Potato Head? They backed off Mr. Potato Head. I think he told them his preferred pronouns are he/him/his, right?" Jordan said with a smirk.


The theme of the conference was “America Uncanceled.” Attendees shelled out between $330 to $7,500 to see Jordan and other pro-Donald Trump politicos vow to protect Americans from the “woke” hordes demanding the removal of statues celebrating white supremacists, among other perceived offenses.
In his speech, Jordan was invoking the specter of “cancel culture” in reference to Disney’s decision to add a content warning at the beginning of some episodes of “The Muppet Show” on its streaming service, because the shows depict harmful stereotypes and “mistreatment of people or cultures.” (In one episode, country singer Johnny Cash performs with a Confederate flag in the background.) As for Mr. Potato Head, the toymaker Hasbro had announced that it would drop the “Mr.” and “Mrs.” from its famous potato dolls, prompting a backlash that included some specters of its own. “It’s time,” wrote one right-wing pundit in response to the Mr. Potato Head news, “for Republican states to secede.”
The courtesy titles, a company official explained to Fast Company, were “limiting when it comes to both gender identity and family structure.” After seeing the outrage the news had created, however, the company canceled the change.


Castor says impeachment conviction would amount to ‘cancel culture’


Trump impeachment attorney Bruce L. Castor Jr. on Feb. 12 said a vote to convict former president Donald Trump would permit “cancel culture" in the Senate. (The Washington Post)
Neither the Muppets nor Mr. Potato Head had faced extinction — only modification in light of companies’ evolving sense of what customers consider to be respectful and inclusive. But among those who are offended by the notion of being offended by “Mr.” or “Mrs.” in a doll’s name or the presence of a proslavery battle flag on a kids’ TV show, “cancel culture” is a new favorite way to describe what’s making them upset (way punchier than “political correctness”).


“Cancel” and “woke” are the latest terms to originate in Black culture only to be appropriated into the White mainstream and subsequently thrashed to death. Young Black people have used these words for years as sincere calls to consciousness and action, and sometimes as a way to get some jokes off. That White people would lift those terms for their own purposes was predictable, if not inevitable. The commodification of Black slang is practically an American tradition. “One of the biggest exports of American culture,” said Renée Blake, a linguistics professor at New York University, “is African American language.”
Terms such as “lit” and “bae” and “on fleek” — or, if you’re a little older, “fly” and “funky” and “uptight” — have been mined by White people for their proximity to Black cool. The word “cool” itself emerged from Black culture. “I do not know what white Americans would sound like if there had never been any black people in the United States,” James Baldwin wrote in 1979, “but they would not sound the way they sound.”
With “canceled” and “woke,” there’s a twist: Not only have these words been appropriated from Black culture, but they have also been weaponized to sneer at the values of many young Black liberals.
1618528306022.png

Nile Rodgers may have invented a colloquial version of “cancel” back in the early 1980s, but in 2021, the phrase has been appropriated by conservative politicians. (Mauro Pimentel/AFP/Getty Images)
“When I hear stuff like ‘America Uncanceled,’ what does that even mean? What are you talking about? What are you really trying to say?”


Screenwriter and journalist Barry Michael Cooper was reflecting on how “cancel” ended up in Orlando.
“It’s really weird, man.”
But for Cooper, there’s also amusement and pride, considering he was largely responsible for the term entering the American lexicon.
Thirty years ago, he was working on the screenplay for “New Jack City,” a film that would become a 1990s Black gangster classic. One of the characters was Nino Brown, a “malignant narcissist” of a Harlem drug boss (played by Wesley Snipes). After sacrificing the life of a child to save his own, Nino finds himself back at his headquarters being castigated by his girlfriend. Suddenly, he grabs her by the head, throws her on a conference table and douses her in champagne.

“Cancel that b----!” he hisses, as a lieutenant collects her from the table and takes her away. “I’ll buy another one.”

The scene, Cooper says now, is “about Nino’s sense of power, and it’s about dismissal: I don’t need you. I made you, I could break you.”
Why did Cooper pick that word, “cancel”? Simple: “Your Love is Cancelled” happened to be coming out of the screenwriter’s speakers around the time he was writing the scene. Rodgers’s harmless kiss-off to a rude date transformed into a gangster’s ruthless desecration of his relationship.
Nino’s profane dismissal proved quotable, and it followed “New Jack City” into the wider world. In 2005, rapper 50 Cent quoted the line on his song “Hustler’s Ambition.” Four years later, Lil Wayne used it on “I’m Single.” Variations on the expression jumped to reality TV: “Get away from me — you’re canceled,” music producer Cisco Rosado tells girlfriend Diamond Strawberry in an episode of VH1’s “Love & Hip Hop.” (“I was just watching ‘New Jack City’ the night before,” Rosado said later.)


Ultimately, the expression took root in that great incubator of creativity: Black Twitter. And that is where the meaning of “cancel” started to evolve.
Declaring someone or something “canceled” on Twitter was not really an attempt to activate a boycott or run anyone from the public square. Cancellations were more of a personal decision, a way to say we don’t really kick it anymore: You stepped out of line, and now I’m done with you. (Think Black fans expressing disgust with Justin Timberlake for dissing Prince.) Saying someone was “canceled” was more like changing the channel — and telling your friends and followers about it — than demanding that the TV execs take the program off the air. The power of cancellation lay with the canceler: How much social capital were they divesting, and how many others would follow suit?
Cancellation notices were “a way to wield power, where we haven’t been able to really do it before on a cultural level,” Cooper said. “Twitter has allowed us to say, ‘We’re here, we’re not going to be discounted, and if you say anything to try to diminish us, we’ll cancel you.’ ”
1618528350146.png

Nino Brown, Wesley Snipes’s narcissistic gangster in “New Jack City,” uttered a profane line that breathed life into the idea of “canceling” someone out of one’s life. (Moviestore/Shutterstock)
The concept of online "call-outs," aimed more at public accountability than low-key channel-changing, really took hold in the mid-2010s, with people pointing out behavior or artistic statements from celebrities they deemed problematic. Sometimes it was for their words, as when Kanye West insisted that slavery was a choice and that Bill Cosby was innocent of the rape charges against him. After decades of sexual abuse allegations against R. Kelly, in 2017, Black fans made a concerted effort to have the singer barred from performing and pressured other artists to cease collaborating with him.


In the wake of #MeToo, the online atmosphere became even more charged as accusations made against abusers were sometimes followed by swift repercussions for the accused. A similar dynamic regarding racism emerged after George Floyd’s killing in police custody — a watershed of horror and urgency over systemic abuse followed by a wave of accountability for people and institutions who were called out as being part of the problem.
As call-outs led to greater consequences, some people became nervous about how social media had changed power dynamics in the court of public opinion. “Cancel culture” was the diagnosis, and the term became a catchall defense for those trying to evade public criticism of any kind.

Cuomo refuses to bow to ‘cancel culture’

New York Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo (D) again insisted on March 12 that he would not resign while allegations of his sexual misconduct were being investigated. (Reuters)
Publisher decides to revoke your book deal after you try to intervene in the certification of a presidential election and a mob storms the U.S. Capitol? Cancel culture. Members of your party calling for your resignation after multiple women accuse you of sexual harassment? Also cancel culture. Dr. Seuss Enterprises decides to stop selling certain Dr. Seuss books that contain racist images? “Cancel Culture Comes for Dr. Suess.”


“It’s just a joke now,” said civil rights activist Johnetta Elzie.
“Cancel” is now just another word that White people have taken and run into the ground.
Rodgers wrote “Your Love is Cancelled” in the wake of a different kind of cancellation.
Chic had been a pioneer in disco music, a genre that was associated with the Black, Latino and gay communities. By the end of the 1970s, however, disco was facing a backlash from resentful rock fans. In 1979, the Chicago White Sox collaborated with Steve Dahl, a DJ and anti-disco crusader, to hold “Disco Demolition Night” at Comiskey Park. Fans got discounted tickets for bringing disco records, which would be collected and ceremoniously blown up on the field between games of a doubleheader.
1618528361167.png

In 1979, Chicago rock fans went to Comiskey Park to cancel their disco records — by exploding them on the field. (Fred Jewell/AP)
Dahl later said that he was unaware at the time of the importance of disco to marginalized groups and that there was no racist or homophobic intent behind Disco Demolition Night. (“Sometimes a stupid radio promotion is just a stupid radio promotion,” he told the Chicago Tribune in 2019.) But, in any case, the event turned out ugly.
The rowdy anti-disco crowd rushed the field and trashed the stadium. Some people had shown up with records by Black artists of other genres, according to Vincent Lawrence, then a teenager, who was working as an usher. “Someone walked up to me [and] said, ‘Hey you — disco sucks!’ and snapped a 12-inch in half in my face,” Lawrence told the Guardian in 2019. “That’s when I started feeling like, ‘Okay, they’re just targeting me because I’m Black.’ ”
The cancellation of disco was not total, but it hit Chic hard. “We were basically scorched by the whole ‘disco sucks’ thing in the summer of ’79,” Rodgers told The Post.
A two-time cancer survivor who works constantly, Rodgers says social media gives him a way to stay in touch with fans. He’s the kind of celebrity musician who replies to individual tweets. “If you look on my Twitter feed, it’s always the same names popping up, and they become my friends,” he said.
One time, Rodgers recalled, someone suggested to him that, if he was such a big deal, then he should be too busy to respond to “anybody and everybody.” The woman unfollowed him, he said, but not before introducing him to a phrase he’d never heard before.
She told him he was canceled.
The author who knows where the white women at
1618528428726.png

tl;dr
Black people invented the word and idea of cancelling in 1981, the year of Moviebob's birth weird, in a song no one remembers and 40 years later wyte peepoo stole the idea and perverted it because that's what dey doo.

Lindsay lifted almost everything from this article with zero due diligence to step back and say "this sounds like a load of horse shit". It's as bad as quoting wikipedia.

The shit song if anyone's interested
 
The article that she's referencing
Lifestyle

The strange journey of ‘cancel,’ from a Black-culture punchline to a White-grievance watchword​

View attachment 2090796

(Washington Post illustration; Warner Bros./Kobal/Shutterstock; Mauro Pimentel/AFP/Getty Images; Joe Raedle/Getty Images; iStock)
By
Clyde McGrady
April 2, 2021 at 6:00 a.m. EDT
One night in 1980 or so, the legendary songwriter Nile Rodgers went on a bad date.
He was out at a club with a group of people, he says, including Eddie Murphy and Rick James. Rodgers was big-time. His band, Chic, had topped the charts with hits such as “I Want Your Love” and “Good Times.” But at heart, he was still a humble kid whose parents had struggled with drug addiction and who felt fortunate to have made it as far as he did. So, when his date asked the maître d’ to remove people from a table so they could sit there instead, Rodgers bristled.

“She probably felt like she was rolling with Berry Gordy or something,” Rodgers, sporting his trademark beret and dreadlocks, told The Washington Post in a recent video interview. “I was just this lucky musician who was doing the job that I loved and got a hit record, and I was in my environment with all my good friends.”


Her attempt to use his celebrity to push people around was a dealbreaker. “No, no, no, I don't do that,” Rodgers remembered explaining. “I don’t play that card.”
Sitting at home one night, some time later, he replayed the bad date in his head. Rodgers, who is obsessed with television — he says he keeps it on in every room of his house, 24/7 — came up with some lyrics:
Watchin’ the late show
I made up my mind, oh
A love that is free like a love should be
Fallin’ behind, oh
Don’t you see you are the one
I couldn’t have begun
No, your love is cancelled

The song, “Your Love Is Cancelled,” which appeared on Chic’s 1981 album, “Take It Off,” was not a hit. But the metaphor Rodgers had invented — the idea of “canceling” a person for unacceptable behavior, such as a network executive pulling the plug on an unsuccessful TV show — has taken its own journey. Recently it turned up in Central Florida, in the mouth of a 57-year-old White Republican from Ohio.
“All right, who’s next?” asked Rep. Jim Jordan. “Who’s the cancel culture going to attack next?”
View attachment 2090797
Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) is one of many conservative politicos who have decided “cancel culture” is a pox on American life. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)
Jordan, sans jacket, hiked up his pants and smiled at the young right-wing activists who had gathered in an Orlando hotel ballroom for the final day of the Conservative Political Action Conference. The congressman scanned the crowd before continuing. "You see last week they tried to cancel Kermit the Frog and Mr. Potato Head? They backed off Mr. Potato Head. I think he told them his preferred pronouns are he/him/his, right?" Jordan said with a smirk.


The theme of the conference was “America Uncanceled.” Attendees shelled out between $330 to $7,500 to see Jordan and other pro-Donald Trump politicos vow to protect Americans from the “woke” hordes demanding the removal of statues celebrating white supremacists, among other perceived offenses.
In his speech, Jordan was invoking the specter of “cancel culture” in reference to Disney’s decision to add a content warning at the beginning of some episodes of “The Muppet Show” on its streaming service, because the shows depict harmful stereotypes and “mistreatment of people or cultures.” (In one episode, country singer Johnny Cash performs with a Confederate flag in the background.) As for Mr. Potato Head, the toymaker Hasbro had announced that it would drop the “Mr.” and “Mrs.” from its famous potato dolls, prompting a backlash that included some specters of its own. “It’s time,” wrote one right-wing pundit in response to the Mr. Potato Head news, “for Republican states to secede.”
The courtesy titles, a company official explained to Fast Company, were “limiting when it comes to both gender identity and family structure.” After seeing the outrage the news had created, however, the company canceled the change.


Castor says impeachment conviction would amount to ‘cancel culture’


Trump impeachment attorney Bruce L. Castor Jr. on Feb. 12 said a vote to convict former president Donald Trump would permit “cancel culture" in the Senate. (The Washington Post)
Neither the Muppets nor Mr. Potato Head had faced extinction — only modification in light of companies’ evolving sense of what customers consider to be respectful and inclusive. But among those who are offended by the notion of being offended by “Mr.” or “Mrs.” in a doll’s name or the presence of a proslavery battle flag on a kids’ TV show, “cancel culture” is a new favorite way to describe what’s making them upset (way punchier than “political correctness”).


“Cancel” and “woke” are the latest terms to originate in Black culture only to be appropriated into the White mainstream and subsequently thrashed to death. Young Black people have used these words for years as sincere calls to consciousness and action, and sometimes as a way to get some jokes off. That White people would lift those terms for their own purposes was predictable, if not inevitable. The commodification of Black slang is practically an American tradition. “One of the biggest exports of American culture,” said Renée Blake, a linguistics professor at New York University, “is African American language.”
Terms such as “lit” and “bae” and “on fleek” — or, if you’re a little older, “fly” and “funky” and “uptight” — have been mined by White people for their proximity to Black cool. The word “cool” itself emerged from Black culture. “I do not know what white Americans would sound like if there had never been any black people in the United States,” James Baldwin wrote in 1979, “but they would not sound the way they sound.”
With “canceled” and “woke,” there’s a twist: Not only have these words been appropriated from Black culture, but they have also been weaponized to sneer at the values of many young Black liberals.
View attachment 2090800
Nile Rodgers may have invented a colloquial version of “cancel” back in the early 1980s, but in 2021, the phrase has been appropriated by conservative politicians. (Mauro Pimentel/AFP/Getty Images)
“When I hear stuff like ‘America Uncanceled,’ what does that even mean? What are you talking about? What are you really trying to say?”


Screenwriter and journalist Barry Michael Cooper was reflecting on how “cancel” ended up in Orlando.
“It’s really weird, man.”
But for Cooper, there’s also amusement and pride, considering he was largely responsible for the term entering the American lexicon.
Thirty years ago, he was working on the screenplay for “New Jack City,” a film that would become a 1990s Black gangster classic. One of the characters was Nino Brown, a “malignant narcissist” of a Harlem drug boss (played by Wesley Snipes). After sacrificing the life of a child to save his own, Nino finds himself back at his headquarters being castigated by his girlfriend. Suddenly, he grabs her by the head, throws her on a conference table and douses her in champagne.

“Cancel that b----!” he hisses, as a lieutenant collects her from the table and takes her away. “I’ll buy another one.”

The scene, Cooper says now, is “about Nino’s sense of power, and it’s about dismissal: I don’t need you. I made you, I could break you.”
Why did Cooper pick that word, “cancel”? Simple: “Your Love is Cancelled” happened to be coming out of the screenwriter’s speakers around the time he was writing the scene. Rodgers’s harmless kiss-off to a rude date transformed into a gangster’s ruthless desecration of his relationship.
Nino’s profane dismissal proved quotable, and it followed “New Jack City” into the wider world. In 2005, rapper 50 Cent quoted the line on his song “Hustler’s Ambition.” Four years later, Lil Wayne used it on “I’m Single.” Variations on the expression jumped to reality TV: “Get away from me — you’re canceled,” music producer Cisco Rosado tells girlfriend Diamond Strawberry in an episode of VH1’s “Love & Hip Hop.” (“I was just watching ‘New Jack City’ the night before,” Rosado said later.)


Ultimately, the expression took root in that great incubator of creativity: Black Twitter. And that is where the meaning of “cancel” started to evolve.
Declaring someone or something “canceled” on Twitter was not really an attempt to activate a boycott or run anyone from the public square. Cancellations were more of a personal decision, a way to say we don’t really kick it anymore: You stepped out of line, and now I’m done with you. (Think Black fans expressing disgust with Justin Timberlake for dissing Prince.) Saying someone was “canceled” was more like changing the channel — and telling your friends and followers about it — than demanding that the TV execs take the program off the air. The power of cancellation lay with the canceler: How much social capital were they divesting, and how many others would follow suit?
Cancellation notices were “a way to wield power, where we haven’t been able to really do it before on a cultural level,” Cooper said. “Twitter has allowed us to say, ‘We’re here, we’re not going to be discounted, and if you say anything to try to diminish us, we’ll cancel you.’ ”
View attachment 2090801
Nino Brown, Wesley Snipes’s narcissistic gangster in “New Jack City,” uttered a profane line that breathed life into the idea of “canceling” someone out of one’s life. (Moviestore/Shutterstock)
The concept of online "call-outs," aimed more at public accountability than low-key channel-changing, really took hold in the mid-2010s, with people pointing out behavior or artistic statements from celebrities they deemed problematic. Sometimes it was for their words, as when Kanye West insisted that slavery was a choice and that Bill Cosby was innocent of the rape charges against him. After decades of sexual abuse allegations against R. Kelly, in 2017, Black fans made a concerted effort to have the singer barred from performing and pressured other artists to cease collaborating with him.


In the wake of #MeToo, the online atmosphere became even more charged as accusations made against abusers were sometimes followed by swift repercussions for the accused. A similar dynamic regarding racism emerged after George Floyd’s killing in police custody — a watershed of horror and urgency over systemic abuse followed by a wave of accountability for people and institutions who were called out as being part of the problem.
As call-outs led to greater consequences, some people became nervous about how social media had changed power dynamics in the court of public opinion. “Cancel culture” was the diagnosis, and the term became a catchall defense for those trying to evade public criticism of any kind.

Cuomo refuses to bow to ‘cancel culture’

New York Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo (D) again insisted on March 12 that he would not resign while allegations of his sexual misconduct were being investigated. (Reuters)
Publisher decides to revoke your book deal after you try to intervene in the certification of a presidential election and a mob storms the U.S. Capitol? Cancel culture. Members of your party calling for your resignation after multiple women accuse you of sexual harassment? Also cancel culture. Dr. Seuss Enterprises decides to stop selling certain Dr. Seuss books that contain racist images? “Cancel Culture Comes for Dr. Suess.”


“It’s just a joke now,” said civil rights activist Johnetta Elzie.
“Cancel” is now just another word that White people have taken and run into the ground.
Rodgers wrote “Your Love is Cancelled” in the wake of a different kind of cancellation.
Chic had been a pioneer in disco music, a genre that was associated with the Black, Latino and gay communities. By the end of the 1970s, however, disco was facing a backlash from resentful rock fans. In 1979, the Chicago White Sox collaborated with Steve Dahl, a DJ and anti-disco crusader, to hold “Disco Demolition Night” at Comiskey Park. Fans got discounted tickets for bringing disco records, which would be collected and ceremoniously blown up on the field between games of a doubleheader.
View attachment 2090802
In 1979, Chicago rock fans went to Comiskey Park to cancel their disco records — by exploding them on the field. (Fred Jewell/AP)
Dahl later said that he was unaware at the time of the importance of disco to marginalized groups and that there was no racist or homophobic intent behind Disco Demolition Night. (“Sometimes a stupid radio promotion is just a stupid radio promotion,” he told the Chicago Tribune in 2019.) But, in any case, the event turned out ugly.
The rowdy anti-disco crowd rushed the field and trashed the stadium. Some people had shown up with records by Black artists of other genres, according to Vincent Lawrence, then a teenager, who was working as an usher. “Someone walked up to me [and] said, ‘Hey you — disco sucks!’ and snapped a 12-inch in half in my face,” Lawrence told the Guardian in 2019. “That’s when I started feeling like, ‘Okay, they’re just targeting me because I’m Black.’ ”
The cancellation of disco was not total, but it hit Chic hard. “We were basically scorched by the whole ‘disco sucks’ thing in the summer of ’79,” Rodgers told The Post.
A two-time cancer survivor who works constantly, Rodgers says social media gives him a way to stay in touch with fans. He’s the kind of celebrity musician who replies to individual tweets. “If you look on my Twitter feed, it’s always the same names popping up, and they become my friends,” he said.
One time, Rodgers recalled, someone suggested to him that, if he was such a big deal, then he should be too busy to respond to “anybody and everybody.” The woman unfollowed him, he said, but not before introducing him to a phrase he’d never heard before.
She told him he was canceled.
The author who knows where the white women at
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tl;dr
Black people invented the word and idea of cancelling in 1981, the year of Moviebob's birth weird, in a song no one remembers and 40 years later wyte peepoo stole the idea and perverted it because that's what dey doo.

Lindsay lifted almost everything from this article with zero due diligence to step back and say "this sounds like a load of horse shit". It's as bad as quoting wikipedia.

The shit song if anyone's interested
Let's look at the usage of this word.
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Oh wow that word's been in use since before the 1800s who could've predicted that?
 
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