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A comment I heard tonight on TV (Kate Moss documentary)...
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I watched the Kate Moss documentary on TV tonight, out of curiosity more than anything.
I just commented on a thread elsewhere about it ...
http://forum.digitalspy.co.uk/board/showthread.php?p=5775726#post5775726
Now the last bit of this message has made me really cross.
(even though I wrote it, I am talking of a quote off TV:))
the bit that made me go 'arghhh' was when Sophie Anderton said that beautiful women, like her and Kate, have a hard time of it. And when some sleaze sells their story to a paper, to her it compares, in her mind, to being raped.
That is not a direct quote but pretty much what she said, in fact I may have toned it down. :rolleyes:
I thought that comment was very very crass. And I don't mind Sophie usually.
Okay , quite serious post by me for a change.
My point is, I have no personal experience of drug abuse, people selling my stories to the papers or indeed rape thankfully (sorry to be so serious but this comment disturbed me) and so I am only talking of how I feel about things. But does anyone else get mad when words are bandied around like that to cover another thing that is totally unrelated? Is selling a story to a newspaper the same as rape as Sophie says? I may have no personal experience of it but it makes me quite emotional. It seemed wierd to hear it just talked about like that, matter of factly.
And there are many other examples of words being used to cover things that are not actually what they really are. I can't think of any off the top of my head, but I am sure some of you can.
I can't see that at all, yet of course have never been in a paper like Kate or Sophie.
However, as a woman, I think using a word like that is very strong and not very applicable imo.
I am probably not making sense, I have had a bit of a weird night before that.
But I just didn't like her comparing being talked about in a paper, to the trauma of rape.
Am I over reacting? :rolleyes: Apologies if I am, it just didn't seem right? And it is not the first time I have heard people joking about or trivialising this matter. :rolleyes:
And sorry to be all serious, not like me at all. Just been a serious night.
I just commented on a thread elsewhere about it ...
http://forum.digitalspy.co.uk/board/showthread.php?p=5775726#post5775726
Now the last bit of this message has made me really cross.
(even though I wrote it, I am talking of a quote off TV:))
the bit that made me go 'arghhh' was when Sophie Anderton said that beautiful women, like her and Kate, have a hard time of it. And when some sleaze sells their story to a paper, to her it compares, in her mind, to being raped.
That is not a direct quote but pretty much what she said, in fact I may have toned it down. :rolleyes:
I thought that comment was very very crass. And I don't mind Sophie usually.
Okay , quite serious post by me for a change.
My point is, I have no personal experience of drug abuse, people selling my stories to the papers or indeed rape thankfully (sorry to be so serious but this comment disturbed me) and so I am only talking of how I feel about things. But does anyone else get mad when words are bandied around like that to cover another thing that is totally unrelated? Is selling a story to a newspaper the same as rape as Sophie says? I may have no personal experience of it but it makes me quite emotional. It seemed wierd to hear it just talked about like that, matter of factly.
And there are many other examples of words being used to cover things that are not actually what they really are. I can't think of any off the top of my head, but I am sure some of you can.
I can't see that at all, yet of course have never been in a paper like Kate or Sophie.
However, as a woman, I think using a word like that is very strong and not very applicable imo.
I am probably not making sense, I have had a bit of a weird night before that.
But I just didn't like her comparing being talked about in a paper, to the trauma of rape.
Am I over reacting? :rolleyes: Apologies if I am, it just didn't seem right? And it is not the first time I have heard people joking about or trivialising this matter. :rolleyes:
And sorry to be all serious, not like me at all. Just been a serious night.
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Love your user name btw. Welcome to the boards.
Well it was a pretty boring programme, but I was cooking the dinner at the time and half watching, and when that came on, I really recoiled at her comments.
After all she has been through (Sophie) I just thought that was a bit OTT. :rolleyes:
And as I said, it isn't just about that. There are many times that people over dramatise a situation, which is offensive to a person who has been in the situation they over dramatise it too.
Not just her comments, but many other.
For example, celebs having depression, checking into a clinic (the priory :rolleyes: ) for two days and being fully recovered a few days later and out on the town.
I do have personal experience from friends I know, of this illlness..and I know that if you are depressed, it takes alot longer than two days to recover. :rolleyes: It is a joke when some people say that.
Sorry, I don't want to be done for libel!:D It was Sophie Anderton.
It just goes to show how far detached some stars are from reality when they use such embarrassing analogies to describe how "hard done by" they are when one of them gets caught sniffing coke.
It's sick
These celebs can say that they feel their privacy is intruded upon, but to feel 'raped'? It just shows how out of touch they are with real life.
Oh right that makes more sense, she's more of an idiot. Sorry my mistake!
Oh edited to add something I saw recently - in her column in Reveal she bitched about Liz Hurley being too old to show cleavage and on the same page printed a picture of herself completely naked for no apparent reason!
Someone else has said elsewhere, that she looked a bit flustered after she made the remark. Maybe she realised it was wrong?
I certainly wouldn't 'cry wolf' as she does.
Nope, you're not. It's an absolutely ridiculous thing to say, and it shows how bad 'celebrityism' (sorry for the lack of a better word) makes people and how detached from real life they become.
To come out with a comment like that is not only downright stupid, it could also cause a fair bit of offence as you mentioned Boho.
Yeah, I was thinking the same thing and it's actually fairly worrying. It seems to be cropping up more and more..."when x happens to a celebrity, it's as bad as murder/rape/other inexcusable offence".
On a sort of related sidenote, I find it's the same when they complain about all the paparazzi crowding them and ruining their lives. This also annoys me a fair bit about these celebrities. They all complain about what dreadful people the photographers are, and say they should be locked up because of it, whilst failing to realise that it's these photographers (and the media in general) that are keeping them in the lifestyle they're used to.
I bet she's gutted.
Seriously though...you really must remember that these people are idiots. Regrettably they are in a position where they have free access to vent their airhead views and make stupid, off the cuff remarks without thinking through what they really mean.
When I say airhead....I'm not just talking about models...just all talentless prannies that find themselves in the media with something (clueless) to say.
My answer. Ignore it all. It doesn't matter.
I don't think she thought about it before she said it and proberly regrets it now i would have thought.
I lost you on the second "someone"...