From Justin Bieber to Leslie Jones: a month of leaving social media
GABBY Douglas, a gold medal-winning gymnast, seemed confused when a reporter at the Olympics started asking her questions about the internet just after her final routine at Rio. The reporter wanted Douglas to answer for a wave of petty criticism, much of it online, targeting Douglas’ hair, facial expressions and hand gestures during the Games. She started to tear up as she gave her response. “I tried to stay off the internet,” she said.
“It was hurtful. It was hurtful. It was. It’s been kind of a lot to deal with,” she said.
Douglas is just one of many high-profile individuals who have avoided or quit social media — particularly Twitter — recently, often because of waves of abuse, prompted by the “wrong” hair, by appearing in the Ghostbusters reboot or by supporting the wrong romantic pairing of two characters in a fictional television show.
Below, we’ve rounded up some of these cases just from the past month:
Leslie Jones
The Ghostbusters actress temporarily left Twitter days after the release of her movie, following a particularly intense wave of racist abuse.
As Jones tweeted image after image of the hateful things people were sending her way, Twitter came under increasing pressure, as it has in the past, to do something about it. Although Twitter’s rules ban “harassment” and “hateful conduct”, the social media company has long been criticised for its slow, inconsistent enforcement of its own policies.
Eventually Twitter did respond, deleting several of the worst tweets Jones received and permanently banning some accounts. Among those banned was Milo Yiannopoulos, a Breitbart writer who often used his once-popular Twitter account to mock his ideological enemies.
As the harassment against Jones intensified, Yiannopoulos wrote several tweets making fun of Jones’ response to the abuse, calling her “barely literate” and sharing doctored images with his 300,000 followers that made it appear (falsely) as if Jones were making profane and offensive postings. Yiannopoulos later disputed his suspension, calling it “cowardly.”
Twitter took the unusual step of releasing a statement that addressed the abuse Jones faced, promising changes to Twitter’s hateful conduct policy and its abuse reporting system “in the coming weeks.” Those changes have not yet been announced, but Twitter said last week that it “will have updates to share soon.”
Meanwhile, Jones has returned to Twitter. And her tweets about the Olympics were so successful that NBC (a company for which Jones also works) ended up flying her to Rio so that she could live tweet the Games in person.
Normani Kordei
The Fifth Harmony singer announced that she was “taking a break” from Twitter in early August, for depressing and familiar reasons: “Over the course of this last week and especially over the last 48 hours, I’ve not just been cyber bullied, I’ve been racially cyber bullied with tweets and pictures so horrific and racially charged that I can’t subject myself any longer to the hate.”
“I’m not the first black female celebrity to deal with this and I’m sure I won’t be the last,” she wrote, before thanking Twitter for “immediately jumping into action”.
According to the Cut, the bullying began after Kordei gave an interview in which she was asked to describe her Fifth Harmony bandmates. Fans weren’t satisfied with the less-thorough answer she gave for Camila Cabello: “Let’s see. Camila. Very quirky. Yeah, very quirky. Cute.”