i don't use the word "grifter," a term with zero meaning aside from when influencers who are deeply worried about their own operations call you one to deflect suspicion that they themselves are. they're not grifters, though: they do the work. that is its own kind of economy.
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believe me, if wendy's could cancel mcdonald's, it most certainly would. it's all marketing and advertising we witness being deployed -- negative advertising, in many cases -- within the attention economy. arguing about who is or isn't "authentic" is brand stuff, too.
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don't get confused by this stuff. i ignore wendy's advertising even in a united steaks of umm where every brand has a clever twitter mouthpiece, and i ignore this stuff too. it might be "doing the work" but it's not the work i do.
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Genuine question, do you find the way you criticize media figures on What's Left to be different from that? It seems like the point of the Krystal Ball critique is that she doesn't hold her positions authentically.
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Insofar as I've got issues with her, it's merely to remind the listeners of her transition. She's an interesting case, and has progressed rapidly through the mainstream media. I don't want her to be de-platformed, lose money, whatever. But knowing her biography is interesting
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