In hindsight it kinda seems like putting Cuties on Netflix at all was objectively a mistake, and the people blaming Netflix's marketing department are probably wrong -- "better marketing" for the movie would've just been kicking the can down the road, this backlash was inevitable
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I haven't seen the movie, I don't want to see it (I haven't seen Pretty Baby from 1987 either) I dunno if I'd go so far as to say it "shouldn't have been made", but I feel like there was a lot of misjudgment going on in giving this movie the equivalent of a "wide release"
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A *lot* of shit that gets people in trouble is so-called "context collapse" That there's a difference between making a joke, or making a point, or thinking out loud with a group of trusted friends and venting it all into a big public space for everyone in the world to react to
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I get Doucouré's argument "I didn't want to make an after-school special", that the emotional reaction she's going for she felt she could only get by showing the raw reality of the stuff that disgusts her
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But man it's a huge huge unwarranted assumption to both just implicitly trust your audience that they'll "get it" and be disgusted the way you want them to, and to expect your audience to trust *you*
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End of conversation
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