Quote Originally Posted by BakoolJaJa View Post
Probably just the result of social media in general. I've said it before, in a real conversation, when standing face to face with a person, you don't have time to overthink and come up with a ridiculous offensive theory about every tiny thing the person says. You just communicate, snappy and fast, and even when somebody says something "questionable" it's easier to give them the benefit of the doubt. Maybe they didn't quite mean it that way. Words sometimes come out of our mouths faster than our brains manage to filter. Etc. Also most healthy people do not immediately get aggressive in such situations.

Digitally though. One misreads the tone of messages. One can sit there for hours, just stewing, making things up, assuming terrible stuff about the person on the other end. And without seeing that person it's easier to dislike them or downright hate them. Every tiny statement becomes a land mine.

Most of us would be completely fine if we talked it out irl. We'd find common ground and get over disagreements. Here we'll continue assuming that we're all monsters and our life goals are to be mustache twirling villains who hurt people on twitter.
*hides his mustache wax behind his back*

I think it's also IRL, people don't have the luxury of getting aggressive over what are fundementally fake internet points. Physicality is real, and standing in someone's face and yelling about what an awful person they are comes with the risk of physical violence.

Basically, IRL we have to decide how much that position is worth, with there being a scale of 'negligible' to 'La Revelucion'.

Here, though? There's fake points to gain and nothing to lose.

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Moving back on topic, I've said it before and I'll say it again. I can't help but feel bad for Bryer, because this is a helluva stain on a resume. Other languages, Poochie's VA was at least adequate. It's easier to separate the character's writing from the performance. Here though, everything was categorically awful. It was bad writing delivered poorly. They were not ready for this role, at all.