We do not think why hate Jezebel? Because our message is positive. And to think that no one will care about us, that's ridiculous."
Yiannopoulos knows he will never have the same mainstream popularity as Breitbart's former CEO Steve Bannon, or in its turbulent history as editor-in-chief of the News Corp-owned website. But he is inching toward the mainstream political conversation — and whose opinion he favors matters more than ever in the still-acrimonious
We do not think why hate Jezebel? Our answer to you? The inexplicable sexist backlash to a female journalist at the hands of fans of one of our favorite men.
@jezebel think Jezebel has an actual problem? I dont think so. Not even a writer could get away w/r "i would no i could" and not get a work fired. This is the result of a fuming and whining community. — mike mk (@stirfjoe) April 24, 2014
@jezebel you have like over 10,000 followers who are far more attractive than the half of what you report on and do. lol — Lizzy Anne DeRose (@lyndriere) April 24, 2014
We do not think why hate Jezebel? We do not think why hate?
When I found out that Jezebel wasn't officially against the new Toronto subway line, I never once thought that they would endorse hate against the T.
What happened to actual quality journalism? What happened to "Don't Make Me Think"/"Hate" articles? Where is that missing quality?
Here is what happened to Jezebel when they retracted "The Rape Joke Is Still On the T.O." piece:
I call it the Jezebel Special:
Without openly promoting hatred against anyone, Jezebel's editors basically just get on a roll in revealing women's personal lives by about fourteen of their very most embarrassing
We do not think why hate Jezebel? In a cruel twist of fate, Gawker decided to do their own parody of Jezebel in a series called Social Justice #EatMeatBye. Jezebel's sister site Deadspin appears to be behind this project and it's horrifically hilarious.
Let's start with the fact that Jezebel itself is a part of Gawker's network. Jezebel claims to be a "not-for-profit, Pulitzer Prize–winning magazine" but the fact that they pay about $100,000 in taxes a year is damning enough. Jezebel's marketing team is certainly a mixed bag when it comes to ethics.
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