It is currently: Oct 08, '25, 6:10 am |
Moderator: Str8Shooter
Viazon wrote:On a related note, I read this on reddit today. It was a blog posted by Justin Roberts.
https://medium.com/@JustinRoberts/believe-half-of-what-you-see-and-portions-of-what-you-hear-296f34743af4
Long but interesting stuff.
Viazon wrote:On a related note, I read this on reddit today. It was a blog posted by Justin Roberts.
https://medium.com/@JustinRoberts/believe-half-of-what-you-see-and-portions-of-what-you-hear-296f34743af4
Long but interesting stuff.
The Legend wrote:It is important to note that Steph was quoting someone else saying this, not actually saying this herself.
Hanley! wrote:The Legend wrote:It is important to note that Steph was quoting someone else saying this, not actually saying this herself.
No, it's really not. If I was to quote someone on Twitter, I'd quote someone like Terry Pratchett and not (to use the most absurd example) someone like Adolf Hitler. She's not quoting a random guy for no reason. Obviously it's because she believes in what he's saying.
The Legend wrote:Hanley! wrote:The Legend wrote:It is important to note that Steph was quoting someone else saying this, not actually saying this herself.
No, it's really not. If I was to quote someone on Twitter, I'd quote someone like Terry Pratchett and not (to use the most absurd example) someone like Adolf Hitler. She's not quoting a random guy for no reason. Obviously it's because she believes in what he's saying.
Actually, I think she was quoting it because the guy was a keynote speaker and that was the main point of his conversation at whatever conference she was at based on the picture that went with the post.
PorkChop wrote:The Legend wrote:Hanley! wrote:The Legend wrote:It is important to note that Steph was quoting someone else saying this, not actually saying this herself.
No, it's really not. If I was to quote someone on Twitter, I'd quote someone like Terry Pratchett and not (to use the most absurd example) someone like Adolf Hitler. She's not quoting a random guy for no reason. Obviously it's because she believes in what he's saying.
Actually, I think she was quoting it because the guy was a keynote speaker and that was the main point of his conversation at whatever conference she was at based on the picture that went with the post.
...but why would you quote a speaker unless you agreed with them?
If I was at a conference and one of the speakers stood up and started cracking racist jokes, I'm not going to quote one on my Twitter page and hashtag my company's name next to it.
It seems you're playing devil's advocate here for no apparent reason. What Stephanie did was really, really silly.
The Legend wrote:PorkChop wrote:The Legend wrote:Hanley! wrote:The Legend wrote:It is important to note that Steph was quoting someone else saying this, not actually saying this herself.
No, it's really not. If I was to quote someone on Twitter, I'd quote someone like Terry Pratchett and not (to use the most absurd example) someone like Adolf Hitler. She's not quoting a random guy for no reason. Obviously it's because she believes in what he's saying.
Actually, I think she was quoting it because the guy was a keynote speaker and that was the main point of his conversation at whatever conference she was at based on the picture that went with the post.
...but why would you quote a speaker unless you agreed with them?
If I was at a conference and one of the speakers stood up and started cracking racist jokes, I'm not going to quote one on my Twitter page and hashtag my company's name next to it.
It seems you're playing devil's advocate here for no apparent reason. What Stephanie did was really, really silly.
Well, OK, let's start with what the guy said is absolutely true. The PR from good will gestures is 100 times more powerful than advertising dollars. That's just honest truth and the reality of the world we live in. So yeah, quoting somebody that makes sense isn't totally unreasonable.
The Legend wrote:^^^ I must have missed the part where she connected it to Connor Michalek. I'm pretty sure that's what others did.
Daz wrote:The whole Justin Roberts thing is sad. But even through the article, there's a vibe to it that reads like "I deserve the credit"
The Legend wrote:I guess ultimately I just don't understand the big scandal, I don't understand why people are angry over this and I don't understand why people are picking on Stephanie, other than certain people love to pick on her and WWE at every chance they get.
The WWE set up a charity in Connor's name to do good work. They probably knew at the time it would generate good PR and good feelings about their company. They probably did it in large part because of the good mojo it would create for their company. Who cares? The bottom line remains that good was done.
Every company that does these charitable efforts in the history of the world has gotten good PR buzz for their efforts. Does that mean they should stop doing good acts, just so they don't appear to be getting good PR off of the act in the first place? That seems to be throwing the baby out with the bath water. People seem to think there's companies out there that do things without their best interest at heart, they think some companies would do things that hurt their bottom line both in the short and long term just because it's a good thing to do.
That's an awfully naieve and stupid way to look at the world because it's just not true. Again the bottom line is that good was done. That's it. That's what matters.
For WWE self-promotion is even more important, because without their self-promotion no one would promote them. The masses view WWE as a dirty company that kills wrestlers early in life and forces steroids on their workers and uses blood and gore and sex to corrupt young minds and poison society. So yeah, if they generate a little good PR to balance out the way most people view their company I say good for them.
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