The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Roseanne Barr launches new YouTube career – explaining tweet

- By Abby Ohlheiser

LAST week, Roseanne Barr told her fans to sign up for her YouTube channel. TV interviews were “too stressful & untrustwor­thy,” she tweeted. She was going to film her “entire explanatio­n of what happened and why” and post it to YouTube, referring to the recent scandal in which a tweet of hers led to the cancellati­on of her rebooted ABC sitcom, despite the series’s huge viewership. Barr’s YouTube channel has been around for a while, although it’s been dormant for months. After these tweets, she revived it with a flurry of videos, including one late Thursday that has gotten some attention. The minutelong video feels behind the scenes, as Barr does a sound check into a mic and sighs, exasperate­d, as a man off camera attempts to explain the concept behind a video that Barr, presumably, is about to film.

Barr is told to imagine herself as the president, caught in a scandal. “Imagine in his statement, to keep and save his job, there were jump cuts, multiple outfits -”

“I’m trying to talk about Iran, I’m trying to talk about Valerie Jarrett, the Iran deal!” Barr shouts. The tweet that led to her firing referenced Jarrett, saying that if the “Muslim brotherhoo­d & planet of the apes had a baby,” it would be the former Obama adviser, who is black. Referring to black people as monkeys or apes is a long-running, well-known racist trope.

In the video, Barr continues to shout, before looking directly into camera. “I thought” Jarrett “was white,” Barr screams, using a vulgar word for a woman instead of Jarrett’s name. She repeats the scream, along with a few more obscenitie­s, and then the video ends with Barr taking a long drag on the lit cigarette in her hand. One of the men off camera laughs.

Maybe this is a teaser for more, or maybe the “joke” is supposed to be that this vulgar scream is all Barr feels she needs to say to address her downfall.

A handful of her other videos over the past couple of days appear to document stages of cooking the same batch of French toast.

One video is devoted to grinding sticks of cinnamon, another discusses which frying pan browns better. Yet another, titled “Tips from the Domestic Goddess,” shows Barr holding her dress around her hips as she demonstrat­es a technique for women who would like to urinate standing up.

Whatever Barr’s plans, the turn to YouTube is more or less in line with the way the Conspiracy Internet works. Although YouTube has gradually started to crack down on misinforma­tion, it’s still considered a core platform for conspiracy-promoting personalit­ies - such as Alex Jones and his network of contributo­rs to build an audience.

Barr herself has long been a part of that community, primarily as an amplifier. She has a history of sharing antiMuslim memes and promoting conspiracy theories such as Pizzagate on her verified account, long before her TV series was revived. Some of those tweets even directed her followers to watch YouTube videos on those conspiraci­es, pulled from deep in the circles of people who devote a lot of online time to promoting them. For this fringe, she was unique: a genuine celebrity who believed what they believed.

When “Roseanne” returned and was a hit, Barr promised to turn down the politics on her personal social media presence - a promise that didn’t last very long and that ended up leading to the cancellati­on of her show. — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Roseanne was going to film her“entire explanatio­n of what happened and why” and post it to YouTube, referring to the recent scandal in which a tweet of hers led to the cancellati­on of her rebooted ABC sitcom, despite the series’s huge viewership.
Roseanne was going to film her“entire explanatio­n of what happened and why” and post it to YouTube, referring to the recent scandal in which a tweet of hers led to the cancellati­on of her rebooted ABC sitcom, despite the series’s huge viewership.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia