Arab News

Rihanna urges fans to delete Snapchat after domestic violence ad

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Al-Gabbani announced the collaborat­ion in an Instagram post.

In a video, the Saudi designer, blogger and fashion icon talks about what she would tell her younger self. “Life is going to bring me some tragic moments but not to let me down ... it’s okay to be sad for a little while but then I have the tools and the tenacity to overcome them and that happiness is my choice,” she said. In a second video, Al-Gabbani

JEDDAH: Dubai-based fashion star Tamara Al-Gabbani has collaborat­ed with the UAE’s Ministry of Happiness to promote the sunny side of life.

shares with her fans how she copes with each day.

“I would say there is a series of happy moments in my life but everyday I wake up deciding that today whatever happens I am gonna go to sleep a happy girl,” she said.

“Positivity and happiness is most definitely a journey where you choose how to handle and manage your reactivity to life, emotions, moods, curve balls, circumstan­ces ... etc,” Al-Gabbani wrote.

“It doesn’t mean not feeling the human response to a situation or moment, but rather feeling it and then taking the decision to accept what has happened, find the silver lining (if you can), and then moving on ... Happiness is a choice and a responsibi­lity. No one is perfect, but we can use each day to work on ourselves and become better version of ourselves. Change is a good thing, and we are all capable of it,” she wrote on Instagram. LOS ANGELES: Pop star Rihanna urged fans to delete Snapchat after the social media app ran an ad making fun of her 2009 beating at the hands of then-boyfriend Chris Brown.

Shares of Snap Inc, the company that makes the app, were down 4.7 percent in trading on Thursday.

“SNAPCHAT I know you know you ain’t my fav app out there! But I’m just trying to figure out what the point was with this mess!,” the singer wrote on Instagram on Thursday.

“You spent money to animate something that would intentiona­lly bring shame to DV victims and made a joke of it!!!,” she added, referring to domestic violence. “Shame on you. Throw the whole app-oligy away.”

The “Wild Thoughts” singer, 30, was speaking out after Snapchat earlier this week apologized and took down an advert on its platform for an online game called “Would You Rather!” which showed pictures of Rihanna and Brown with the captions “Slap Rihanna” and “Punch Chris Brown.”

R&B singer Brown pleaded guilty to assaulting Rihanna in 2009 in an incident that made headlines around the world when a photo of her bruised face was released.

Snapchat said in a statement earlier this week that the ad “was reviewed and approved in error, as it violates our advertisin­g guidelines” and was removed at the weekend.

The company did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on Rihanna’s posting.

Rihanna’s comments were the latest bad press for Snapchat. Its shares lost about $1.5 billion in market value in February after social media celebrity Kylie Jenner, who has as many as 105 million Instagram followers, tweeted that she did not like the Snapchat site’s redesign.

Dozens of fans on Thursday tweeted that they were following Rihanna’s call to delete the Snapchat app.

“Rihanna let them KNOW. RIP SNAPCHAT,” tweeted a user with the Twitter handle @ loveontheb­rain.

“y’all thought kylie killed snapchat, but rihanna dragged it to the grave! RIP september 2011-march 2018,” tweeted a user called cozy spice.

 ??  ?? Tamara Al-Gabbani
Tamara Al-Gabbani
 ??  ?? Rihanna
Rihanna

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