Last December, as Insecure wrapped its final season, I logged into Twitter to see a flood of praise for both the show and its star Issa Rae for her “game changing” work on it. Interview clips circulated in awestruck tweets about her refusal to seek out richer, more notable celebrities, choosing instead to “come up with her friends who were just as hungry as her.” Naturally, I was confused. Not by praise of the show, but by the narrative forming that this was “game changing”, or that Issa Rae had ever been “hungry.” A wealthy graduate of a top-three university (boasting a 5% acceptance rate) going on to access opportunities to amass more wealth is literally the game.
They E-Fuckin the Tweets Man For Retweets
They E-Fuckin the Tweets Man For Retweets
They E-Fuckin the Tweets Man For Retweets
Last December, as Insecure wrapped its final season, I logged into Twitter to see a flood of praise for both the show and its star Issa Rae for her “game changing” work on it. Interview clips circulated in awestruck tweets about her refusal to seek out richer, more notable celebrities, choosing instead to “come up with her friends who were just as hungry as her.” Naturally, I was confused. Not by praise of the show, but by the narrative forming that this was “game changing”, or that Issa Rae had ever been “hungry.” A wealthy graduate of a top-three university (boasting a 5% acceptance rate) going on to access opportunities to amass more wealth is literally the game.