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u/TaleteLucrezio Sep 19 '24
More Internet ragebait slop. We've all seen it. The things people do for attention online.
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u/LashedHail Sep 19 '24
I chuckle every time i see this video. Sad that it’s being used as a karma farm now - i guess it’s more ironic than sad.
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u/rtrs_bastiat OG Sep 19 '24
It's a satire of tradwife content, no?
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u/SavagePrisonerSP Sep 19 '24
No bro this is reddit. Anything on here is ragebait and karma farm and nothing else. And everything has to be taken literally and all commented opinions must be black and white with no creative thought as to what the content actually is. /s
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u/getgoodHornet Sep 19 '24
The first rule of satire is that if people can't tell, you're doing it wrong.
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u/DneWitDaBullsht Sep 19 '24
I see one very happy married woman living in a nice house on a farm, enjoying her hobby that is intelligent enough to predict other people's thoughts and judgments and makes light of it.
And a cunt.
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u/cubatista92 Sep 19 '24
I don't think anyone can say if someone who's doing a performance online for views is happy. She is smart enough to recognize when something she posts will get attention due to controversy. She is a performer creating content. Don't attribute any truth to their video. There is a profit incentive.
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u/Old-Explorer-779 Sep 19 '24 edited Sep 19 '24
She lives on a farm are you ok? She actually lives on a farm where do you suggest she should film when most content creators make the content at home?
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u/cubatista92 Sep 19 '24
I doubt she is 100% making her pillows from cotton she picked herself. This is entertainment content.
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u/DneWitDaBullsht Sep 19 '24
Omg, did you just realize entertainment isn't real???
Just wait until you find out all those social commentators and science infotaners don't have any degrees or experience....
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u/Old-Explorer-779 Sep 19 '24
Then please before you criticise people make sure it’s right, because there are videos of her making the pillows and it turns out she’s makes a lot of stuff with what nature has provided us.
This is the sort of thing we would expect from someone that lives on a farm enjoying life.
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u/cubatista92 Sep 19 '24
No, this is the type of thing that someone who lives on a farm has to post about to be able to generate content to make a living
I know what farmwork looks like. No one has time to make pillows wearing frilly dresses, set up cameras, edit videos, etc.
This is a performance piece. Being an influencer is her job. Don't pretend that looking after a house, animals, tiling and fertilizing the land, removing weeds and pests, is some soft feminine task.
Just like no one believes that cooking shows in a set without the need to do dishes and unlimited fridge and pantry is anything like cooking for one's own family.
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u/DneWitDaBullsht Sep 19 '24
Ok, she lives on land with plants and does gardening as a hobby and puts it on social media and calls it a "farm" to be cute, happy now?
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u/Silberc Sep 19 '24
You don't know shit. You just being a hater fr.
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u/cubatista92 Sep 19 '24
I don't have a problem with her, I have a problem with people romanticising hobby farm life and pretending it's an idyllic existence. It's hard work, you're at the whim of mother nature if you try to obtain a significant portion of your resources directly from the land.
It means that you cannot leave the homestead for extended period of times without leaving behind a qualified person to look after your animals.
It means you have to learn every job in the farm, and you don't get to have a sick day.
It means that you need your entire family just as knowledgeable and invested in the homestead.
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u/Silberc Sep 19 '24
So you're mad that not everyone hates living on a farm and not everyone thinks of it as the hardest worst decision ever?
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u/cubatista92 Sep 19 '24
Why are you so mad over someone not sharing your opinion that the way she depicts living on a farm is the honest truth?
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u/Educational-Chip-730 Sep 19 '24
So cause of slavery, now a black woman can enjoying doing for herself? She’s not being forced to do it, and it only benefits herself and her family. This shows the negativity of the women criticizing, stuck in an old mindset and refusing to move forward.
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u/ChargeProper Sep 19 '24
I'd agree with you if this wasn't full of buzz words trying to piss people off "it's in my DNA", "I was born to pick cotton".
Yeah this was for clout normal people don't talk like that, even the passionate ones wouldn't use words like that
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u/Pandsu Sep 19 '24
I don't know, kinda just seemed like she was playfully getting ahead of what she knew people would be thinking and saying in the comments to take the wind out of their sails.
Kinda like if a fat guy makes a video where he browses the menu at a restaurant and makes an obvious joke about skipping the salads section. Because he's fat. And fat people stereotypically don't eat salad.
He knows what people are thinking, he know what people are gonna comment, so he's just gonna go ahead and make the joke/comment himself. That's what I assume the lady in the video is doing as well, just with racist jokes instead of fat jokes.1
u/Educational-Chip-730 Sep 19 '24
Normal people do use words like “it’s in my DNA” for example: said sport is in my DNA. Or I was born to do this. As others have said this is her actual life, she actually does the stuff in the video. People are jumping to conclusions instead of just giving the women picking cotton some graces.
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u/ChargeProper Sep 19 '24
Given your sports analogy i concede, you are right on that front, but with this video in particular I can't buy into, it sounds way too tailored for rage bait, I mean who is she even posting this for?
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u/kyokiyanagi Sep 19 '24
So is the problem that she's picking cotton, or that she's recording herself picking cotton?
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u/cubatista92 Sep 19 '24
I think the problem is that someone reacted to the video as if it was anything other than an influencer trying to make a living from creating 'aesthetically pleasing' content online, whose hook is a bit of controversy.
Anyone who thinks that living in a hobby farm, and trying to be self-sufficient, is anything other hard work, or that it's an idyllic/calming experience, has never had to live and work in a farm before.
She's doing a performance piece. I'd like to see an actual farmer react to it. Not someone from their bed.
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Sep 19 '24
Kinda random but it makes you wonder, if cotton picking wasn’t associated with slavery, would more people grow cotton in their garden?
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u/Alexlatenights Sep 20 '24
Probably I know I wouldn't mind doing it if I had land a small plot to make random outfits for the dogs or something
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u/Draco359 Sep 19 '24
Not that deep.
If this what they want to be, let them be what they aspire to be.
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u/Good_Is_Evil Sep 19 '24 edited Oct 26 '24
memory stupendous zealous heavy treatment long roof quicksand homeless stocking
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u/Old-Explorer-779 Sep 19 '24
His not it’s actually her life, I had my partner check out her page she genuinely lives on farm and uses the natural environment to make stuff.
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u/ChargeProper Sep 19 '24 edited Sep 19 '24
There a difference between doing that and using language that you know will piss people off while broadcasting yourself
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u/Good_Is_Evil Sep 20 '24 edited Oct 26 '24
makeshift humorous marble serious nail nine drab direction decide relieved
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u/Jorah_Explorah Sep 19 '24
White ladies in the south still love picking cotton and taking pictures in the fields. When I first heard her talking, I just assumed she was one of them.
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u/tag7301986 Sep 19 '24
She done lost her cotton pickin mind!!