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Old 03-28-2022, 08:12 PM   #16
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Well said. If Chris Rock knew about JPS's alopecia, then the joke was mean; as you say, he knows women care about their hair. And of course, if Will Smith had done nothing but laugh at the joke, he would have gotten flak, as well. He probably should have just heckled Chris Rock briefly, as he did anyway.

I suspect they will shake hands and move on. Most guys will.
Chris Rock's fans were stunned he would mock Jada Pinkett Smith's hair after making his 2009 Good Hair documentary
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Old 03-28-2022, 08:22 PM   #17
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Janet Hubert, Fresh Prince of Bel-Air's original Aunt Viv, defends Smith: "There is only so much one can take… sometimes you have to slap back"
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Old 03-28-2022, 10:32 PM   #18
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Janet Hubert, Fresh Prince of Bel-Air's original Aunt Viv, defends Smith: "There is only so much one can take… sometimes you have to slap back"
Aunt Viv is wrong. There was no need for the slap. Will Smith could have simply heckled Chris Rock from the audience. He did anyway.
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Old 03-28-2022, 10:41 PM   #19
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I wouldn't be surprised if it was secretly staged.

WS is that type of person.
That’s what a lot of people thought at first, me included, but at this point I’d say that ship has sailed.
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Old 03-29-2022, 05:21 PM   #20
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Jada Pinkett Smith calls for "healing" amid husband Will Smith's Oscar controversy

"This is a season for healing and I'm here for it," she wrote in a statement posted to Instagram, two days after her husband slapped Chris Rock over a joke he made about her hair. Meanwhile, Will Smith’s mother, Carolyn Smith, said she's never seen her son "go off" like he did Sunday: “He is a very even, people person,” Carolyn Smith told Philadelphia’s local ABC affiliate Action News. “That’s the first time I’ve ever seen him go off. First time in his lifetime…I’ve never seen him do that.”

ALSO:

Stop making Will Smith's slap of Chris Rock more than what it is!

In the first 24 hours after The Slap, "every possible reaction to the incident has already been aired," says Joel Anderson. "Some people have understandably cautioned against any possible expression of tacit support for violence in public, as if we’re not already awash in a culture that already glorifies it. Others placed blame on Rock for gleefully passing along a tasteless joke that made light of Jada Pinkett-Smith’s autoimmune disorder. A few have pointed out the hypocrisy of the Academy’s public statement against violence, noting that it has long coddled and even glorified accused abusers like Harvey Weinstein, Roman Polanski, and Woody Allen, among others. Others connected the moment to racism, sexism, ableism, and even the larger breakdown in social mores in recent years. Like so many controversial events these days, it has taken on a mirage-like quality of something that might explain what’s wrong in American life, in different ways to different people...We don’t have to take this too seriously. We don’t have to live like this, mapping complex social phenomena on something fundamentally as straightforward and unexceptional as dudes using a personal slight—or a perceived one—as a pretext for getting physical. Unsurprisingly, the social media response has followed its own inevitable arc, from shocked to bemused to serious to exhausting."

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  • How you respond to The Slap ends up saying more about you than it does Will Smith, Jada Pinkett Smith or Chris Rock: "It’s a Rorschach test, revealing the specific ways in which the take-havers imagine themselves as the protagonists of reality," says Gita Jackson. "Although there does seem to be a clear cause-and-effect in terms of why this went down, there’s also a distinct lack of context granted by the fact that celebrities and their lives are so distant from everyone else and theirs. Smith and Rock are both black men in Hollywood; it’s very possible that they know each other and that this beef extends beyond what we saw last night. It’s equally possible this was all a farcical misunderstanding brought about by Smith assuming everyone is up to date on his family’s various health problems and some writer not thinking to take 10 seconds to use Google. In any case, they seem perfectly capable of resolving it on their own, and neither Rock nor Smith seem to have left the night worse for wear. Since we as a culture invented the idea of celebrity, we have used the lives of strangers to explain our own. They become like Greek gods or royalty; these are people who experience things for us, about whom we tell stories in order to understand ourselves. The internet has only made this process faster, so that the free association between what happened and what it reminds you of happens more quickly than one’s ability for critical thinking. Cultural events like this are made of clay. They have so little structure, they’re pliable enough to take any form that you need them to."
  • Presenting "The Complete Guide to Will Smith Slap Takes": "It was the Slap that launched a thousand takes," says Chas Danner and Margaret Hartmann of Intelligencer, adding: "Once it became clear that the incident was not staged, seemingly everyone felt compelled to form an opinion on it and to share their views with friends, family members, co-workers, social-media followers, their hair stylist, their dog walker, strangers on line at the grocery store, etc. Maybe you’ve already run through your initial viewpoints but can’t find the motivation to talk to other humans about anything else today. Never fear: We at Intelligencer have compiled the definitive guide to every possible slap take."
  • Will Smith should definitely not be invited back to next year's Oscars: "On Monday, the academy responded more strongly, saying it 'condemns' Smith’s actions and added that it had begun a formal review and will 'explore further action and consequences,'" the Los Angeles Times says in an editorial. "It can start by making it clear to Smith and the public that he will not be invited back to the Oscar show next year as a guest or a presenter. Traditionally, the winner of the lead actor award presents the Oscar the following year to the leading actress winner (as Anthony Hopkins did Sunday night with Jessica Chastain.)"
  • It seems like there's a double standard in the reaction to Will Smith since Hollywood has a history of embracing violent (white) men: "Hollywood’s history with interpersonal violence is complex because Hollywood is nothing if not forgiving of white men’s violence, especially against women, as evidenced by the long careers of Roman Polanski and Harvey Weinstein," says Mikki Kendall. "Mel Gibson’s periodic returns to the screen—including a 2016 nomination for Best Director—after facing allegations of domestic violence as well as spewing racist and antisemitic attacks on costars and others signals a willingness of many in Hollywood to look the other way. The Oscars have also never been immune to public conflict. John Wayne reportedly had to be restrained by six men when Sacheen Littlefeather used her time at the podium to refuse Marlon Brando’s Godfather win on his behalf when he boycotted. She later claimed she was blacklisted by studios, which effectively ended her acting career. Yet the conflict at this year’s Oscars seems to have many who have been, let’s just say, morally flexible about violence ready to take a stand against it now."
  • The Slap turned the Oscars into an A-list adaptation of The Jerry Springer Show: "What happened (Sunday) night at the Dolby Theater proved definitively that the Academy Awards are still capable of delivering a jaw-dropping water-cooler moment that can have the whole world talking the morning after," says Benjamin Svetkey. "Granted, it took a major movie star committing an act of physical violence to pull it off, but whatever. As a TV show, there’s no denying it was riveting. I literally jumped from my sofa to get a closer view of the screen when Will Smith marched up to the podium to smack Rock in the face after the comedian cracked a relatively bland if still distasteful joke about Smith’s wife’s shaved head (“Jada, I love you. GI Jane 2, can’t wait to see you”). Was it real or some sort of schtick? Was my TV broken or did ABC cut the sound? And then, right afterwards, why was P Diddy plowing through the rest of the show — move along, nothing to see here — as if the most extraordinary thing that had ever happened at the Oscars hadn’t just happened?"
  • The Slap was the best thing that could've happened to the Oscars: "The incident that spawned a million takes was shocking both because it was so unexpected and because it made the awards feel abruptly intimate — not some distant glitzy gathering but a work event for a constricted group of people with its own internal hierarchies and long-standing grudges," says Alison Willmore. "Will Smith getting up out of his front-row seat and walking the relatively short distance onto the stage to smack Chris Rock was a breaking of protocol, and it was also a breaking of the Oscars pretense that this is the night Hollywood gets together to enjoy its own company. It’s an industry function, and plenty of industries have their own star system and awards, and they’re probably all as messy — they’re just not televised."
  • Comedians from Rosie O'Donnell to Kathy Griffin to Rob Schneider defended Rock: “Let me tell you something,” Griffin tweeted, “it’s a very bad practice to walk up on stage and physically assault a Comedian. Now we all have to worry about who wants to be the next Will Smith in comedy clubs and theaters.”
  • Longtime former Oscar ceremony writer Bruce Vilanch weighs on the handling of The Slap: "I think they’ll have to dig their way through the idea that somebody was supposed to arrest Will Smith for assault," he says. "I don’t think anybody was sitting backstage looking through the Academy code of conduct. And I suspect if they were, they decided, 'Just let it play out, and it’ll be dealt with after the broadcast.' To call attention to it by then having him disappear from his seat would really overshadow everything that was going on, so I think that was the decision that they made." As for Rock's joke, Vilanch says: "I certainly know that when people get up onstage, comedians especially, they say things, and they’re in-the-moment, and sometimes it works, and sometimes it doesn’t. And then when it doesn’t work on the Oscars, they hear about it for the rest of their lives....This was, like, a calculated move. (Smith) got up, and he strode over there, and he did it. I think the moment it happened, you realized this was not in the script."
  • The Real World: Seattle's Irene McGee, who was famously slapped on the show, offers her support to Rock
  • At the 2000 MTV VMAs, Shawn Wayans pretended to be Chris Rock getting assaulted by various celebrities
  • Beyoncé has been connected to some of the most chaotic award show moments: Does the Slap drama prove she's cursed?
  • A former Los Angeles County D.A. calls on prosecutors to file charges against Smith, even without Chris Rock: “Charges actually can and should be filed because the offense was against the state of California. It’s not Chris Rock versus Will Smith in a criminal matter. The LAPD and the city attorney should not close the door on what was an obvious criminal offense and is easily provable,” said Steve Cooley, L.A. County's D.A. from 2000 to 2012.
  • Will Smith's slap tarnished a night of pride for Black Hollywood -- and his legacy: "Smith delivered a gift-wrapped present to conservatives dismissive of the Black Lives Matter movement and increasingly frustrated by the battle against systemic racism, from voting rights to critical race theory," says Greg Braxton. "It was easy to imagine Tucker Carlson watching the awards in his pajamas, leaping up and pointing to the screen: 'Look! White people aren’t hurting Black folks. It’s really Black-on-Black crime. Those people are beating up on each other.' Smith’s heroic stature inside and outside Black culture, and his carefully constructed persona as the patriarch of a celebrity family, only intensifies the fallout. And his actions have now placed his reputation in jeopardy. That is true whether you take Rock at his word — that he was making a G.I. Jane joke — or believe he crossed the line by coming for Pinkett Smith over a medical condition. You don’t need to justify Rock’s rhetoric to be mortified by Smith’s disproportionate response. Nor do you need to demand condemnation from the NAACP, investigation by the LAPD or expulsion from the academy to recognize the utter inappropriateness of a movie star assaulting an award presenter on national television."
  • There was an unreality to the Will Smith slap and its aftermath: "It was unsettling to see Smith accept his Oscar—shortly after being counseled by Denzel Washington and his publicist—and receive a standing ovation," says Sophie Gilbert. "It was strange to hear him claim the mantle of a protector, and compare himself to his character Richard Williams, 'a fierce defender of his family.' It was strange to watch him say he wanted to be 'a vessel for love' and 'an ambassador of that kind of love and care and concern,' right after the most flagrant outburst of violence in Oscars history. It was odd to see him declaring that “love will make you do crazy things,” while his wife regally nodded, and to laugh his gleeful, barking Will Smith laugh, that laugh, the kind any casual moviegoer could identify with their eyes closed, right after saying that he hoped the Academy would have him back. It was eerie to learn that Smith and his family danced the rest of the night away at the Vanity Fair party, the triumphant star clutching his statuette. All of it felt a little like an exercise in entertainment-industry gaslighting. Did we really see what we thought we saw? Did it matter? Maybe not. Maybe the lines between reality and constructed entertainment have blurred beyond the point where they’re discernible anymore. Smith’s behavior was so extraordinary that it seemed, watching, as though he might be in crisis."
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Old 04-03-2022, 12:51 AM   #21
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Aunt Viv is wrong. There was no need for the slap. Will Smith could have simply heckled Chris Rock from the audience. He did anyway.
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I love #WillSmith very much.
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didn’t deserve to be hit. Period. My heart aches for what has happened. I don’t know what caused that chaos & confusion, but I do know that Will has a big heart. I’ve seen him many times try his best to do what is right. I believe in him.
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