Hilaria Baldwin - At it again

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Daniel Hernandez cultural reporter with the la times is on it. She’s done.

Gabriel Sama, Reporter for CNET: “Why this matters? For some of us, our accents and backgrounds SOMETIMES feel more like a burden to our careers than assets or qualifications. And that feeling sucks.”


Where did it get Hilaria Baldwin, career wise? She has a podcast- anyone can have one. She's done some sponsored posts- many have done so. Entertainment shows cover her like they cover any other celebrity wife who loves the spotlight. Her Spanish fakery didn't land her any points with anyone except, seemingly, Alec.

This simply isn't the same as a Jess Krug at George Washington University or Rachel Dolezal at the NAACP, sorry.


Keep telling yourself that she didn’t benefit from it. Whatever helps you sleep at night.


Where did she benefit from it in a way that other attention-seeking, non-fake-Latina celebrity wives haven't? Honestly, as others in this thread, that's what makes it all the more ridiculous- it didn't really benefit her (other than snagging Alec). It was a ridiculous thing to fake, and to now be called out for something so silly to have made up.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Daniel Hernandez cultural reporter with the la times is on it. She’s done.

Gabriel Sama, Reporter for CNET: “Why this matters? For some of us, our accents and backgrounds SOMETIMES feel more like a burden to our careers than assets or qualifications. And that feeling sucks.”


Where did it get Hilaria Baldwin, career wise? She has a podcast- anyone can have one. She's done some sponsored posts- many have done so. Entertainment shows cover her like they cover any other celebrity wife who loves the spotlight. Her Spanish fakery didn't land her any points with anyone except, seemingly, Alec.

This simply isn't the same as a Jess Krug at George Washington University or Rachel Dolezal at the NAACP, sorry.


Keep telling yourself that she didn’t benefit from it. Whatever helps you sleep at night.


Where did she benefit from it in a way that other attention-seeking, non-fake-Latina celebrity wives haven't? Honestly, as others in this thread, that's what makes it all the more ridiculous- it didn't really benefit her (other than snagging Alec). It was a ridiculous thing to fake, and to now be called out for something so silly to have made up.


Snagging Alec seems like a big benefit particularly when you would otherwise be making minimum wage teaching yoga.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Vanity fair Spain article: She learned to spell her new surname whe she got married, and that her parents didn't understand her until the third time she pronounced it.


Are you kidding? As in, they’re so foreign they didn’t know how to spell Baldwin?
m


Apparently!!! The original text in Spanish is on leni briscoe’s Twitter
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Daniel Hernandez cultural reporter with the la times is on it. She’s done.

Gabriel Sama, Reporter for CNET: “Why this matters? For some of us, our accents and backgrounds SOMETIMES feel more like a burden to our careers than assets or qualifications. And that feeling sucks.”


Where did it get Hilaria Baldwin, career wise? She has a podcast- anyone can have one. She's done some sponsored posts- many have done so. Entertainment shows cover her like they cover any other celebrity wife who loves the spotlight. Her Spanish fakery didn't land her any points with anyone except, seemingly, Alec.

This simply isn't the same as a Jess Krug at George Washington University or Rachel Dolezal at the NAACP, sorry.


She was allegedly charging $40,000 to $60,000 for each sponsored instagram post. She also had the Extra! corespondent gig at one point. She had a book.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Daniel Hernandez cultural reporter with the la times is on it. She’s done.

Gabriel Sama, Reporter for CNET: “Why this matters? For some of us, our accents and backgrounds SOMETIMES feel more like a burden to our careers than assets or qualifications. And that feeling sucks.”


Where did it get Hilaria Baldwin, career wise? She has a podcast- anyone can have one. She's done some sponsored posts- many have done so. Entertainment shows cover her like they cover any other celebrity wife who loves the spotlight. Her Spanish fakery didn't land her any points with anyone except, seemingly, Alec.

This simply isn't the same as a Jess Krug at George Washington University or Rachel Dolezal at the NAACP, sorry.


Keep telling yourself that she didn’t benefit from it. Whatever helps you sleep at night.


Where did she benefit from it in a way that other attention-seeking, non-fake-Latina celebrity wives haven't? Honestly, as others in this thread, that's what makes it all the more ridiculous- it didn't really benefit her (other than snagging Alec). It was a ridiculous thing to fake, and to now be called out for something so silly to have made up.


Snagging Alec seems like a big benefit particularly when you would otherwise be making minimum wage teaching yoga.


So the reporters are talking about it have potentially negative impacts on their career. People like Kelly Kean Sharp and Jess Krug did fake being Latina in a way that positively impacted their career and potentially took job(s) away from actual Latino people.

Hilaria Baldwin... managed to seduce Alec Baldwin.

Nope, it's just not comparable. Are we saying Hilaria took an actual Hispanic woman's potential "job" as Alec Baldwin's wife? Come on.
Anonymous
Quesu:how does this affect anyone other than Hilaria and her relationship with her husband, assuming he cares? Though I guess she deprived an actual Spaniard of a shot at being Baldwin’s wife.
Anonymous
I also think ginning up the 'harm' she caused is a cringe fake victimhood storyline. I just think being a pathological lying fraud to bag a rich famous husband is funny, ESPECIALLY when you grew up really damn privileged with MD and JD parents!
Anonymous
I listened to her self masterbatory uber mom podcast today. Hillary (Saint Hillary? Queen Hillary?) interviews various celebrity moms about parenting. I don't think any of us would have gotten a call back from her podcast guests.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Quesu:how does this affect anyone other than Hilaria and her relationship with her husband, assuming he cares? Though I guess she deprived an actual Spaniard of a shot at being Baldwin’s wife.


It doesn't.

Hilaria's fakery is ridiculous and laughable, but the internet's need to turn this into some sort of social justice violation is eyeroll worthy. She's a white woman who pretended to be a white woman with a more exotic background.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The NY Post cover tomorrow



It’s not just her name, Hilaria Baldwin’s entire life is a fake

https://nypost.com/2020/12/28/its-not-just-her-name-hilaria-baldwins-entire-life-is-a-fake/


This is mean. I think she's ridiculous with her yoga posing all over the place, but this is mean.

Oh well. This is culture these days. Tear someone to shreds for entertainment and then move on to the next victim.


I gotta respond to this. Pointing out an ongoing lie/scam isn't tearing anyone down. Hilaria should thank everyone involved in the early part of this thread for making her a household name. She didn't even have a million followers. My niece had more followers than her on Tiktok and I guarantee you don't know her name.


I've been laughing along at her fake persona since before this thread was created. This is funny as an internet thing, as it has been for years in various comment sections and on message boards. Front page of NY Post? That's a step too far for me, piling on public humiliation.

And Insta and TikTok are different ballgames.


Sorry, these lines from the Post piece are *chef's kiss*

"As was her alleged other grift, using that great line — one reportedly deployed by Yoko Ono, Heather Mills and Meghan Markle when they each met their world-famous husbands — asking Alec, “So what do you do?”

Ha! Well, if Alec believed that one, no wonder he believed one former Hillary Hayward-Thomas, privileged white New England-born-and-bred daughter of a Harvard med school professor and a Georgetown educated lawyer father, was really an exotic Spaniard without a television or a basic command of English or a sustained accent. Nope, Hilaria was just a yoga-loving fawn in the New York City jungle who was definitely, totally not interested in social climbing or landing a rich, famous, older husband."


So. Good.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Vanity fair Spain article: She learned to spell her new surname whe she got married, and that her parents didn't understand her until the third time she pronounced it.


Are you kidding? As in, they’re so foreign they didn’t know how to spell Baldwin?


This is........*chef’s kiss*
Anonymous
"yoga-loving fawn" lol
Anonymous
^^PP here. I’m not the same chef’s kiss poster as above, I just like that phrase, too 😂
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Quesu:how does this affect anyone other than Hilaria and her relationship with her husband, assuming he cares? Though I guess she deprived an actual Spaniard of a shot at being Baldwin’s wife.


It doesn't.

Hilaria's fakery is ridiculous and laughable, but the internet's need to turn this into some sort of social justice violation is eyeroll worthy. She's a white woman who pretended to be a white woman with a more exotic background.


I'm a republican so I don't care about the SJW crap. I'm here for the parody videos.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Daniel Hernandez cultural reporter with the la times is on it. She’s done.

Gabriel Sama, Reporter for CNET: “Why this matters? For some of us, our accents and backgrounds SOMETIMES feel more like a burden to our careers than assets or qualifications. And that feeling sucks.”


Where did it get Hilaria Baldwin, career wise? She has a podcast- anyone can have one. She's done some sponsored posts- many have done so. Entertainment shows cover her like they cover any other celebrity wife who loves the spotlight. Her Spanish fakery didn't land her any points with anyone except, seemingly, Alec.

This simply isn't the same as a Jess Krug at George Washington University or Rachel Dolezal at the NAACP, sorry.


Keep telling yourself that she didn’t benefit from it. Whatever helps you sleep at night.


Where did she benefit from it in a way that other attention-seeking, non-fake-Latina celebrity wives haven't? Honestly, as others in this thread, that's what makes it all the more ridiculous- it didn't really benefit her (other than snagging Alec). It was a ridiculous thing to fake, and to now be called out for something so silly to have made up.


Snagging Alec seems like a big benefit particularly when you would otherwise be making minimum wage teaching yoga.


So the reporters are talking about it have potentially negative impacts on their career. People like Kelly Kean Sharp and Jess Krug did fake being Latina in a way that positively impacted their career and potentially took job(s) away from actual Latino people.

Hilaria Baldwin... managed to seduce Alec Baldwin.

Nope, it's just not comparable. Are we saying Hilaria took an actual Hispanic woman's potential "job" as Alec Baldwin's wife? Come on.

She’s now set for a life of luxury as Alec Baldwin’s wife. Better life than all on here could ever dream of. She deceived Alec into believing she was Spanish and went on to have a litter of kids to increase security. She is a con artist, but it worked out for her. Much more glamorous than being a yoga instructor.
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