Anonymous wrote:Tyler's comment on the grandbaby post: #hotgrandma
Her response: Spoken like a #hotpop.
Will her kids really let Tyler have a grandpa name? It's so performative.
Anonymous wrote:Tyler's comment on the grandbaby post: #hotgrandma
Her response: Spoken like a #hotpop.
Will her kids really let Tyler have a grandpa name? It's so performative.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of normies record this type of announcement. With a new baby on the way she may finally go back to quality family content instead of stupid shilling.
A new generation of Hatmakers to exploit for content? I hope the parents draw some lines to shield their child from this
Anonymous wrote:A lot of normies record this type of announcement. With a new baby on the way she may finally go back to quality family content instead of stupid shilling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was thinking why does it have to be recorded? Is everything a performance? Even her kids think that way.
It's common to record big moments like this. I felt she was being 100 percent genuine in this video and did not know she was being recorded. She was not playing to the camera like she usually does and seemed to be present with her family in the moment.
It felt totally performative to me.
In my opinion, the fact that so many commenters here immediately feel back into the "awww, the grandchild announcement was so cute and authentic" is further evidence of the larger problem with influencers like Jen and the people who get sucked into following them. A simple appeal to sentimentality immediately turns people into piles of mush and all discernment goes right out the window. The bigger picture is that the entire social media based culture of influencers and putting your personal life on display for all the world to see is toxic and fake. It's just another manifestation of our sick celebrity culture, except that now we all get to participate in the celebrity machine by projecting our own lives online and watching other people project theirs and believing their anything authentic about it all. Our entire existence has become mediated. It's like the Truman show, except were all inside the dome.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was thinking why does it have to be recorded? Is everything a performance? Even her kids think that way.
It's common to record big moments like this. I felt she was being 100 percent genuine in this video and did not know she was being recorded. She was not playing to the camera like she usually does and seemed to be present with her family in the moment.
It felt totally performative to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was thinking why does it have to be recorded? Is everything a performance? Even her kids think that way.
It's common to record big moments like this. I felt she was being 100 percent genuine in this video and did not know she was being recorded. She was not playing to the camera like she usually does and seemed to be present with her family in the moment.
Anonymous wrote:I’d agree with that assessment. I knew tray and Jenny and Shonna and her husband (can’t recall his name off hand) from afar when my family attended ANC when it was still at Akins HS. We enjoyed it at first. It was best when it moved to Jackie’s Dance place on Manchaca Road. They were the key founders and elders, if you will, along with a few other folks. Nice enough, but there were definitely a divide— they were the royalty. The rest of us were just commoners. This became especially evident with John Church (his real last name) and his church (can’t remember the name) joined forces with ANC. John was a good pastor and he and his wife Audrey were very authentic in my opinion. The folks who came over, including the Dahlstrom’s were genuine. But you could see a divide slowly form. The fakeness of the Hatmaker gang became evident to me. We quit going after a while. BTW- I know for a fact that Jenn, more or less, pawned Remy off on the Dahlstrom’s, who have a daughter about the same age as Remy. There were multiple weekends that Remy spent with the Dahlstrom’s. It was if Jenn used them as free baby sitters. Never, ever reciprocated or really befriended them. In my view, as a casual observer, Jen used anyone she could for her personal gain. Anyone else from ANC care to chime in? See it differently?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Had to go check out the "my favorite things" post. It's incredible how many people responded for her links.
5. It seems a lot of people that follow influencers have parasocial relationships, thinking the influencer cares about them, and that they're "friends."
I think that’s by design. Why do you think that Jen constantly refers to her followers as “beloveds, her community, her tribe (she doesn’t do that anymore because she was told that it’s insensitive to native people), darlings, dear ones, lovelies, ad nauseum….
There are people who are so desperate to feel loved and included that they will latch on to people like Jen because they truly TRULY believe that she cares about them, when the reality is that all they represent to her is a $.
And she’s laughing all the way to the bank.
Literally none of the women I know have or would refer to each other as "beloved." It's so weird
Anonymous wrote:I was thinking why does it have to be recorded? Is everything a performance? Even her kids think that way.