If you believe Chappell Roan will certainly allow you cross her borders, best of luck infant.
The “Red Wine Supernova” vocalist required to TikTok on Monday (Aug 19) to open around “harassment” she’s been obtaining from followers just recently. “Just answer my questions for a second,” she claims in the two-part clip. “If you saw a random woman on the street, would you yell at her from the car window? Would you harass her in public? Would you go up to a random lady and say, ‘Can I get a photo you with you?’ And she’s like, ‘No, what the f—?’ And then you get mad at this random lady? Would you be offended if she says no to your time because she has her own time? Would you stalk her family? Would you follow her around? Would you try to dissect her life and bully her online? This is a lady you don’t know, and she doesn’t know you at all.”
Calling herself a “random b—-,” Roan proceeded, “I don’t care that abuse and harassment, stalking, whatever, is a normal thing to do to people who are famous or a little famous. […] I don’t care that this crazy type of behavior comes along with the job, the career field I’ve chosen. That doesn’t make it OK. That doesn’t make it normal. That doesn’t mean I want it, doesn’t mean I like it. I don’t want whatever the f— you think you’re supposed to be entitled to whenever you see a celebrity.”
She ended that she does not “give a fuck” if it’s “selfish” to decrease pictures or hugs. “That’s not normal. That’s weird. That’s f—ing weird.”
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Watch both video clips here and here.
Roan has actually escalated to popularity in the months because she dropped her launching cd The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess in 2014. After a collection of headline-making efficiencies– consisting of at Coachella and Gov Ball 2024 — the 14-track task made a brand-new optimal ofNo 5 on the Billboard 200 last month.
The vocalist formerly shared her ideas on the ups and downs of popularity with Drew Afualo on the latter’s The Comment Section podcast last month. “People have started to be freaks — like, [they] follow me and know where my parents live, and where my sister works. All this weird s–t,” she clarified.
She proceeded, “I’m just kind of in this battle … I’ve pumped the brakes on, honestly, anything to make me more known. It’s kind of a forest fire right now. I’m not trying to go do a bunch of s–t.”
However, Roan likewise shared the positives of her newly found popularity, consisting of acknowledgment from her idolizers. “People who I’ve looked up to my entire life are like peers, which is sick,” she informed Afualo, keeping in mind,“Miley [Cyrus] invited me to a party, and I was like, ‘You don’t know that you were my first concert when the Jonas Brothers were opening for you.’”
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