December 15, 20205 yr Popular Post Perez Hilton In Tears After Being Banned From TikTok By AMELIA WARD Celebrity blogger Perez Hilton has posted a video of himself in tears after being banned from TikTok, saying that his world is 'crumbling'. A distressed Hilton claims that the reason he was banned is for 'violating community guidelines', including harassment and bullying, but disputes this. Speaking on the video, he says: "The reason that TikTok gave me for permanently banning my account without any warning is 'multiple community guidelines violations'. "I am feeling numb, and I don't want to seem overly dramatic, but I feel like my world is crumbling. This feels like a death to me." Full Story: https://www.ladbible.com/news/celebrity-perez-hilton-cries-after-being-banned-from-tiktok-20201215
December 15, 20205 yr Popular Post Dear Perez Hilton, Get a haircut and get a real job. Regards, Disinterested in Droitwich.
December 15, 20205 yr Popular Post God help our front line trenches if there is ever another world war !
December 15, 20205 yr Well, I rather see Paris Hilton multiple pictures in distress--oops, back to xhamster.
December 16, 20205 yr 9 hours ago, Neeranam said: Never heard of him before. You haven’t missed a thing, trust me on that one, and he definitely deserves to be banned by essentially everyone and everything!
December 16, 20205 yr 12 hours ago, fangless said: Who is it and what has it got to do with Thailand? Bangkok has a Hilton
December 16, 20205 yr Popular Post I consider social media to be the most destructive force in contemporary culture today. Children are growing up now in a world where they expect immediate response, gratification and notification. Their brains no longer have time to evolve; they must adapt to change in an instant, and the results are distressing. The difficulties of growing up have never been so public. Social technology provides a platform where things can run wild. Imagine the stress of high school – the competition for popularity, the pressure to fit in, the judgmental nature of social activities – at an accelerated pace. We try to protect our children from wandering off into the darkness on their own, and it turns out they are doing exactly that – online. When they get older and “ready,” we send them off to college, where they face more pressures. But social media has an infamous dark side and the more people share, the more serious this side becomes. As it turns out, living your life online has serious consequences for your self-esteem, your relationships, and your career prospects. Like this guy Perez, recently my sister in law went through a divorce. In the time leading up to the divorce, she was incessantly posting stuff on facebook, about his infidelities, and other indiscretions. I kept asking my wife, why would she do that? Why does she want everyone to know, and to see a tragic event in her private life? But, she had lost all of her ability to discriminate, and make that kind of decision, due to a life of obsessive posting online. That stuff is public. It is out there, and it exacerbates humiliation, for those who do not think things through. Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter addiction is real and it is dangerous. Not only does it prevent you from living in the present, it can also leave you with crippling anxiety and insecurities. But few people talk about the real danger of social media addictions. These addictions make you boring. Nobody wants to hear about what he said on Facebook, what she said on Instagram or what you said on Twitter. If they wanted to know, they would have already seen it, liked it, and moved on. The real danger of social media is not that you might say the wrong thing to the wrong person. The real danger is the fact that one determined person with nothing else to do can find your name, your phone number, your address, your parents’ address, your third-cousin’s Twitter, your boss, your co-worker, your ex-lover, the ex-lover you briefly forgot about and use all this information to systematically tear your life apart piece by piece. But why would someone go through so much trouble to do that? Because it was probably not that hard. There’s a good chance your own web presence coupled with some inventive searches led them straight down the trail to destroying your social life, your relationships and your career all in one fell swoop. Social media can build you up. But the way it is used today can also tear you down. This is especially relevant for the youth, most of whom do not have much self esteem to begin with. Edited December 16, 20205 yr by spidermike007
December 16, 20205 yr I had to google who he was. Not really a celebrity - Just some guy who posts comments about celebrities. Grow a pair and stop being a little baby. Anyone who's old enough to drink shouldn't be a TikTok user anyway - it's a platform for kids to bully each other online.
December 16, 20205 yr Does he possess a razor? He looks like some down-and-out wino, (sorry winos if that comparison upsets you...).
December 16, 20205 yr Maybe he is upset because you can earn millions on that platform doing stupid things.
December 16, 20205 yr 2 hours ago, balo said: Maybe he is upset because you can earn millions on that platform doing stupid things. Only 7 people make more than 1 million - and he's not one of them. https://www.intheknow.com/2020/10/06/highest-paid-tiktok-stars/ He doesn't even break into the top 15, and only had a paltry 1.6 million followers. https://influencermarketinghub.com/tiktok-highest-paid-stars/ Another source (NY times) has him earning 3k a month. Hardly worth crying over.
December 16, 20205 yr These twerps make big money from these social media sites. The more followers they have, the more likely they will get sponsorship and product deals. That's why he's crying. He is just about to lose a lot of wedge.
December 17, 20205 yr 21 hours ago, 2530Ubon said: I had to google who he was. Not really a celebrity - Just some guy who posts comments about celebrities. Grow a pair and stop being a little baby. Anyone who's old enough to drink shouldn't be a TikTok user anyway - it's a platform for kids to bully each other online. I don't follow perez but I do know he does more than "comment". He made a name for himself talking and sharing trash about entertainment celebrities. He achieved a certain level of power because people became afraid that their careers might be harmed if he decided to post cr@p about them. I won't shed any tears if he slithers back into obscurity.
December 17, 20205 yr 8 hours ago, Iron Tongue said: I don't follow perez but I do know he does more than "comment". He made a name for himself talking and sharing trash about entertainment celebrities Is that not commenting? verb (used without object) to make remarks, observations, or criticisms: He refused to comment on the decision of the court. to write or make explanatory or critical notes
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