The first signs that Hilaria Baldwinâs life was going seriously off the rails came from the same place where she usually derives her sense of control. âI started seeing comments on my Instagram, â she said in an interview. âItâs a very strange thing and you can just be living your life,â she said, when suddenly comments begin to mount suggesting that you, a famous person who has shared so much of yourself with your hundreds of thousands of followers, are not who they thought you to be, and you find your very identity the subject of international debate and scepticism.
Font Size Not all culture cancellations are the same. The emerging “news” that Hilaria Baldwin (wife of former screen star Alec Baldwin) has been faking her Spanish origins is the subject of much recent online mirth, starting with the New York Post. Yet somehow this ignominy has earned her not condemnation, but a supportive platform in the Stop the presses! The story’s text box at least clarified, “She speaks out after being accused of faking her heritage.” But reporter Katherine Rosman’s long interview served as aggressive public relations on Hilaria’s behalf. The Times seems almost embarrassed to have to cover the unpleasantness. There is a palpable reluctance to criticize the celebrity who may or may not be “Latinx,” or whatever liberals say these days.
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