Because you setup a non-sense situation to fit your narative.This is an incoherent response. You claim you're being treated more harshly than you would have been treated in person, someone replies by saying they would have treated you identically in person, and you retort by saying you're not talking in person? Absolute non sequitor.
One that doesn't apply to the subject matter that we're supposed to be discussing.
This entire Thread is about "Is SNW getting too goofy?".
Yet you make this about somebody's personal life.
That's not what I made it about, it was never about their personal life.
No, you're having a hissy fit because you feel like you were slighted or need to feel slighted for somebody else who isn't even here. You're white knighting and virtue signaling over something that isn't even relevant to the topic of this thread.Online or in-person, your behavior was objectionable and you're being treated the same way you would in either environment.
I just grabbed a screen shot because it was convenient, you completely blew it out of context beyond what I was trying to state.You didn't just "source a picture" from the interview. You didn't just have a prior idea and then happen to take a piece of supporting evidence for your thesis from that interview. You actively responded to that particular interview by objectifying Navia. It was incredibly gross.
Non-sense, you're the one having a melt down over a simple picture.Nope. Absolutely not. This assertion is another act of objectification and dehumanization from you.
Hollywood is all about looks, if you can't understand that.
Beauty in Hollywood: The Importance of a Pretty Face
Pretty Privilege: A personal Perspective from Hollywood
In Hollywood, which Star Trek is apart of, looks matter.In a perfect world, there would be no privileges. In reality, being pretty offers huge advantages, especially in Hollywood. But slowly, things are changing.