But it definitely remains true now that a good moderator or set of moderators in a room kind of makes or breaks the experience.
I think that has been true since the very beginning. I think also, moderation has played a really important role. Not only do they have access to them, but in what feels like a very intimate medium of communication - voice, and that they could pop up in any room that that person might be in. Having that fresh slate of a social network for some people means that people that they have blocked on other social channels now have access to them. And just in terms of how people interact with each other, obviously, that looks a little bit different than what you’re going to see on a Facebook or a Twitter because it’s audio-based, but also, just the way in which people have access to each other. I would also say, from my time working at a company that made a social networking app, if you put humans on a platform together to communicate with each other, you are inevitably going to get some of the dregs of humanity as well. I’m not getting paid any commission on this.” And I think I have both positive and not-so-positive thoughts about Clubhouse. It feels a little bit odd because I’m like, “I don’t work at Clubhouse. What’s happening with the platform now? What are the growing pains? Molly Wood: OK, so now, here we are in the present.
So it’s just, I think, a real natural fit. And then, when you combine that with just the very kind of Black culture, I just think that there’s something that’s very oral about Black culture and how Black people communicate with each other. No arrests had been made by Thursday night, CBS 13 said.Aniyia Williams (Photo courtesy of Williams)Īniyia Williams: This convergence of cool people, exclusivity and celebrities all being on this thing just really has had it explode. However, she appears to have changed her mind and filed a report the following day, the site said. The slur-slinging woman was treated by medical workers on the scene for minor injuries, initially telling officers that she did not want to press charges for the fight she accepted was partially her fault, Sacramento Sheriff’s Department told TMZ.
She then posted a video update Thursday to insist that she had not been arrested, dispelling online rumors that she was “incarcerated,” CBS 13 said. “B-h! I’m the right one!” the puncher said as she left the store, encouraging the cashier to call 911. The black woman immediately started punching her adversary, hitting her head several times before the woman ended up on the floor, sobbing. “B-h, I’m the right one, try it!” she screamed at the white woman, warning she would “beat your motherf–king ass in this motherf–king store.”Īfter a final challenge to say “n-r again,” the white woman pauses - just to unexpectedly spit out the racist slur. It is not clear what sparked the fight but t he unidentified black woman flies into a rage when the white woman uses the N-word, repeatedly screaming back, “Call me a n-r again!” Viral video of the so-called “Sacramento Karen” showdown begins with the pair screaming at each other from inside the convenience store Monday. Judge to take unpaid leave after using N-word on video - but resists calls to resignĬops probing racist flyers accusing Coney Island kids of area break-insĪlabama sorority expels member, ousts president for racist text messageĪ black woman battered an elderly white shopper in a California 7-Eleven in a violent confrontation caught on camera after the white woman used a racial slur. LA County is searching for 'legal heirs' of famous black-owned beach resort