Posted on August 13, 2020, at 4:50 p.m. Calls and texts to a publicly listed number for Claudia went unanswered. “People were yelling, ‘Oh you’re a queen, we love your outfit!’ Just craziness.”For Murphy, the incident cemented a growing unease she had felt about what she said was once her “complete stanhood” of the sisters, who have long courted controversy for their own perceived racist and insensitive behavior, and for not publicly disavowing their mother’s most extreme views.In fact, it wasn’t two years ago that the sisters were written off by some as canceled. Ben Kothe / BuzzFeed News; Getty Images, Youtube / Via They relaunched their podcast a month after the Daily Beast story, keeping and adding to their now-huge network of fans. In the blog post, Claudia wrote she was the “worst and least useful intern to ever grace their halls” and kept “fucking shit up.” She decided her antics were funny enough to share, so she started a blog called GirlWithAJob.com, where she wrote mostly made-up anecdotes about her intern life. Multiple women also told BuzzFeed News they have been harassed, getting demeaning and threatening DMs and comments online from the podcast’s increasingly toxic army of fans. Both Murphy and Klenke said that the sisters did not do a live show of the podcast as advertised.“It was a fun weekend, but it wasn’t what I wanted or what I was expecting or what I paid for,” Klenke said.Klenke was so disappointed by the weekend that she sent Claudia and Jackie an email, which she shared with BuzzFeed News, with suggestions on how to make the camp better in the future. @Fab040, a.k.a. She also expressed her disappointment about missing the live shows and not getting much face time with the sisters.“I know I had high expectations, but it was definitely a lot of the Instagram posts that we saw,” she told me. “But they didn’t.”One former fan, who asked to remain anonymous, said she feels the sisters “made some surface-level comments for appearance purposes only to not lose any listeners or sponsorships and refused to denounce their mother and her comments.”“Their morals and the way they treat people who are ‘beneath’ them doesn’t align with what I believe, so I stopped listening so they couldn’t profit off my viewership,” she said.Mehek Khaira, another former fan, said even though she wanted to give the Oshrys the benefit of the doubt, the fact that they are so quiet about their mother has led her to believe “they really do share the same ideology as their mom.”“Ultimately, people's aversion to their lack of empathy and ignorance is getting real and no one wants to sit quietly anymore,” she said.“They will literally shut down anything that will make them look bad to these people, because they don’t want to lose any of these followers who are just clueless,” she said, adding that after posting her essay, the sisters blocked her from the Facebook groups without addressing her piece.Since posting her essay, she said she has received “hurtful” comments on her essay, calling her a “special type of loser” and to get “a fucking life.” But to Murphy, that loyalty to the sisters, which she once felt too, is unfortunately misplaced.“These girls don’t know you,” she said of Claudia and Jackie. When Geller and Oshry divorced in 2007, Geller was awarded nearly $4 million, the New York Times reported, and moved into a $2.2 million apartment, which took up an entire floor of a Midtown condo building, according to property records. In 2018 the But, since then, Claudia and Jackie have only become more influential.
For Murphy, one flag was when she paid nearly $730 to attend “Camp Toast,” a four-day, three-night “extravaganza” for Toasters in May 2019. Dit had een grote impact op Claudia. Yvonne hoort bij een bijzonder, artistiek gezin.Plaatsnemen in het publiek, meedoen als deelnemer of schaaf je liever je acteerskills bij als figurant? Many have also soured on the sisters themselves, who repeatedly have refused to apologize for continued missteps. “I don’t usually discuss politics or anything of that nature because everyone would disagree with me ’cause you’re all idiots,” she wrote.However, she did address a complaint from a commenter who said her blog was “an affront to women everywhere.” Claudia responded, in a 2014 post titled “Feminism,” advising if you are “an avid Jezebel reader or Teva wearer you will not like what you’re about to read.” She argued that if the commenter didn’t like her blog, she shouldn’t read it, a mantra that she and Jackie would later repeat to quiet haters of their podcast.“Since when does feminism imply hating on other women who aren’t like you? Dissenters got purged, they say, by Claudia and Jackie. “I don’t think my expectations were anything outside of what I had seen.”No one responded to her email, Klenke said, and she eventually stopped listening to the podcast. If this is modern day feminism, then I am certainly not a feminist,” she wrote.In February 2016, Claudia wrote a blog post called “5 Times Donald Trump’s Twitter Was Everything.”“Regardless of your political affiliation, I think we can all agree on one very simple thing: the best thing to happen to the internet is Donald Trump joining Twitter,” she wrote. Op de lagere school had ze het niet makkelijk, ze was het enige donkere meisje in haar klas op de lagere school en dit leidde tot pesterijen van haar klasgenoten.


It just didn’t appeal to her anymore.“It kind of soured any positive feelings I had for them,” she said.Many former Toasters agreed. Para saber mais sobre nossa política de cookies, acesse Looking back at Claudia and Jackie’s careers and how they amassed a large and loyal fanbase, BuzzFeed News found more than a dozen previously unreported blog posts by Claudia, some of which express hateful opinions similar to their mother Pam Geller’s, raising questions about whether she has truly changed. More than 100 of the Facebook groups affiliated with “My theory is that they are performative influencers, catering to a millennial female liberal demographic,” said one former fan, Kristen Landels.