Posted on 03/01/2022 9:13:41 AM PST by Kaslin
Cancel Culture can come for anyone, at any time. Whether it’s me, school parents in Virginia, protesting truckers, or media personalities, it will eventually come after everyone who does not believe in the ideology of the Left. They will continue to attack all of us if we don’t stop it. Even those with large and loyal audiences are not immune – Joe Rogan can attest to that.
When it comes for you, there are a number of things you can do – and some that you should definitely avoid doing – to protect yourself before it destroys you personally or professionally.
When the Cancel Culture mob came after me, I was caught completely off guard. I listened to the advice of the people around me – people who I thought had my best interests, or at least the best interests of my company, at heart. I received a lot of bad advice from people who either didn’t know what they were talking about or who really had no interest in my survival.
Being one of the early targets of Cancel Culture, there are things that I wish I had done differently, and things that I’ve learned over the past few years that I wish I had known from the start.
If I could go back in time and give myself advice about how best to respond to Cancel Culture, this would be it:
1. DON’T: APOLOGIZE
Apologizing is a trap. Papa John’s issued an apology attributed to me after Forbesran a hit piece about me using a leaked, deceptively edited transcript from a private media coaching session with me. I knew that I had nothing to apologize for, but corporate media personnel issued the statement, claiming the whole thing would blow over following an apology. Instead, the exact opposite happened. As soon as the statement was issued, the Cancel Culture mob, including the company I founded, took it as an admission of guilt and doubled down on their crusade to hurt me.
2. DO: PROMOTE THE FACTS
Simply denying a false narrative can give credence to the lies being told about you. I knew all along that my words were being twisted in the media, and thanks to the lawsuit I filed against the ad agency that stabbed me in the back, I’m proving it.
3. DO: ACT QUICKLY AND AGGRESSIVELY TO COUNTER THE NARRATIVE
It doesn’t take long for the media to adopt its preferred narrative. Once that happens, it’s almost impossible to change the conversation, even when that underlying narrative is completely dishonest. Every time you see that false narrative repeated, you need to push back immediately. Contact reporters to demand a correction. If that doesn’t work, contact their editors. Use every tool at your disposal, including social media, to promote the truth.
4. DO: RECRUIT THIRD-PARTY ADVOCATES
5. DO: USE THE MEDIA TO YOUR ADVANTAGE
There’s always a political element to Cancel Culture, especially if you have notoriety or influence. The exploitation of tribalism is part of what makes Cancel Culture so effective – if people think you have a different political perspective, they’re less likely to view you as a person, and more likely to view you as just another opportunity to score political points. The flip side of that, however, is that there will also be reporters who are predisposed to sympathize with you. But they can’t do anything for you unless you tell them the truth of your story. A key part of telling that truth is having good PR representation. I learned the hard way that knowing when to jettison a bad PR team is just as important as having a good one.
6. DON’T: BE DISCOURAGED BY SOCIAL MEDIA CENSORSHIP
Social media can be an extremely helpful tool. Before Cancel Culture came after me, I had virtually no social media footprint, but I’ve found a lot of support on social media since then. Unfortunately, victims of Cancel Culture often find themselves silenced by Big Tech and dominant social media platforms. Fortunately, there are vibrant and growing alternatives available that consider online freedom of speech a core principle. You should establish a presence on them now, so that you have those resources at your disposal right away if you ever need them.
5. DO: USE THE MEDIA TO YOUR ADVANTAGE
There’s always a political element to Cancel Culture, especially if you have notoriety or influence. The exploitation of tribalism is part of what makes Cancel Culture so effective – if people think you have a different political perspective, they’re less likely to view you as a person, and more likely to view you as just another opportunity to score political points. The flip side of that, however, is that there will also be reporters who are predisposed to sympathize with you. But they can’t do anything for you unless you tell them the truth of your story. A key part of telling that truth is having good PR representation. I learned the hard way that knowing when to jettison a bad PR team is just as important as having a good one.
6. DON’T: BE DISCOURAGED BY SOCIAL MEDIA CENSORSHIP
Social media can be an extremely helpful tool. Before Cancel Culture came after me, I had virtually no social media footprint, but I’ve found a lot of support on social media since then. Unfortunately, victims of Cancel Culture often find themselves silenced by Big Tech and dominant social media platforms. Fortunately, there are vibrant and growing alternatives available that consider online freedom of speech a core principle. You should establish a presence on them now, so that you have those resources at your disposal right away if you ever need them.
These tactics work a whole lot better with a take no prisoners nasty street-fighting attorney in your corner.
They won’t ask for retractions—they will demand them—and escalate as high as they need to—and start suing everybody and anybody for defamation.
The Brandon media are enemy combatants.
For the love of Pete, why don’t you try proofreading your posts? Is it that you’re lazy, or is it that you just don’t respect your fellow Freepers enough to take that extra 30 seconds?
Yes.
Well, a good half of that doesn’t apply to me.
I don’t do social media and I don’t get any media attention anyways.
And I would never apologize for something I did not do wrong.
Oh, and don't given them any power by letting their opinions mean anything to you.
They are whiny attention seeking children, with the emotional maturity and perceived need-to-belong of cliquish high school kids. Treat them as such.
I'm far more worried about important things such as when to next get my dog groomed than I am about what anyone in "cancel culture" thinks about anything.
Nick Sandmann’s attorneys did a splendid job of showing how that is done. Looks like the Rittenhouse kid will follow suit.
“.1 DON’T: APOLOGIZE”
☝ THIS!!!
“I don’t do social media...”
FR is old school “social media”
It’s just not the modern conception of it.
Are you referring to points 5 & 6 and 5 & 6?
I’ve heard Nick and Kyle have been in communication with each other quite a bit since Kyle was acquitted.
The key is never play defense—ever.
Go on offense.
Push push push push....
That is how you win.
Just a friendly reminder to those believers in cancel culture: the first amendment doesn’t protect your feelings.
You read the posts?
“Well, a good half of that doesn’t apply to me.
I don’t do social media and I don’t get any media attention anyways.
And I would never apologize for something I did not do wrong.”
Corporate world problems, mom. I don’t have them either.
What’s with some people?!?!?! You said it! And it’s not Monday, it’s freaking Tuesday - at that. All we can do is chuckle.
You read the posts?Yes.
Fire back.
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