The outcome was predicted by plenty users in this community, but now the news are noticing it.

  • LvxferreOPM
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    1210 months ago

    I’ve seen worse. Have you heard about the chicken sandwich drama?

    • user1 calls a chicken sandwich a “chicken sandwich”, in a food subreddit.
    • user2 (an assumer unmoderating the sub) assumes that user1 is trying to “public shame” the OP, otherwise user1 would’ve called it a “chicken burger”.
    • user1 and user2 start discussing through modmail, while user2 is clearly harassing user1
    • the discussion goes public
    • people start mocking user2 with the words “chicken sandwich” in all subreddits that user2 unmoderates

    Bonus points: user2 also moderates a subreddit known for its propensity to brigade and try to… public shame people based on their cooking opinions.

    • @[email protected]
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      210 months ago

      …I might have been banned from that subreddit about shaming people. I got banned from some small cooking sub like that for “spamming” with like two comments in the whole sub. Turns out one was a reply to the moderator, and I guess they didn’t like that.

      Oooh, I couldn’t remember the name but it just hit me. Was it r/iamveryculinary? I don’t recall any brigading but I wasn’t there for long.

      • LvxferreOPM
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        10 months ago

        Yup, the brigading sub was r/iamveryculinary. The “chicken sandwich drama” was in r/food.

        If you don’t remember brigading you probably went to IAVC in its earlier times. Back then the sub just picked on content where users were bossing each other around on food opinions. That was fine, but in Reddit it is not sustainable in the long term.

        Eventually the sub got filled with oversensitive and assumptive morons with the reading skills of a potato, always assuming that any food opinion was someone trying to boss them around, and reinforcing each others’ assumptions. Nationalism also became a commonplace there, since the users there were too stupid to not generalise. With the unmoderator in question (TheLadyEve) disingenuously pretending that the admins, in one of their few instances of sanity, were persecuting the subreddit to curb down its brigading tendencies, even if she knew that the only way to prevent the brigades would be to close down the derailed subreddit, but I guess that an assumer like TLE wouldn’t be able to do it.

        It reached a point where, if you found some comment being downvoted into oblivion in r/food, r/cooking or r/askculinary, with random insults, you could pretty much guess “this was linked in r/iamveryculinary”.

        • @[email protected]
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          10 months ago

          Oh, wow. Yeah, TheLadyEve was the moderator I replied to, and the one that banned me. Good to have confirmation I did nothing wrong and they were just a terrible mod.

          Thanks for the Reddit history tour lol.