• @[email protected]
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    803 days ago

    That’s a great yearbook quote for/from someone who ended up doing extraordinary things.

    • Beacon
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      -73 days ago

      I mean yes, but also no. She’s a total nepo baby. Her mom was a big actress and her dad was literally the president of NBC

      • @Maggoty
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        273 days ago

        Being a nepo baby doesn’t give you talent. She did all the work, she just didn’t have to spend a decade serving tables while waiting to be discovered. Nepotism sucks, but we shouldn’t turn away genuinely hard working and talented people for it. It’s more like a red flag that makes the nepo baby need to prove themselves, which she did.

        • Beacon
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          233 days ago

          She’s talented and hard working, but there are zillions of actresses just as talented and hard working as her. The nepotism is what gets her the extra auditions and gets her selected over the other equally talented and hard working actresses

          • @Maggoty
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            53 days ago

            Yeah and that’s the damage. I said as much. But they aren’t going to not audition her.

          • @GrammarPolice
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            -72 days ago

            And you sound awfully like Pol Pot now

            • Zement
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              2 days ago

              And people could come under the impression you were born with a trust fund but attribute your millions to your “hard working investment strategy”… it’s the same. You can put hard work in, but after a certain threshold it guarantees success. It’s life on easy mode. Period.

              Edit: And she probably never got diddlied by an ugly old producer. Which I am honestly happy about for her.

          • Phoenixz
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            -73 days ago

            Okay, and do you have any indication that she had her family work for her, get her auditions that others failed to get?

      • @4grams
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        113 days ago

        there’s a couple nepo babies in Hollywood that I’m ok with. She’s one of them, Julia Louse Dreyfus is another one. I mean, granted going into acting and getting some success was not exactly due to straight up hard work, but there’s plenty of people in similar situations who don’t put in ANY work, don’t give us good performances and don’t support decent social causes…

        I just can’t get angry just from where they came. I get angry with those that exploit and feel entitled simply due to their luck of birth.

        • @SkunkWorkz
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          2 days ago

          How is Julia Louis-Dreyfus a Hollywood nepo baby? Her family doesn’t work in the industry. Sure she’s privileged as hell since she is a billionaire heir. She never had to worry about money while pursuing an acting career, but being privileged isn’t automatically nepotism. Maybe her family could have used their vast network to get her an audition for SNL but there is no proof of that.

          Though her son is a straight up nepo baby.

          • @4grams
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            12 days ago

            Yeah, I suppose you are right, but money pretty much replaces connections in any industry so I lump them in the same category. Both had roadblocks cleared for them that most don’t due to connections. One came from the industry, another from Industry.

      • @chonglibloodsport
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        123 days ago

        So if you were her sibling you would have done much more extraordinary things?

        • Beacon
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          183 days ago

          Nothing i said implied that. Apparently people don’t know what a nepo baby is. A nepo baby gets a massive leg up over the competition because of who their parents are. They can be talented, but their success in the industry came about because their parents are powerful

          • @chonglibloodsport
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            3 days ago

            People know perfectly well what a nepo baby is. She’s not the only person in the world who had the same (or even better) opportunities. Her accomplishments are still extraordinary.

            Everyone has to play the hand they’re dealt. She’s played hers far better than most. That’s what people are acknowledging.

            This whole game of “she owes everything to her parents” is BS because countless other people have been born to privilege and accomplished NOTHING.

            • @[email protected]
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              153 days ago

              And a overwhelmingly larger number of people were born to abject poverty and got nowhere despite great talent and effort.

              • @chonglibloodsport
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                3 days ago

                Right and that’s a tragedy. But that doesn’t take anything away from Sigourney Weaver’s achievements. Even if everyone on earth was born into a Star Trek techno-utopia with no poverty or war or disease, with every opportunity available to everyone, her achievements on the screen would still be extremely impressive.

      • Twinklebreeze
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        53 days ago

        I think you mean legacy artist. Nepo babies are the ones that can’t act.

        • Beacon
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          73 days ago

          Not true at all. Nepo babies can be talented, but they got a massive leg up over the competition because of who their parents are.

    • Flying SquidOP
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      383 days ago

      It’s sort of a stage name. It’s a name she chose for herself.

      Susan Alexandra Weaver was born in New York City on October 8, 1949,[4][5] the daughter of English actress Elizabeth Inglis (1913–2007)[6] and American television executive Pat Weaver (1908–2002).[7] Her father served as president of NBC from 1953 to 1955, during which time he created The Today Show.[8] Pat’s brother, Doodles Weaver, was a comedian and contributor to Mad.[9] She is of Dutch, English, Scots-Irish, and Scottish descent through her father.[10][11]

      At the age of 14, Weaver began using the name “Sigourney” after she took it from a minor character in The Great Gatsby.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sigourney_Weaver

      • @RizzRustbolt
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        223 days ago

        So… she has the second best stage name in the Weaver family.

        • @scutiger
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          53 days ago

          NGL, Doodles Weaver is a pretty memorable name.

        • Flying SquidOP
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          33 days ago

          And she did a lot fewer recordings with Spike Jones and his City Slickers.

      • @pyre
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        183 days ago

        it’s crazy to think that someone would see the name at 14 and start using it their whole life. iconic. she had nothing to worry about with that attitude; she never had the chance to be normal.

        • @scutiger
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          53 days ago

          It’s not her given name, but it’s also not a stage name because it’s a name she was using before she started acting.

  • @Sam_Bass
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    42 days ago

    A valiant effort, madam. But normalcy of late is a relative proposition at best