Amanda Palmer

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KI cannot believe this thread is so short. She's ridiculous.
Every so often I hate watch this video. It just... Can you imagine. The whole giving you a flower and insisting on making eye contact. Brrrr. It's way beyond a normal word like cringe.

this thread begins with a list of dislikeable things about Amanda. I would like to add:

her eyebrows
The absolute look at me I'm so edgy cringe of adopting "bleeping" as a middle name
The weapons grade further cringe of signing everything "AFP"
The "everything I do is ART" stuff. Getting her fans to write all over her boobs and calling it art like she's Marina Abramovic
Those stupid bleeping arm sleeve things
Her eyebrows. It always wound me up no end cos she's all "I don't remove my body hair for I am a Feminist". Oh piss off
 
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KI cannot believe this thread is so short. She's ridiculous.
Every so often I hate watch this video. It just... Can you imagine. The whole giving you a flower and insisting on making eye contact. Brrrr. It's way beyond a normal word like cringe.

this thread begins with a list of dislikeable things about Amanda. I would like to add:

her eyebrows
The absolute look at me I'm so edgy cringe of adopting "bleeping" as a middle name
The weapons grade further cringe of signing everything "AFP"
The "everything I do is ART" stuff. Getting her fans to write all over her boobs and calling it art like she's Marina Abramovic
Those stupid bleeping arm sleeve things
Her eyebrows. It always wound me up no end cos she's all "I don't remove my body hair for I am a Feminist". Oh piss off
Anyone else get Temu ad and no video?! Maybe it’s a blessing.
 
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I remember a couple of years ago, prob a decade now, went to her gig and made a dent in my planned overdraft buying her merch. I feel physically sick thinking about it now. It was this sort of gig when I felt I was expected to cry a couple of times but felt nothing so forced my emotions. I wonder why I was like that.
Thank duck I grew up.
Also she was completely moody when signing afterwards saying she was “tired”. Maybe just piss off
 
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Oh god I'm an idiot. My bad. Try this?
Omg. I tried to watch this with an open mind, but there’s something really unsettling about her.
And all the stories just sound like people enabling a narc tbh.
 
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Omg. I tried to watch this within an open mind, but there’s something really unsettling about her.
And all the stories just sound like people enabling a narc tbh.
I couldn’t watch it, I ff a few times and caught a few words but she’s mega annoying.
 
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She seems to be acting as a single mother, though he occasionally joins them, or seems to look after their son. Like when she went to New Zealand again, this January. They were there for a month, and he went with them. I wonder if she's cut him out or if he's chosen to concentrate on his career for a bit.

She posted this to Twitter, fairly recently:



Their poor son.
A graduate of the Jack Monroe Twitter School of talking tit, I see.
 
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I saw her in Brighton after having a few years away from her music. It was like she didn’t want to be there at all. I read her book, which came across as the weirdest narcfolio I’ve read - apart from SSDGM - and I felt really aggravated afterwards. NG didn’t come across very well in it at all, either.
 
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Omg. I tried to watch this with an open mind, but there’s something really unsettling about her.
And all the stories just sound like people enabling a narc tbh.
Urgh. Agree ref the unsettling. I feel I'd have to leave the room if we were at a party together
 
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This has come up on other threads but it deseves a place here for your scorn: In which Amanda bleeping Palmer claims she understands how Sinéad O'Connor, a supremely talented woman who had suffered abuse as a child and had PTSD and was bipolar in a very repressive world, felt being booed at Madison Square Gardens because she had made an astonishingly brave statement that would only be grudgingly acknowledged to be true many years later. Amanda knows how this feels because she too has been shouted down and drowned out and wondered if she was crazy. And Sinéad would be proud of her for rattling off the first stupid self-absorbed thoughts that come to her mind when she hears the news of Sinéad's death.

"
Sinéad.

If I were a different kind of person I would let it settle and wait a few days to collect my thoughts and do this the right and grown-up way but I think she’d be more proud of me for writing like this….pulled off to the side of the highway writing from my bleeping heart because that’s she did, all her life, made from the heart.

I got my first Sinéad record at age 14 - I Do Not Want What I Have Not Got - dubbed from my mentor Anthony’s CD collection onto a 90-minute Maxell XLII blank cassette tape. It changed my life. I wanted the artwork, so I borrowed Anthony’s CD booklet, took it down to the town library xerox machine, copied it, and carefully and lovingly cut it to size for a cassette tape. So I could see her face.

Her face.

I learned every song by heart.

She was fierceness and honestly incarnate.

She howled her heart out so purely that people had no idea what to make of it.

This is a woman who ripped up a picture of the pope on Saturday Night Live (when it had no ”safety delay”) to draw attention to the sex abuse happening in the Catholic Church, after delivering “War” by Bob Marley, a cappella:

Until the philosophy which hold one race
Superior and another Inferior
Is finally
And permanently
Discredited
And abandoned
Everywhere is war.

Twelve days later she took the stage at Madison Square Garden for a Bob Dylan tribute festival and you could barely hear her sing over the boos and jeers from the crowd. She scrapped her planned Dylan song and screamed out “War” again, as the crowd tried to overpower her.

That feeling. Many women have been there. I have been there too, shaking, as it feels like the whole world is trying to shout and drown you out, and put you in your place. Wondering if I am the crazy one. Wondering if this many people are right. Or wrong. Or even real.

She was right about the church. She was very bleeping right.

She was right about so many things.

Now that she is dead, I know she’ll be lauded and applauded.

But back then? That night? How do you imagine she felt that night, crawling into bed, having been abused by a crowd of thousands? How would you feel? What would that do to you? Would you care if the world turned around, forty years later, and said: “Sorry about that, you were actually very brave?”

This is a woman who boycotted the Grammys saying she did not want “to be part of a world that measures artistic ability by material success.” This is a woman who refused to play US national anthem before certain concerts. That went down reallll well, too.

She was hated, she was scorned, she was cancelled for being honest over and over again. That SNL move was the beginning of the end of a career in many ways. She never recovered.

Too much, they said. Go away.

She used her voice. She kept on speaking.

She was loud. Being a loud woman is not bleeping convenient, for anyone. Ever. Not around here.

She was strikingly beautiful. She shaved her head and gave the middle finger to the beauty standard. She wore combat boots and jeans. She opened her mouth to the max, literally. She did not mumble; she roared. She inspired me into taking power; she inspired so many of my friends. She showed us all another way. There’s this way, too. Go this way, she seemed to be screaming, GO.

Dismissed as crazy. She struggled, and she struggled, and she struggled. She was punished, she was mocked, she was ridiculed.

She retreated and came back time and time again, her roar ragged, her frustration jagged and visible. Painful. You could see it, feel it. We mourned it, me and my friends.

Sinéad? Misunderstood? Which chicken, which egg?

What the world did to Sinéad was death by a thousand cuts. The world lauded her, worshipped her, bought her, sold her, forgave her, claimed her, disavowed her. Over and over in cycles. How could anyone survive that? Like a piece of metal getting bent over and over and over again. It breaks.

She began as a fragile person. A fragile artist. Which is why her songs were so beautiful and powerful to begin with. A raw heart. A mother. Not an idea, not a theoretical. A person.

The world loved the taste of her. The world didn’t know how to digest her. The world spit her out.

She never apologized for ripping up that picture of the pope. When asked later, she said “I’m not sorry I did it. It was brilliant”.

It was.

She was.

Never forget this woman.

Let her memory guide us.

Let them scream at you, but do not stop singing.

Never apologize just to make them happy, to make them go away, to “get along”, to make them accept you.

No, no, no.

Me say War.

Sinéad….rest in world-changing ripped paper phoenix-pieces from the stage, rising and burning into the white night stars. Find peace at last. I hope you forgive us what we could not give you."
 
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This has come up on other threads but it deseves a place here for your scorn: In which Amanda bleeping Palmer claims she understands how Sinéad O'Connor, a supremely talented woman who had suffered abuse as a child and had PTSD and was bipolar in a very repressive world, felt being booed at Madison Square Gardens because she had made an astonishingly brave statement that would only be grudgingly acknowledged to be true many years later. Amanda knows how this feels because she too has been shouted down and drowned out and wondered if she was crazy. And Sinéad would be proud of her for rattling off the first stupid self-absorbed thoughts that come to her mind when she hears the news of Sinéad's death.

"
Sinéad.

If I were a different kind of person I would let it settle and wait a few days to collect my thoughts and do this the right and grown-up way but I think she’d be more proud of me for writing like this….pulled off to the side of the highway writing from my bleeping heart because that’s she did, all her life, made from the heart.

I got my first Sinéad record at age 14 - I Do Not Want What I Have Not Got - dubbed from my mentor Anthony’s CD collection onto a 90-minute Maxell XLII blank cassette tape. It changed my life. I wanted the artwork, so I borrowed Anthony’s CD booklet, took it down to the town library xerox machine, copied it, and carefully and lovingly cut it to size for a cassette tape. So I could see her face.

Her face.

I learned every song by heart.

She was fierceness and honestly incarnate.

She howled her heart out so purely that people had no idea what to make of it.

This is a woman who ripped up a picture of the pope on Saturday Night Live (when it had no ”safety delay”) to draw attention to the sex abuse happening in the Catholic Church, after delivering “War” by Bob Marley, a cappella:

Until the philosophy which hold one race
Superior and another Inferior
Is finally
And permanently
Discredited
And abandoned
Everywhere is war.

Twelve days later she took the stage at Madison Square Garden for a Bob Dylan tribute festival and you could barely hear her sing over the boos and jeers from the crowd. She scrapped her planned Dylan song and screamed out “War” again, as the crowd tried to overpower her.

That feeling. Many women have been there. I have been there too, shaking, as it feels like the whole world is trying to shout and drown you out, and put you in your place. Wondering if I am the crazy one. Wondering if this many people are right. Or wrong. Or even real.

She was right about the church. She was very bleeping right.

She was right about so many things.

Now that she is dead, I know she’ll be lauded and applauded.

But back then? That night? How do you imagine she felt that night, crawling into bed, having been abused by a crowd of thousands? How would you feel? What would that do to you? Would you care if the world turned around, forty years later, and said: “Sorry about that, you were actually very brave?”

This is a woman who boycotted the Grammys saying she did not want “to be part of a world that measures artistic ability by material success.” This is a woman who refused to play US national anthem before certain concerts. That went down reallll well, too.

She was hated, she was scorned, she was cancelled for being honest over and over again. That SNL move was the beginning of the end of a career in many ways. She never recovered.

Too much, they said. Go away.

She used her voice. She kept on speaking.

She was loud. Being a loud woman is not bleeping convenient, for anyone. Ever. Not around here.

She was strikingly beautiful. She shaved her head and gave the middle finger to the beauty standard. She wore combat boots and jeans. She opened her mouth to the max, literally. She did not mumble; she roared. She inspired me into taking power; she inspired so many of my friends. She showed us all another way. There’s this way, too. Go this way, she seemed to be screaming, GO.

Dismissed as crazy. She struggled, and she struggled, and she struggled. She was punished, she was mocked, she was ridiculed.

She retreated and came back time and time again, her roar ragged, her frustration jagged and visible. Painful. You could see it, feel it. We mourned it, me and my friends.

Sinéad? Misunderstood? Which chicken, which egg?

What the world did to Sinéad was death by a thousand cuts. The world lauded her, worshipped her, bought her, sold her, forgave her, claimed her, disavowed her. Over and over in cycles. How could anyone survive that? Like a piece of metal getting bent over and over and over again. It breaks.

She began as a fragile person. A fragile artist. Which is why her songs were so beautiful and powerful to begin with. A raw heart. A mother. Not an idea, not a theoretical. A person.

The world loved the taste of her. The world didn’t know how to digest her. The world spit her out.

She never apologized for ripping up that picture of the pope. When asked later, she said “I’m not sorry I did it. It was brilliant”.

It was.

She was.

Never forget this woman.

Let her memory guide us.

Let them scream at you, but do not stop singing.

Never apologize just to make them happy, to make them go away, to “get along”, to make them accept you.

No, no, no.

Me say War.

Sinéad….rest in world-changing ripped paper phoenix-pieces from the stage, rising and burning into the white night stars. Find peace at last. I hope you forgive us what we could not give you."
Long overdue for someone to tell this twit to sit down and shut her fool ass mouth!

Like this talentless beggar C U Next Tuesday was even on Sinead’s radar.

The grief vultures coming out after her death are disgusting.
Didn’t give a tit about her in life but using her to get likes, false sympathy and ass pats on social media🖕
 
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Long overdue for someone to tell this twit to sit down and shut her fool ass mouth!

Like this talentless beggar C U Next Tuesday was even on Sinead’s radar.

The grief vultures coming out after her death are disgusting.
Didn’t give a tit about her in life but using her to get likes, false sympathy and ass pats on social media🖕
I have never seen the like. This is the first hero from my early teens to die, and nearly everyone in Ireland is sorry about it but every second post on my social media feeds is someone using Sinéad's beautiful face for likes. I am interested in hearing what musicians and bands who worked with her have to say, and her friends and family - when they are ready, but some grifter like Amanda Palmer, or some bleeping bar in San Francisco where she had a drink once, some influencer pretending they loved her when all they knew was her most popular song which she didn't even write, they should indeed shut their fool ass mouths as you rightly say!
 
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I went back to Amanda's facebook post about Sinéad O'Connor herself, to see the reaction, and she actually held out her cap for money in the comments. The state of her. After saying that she taped Sinéad's albums off a friend and all! I mean, we all did that as teenagers, but later on when we earned a bit of money we bought copies of the ones we still liked when we were switching to CDs and digital.
 

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I went back to Amanda's facebook post about Sinéad O'Connor herself, to see the reaction, and she actually held out her cap for money in the comments. The state of her. After saying that she taped Sinéad's albums off a friend and all! I mean, we all did that as teenagers, but later on when we earned a bit of money we bought copies of the ones we still liked when we were switching to CDs and digital.
Amanda Is an absolutely unfathomable sack of festering tit.

And who the duck likes a comment like that!?
 
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Does anyone know why her and Neil split, he says it was his fault?
Times article archived here: https://archive.ph/iAtvr

He legged it to the other side of the world during the pandemic, which meant his little kid was abandoned for nine months, and the people of Skye were put at risk by him swanning with potential germs. crappy thing to do, so I'd say it doesn't matter how obnoxious Amanda was, he will have to shoulder that blame forever. He's also much more accomplished and popular, though his stuff is not my cup of tea so I can't rate him, so he is/will be forgiven. I think they were made for each other really.
 
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