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Rashida Jones Slams Miley Cyrus, Rihanna & Nicki Minaj For Acting Like Pornstars


Rashida Jones lashed out at the 'pornification of pop stars' in a recent essay for Glamour, calling out Miley Cyrus, Nicki MInaj, and Rihanna.

"If 1994 was the Year of O.J.'s White Bronco, 2013 was the Year of the Very Visible Vagina," the 37-year-old actress wrote, criticizing "the Miley Cyrus cross-continental twerk-athon and Nick Minaj's Halloween pasties. With the addition of Rihanna writhing on a pole in her 'Pour it Up' video and Lady Gaga's butt-crack cover art or the song that goes 'Do what you want with my body,' I was just done. I'd had enough."

"Let me say up front: I am not a prude. I love sex; I am comfortable with my sexuality," Jones continued, but protested that "every star interprets 'sexy' the same way: lots of skin, lots of licking of teeth, lots of bending over. I find this oddly…boring. Can't I just like a song without having to take an ultrasound of some pop star's privates?"

What sparked Jones' explanation was a Twitter exchange, in which she advised celebrities to "#stopactinglikewhores" and was slammed for "slut-shaming" pop stars.

"The fact that I was accused of 'slut-shaming,' being anti-woman, and judging women's sex lives crushed me. I consider myself a feminist," Jones wrote. "But I will look at women with influence-millionaire women who use their 'sexiness' to make money-and ask some questions. There is a difference, a key one, between 'shaming' and 'holding someone accountable.'"

"I understand that owning and expressing our sexuality is a huge step forward for women," Jones wrote. "But, in my opinion, we are at a point of oversaturation. "

"What else ties these pop stars together besides, perhaps, their entangled G-strings? Their millions of teen-girl fans," Jones noted. "Even if adult Miley and Nicki have ownership of their bodies, do the girls imitating them have the same agency?"

Jones concluded with some requests for 2014.

"Women: Let's at least try to discuss the larger implications on pop culture without shaming each other," Jones wrote. "There's more than one way to be a good feminist."

"And finally, pop stars: Please stop saying you don't want to be role models. Because, guess what. You are," Jones concluded. "You depend on the millions of people who adore you…Go ahead and tweet pictures of your undercarriage. But perhaps every eleventh song or video, do something with some more clothes on? Maybe even a song that empowers women to feel good about some other great quality we have?"

The pornification of pop stars!

Move along Rashida Jones, nothing new to say here! We already know what you're saying, why you think Miley is twerking with midgets?

And Nicki does it all!










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