What do Lena Dunham, Logan Paul, and, most recently, Drake have in common?
They've each at some point employed their iPhone Notes apps to pen statements and apologies for all the world to see. Those longwinded chunks of text are an inevitable part of most celebrity scandal life cycles.
SEE ALSO: These extreme Post-it notes will definitely get your point acrossNow, in my humble opinion, the Notes app is strictly to be used for grocery lists, makeshift diary entries, and lists of shows your friends tell you to watch, though you never will. Celebrity drama would be much more interesting if famous people would break free from Notes app mold and try something new.
Thanks to social media, the nature of how celebrities interact with the public has changed significantly. Platforms like Twitter and Instagram serve as a direct portal to consumers (that's us, the plebeians) and the need for a middle man to relay information has become somewhat unnecessary.
Need to apologize for something incredibly offensive that you said in an interview? Take a screenshot of a statement crafted in the Notes app, and voila: You've said what you need to say on your own terms and with no pesky character limit.
Lindsey Weber and Bobby Finger, hosts of the "Who? Weekly" podcast, were two of the first journalists to notice a trend towards celebrity Notes app usage.
As they explained in a 2016 piece for Vanity Fair:
"All of these notes—posted to Instagram or tweeted—took the place of a traditional press release or a two-page spread in Peoplemagazine. We don’t need those things anymore, many of our favorite (and not-so-favorite) celebrities agreed."
As Finger noted on Jezebel back in 2016, it's a tactic that's been used by everyone from Ariana Grande, who apologized for that infamous doughnut-licking scandal, to the NFL.
Today, this method is a go-to for public statements of all kinds. Just last week, Drakeused to the app to clarify the details behind a damming 2007 photo in which he's seen wearing blackface.
And ugly as the interface is, it gets around the 280-character limit imposed by Twitter, and it's easy to cross-post to Instagram.
But good things, when done in excess, are bound to become a meme — and when a new Notes app screenshot is released into the wild, the jokes come pouring in.
Tweet may have been deleted
Personally, we're tired of this. But where, if not the Notes app, should celebrities put their apologies? Here are a few of my very real suggestions. Famous people, take notes on any medium you choose.
While you're confessing your sins and asking for our forgiveness, you might as well share what you're spending your hard-earned money on. We stan transparency of all kinds!
Via GiphyThat way we know you're really serious about your apology.
There's nothing like disguising your lackluster apology in beautiful imagery to distract people from the fact that you didn't actually use the word "sorry."
Billboards are typically reserved for advertising or for admissions of love, but isn't a successful celebrity apology note essentially a combination of both?
Via GiphyGive us a break from staring at our screens.
Most "apologies" are wordy and confusing. Make things moreconvoluted by hiding it in a crossword puzzle.
This one is for apologies that aren't really necessary, but that you feel compelled to make anyway.
Via GiphyAnd then take a photo and post thatto Twitter. Let us see that nitty, gritty self-reflection!
The cat GIF — otherwise known as the universal language of the internet. Cough up some remorse with a side of reusable content.
Via GiphyCopyright © 2023 Powered by
Forget the Notes app: 9 places we'd rather celebrities put their apologies-休牛归马网
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