I dismiss these allegations at face value because it's the DOJ. It is a little weird that Lauren Chen managed to secure enough funding to bring Tim Pool and other much bigger influencers under her brand though. I mean she's one of the most beautiful women in conservative politics, but that's not good enough justification to give her millions of dollars.
It did seem odd that she was starting such an ambitious venture with her silent partner husband at this stage in her life.
She does have some based opinions. But her main shtick is that she's distractingly beautiful on camera, which certainly has a time limit and awkwardness with her marriage, child and age.
It's also interesting that Chen owned Tenet but kept her own brand separate and did no streaming work or promotion for the platform itself.
Yeah, I'm looking forward to her explanation. I just don't see her as the type of person to run a media conglomerate so I'll be interested to see how much other people are involved, but I could be wrong.
She is surprisingly based and open-minded given her earlier appearances. Back in 2018 or so she sounded like a cuckservative on JLP's show, but then again she always seemed like one of the more levelheaded political influencers.
I find the wall is a little overstated for some women. Michelle Malkin and Megyn Kelly have had long careers, so I actually think Lauren could trade on her looks for quite some time if she keeps herself healthy.
I suppose I liken it to Rebecca (Blonde), Matt Christiansen's cohost, who herself was a firebrand attractive conservative commentator during Trump 2016, somewhat like a more based Lauren Southern.
But Rebecca ultimately met an older military vet and settled down as a wife & mother to two children in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, retreating to treating YT as a hobby she does 3-6 hours a week.
It gets weirder when your main trope is your attractiveness and then you settle down IRL (which is also obviously the right thing to do).
But it feels wrong to simp for lack of a better term for someone you know is a wife & mother, even if it shouldn't matter IRL either way.
I dismiss these allegations at face value because it's the DOJ. It is a little weird that Lauren Chen managed to secure enough funding to bring Tim Pool and other much bigger influencers under her brand though. I mean she's one of the most beautiful women in conservative politics, but that's not good enough justification to give her millions of dollars.
She's also relatively a new mother.
It did seem odd that she was starting such an ambitious venture with her silent partner husband at this stage in her life.
She does have some based opinions. But her main shtick is that she's distractingly beautiful on camera, which certainly has a time limit and awkwardness with her marriage, child and age.
It's also interesting that Chen owned Tenet but kept her own brand separate and did no streaming work or promotion for the platform itself.
Yeah, I'm looking forward to her explanation. I just don't see her as the type of person to run a media conglomerate so I'll be interested to see how much other people are involved, but I could be wrong.
She is surprisingly based and open-minded given her earlier appearances. Back in 2018 or so she sounded like a cuckservative on JLP's show, but then again she always seemed like one of the more levelheaded political influencers.
I find the wall is a little overstated for some women. Michelle Malkin and Megyn Kelly have had long careers, so I actually think Lauren could trade on her looks for quite some time if she keeps herself healthy.
I do agree with you re: Chen ageing gracefully.
I suppose I liken it to Rebecca (Blonde), Matt Christiansen's cohost, who herself was a firebrand attractive conservative commentator during Trump 2016, somewhat like a more based Lauren Southern.
But Rebecca ultimately met an older military vet and settled down as a wife & mother to two children in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, retreating to treating YT as a hobby she does 3-6 hours a week.
It gets weirder when your main trope is your attractiveness and then you settle down IRL (which is also obviously the right thing to do).
But it feels wrong to simp for lack of a better term for someone you know is a wife & mother, even if it shouldn't matter IRL either way.
I try to appreciate the genuinely good things in the world, including beauty. There's a fine line, but I don't consider it simping.