‘Queer’ Vogue Writer Craps On Actress Brigitte Bardot’s Legacy Right After Her Death
Brigitte Bardot, legendary French actress and sex symbol, died Sunday at 91 years old.
On Monday, Vogue’s culture writer, Emma Specter, wrote a bitter tribute to Bardot. Specter covers “film, TV, books, politics, news, and (almost) anything queer,” according to her bio, and “bakes a lot of bagels” in her spare time. Her book, “More, Please: On Food, Fat, Bingeing, Longing, and the Lust for ‘Enough,’” is out now, according to her website.
Specter writes of “Bardot’s late-in-life shift to supporting right-wing political candidates, her way of coldly dismissing actresses who came forward about their experiences of sexual harassment during the #MeToo movement, and how she was fined multiple times by the French government for ‘inciting racial hatred’ with her blatantly bigoted comments about Muslims.” (RELATED: Brigitte Bardot, Iconic French Femme Fatale Turned Outspoken Activist, Dead At 91)
This person wrote the Brigette Bardot piece for Vogue (“It’s our collective responsibility not to let Bardot’s beauty and talent obscure the UGLINESS of her........





















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