September 16 2016
________________________________________________________________________________
Blogger Joe Jervis is used to dealing with angry readers sending him
nasty emails and flooding his comment boards, but even he was taken
aback by the actions of a demented Lady Gaga fan last month. The JoeMyGod
creator was warned to give Gaga’s new single a good review or else (not
that the political-minded site is often in the business of doling out
music critiques) and sent images of an ISIS terrorist holding the head
of a man he just decapitated.
Jervis informed Gaga’s management, who alerted authorities about the deranged person.
“[The images of the dead men] were something you might see in a flash
on Twitter and just go, ‘Ugh,’” Jervis says. “But it’s as gruesome as
any horror movie you can imagine and more so because you know it’s
real.”
For much of the 12 years of JoeMyGod’s existence, Jervis has
found himself on the receiving end of online hate and threats,
sometimes from the anonymously unbalanced like the Gaga fan, but also
from the religiously zealous. The antigay organization Liberty Counsel
repeatedly requested that onetime U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder
arrest Jervis for terrorism because a JoeMyGod commenter called for homophobic churches to be burned down. Others have mailed hate messages to Jervis's home.
“I’ve gotten emails from people that made it very clear they know where I live,” he says.
Brazen xenophobia and online harassment — known as “trolling” in
online parlance — is familiar to not only gay writers like Jervis. Most
LGBT people on the internet know not to look at the comment sections of
sites like YouTube or TMZ, which often teem with antigay,
anti-trans, and racist rhetoric. Trolling is becoming such a problem
throughout the internet that high-profile action is finally being taken.
National Public Radio ended public comments on its site a few weeks
ago (NPR’s managing editor didn’t say trolling was the reason, instead advocating for online conversation to shift to social media, where people are more accountable). Time recently ran a cover that declared trolls were ruining the internet, sprinkling toxic hate, homophobia, and misogyny from Reddit to 4chan. Saturday Night Live’s Leslie Jones was bullied off Twitter this summer by haters who attacked her appearance, some encouraged by the gay king of trolls, Breitbart editor Milo Yiannopoulos. After the Jones incident attracted global news coverage, Twitter finally banned the serial harasser.
Fame-whore Yiannopoulos is a reminder that some LGBT people can be
just as cruel on the internet as any alt-right Donald Trump voter typing
away in a dark basement. Trans reality star Caitlyn Jenner is
frequently a target of hate from gay and bi men on Advocate.com comments
and social media. While much of the animosity stems from her vocal
support for Republican politicians, including Trump, her gender,
genitals, and appearance are frequently disparaged instead of her
political views.
“We’re cheating ourselves if we don’t accept that there are horrible
gay people in the world,” Jervis says. “There are gay transphobes, gay
racists, gay misogynists.”
Jervis doesn’t regularly police his very active comment boards —
which receive hundreds of thousands of comments every month — instead
letting hateful posters hang themselves.
“My [tolerant] readers take care of [the trolls],” he says. “Some of them rather enjoy taking care of it.”
Jervis draws the line at physical threats, which his more rational
readers will inform him of by emailing him directly. Even wishes of
physical harm by natural means will get users deleted and possibly
banned. Writing “I wish Tony Perkins would drop dead” or “How is Pat
Robertson not dead of a heart attack yet?” will not fly, Jervis says.
Though he’s considering hiring someone to monitor the boards, the idea of ending comments on JoeMyGod
is as far from Jervis’s mind as possible. Discontinuing comments “would
be the end of my site,” he says. Sure, people scream at each other and
occasionally lash out — the Hillary versus Bernie battle among LGBT
readers continues to periodically rage — but there’s “a sense of
community” on JoeMyGod’s comment boards, sort of like a virtual gay bar, that would instantly be extinguished.
Jervis says many of his readers are middle-aged or senior gay and bi
men, some with HIV, who have few outlets for connection with those like
them.
“They feel like they know each other,” he says. “A lot of them can
make a joke that would seem obtuse to the average person, but other
readers will fall to the floor because they know that guy’s history.”
On a recent post about presidential polls in Colorado, a longtime
reader revealed that his father had died. The whole thread got derailed
with condolences. “It went on for hours and was really a beautiful
thing,” Jervis says.
As a semi-hardened New Yorker, Jervis is mostly reluctant to use the
term “safe space,” but he acknowledges that’s an accurate description of
his boards. “For many years, my site has been a safe space for older
gay guys to talk about their fears and their successes and their loves.”
Jervis is even trying to make lemonade out of the trolling sent his
way. He’s creating a line of T-shirts emblazoned with insults he’s
received and asking readers to pick their favorite — “homosexual
buccaneer” is currently leading.
“The other one was ‘deviant sodomite,’” he says. “I’d wear that one on the subway.”
Read more articles from the Advocate, here.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.