Entertainment of Tuesday, 4 September 2018

Source: browngh.com

Sister Deborah talks about her experience with cyber bullies

Deborah Vanessa Deborah Vanessa

Social media has increased the prospects of effective communication among people at large; closing up the boundaries between people and making easy interactivity possible.

Sister Deborah, in a twitter chat with Social Media Week Accra, addressed celebrity issues being faced online due to over-familiarity between them and their fans.

The notion that celebrities ought to act a particular kind of way often creates the impression that they may be a different kind of people, and thus, they should be able to contain everything that comes at them calmly.

Celebrities find social media as a great tool to interact with their fans. The bridge created by social media between the two has brought about opportunities for some while creating too much familiarity in a lot of instances and has opened doors ajar to cyber bullies.

Cyberbullies leave off alarming comments about people and especially celebrities, which can potentially damage their self-esteem, hard-earned reputation and dampen their spirits.

Some of these cyber bullies are fans of the celebrities who have a sense of entitlement about how the stars should interact with them.

Sister Deborah, a well-known TV Show host, fashion designer, creative director and musician, is not new to the activities of the cyber bullies.

She also shared instances where she was cyberbullied. She lamented that in the comment section under a recent post of a video she made of herself singing her song “Ghana Jollof” on Instagram, some posted some mean and hateful things, and she had screenshots to show; like they say, the Internet always has receipts.

She explained that people should know their limits and know when to draw the line when dealing with celebrities and people in general.

On the kind of relationship, fans should have with their celebrities; they shouldn’t feel too entitled to the point of harassing these celebrities – for they are as human as everyone else, and words do affect them like everyone else too.