It must be hard being Charlize Theron.
Sure, she’s exquisite-looking, talented, wealthy, and successful. But she’s almost too famous to function. She’s so famous that a moderately offensive fuck up on her part can make news around the world and cause an avalanche of online criticism.
Theron — the 38-year-old South African actress famous for extreme beauty, golden skin, and playing a chubby lesbian murderer that one time in Monster — had one of those moments this week. In an interview, she compared the intense media coverage of her life to the experience of being raped.
When asked why she doesn’t Google herself, she told Sky News: “I don’t do that, so that’s my saving grace. When you start living in that world, and doing that, you start I guess feeling raped.”
See that moment here.
Now. Twitter-users, victim’s rights advocates and generally compassionate human beings everywhere have condemned Theron for that comment. And rightfully so – implying that paparazzi attention is in any way the same as being sexually assaulted is abhorrent when you think about it. You’d think that with Theron’s level of fame, someone might have given her basic sensitivity training at some point in her decades-long reign of celebrity.