Amber Rose Clarifies Idiotic Statement About Philly Women

For every time that Amber Rose talks about her version of feminism, she then finds a way to put down women. Last week, Rose was a guest on the Drink Champs podcast and said that Philadelphia women werenโ€™t โ€œtraditionally attractive.โ€ She went on to say that she herself had been โ€œblessed with beauty,โ€ explaining that…

For every time that Amber Rose talks about her version of feminism, she then finds a way to put down women. Last week, Rose was a guest on the Drink Champs podcast and said that Philadelphia women werenโ€™t โ€œtraditionally attractive.โ€ She went on to say that she herself had been โ€œblessed with beauty,โ€ explaining that people often did not believe she was from South Philly because of her looks.

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Walter Davis On Building a Black-Owned Bank From Zero to $2 billion
Walter Davis On Building a Black-Owned Bank From Zero to $2 billion

โ€œI donโ€™t know how I could say this without sounding fucked up, but a lot of the people where Iโ€™m from arenโ€™t traditionally attractive people,โ€ Rose said in the June interview.

Of course, people immediately felt that she was speaking about being ambiguously whatever sheโ€™s calling herself this week. Especially since throughout her career, sheโ€™s flip-flopped from saying sheโ€™s not a black woman to most recently saying sheโ€™s a biracial black woman.

Rose first clarified her comments on Instagram after facing backlash and people challenging her to come back to South Philly and call a woman not traditionally attractive to her face.

โ€œI know that people really want me to be a superficial bitch, but Iโ€™m just not that person,โ€ the model said in response.

โ€œI find beauty in everyone. ... Unfortunately, itโ€™s not easy doing interviews and always saying things the way you really want to articulate,โ€ she continued. โ€œI wasnโ€™t saying thatโ€™s how I felt, I was saying thatโ€™s how people treated me.โ€

Over the weekend, Rose was caught on camera by TMZ, and she said she had used a poor choice of words.

โ€œI never said anyone was ugly. Iโ€™m so frustrated,โ€ she said.

โ€œIt makes me so sad because I never said that. And maybe I shouldnโ€™t have used the word โ€˜traditional.โ€™ But I just meant societyโ€™s standard of beauty,โ€ she clarified. โ€œBecause I never felt like I was beautiful. I felt like they were beautiful. So itโ€™s the opposite of what everybodyโ€™s saying. Shoutout to Philly.โ€

Personally, Iโ€™m not buying her โ€œI didnโ€™t mean itโ€ response. Traditional attractiveness has always been tied to lighter complexions, and sometimes, people with such complexions automatically think that theyโ€™re beautiful and are praised for their complexions, not only by men (and women) individually but, as Rose said, by society in general.

For reference concerning her โ€œtraditional attractiveness,โ€ here are photos of a young Rose:

https://twitter.com/twit_award/status/602163904551194624
https://twitter.com/RealAyomii/status/695701005988556800

It wouldnโ€™t shock me at all if South Philly men had put Rose on a pedestal because sheโ€™s light-skinned. Iโ€™m sure sheโ€™ll have another slut-walk,ย and claim that all women are beautiful, before saying something else vapid.

Straight From The Root

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