Fans buzzed last summer when JoJo Siwa called Candace Cameron Bure the "rudest celebrity" she'd ever met. The two reconciled, but is Siwa now thinking she was right all along? The openly gay 19-year-old entertainer called out plans by the actor and cable exec to make cable channel Great American Family a gay-free zone where it's assumed that "traditional marriage" is the only sort that matters, Entertainment Weekly reported. "[H]onestly, I can't believe after everything that went down just a few months ago, that she would not only create a movie with [the] intention of excluding LGBTQIA+ [people], but then also talk about it in the press," Siwa said in an Instagram post. "This is rude and hurtful to a whole community of people," Siwa declared. As previously reported, Bure had told the Wall Street Journal that in her capacity as chief creative officer at the cable channel she was going to avoid inclusive holiday movies of the sort that her former employer, the Hallmark Channel, has begun producing. "I think that Great American Family will keep traditional marriage at the core," Bure told the newspaper. Bure also said that the reason for leaving Hallmark was that the channel had undergone "a change of leadership," whereas "I knew that the people behind Great American Family were Christians that love the Lord and wanted to promote faith programming and good family entertainment," Bure said. Moreover, "My heart wants to tell stories that have more meaning and purpose and depth behind them," Bure offered the WSJ, though without explaining why same-sex relationships would lack those qualities. Tap link in bio for more on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️?????? ?: @itsjojosiwa
Fans buzzed last summer when JoJo Siwa called Candace Cameron Bure the "rudest celebrity" she'd ever met. The two reconciled, but is Siwa now thinking she was right all along? The openly gay 19-year-old entertainer called out plans by the actor and cable exec to make cable channel Great American Family a gay-free zone where it's assumed that "traditional marriage" is the only sort that matters, Entertainment Weekly reported. "[H]onestly, I can't believe after everything that went down just a few months ago, that she would not only create a movie with [the] intention of excluding LGBTQIA+ [people], but then also talk about it in the press," Siwa said in an Instagram post. "This is rude and hurtful to a whole community of people," Siwa declared. As previously reported, Bure had told the Wall Street Journal that in her capacity as chief creative officer at the cable channel she was going to avoid inclusive holiday movies of the sort that her former employer, the Hallmark Channel, has begun producing. "I think that Great American Family will keep traditional marriage at the core," Bure told the newspaper. Bure also said that the reason for leaving Hallmark was that the channel had undergone "a change of leadership," whereas "I knew that the people behind Great American Family were Christians that love the Lord and wanted to promote faith programming and good family entertainment," Bure said. Moreover, "My heart wants to tell stories that have more meaning and purpose and depth behind them," Bure offered the WSJ, though without explaining why same-sex relationships would lack those qualities.
Tap link in bio for more on @EDGEmedianetwork
?️??????
?: @itsjojosiwa
Tap link in bio for more on @EDGEmedianetwork
?️??????
?: @itsjojosiwa
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