Are you buying The Poor, Bullied Anne Hathaway Campaign of 2014?

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I covered most of the nonsense that went down with Anne Hathaway back in late 2012 and early 2013, the height of her Oscar campaign for Les Miserables. I remember how harsh people were about all things Annie, and I remember defending her… sometimes. To be fair to Annie, she’s not the first person to oversee an overzealous Oscar campaign and she’s not the first person to oversaturate the media with too many interviews, too many magazine covers, too many photo-ops, too much twee-ness (coughNataliePortmancough). To be fair to the media, Anne WAS overzealous, annoying and much, much too cloying and needy. It was like everyone forgot that, oh right, she’s actually an A-list actress with a great deal of talent. Even Annie forgot. Was the coverage of her at times overblown, rude and “bullying”? Yes, it was. But I do think there’s a difference in “bullying” coverage and coverage that was basically like “please settle down, girl, you’re embarrassing yourself.”

I bring this all up because Annie is promoting Interstellar, and she keeps speaking of that moment in her life. To hear Annie tells it, the Hathahate was like being punched and slapped. When Anne sat down with Ellen DeGeneres this week, Ellen was really nice to her and Ellen referred to what happened as “cyberbullying.” Agree or disagree? Eh. You can see the video here. Here’s what went down:

Through hate, Anne Hathaway learned to love. The actress, 31, appeared on The Ellen DeGeneres Show Thursday, where she opened up about the backlash she suffered after winning Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress in Les Misérables.

“For whatever reason—and it’s a small group, trust me—[cyber bullies are] loud because I went through this,” host Ellen DeGeneres told her guest sympathetically. “And voices that don’t like you and say mean things really stick with you for some reason, more than voices that say, ‘You’re great!’ So, when that was going on after the Oscars, which you should have been celebrating—you won an Oscar!—and then all the sudden…Explain how you accidentally Googled something and this is what you found.”

Hathaway, a Hollywood veteran, said she “had gotten out of the habit of Googling myself because that’s just a bad idea to ever do that.” But in a rare instance, she said, “My friends and I had an idea for Funny or Die and we wanted to do something on celebrity pregnancy rumors, so we just Googled pregnancy rumors and the story came up. The title of it was ‘Why Does Everyone Hate Anne Hathaway?'”

The audience gasped, to which she said, “It’s really OK. It has a happy ending. Life continues.”

“Yes, but I know what that feels like and I think when people write things like that or say things like that it is cyber bullying,” DeGeneres told Hathaway. “How did you deal with all that?”

“Well, I listened at first. I couldn’t help it, you know? And you try to shut it off and I couldn’t, and then I realized why I couldn’t was I hadn’t learned to love myself yet. I hadn’t gotten there. And if you don’t love yourself when someone else says horrible thing to you part of you is always going to believe them,” she said. “So, then I was like, ‘OK, I don’t want to believe these people. I don’t want to agree with them on any level. And I want to figure out who I am. I want to learn who I am. I don’t want to feel like I’m fragile every time I leave the house because I’m so dependent on what other people think about me. So, I just took a step back, and as Matthew McConaughey, my co-star in Interstellar, would say, ‘I just kept living.’ And, it’s been a really cool journey,” Hathaway said. “I feel like I arrived in a place where maybe not every minute of every day, but way more than I used to, I have a tremendous amount of love and compassion for everyone else—and best of all I have it for myself, which I never enjoyed before.”

DeGeneres then offered the actress more support, saying, “There’s a great phrase: ‘What you think of me is none of my business.’ And there’s nothing wrong with being fragile. I think it’s a beautiful thing.”

[From E! News]

I too think it’s okay to be fragile and for a person to acknowledge that they’ve been hurt by certain comments. But I don’t care for the way Anne is allowing herself to be infantilized by this – she wasn’t some little girl done in by dastardly bullies, nor was she physically assaulted or damaged in any profound way. She was a grown woman flashing her Oscar Biscuit at the premiere of Les Mis and throwing hissy fits when she didn’t get her perfect Oscar dress and some people on the Internet said mean things about her. That’s it. I do agree that Annie probably didn’t “love herself” enough to ignore the haters, but… I don’t know. I’m not really feeling this whole Poor Bullied Annie Hathaway Campaign of 2014.

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Photos courtesy of WENN, Fame/Flynet.

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158 Responses to “Are you buying The Poor, Bullied Anne Hathaway Campaign of 2014?”

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  1. Jenna says:

    To answer your question in the headline:

    LOL. Nope. 🙂

    • Jem says:

      +100000000000000000000000000000

    • Jag says:

      Nope! And she’s making all of that HathaHate come back with a vengeance with the way I feel about her again.

      • MrsB says:

        That’s what I was thinking. Does she think this act is going to endear her to people?? Really?!? But this is the problem with a lot of celebrities – they take a minor problem in their life, which is so small compared to all the crap a “normal” person has to deal with daily – and act like it’s the worst thing ever and we should all have pity for how tough it is for them and then praise them for getting through such a traumatic experience. Give me a break.

      • Sarah says:

        Exactly what I was thinking. How is this going to make people like her again? I was never on the “hate” train, but I did get very, very tired of her. And sorry – a legitimate question of the time was why do people hate her? That’s not bullying. That’s asking a question and one she would do well to figure out before trying to redeem herself. Otherwise, she’s just going to make it worse.

      • serena says:

        Yep, she’s doing it herself. People were trying to forgive ( you know what I mean) and forget, but then she has to bring it back again to play her ‘booh me’ card.

      • Miffy says:

        ‘In hindsight, I may have been a bit full on for everyone’s tastes. But I was just excited. Sorry! Oh me! Teeheehee! But anyway, my new project-‘
        The quote that should have but never will be uttered by Ms. Hathaway.

      • DIANE says:

        How is she in Interstellar? Is she looking for an Oscar nomination, maybe for Best Supporting Actress? Going for the sympathy vote? She seems like she was probably one of the mean girls when she was a teen. She’s finally settled on the Audrey Hepburn waif look, but the talent’s just not there. She’s an okay actress, and that’s about it.

    • Babalon says:

      I’m not buying it either. I am amused by it, though. I can always count on AnnE to really ‘do the most.’

    • Eve says:

      MrsB, very well put, I totally agree.

    • Josephine says:

      I agree. The new campaign doesn’t work b/c it is still a form of self-obsession, which no one really cares for. I never disliked her for her oscar campaign; I disliked her b/c she tried to make the public believe that her oscar campaign was so much more genuine than anyone else’s.

      I also dislike that she is an Ayn Rand follower, which frankly, explains her attitudes.

    • Steve E Wonder says:

      Most of the rest of the world already loves her, but Hathaway just learned to love herself. That is just what the haters need to do. They are envious of her sweet demeanor, looks and talent – all features they obviously do not have. They should build up themselves, not try to jealously tear down someone they desperately wish they could be.

  2. judyjudyjudy says:

    Yes. She was absolutely bullied.

    • Candy Love says:

      Then every celebrity, politician and public figure is bullied and some more then others.

    • littlemissnaughty says:

      Really? Is it bullying if someone annoys the crap out of you and tell them to shut up? She decided to campaign for that Oscar and campaign she did. Hard. It was too much and there was backlash. A lot of it. Backlash is not bullying. I loved her for years but the THAT happened and even I couldn’t anymore.

      • emmie_a says:

        Yeah I hate how people turn negative feedback into bullying. I cannot stand Anne. She annoys me like no other. Is that bullying? No, but she would think it was bc all these spoiled celebrities are surrounded by such ‘yes’ people & live in such a narcissistic bubble that when they hear something they don’t like it’s bullying.

      • holly hobby says:

        Right on. Don’t get me wrong, I was an Annie fan since Princess Diaries but she grated on my nerves during her Oscar campaign. It was everything, talking with a baby voice (“It came true!” Honey, we know what your real voice sounds like so stop), trying to tack in sex trafficking at the very end of her Oscar speech and then saying that’s what she was doing all along when really she wasn’t. The dress drama, the diet drama, the hair loss drama etc.

        I really think, like Samson, once she chopped her hair off, she lost her mind and filter.

    • paranormalgirl says:

      It’s not bullying. The term “bully” is used much too loosely these days. She was criticized. Criticism is not bullying. No one threatened her life or her health or to hurt her. They just didn’t like her, and not liking someone is allowed. Saying you don’t like someone is allowed.

      • Kiddo says:

        Oh good. I don’t like her.

      • Francesca says:

        Thank you! The whole power of bullying is that the aggressor has some kind of real or perceived advantage/power over the victim. She is just human and had her feelings hurt. BFD.

    • deehunny says:

      @judy, I also think she was bullied to a certain extent. She didn’t “bring it on herself” because she was oversaturated and really wanted that Oscar.

      With that being said, she is definitely bringing back the Hathahate by REPEATEDLY bringing it up to outlets. It’s one thing to hear the first story a while ago, and feel a momentary pang of guilt, but it’s another for me to hear it for the third and fourth time. Girl just doesn’t know when to quit.

    • Charlie says:

      I’m not sure if it was bullying, but I don’t remember any celebrity being treated the way she was just for being a bit too annoying. And let’s not pretend it was all in her head.

      • holly hobby says:

        Goop gets a lot of negative comments but that doesn’t bother her. She never deigned to respond to the peasants. Well Annie should buck up too or stop bringing it up.

    • Sofia says:

      Writing comments and giving opinions online is not the same as being offensive is a very mean and twisted way (that’s bullying for me). She is a public person, she gives interviews and therefore anything can be commented on. It doesn’t mean people or right or that she is wrong. It is what it is. She is putting herself in this victim, “oh poor me” position which just reinforces what she was complaining about…

    • bns says:

      You might as well leave this site if you think that talking shit about celebrities = bullying.

      • Sofia says:

        Anyone who works in such a public arena as hollywood (oscar winner!) has to know that media/public react to them in ways they can’t control no matter what they do . A few can, but those know how to work with it instead of against it. If you are uncomfortable with all that comes along with the paycheck (like paps, it is what it is) chose another profession where you are protected from all of this, chose something where you won’t have the need to feel validated by strangers. What annoys me is that she is playing this role as someone who is surprised by the negative opinions of her like this kind of stuff never happens to anyone! And she won an oscar! She should rise above all of this and focus on her successes instead of feeding that not so nice chapter of her life. Are we talking about anything related to her new film? No. And it’s not our fault. Someone should hire a new pr team.

  3. Morgan says:

    I try to feel a little bad for her because it was a lot, but she STILL just annoys the ever-loving crap out of me. When she was on Fallon, I rolled my eyes at like every other sentence.

  4. Jayna says:

    Well, I guess until one of us goes on the internet and sees vicious things said about us and how everyone hates you that we won’t and can’t know how it feels. I think it would really hurt.

    • FingerBinger says:

      I agree ,but she’s been in this business long enough to have developed a thick skin. Then again I still don’t know what she did that was so wrong.

    • OhDear says:

      +[insert number here]

    • MrsB says:

      If it hurts her that much to hear complete strangers criticize her, then she probably shouldn’t be in the entertainment business. That’s just part of the job description.

    • Belle Epoch says:

      There’s an expression: if one person tells you that you have a tail, you laugh. If TWO people tell you that you have a tail, you better turn around and look.

      She could have learned some valuable lessons about how she is coming across. Yes, it would be painful, but it would have helped her realize she is perceived as cloying, fake, and aggressive – all at the same time. Instead she sticks her fingers in her ears and goes LA LA LA LA! really loud and talks about being bullied. There was a REASON.

    • allheavens says:

      @Jayna

      I’m on a social media site and I am very political.

      You would not believe the shit thrown my way on a daily basis. The things said about Anne are mild in comparison.

      People can be very cruel and the anonymity of the Internet only exacerbates that behavior.

      Anne needs to suck it up and stop talking about it because it is not going to change.

  5. aims says:

    No…. she was way to hungry for the Oscar. The acceptance speech and selling out her gay brother for extra credit. Humanity needed a break

    • Chris says:

      “It came true! (said in little girl voice)…..the misfortunes of Fantine….” So much wrong with that acceptance speech. Groan-inducing.

      • Miffy says:

        Oh, Jesus tap dancing Christ.

        ‘It came true!’ Complete with the cradling of the golden phallus.

        I agree that the hate was over enthusiastically shoveled her way and I’d like to feel bad for her because, y’know, I’m a human but holy fudge do I want to meet her in person some day to treat her to the migraine inducing force of the eye roll that little line induced. It was a spectacular eye roll, my masterpiece, I haven’t rolled my eyes since because I’ll never top that performance.

  6. lana86 says:

    dont have an opinion, but her face always creeps me out. Those weird shaped underlined eyes, blood red lips etc. I’m so shallow.

  7. QQ says:

    No, no Gracias, I had two heaping servings of that Last year… I’m still so full

  8. Lux says:

    Eh. Still don’t like her. Her outfit in the first photo is fine but she usually has the worst street style of any celebrity.

  9. Jess says:

    She keeps quoting Matthew M. and I don’t think he can stand her. To be fair, Chastain has been just as annoying lately, running around giving interview after interview about how HARD her life has been (poor, bullied growing up, depressed, dad not around, sister committed suicide, blah blah). Throw them a pity party, it won’t change the fact that Interstellar is not the critics darling they all thought it would be (mid-70s on both metacritic and RT, lol).

    • Hiddlesgirl85 says:

      Umm? Ouch.

    • Evliaoe says:

      Chastian is annoying. She went to Julliard and has connections to get into Hollywood. She is not poor or had to work that hard in reality. She got help from Robins Williams to go to Julliard I think.

      • Nick says:

        She didn’t get help from Robin Williams as in having connections. She won a scholarship that he had. Two different things.

    • Miffy says:

      She did the same thing during the promotional stuff for Alice in Wonderland, kept referring to ‘Tim’ and ‘Jonny’.

      There was a particularly telling interview with her and Helena Bonham Carter where Anne kept talking about the hilarious time they had together and Helena was just sat next to her, staring at the ground and nodding every now and then but saying nothing. I was cringing for her.

    • ella says:

      I was mildly interested in Interstellar, although I’m kind of over MM’s whispery wisdom-imparting voice, until I heard she was in it. Now it’s a definite no.

  10. Milena says:

    She sounds exactly like my cousin, who is a perpetual victim (not in any actual sense, just emotionally). I do think that what Anne said could be helpful for young kids who’re actually suffering from cyberbullying… but recasting herself as a blameless victim is such bull. It’s crazy when people lack the perspective and distance to see themselves as others do – or the maturity to try. Grow up, Anne.

  11. lunchcoma says:

    I feel sorry for her now and felt sorry for her then, but this isn’t the right route to go with publicity. She’s already known for being annoying. She needs to find aspects of her personality that are relatable to other people and play those up if she wants to rehab her image a bit. Bringing it up over and over won’t help anything.

  12. Gina says:

    Get over yourself Ms. Hathaway.

  13. defaultgirl says:

    If EVERYONE is getting bullied, then who exactly is the bully??? Can we erase this word (BULLY) from existence it’s overuse lately is ridiculous. Wait, does that make ME the bully…

  14. Mesia says:

    People on the Internet are unnecessarily mean to celebrities. That being said, she is super annoying.

  15. Lindy79 says:

    After seeing her on Graham Norton last week, even friends of mine who wouldn’t frequent sites like CB (and wouldn’t have been aware of Hattahate 2014) were talking about how annoying and obnoxious she was.

    It also looked like McConnaughey couldn’t stand her.

    • Lisa says:

      I usually defend her. If there’s a name for the people who hate you (Hathahate), that’s got to be disturbing. James Franco is fairly obnoxious and he does not get the same amount of hate and he pretty much checked out during that Oscar ceremony, leaving her to do all the work. So it does smack a little of misogyny to me. On the other hand, she was quite annoying on the Graham Norton show. But so was McConnaughey! She did make me laugh when she punctured that gargantuan ego of his when she said so the smell of you unwashed threatens males of other species? So no wonder he was pissed at her. Neither of them did themselves proud. She is a little boring but her problem is basically that she is too insecure. I can’t get angry at her for that. Everyone can pick that up about her and, to me, she’s just an easy target for bullies.

      • Lindy79 says:

        For me, it was the story about demanding her husband who was on a work call watch a sunset with her and sulking when he didn’t …while AGAIN mentioning the weight loss for Les Mis (seriously, why did she think that was a good idea to tell in public?) and also the interruption of someone else’s story so she could hug Lena Dunham because she was “cold” that brought out my “bitch please” face.

      • lunchcoma says:

        Oh. Wow, Lindy. I think I need to check out this episode online. I occasionally defend her as being a bit irritating but fundamentally harmless, but that sounds like really self-absorbed behavior.

      • Charlie says:

        I thought she was cute on Graham Norton. The gravity story was funny.
        Lena too.
        McConnaughey on the other hand, was incredibly boring. So. Very. Boring. And full of himself.

      • Lisa says:

        Not sure how comments situation works here but just to agree with Lindy79 and Charlie. McConnaughey came off as soooo full of himself. The story she told about tormenting her poor husband at sunset was really really annoying, tbf, she did acknowledge that about herself but, imho, she acted like a 5 year old. It was also extremely annoying when she interrupted Micky Flanagan’s story, that was such an attention grabbing why isn’t the camera on me all the time moment. Mind you I got the vibe that they didn’t get on well together at all – McConnaughey made a point of saying I can’t with the drama queen stuff, and she took a dig at him. If she was feeling uncomfortable, that might have caused her to act out a little bit more, who knows? Again that’s an insecurity thing, most actors are deeply neurotic.

      • Miffy says:

        Coming back to Lisa’s comment, you can’t really compare Hathaway and Franco and call it misogyny. It’s not like they’re each other’s gender equivalents. Franco is obnoxious but owns his obnoxiousness and laughs at it. Hathaway is still trying to pedal herself as really likable via her self-absorption. She lacks the awareness that could save her from this whole mess.

      • Sofia says:

        If you chose a career where you have to put yourself out there you NEED to learn how to deal with insecurity in a more healthy, a less publicly way. Or not fight for stuff like oscars and keep a low profile. If your motivation is public validation… well, you are on the wrong path and asking for trouble. This is also for anyone like politicians, artists, sports people, not just Anne and actors in particular.

    • Lulu says:

      Watched the Graham Norton show that had Matthew , Anne and Lena Durham … God but Anne’s annoying , she even made Lena come off as a less irritating presence , but still weird as shit , Lena told a story I guess it’s in her book too, how she petted her mother’s vagina while in bed together thinking it was a hairless cat…..!! What TMI

      Mathew who I’ve seen on a Graham before , looked off and like Anne was the last person he wanted to do this mind numbing long promotional tour with Even though he was nice to her, got the impression she wasn’t his kind of chick.

      • Lisa says:

        *Wtf was that story about Matthew sexually intimidating a ram? And he throws his baby about ten feet?
        *I feel like shes’s still being blamed for the Oscars and Franco just smugs his way thru it. #cantstandfranco
        *i think her problem is that she acts out when she gets anxious – that’s not something that’s easy to control

    • Steve E Wonder says:

      Anne and Mathew were fun, not annoying on the Norton show. On the other hand, you and other self-haters ought to know annoying. Learn to cope with your jealousy, please.

  16. Jaderu says:

    Being made fun of for being homosexual is bullying. Being harassed and humiliated because of your gender is bullying. Being called horrible names because of your race is bullying.
    People telling you to put your biscuit away and to chill with the “It came true” malarky is not bullying. Most of what was written was just different versions of “I don’t like Anne…this is why”. She wasn’t bullied.
    I’m disappointed in Ellen for going along on this stupid pity party. Ellen actually was bullied before there ever was a thing such as cyber bullying.
    Just stop talking about it Anne. You have talent and people would have forgotten about it by now.

  17. Lurker says:

    That blouse is terrible.

  18. Penelope says:

    I like her as an actress but she was obnoxious about that Oscar from the moment she got nominated straight through to her twee acceptance speech. She needs to learn from the experience and move on. Her pathetic, self-assumed mantle of victimhood is just another cry for attention albeit in a different way.

  19. whatsmyname? says:

    I think that when she keeps talking about this it just makes people remember why they don’t like her instead of feeling sorry for her.

  20. Sisi says:

    Bringing it up and reminding us of how tired we were of her yearlong inyourface campaign every time isn’t going to help her public persona, it’ll just make us not move on, just continue the ugh feeling. Not very clever strategy of her team. Ugh.

    She needs to hook up with McConnauhey’s people on how to improve and renew her brand gracefully, not resume where she left off.

    • Jem says:

      Agree with everything u said. Its like some people just cannot let it go. The more she brings it up and attempts to ‘instruct’ us how to feel about it – Im assuming ‘guilt’ is what she is aiming for – the more she reminds us why we got annoyed with her to begin with!!!

    • Miffy says:

      Sorry, doesn’t just bring it up incessantly, but brings it up under the illusion that anyone should feel guilty about it. She’s constantly bringing it up in the context of ‘It’s okay, guys, I forgive you. I’m a better person for your ugliness.’

  21. Virgilia Coriolanus says:

    Why is she still talking about it? It was two years ago……seriously. No one was calling her a whore, a slut, saying she should die, etc…..people were talking trash about how she became totally needy for that freaking Oscar. And how annoying she was. And seriously–anyone watch her on the Oscar Roundtable session that she did with Brad Pitt, Mickey Rourke, RDJ, Frank Langella, and Sally Hawkins–she came off as annoying and completely full of herself. That’s how she is.

    And she’s a grown ass woman. She cares WAY too much about what other people think about her, and imo, is making this into a bigger thing than it really is. Acknowledge it once, and then ban questions about it. It makes you look pathetic and stuck on it.

    IMO, she’s probably upset that everyone wasn’t going for her ‘aw shucks, ME!’ routine for the whole flipping oscar season.

    • Kiddo says:

      She’s making herself more unlikeable. Time to ignore her.

      • Virgilia Coriolanus says:

        She already gets that from me, lol. I tried to watch ‘One Day’…it was godawful. I’m honestly not sure that Anne can actually act. I think she’s okay, and better than some of her peers. But I do not get excited when she’s onscreen, or I hear she’s in a movie.

        And if you think about it–she’s had a handful of films where she was required to be more than ‘cute’–Brokeback Mountain, Rachel Getting Married, Les Miserables…that’s about it. And maybe Intestellar. So I don’t even know where she’s getting all of this ARTISTE! crap from. And for me, she doesn’t improve any of her movies, dramatic/serious or not. She’s okay, but I never see her as irreplaceable in roles.

        I guess for me she has no charisma. I like certain actors/actresses because they may not be the absolute best, but they always give a good performance in an otherwise shitty/mediocre movie.

    • Jaderu says:

      “IMO, she’s probably upset that everyone wasn’t going for her ‘aw shucks, ME!’ routine for the whole flipping oscar season.”

      This! She’s just pissed she didn’t get away with it.
      If Ellen had been the one that brought it up, fine. (Although I doubt it) But if she had just said “You know it happened and now I’m putting all that behind me, let’s talk about something else” I would have so much more respect for her.

      • Kiddo says:

        She’s pissed people don’t LOVE her. She DESERVED adoration and LOVE for that Oscar, even though she behaved like a disingenuous phony who sacrificed deeply and was surprised by the win. She doesn’t realize her baloney acting is awful and people are on to her schtick.

    • bns says:

      OMG that roundtable. Mickey Rourke looked like he wanted to kill himself. Can’t say I blame him. Everyone at that table was insufferable, except for him and Sally Hawkins.

      • Virgilia Coriolanus says:

        Haha, I liked everyone but Anne and Frank Langella–he came off as kind of a creep towards Anne. But both Rourke and RDJ looked like they wanted to be anywhere but there–especially Rourke. At least RDJ tried to be polite.

      • lisa2 says:

        I don’t think they were insufferable at all. I think Anne was they youngest and out of her depth and Sally didn’t have much to contribute. I remember them asking the group if they googled themselves.. She was one of maybe 2 that said yes. The others there have been in the business a long time. They made their mark before Social Media took over. They have a different perspective and view of gossip. I don’t think they pay attention to it, and I don’t think they let what strangers behind a computer think drive their lives or how they live it. Brad and Robert were the only ones that really know what it was like to be on the cover of tabloids. And I will say for Brad’s stance he has not let the gossip make him do anything nor does he talk about it all the time.

        Anne would do best to stop reading what we or anyone has to say about her.

      • Virgilia Coriolanus says:

        @lisa2
        Anne came off BAD because of that–the googling thing. Because first she said that she didn’t ever–and then when RDJ was the only one who said he did, she changed her answer, when it was *cool* to do so. I think she was nervous, but God. She just kept yammering on and on…..

  22. Leslee says:

    she is the absolute worst. Every movie she is in she ruins. So unauthentic. In my opinion. Can’t wait until she goes away.

    • Lola says:

      Agreed. I don’t know how or why she could be considered a good actress, she’s way too fake.

  23. InvaderTak says:

    Does she not have friends? That will tell her to knock it off? And everyone need a to stop throwing around the bullying card. It is a real problem with real consequences. Stop cheapening it for sympathy.

  24. Molly says:

    All of the Interstellar people seem to be determined to ruin my enjoyment of the movie. Anne being her usual obnoxious, self-absorbed idiot self now wallowing in pity, Chastain running her mouth about opportunities in Hollywood for WOC while she’s been in about 20 movies in the last three years (then invoking Meryl Streep’s name as someone who gets cast too often), Nolan dissing Marvel movies for daring to be fun and entertaining, Matthew McWhatever for leftover douchebagness from last year. All of these people need to take a long break, they are thirsty and irritating.

    • Kiddo says:

      Honestly, from commercial clips, it doesn’t look that good anyway.

      • lisa2 says:

        It really looks so boring and uninteresting. I’m so over Matthew and his everything. I had to turn the volume down last award season because I just couldn’t bare to listen to him anymore. I use to like his voice, but no it makes me cringe.

        I don’t have a bad opinion about Jessica.. I just think she make WAY TOO MANY MOVIES. To me she needs to take a break or stop making 3 or 5 movies a year. I don’t think she has a fanbase that large to support her that much.

    • Jem says:

      Yeah, I have to be honest that I’m turned off to seeing this film because of it’s annoying stars. Struth.

    • Luciana says:

      I wholeheartedly agree. AnnE is as irritating as Jessica Chastain. I said a couple of weeks ago Jessica is pulling a Jude Law. There was a time when Jude was starring every single movie and it was exhausting. She needs to step back before the Hathahate gets her too.

  25. Jonesy says:

    She comes across to me as someone who tries waayyy too hard to be likeable, and always fails miserably. If she’d just shut up for a minute and stop giving a sh** about what everyone else thinks, she’d be so much less annoying.

    • frivolity says:

      Yes. She is absolutely insufferable. The stick up her butt is far bigger and higher than even Paltrow’s. If I ever see her on a talk show, she makes me cringe. She tries so hard to be funny and attempts to get people to laugh along with her, but she is not so they do not. And she is so, so, so phony.

  26. jilliop says:

    To be fair, I didn’t think Hathway’s campaign was that bad compared to other people. Natalie Portman has the most neediest, most pathetic, most undeserving Oscar Campaign. She went as far as lying about doing the dancing work in Black Swan and took credit for that ballerina’s work. Atleast Anne Hatheway would never sink that low. Besides, Anne’s career after her Oscar win is far better then Natalie. Natalie isn’t the one getting roles in movies like Intersteller or great work offers. Natalie is stuck with a kid from getting knocked up by some no-name loser who left his long-time girlfriend for her.

    • Molly says:

      Who cares about Natalie Portman? The topic is Anne Hathaway.

    • Gillian1 says:

      Natalie Portman’s hubby is hardly a ‘no-name loser’ – he’s a major figure in the arts world, with serious and significant achievements that go beyond 97% of any of the celebrities who make it onto this site.

      • Luciana says:

        + 1

        He might be douche in real life – leaving a longtime partner is uncool – but he’s a well known dancer.

      • Lulu says:

        Didn’t she move to France with him because he took over a Paris ballet house or something to do with dance .

    • Likey says:

      I agree Natalie can’t act and didn’t deserve that Oscar. But her husband is not a “no name”; he’s pretty high up in his industry, for what that’s worth. But I don’t think Portman had a choice; she probably had a contract saying she had to protect the commercial interests of the film. The decision to make her out as some ballet genius was probably that of the producers and the production company. The real dancer – Sarah something – was brave – and right – to have come out and made that clear. I think Portman did get that Oscar partly because everyone thought she’d done a lot of the dancing. Turns out most of it was the real, professional dancer’s work.

    • jillop says:

      The reason I mentioned Natalie is because Natalie was mentioned in the beginning part of this article and the author compared Anne’s campaign with Natalie’s. As far as I know, Portman husband was never famous or well known to most people before Black Swan. So I am correct to call him a no-name loser who is a gold digger too. We all know he got the Paris Opera gig cause of Natalie’s connections. Infact, I don’t even think he might still be the director. All he does is follow Natalie around. Being a director of Paris Opera is probably demanding and hard work. He looks too fat and out of shape to be a director of ballet. He is not known outside of the ballet circle. How many people can recognize him on the streets like he is a star? He is a nobody as far as I am concerned.
      Natalie Portman herself has made comments about not being a ‘tool’ in Hollywood so I don’t buy the BS that she was under contract and forced to say she did all the dancing. She was very greedy and hungry for that Oscar. She went as far as lying to get her dumb statue. Anne never lied about her singing or anything to get her Oscar.

  27. nk868 says:

    she’s that annoying “actress” drama chick from high school who is always watching out of the corner of her eye whenever she’s doing anything to make sure you’re watching.

    she never seems natural. she tries too hard to convince us she’s this or that to ever seem like she’s being herself. she says she’s self-conscious and nagged by self doubt, then says she tells her agent about people doubting if she’d be right for a role “just get me in the room” with some cunning determination. i no longer think she’s a good actress. it’s always breathy ann acting as if she’s an actress acting out each role. it’s too forced. she grates.

    she needs to go work in theater where she belongs and piss off

    • meh says:

      As someone who used to work in theater, even they do not deserve to have Anne Hathaway inflicted on them.

      Also, I really can’t see her being much better on stage.

  28. Falkor says:

    Every single person in the public sphere (celebrities, politicians, musicians, etc.) has been sh↑t-talked online. That is the nature of the beast. Precious little fawn actresses with fragile egos are not exempt. AnnE with an “e” is not some innocent young thing unaware of the ways of the world, her con man ex is plenty evidence of that. She can play the martyr all she wants but as long as she uses the backlash to define her, she will never recover from it. People will never forget if she doesn’t let them.

    • Virgilia Coriolanus says:

      I still wonder what went on with her and her ex. I mean, I’d be the dummy that DIDN’T know, but from what I understand, as their relationship went on, he was making TONS of money. They had a suite in the Trump tower. He was giving her a lot of really nice (and not that cheap shit that her hubby’s having her shill for on the rc) jewelry. I mean, was the ex kind of poor when they started, and then ‘all of a sudden’ made a lot of money–that would raise red flags with me.

      But I know that she got off with that one, clean as a whistle. I don’t know how she suppressed it enough so that the TABLOIDS didn’t even talk about it–because if she was anyone else, that stuff would’ve been brought up every time there was any news about her. I didn’t even know that she was with that con man until I read CB’s archives.

      • Falkor says:

        There were plenty of red flags, but she was likely enjoying the extravagance and Anne’s bottom line is Anne. She rode that train to the end of the track and then she hopped on to the next. She’s not wet behind the ears, she’s savvy and experienced. I think she has a big ego (like most in the business) and her reaction to the backlash wasn’t coming from a place of insecurity, so much as a place of anger. I think she’s mad that people see her as obnoxiously false because her expectation is for us to shut up and buy into what she’s trying to sell, no questions asked.

      • Josephine says:

        Her philosophy is that our highest calling is to be utterly selfish and look out only for ourselves. Seriously – she is a devotee of Ayn Rand. So none of her actions surprise me, and it doesn’t surprise me that she figured out a way to escape that situation without liability.

      • Molly says:

        Something from another vanity fair article: Anne and Rafaello were forced to surrender jewelry for auction after his arrest. All were purchased with funds that he stole. One of the items was a watch that was engraved FROM Anne and was given TO Rafaello. So the question is, why was she using money that he stole to buy him gifts? I think she knew more than she let on and just didn’t care. She spent his money, expected him to spend on her. http://www.vanityfair.com/online/daily/2010/09/follieri

    • Falkor says:

      @Josephine: Thank you so, so, so, SO much for that tidbit. That tells me everything I need to know about AnnE with an “e”.

  29. Ellen says:

    So when people tell me that I’m acting annoying, pretentious, and over-entitled, what I need to do is not examine whether I’m actually doing those things but just learn to love myself better.

    Ok. Got it.

  30. Okay says:

    So a few critical remarks = bullying? Okay, sure. She was accused of being disingenuous and it’s clear that she hasn’t taken into consideration that she may have actually been guilty of that. Because every word out of her mouth seems REHEARSED. She tries way too hard to get everyone to adore her and that backfires. She will never learn and will continue to cry about getting “bullied” by the meanies on the internet while she obsessively googles herself.

    • MSat says:

      A few critical remarks? The backlash had its own NAME: Hathahate. I doubt you or anyone else on this site could withstand the prolonged campaign of mean she faced, along with many other actresses.

  31. Katerina says:

    Ugh… Can’t stand her. She’s so annoying and insufferable. She reminds me of that super annoying figure skater Sarah Hughes.

  32. Luciana says:

    I didn’t like her before the Les Mis debacle. I didn’t like her during the Oscar campaign. I don’t like her now. Sorry, AnnE!

  33. Gillian1 says:

    I can understand why Internet hatred can hurt, but I’m surprised that Hathaway keeps on talking about it – surely it would be a wiser PR strategy for her to rise above it? She remains the leading actress of her age group (between J-Law and Chastain), and is likely to have a long career because she is genuinely talented. Having said that, the Interstellar campaign is really grating on me as well…

    • Carrie says:

      The best, really? Meh. She overacts a lot. Chastain is consistently underwhelming. I thought Jennifer L. did well enough in Silver Linings Playbook and deserved to win, considering she had very little true competition, and I enjoy her as Katniss.

  34. Carrie says:

    Should’ve made a joke about how annoying she was a couple of years ago and laughed about how she drove people crazy. Instead she goes off on a tangent about self love and meanies on the internet. Clearly she hasn’t changed or learned anything, still so annoying.

  35. Candy Love says:

    Stephen Huvane is Anne publicist and is also the Publicist to Jenniffer Aniston, Goop and Demi and all of these ladies have had this pity party narrative at some point this is his M.O. Ether he dosen’t like to show his female client in strong light or this is the image they won’t for themselves.

  36. MrsNix says:

    Oh please.

    She has such an odd way of viewing herself. Sweetie, you are a very wealthy and frequently employed actress. You have natural beauty and some acting chops, and you are still young. This attention will ALL be over in 10 years. Totally over. Unless you are REALLY lucky.

    Fame and detractors come with being a very wealthy actress. Self-pity because someone made a list of all the snotty and clueless and “look at me!” crap you’ve pulled (OWS with a sign about wealth inequality…really?) is not oppression or bullying or anything else. You put yourself out there. You cashed the checks. You accepted the free designer duds. You continue to accept high profile film roles. Suck it up or get off my screen. Seriously.

    Poor you, Anne. Poor. You.

  37. Dancinancy says:

    Ella Enchanted was one of my favorite movies (and I was 25 at the time!). But every time she opens her mouth now, I want to throat punch her. I want Princess Mia back. Less Bride Wars/Fantine.

  38. anon33 says:

    THIS TIMES A MILLION!!!

  39. Sara says:

    does that suck for you and your family/friends when something like that happens? absolutely.
    can you do something about it? yes. disappear, get a real job. stay out of the spotlight for ever.

    celebs only want the good sides of fame, free tickets, best table in the restaurant, getting meaningless awards etc etc etc. but oh god when a fans bothers to ask for a picture or people cant stand to see their face 24/7 they loose their sh*t and feel oh so bad.
    being that famous, having soooo many perks and on top of that earning so much money for little work has got to have some downsides.

    either take the heat or get away from the oven.

    also playing woe is me will only make more people angry. i am one of them, before this i just ignored her when it became too much but now i have an intense dislike for her. go away AnnE, we really dont like you.

  40. SAKS says:

    I don’t get why people hate her that much. She is not the nicest but she is far from being the worst.

    Almost every actor/actress who has a chance of winning are really obnoxious during award season, Natalie Portman’s campaign was a hundred times worse and so it has been with Jessica Chastain every time she is nominated (and I like both of them). Maybe Anne was really hurt because of the comments, not just for the actual objective critics, but for the other insults that came with it.

    Yet, this victim attitude is not helping her one bit, like someone said in a comment above, she should have just laugh about it and aknowledge that she was actually annoying. Or should just let it go and just concentrate in her work, as she is actually a good actress.

  41. bns says:

    I always feel like a terrible person when it comes to celebrities because I rarely feel truly sorry for them. People tried the whole bullying angle with Renee Zellweger recently, and I’m just not buying it.

  42. s says:

    This is pathetic..people in the real world actually have problems yet she’s a millionaire moaning that people were mean to her. Get over it, you fool! And I read in the Daily Mail that she “doesn’t read about herself online” but that she just happened to come across a story about “why do people hate Anne Hathaway?” so clearly, she’s a liar as well as being the most annoying person ever.

  43. s says:

    Did she put on weight too? Her thighs look a bit bulky and I hate her hair that short..it looked a lot better long.

  44. serena says:

    First of all, it wasn’t a small group. At all. Second, she’s not getting better, Anne’s still playing the victim part. I’m not saying she did something terrible, she was just annoying as hell. Now she’s less annoying, much less of that twee-ness, but still is at some level.

    None wanted to offend her but I’m positive everybody wanted to yell ‘JUST SHUT UP’ to her (even now).

  45. Truma says:

    well i think its easy to say, whatever grow up blabla its this business. but if you are in this position, its different. no matter how anoying she was, it was too much what people said about her and it went on too long. be anoyed for a week or two, ok, but this went on for months. even today when you look at facebook and no matter which magazine posts a story with her, people acting like they are still anoyed by her. Some people take these celebritys way to serious and personal . the problem is, even when she change that anoying behavior, people will always say, oh shes so anoying. she was gone for a year and still people think shes anoying. People, get over it, you act like Anne Hathaway a year ago!

    • Kiddo says:

      Nah, people were over it. She brought the entire thing back up and is peddling it every chance she gets. It’s clearly not the most important issue of any observer’s life, only hers. But she is in a business where she needs to sell herself to get money from the public, she is doing damage to her own brand, so it behooves her to stop doing what is not working, instead of adding more installments to the same narrative.

    • Falkor says:

      AnnE acts like AnnE a year ago. That’s the issue.

  46. Bess says:

    I heard a minister once tell a tragic story of a teenage girl who was destroyed by comments her peers made online.  The preacher bellowed from his pulpit,  “They turn secrets into gossip, and heartbresks into mockings!” I think Anne felt genuinely sick from hurtful words about her.  I see meanspirited people all the time who are out to “get” someone, and I suppose when you’re famous it can be quite frightening.  I know how Anne feels a little. When I worked at a studio lot in LA 17 years ago, I was a victim of slander.  I don’t like to use the term victim, but I was just that.

  47. Josa says:

    Don’t know if Anne is smart enough to know the difference. But criticism will mean something that she did isn’t right and getting criticized. Referring all criticisms as bullying however, she made them sound like some irrational attacks from others entirely regardless of her own actions, that she is a victim, she did nothing to incite that. That’s what she’s hoping others to believe was what happened.

  48. Likey says:

    She’s utterly self-absorbed and doesn’t know how to pull herself back to give other people (her audience, other actors, anyone else) their own space. It’s that simple. That’s why people can’t stand her. Who starts an acceptance speech with a smug, silly line like “It came true!” What an idiot. Having said that, there’s a fine line between the expression of hatred and bullying and I think Hathaway got the point we’ve all been trying to make. The problem is that she seems to have dug her heels in deeper in self-righteousness instead of bending a bit and learning to rein herself in like a mature adult would do. I think her name stinks in Hollywood and casting directors, producers, directors, and actors are avoiding her. I don’t see her scheduled for projects after the current Alice in Wonderland she’s on right now. And the fact that she’s an Ayn Rand fan makes her that much more repellent to me. Selfish, narcissistic, and self-absorbed.

    • Bess says:

      Okay. I don’t know her personally (do you?) and maybe her choice of words during that particular program could have been better. But, I remember some advice I heard an actor say years ago: “You’re never as bad as they say you are, and you’re never as great as they say you are.” Let me put a twist to that by advising Anne to say, “I’m never as bad as I think I am, and I’m never as great as I think I am either.” I must add, in Hollywood, Humility is a rarity.

      • Likey says:

        I don’t know her personally but most people commenting on her PUBLIC behaviour do not. Humility may be a rarity in their industry but plenty of actors – even those who think they’re all that – know better than to drape their presence over everyone and fill every place/situation/context with the sickening fragrance of their presence. While I’m not filled with intense hatred for Anne, I find her case very interesting as a PR disaster. One thing I notice is that even when she’s thanking others during her award acceptance speeches, it’s still somehow all about her.
        If I were to advise her, I’d just tell her to pull it in. It comes down to good manners and acknowledging that other people do exist, even in your self-perceived universe (this is something most people learn before coming of age). Not some psycho-babble about “not loving myself enough.” She just doesn’t get it. If she learns to make space for others in a genuine way, I think the haters will ease off.

    • Falkor says:

      Most decent actresses/actors who are not humble in actuality can, ya’know, ACT like they’re humble.

  49. Sofia says:

    Some people think no one learns anything in gossip websites, well I think they are wrong because we discuss things and celebrities are just the starting point of conversations about society, education, role models… you name it. It makes us think and maybe reconsider some views we had.

    And Abbicci I gained a new perspective of bullying with what you wrote, thank you!

  50. Jessica says:

    I’m not sure it was about the campaigning. Until Le Mis Anne had been a pretty under the radar celeb for someone with her level of fame. A lot of her weirdness had passed people by. I think the backlash was just people noticing a lot of stuff they previously hadn’t noticed.

    I’ve kind of followed her career since the Princess Diaries, and she is strange. Every year or so she tries out a new public persona that’s clearly, painfully fake. We’ve had America’s Sweetheart Anne, Edgy Anne, Fashion Girl Anne, Fragile Little Girl Anne, Bombshell Anne, Intellectual Anne, SERIOUS ACTRESS Anne, Laid-back Hipster Anne…it’s weird. She tried out a whole bunch of different approaches when she was with the rich con man ex. I guess we’re getting Victim Anne now. It’s not like she’s a mess of contradictions, she’s not all these things at once, or even a few of these things at once. She picks herself a new image, throws herself into it completely, sticks to the script rigidly…and it doesn’t have the desired affect so she goes back to the drawing board.

  51. Erm says:

    She looks so much better with the longer hair. She looks like Audrey Tautou in her Amelie days. And I love love love that her skin is left so naturally pale and not spray-tanned to death.

    But yes, this interview is not the way to make the Hathahate go away. She needs to hire a new publicist, assuming she even has one?

  52. Treehouse says:

    She is not humble. I saw her at a Q&A for Les Mis with others from the movie and she hogged the mike, jumped up for aggrandizing “enactment” of some little nonsense, and altogether acted like a spoiled, self-infatuated starlet. It was uncomfortable, especially when a more talented actress was present and made none of these weird gaffes. Anne came off like a fifteen year old.

    It’s too bad, because I think she’s talented. Didn’t think a lot of her in Les Mis but I think she pulled off Catwoman and those are big stilettos to fill.

    I don’t know what her deal is, and I don’t know why her team is encouraging this apology tour. She just starred in her second Nolan movie; she won an Oscar, she’s married now. Everyone has short memories — just BE someone cool and decent going forward. I’m tired of how-I-am-persecuted-on-the-internet being a talking point. Have you nothing else to say? If it must be addressed, make it one and done: “Yeah, there was backlash, but it was a crazy time in my career and I guess it’s par for the course.” Next question. Grrrr….

    • Gorgonia says:

      yes, I like her as an actress and I agree: her performace as Catwoman was amazing. If only she thought more about acting and giving good performance, and less about being a celeb …

      • Treehouse says:

        Yes! Her Catwoman was completely solid. She needs to play characters with menace and shade. I think that will go over much better than the ingenue stuff.

        Reading through that VF piece last night, I’m starting to think Huvane did an Olympian trick getting her out of the Folliari thing. The fact that we’re talking about AnnE as a internet problem is a lesser evil than talking about her role in his downfall.

  53. Chris says:

    And of course she played no part in the way the general public were reacting to her behavior.

  54. Someonestolemyname says:

    Wow she’s only 31, she’s done a lot with her career. I
    Thought she was older for some reason. She doesn’t look older, it’s just that she’s been around for so long, I just thought she was older.

    She doesn’t seem like a bad person,she just seems a little self absorbed and annoying , but I actually like her, even though I think Emmy Rossum is a much better actress and should be getting more accolades than Anne as an actress.

  55. Gorgonia says:

    I don’t dislike her, even if I’m not a fan, but now she is exaggerating: her behavior is too childish, every adult people in the world should know it’s impossible to be liked by everyone. The problem is she has a sick desire for visibility and this is going to be her eternal weakness.

  56. holly hobby says:

    Annie, stop talking and just make movies. Also install a filter between your brain and mouth. It works wonders.

  57. MSat says:

    We can’t possibly know if the mean backlash hurt her or destroyed her. We’re not her. I also think it’s insincere of people to ridicule her reaction to the hatred and pile on more hatred. No one wants to admit this happened to her, but it did. It was mean and petty and it’s still happening, based on lots of comments here alone.

    Imagine confronting the person who bullied you when you were young and made your life miserable, and having them tell you it never happened and to shut up about it.

  58. Intro Outro says:

    Hathaway left me completely and utterly cold in Interstellar. MM had more chemistry with that robot thing than with her.

  59. Jules says:

    I’m buying it. How she feels is how she feels, end of story. It’s cruel to tell people how they *should* feel. And all that blowback against her was ridiculous—she’s an actress. If you don’t like the coverage don’t read it, don’t listen to it, don’t watch it.

  60. Anare says:

    Saw Interstellar last night. Loved the movie but thought Anne Hathaway was the weak link in the acting. The other actors were fascinating to watch except for AH. Unconvincing performance. Even a couple cringe worthy moments.