Tag Archives: Hated

Ellen DeGeneres says she was ‘most hated person in America’ after ‘devastating’ toxic workplace claims: I ‘had a hard time’ – New York Post

  1. Ellen DeGeneres says she was ‘most hated person in America’ after ‘devastating’ toxic workplace claims: I ‘had a hard time’ New York Post
  2. Ellen DeGeneres Addresses ‘Getting Kicked Out of Show Business’ on Her New Comedy Tour: ‘It’s Been a Toll on My Ego’ Rolling Stone
  3. Ellen DeGeneres Jokes About Getting ‘Kicked Out of Show Business’ After Toxic Workplace Claims: I ‘Had a Hard Time’ PEOPLE
  4. Ellen DeGeneres Says She Got Kicked Out of Showbiz in New Stand-Up Show TMZ
  5. Ellen DeGeneres Is Funny And Candid In Her Return To The Comedy Stage, Talks About “Hard Time” She Had Following Talk Show Controversy Deadline

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Sam Bankman-Fried believes he is one of the ‘most hated people in the world’ as documents reveal his justification for FTX crash – Fortune

  1. Sam Bankman-Fried believes he is one of the ‘most hated people in the world’ as documents reveal his justification for FTX crash Fortune
  2. ‘One of the Most Hated People in the World’: Sam Bankman-Fried’s 250 Pages of Justifications The New York Times
  3. Sam Bankman-Fried’s Parents May Have Been More Involved in FTX Than We Thought Futurism
  4. Sam Bankman-Fried blames friends, colleagues, and lawyers in unreleased document cache CryptoSlate
  5. Sam Bankman-Fried says, ‘I did what I thought was right,’ in leaked docs: Report Cointelegraph
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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John Stamos “Hated” ‘Full House’ & Wanted Out When He Saw Reactions To Jodie Sweetin & Realized Sitcom Wasn’t Like ‘Bosom Buddies’ – Deadline

  1. John Stamos “Hated” ‘Full House’ & Wanted Out When He Saw Reactions To Jodie Sweetin & Realized Sitcom Wasn’t Like ‘Bosom Buddies’ Deadline
  2. John Stamos says he wanted off ‘Full House’ once he saw Jodie Sweetin had people ‘dying laughing’ and realized the child actors were gonna steal the show Yahoo Entertainment
  3. John Stamos Wanted ‘Off’ ‘Full House’ After First Table Read Parade Magazine
  4. John Stamos tried to quit ‘Full House’ so he wouldn’t be upstaged Entertainment Weekly News
  5. John Stamos Almost Quit “Full House” Because The Kids On The Show Were So Talented Yahoo Entertainment
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Tom Holland Says He’s 8 Months Into Year-Long Acting Break, Sends ‘Massive Thank You’ to His Fans After Critics Hated ‘The Crowded Room’ – Variety

  1. Tom Holland Says He’s 8 Months Into Year-Long Acting Break, Sends ‘Massive Thank You’ to His Fans After Critics Hated ‘The Crowded Room’ Variety
  2. Tom Holland hits back at claims he’s taking a year off from acting because of bad reviews for ‘The Crowded Room,’ and says he’s already 8 months into his break Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Tom Holland clarifies 1-year acting break, is already 8 months in Insider
  4. Tom Holland responds to negative reviews of new show The Crowded Room Digital Spy
  5. Tom Holland Says His Break From Acting Wasn’t Caused By Bad Reviews GameSpot
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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‘Book Club: The Next Chapter’ review: Hated it, cover to cover – New York Post

  1. ‘Book Club: The Next Chapter’ review: Hated it, cover to cover New York Post
  2. Book Club: The Next Chapter Review – A Thin But Heartwarming & Entertaining Sequel Screen Rant
  3. ‘Book Club: The Next Chapter’: All the Real-Life Places Diane, Vivian, Carol and Sharon Visit in Italy PEOPLE
  4. Book Club: The Next Chapter stars share book, drink pairing picks Entertainment Weekly News
  5. ‘Guardians Of The Galaxy Vol. 3’ Strong $54M+ Second Weekend; ‘Book Club: The Next Chapter’ Hopes On Mother’s Day – Friday Box Office Yahoo Entertainment
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Reggie “Hated” Donkey Konga And Was Worried It Would Hurt The DK Brand

Update [Sat 7th May, 2022 12:30 BST]: G4 has now uploaded the full interview with Reggie – adding some much-needed context to that line about how much he “hated Donkey Konga”. It turns out, he was just protective and was worried about the music rhythm series ruining the Donkey Kong brand. In the end, though, he admits it sold “reasonably” well.

“I have to tell you, as an executive, I hated Donkey Konga. I hated it. I fought with our parent company. I thought it was going to hurt the Donkey Kong brand. Personally, I didn’t find it a lot of fun to play so I pushed back hard. You know what? We launched it. The first game actually sold reasonably well, but boy I was not a fan.”


Original article [Sat 30th Apr, 2022 02:30 BST]: The former Nintendo of America president, Reggie Fils-Aimé, is currently doing the rounds online to promote his new book Disrupting the Game. If you thought you’ve heard everything he’s had to say, perhaps not.

In a new teaser (that lacks context and is clearly poking fun) for an upcoming G4TV XPlay interview, Reggie can be seen answering some hard-hitting questions. We do hear him say a little bit in this short time frame, but possibly the most shocking (and hilarious) line is the following: “As an executive, I hated Donkey Konga.”

Again, there’s not really much context here, so there’s no need to raise that pitchfork just yet. It’s no doubt G4TV drumming up some excitement for this special interview. Reggie’s new book will be made available on 3rd May. It’s filled with inspiring stories and lessons about his “unlikely rise” to the top.

Keep an eye out for our Nintendo Life review next week.



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NFL Week 18 picks, odds: 49ers take out Rams for playoff berth, Falcons shock hated Saints

Week 18 is here for the first time in the history of the NFL. It’s confusing and perplexing because Week 17 has so long been the finale of the regular season. Having the regular season extend into the middle of January is throwing everything off. The calendar feels weird, my brain doesn’t know how to operate and I’m expecting this weekend to be the playoffs still.

But it’s not! And this is the new reality moving forward for the NFL. Plus it gives me one more week to catch Pete Prisco in season-long picks. 

And the old Week 17 rules apply: you have to handicap motivation but remember that motivation, while it may change a team’s interest in winning a game, does not affect a team’s interest in covering the spread. Proceed with caution.

All NFL odds are via Caesars Sportsbook

NFL Week 18 Picks

Saturday, 4:30 p.m. ET
TV:
 ESPN/ABC | Stream: fuboTV (click here)
Follow: CBS Sports App

Latest Odds:

Denver Broncos
+10.5

This game got Saturday flex status to motivate Kansas City to play a full game. The Chiefs are still chasing the No. 1 seed but need to win or tie and have the Titans lose to the Texans. Andy Reid likes to rest his guys when he can but he also likely wants to hold on to the No. 2 seed and multiple home games. A win gets him to 12-5 and guarantees he can’t fall below the second overall spot. Teddy Bridgewater is on IR so it’s the full Drew Lock show. I think Denver can find a way to sneak through the backdoor but Kansas City is a good bet to win here. A loss would throw an early wrench in the AFC playoff projection. Patrick Mahomes is 8-0 in his career against Denver (6-2 ATS), and the Chiefs are riding a 12-game winning streak against Denver. 

The pick: Chiefs 28, Broncos 20
Props, Best Bets: Nope

Saturday, 8:30 p.m. ET
TV:
 ESPN/ABC | Stream: fuboTV (click here)
Follow: CBS Sports App

Latest Odds:

Philadelphia Eagles
+4

The Eagles clinched a playoff berth last week and Nick Sirianni indicated he’d be willing to potentially sit players, including Jalen Hurts, who he needs to be healthy for the postseason. The Cowboys need a pretty crazy parlay to move up to the No. 2 seed, but the No. 3 seed is definitely in play. And the higher the Cowboys are seeded, the more likely Jerry Jones is to get multiple home games. The other thing for Dallas here is a need to actually look sharp on offense after struggling against Arizona. Stumbling into the playoffs with questions on offense won’t do anything for the mood around Jerry World. Dak Prescott’s been outstanding against division opponents, so unless there’s a massive COVID situation with Dallas or Mike McCarthy intends to sit everyone, I like Dallas in this spot.

The pick: Cowboys 24, Eagles 14
Props, Best Bets: Cowboys -7

Which NFL picks can you make with confidence, and which Super Bowl contender will go down hard? Visit SportsLine now to see which teams win and cover the spread, all from a proven computer model on a 135-96 roll on NFL picks.

Sunday,1 p.m. ET
TV: 
CBS | Stream: Paramount+ (click here)  

Latest Odds:

Jacksonville Jaguars
+15

Wildest stat of Week 18: the Colts haven’t won at Jacksonville since 2014, despite the Jags having one winning season in that entire stretch (2017, of course). This is a very different situation than the last few years, though, because the Colts could lose their playoff spot with a loss to the Jags. If Indy loses, they need a lot of help to get in. Jacksonville’s probably worse than at any point since 2014 — somehow — and it’s hard to imagine the Colts not finding a win simply by feeding Jonathan Taylor. 

The Pick: Colts 24, Jaguars 10
Bets: Nope

Sunday, 1 p.m. ET
TV: 
CBS | Stream: Paramount+ (click here)  

Latest Odds:

Baltimore Ravens
-3.5

Massive game here IF the Jags can pull off an upset of the Colts. If not, both these teams are eliminated regardless of the result. We don’t know whether Lamar Jackson is going to play in this game and Ben Roethlisberger is ripe for a “letdown” spot after winning at home with a sub-3.0 YPA effort against the Browns on Monday. The Ravens are pretty substantial favorites here (-5 as of Friday) but if I’m looking anywhere it’s the under, despite a low total of 41.5. It’s looking rainy and cold in Baltimore on Sunday and neither of these teams is going to take huge shots down the field.

The Pick: Ravens 17, Steelers 10
Bets: Under 41.5

Sunday, 1 p.m. ET
TV:
FOX | Stream: fuboTV (click here)  

Latest Odds:

Minnesota Vikings
-5.5

There’s a decent chance both of these coaches are fired the day after this game, regardless of the outcome. This probably isn’t a great game to bet on for motivation either, considering the playoffs aren’t in play. If I’m backing a team for motivational purposes, I’m probably rolling with Mike Zimmer’s team, given they should have a bigger affinity for their coach. Laying anything more than a field goal with this Vikings team is dangerous, but the Bears’ pass defense is bad enough we could actually see some decent points here if the Bears can manage to produce some explosive plays. I’ll back the over here because Matt Nagy will probably have a YOLO game plan. 

The Pick: Vikings 31, Bears 24
Bets: Over 44.5

Titans at Texans

Sunday, 1 p.m. ET
TV: 
CBS | Stream: Paramount+ (click here)  

Latest Odds:

Houston Texans
+10.5

The return of A.J. Brown has been a huge difference-maker for Ryan Tannehill, with his YPA going from 5.7 to 7.8 when Brown is on the field. The Titans can clinch the No. 1 overall seed with a win here, so they’ll be motivated. The Titans should be feeling amped with the news Derrick Henry — who hasn’t played since Halloween and he still ranks sixth in the NFL in rushing yards! — is likely coming back for the playoffs. Get that top seed and you’ve got to feel you can do some damage, particularly with a defense allowing less than 10 points per game the last four weeks. I’m inclined to take the Texans with a double-digit spread, but there’s definitely a chance the Titans just get loose in the run game and the Texans can’t come back. Mike Vrabel’s shown a willingness to squat on small leads against bad teams and Davis Mills has looked sharp. 

The Pick: Titans 24, Texans 14
Bets: Texans +10.5

Sunday, 1 p.m. ET
TV:
FOX | Stream: fuboTV (click here)  

Latest Odds:

Detroit Lions
+3.5

Jordan Love versus Tim Boyle. Feel the energy. The one thing that sort of sticks out with Packers -4 here is Aaron Rodgers has said he and Davante Adams are playing. I have a hard time believing it, but in the event the starters DID play, Green Bay would be like a 14-point favorite. The Lions will play hard and could get Jared Goff back, so it’s a little dangerous to go against them playing against backups. These teams are already a combined 19-12 to the under on the season and with backups playing we could see pretty light scoring, even if the defenses aren’t exactly “stout.” I’m kind of intrigued by Love in this spot but expect the Lions to keep it snug.

The Pick: Packers 21, Lions 17
Bets: Pass

Sunday, 1 p.m. ET
TV:
Fox | Stream: fuboTV (click here)  

Latest Odds:

New York Giants
+7

Joe Judge went on an unhinged rant while answering a press conference question on Sunday after the Giants’ loss, talking for 11 minutes and detailing multiple potential fabrications. Bill Barnwell and I did a full one-hour podcast about it if you’re interested, but the primary takeaways are that Judge gets multiple calls from multiple former players every week who want to come back and play for the Giants for less money and multiple to-be free agents who are “begging” him to come back next year. He also side-swiped Ron Rivera and WFT in the presser, talking about players who got in a fistfight and referring to the team as a “clown show organization.” On Wednesday, Judge backed off it, claiming he wasn’t talking about Washington. The only other team he could be referring to was the Rams, but their fistfight happened *while Judge was coaching* so it’s not possible he knew about it by the postgame press conference. Rivera is well aware, the Giants are shorthanded and I think we see Washington run it up on them.

The Pick: WFT 24, Giants 6
Bets: WFT -6.5

Sunday, 1 p.m. ET
TV: 
Fox | Stream: Paramount+ (click here)  

Latest Odds:

Cleveland Browns
-6

No Joe Burrow, no Baker Mayfield. The Bengals are probably going to rest just about everyone despite still technically being alive for the No. 1 seed. It’s the smart move — they’d need like a 100-1 parlay to hit in order to leap up to the top of the AFC standings. By resting Burrow they basically give him a much-needed bye (Burrow even said he appreciates the mental break) instead of forcing him on the field just to end up in the same spot. The No. 3 and No. 4 seeds are largely negligible unless some insanity happens in the first two rounds of the playoffs.  

The Pick: Browns 17, Bengals 10
Bets: No

Sunday, 4:25 p.m. ET
TV: 
CBS | Stream: Paramount+ (click here)  

Latest Odds:

Buffalo Bills
-16

Buffalo has to win here to take the division crown, otherwise the Bills would need a Patriots loss to the Dolphins to capture the AFC East. Winning shouldn’t be a problem with the Jets being as bad as they are — the question is how aggressively will the Bills use their starters here. Given they played Josh Allen some and blew out the Dolphins in Week 17 last year, I’m leaning on them being willing to run up the score against New York at home in a game they really, really want to win. I took the Bills over 10.5 wins preseason pretty aggressively, so I’m considering a hedge on the Jets ML here. Sean McDermott likes to go kind of big in these spots — no chance you can back the Jets.

The Pick: Bills 41, Jets 10
Bets: Bills -16.5

Sunday, 4:25 p.m. ET
TV: 
CBS | Stream: Paramount+ (click here)  

Latest Odds:

Tampa Bay Buccaneers
-8

The Cowboys game on Saturday will matter for this game — if the Eagles somehow win, the Buccaneers will be staring down a No. 2 seed and multiple home games. Tampa already dispatched of the Panthers two weeks ago in a 32-6 road blowout. It’s borderline shocking to see this line at Bucs -8, especially when the Buccaneers don’t plan on resting their starters in the final week of the season. The number stinks real bad here, so bad that, as bad as the Panthers have been, I’m going to back them trying to go out with a mild effort in the wake of Matt Rhule catching a ton of heat. Also — the Bucs have been blanked and nearly lost to the Jets in the last three weeks. They’re banged up as you can be and won’t be chucking it around.

The Pick: Buccaneers 21, Panthers 14
Bets: Nope

Patriots at Dolphins

Sunday, 4:25 p.m. ET
TV: 
CBS | Stream: Paramount+ (click here)  

Latest Odds:

Miami Dolphins
+6.5

The Patriots’ history with the Dolphins on the road late in the year isn’t good. But this might be a pretty big game for Bill Belichick — if the Pats lose this game, they could fall to the seventh seed, which would mean a road game against the Chiefs in Wild Card Weekend. So the Pats are motivated for that and, of course, for the division. A full touchdown with an aggressive defense at home is just too much in this division matchup. Probably leaning under on this game at anything above 40.

The Pick: Patriots 17, Dolphins 14
Bets: Under 40

Sunday, 4:25 p.m. ET
TV: 
Fox | Stream: fuboTV (click here)  

Latest Odds:

Atlanta Falcons
+3.5

The Saints are the way more desperate team here, so they make sense as an obvious play. But they’re not … good. Taysom Hill and this offense can’t generate much of anything. The Falcons are a bad football team and finally eliminated from playoff contention. Atlanta’s been blasting bad teams and losing to good teams by a ton — the lone exception is the victory earlier this year over the Saints. The Falcons are going to care about this game because they can help knock their most hated rival out of the playoffs.

The Pick: Falcons 21, Saints 17
Bets: Falcons +4.5

Sunday, 4:25 p.m. ET
TV: 
Fox | Stream: fuboTV (click here)  

Latest Odds:

Arizona Cardinals
-6

The Cardinals are coming off a huge win but this might very well be Russell Wilson’s last game with the Seahawks. Arizona is playing for the division, but Russ is def playing to remind everyone how valuable he is when the offseason trade rumors get going. The under is 4-1 in Cardinals/Seahawks games since Kliff Kingsbury was hired, and while we saw the Seahawks light up the Lions at home last week, it seems less likely they just open things up against this Arizona defense. The Cards may very well win this game, but it’s kind of tough to imagine the Seahawks just going away with this big a spread.  

The Pick: Cardinals 24, Seahawks 21
Bets: Seahawks +6.5

Monday, 4:25  p.m. ET
TV: 
Fox | Stream: fuboTV (click here)  

Latest Odds:

Los Angeles Rams
-4.5

Massive, massive game for both teams. The Rams can win the NFC West with a win over the 49ers, regardless of what happens with the Cardinals (although they can still win the division with a loss, if Arizona loses, too). The 49ers are in a similar position with even higher stakes: a win guarantees Kyle Shanahan’s team a playoff berth. San Francisco can still get in with a loss and a Saints loss, but that’s leaving way too much to chance. These teams could also simply tie to get what they want — a SF/LAR tie would end up with the Rams winning the division and the 49ers locking in a playoff spot regardless of what happens with the Cardinals and Saints. I wouldn’t bank on that being a plan, but it’s still possible. The 49ers have had the Rams’ number the last few years and I’m getting more than a field goal, which makes this a no-brainer for me.

The Pick: 49ers 24, Rams 21
Bets: 49ers +4.5

Sunday, 8:20 p.m. ET
TV: 
NBC | Stream: fuboTV (click here)  

Latest Odds:

Las Vegas Raiders
+3

The other potential tie situation in play that people are all worked up about. If the Jaguars beat the Colts (the part of this we’re all ignoring), the Raiders and Chargers could take knees for 60 minutes. Even if the Colts do lose in Jacksonville, the NFL would never let it happen. And the players would never be willing to just take knees for four quarters. We should get an old-fashioned Sunday night shootout between Justin Herbert and Derek Carr. Derwin James might be the key here — he’s gotten in full practices so far this week so is tracking to be good to go. If the Chargers are less than a field goal, I want them, otherwise I’d lean the Raiders. It should be a close, high-scoring game.

The Pick: Chargers 34, Raiders 31
Bets: No

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India’s Farmers Call Off Yearlong Protest Against Hated Farm Laws

NEW DELHI — Harminder Singh said he was going home.

“This is proof of unity,” said Mr. Singh, 23, overlooking a group of farmers dancing to Punjabi tunes and others helping themselves to spoonfuls of milky rice pudding as the news came in.

After a sustained protest that forced one of the country’s most powerful leaders into a rare retreat, India’s farmers said on Thursday that they were ending their action, more than a year after they laid siege outside New Delhi in response to farm laws that they feared would destroy their livelihoods.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi stunned the nation last month when he announced that his government would repeal three laws that had been passed in September 2020 in an effort to overhaul the country’s struggling agricultural sector. At the time, he urged the farmers to go home, but they did not immediately do so, vowing to wait until the laws were formally done away with. Last week, Parliament made that happen, signing off on the repeal without debate.

The protesting farmers had other demands, and on Thursday they said Mr. Modi’s government had agreed, at least in principle, to discuss and resolve the major ones, including a countrywide law guaranteeing minimum prices for crops and a withdrawal of tens of thousands of charges filed against demonstrating farmers.

They were also seeking compensation for the families of people who lost their lives during the difficult conditions of a year of protests, such as from exposure to extreme temperatures, heart attacks and Covid-19.

“It’s a complete victory,” said Ramandeep Singh Mann, an engineer-turned farmers’ rights activist, wearing a pink turban. Yet he acknowledged that questions remained about whether the government would meet the additional demands, and who would be part of the government committee to discuss the guaranteed minimum prices. “In every movement, you don’t get everything,” he conceded.

Mr. Mann added that the fight for farmers’ rights was far from over, though the protest had been called off by farming unions and a majority of those involved would start returning to their villages as of Saturday. Mr. Mann said that some would continue to camp at the site until Jan. 15, when farmer organizations would gather once again to deliberate on the future of the movement. For now, he said, 85 percent of the people would start packing up and leaving.

“This is a long struggle, and we are capable of renewing our protest once again if needed,” he said.

The movement may have succeeded in calling attention to the desperation unfolding on India’s farms, but the battle is half won, experts say. Serious problems remain with India’s agriculture system, which incentivizes farmers to grow too much of the wrong kind of crops. Both sides recognize that something has to be done.

Devinder Sharma, an independent scientist and agricultural expert based in the northern city of Chandigarh, said the market-friendly laws brought in by Mr. Modi last year were described as an “agricultural revolution.” But, he said “the markets have never given farmers a rightful income. The market edifice we have created as an answer hasn’t worked anywhere in the world.”

At Singhu village, the main protest site in New Delhi, where farmers have camped through winter rains and sweltering summer heat, the mood was both triumphant and cautious.

Tractors fitted with loudspeakers blared songs of victory as a small section of farmers sat on the ground holding posters demanding guaranteed prices and justice for those who were mowed down in a horrific incident in the state of Uttar Pradesh.

Satnam Singh, a farmer wearing chains and locks across his chest in a display of protest, said he was going nowhere until the government decided to bring forth the law guaranteeing crop prices. “The protest is not over,” said Mr. Singh, 28, who said he had given up food for the last few days along with five others. “We will take this protest forward even if others return.”

Mr. Singh and his group of farmers pointed to the locks holding their chains. “MSP is the key to this protest’s end,” they said, using an abbreviation for minimum support prices.

Muhammad Jahangir, a 26-year-old student, appeared deeply suspicious of the government’s promises, saying committees were a way for Mr. Modi and farming unions to lead the protest movement astray. “Committees have never benefited farmers,” he said. “The farmer leaders want to move on to fight elections. Who cares about the farmers?”

Harminder Singh, the 23-year-old farmer, said he was proud that the movement had achieved what it set out to do in the first place: getting the laws repealed. “We will come back if we are asked to return,” he said.

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Oculus Quest 2 Took Me On A VR Space Journey And I Hated It

Even though I try my best, I don’t like anything. I travel only when forced to, I experience new things only when obligated, I adapt only when there’s no other choice. I don’t live a completely joyless life — you don’t know pleasure until you’re seated at a restaurant next to a couple having a rippling fight, close enough for you to hear every word of it — but it would be fair to say I take less pleasure from the wonders of the world than the average person.

But of all the things I don’t like, the top spot goes to the moon. God, how I hate the moon. I know it’s “Earth’s only natural satellite,” but FUCK the moon. It’s so bossy — always telling tides when to ebb and flow, turning perfectly normal people into werewolves, giving me my period. Just a quick glance at that stupid hunk of cheese in the sky and I’m muttering to myself about how much I hate it, along with the stars, the sun, the planets, the solar system, and pretty much everything else that’s out there.

I’m not a psychologist, but if you ask me, my aversion to space started in grade school, when we had to go to the planetarium at the science center and the girl I got paired up with bit my arm while we looked at the stars. I only went to sleepaway camp once, in the sixth grade; I didn’t want to, but my parents said it was mandatory. “You have to learn to be outside,” my mother told me, after 12 years of not allowing me to go outside. But it wasn’t being outdoors that I hated — it was that I was in a place so remote that I could look up and see every twinkle in the sky, every mocking gaseous spheroid. It made me feel like I was bound to be crushed by the universe. It was bad enough to feel insignificant as a human being on Earth. Why did I need the added burden of feeling insignificant on a celestial level?

Working from home for over a year did not, surprisingly, make me more amenable to the vastness of space. (I also hate the desert, and the endless expanse of the ocean makes me feel nauseous.) I like my apartment. I don’t mind being home. But I’ve started to notice that more and more normies are trying to find a way to go to space. Even Jeff Bezos, a man who can literally have anything and everything he wants here on Earth, is willingly traveling to space in a few weeks. (I can personally only hope that he doesn’t return so that I never again have to be tempted by two-hour free delivery for a $1.99 egg of glow-in-the-dark Silly Putty.)

People talk about space with a quiet awe that’s always made me feel like I’m missing out. So in the pursuit of being less of a space coward, I contacted someone at Facebook and asked if they’d send me the Oculus Quest 2, a VR entertainment set that allows you to play video games, watch movies, or, in my case, try out a few space simulations. The Oculus comes with a clunky headset, two joysticks, and arguably very few instructions. Over the course of a month, I logged on, strapped in, and prepared myself for my journey to nowhere. Not to spoil the story so quickly, but I hated it.

The Oculus offers several apps that replicate the experience of space travel. I started with Space Explorers, a series about NASA astronauts, which I watched in small bursts to get comfortable. But comfort never came. Turning my head and seeing someone placidly float by gave me heart palpitations. Then I tried Mission: ISS, which let me wander through the International Space Station in zero gravity. I didn’t love that either — VR headsets are a wonderful way to experience car sickness in the comfort of your own home — still, I could manage. But then I’d turn my head, see the glowing, terrifying orb that I live on (aka Earth), and scream like someone was stabbing me, rip the headset off, throw it in a corner of my apartment, and hope it would burst into flames.

While it’s very clear I will never be a NASA candidate, I did want a deeper understanding of what exactly was wrong with me. I spoke to several experts to try to understand my phobia and hopefully get to a place where I’m not plagued with anxiety when I look up at the stars.

Kelley Slack, a personality assessor who used to be contracted by NASA, told me that the testing to become an astronaut is rigorous and meant to separate the wheat from the chaff when it comes to who can go to space. “[Astronauts] go through a two-hour psychiatric interview and a two-hour interview with psychologists,” said Slack, who now works at Birkman International, a behavioral and occupational assessment company. During the NASA interviews, each candidate is asked the same questions in the same order, and the psychologists consider any possible diagnoses. Those with mental health conditions — claustrophobia, for example — are unlikely to make it into the great unknown.

“The other half is picking the people who are most suitable for going,” Slack said. Candidates are put into small teams and placed in a field — “there’s a pecan grove on Johnson Space Center” — and tasked with various exercises to demonstrate how they’d work together in a team. “Do we think this person can go into space and be healthy?” Slack said. “Can they adapt well in space? Can they work well with their teammates? How will they do in an ICE — isolated, confined, extreme — environment?”

From there, the astronauts picked to go into orbit make contingency plans for things that could happen while they’re away. One astronaut’s mother died while he was up there, Slack told me. “There was a plan for that already in place, including who would tell you that kind of thing,” she said. This I can’t fathom; I’ve had a hard enough time being separated from my family on Earth, never mind a rocket ship ride away.

I told Slack how much I hated space, about my inability to even handle a virtual version, and that the idea of a vast nothingness was my worst nightmare. “I can imagine,” she said.


Kelsey Wagner For Buzzfeed News

Yet humankind is still trying to get to Mars. NASA is investigating the possibility of water existing there, even though it is made of fucking lava, and Elon Musk is trying to explore the possibility of “making humanity multiplanetary.” But that trip would be much, much longer and far more complicated, both technologically and psychologically. On that journey, Earth would become not the threatening, enormous glowing orb I saw in the Oculus, but almost nothing at all, just another dot in the sky. This presents a whole other set of problems for some potential astronauts. “One thing that concerns us about people going to Mars is what’s called the Earth-out-of-view phenomenon,” Slack said. “The most favorite activity of astronauts is to look at Earth and take photos of Earth. So how’s that going to work?”

Slack seemed to be empathetic about my fear of space, but she was still hopeful I could get over it. “You’re standing on the threshold of the ship and you have to take that first step out,” she said. “That’s gotta be terrifying.”

“I believe in you,” she added, which made one of us. After speaking to her, I made another attempt to launch myself into space with the Oculus. Again, I only lasted 10 minutes. The sheer sight of an astronaut gently drifting toward me, their leg a foot from my head, made my heart rate jump so high that my Apple Watch asked me if I needed an ambulance.

Slack knows what it takes to go to space, but she’s never been herself, so she can’t speak to the appeal of actually being there. So I also called Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield and begged him to tell me why he likes it. Much of his career has been spent talking to children about the wonders of space; I can’t imagine talking to me was much different.

“I don’t get it,” I told him. “It just stresses me out. What do you see in it?”

“How ‘bout this,” he said. “Imagine if, in the last hour and a half, you’d seen the entire world. You’d been around it once.” He described his own trajectory around Earth, a trip he’s made more times than I’ve been to the dentist. “You’ve seen Ireland and then all of Europe and the Alps. You cut down across the Arabian Sea and right across India and down across Malaysia, and you skirted the edge of Australia and you crossed the coast in 30 minutes. Imagine if that was rolling out in front of you like this kaleidoscope carpet.” I imagined it along with Hadfield, those enormous expanses of land, some filled with people I care about. It sounded sublime, to glide above literally everyone.

“What did you do in the last hour and a half?” he asked me. I shifted in my chair so that the buttcheek that had fallen asleep could take a break. “I’ve done things,” I said.

Hadfield is a retired astronaut, but I wondered if he should pivot to doing space PR professionally. Talking to him was, frankly, the closest I got to being convinced that it was good for anything at all. “It’s way beyond beyond. It’s profound. I don’t know if you like the Sistine Chapel or the Taj Mahal or the redwood forests, where you walk into a place and you feel overawed with the import of the beauty that surrounds you, the immensity of it and the age and intricacy of it,” he said. “That’s how you feel all the time up there.”

Natural majesty does indeed sound breathtaking. But I suppose what really bothers me about space is that, ultimately, it’s isolating. You’re basically alone up there. Stillness doesn’t settle me; it makes me panic. Not being able to hear ambient noise — music from someone else’s headphones, a stranger screaming, a toddler laughing, a traffic jam, anything to alert me that humanity is near — makes me feel dread. Maybe after the year we’ve all had, I’m not interested in a type of exploration that makes me feel alone in a brand-new way. Who needs to be in orbit when I already feel like I’m on the moon, waiting to come back down to Earth?

Hadfield reminded me that I’ve actually been alone for years. “It may stem from a fundamental fear of losing people or getting hurt or getting lost. Your family is in Canada. You’re in New York. You’ve found a way to cope with it,” he said. “The best you can be is touching someone else, but you’re seldom touching someone else. You’re always separate. The real question is: How big is that separation?”


Kelsey Wagner For Buzzfeed News

After talking to Hadfield, I tried the Oculus again, hoping I was finally cured. I walked into Spheres, produced by Darren Aronofsky and narrated by Millie Bobby Brown, which, sure. But the experience, which is vaguely interactive but mostly a horror show of aurora borealis, overwhelmed me so much that I could only stand among the shooting stars for a few minutes before I again let out a guttural scream and almost stepped on my cat while trying to avoid VR space death. When the planets literally aligned in front of me, I had to hit them with my hands to send them into orbit. I threw the Oculus back under my bed, treating it like a monster that goes bump in the night. I knew I needed more help.

I called John Mongiovi, a Manhattan-based hypnotist who works with people on phobias and habits, from fear of flying to smoking and, I guess, hating the moon. Surprisingly, there’s little data around whether hypnosis cures swarthy women of their fear of space. But hypnosis has been shown to be effective in treating smoking cessation, PTSD, and disordered eating. “I’ve never helped someone with this phobia before,” he told me when I arrived at his office a few days later. “I don’t mean it to laugh, but it’s really unique.”

He asked me if there were other things that made me feel the way space does, and I immediately thought of plane travel. In the before times, I’d usually fly two to four times a month, but I never got used to it and have never been able to look out the window without feeling disoriented. I hate seeing nothing but the horizon. Similarly, I can tolerate a forest, but I’d rather not. The ocean is fine if I’m standing on the beach, but if I’m on a boat, out in the middle of nowhere, I feel incensed and spooked. I began talking about my other pressing anxiety: how I haven’t seen my family in 17 months.

Hypnosis feels like particularly intense guided meditation. During our session, I lay down and closed my eyes while Mongiovi sat next to me, delivering a raspy monologue into my ear. He gave me some instructions to follow on my next Oculus jaunt. “When you put that headset on, notice what takes place in the body. Notice some of the images that you remember from that experience,” he said. “Imagine the vastness. No beginning, no end. Nothing but space. Feel your back on the couch. When they allow you to look through the window and you see the tiny little Earth, remember where you put the VR headset on. Notice your breathing.”

Then, unexpectedly, Mongiovi coaxed out a long-forgotten memory of the swim classes I used to take in the deep tank at our local pool. The water there was darker than that of the other tank, so I couldn’t see clear to the bottom. I always felt like I would drown, even though I could swim. I told Mongiovi about how I would cling to the edge of the pool, eventually lifting myself out, and thinking, Fuck this. I don’t need to dive for rings like a dolphin.

Mongiovi asked who would be there for me after swim lessons, and I told him it was my mom. “I want you to imagine your mom at her most encouraging, positive, if these are words that can define her,” he said. I laughed, mid-hypnosis, instead. “Not so much,” he said.

Even without the insight of a specialist, the psychology of why I hate space isn’t that hard to figure out. I don’t like feeling out of control. I don’t like feeling insignificant. I don’t like feeling like I could float away and die. I’m not interested in learning new things about the universe, because what I know so far is depressing. I’ve been apart from everyone — most of my friends, all my colleagues, my entire family — for more than a year, and that won’t change soon. When you’re sad, everything feels like a metaphor, and this began to feel like one too. Space just reminds me that my despair means nothing in the grander scheme of things.

But Mongiovi did remind me that, back then, I got myself out of the pool. I clung to the edge on my own. I could float; I never drowned. I knew how to save myself every time. “Hold on to the edge of the pool,” he said. I repeated it to myself for days. “Hold on to the edge of the pool,” I said to myself on the subway. “Hold on to the edge of the pool,” I whispered to myself at night while I thought about the Oculus tucked under my bed.

The next day — with the help of a patient friend, who was there to remind me that I was on Earth and not out there in the great big nothing — I put on the headset one more time. I stepped out onto the space station, holding the VR space boat with one hand. “I hate this!” I screamed. “People need to have more natural fear about things! They need to respect the boundaries of what’s necessary to know!”

I started to lose my grip on the space station, rolling backward even though my feet were firmly planted on the ground. “I am in FREE FALL!” I yelled at my friend. But I stayed. I even flew around with a jet pack. I tried to admire the Earth, or the facsimile offered by the Oculus. I felt dizzy and hateful, but I did it. After a half-hour, with only a few short breaks, I pulled the headset off. I was drenched in so much sweat that my makeup was dribbling down my chin. It was a miserable experience; I have never hated the endless expanse of space more. But I made it. I held on to the edge of the pool. ●

This story is part of the BuzzFeed News Travel Week series.

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