Politics

Hugh Grant says hate actually is all around as he tweets comments from MailOnline

Hugh Grant re-purposed a line from the hit rom-com Love Actually to highlight the hatefulness on display in the MailOnline’s comment section.

The actor and activist re-tweeted The DM Reporter, which circulates the worst of the Mail, saying “If you click on the link I’ve got a sneaky feeling you’ll find that hate actually is all around”.

Dame Sharon White

Readers had been commenting on a piece about John Lewis, which came under the stewardship of Dame Sharon White last week.

In her opening speech she told staff that the retailer may be forced to shut stores and cut jobs to survive the “most challenging period” in its history, comments which didn’t go down well with certain people, who called her a “PC appointment” that will “cripple the brand”.

The DM Reporter tweeted the comments, saying “at some point we’re going to have to address the embedded racism that exists among a large percentage of the Daily Mail readership.

“Case in point; here they are triggered into fury over the suggestion that a black woman could get a job without political correctness.”

The tweet has garnered thousands of interactions since it was posted this weekend, with Grant contributing an additional healthy bump.

Spoof election video

The Conservatives came under fire during the General Election last year after they used a video of Boris Johnson emulating a scene from Love Actually by silently holding up Brexit-themed messages to a woman at her front door after pretending to be a carol singer.

Grant, who played the Prime Minister in the movie, quipped about the amount of money spent on it, wondering how much of that was Russian – after revelations of huge donations to Johnson and the tory party from Putin cronies that could explain why they have sat on the Russian interference report until after the election.

The actor also noted the absence of a key card in the classic movie scene that referred to telling the truth.

Hugh Grant told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “I thought it was quite well done, very high production values, but clearly the Conservative Party have an awful lot of money. Maybe that’s where the [Russian currency] rubles went.

“But I did notice that one of the cards from the original film that he didn’t hold up was the one where Andrew Lincoln held up a card saying, ‘Because at Christmas you tell the truth.’

“And I just wonder if the spin doctors in the Tory Party thought that was a card that wouldn’t look too great in Boris Johnson’s hands.”

Related: Ireland hails the end of right wing domination as exit polls come in

Jack Peat

Jack is a business and economics journalist and the founder of The London Economic (TLE). He has contributed articles to VICE, Huffington Post and Independent and is a published author. Jack read History at the University of Wales, Bangor and has a Masters in Journalism from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

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