The celebrities are described in the international newspapers as ‘young, well-known and apparently no longer willing to live according to the corona measures’. The British newspaper The Guardian has also devoted an article to it, which even ended up in their top 3 best read pieces. “They believe in a conspiracy theory that states that the government is using fear of the virus to control the people,” the American radio station NPR said in an article.
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Famke gets the wind from the front of the BBC. The British broadcaster tells their readers that the singer was ‘previously paid by the Dutch government to encourage young people to obey the rules’, but Jinek couldn’t convey her new theory properly. “It’s not good for influencers to spread such things, it’s not what we can use at the moment,” the BBC continues. “There is a risk that the rules will now be undermined.”
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RTBF, the French-speaking broadcaster in Belgium, describes Famke as ‘the most hated girl in the Netherlands’. But also that it spreads a message that ‘ties in with that of the most skeptical or even conspiratorial movements’. Radio France Internationale describes the # Ikdoenietmeermee action as a ‘gigantic flop’ that would even ‘disappoint fans’.
How Famke went through the dust in the Netherlands can be seen in the video below.
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