wrote in the five-part thread. “Sometimes they worked as jokes in my head and I was dismayed to see how they read on screen.“In the past, I’d usually leave bad tweets up just so they could be dunked on.
At least that way they could lead to smart replies and even advocacy. Deleting them felt like whitewashing a mistake,” he continued. “But I think that practice may have given the impression I stand by every failed joke I’ve ever posted here.
Not at all!”Presumably, he was referencing a now-deleted 2014 post that read, “Nothing sadder than a hot person in a wheelchair,” which caught the ire of Twitter users in 2018 and led to him expressing “regret” after a “public flogging.” And in 2015, he joked about a “Star Wars” fan — who had terminal.
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