Roseanne Twitter Followers Jump More Than 35 Percent After Show Cancellation

Roseanne Barr may have lost her show, but Twitter hasn’t abandoned her.

The star of ABC’s now former hit “Roseanne” has seen her audience on the social media platform balloon more than 35 percent since her infamous, racially-charged tweet suggesting that former Barack Obama adviser Valerie Jarrett is a product of the Muslim Brotherhood and the “Planet of the Apes.”

On the day the tweet was launched — in the early morning hours of March 29 — Barr had approximately 646,000 followers, according to a snapshot from the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine. But as of Monday, June 4, less than a week after the firestorm first erupted, Barr’s following had increased to 878,000, a 35.9 percent gain.

Also Read: Bill Maher Responds to ‘Roseanne’-Inspired Push to Cancel ‘Real Time’ by ‘Explaining Jokes to Idiots’

“The old saying is ‘there’s no such thing as bad publicity’ and this appears to be Exhibit A,” Joe Concha, a media reporter for TheHill told TheWrap Monday.

“I think this shows that many of those who follow her thought she got a raw deal and didn’t unfollow her — when of course she got everything she deserved — and all the press around the show’s cancellation attracted people to her feed to either watch the train wreck or out of simple curiosity,” Concha added.

During that stretch of time, Barr’s fans also launched a Twitter campaign to increase her following, which may have helped fuel the surge.

Let’s get Roseanne to 1 Million followers to show our support !!!!! #DoubleStandardsSuck@therealroseanne pic.twitter.com/AxWCQYqrYG

— ????????????????Amanda Mendez???????????????? (@mandymendez90) May 31, 2018

In a lengthy post last week, the comedian apologized for her remarks saying that she had been on Ambien during the time of the incident.

“Guys I did something unforgiveable (sic) so do not defend me,” said Barr in a now deleted tweet. “It was 2 in the morning and I was ambien tweeting-it was memorial day too-I went 2 far & do not want it defended-it was egregious Indefensible. I made a mistake I wish I hadn’t but…don’t defend it please.”

Since that fateful Tuesday, Roseanne has remained busy on Twitter despite numerous promises to leave the platform and canceled an appearance with podcaster Joe Rogan on Friday. And an interview she did record with her spiritual adviser Rabbi Shmuley Boteach has so far remained unreleased.

‘Roseanne’ and 10 Other TV Shows and Movies That Retroactively Changed Their Continuity (Photos)

  • Sometimes shows and movies write themselves into a corner — hard. That’s not a problem if the series or franchise is pulling the plug for good. But with so many revivals and sequels happening today (not to mention programs that get picked up for an additional season after airing a “fauxnale”) it’s becoming more common to totally retcon (retroactive continuity) plot points to make things work. Here are some famous examples of writers turning back the clock, calling it “all a dream” and just literally pretending like nothing happened.

    Also Read: ABC’s ‘Roseanne’ Reboot Sets Spring Premiere Date

    ABC


  • Will and Grace

    1. “Will & Grace” — The 2006 series finale didn’t leave a ton of room for a revival, what with Will (Eric McCormakc) and Grace (Debra Messing) having grown apart over a couple decades, gotten married and only reuniting in the final moments while dropping their children off at college. So, when NBC decided to bring the beloved sitcom back this fall, it was clear that ending would need to go. And it did within a matter of minutes in the premiere when Karen (Megan Mullally) explains away all that drama as a dream she had. The kids never existed, the partners were out (due to divorces) and everything was back to the status quo. Classic.

    Also Read: Ratings: ‘Will & Grace’ Christmas Episode Jumps Double Digits After Live ‘Voice’ Cuts

    NBC


  • "Roseanne" revival cast photo

    2. “Roseanne” — First Dan (John Goodman) survived a heart attack in the final season, then it was revealed in the series finale that he’d actually died, but lived on in a novel the titular character wrote. Now, with the revival set for this spring (and the announcement it’s including Goodman) we know they are going to need to retcon their retcon. Did that make sense?

    Also Read: ‘Roseanne’ Revival Finally Confirms Johnny Galecki’s Return

    ABC


  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer

    3. “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” — Joss Whedon wants to pretend his first attempt to bring Buffy to life never happened — and so do most fans. When Whedon got the chance to execute his vision properly with the “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” series after bailing on the movie of the same name (based on his screenplay), he basically ignored any part of the film he hadn’t agreed with. Good call.

    Also Read: ‘Buffy’ 20th Anniversary: Sarah Michelle Gellar Gets Nostalgic in Thank-You Note (Photo)

    20th Century Fox


  • newhart finale

    4. “Newhart” — This show was literally, entirely a dream. In the last two minutes of the final episode, Bob Newhart — who’d play Dick Loudon, a Vermont innkeeper, for eight seasons — wakes up in a strangely familiar bedroom. “Honey, wake up, you won’t believe the dream I just had,” he says to Suzanne Pleshette, who played his wife, Emily, on the ’70s sitcom “The Bob Newhart Show.” So that entire wacky show was retconned into never existing and just being a dream of Newhart’s on his previous series. Yeah.

    Also Read: Chelsea Handler, Rami Malek and Bob Newhart Join Television Academy’s Salute to Broadcast Networks

    CBS


  • Klingons

    5. “Star Trek” — Iconic villains-turned allies the Klingons debuted in 1966 as, due to makeup effects limitations, basically guys with tans and goatees. However, in 1979’s “Star Trek: The Motion Picture,” set 5 years after the original series, they received the forehead ridges they’re known for. No one commented on the change in subsequent films and it was taken for granted audiences were supposed to pretend they were always like that. Until 1996, when “Deep Space Nine,’ set 100 years later, confirmed that old school Klingons really did look different during the Original Series era (the explanation was provided in 2005 by “Star Trek: Enterprise.”) But now comes 2017’s “Star Trek: Discovery,” set just 10 years before the events of the original series. This time, the Klingons look nothing like the original or forehead ridge versions with — you guessed it — no explanation given.



  • St ElsewhereNBC

  • 7. “Dallas” — Bobby Ewing (Patrick Duffy) was literally DEAD on this show for an entire season before he was brought back in a very bizarre way. His wife finds him in the shower and suddenly realizes that whole chunk of series was a dream. The was more than a little trippy for fans of the primetime CBS soap.

    CBS


  • Prison BreakFox

  • Charmed

    9. “Charmed” — In the seventh season finale of this long-running WB series about a trio of magical sisters, the girls “killed” themselves off so they could escape their duties as the Charmed Ones. Because the show picked up an unexpected eighth season in the eleventh hour, the writers were forced to find a way to bring them back to the craft. Their solution? Have Homeland Security take responsibility for the cover-up. Works for us!

    Also Read: ‘Charmed’ Reboot in the Works at CW

    The WB


  • Patrick Stewart Logan20th Century Fox

  • deadpool disney fox deal bad news20th Century Fox



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Will and Grace didn’t have kids and Dan didn’t die — basically everything you knew is a lie

Sometimes shows and movies write themselves into a corner — hard. That’s not a problem if the series or franchise is pulling the plug for good. But with so many revivals and sequels happening today (not to mention programs that get picked up for an additional season after airing a “fauxnale”) it’s becoming more common to totally retcon (retroactive continuity) plot points to make things work. Here are some famous examples of writers turning back the clock, calling it “all a dream” and just literally pretending like nothing happened.

Also Read: ABC’s ‘Roseanne’ Reboot Sets Spring Premiere Date

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