I don’t want to say charm, but it gives you an opportunity to be someone that you’re not in terms of a persona. “The culture of Twitter operates that way. “I do have a Twitter parody account that operates under a veil of a persona and I have made blatantly racist comments under that persona,” Znidarsic-Nicosia said.
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The account was deactivated later the same day.īut on Tuesday she revealed her online identity before a room full of reporters at the behest of her lawyer. In the ensuing days, Znidarsic-Nicosia denied being associated with the account in a brief interview with CITY last week. Nicholas Nicosia and his wife, Mary Znidarsic-Nicosia.
Jones intends to sue the city for being made to attend a party at the East Avenue home of Dr. Firefighter Jerrod Jones, right, and his lawyer, Nate McMurray, during a news conference on the steps of City Hall on Aug.The account, which went by the handle and operated under a variety of usernames, including “Colonel Nathaniel Sanders,” had been active since November 2021 and routinely trolled Black people, elected officials, and journalists, often in a voice that mimicked Black Vernacular English. The image was that of a bust of a “Smilin’ Sam from Alabam’ The Salted Peanut Man,” a Black caricature piggy bank that Znidarsic-Nicosia said was on display in her home.
While she did not refer to the account by name, even when pressed by reporters, she acknowledged that one of the profile photos used on the account was hers. They said the event was intended to clear their names and restore their reputations. Nicholas Nicosia, and their lawyer staged at a Hilton Garden Inn in Pittsford. Mary Znidarsic-Nicosia admitted that she was behind the social media account during a news conference that she and her husband, Dr. The wife of a prominent Rochester couple accused of hosting a racist Juneteenth parody party at their East Avenue home acknowledged Tuesday that she ran a Twitter account notorious for its racist posts. 23, 2022, that they said was intended to defend themselves against allegations of racism and to restore their reputations.
Nicholas Nicosia at a news conference on Aug.