THE
BLUE &GRAY
THE UNIVERSITY OF MARY WASHINGTON STUDENT NEWSPAPER
October 26, 2017
VOLUME 91 | ISSUE 8
PRESS
SERVING THE COMMUNITY SINCE
1922
#MeToo campaign spreads awareness ZACHARY STRADER Senior Writer
The #MeToo is a campaign that has blanketed social media since mid-October. According to RiteTag, a popular Twitter analytics website, usage of the #MeToo tag began its dramatic rise on October 15, the day actress Alyssa Milano tweeted asking people who have been sexually harassed or assaulted to reply with the tag. The following day RiteTag indexed 283,300 unique tweets utilizing the hashtag. The hashtag has been used across multiple social media platforms and is often paired with personal stories of sexual assault. Public figures like Reese Witherspoon, Terry Crews and Senator Claire McCaskill have partici-
Flikr / Creative Commons
Some UMW students enjoy playing Pokemon Go around campus.
Instinct & Mystic take over UMW Gyms
OLYMPIA JARRELL Staff Writer
Pokemon Go at the University of Mary Washington was incredibly popular after its release in July 2016 and today though it is not as widely spread in popularity, teams still play on campus. Gary Baldanza, a senior studying computer science as well as a member of Team Valor has played pokemon Go since the beginning. “Pokemon Go on campus is crazy and has no love for Team Valor,” Baldanza said. He continued describing the competitiveness of the three Pokemon Go factions on campus, “most of the time the gyms here are controlled by either Team Instinct or Mystic, which really cripples the currency income.” Tara King, a senior creative writing major and who is on team Mystic weighed in on the Pokemon Go popularity on campus, “Campus is one of the best places to play Pokemon Go,” said King. “There are so many PokeStops and Gyms. I also find a greater variety of
Pokemon while playing on campus which is nice, because I live off campus in an area where there aren’t that many stops or spawn points.” When asked if Pokemon Go was as popular on campus since its release King replied, “I don’t think it is quite as popular now as it was in the
both casual and hardcore gamers.” Baldanza stated that he had never paid real money for pokemon go and that it is nice to have a free to play game. “But you definitely know when someone has invested quite a bit of money into their account,” Baldanza said. Baldanza also commented on how competitive Pokemon Go is on campus. “Pokemon Go is competitive between team mystic and Instinct, team Valor is not really represented well here.” Michelle Goff, a senior creative writing major who is also Team Mystic commented about Pokemon Go’s popularity in 2017 on campus. “I don’t think Pokemon Go is nearly as popular as it used to be,” said Goff. “Some people still have it on their phones but I think the majority of people play it super casually or just open the app every once in awhile.” Goff went on to say, “I do think it’s nice to have Pokemon Go at Mary Wash, even if I only use it when I’m walking by myself between classes. It’s fun and easy to use.”
“I also find a greater variety of Pokemon while playing on campus which is nice, because I live off campus in an area where there aren’t that many stops or spawn points.”
IN THIS
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-Tara King beginning.” King concluded by saying, “I do think it still has a strong fanbase though.” When asked if Pokemon Go was as popular today at UMW Baldanza said, “not even close. You have a few players that are dedicated, but I think a lot of players gave up pretty early on… Pokemon Go kind of has a pay-to-win model, which has a lot of hostility from
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“This campaign, #MeToo, has brought sexual harassment and sexual assault out of the shadows, showing our community that it can happen anywhere.” -Tiffany Oldfield pated, even everyday users of Twitter, Facebook and Instagram have posted in solidarity. The traction of the campaign is better evidenced by the hashtag’s exposure numbers, an estimate of the total number of times tweets with the tag have been viewed. RiteTag reports that, from Oct. 15 through 18, tweets featuring #MeToo were viewed more than 18 billion times. Derick Lyon, junior international affairs major, believes that, after having successfully, “shed light on something that’s widely avoided due to the difficulty of the subject,” the #MeToo movement needs to pivot to more traditional means of initiating cultural revision such as fundraising. Atkins believes that we should be turning to more traditionally activist means as well. “If you want to seek change then you need to write your congressmen and other government officials. […] I want to see change because I know that this is something that can’t continue.” Given the high-profile nature of Alyssa Milano’s
SLAM DUNK
•#METOO | 10
The NBA season has an exciting first week. SPORTS | 3