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Cara Delevingne Thanks John Green for Supporting Her After THAT Interview

Delevingne had to defend her actions on Twitter.

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“Paper Towns” actress Delevingne, who raised eyebrows and made headlines this week thanks to an exceedingly awkward interview on “Good Day Sacramento”, had another cringe-worthy moment on Thursday, which this time played out on the stage of social media.

The model/actress blamed the visibly uncomfortable exchange on the reporters, tweeting that they didn’t understand sarcasm or her dry British humor.

She quipped she had “never read the book, or the script. I kind of winged it”, before explaining that she had of course read the book and found it “amazing”.

“Cara has read the book (multiple times), but the question is annoying - not least because her male co-star, Nat Wolff, was nearly always asked when he’d read the book, while Cara was nearly always asked if she’d read it”, he writes.

“I work really hard and love what I do, I don’t feel like I need to apologize for being human”, Delevingne wrote, including the hashtag “#sorrynotsorry”.

“Look, these are obviously the first worldiest of first world problems, but the whole process of commodifying personhood to sell movie tickets is inherently dehumanizing”, Green wrote.

For Green, Delevingne’s behaviour is admirable and neither entitled nor haughty. Even the women on The View were debating whether or not the actress was on her period when she gave the interview (yes, seriously).

So clearly, she needs no help standing up for herself. He emphasised that Delevingne does not exist to feed people’s narrative or news feed, which is precisely why she is very interesting.

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It didn’t get off to a great start when the programme’s anchor appeared to call her Carla, and the next few minutes where they tried to get a bit of information out of the blonde beauty were fairly painful.

John Green