>>521039756
I couldn't tell you anything beyond the obvious. There are memes around this just because of what the moment was symbolically, how perfectly the interviewer woman encapsulated her loathesome ideaology in that moment, and then lastly, Sydney's response to it, she was basically given an offer in that moment and she DECLINED it, and it was given to her with emotional instability, uncertaintly, and almost a personal concession in the face of Sydney's interviewer as she attempted to get an apology. The whole coversation was manipulative and leading up to that moment, and Sydney was really standing her ground there.
This is in a societal context where years prior the "right response" would have been submission to their framework, in which you could potentially be "the bad guy".
Now whether or her repsonse or lackthereof was just part of her ad contract or something, I don't know, but I don't think it would really matter to the extent the meme is concerned.
Apologies for involving myself in this discussion though, it makes me feel like a faggot, and there' really not much I can offer in it. I just find the whole thing a bit amusing from the outself, maybe because the implicit culture in the shared creation of a meme reminds me of what /pol/ used to be. I think it's fun.