Jennifer Aniston is well known actress in hollywood. She is mosty famous for her iconic role in “Friends,” but now a days the actress is avoiding some members of her inner circle who are not vaccinated against the coronavirus.
Last week, her InStyle interview made headlines after she said the magazine that people have a “moral and professional obligation to inform” others about their vaccination status.
I have just lost a few people in my weekly routine who have refused or didn’t reveal, and it was unfortunate,” Aniston told to the magazine.
Then she supported her vaccination comments in a Thursday post on her Instagram story.
Responding to a question about why she is worried about unvaccinated people around her if she is received a shot for her, Aniston wrote, “Because if you have the variant, you are still able to give it to me.”
A representative for Jennifer Aniston rejected to make the actress available for comment Saturday.
High-profile vaccination endorsements have become a top part of public health messaging in the pandemic era. Political people, celebrities, athletes and religious leaders have encourage others to get vaccinated and follow scientific guidance.
On August 1, Amerian famous singer Ariana Grande shared with her 257 million Instagram followers a “gentle reminder to please get your vaccines.” Last month, teen singer Olivia Rodrigo stood pink-clad in the White House briefing room, encouraging teenagers to get their shots. Aviator-sunglasses selfies with President Joe Biden included. In March, former presidents Obama, George W. Bush, Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter starred in an ad urging vaccinations, with George Bush saying he was looking forward to Opening Day at the home of Major League Baseball Texas Rangers, with a full stadium.
Dolly Parton gets her medicine test
“I just want to say to all of you cowards out there, Don’t be such a chicken squat,” country singer Dolly Parton said in a March video posted to Twitter after she was vaccinate, get out there and get your shot.
Former presidents Obama, George W. Bush, Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter rebuke the public to get vaccinated in an ad aired by the Ad Council on March 11th.
As vaccination rates freeze amid distrust and false information about the doses, such campaigns allow the message to quickly spread to millions of people. Yet they are not new. For centuries, celebrities have used their social media high-profile voices to encourage for vaccine, many times becoming the faces of vaccination drives.
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