Do you think floating dresses and shawls and smoky eyes were Stevie Nicks’ most dramatic things? Away from there.
Fleetwood Mac singer, 72, asks younger people to wear mask and social distance to stop the spread of coronavirus, and does so with an addition of statistics, heartbreaking language of science and one of the seasons of “American Horror Story.” she showed up.
“If I sense [COVID-19], I will never sing again. Give me a fan and I’ll be hoarse for the rest of my life, I don’t have much time,” Nicks said obviously on a Facebook Tuesday. Send.
He cited the number of other people who have died in the United States since their previous position on COVID-19: more than 22,000 in thirteen days.
Nicks cautioned that he opposes others who do not wear a mask or adhere to other protective guidelines. “Masks and estrangement now have a political statement. It’s not politics. He’s a silent killer hiding in the shadows. He’s stalking you. It doesn’t matter who you are … It’s just looking for a victim,” he wrote.
The singer-songwriter has become more dramatic in recalling the season of the television series “American Horror Story” in which she had appeared.
“It became an apocalypse on the ground. A real ‘shelter in the place’.”
And unless you are a famous witch or sorcerer or just a very particular person, you have not entered one of the underground bunkers; however, if he entered, he arrived in a magnificently ragged black Victorian car pierced by two noble, monstrous but dying nobles. black horses, ” wrote Nicks.
She said it alone as a story, but she felt the seriousness at the time. The characters did not need to leave their safe haven because only death awaited them on the ground. When they came out, they were dressed in dangerous fabrics and fuel masks. He discovered the terrifying situation, he said.
Then Nicks went from script to science.
“Are you all aware that if you have this virus, will you fight the aftermath for the rest of your life? Micro blood clots – in all your organs; neurological disorders in his brain a cough that tears his throat and helps keep coming back,” he wrote.
On Twitter, he connected to a Washington Post article focusing on the main points on COVID-19, and added some of the previously indexed, which were revealed through autopsies performed at NYU Langone Health in New York.
“This virus can kill you. He can kill me. Put an end to my chances of putting on my boots and going out on the road,” Nicks wrote. “Eliminate the chances of one of us on the music network one day returning to the stage, because we will never put you in danger, never take yourself or yourself or your life for granted. Never jeopardize the oldest and most fragile circle of relatives. You feel the same way. You assume mortal dangers because you think you’re immortal. You’re not.”
Nicks said other younger people avoid thinking they’re immortal and slap masks.
“Call it Armageddon. Call it a pandemic. Call it apocalypse,” the singer wrote. “It’s a true American horror story. It’s not a miniseries, it’s a tragedy.”
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