Rolling Stone has come under fire for featuring Boston Marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev on its cover this month, but others are defending the work behind the journalism itself.
The magazine has outraged thousands online and at least nine companies, including Kmart, Walgreens, CVS and Rite Aid, have banned the issue from their stores. The controversy comes despite Tsarnaev being called a “monster” on the cover.
“There’s nothing more viral than outrage,” Buzzfeed’s McKay Coppins said on msnbc Thursday. “I refuse to get worked up about it…this is a classic case of magazine cover trolling.”
The Boston native called the magazine—which has had cover features in the past about Roman Polanski, O.J. Simpson, and Charles Manson—“tasteless,” but noted, “there’s a difference between censoring and just calling out the article for poor taste.”
Coppins added that banning the magazine is “obviously not in the American spirit of how this should be handled.”








