Which adds another argument as to why it was a poor choice of words: the audience certainly was not exclusively American, and they ended up constructing wordplay around a word with vastly different interpretations. Bad idea.WoahDan said:The severity of 'c***' is a regional thing, most parts of the UK consider it to be one of the strongest swearwords around ( though none consider it to be quite as bad as in the US, to my knowledge), but there are a couple of areas in the southeast where it is used as casually as you have heard.
Do remember The Onion is not exactly universally known (to the point where foreign newspapers semi-regularly get burned sourcing them for news), and extremely few people can be bothered wiki'ing every random dipship on twitter.As to the article itself, whilst the article is correct in that the Onion should have made it clearer that it was a joke, people really need to take the context into account before they get mad, especially on the internet.
Poe's law also is fully in effect here - I can throw a random bet that this wasn't even the worst thing said about her on the internet.