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D ealing with ableist abuse has become part of comedian Rosie Jones' day-to-day life.
Whether it is being shouted at in the street, laughed at in the pub, or being refused a lift from a taxi driver who assumes she is drunk, Jones' cerebral palsy has made her a target for hate speech.
While the abuse predates her fame, Jones' appearances on the likes of 8 Out of 10 Cats, The Last Leg, and Question Time brought her, and her disability, into people's homes, and soon the insults, taunts and slurs followed Jones home, too.
"I love my job, I love my career, I love my life, but of course, running alongside that, I am a woman with cerebral palsy," says the 33-year-old comedian and writer.
"I've been disabled all my life, which means that I come across difficulties, whether that is physically or socially.
"The bigger I've become in terms of my career, unfortunately the more abuse I have received online. And some of that is because I'm a woman, and of course women aren't funny! But a lot of that abuse has definitely come from my disability."
After dealing with ableism for years, Jones is fed up, angry and upset at how abuse directed towards disabled people doesn't seem to be taken as seriously as racism, homophobia or other forms of hate speech, and wants to understand why people think it's okay to troll others online.
Her new Channel 4 documentary sees her dive into the issue, from...