BlackFrancine
BlackFrancine
BlackFrancine

Hmm. Your mockery was difficult to parse. I imagine that at every university the laundry situation is probably different. At smaller schools, students might have to drag laundry across campus. Plus, students who live off campus often do—so maybe that's what the previous commenter was referring to.

I started at UT in 1996, so I was on campus at the same time as you claim to be, and you are so full of shit. I lived in Jester (11th floor)—which is the largest dorm, where the most students live, and there were laundry facilities in the building, and I believe there were in the other dorms as well (Roberts and

Leslie's dead, jerk. And please don't sully his name by dragging him into your trolling as some sort of trophy of how you ~know~ Austin so well.

I went to UT, and like at every college, it's typical for men to wear shorts and flip flops and ratty T-shirts—even pajama bottoms—to class. None of that is professional, but none of it is disallowed in the nursing school either. This is clearly not about professional attire. If it were, students would be given a

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I have a soft spot for Baby Phat by De La Soul.

Yes. Thank you. This is absolutely not a rape joke. It's a joke about how rape jokes have become an issue in the feminist blogosphere/media, and how Mindy's character is totally tone deaf to that sort of thing.

I totally agree with this. I read the first paragraph of the article, and thought, "I didn't know I was supposed to be embarrassed about using condoms! Why has no one told me this before?!" And then I thought, "Wait. I don't give a fuck. Never mind."

Well, thank God there are film experts like you on the internet, just waiting around to point out things that every adult in the western world is fully aware of (like the timing of movie shoots and releases). Where would we all be without your masterful insight into movie-making?

I don't think it's disingenuous. Kidman's career absolutely saw an upswing after the divorce. Anyone old enough to remember her career before (the biggest movies of which were, what? Days of Thunder and Malice? Maybe Eyes Wide Shut?) would have a hard time denying that. Moulin Rouge and The Hours made her into a

Right? We prayed on it, and God told us that in OUR case, it's a fetus, not a baby.

But isn't adding laws that restrict abortion a way of ending abortion that is, in fact, "legal and by the will of the voters"? I mean, the Texas law just stood up in federal court. So, so far, it's legal. And the legislators who passed it were legally elected to represent the will of the people.

So, you think it's more like Scully to just ignore untested possibilities and just watch someone she loves die rather than trusting instinct/religion/mysticism/? (See: Beyond the Sea, All Souls, Revelations, etc.) Or that she'd rule out the possibility that there's a scientific basis to certain phenomena that we

Dude. I just watched an episode where Scully hires an energy healer to work on her hospitalized friend. So...

Temple of the Dog is so delightfully corny. I mean, they're just SO EARNEST. God bless the 90s.

Ha! You beat me! I just posted this, too! Because, dude. I don't mind stealin' bread from the mouth of decadance, yo.

Pump Up the Volume was probably the single largest influence on my musical tastes and/or personality. I seriously watched that movie almost every day when I was 12 and 13 years old. I can still recite it.

If I could star this a million billion times, I would. ALL THE FUCKING STARS. ALL OF THEM.

I am too! Or actually, I'm watching it for the first time. I watched 3 episodes last night! And I'm about ready to backhand Mulder's whiny ass (Last night I watched an episode where a woman was raped by an invisible spirit/person, and fucking MULDER thought she was making it up to collect disability. So he's fine