ChineapplePunk
ChineapplePunk
ChineapplePunk

I'm not shaming anyone: I'm just posting my reaction to something that would probably be a pretty awkward situation for a lot of people.

I think a lot of these are beautiful, but I think the ones where they're standing there naked with their preteen boys are bizarre. Sorry, everyone.

If he was a woman, would their open mocking of his open shirt, exposed chest and "kinky boots" be more or less offensive? They were insanely rude and unprofessional to him throughout the interview, making offensive comments about both his appearance and his perceived mental health, and he fired back in kind. Immature?

First of all he complimented her, secondly what the hell? I really don't think you know how comedians roll in hostile situations. Go rent some movies

Did you actually watch the interview? They began by making fun of his look - shirt, boots, chest hair etc. and he proceeded to make a silly comment about her low-cut blouse. They proceeded make fun of his accent and speak of him as if he wasn't there, which he points out, all the while failing to really address the

Oh for fuck's sake. A comedian who is known for a crass/crude/offensive style of humor should be expected to apologize for displaying that humor in an interview that is designed to promote his comedy tour?

I think he was responding in the heat of the moment. And it's not like he isn't crass as a general rule. I don't condone the low-brow nature of his response, but he was being needled relentlessly by these interviewers and lashed out. The core of the responsiblity in this scenario, at least to me, resides squarely with

No.

Your own level of knowledge is not necessarily reflective of objective reality.

Yeah, society advances like that. A few years ago, it was illegal for blacks to marry whites... TMYK

The first things you mention are either not actual things, or don't have examples in nature. Gender is a social construct and thus is pretty relative to society. Sex, on the other hand, has a WIDE variation in humanity, from intersexed people, to XY people that don't respond to androgens, to XY people that are

1) You're confusing gender and sex, which are two different things.

Two things:

1) Now I want to play Gone Home.
2) Way to prove how low you've really sunk, Kotaku commentariat.

How are they at all thin-skinned? That's the stupidest garbage someone's said on here. They disagree with PA's position and have decided not to be in the show. There's nothing delicate or "snowflake"-like about that. You have no understanding of the issue.

Celebrities, such as movie star, politicians, etc. have done something that put them on a public stage. Made a movie, ran for office. They made a choice, took an action by which they gave implicit consent to give up some expectation of privacy.

The article says that she was a PR rep, not that she was a cosplayer as you are faulting her for being. PR rep may be booth babe but it may not. Her outfit was not discussed.

Your table reservation at missing the point is still waiting. Again, your assumptions are showing

And that right there is the problem. Big and bold as brass. "It's the culture". Yeah? So's rape culture. That's not acceptable either.