Deebauch
Deebauch
Deebauch

She says she never sold it because she wanted to show Cal that she could make it without him. That’s all well and good, but your granddaughter doesn’t give a fuck about Cal, but would really like something to help her put her kids through college.

And all those old photos of herself—none of her kids, her grandkids, friends, family, etc. Just photos of herself.

Result: Cal’s Coat

The Benny Hill theme song IS Yakety Sax...

don’t worry, they’ll tell us where they fit on the list

I was having fun until I started to miss Jia again :/

you should clearly abandon protocol and let everyone out of steerage/the greys on this sub-blog. Ask yourself, Bobby: do you want to be like Titanic Leo or like Titanic Billy Zane?

You’re either missing the point or being willfully obtuse. The representation in Suicide Squad was great. The way the diverse characters except Deadshot and Waller were handled was terrible. The criticisms mentioned in the article I linked are valid. Shockingly, I can criticize a movie’s flawed treatment of diverse

“The end goal is to create movies completely devoid of anyone straight, white and male.”

A better question than all of that hysterical nonsense you just asked me is why the hell are you so worked up over criticism of Hollywood trends? I’m putting my money on “pissy DC fanboy” but I’m open to being wrong.

Exactly. The narrative between the QB and coach or running back is always mentioned. Or if the player is new to a team there is almost always some back story of personal note. Hell, remember Kurt Warner? “Stocked shelves at a grocery store for $5.50 an hour” before finally being signed by an NFL team. That guys story

Notice how you said “some feminists?” Perhaps if they guy had said “many women” or even “most” I wouldn’t have had the FU reaction to his statement. However, I’m one of the women who hate all the extraneous stuff. And not just on the Olympics. Football drives me crazy with all the background babble and, while I have

I am annoyed by this idea that corporations can never really be sexist, because they only care about making money. Corporations are run by people. People have personal beliefs and baises, often not backed by hard facts. “Women like stories! Women don’t care about scores!” is a narrative that people believe. It’s a

This. NBC is assuming that this is the sort of “packaging” people (women?) want around their sports. But really this is the only way that they’ve ever bothered to give it to us to consume. The BBC does such a better job. Every event is broadcast live, I believe. They set up new channels. And they’re almost always

No, they *think* they know what women want. They’re executives, after all. They’re wrong, and you are too if you think they are basing their decisions on anything close to reality.

I would argue that they have done a really bad job in figuring out what people want. Basically, their argument is that the American audience for the biggest sporting events of the year is mostly older women who like the stories but aren’t particularly interested in sports. Does that sound reasonable? Doesn’t it sound

No, I don’t think they do innumerable (effective) focus groups. The very fact that they can’t attract a male audience to watch sports suggests that they’re not doing it right. They have managed to create a product that people who watch sports pretty much actively avoid. Every single business and industry in this

I never watch the opening ceremonies. I find them boring. I find the aspect of “the journey” boring as well. I like to watch the athletes do athletic things. Like sports.