HuxtableSweater
HuxtableSweater
HuxtableSweater

Except that's not really the case, is it? We often find ourselves coming down on kids younger than 18. It seems that our reactions are often driven by what they do and how outraged we are rather than how old they are. Meaning, if you are a 13-year-old bully, murderer, harasser, little sympathy is shown, and rarely is

Here's something I wonder: I get the whole "It's so sad because KKK Jr. is so young and his parents are horrible." But at what point do people turn the corner from offering sympathy over how someone is raised and begin calling out someone for being a horrible person, unworthy of our sympathy? Do we wait until this kid

Actually, I think that's Ben Kingsley playing Johnny Depp playing Tonto. Sorry, Sir Ben Kingsley. Have some respect.

Because that's not the way player math works. Few players have the exact same game. Oscar and Neymar will be playing different roles. Systems matter, and Barcelona don't have the easiest system in the world to walk into. Thierry Henry didn't just walk in and continue business as usual, did he? And he's pretty good.

Suarez is man size. If you see him in real life, the guy is about 6' 2", and he has a much different game than Neymar. You're talking apples and oranges.

NeneLeakes is a new website that allows people to disclose personal information about Nene Hilario anonymously.

Being the first African-American saint. I suppose that's impressive, but I'm struggling to care, even though I'm trying.

Just finished reading and that was a wonderfully articulate piece, not just in it's conclusion, but in the chronicling of his evolution of thought. I've read piece after piece on this topic from all angles and the way Patton framed everything really hit home for me. Particularly this point:

I think the marriage PR machine — through movies, fairy tales (happily ever after), magazines, etc. — has done as much harm to the institution as anything else. Maybe instead of a pill to learn how to be happy, people might want to first try dealing with reality instead of deluding ourselves. I still find that the

This is something I've wondered: Do we think that other cross-sections of men spending significant amounts of time abroad for work behave differently? Percentage-wise? Sure, there's probably no empirical way of figuring this out. But I mean if men in charge of national security still let their dicks get in the way ...

It's actually a direct quote from the bible. Jezebel 3:16. Everyone seems to forget the brunch passages.

And here's the crazy part - non-sluts talk about sluts at brunch! They're like celebrities; at some level, everyone wants to be one, and to be talked about at brunch.

The issue isn't just curiosity; it's curiosity rooted in otherness. The touching phenomenon stirs up a history of freak show otherness and feeling entitled to invade a black person's sense of space out of curiosity, as if that is a phenomenon that has equally applied to all people. Historically, white people have been

Had me rolling. That's one of the most accurate comments of all time.

This is a trick question. What is the one with the cape, Alex.

Something, something, mysterious ways. Something, something.

Stew ain't that slow, but he also ain't that good. So there's that. Unless, of course, we define good as being useless.

And a reference to cheese and nachos. And hos.

Can't say if that's what he's really like, but I can see how he comes across like that. And it's kind of the way he delivers his content, without a need for explanation — like, don't worry about it, I'm Macca, it's true because I said it.

I'm not too impressed with Macca as a color commentator. As a player, he was great. In the booth, Twellman is actually 10x more informative and analytical. If you're an accent snob, then maybe Macca's your thing, but on content alone, Twellman already wipes the floor with him.