Jones2
Mrs. Jones
Jones2

I don't think that's how it was meant. I think it's more the other way around. More often, women can enjoy shows, books or movies from a male perspective, but it's much harder to get boys to enjoy things shown from a female perspective. I would imagine, and this is totally me speculating as I don't know them

Are you Barbie?

Could not agree more!

Yep. To this day, I'm still pissed my business card doesn't say Princess.

That is clearly what I said. There are no logical fallacies in that.

You know the salon is one of many sets? Most have nothing at all to do with beauty.

There is an inventor's workshop. It's not just salons and I don't think this has anything to do with encouraging certain careers. There's also a cafe, are they trying to make all girls into waitresses? OMG there's also a bedroom, are they encouraging prostitution?

It kinda reminds me of girls who go on and on about how they don't understand women and all their friends are men and what a cool girl they are because they're so above "women" things, when really they are probably the ones with the problem.

It's one of the things that pisses me off the most about Jezebel, this continued hatred of girly things and this idea that you're only cool if you played with toy guns as a kid and hated dolls. So many comments imply a disappointment from mothers who have daughters who love pink. But it goes back to a deeper social

Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! This argument is the opposite of progressive and continues to stress the idea that "boy things" are great and you're super cool if you like them and everyone should be playing with them, and "girl things" are bad and dumb and you should totally be ashamed if you were a little girl who

I hate the outrage over this. It continues to stress the idea that "boy things" are good and "girl things" are bad. Start all the comments from people bragging about how they loved their Star Wars and generic legos and that makes them super cool and everyone else should like that too.

I think you missed the point of my comment. I often believe it's not about me. But when someone implies that they can't speak to childless women because they are shallow, she is talking about me. Way for her to continue stereotypes!

That whole paragraph pissed me off too. I'm only 23, so none of my friends have kids, but I'm not a self-centered idiot who only thinks about myself and could never possibly understand the undertaking of having children. And I'm living in NYC in my 20s, per this site and pretty much everything written about my

That's a very closed minded way of looking at things. There are a lot of lovely pieces by women who choose to be veiled and its ties to their personal religion. Just because you don't want it for yourself doesn't mean you should look down on women who do. I am very supportive of veiling as long as the woman chooses to

I'm a 20-something feminist and I hate how common this thinking is. I've gotten to a point, when on dates, that if the guy I'm with doesn't identify himself as a feminist then I'm out. It's in my opinion that if they don't, then they're either anti-woman or ignorant (meaning they are using a wrong view of feminist

I'm confused? I thought my vagina became a clown car if I didn't take birth control? Poppin' out all the babies!

Yes, because Hollywood parents have never ever done something bad for their children.

Not from what my doctors have told me. I tested for HPV, got some more cells scraped away and was told to come back in 6 months. Went back and was all good.

It naturally leaves your body. It's when it doesn't naturally leave that it could cause problems.

Tell that to my sold out (very drunk) audience in East Village, Manhattan.