Jonesisonthelam2
Jonesisonthelam2
Jonesisonthelam2

Awwww, no! (I understand completely)

Seriously! Hair bleach, curly hair products? From Amazon? I’m not getting this insult here, all I’m seeing is a practical, normal woman taking care of her personal needs in a way that probably 90% of women could identify with!

I was going to say - I wouldn’t worry about Amy Adams, she’s taking her checks from the “abuse” all the way to the bank.

More!

I think that's why he's so gross - it's his jealousy of Don's suaveness that drives him to do what he does, and in doing so makes him a pathetic character. He's good at his job, but he's desperate to be seen as "not a nerd/schlub," and thus is completely vile.

It’s really sad to see how healthy and happy she seemed in the early footage of her, compared to how shriveled she became before her death. It’s like the pressure pot of fame just sucked the life right out of her.

Yes!!! The Badlands in South Dakota are breathtaking! I drove through there on a road trip a couple of years ago. A lot of Native American history as well.

Same here! I always find people more attractive when I get to know them. I have a lot of friends who tend to make nasty snap judgments about strangers, but I'm always like "I bet once I go talk to that guy he's really awesome..." Weird huh?

I HATE the pressure from women to demean yourself so that you don't offend other's sense of insecurity. I'm a very average looking woman, but I have no problem recognizing when another woman is strait up beautiful or more attractive than me. I think I feel positively about myself in most other ways that I don't need

Ughhh. I hate this question in that it feels like it plagues me all the time in my relationships with my friends actually. I'm not hot - I'm average, maybe even below. But I'm a pretty smart, funny person, and never have any problem finding myself getting along with people I find attractive.

My mother and father are hoarders - it started when my brother and I were young, and only got worse as we grew up. We're both out of the house now, luckily living our own relatively sane lives, but it's an experience that not many people who haven't experienced it can understand.

Can you explain "psychologically kill"? Just curious, because I have an inkling of what you might mean (based on people I know), but I'm curious to hear someone else's sense of this.

I feel like it's a society money thing. They came from money, and had certain expectations of what life "should" be like because of what they saw their family achieve, but the same social gifts did not fall on them. I think they had trouble facing any other sort of reality (having to actually work in the world), and

Ughhhhh, yeah. I've actually seen this sort of behavior appear in some friends of mine my age (30's), and it's soooooooo weird and no one seems to want to talk about it openly, so it's just allowed to carry on. I had seen this doc a long time ago and it was always bittersweet, but seeing that sort of behavior play

See, I think it makes sense. He reeks of desperation to avoid his actual averageness.

Gotta be honest, Ronan Farrow is giving me the creeps too. He reminds me of a kid finally reveling in getting to live out the musical theater dreams his parents never let him indulge in.

Ooph. That's tough. I can believe it though - it sounds like you were better friends with the ex than with the girl, which happens.

Ha! Because after you break up, then who do you have to be emotionally abusive to? Abusers often have a hard time letting go of the person who used to take all their shit ;)

" A rich kid from a private city"???? What is a private city? I must be too poor to know.

Ew, a "filmmaker." Say no more, you are forgiven.