LouisaMaybe12
LouisaMaybe12
LouisaMaybe12

She is brilliant. I have been in love with her Green Porno, and every subsequent series on the fucking/baby-having habits of Earths many creatures. She's divine. Ampster, so cute.

I am just a little sad that Gordon Ramsay walked away from their restaurant/bakery because that 20 minute clip was not enough for me. I was sitting there with my mouth wide open in horror, yet I wanted more. It blows my mind that there are people so incredibly insane with no concept of their own crazy.

This is super hypocritical, because I think most slut-shamers would consider Chrissy Teigen a "slut." So she should understand better than anyone why that insult is wrong. It's OK for her to make a career out of her body and being sexy, but not anyone else? If she feels positive at all about what she does, and if she

I'ma quote Louis CK from his latest Rolling Stone interview: ""Crack whore" were not my words. I don't think there's anything meaner you could call somebody. "Whore" is a really mean word for a prostitute, it's derogative. I made no judgement on that woman." I have no interest in being a prostitute or a stripper, but

And Tracie, you say it's okay to call Farrah a "Bitch" and a "Fame Whore" but 'Whore whore" and "slut" is where you draw the line???

Wow. What a class example in someone who is so self-absorbed they are making ZERO effort to put on their big girl panties and function like an adult by at least TRYING to understand someone else's point of view. For someone who is "too old", she's sure acting like a passive-aggressive fourteen year old.

Is it fair to say slut is off-limits, but then call a woman (or anyone) a bitch as an insult? They are both pretty gendered words (at least in practice) and I'm sure there can be better insults to use.

And I want to make sure I'm being clear: When you're at work, in an equal-opportunity employment arena, it doesn't matter if you're black, white, Asian, male, female, queer, straight, gay, Christian, atheist, agnostic, anything. If your boss is posting things up in your work place that makes you uncomfortable, THAT

Thank you. I wonder the same thing. But it's not only men. This post and other similar Kotaku posts have featured women getting in on the "Problem? Does not compute" bandwagon.

This discussion is making me wonder the following things:

The thing about quotation marks is that it must actually quote something. Nowhere in this article, or in the full article linked, does this person say, or even suggest the point is to get them back.

The point was to highlight the casual objectification of women in her workplace. The fact that she allowed, and even

It appears they would like her to a.) single-handedly cure breast cancer and b.) personally pay for the breast cancer treatments of their mothers, sisters, cousins, and neighbors because she didn't attend to option A because it became personal.

Before today, I didn't even like Jolie that much, and I think that, as a

Thank you. I'm not a fan of Jolie generally, but her handling of this isn't something to criticize. The way her piece read to me, she's using her celebrity to raise awareness and to advocate for women with fewer resources. Yes, she talks a lot about herself and her own story. She almost has to, because that's what

It's clear that nobody actually read the Op-Ed who keeps harping on Angie for being privileged about this. She says, and I quote:

Wow. Stunned.