MountDewm
MountDewm
MountDewm

...just to piss you off. Cheers!

ok

White people look the same.

Because it's the first thing most people thought of while reading this story.

Judging from all the commercials she was in, she made the team because her corporate sponsors demanded it.

Thug.

Somebody's gonna pay for this

And here I thought long-rumored/long-denied packages went out of fashion with Jamie Lee Curtis.

Stephen Colbert came up with the best workaround for the S**** B*** problem...just call it the Superb Owl.

Neither, the last spoken word of proper English was last heard in Alabama in 1932.

Spoken like someone who couldn't rely on talent in the first place. That's like saying because microwaves are so easy to use anyone should be able to cook a great meal.

The pure joy on display at going 8-8 for the second time in three years (book-ending a 6-10 season) and the coach not being fired because of it tells you all you need to know about the New York Jets.

Not that I think that this particular situation is a big deal, but if we're being real, falling is significantly different from being flung. That you use the former as a euphemism for the latter serves to point out how little regard large corporations have for individual results, an attitude that trickles down from

Maybe why you're a former UPS employee?

The film doesn't glorify Belfort's behaviour any more than Wall Street glorifies Gordon Gekko's, or Goodfellas glorifies Henry Hill's. If you see what he did and think it's a great idea, that says more about you than Martin Scorsese.

I get that this is really personal for her, but the film is neither glorifying or criticizing the practices discussed. (Hint: those aren't the two options for film/art/etc.) It's a biographical depiction of greed, misery, and an industry. Whether a viewer feels envious or disgusted is entirely up to them. (Having

Yes, all movies should be after school specials. That sounds like fun.