RunningOutOfBurnJokes
RunningOutOfBurnJokes
RunningOutOfBurnJokes

Honestly all I see here is how bad a photographer is and how much work was left to the editor. I know Annie is regarded as a great photographer (and I love a huge amount of her work) there are still ways to photograph and light someone that don't require so much editing.

I wrote "nonwhite," not "black."

"This is about Vogue, and what Vogue decides to do with a specific woman who has very publicly stated that she's fine just the way she is, and the world needs to get on board with that. Just how resistant is Vogue to that idea?"

Alicia Silverstone, is that you?

This one has to be my favorite. This man is so not amused by their antics.

This face is the greatest reaction I can imagine. I really wish I could have heard his thoughts at this moment in time. "What do we do? Do we ignore it? Do we leave? This is so uncomfortable. I just wanted to watch the game. Uch, drunk people."

Not too be a rabid feminist... But I want to see exactly the same movie, except like 'Diamond Age'. Where the protagonist is a young under privileged woman (maybe even queer, disabled, and transgendered).

What are A.J. and Meadow Soprano pissed about?

He made a joke about her sucking at her job, and when you consider how many other Nascar drivers suck at their jobs and don't get called out for it, it is obvious she's being singled out because of her vagina. Then he made the joke about her asking her boyfriend if her suit made her look fat. It's a joke based on

He did make a joke about her gender, with that whole "do I look fat in this fire suit" bit. It was uncalled for and inappropriate, but even worse, it was an awful joke. Just really, really bad.

Is there a reason NASCAR can't find a comic who is actually funny to work their show?

This whole article is not fair, and not really based in reality. Because Jay Mohr is definitely not a comedian.

Yeah remember all those jokes about Jackie Robinson, back in the day, when he was the only black player in the majors? Those were hysterical! Too bad he couldn't laugh at himself when fans and players made all those funny jokes. As he was breaking into a sport dominated by white men.

The problem, is that there is this history of misogynist bravado in racing of all kinds, which transforms what might otherwise just be gentle ribbing, into a questionable attack based on gender. It's kind of tough to tell which it is, sometimes. She probably has that look on her face, because she's trying to figure

I get it, yeah. Makes perfect sense, the way you explained it. And wouldn't it just be worth it, every now and then, to mix up the roles a bit? Hell, didn't they do a documentary about the female drug lord in Miami? What was her name? Wouldn't that have some plot potential? Maybe Stone took some motivation for Hayek's

It's the same reason why kids in sci-fi (or most movies or shows for the matter) are hated: They're just foil. If they are not there as something that hero has to protect, someone for the villain to terrorize to show the extremity of the situation, they are usually there to A. Make us empathize with the hero or B. Get

Peggy Hill is a bad example. She was an actively unlikeable character. Case in point—the episode where she pretends to be a nun to get a teaching job for which she is not qualified.

"Lori was just annoying. Bad parent, bad judgment, an all around stick in the mud."

Sexism definitely plays a part, but I think the source of some (though not all, by any means) lady-character rage is that they're often forced to play the straight man, which reads as nagging. Right back to sexism, there, but no one likes a killjoy, which is what Lori and Skyler often were.

In Andrea's defense, she was (and continues to be) far more bad ass in TWD graphic novels. I blame the writers of the show.