aoaoroaoruauuu
DURR URR AURARU
aoaoroaoruauuu

Have you read his poetry? Did you know that he wrote poetry? I’m gonna guess no. As for your claim that he ushered in the “thug” attitude, well you’ve just proven yourself to be quite ignorant of the history of black communities and young people, anger and violence. Hate to break it to you but there were criminals in

I think he was symbolic of a certain era in rap. He was the dude many black men from the streets wanted to be. Hard enough in the streets not to be trifled with (however, he was which ultimately lead to his death), desired by women, had money, power and influence. There aren’t too many men from his walk of life in our

He is considered by most to be the GOAT. So many would disagree with you.

First of all—dude is spot-the-fuck-on a dead ringer for Tupac, holy shit.

I hear that stuff is strong enough for a man .... but Ph-balanced for a woman.

Via @bomani_Jones

You’re not just thinning the value of something you’ve already got by applying it too often and too far, which is currently the case across the temporal board.

two american kids killing toddlers in the heartland

Little Ditty with Jo and dying.

also while basically doing “verbal blackface”

“My stay at home husband has serious issues” There you go. He should at least be an equal contributor, instead of a leech.

McGregor: “I should create my own belt because I am, in myself, my own belt. It doesn’t matter weight. It doesn’t matter if it’s a featherweight, the lightweight, the welterweight, it’s the McGregor belt, so that’s it. I’m fighting for my own belt.”

what if...I was realized that and I was talking to other commenters to facilitate discussion in what is always an echo chamber anyway? And what if I said outright I wasn’t referring to Stassa or criticizing her at all?

Answer to the question: however the fuck she wants. The question is insulting (not that I’m pointing fingers at Stassa, just, you know, at the entire culture of this debate).

So you’re saying you made a well thought out, reasonable decision about your health and your body; the people responsible for it did not judge or subject you to their personal bias; and your supportive partner was there for you and cared for you before, during and after.

Hail Caesar’s being set during Hollywood’s studio system is a fairly important part of its plot, so you can’t really move it to the ‘70s without changing that. But it’s not like there were no people of color in late ‘40s/early ‘50s Hollywood—Lena Horne, Dorothy Dandridge, Carmen Miranda, Ricardo Montalban, the

Funny how jezebel has been eerily silent about that...