avclub-7f1ca67f05b57d2650e6dbfc8412befd--disqus
peevishcommentator
avclub-7f1ca67f05b57d2650e6dbfc8412befd--disqus

Sure, he doesn't know it, I'm just saying he's wrong.

Well… yes? Obviously it wasn't going to be an R rated film, they want children to buy tickets.

To be fair, the Leftovers is a world where pretty much everyone is substantially more attractive and charming than in real life, it's not as crazy as it could be.

She's liberal enough to think Palin and Trump are absurd, she's just not on board with some of the farther-left stuff.

It's not like Kimmy Schmidt is free of Trump criticism. And it makes jokes about incredibly unimportant things constantly.

Lilian owns the building, so of course she's not paying rent. And they live in a neighborhood where they water is orange and chunky, low rent isn't crazy.

"The best parts involve Perry, who quickly acknowledges Kimmy’s privileges as a white woman when he obliquely spells out his frustrations over the fact that he worked for so long toward attending Columbia and she seemingly waltzed in with a full-ride scholarship"- but Perry's wrong about that. Kimmy doesn't get in

Is Montez less petty than Selina? She's better at her job, but she doesn't seem especially sincere or anything.

If Paige beats Elizabeth in a fair fight, I fully expect the next scene to be Elizabeth finding out she has polio or something.

The one thing I hate about Mad Men is that Sally Draper's evolution over the course of the show makes the children in pretty much every other drama look like garbage by comparison.

He just looks like he's a bad week away from ODing, or a strong wind might blow him away.

I feel like by former child star standards, Osment doesn't deserve a "what the hell happened". He got fat and grew a beard, it happens. In a world with Lindsay Lohan and Macaulay Culkin, "fat but happy" is a pretty decent outcome.

I liked him in Horrible Bosses.

Is it that offensive? I know that when I hear made-up gibberish meant to sound like English, I'm not even slightly offended. https://www.youtube.com/wat…

I'm not using it as an escape from the argument. The homophobic bakery is one of the most famous modern examples of discrimination through refusal to provide a service, so I'm comparing the two.

I don't post Matrix memes, but what if asking politely doesn't work? They advertise based on their discrimination, I doubt politeness will change their stance.

"It's not discrimination, it's a fun idea that women would probably like."- how do those two things contradict one another? "Women like it" doesn't mean it's not discrimination. I'm sure a lot of white people enjoyed segregation, that doesn't mean it was fine.

Has the court really not ruled on "is discrimination based on gender allowed"? I'd be surprised. And there's no circular logic here.

The only difference is in the frequency of the discrimination, both are discrimination and as such are wrong.

Does Curves have machinery that just refuses to work for men?