TV is a fickle bitch goddess
TV is a fickle bitch goddess
ten percent or so
This is the best comment
Look, there's the Oxford comma (e.g. "Cookies, cakes, and cats for my birthday") and then there's the AVClub comma ("I really should split this sentence up into separate sentences, but I'm lazy, so I'm going to keep writing here, and I think that's ok, don't you, but I don't know if it is, some find that problematic,…
Yes, I am 14. Another reason for you guys to give me s**t. And don't try
to come off as tough guys, we all know you are either: fat, out of
shape teenagers who sit in their room all day or fat, out of shape 30
year old men bashing on fat, out of shape teenagers. And If you give me
that bulls**t pretending you can beat…
You can't argue about a person's opinion, but you can argue about how they reached that opinion. What's the evidence? Show me your steps, back it up with data.
BLIMEY
That is how I would have written that sentence. Thank you.
For a concerned American you sure are sunny!
Troll or Astro-Troll?
@Dan Middleton:disqus I do think that the author very much believes in her premise, and I think that media representation of women is worth writing about here.
Enough has been said about the meat of this article by now. I am curious, though, if this is proper grammar. I'm not asking to be a jerk. I'm curious because my own grammar is spotty at best, and I often feel like Homer's "I've been calling her Crandal!" line when it comes to grammar:
What's really problematic is the word problematic.
He's related to the handyman on One Day At A Time
Bonus: it can also get "Cecelia, you're breaking my heart…" (the sampled drum beat) stuck in there, too!
DENTAL PLAN
Hmmm, it would have to be like "I heard that this lady has the biggest [redacted] in Hollywood!" in order to compare to what Sagat was saying outside of Full House while working on Full House.
Apparently! I know it is trite to say, but I'd love to be in his position, even if I were bored at work.
Sure!!!
Take off!