brotorious--disqus
ggggbabybabybaby
brotorious--disqus

disqus is randomly switching my name to a throwaway account i made like three years ago. what is happen

i can't believe i'm posting this, but tosh's first two standup specials were legitimately good. basically, i want to separate his skill as a comedian without excusing his actual sexism. i do not believe that comedians should be able to say anything without consequences. context is everything. daniel tosh has

aw that seems unfair. ben stein is just old and grasping at straws. he's not crazy, just wrong. he wants to believe in something that he can't prove. it's so common (especially in american politics/culture) that dismissing it as crazy doesn't help anyone's understanding of what's happening.

to be fair, i think the show tried to have it both ways, and maybe that's what bothered you (or maybe you just didn't think it was funny enough to warrant a full segment). i do see your point that it SHOULD be self-explanatory, but from my personal experience, it really isn't. i still see "why can't white people say

but black people especially.

or to an orgy

is the internet done with the generation x backlash so we can acknowledge that nirvana was rad again?

it was an exploration of context. weren't you at least interested in how the word changed meaning/offensiveness depending on who was speaking it (and the intended audience)?

she didn't have any real friends

yes

syndication viewers represent

in the periphery of little sicily
little did she know, i'm ticklin boo, she so giggly

that's a loose interpretation of the word "interesting."

whothinks?

it's a real pussy wagon

stone cold steve austin's stone cold steve austin stunner

@LiberalCollegeFreshman:disqus well, if you're allowed to "my black friend said…", then please allow me to "this is like the civil rights movement".

WHITE POWER

wait what?

@avclub-a6fdefb2b99177b152b2392b43097665:disqus so yes, then.