burnermeh
burnermeh
burnermeh

There's no such thing as medication for borderline personality disorder.

Oh, I'm sure it does. The TV roles are nowhere near 50% minority, especially if counted by total lines or screen time. Discounting reality TV, here's what's on tonight:

I really hope Yvette moves on to some bigger roles. She has a wonderful comedic presence.

Yes, working in a local rep theater may be hard (although most jobs are), but it's clear that's not who Hamm is talking about. Hamm prefaces his comment by saying "[w]henever people want to talk about how hard it is to be an actor," he's obviously referring to media interviews with Hollywood actors, not some guy

If they want to increase demand for the IUDs among teens, they should figure out how to make the copper amplify local wi-fi signals.

Maybe the secret to running things is to always wear the same shirt, ladies?

When the books are finally written on great cultural characters of the turn of the 21st century, Emily Gilmore will be at the top of the list.

Filming horizontally requires two fingers unless you are a child under the age of 8 or have a physical disability.

"A waiter at a nice restaurant probably does the same amount work as the waiter at Cracker Barrel, yet gets paid far more handsomely, at least on a per table basis."

I had the same thought, but it says somewhere in there that she went to high school in America. I'm assuming that means her dad was not just of African origin, but actually an African-American.

As the plot thickens, the BBC reports that she "had been arguing with a mullah about his practice of selling charms to women at a shrine." The most recent reports make this sound like a story about money, not mental illness. It would be very easy to win any argument by declaring that your opponent had burned a Koran

Afghanistan isn't culturally Arabic, so I don't know what relevance this question about Arabic cultural sensibilities has to do with this case.

I feel like half of all the grief I see on Twitter is conflicts between people with differing ideas about what Twitter is for. Somebody always wants to tell Keith Law or whomever that they don't want to read about his politics or what kind of pie he likes or what he thought of some new movie, because they think

Also, everybody looks uncomfortable, scrunching their shoulders up because they're too close together. Why not do this in three or four rows to get everyone in the shot, so nobody is crushed together and so you can actually see people's faces?

I can't believe how utterly uncritical this interview is. I hope nobody strained a muscle tossing all these softballs.

I don't think that Plato was the first or only advocate for gender equality. The number of written documents that have survived for more than 2000 years are small and overwhelmingly written by men, so it's not surprising that some of the earliest recorded feminist advocacy would be from men. I would assume lots of

If you ignore that modern Maya populations suffer from hideously high malnutrition and child mortality rates, you could draw that conclusion. I think those problems have less to do with vegan/non-vegan diets as much as abject poverty, but the Maya are a weird population of people to hold up as a population to emulate

If you ignore that modern Maya populations suffer from hideously high malnutrition and child mortality rates, you could draw that conclusion. I think those problems have less to do with vegan/non-vegan diets as much as abject poverty, but the Maya are a weird population of people to hold up as a population to emulate

If you look at many of those Mayans today, they are horribly malnourished and have enormously high child mortality rates. So, yeah.