Yeah, that’s exactly what I just said. You would think it does but clearly it does not.
Yeah, that’s exactly what I just said. You would think it does but clearly it does not.
Picking up a few from CVS before going off on their little road trip would have been a good idea. Usually being monied means you’re well educated and people assume you are intelligent from all the prestigious schools you’ve gone to and yet...these folk seem like they didn’t think anything through. At all. Like where…
Yep! Huge fan of JJ.
Ugh. That’s awful. I’m really, really sorry that happened to you. But I don’t think that’s a typical high school experience.
I hate recycled plot points in sequels. It feels so insulting to the viewer. Yet JJ Abrams did it in such a way that it did not feel banal but rather reminiscent. I was very impressed. Loved the movie.
I wasn’t “uncool” but I wasn’t “cool.” A guy used to throw little pieces of paper into the back of my hair in math in 11th grade for the benefit of his friends. I hated it. It was so embarrassing. I saw that he’s married with kids and clearly not the same person that he was at 16. I just can’t hold a grudge over…
So still a bunch of 20-somethings. Hopefully #itgetsbetter but if not, fuck ‘em.
All these comments are so bitter about high school and reunions. Shit wasn’t great for me either but I moved on and truly love going to reunions to see people who are not nearly as terrible at 35 than they were at 15. I think that it helps that I’m living a good life and have the confidence to realize it.
How long ago was high school? Sounds like not too long ago...
Have you all lost your minds? Just because someone had a gorgeous voice back in the day does not mean they have carte blanche to act like an insufferable asshole everywhere they go. Let’s just call it what is it, diva behavior = asshole behavior. It’s not cute and it’s not funny, except when Mariah does it.
He looks like he smells of cigarettes and day-after booze oozing through his pores.
Aka most guys on dating sites. “I’m attractive and like women with tight bodies.” You sure about that?
Fair enough. The context makes it not nearly as bad.
Unless you’re Catholic, I think it’s a mistake. I’ve thought about this before. My friend dressed as a pregnant nun for Halloween and I thought it was in poor taste. She isn’t Catholic. Again, it’s not as bad as blackface but it’s pretty insensitive.
I am Jewish and I’ve seen many people “dress up” as a “rabbi” for Halloween. The mere fact that people think that dressing as an Orthodox Jew = rabbi is already a huge fail but the fact that you are dressing up as an ethnicity (or ethnoreligion as Judaism is) is not cool. It’s not quite blackface but it’s close to it.
You have to be the type of person completely oblivious to how your actions affect others. Like people who stop in front of revolving doors or at the top of escalators.
Oy, please don’t “dress up” like a “Jew.”
I mean, you keep saying “legal” when you mean “ethical” so I think it was confusing. I don’t think you’re going to understand how saying “I’m well aware that it is legal to discuss public figures” is already a problematic statement but ultimately I don’t think it matters to continue chasing our tails over something so…
I think you missed the point. There’s nothing tortious about talking about someone publicly unless it’s defamatory and even then it’s a harder standard for celebrities. You’re entire comment was about the potential illegality of not obtaining consent from a person to discuss them on camera and I’m telling you there is…
You can talk about public figures on a show without obtaining their consent.