claudiageorge01
Claudia George
claudiageorge01

Cockatiels are the bestest.

Look at the list of writers. I was deceived at first because some of the writers have female sounding names. They are actually just dudes. Unless I missed something (I started raging and had to stop my investigation) there were no female writers. Which is especially frustrating cause X-files had such a diverse writing

I know what GT post you're referring to and I'm afraid I'm going to have to be unoriginal and give you almost the same response I gave the other poster:

"One morning I woke up and found my favorite pigeon, Julius, had died. I was devastated and was gonna use his crate as my stickball bat to honor him. I left the crate on my stoop and went in to get something and I returned to see the sanitation man put the crate into the crusher. I rushed him and caught him flush on

That is NOTHING. Tyson is also quoted as saying that the best punch he every threw was at his ex-wife:

I love The X-Files. But it's depressing to look at the list of episodes and realize that ALL the the different writers/directors they had work on the show over the course of the 9 years it aired were male. Except for Gillian Anderson, who wrote and directed one episode, not a single other woman as far as I have been

Wikipedia is a wankfest. I've caught TWO academics (yes... men) that I actually know manipulating articles to make it look like they have more of an intellectual/professional relationship with really really famous people in their fields than they actually do. And that was by accident. That kind of activity must be

"I always found Austen's female characters one-dimensional and lacking in passion and energy; I prefer the Brontë sisters for dramatic love affairs and my all-time favorite, Edith Wharton, for crossed-signals romances amongst gentlefolk. Of course, Wharton's novels are actually cynical (read: realistic) and the

Not the Bob!!!

Well, that is compatible with the basic tenet of the MRM: That being told "no" by a woman = oppression.

I say this all the time. Of course a fetus/embryo is alive. Of course it is human. The point is that you can't legally obligate a woman to forfeit her personal physical privacy to support or sustain someone else's life. If you could, we could mandate that people become living organ donors.

I just don't think you need to excuse women for making decisions about their own body. As I said... the ridiculous one here is the food magazine that will interview ANYONE, not this random woman (who, as it turns out, isn't even a model) who happens to not eat a lot and works out a lot.

This is exactly what I said Dinosaurs. All the people complaining, in all seriousness, that she looks 45+ in the portrait I very very deluded.

Would be cuter if they were miniature horses. (Yes... I made this joke on Gawker first. An accident I assure you.)

I'm not ok with this. It's too much explicit communication. Just do the following:

I also think it makes the concern trolling that much more obvious as concern trolling. Can't even argue that there's a larger conversation that needs to be had about "the industry."

I'm confused. I actually never read more than half an Anne of Green Gables novel... but wasn't the whole point that she was a disgusting ginger and no one would ever love her because of it?

Ahh. Thank you. My mind saw designer and filled in model I guess.

Well, yeah, they're commenting on that. But in the context of saying this woman leads an ascetic life/life with no sensual pleasure and OTHER people commenting that she must have a low sex drive because she doesn't eat enough.

Ugh... I'm getting super pissed off by some of the misogynistic garbage women are writing below. Basically saying that Wearstler must live a sexless life. Like, "Hey... we're threatened by this person who has the privilege of being thin in a thin loving world... let's just call her sexless." Cause having sex and