daringdropout-old
daringdropout
daringdropout-old

This is awesome.

Not feeling the 90's bangs.

The couch-surfing guy is an idiot, but the idea itself is interesting.

Okay. I'm going to take a deep breath and reply to your incoherent comment.

@applebrown-betty: I hear you, believe me. But in general I think more women read romance novels than watch porn, especially older women.

@m. Bohème: I agree on every count. I read the books after the show started and I couldn't help but feel angry about the casting choice for Sookie.

@sexysecularist: Consistently well-written, believable, and...dead? Because a major point the article was making is that he LOVES killing women off. It's a major theme in his work and reinforces the idea that women, in Nolan's films, exist as instruments to manipulate men.

@brown.h.b: I think I expect more of Christopher Nolan *because* he's so much greater of an artist than Michael Bay. I don't care what Bay does with the women in his movies because I don't respect him and I won't be paying to see his work.

@sexysecularist: Sorry, "Noir is by definition sexist" isn't good enough for him to get a pass here.

This is awesome.

A male friend of mine stumbled on his girlfriend's parents' homemade sex tapes. She insisted on popping them in and seeing what they were; she ran screaming from the room and he had to clean up and put them back.

I learned something today. Even reading can become just another device to attract a man!

@coolcooldame: Agreed. I thought she looked better in seasons 1 and 2 when she was a bit curvier, anyway.

@SickMouth: Well, great. You've got a vagina. I still think you missed the point.

@pop culture reference: Starring in a television series for five years actually is real work, as opposed to "work". Working on a television show is time consuming and exhausting.

@SickMouth: It's nice to see that what you got out of this article, ultimately, was "Hey, what about ME?? You're hurting my man feelings!"

I read lots of highbrow books. But God, I kind of hate the world of literary academia.