darkhelmet1976
Metta Whirled Peas
darkhelmet1976

Well, in the short term, anyway.

Entirely true, but the headline is still disingenuous and click-baity.

Second the thumb up for Magic Mike. Good movie with terrific performances from MM and Channing Tatum (who is hilarious in another movie I didn't expect to like, 21 Jump Street.)

"In the real world, I'm paid to be an expert in my field. When people say he "wrote the book on it" about a subject, they're talking about me. Literally. "

You're so appalled by "men talking about their penis feelings" that in an article titled "Ranking the Men of SATC," YOU wrote:

I think you dismissed my comment.

I think I like all of your suggestions in terms of their ability to reward regular season success and contribute to identifying the best team. Of course, none of them will ever happen since they shorten the playoffs and include fewer teams, which is antithetical to the business side of the leagues. Darren Rovell

Same thing happens here every time a picture of Idris Elba or Tom Hiddleston or Ryan Gosling is posted. (OMG, my ovaries explode! I want to have all his babies, LOL!)

I agree that the win-or-go-home nature of the NFL playoffs minimizes the chances of the best team emerging as champion, and that that's not a good thing, but what is the alternative?

If you absolutely must tell an unfunny rape joke, just whisper it to your dog.

Baseball player? Mr. Coffee spokesman? Huh?

How would you report the story without mentioning that she was drunk, since that's the very circumstance that makes the defendants guilty of rape?

The 11-page article was an extremely well-researched account of the event and everything that followed. Of course the author includes accounts of how drunk the victim was that night since it directly relates to the point that she couldn't consent.

Victim blaming is not ever OK, but the article in The New Yorker didn't include any of that.

I just read the article and didn't detect any victim-blaming from The New Yorker. Where did you see it?

I was watching the MLB Network while Joe Carter and Mitch Williams analyzed the famous Game 6 that linked them. For that hour, they covered so much cool "inside baseball" stuff, and one thing that stuck out was when Williams mentioned that no teammate he ever played with had more baseball smarts than Lenny Dykstra.

Let me google that for you . . .

Holy cow, are you obtuse.

I've had never heard of Gal Gadot and have no idea what her body looks like, so please don't assume I'm criticizing her physique.