dialoguedub
DialogueDub
dialoguedub

I wish every black NFL player and NBA player would protest by refusing to play until something is done about these trigger happy cops. All the racist assholes who are cheering for Darren Wilson now are probably the same ones who would whine the loudest about their favorite fantasy football player not getting them any

TI's just happy his product (Azalea's Persona/Act) is winning him indirect fame and fortune. She's just a minstrel show without the blackface.

I think a lot of men who grew up not contributing to household chores or childcare also experience what a Cracked writer once called "effort shock" - like sticker shock, you can't believe how much it takes until you actually see it.

"The only non-white woman even mentioned in the entire interview is Beyoncé, who Reese Witherspoon names when asked if there is a contemporary woman she would like to play onscreen"

YOU ARE GETTING IT.

Being a guy, I can never really understand how this feels for a woman, but what surprised me was the cumulative feeling of disgust I felt as the video went on. Each comment was compounded by all the comments that preceded it. I can only imagine what that must feel like at the end of an entire day.

Soooo many people think they are goth, but in reality they are just Baroque ass fools.

But how much can't could a white girl can't even if a white girl literally could not even?

And I would be remiss if I failed to mention the seamy underside of her popularity: lots of porn....Guess all those guys obsessed with Rei Ayanami from Neon Genesis Evangelion finally found someone even more appealingly blank!

Oh look, another "black women look like men" comment. This is what we're talking about when we say that black women don't experience femininity the same way. Our bodies get coded male by default (which is actually super transmisogynisitc when you think about it, see: Joan Rivers' comment on MObama) and it's used as an

She does, but at the same time her use of language, pace etc. are very mature and more in-line with "masculine".

Who is looking?" And it's always been the same answer for the most part. How do people look? How are people supposed to look? Are white audiences looking at it in the right way? And are black audiences looking to see this piece? And, of course, my question is: What is the right way to look at a piece that is full

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Lots of great comments, in reply... Here's a film I made debating second and third wave feminist readings of Miku cosplay in America and Japan.

tell that to drake! :o :o :o shots fired.

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I think it's cool that so many people can make music with Vocaloid (it's software). And I guess the Vocaloid characters are cute. I find the idea of going to "see" Vocaloids "live" dumb, though. sorrynotsorry