emmabrocker2
emmabrocker2
emmabrocker2

It's true there are some phrases that involve obscenities that are just so descriptive, I can't imagine a censored substitute. For me, it's been half-ass: I so badly want to tell students when I feel like they've half-assed an assignment, but I haven't been able to find a more appropriate phrase to express my point.

Maybe it's a high school thing? I remember having the occasional crush on a boyfriend's hot dad when I was a teenager. What with the prevalence of MILF fantasies, I would think that there are definitely a lot of guys who had similar experiences.

Maybe they're the first ones who were actually mother and daughter to do it in porn? I feel like it's a common enough fantasy/kink that there have been lots of actresses who have pretended to this relationship. Saying "I'm the first!" is equivalent to an actual nurse saying that she's taken over the nurse fantasy

I didn't post a home address. I didn't post a phone number. I messaged his father, then posted his Facebook so that others could do the same.

Deadspin has a good run-down of some of the facts of the case that make it so especially appalling, if you want to catch up.

Developmentally, many adolescents are unable to connect cause/effect and can have a limited ability to empathize. I'm not saying this to excuse any of this, but it blows my mind that this is a proven fact of adolescent psychological development and there aren't more measures in place to teach kids about these issues

The kid who's doing most of the talking is named Michael Nodianos, named after his father. His dad's on Facebook. I'm tempted to send a link, on the off-chance it hasn't hit the Nodianos household yet.

The girl's not in the room; this is two days after the rape, when a bunch of teammates to the two guys who committed the rape are joking about it. This video's particularly relevant because most of them—including the guy who's the centerpiece of this video, a sweetheart named Michael Nodianos—were livetweeting the

The kid who did most of the talking in this video, Michael Nodianos, live tweeted the rape as it was going on. That's right: he didn't just fail to pull off two guys anally raping a 16-year-old girl, but he tweeted jokes about it. Are you really saying he deserves a do-over?

The star of this video is wearing an Ohio State T-shirt. Hopefully he's a senior who's freshly turned 18.

Hear the girl laugh at 8:39? I can't imagine what it'd be like to be a woman in the room when this is going on.

Yeah. I'm predicting someone's gonna have their admission revoked.

Yeah. Google "Michael Nodianos" and this is the first thing that comes up. Twitter deleted; Facebook gone; but this will live on forever. I wonder if Ohio State will revoke their admission.

Some of the people in this video were players on the team that were present for the party/rape, livetweeting and videotaping it as it was going on. At this point, the only students who have been penalized—kicked off the team and facing prosecution—are the two men who were proven to have committed the rape. The guys

This is the Facebook for the father of Michael Nodianos, the student who's the centerpiece of this video. (He's also one of the students who live-tweeted the rape, with choice comments like: "You don't sleep through a wang in the butthole #deadgirl," "Some people deserve to be peed on," and "Song of the night is

Guys: she's not saying that lesbians are never raped. She's saying that a video like this leaves her with a poor impression of high school boys. These assholes are hardly a representative sample, but I get where she's coming from.

I think it's referring to the fact that she was passed out and didn't physically respond to the rape. He mentions at one point that she wasn't physically responding even as she was being anally raped.

All of this was disturbing, but hearing a girl's laugh at 8:39 made my jaw drop a little bit. Imagine being a woman in that room, hearing them talk this way about someone you know.

I couldn't enjoy the dancing because I was way too concerned about the fact that she's got an 8-year-old and 6-year-old next to amps and speakers. I worry about damaging kids' hearing when they're sitting in the nosebleeds at a concert, let alone on the stage! I hope they had earplugs and/or that someone with

I usually try to, but it's a tough situation: both kids will invariably have different stories, and students sitting nearby will either stay quiet or align with whoever they're friends with. Every time I've ever tried to get to the bottom of the causes behind actions I witness—a kid saying STFU, for example—one kid