esbaird
peskyjnixon
esbaird

As its been pointed out, this article is obviously talking about an opinion summarized from speaking to very few people and its empirical evidence is that these people say that "Everyone else is like me too!", which frankly I think is more a manner of psychological self justification than a likely scenario.

G-d bless Canada. Its time for a visit.

sir I am! :-)

Most men would argue it makes you geek-chic-freak, also known as the female holy grail in certain circles.

Its perfectly fine when its a personal blanket statement, but blanket statements about humanity in general are never relevant (see what I did there?).

I think its impossible to gauge what enough, too little, or too much is. I've been in relationships that have ended because my partner did not want to have sex as often as I did. I've been in relationships where the opposite was true. Some people have a very active sex life and that works for them. Some people

You mam, you deserve that Star more than ever! Can we get her two?

Amen!

I love my fiance of three years, if she ever said this to me (which I can't imagine she would) she would be looking for a new partner pretty quick. Good luck with that relationship Sandwich!

fair enough, I can see that. I mean look at this clip, he's actually pretty clearly trying to back up Jane but it comes off like he's reinforcing the bias . At least he's an old guy that's trying, sadly that puts him ahead of so many of them....

Was that because of misogyny though? or was it because he was a bit of a wooden actor and not particularly well suited for sketch comedy? (By the way I'm asking because I legitimately don't know, I'm not trying to challenge you)

Read the interviews polly, they spend the night at his house and go out shopping with him. I'm pretty sure its more than fear of reprisal driving that behavior. I'm not trying to be an ass, but at the same point people like Beverly D'Angello have nothing but glowing things to say about him. time may have changed

I have offended you, and it wasn't my intention. You clearly believe your opinion is right and anyone who like Chevy or Bulushi are simply reliving your past. So it goes.

The difference is work environment. The product may still have moments of misogyny, her point was that simply existing in the 70's workplace environment was hostile. Clearly there are still SNL members coming out of that environment that don't have high praise for it, but mostly they aren't talking about sexism

You don't have to blow out other candles to make your own brighter. Chevy Chase and Belushi were hilarious in their time. They still sell more DVD's than Soap ever has, that doesn't take away from the brilliance that was Soap. It really was a revolutionary satire for its time. As far as holding up, I'd argue they

Tina Fey is a shining example of someone being so good, and being so hard working as to overcome the latent misogyny on SNL, but as pretty much any woman (who has a solid enough career) will tell you, the biz is still male centric. But hopefully what people like Fey and Curtis can do is to teach others how to be

If so, he's clearly come a long way. The cast on Community, male and female speak nothing but the highest praise of him.

meaning you are used to seeing them performing in a 3 dimensional field. Without it... well, it looks like the t-ball of fighter games given the participants.

Eh, I've read everybook and certainly sometimes his profession as a detective certainly is the grounds for getting him in trouble, but the book clearly paints the narrative of a guy who has chaos spin around him whether he chooses to involve himself or not, his entire upbringing and life debts are aspects of this but

What I don't understand is why they didn't go with the Tekken arena that is (somewhat 3 dimensional). The field just looks very kidlike for the Tekken characters. I would be far more interested in the Street Fighter toons getting a Tekken makeover than the reverse.