Serious question: those of you who follow and defend him. 1) What are your goals with relationships or women (to become a high-value man yourself, get in a relationship with a woman who submits)? 2) How does he help you get to that?
Serious question: those of you who follow and defend him. 1) What are your goals with relationships or women (to become a high-value man yourself, get in a relationship with a woman who submits)? 2) How does he help you get to that?
Thanks for building that community and helping me find like-minded folk. I miss those times. But “the thing about the old days...they the old days”.
I understand peoples’ sense of loss about the show ending...and I’m glad it is ending. Issa did a good thing. She showed black women in a complex way that we aren’t used to seeing—both flawed and exceptional, and women who aren’t the traditional simplistic quartet trope (the average one, the ho-ish one, the…
“But still, I can’t help but be a little sad for the way things are going for Issa in the romance department. I want her to finally be the grownup that she is and get into a healthy relationship—but who says healthy has to be boring?”
No lies detected.
“I struggle with Molly like she’s somebody who did me dirty in real life.” Between folks’ reactions about condoms and AKA line jackets, Insecure-induced Parasocial Syndrome is real.
It was never about free speech but always about impunity.
‘cuz they’re the Real Victims(tm)
“He’s taken himself too seriously like so many older comedians.” That tracks with the pretentious opening shots evoking Miles and Monk
Fuck. You beat me to it.
From Bob Goldthwait:
I have a Master’s degree and reading Toni Morrison makes my head hurt.
So, uhhh, were y’all mad when Randall was an Omega for one episode on This is Us? Asking for a friend.
Not justifying this at all, but some context: Way before R. Kelly, relations with underage girls was a common trope both in songs and in the lives of the artists. Many of your and our faves (Prince, Bowie, Marvin, etc) had 15-16 year-old “friends” who were being groomed or who were the muses for songs about it. A…
It’s still showing on my screen.
Me too. Pun intended.
And nobody blinked an eye back in 1980-something. Gee, social norms have really changed.
Yes. Back when you could win red, black, and green points for unironically denouncing black-on-black crime.
Yup. Those songs are kinda cringe now, but that’s misdemeanor shit. Literally. I got all of those beat. Let me ruin a beloved band for you all...
“ I love it. When shows don’t pretend like they’re supposed to be good I find it much easier to engage and enjoy since well, everybody’s surprised that we’re here from the show-runners on down.”