icelandic-butt-cheek
icelandic_butt_cheek
icelandic-butt-cheek

“Pudding face” gave me my morning laugh, thank you.

“They don’t put attractive people like me in jail.”

Any person who could fairly be described as a villain here will end up walking away richer than they were before, which is a pretty apt description for capitalism.

If you are ignorant, as Chappelle clearly is when it comes to almost any issue that is not about the plight of black and brown men, it makes your comedy worse, because you just say dumb shit that is easily refutable, like this: “If they’re Black, then it’s a gang. If they’re Italian, it’s a mob. If they’re Jewish,

“I should be able to talk about things, but you shouldn’t be able to talk about me talking about it.”

Some parts of the monologue bothered me, other parts made me laugh. I think the real problem is the response created by his monologue. I’ve seen a lot of twitter taking it to the “Jews really do run shit and they need to stop being so sensitive! Why don’t they dry their tears with their money?

I hate the framework of ‘We should be able to talk about things”

because there’s a sense their work also contains powerful truths about society and life –

Convincing regular people that they can aspire to the same level of health as a pro athlete or a model is a huge hustle, yeah. Us normies would be better served by buying into the concept of radical self-acceptance, while striving for (gradual, reasonable) self-improvement (relative to ourselves).

A sarcastic pat on the back is still a pat on the back. I’ll take it!

Celebrities, by definition, have a huge reach and influence by virtue of being celebrities. It’s some middle school wallflower ass thinking to be like “if only the scientists and intellectuals were the celebrities”.

Between this and Rihanna casting Johnny Depp in the new Savage x Fenty show, I guess it’s “fuck you” to anyone who cares about women in their fanbase. Why the fuck do these celebs think THIS is the right way to be edgy?

Very lucky, yeah... I think that’s the part that people are missing. To illustrate, I’m nearly 50 and have lived in 3 majors cities, over a decade in each. I’ve met a bunch of different people in a bunch of different scenes. I became well-acquainted (but not close, obviously) with, let’s say, about 3000 women. I can

Some people just have low body fat naturally, and long limbs. The friend I mentioned bakes a ton. She also loves cooking in general, makes her own pierogis, and never skimps on the sour cream.

Any photo of Iggy Pop from the early 70s shows a man with impeccably sculpted and defined musculature whose only workout was performing and chasing down whatever drugs he happened to be strung out on.

Up til my mid-twenties or so I was super thin with visible abs despite eating lots of junk and not working out. I don’t find it wildly unbelievable that she’s just genetically thin and muscular. She says she doesn’t skip meals, not that she houses burgers and fried chicken on a regular basis. She prob has a private

I think there’s a component here that’s like “it would be helpful if people who are in bodies that are really difficult to obtain without time, money, resources people don’t have if they’re not rich/famous” but at this point I just question the utility of calling it out again and again. It feels weird. 

I mean...she doesn’t look especially muscular, so I don’t see what’s so unbelievable about it. She’s only 31, it’s entirely possible that she really just doesn’t eat all that much/that she just has a high protein/low carb diet. She said she doesn’t have a trainer or exercise much, but she never said she doesn’t have a

What I heard: person whose success is based solely on her being a genetic exception and fully acknowledges that her success is based solely on being a genetic exception refuses to say she’s not totally a genetic exception like I want her to.

It would be great if they really cared about the core issues that are affecting men. Suicide rates, absolutely. We should be talking about mental health issues.