janderson45
Jane Anderson
janderson45

It really is kind of good advice to celebrities though. I mean, obviously we need to bring these people to justice and establish better legal means of preventing this, however that doesn't mean you don't take precautions. Celebrities (male & female) are at the highest risk of having their personal data stolen more

Oh you definitely don't have to be a monster to create one. Maybe that happened to be the case here, but Steve Carrell is an absolutely lovely man.

When I hear the word "mong" I automatically think of "H'mong" since there was a large community of them in Fresno where I spend a part of my youth.

And yet, language is malleable. If I say "I am gay", you will automatically think that I am a homosexual, rather than just assume that I am happy. This is not even a syntax issue, as I can say "I am happy" without having to add a quantifying statement like "today" or "feeling".

I really think Derek shows more of the real Ricky than "Ricky Gervais" does. His public persona is something for him to often work out his own issues in a free form, often offensive way — he has struggled a lot with his weight, so he just says what he thinks, even if it's blunt or mean. He's probably too reliant on

oh man, but derek is REALLY GOOD. like, ugly crying good,

He acknowledges it's bad. He understands and points out things like misogyny, male privilege, weight and shame, etc. Like Louis C.K., he turns that around on himself not at other people, makes himself the butt of the joke.

Maybe we should stop putting celebrities on pedestal and acting like they don't spew shit out of their mouths like normal humans. Most aren't saints like Patrick Stewart, Hiddles, and Ian McKellem and i'm sure if we dig far enough we can find something bad from their pasts to knock them down to earth with.

Ricky Gervais, the British Louis C.K., except slightly less pandering and disingenuous.