keykayquanehamme
Quique Munners
keykayquanehamme

Now you know it happened over a decade ago. 

A sick joke at a Halloween party... that they weren’t even at or invited to! Mad just to be mad! Was it in poor taste? Absolutely. Did Neil Patrick Harris invent poor taste?!?!

What are the first words that the VAST majority of people ever heard Amy Winehouse utter?

They tried to make me go to rehab / But I said ‘No, no, no...’”

People didn’t feel entitled to comment on her struggles; it was literally unavoidable.

This isn’t like a local band playing local bars. Touring bands schedule at least 6 months out in normal circumstances, and probably a lot more given the pandemic... So let’s assume they had a conversation and Dave Grohl was like “Absolutely. I hear your. We’re gonna fix this...” That wouldn’t have impacted “ramped up”

I think you were on reasonable ground up to the assumption that Grohl blew off the conversation... The thing people often forget is that tours get booked months in advance. Festivals get booked seasons or even years in advance. So, depending on when this conversation theoretically happened, there may have been between

Definitely. Everyone who ever writes a song about anyone else is definitely crazy. Always.

Maybe the safest thing to do if you’re already assuming “axe to grind” is not also deciding you’re right and then deciding what that axe is...

Umm..when did black-bashing, spouting white supremacy shit, and black self-hatred in general, become “conservative views”?

Always.

You weren’t invited. You’re under no obligation to volunteer. See how that works?

Malcolm Nance isn’t “Black people.” (And neither are you.) He’s Malcolm Nance.

Wishing people lots of luck is silly. Joining a war on the side of the people pointing guns at the assholes isn’t a silly stunt. You wouldn’t do it because you’d rather type about it. That’s fine. Don’t embarrass yourself, though...

This is a smorgasbord of words. It’s crazy to think that the biggest contribution you have to offer can basically be boiled down to “So what’s the cut-off for creepiness?”

It’s a terrible thing. But it’s also true.

That sounds like a problem that might be more successfully addressed with exploration than explanation...

We’re.

As in “We’re lucky.”

As in “We’re lucky that stupid, ridiculous, counterproductive criminal *ahem* ‘justice’ policies haven’t cost us more...”

So he’s lucky, sure. We’re all lucky.

One side sees election results as a means to an end, and is willing to ignore/refute election results they don’t like. One side sees election results as an end unto themselves, and is willing to ignore/refuse to pay attention to any sign that there is progress in their favor. And in the middle, a bunch of people that

I’d love a “let’s go grab some shawarma and talk about all of this” short between Doctors Strange and Palmer. Having just caught the emergency surgery scene in Doctor Strange again recently, I’m realizing that Christine Palmer got thrown in [more than] the deep end, with even less explanation than the Sorcerer Supreme

Counterpoint: I think you’re throwing out the possibility that the most recent examples you’ve seen are actually BETTER avenues for newer villainy.

What type of “newer villain” do you want to see?

We’ve already we’ve seen villains motivated by basic philosophical differences, seen villains motivated by personal and

No one said anything about sole writing credits? Really? Let me offer you a quote:

I don’t know much about Harry Styles nor anything about if/how he writes so if he is in fact composing the music and writing the lyrics of his songs himself somewhere in a room then great but a songwriting credit for a pop song these

You’re not explaining anything to me that I don’t understand; I’m closer, in chronological age, to Noel Gallagher than I am to Harry Styles. I’m just capable of understanding lazy/hacky arguments regardless of where they come from. That said, I can see why you don’t want to pick a lane. The same person - you - typed

It would have been great if you’d put some thought into this comment before you published it.

He didn’t “blow up his [...] career.” He blew up his public persona. He’ll ultimately be fine. The rest of what you typed isn’t honestly worth responding to because it’s exactly what Will Smith did, minus the immediacy: