Per the Charlie character on Always Sunny, he's also slightly more likely to be genuinely nice to people outside their group. .... I mean, he's also ruined some lives, but he's the least likely to be consciously malicious.
Per the Charlie character on Always Sunny, he's also slightly more likely to be genuinely nice to people outside their group. .... I mean, he's also ruined some lives, but he's the least likely to be consciously malicious.
He was also in The Lego Movie and Pacific Rim, also known as two of my favorite movies of the past year. So you know, that helps!
I watched Drinking Buddies this weekend. It was okay. It helps if you know going into it that most of the dialogue was improvised with the actors knowing the basic plot points that needed to be gotten to. It also helped me to know beforehand that (*SPOILER*) it's a pretty open ended ending so that when it came I…
Wait, so the girls don't know until they get there that it's supposed to be the prince of England?
"As far as I know, nobody has ever died from lack of sex. Sex is fun and all but it is not a necessity, especially when the potential consequences of sex could bring financial disaster upon you, it's just not worth it."
There was an article I read on a British website about the horrible treatment of rape victim by their colleges and the large majority of the commenters were saying "God, this is such a simply solution. Just go to the police!" as if American girls must be idiots.
And that's probably a good reason why not shaming women for birth control is a good thing. Oh wait, I forgot you just think they shouldn't have sex.
Um... I'm not. Actually don't want kids.
Because I've personally had that be the response when I post that kind of comment. "Hey NOT ALL MEN feel that sense of entitlement!" And yeah, after a while you feel the need to preface by going "Yes, I know" because you don't want to have to deal with another condescending reply.
No, I hear it all the time from dudes being unironic. A friend of mine had a guy message her this week to EXPLAIN to her that not all men are jerks. The meme is around because this response happens all the time.
Except that he's clearly learned nothing, that he's mostly just trying to find a way to stop his girlfriend from being with other guys and apparently in the responses to his post he was continuously saying how it was unfair to him.
And again, the fact that he calls it "unfair." Because now that it doesn't benefit him, it's suddenly HER fault.
Yeah, that's what I said in another comment. It's not that open relationships can't work, but they actually TAKE work. Like, you have to lay ground rule that each are comfortable with and keep communicating and be honest with each other through the process and continue to show respect for each other's feelings. But…
It is the whole fallacy that men are SUPPOSED to graze for women while women are supposed to be faithful to one man. Which is HILARIOUS when you do the math and realize the only way men can have lots of sex with different women is if women are also having sex with lots of men. OH THE PARADOX!
And I think that's the thing. The guy assumed that being in an open relationship meant that he could screw anything he wanted and still come home to the doting girlfriend. He didn't realize that actual successful open relationships mean you feeling confident in your relationship with the other person, a lot of…
But seriously, if you can't bear the thought of your significant other being with other people (which a lot of people can't, which I get), then don't put your relationship into a place where you're giving her the option to be with other people. And if you think that your girlfriend is so physically repulsive that any…
Oh come on now ... that would be breaking a perfectly lovely musical instrument on some douchenozzle's thick head.
I think my favorite part is "the open relationship has gotten way too unfair towards me" because it sums up the straight guy sense of entitlement to a T.
And again, if you have say, SEVERAL gay characters in your story and they all act and feel differently, then suddenly if you have an outrageously quippy gay man in the story there's less of a chance of him becoming the one representation for gay people in it. Same thing with you have several Hispanic people in your…
I realized recently that growing up the only time I found "politically correct" casts to be annoying was when they weren't written as people and instead as those stereotypes ... where it was clear that they were characters written not to be complex as everyone else but to tick off the diversity box. But I get annoy…