Agree! We just went from “I’m pregnant!?” to “Well, obviously I’m not having this baby” to “Oh btw, I had that abortion.”
Agree! We just went from “I’m pregnant!?” to “Well, obviously I’m not having this baby” to “Oh btw, I had that abortion.”
I really want Raf to find someone and be happy, even if that someone isn’t me.
Rogelio makes me waaaaaaaay happier than he likely should. I ADORE him.
i love rogelio so much.
Mive me some of that Rogelio. I’m obsessed with that man and his flawlessly-executed narcissism.
It was perfect. No hemming and hawing over how and when. No overly dramatic scene of going to get an abortion or watching her “suffer” through some cramps. Just an “oh, by the way” and that was that. It was all just perfectly realistic and matter of fact.
I really liked how at they at the end had the whole family tearing down the wall paper despite the different opinions.
This is why the road to 270 for future GOP presidential campaigns goes through the Midwest.
That doesn’t surprise me at all. I assume that is not an unusual position in many all-white spaces.
Plus they know that white women will come roaring back as soon as some judge tries to put a few black kids in Tyler and Melanie’s middle school.
She’s coming to terms with a reality that directly affected her and her fellow white women.
It’s like being the “cool girl” who’s “one of the guys.” Conservative women get praise specifically for rallying around causes that are seen as (and actually are) the opposite of what is actually in the self-interest of women at large. Same as the women that slut-shame other women to fit in with the men and be “cool.”
“You get attention, praise, employment.”
I get it. I grew up in a solidly Republican suburb outside a heavily Democratic city, and as high school (and then college) student who was interested in politics, I had mentors who tried to steer me towards Republican causes/volunteering opportunities. The implication was pretty clear — as a woman and as a minority,…
I don’t get it.... like, any of it. I personally think Amy Schumer is problematic in many, many ways, but she is funny sometimes. This is not one of those times.
Usually, but they never get the deal about airplane food.
Why did they think a poorly-executed “parody” by a bunch of rich white women of a southern black anthem in a time of noted racial tension and strife would receive anything but much deserved mocking? There are a ton of other sources to “parody” that don’t draw from such powerful and poignant experiences.
She should leave the comedic parodies to Weird Al Yankovic.
Peaches great, tomatoes terrible--I’m not seeing a problem here. Thanks, Obama, indeed!
I too respond to criticism by showing people pictures of me in my underwear.