marissamckenzie
MarissaMckenzie
marissamckenzie

Well OK, sure, but I don’t think she cares if you care or not. I am pretty sure if there was a movie based on your life that positions you as doing some pretty awful things (especially if you deny you did these things, whether you actually did them or not) you probably would feel the need to comment on it. Also there

MOTHER APPROVES

A man working alone with two women? He does not approve.

Want to tell a really interesting story?

Ask Olivia Wilde why the original three screenwriters for Booksmart were kept from seeing the movie before its release, or attending the premiere, or participating in press for the movie, while she and her screenwriter took the credit for their ideas. Ask how she feels that the

This show sucks anyways, who cares?

Maybe, according to Dan Dakich, we pay our football players too much. A cursory google search shows that Andrew Luck has made about $50,000,000 in his “brief” NFL career. Clearly more than enough to retire comfortably on.

Dan Dakich’s family members who are steel mill workers, cops and teachers make considerably less

It's like one side saying "Let's kill this guy", the other says "Hey, maybe don't?" and you, the reasonable centrist, decide the best solution is to cut the guy in half.

Dr. Wen wrote:

None of the embedded photos are selfies, tho

I think a quick glance at the False Equivalence wikipedia page oughta do it.

Non-Committal? Conrad attempted suicide 4 times before he even met her. He gave up on therapy or any form of help and had a terrible home life with a physically abusive father. Michelle tried to get him help for 1.5 years until she snapped. To say that she pushed some healthy boy off the edge who would have otherwise

>In a weird way, the people I reached out to were so bad about it that it snapped me out of it. But that doesn’t mean it worked like that for everyone else.

Well, that’s kind of the point of the film. That reading those words without any context of who that person is, and who the person she was texting was, does not tell the whole story. She was as deeply disturbed as he was. He had also attempted suicide four times previous and to Ms Carter, she was helping him go

If those words are dangerous, capable of inflaming suicidal ideation in susceptible populations, is it wise to reproduce them in length in a comment? What is gained by this, other than you expressing moral outrage at the cost of others’ mental health? Did you really ~need~ to spread those dangerous words to express

I mostly agree. I’ve only seen the first half, but so far it has been pretty illuminating? At the time, I was one of those people that the documentary talks about, thinking she was just some crazy lonely piece of shit. Which, she is. But that narrative does erase the fact that most of us were lonely heartbroken

MLK was famous for his work on civil rights and then he was murdered. Emmet Till was famous for being lynched. You don’t see the difference?

I think the problem is calling Emmitt Till a “celebrity,” which carries a connotation of glamour and lightheartedness. If it had been a list of “important historical figures” I think the reaction would have been different.

a little fun fact about people from the area should not include a child lynched by white men for being falsely accused of whistling at a white woman, you ass.