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FishnetsFriday
missfishnetsfriday

GIF of the day goes to......

Does noted video blogger Jay Smooth know that there is a porn actor who stole his name?

Lawrence O'Donnell loves him some sassy, mouthy broads. And I say "sassy, mouthy broads" as one of the highest compliments one can give.

i love that you just made 'underbutt' into a verb. i'm going to spend the rest of the evening thinking about how to use it in various sentences and giggling at inappropriate moments.

I love that she addresses the privilege that everyone is going to use as ammunition against her. It's time for all of us to quit merely acknowledging our privilege, to stop pantomiming guilt, and begin utilizing it to fight for those who have been systematically robbed of their medical choices. Sarah Slamen is not

You're really missing my point.

So what you're saying is that you're okay with judging people based only on their jobs? Because I think that's shitty.

Promoting this out of the greys...I love the shit out of Fionna and Cake.

She didn't just sing the theme on the gender-bent episode of AT, she INVENTED Fionna and Cake and is a major player on that show. Also notable: Steven Universe, the new cartoon of former AT-storyboarder Rebecca Sugar. I believe it's the first female-created Cartoon Network show. Ladies be doing things in the cartoon

My work is only so I can pay to have a house and car and train all day long.

Ok. Let me state it in another way then - Your comment is exactly why this trend makes me feel uncomfortable. The "thinner ladies"? A "small posterior"? "Cute"?

Yea, because that's what thin women want. More attention from men.

The words 'derriere' and 'coquettish' TOTALLY make this comment non-boorish.

This article actually points to a larger problem with how we, as people, live our lives in the US: defined mainly by our occupation. I hate this stuff, because it's so dehumanizing and reductionist. These arguments all miss the goddamn point: we are all people, and people aren't summed up in simple titles. I am not

I'm also tired of this argument. It seems that those who actively engage in it regularly tend to oscillate between "being a mother is the hardest job ever!" and "being a mother is sunshine and roses!" I've heard numerous mothers say things like "BEING A MOMMY IS THE HARDEST JOB EVER! YOU WON'T UNDERSTAND UNTIL YOU

I was wondering about this, too. The most famous sci-fi women authors I can think of (Mary Shelley, Ursula Le Guin, Margaret Atwood) all got promoted out of "science fiction" and into "literature." This certainly happens plenty with men as well (Kurt Vonnegut, Douglas Adams) but I wonder if there's a belief (correct

I know men who are reluctant at best to read anything written by a female author. I can't think of many women who are as reluctant to read anything written by a male author.

Publishers are frightened enough of consumer skepticism that they've been known to actively disguise the sex of authors outside their "proper" genres. Nora Roberts wrote as J. D. Robb (genderless but obviously means to sound male) for years because she was writing sci-fi styled murder mysteries.

..... which meaning of "urban" is applicable to urban fantasy?