mmanual--disqus
monstermanual
mmanual--disqus

The Nasty Bits covering What Love Is is this show's disinterest in the actual people and story of punk in a nutshell: Rocket From the Tombs didn't exist in 1973, and even later were unknown outside of Cleveland, Ohio, and the version of What Love Is they play is the Dead Boys version, by RFTT members who moved to New

Not to mention The Hot Rock, or that Dig Me Out was a huge departure from their first two albums…

It takes a cold heart to complain about "wipe, wipe, wipe."

There's no blurred line in the scene though. It is a rape. The blurred line is in the book, where Jaime knows she wants it, which the author prefers!

This is an important point. In both the scenes discussed here, Cersei and Dany are being victimized, even if it is more ambiguous in the book than in the show. Is it worse for the show to depict it as such?

If you ran up to someone on the street and started kissing them and tearing their clothes off and hoisting them onto a nearby surface to fuck them, you'd be sexually assaulting them.

What was it when Jaime overpowered her and tore her clothes off?

He didn't force her to have sex when he forcefully lifted her up and tore off her clothes over her objections? Does sex only start when Jaime's penis goes in?

Jaime overpowers her and tears off her clothes while not listening to her say she doesn't want to have sex. Then she takes his penis, says yes, and kisses him. Does that make it okay that he forced her into having sex in a church next to her son's corpse?

Yes, after he has already started to have sex with her, despite her objections, she gives in to him. Does that make it okay?

btw, even if her ONLY objection is location, that's still a good objection. It's a reasonable objection to not want to fuck in a church next to your son's corpse, even if you want to fuck otherwise. Jaime still ignores her.

Really? She wanted to hook up? Where in the text do you find that? Where she says she doesn't want to hook up? Because she gives in, AFTER he forcefully starts to have sex with her, does that make it all right?

I keep seeing so many links to this piece on the internet which think that the book scene was perfectly consensual. Oh, so Cersei consented when she told Jaime she didn't want to have sex? Did she consent when she pounded on his chest and "he never heard her"?

I think the argument on the scene last night is undercut by referring back to the text itself. I had forgotten everything about the scene except that they had sex near Joffrey's body, but reading it again, its super creepy, right? At best Jaime forces himself on Cersei near their son's corpse and she kind of goes

And who hasn't read that many books. It's nonsense to act like there are all of TWO good Marvel books right now. Even beyond Hawkeye and Daredevil- Thor, Avengers AI, Black Widow, Superior Foes, and Secret Avengers are cream of the crop, and then we have outstanding new #1s with Loki and Ms. Marvel, and dearly

There's some bullshit in this article. An easy way to distinguish Lena Dunham from Hannah is that one of them is a professional television writer and director and one of them is a comedy tv character.

You're forgetting they showed his entitlement and arrogance a lot last season, particularly when he talked to Ros and Osha. I think we'll see more soon as he waltzes into Balon's keep and expects to be handed his inheritance.

"Sleigh Bells’ amateurish and tinny-sounding performance"