n0w4yj053
NOPE. I'm out. Too toxic.
n0w4yj053

ihate the people who would write this, fake write this, and i feel like i hate the fictional person it applies to.

The bright-eyed ingenue is what's popular now. Emma Stone and Jennifer Lawrence have it. Kristen Stewart doesn't have it and isn't trying to have it and doesn't care if you don't like that she doesn't have it. She would have fit in better with the anti-heroes of the 1970s than she does today.

Even if you think she's the worst actress the Hollywood pipeline ever excreted (I happen to think she's fine), it's still vaguely distasteful to sneer at a woman for not giving you the facial expressions you think she should. Kristen Stewart doesn't owe you smiles.

an updated look that reflects her ability to pick up buildings and mountains and throw them at jerks.

African Diaspora is a legitimate sociological term referring to millions of people, including me.

I'm sure she was awful, but "African diaspora" is a legit term if you are talking about, you know, the "African diaspora." What would be ironic about it? It's a real thing.

Loved Capaldi as the Doctor. Love the fact that Clara is more than just a sexist catchphrase now. And I question why they haven't given the Mystery Threesome their own spin-off series yet.

Milo Manara

Maybe I'm just a little on edge about this shit lately, but it seems kind of telling to me that if you get involved in the American Prison Industrial Complex and you're white, you get a million dollar publishing deal at the end of it. As opposed to if you're black, in which case you get dead.

Fair enough.

That, ladies and gentlemen, is what a hero looks like.

Because people think that everything needs to be tailored to them and make them feel special. Keza says she played every day for 8 years but always felt alienated. Well if she played every day for 8 years then it must not have bothered her cuz she kept playing. You don't do something that upsets you every day for 8

I also read those lyrics as "No, really, some dudes dig this," which... why are we mad about it? Self-acceptance doesn't preclude the desire to have someone else find you attractive.

But at the same time, she states that if you don't like the way she looks then move along. I feel like a lot of people have been reading too much into individual phrases within the song without placing them within the greater context of the song itself. Everyone wants to be seen as attractive to the sex of their

I get it - it's bad because it's on the radio.

Still holding out for Paterson Joseph, personally. I love Elba like I love oxygen (so much!), but he seems far too busy for a project like Who.

I've already seen the Blake's Seven reboot. It's called "Farscape"

As Danny "Machete" Trejo says,