You’re thinking of The Chris Farley Show.
You’re thinking of The Chris Farley Show.
I actually prefer the dehydrated onions. The big slices of raw onion are too overpowering.
Yeah. I started to mention that aspect of it as well in my previous comment, but I left it out in the interest of brevity and cohesion. Hard to be more specific when you’ve had your cultural heritage stripped from you.
I typically use “black” and it does seem from my experience that most people prefer it, but it depends on the context somewhat. Polling on the subject shows that there’s no strong preference. Though I suppose it’s not broken down by age. It would certainly sound weird to phrase it the way you did, but it doesn’t sound…
If it’s preferred, it’s by a small margin. Polling shows that they’re both equally acceptable. I use “black” more often myself, but there are certain contexts when “African American” feels more appropriate. If nothing else, it can be useful to provide variety in a paragraph.
Sure. It can be. But I don’t think the idea that it’s offensive is a widespread opinion. That’s not what polling shows at least.
More saliently, Black Americans are not Africans, and haven’t been for eons
I’m nearly always amenable to the idea that a majority white cast should be more diverse. But the idea that Luigi, a canonically Italian character, must be voiced by a person of Latin origin simply because Leguizamo played him in a very poorly received and best forgotten live-action adaptation 30 years ago is pretty…
I don’t follow American Idol or Pop music, but you should probably include Adam Lambert. Dude toured with Queen and has apparently sold a ton of solo albums. I’d say he’s more successful than everyone on your list other than Hudson.
They’re illusions, Mary Kate. A trick is what a whore does for money.
So every character in every one of those photos is Kristen Ritter? Pretty impressive.
I understand the distinction you’re making and I agree that it’s more commonly used the way you’re using it. But I don’t think that makes the other usage wrong.
I don’t see how any of that is treating her like a hero. They’re just happy she’s home because they felt like her imprisonment was unfair. I really don’t get why you have such a bone to pick with her. Did you lose a bet on one of her teams or something? It’s weird.
Seems like you need to read your own comments again. You used the word “hero” in your very first response, before anyone had replied to you. You directly asserted that Jezebel was treating her as a hero.
Bro... If the law is unjust, then imprisoning anyone for violating it is necessarily unjust. You can’t separate one from the other. Moreover, Griner’s imprisonment was especially unjust because of the length of the sentence she was given. That satisfies your hairsplitting “manner” criterion.
Does this make any of these people heroic?
But “wrongfully imprisoned” is not the same thing as “imprisoned because of an unjust law”.
Breaking: Out of work actors would like more work.
I would contend that my way of thinking is the norm, not the exception. But it’s fine I guess. If you want to be angry over nothing, that’s your choice.
I really don’t see how that is at all a problem. I have had people respond to me by asking if something was still available and then not message me again after I said yes. But so what? It took two seconds of my time. As others have pointed out, someone can say that they will remove the ad when the item is sold and…