prettylegit
PrettyLegit
prettylegit

This is the only correct answer.

So, they protested the Academy, because the government has statute of limitations in place?

Based on that one story alone, you make the jump to “Carey is involved in someone’s death”? Did we read the same profile? Aside from getting angry on set and taking off his makeup (which, it sounds like it was insanely uncomfortable and frustrating to be in) and the one line about he freaked out that he thought the

Get Out didn’t win because Jordan Peele is a new director and Del Toro is very well liked in Hollywood. Assuming anything beyond that is just you projecting.

What a bizarre fucking article. What is even the point of this?

They are in great shape, though. They are an incredibly healthy company from an overall perspective. The network gets a lot of traffic, they are looking at an even bigger TV deal, and are making money overall. From their end, they see zero reason to pass the torch right now.

That is the most perfect description of Last Jedi I’ve read yet.

If we’re only counting the movies, sure. But Kingpin is by far the best villain of all their media. Second only in superhero movies to the aforementioned Joker, but only just.

The public outrage machine burns hot, but short. People aren’t going to be up in arms about stuff like this for awhile. How it always goes. Everyone got burnt out on the daily news cycle, and stuff like Aziz being blown out of proportion soured everyone’s thirst for blood. Just how this stuff always works.

Enemy of your enemy is your friend.

I have nothing to do with it one way or the other. I’m just surprised that nobody sees the direction this is headed. It’s like everyone collectively forgot how this works.

Wondering what this movement is going to do when everyone realizes there’s next to zero ACTUAL consequences for keeping said men in their jobs? Like, had Netflix realized nobody was going to watch House of Cards had they kept Spacey on, what would #MeToo have done? As far as I can tell this is the first social justice

Just for my own curiosity, I’m really dying to know whether you think lumping an awkward guy on a date with a decades-long predator like Weinstein is going to have a positive effect on this movement? Surely you have to understand no rational person is going to buy that, and grouping trivial personal issues in with

The-entity-formerly-known-as-Gawker trying to call out another outfit for shoddy reporting. That’s rich.

I mean, do what you want. But, you might want to be aware that you’re tanking your own movement. Do with that fact what you will.

I mean, be pissy about it all you want. You can rattle on about opening dialogues, but the reality of the situation is that most people aren’t going to care unless it directly involves them, as has been true throughout history. In Hollywood, if it’s not affecting someones bank account then it really doesn’t matter.

Surely you understand that the #MeToo movement only has legs so far as companies that employ these people think anyone will give a shit, right? Like, if Netflix doesn’t think they’ll lose any money if they keep Kevin Spacey, then he still has a job. The more trivial the focus of the movement gets, the less likely it

What’s wrong with the universe? Couldn’t tell you. As to why people starred the comment, it’s because it’s true. And that has nothing to do with my views on the matter. It’s just the reality of any situation like this. #MeToo only has power so long as companies take the Weinsteins and Spaceys of the world to task.

I don’t have a problem NOW. I’m just pointing out where this is going to be headed. I don’t really care one way or the other what happens. I’m just letting you know, the more trivial the accusations get, the less people are going to care. And once media companies like Netflix know that people don’t care, and there

I’m just pointing out what the inevitable end to this is going to be. Aziz Ansari being pushy on a date is a far drop off from Harvey Weinstein. What is going to happen is eventually someone is going to make a stir over something even more trivial, and the collective “Okay, now this is just ridiculous” from the