scrunchiepower3
scrunchiepower3
scrunchiepower3

That’s why I just shrug when I see those “Millennials aren’t having kids!!!” articles. I’m two years too old to be considered a millennial, but everything described above combined with my student loan debt, the insane cost of childcare, the destruction of the public school system, and the nonstop gun violence are the

None of my family or friends have EVER thought we could “have it all”. That was always a middle/upper class White woman’s dream.

If it was product placement then it would have been even more annoying because he didn’t make it clear in the tweet.

Oh, this motherfucker ...

Can we take a moment out of talking about how awful NPH is and bask in how lucky we are to be alive right now with Rachel Bloom? I just discovered Crazy Ex-Girlfriend a couple of months ago and I’ve been catching up every single night since. Even if the 3rd season isn’t living up to the first 2, it’s still brilliant

At the same time, NPH is very much brands himself as The Theatre Person™ -, with a specialty in Musical Theatre© - and Rachel Bloom stars in the biggest musical TV show of the last several years. Like it’s a massive award-winnimg critical darling, and I don’t even think it was Rachel’s first year backstage/red carpet

Rachel Bloom’s GQ statement is glorious.

What seems odd to me is what a high end resort gains from having influencers stay at their hotels? They appear to be so exclusive and typically all booked up that they barely even spend money on traditional advertising. What’s to be gained by having someone come stay for free just to advertise to Instagram’s core

I’m trying to imagine something that I have access to that an ‘influencer’ might possibly request, and I’m coming up very short.

Like it or not, she isn’t wrong. I hit up the website and her resort’s cheapest rate for 1 adult for 7 days is $1759/night for a basic room all the way up to just under $5300/night for a two room private beach house. Even meeting in the middle with their ‘Best Rate, Full Board’ it’s still $2,933/night. At 7 days

I’m unclear on why exactly that’s classist. Maldives isn’t a cheap destination, which means that these “influencers” are potentially requesting thousands, if not tens of thousands of dollars worth of services for free.

I am pretty sure that IS what it means. Classist as fuck? The woman is trying to run a goddam business, which is what all these so-called ‘influencers’ should be trying to do.

Technically, those accounts who share your hobbies could be considered influencers. People just can’t believe it, when they are considered ‘them’.

Their best move is to just ignore the emails.

Yeah, I can see that it is annoying to be hounded with these emails, but “influencers are ruining everything” seems extremely hyperbolic... it’s emails.

Serious question: why do people follow “influencers” on instagram? I have instagram, I follow my friends, some museums and some accounts by people who share my hobbies (embroidery and botany). Why would I want to see some random millennial sit by a pool in designer clothes?

I have a small day bike tour company in a heavily touristed city.

I have to tell most ‘influencers’ that our unmanned facebook page with 1200 followers gets more likes for our once every 6 month random post than anything they ever put up.

“6 people liked my picture of a hotel in Florida, can you imagine what I can do

My short-ass mother wore 4 inch heels every damn day from 1982 to 2000 and something. She just recently had to have a double hip replacement and has major knee pain at 64 years old. Heels aren’t worth it.

thats because you’ve already fucked up your feet by wearing high heels regularly. at a certain point, deformed craves deformed.