seraphxiii
Seraph_X3
seraphxiii

Yeah, he's cute. I didn't think he was conventionally attractive, though. … He has a small mouth and a lack of upper lip, more specifically. It's not really a flaw so much as a reason I don't think he's conventionally a Hollywood hottie type. I guess general tastes are changing, though? I'd honestly rather be with

I think it's definitely wrong to objectify people (I'd NEVER call someone MILF), but attractiveness is generally something we all pay attention to. I think it's MOSTLY okay, or at the very least less problematic, to discuss it, so long as you're not getting into detail about what you'd like to do to them based solely

I actually thought Blunt did the best she could with the material and even played them pretty big, like with the robots and the baking competition sketch. The material just wasn't always the strongest is all.

I didn't see them until well into college (just one of those things), and always got a reaction like I didn't know what Star Wars was when I mentioned it.

I actually think Cecily is an overlooked treasure on the show who gets overshadowed by (the great) McKinnon. She's just as good at committing to funny characters without breaking, and I think those two could easily be the new Tina Fey/Amy Poehler or Ana Gasteyer/Molly Shannon. I'm wondering when they'll bring back her

Emily Blunt for Janet Van Dyne, perhaps?

[thinks] Huh. Yeah, they've not really had a conventionally Hollywood star looking guy in a while. Jason Sudeikis really only comes mind in the past few years. Not that anyone's been ugly, mind you, but like… no real male eye candy. And yet all the women are generally conventionally Hollywood attractive, save for

I took it as a more blatant acknowledgment that their "real women" sizes still comes off as patronizing and still makes women feel like they're "other" if they have to shop at a place that makes a point of selling to them.

Huh. I took it more as kind of a pedantic clarification that implied her sense of superiority for liking the original British over the American one, despite being American herself.

Apart from Kyle Mooney in the last few moments (what the hell was that sudden personality shift?), that sketch probably got the biggest laughs out of me of the night. Something about playing it straight while committing to the hamster aspect of it, like Bennet's drinking from the bottle, just got to me. Same reason

I think what's most disturbing is that, like most villains, they believe that what they're doing is right and justified, even if they know a lot of it is problematic to the rest of the world. They have the mentality of "these people just don't understand Christianity - TRUE Christianity." And because they show

Not really. It's a somewhat distant branch off of the Maranatha Campus Ministries concept of disciplining that was a subject of controversy in the 80s. That movement planted a church elsewhere, that church planned several churches across the US and even New Zealand, and then there's my former church, which actually

Yeah, I mean… pretty much. It actually kinda took me a very long time to use that word more seriously, and even now it's like, "Well, at least they didn't give us Kool-Aid?"

Aw, thanks. [hugs back]

They've been reported to the school, since they use their facilities as a non-profit and such, but word has it the leaders have outright told members that the report that was filed doesn't actually exist, despite my two friends and I contributing our stories to the report alongside former members from years ago and up

Yeah, the goal of that church was allegedly to be a safe place to kids coming into college and keep them off drugs and to respect women and all that and of course talk about Jesus and such, which, you know, fine, but when you got down to it, there was a calculated militancy, and they would slowly bring you into the

Same boat, for somewhat similar reasons as to what you allude to, only I'm a guy. I was finally dealing with some stuff related to my experiences with sexual abuse as a kid right around the time I first went to college, having told my best friend, he first person I'd ever told, the year before. We both went to this

Counterpoint: For some reason, I find it clever that they melded modern gospel with the Muses.

Yeah, I can KINDA understand the mentality of keeping something simpler vs. the sometimes complicated world of new technology, too, but at the same time, the security risks involved or even the fact that the company who made out system went out of business over a decade ago is just kinda terrifying.

Oh, I know. That was my suggestion. I just… I can't exactly do that without permission.