Well, it is a story about someone creating a power structure and using it to harmfully exploit others for purely self-serving reasons, in a way that is clearly unethical and possibly criminal.
Well, it is a story about someone creating a power structure and using it to harmfully exploit others for purely self-serving reasons, in a way that is clearly unethical and possibly criminal.
Happy Death Day After Next
Depending on how old you are now, 14 year old you may have looked forward to reading him because he was actually really good at one point. He just turned into a cheap parody of himself IMMEDIATELY after going to ESPN, and then somehow it’s been all downhill even from that point.
Pro-tip: if you take a swig of Bud Light, then top it off with amaretto, it tastes like Dr. Pepper.
You are asking one question, and I am asking another.
You left out the part where Lebron also tells the ref that he would never again work another one of his games, which often include late playoffs and finals which are the most prestigious, thereby threatening the very livelihood of a person who makes 0.000001% as much as he does.
I.e. “I don’t have any examples but since other people have said other refs treat men and women players differently, I just decided to make up that he does too.”
Show me an example of a male player outright threatening his livelihood, and him not doing anything about it, and I’ll take my comment back. But I’m going to venture a guess you completely made that up.
The whole show is great, and I will be wholeheartedly rooting for Sandra Oh to win her Emmy. But Jodie Comer is just on another level - legitimately one of the most enthralling performances I’ve seen.
Take the double-standard out of it - do you think Serena should have been assessed a code violation for verbal abuse?
It’s unbelievable to me that Deadspin, of all places, is taking a case of a multimillionaire athlete many, many, many times over threatening the livelihood of a worker who won’t make in ten years what she did that afternoon, and saying “yeah the multimillionaire is the victim here”.
That’s the most laughably pathetic thing I’ve ever seen.
What??
You seem to be missing the reality that in this day and age, many relationships start between people who meet at work, and there is nothing inherently wrong with that. Everything you say about harassment applies to any situation where two people may meet, and is not work specific. People should always act…
I’m okay that they overlooked Killing Eve as the Overlooked Drama, so long at we all agree that Jodie Comer was the most overlooked nominee in any category, period.
I’m going to continue “listening” to the many people I personally know, who are dating or have dated people they met at work. If they “did the job they are there to do” and “swyped on Tinder for sex”, they would have been deprived of loving, happy relationships (and often marriages), which doesn’t seem like the best…
as has been made clear over the last year many many more people are uncomfortable with co-workers hitting on them
I flirted with a coworker once, but was respectful and not a creep. We are married now. Last weekend we attended a wedding of two of our other former coworkers.
I also think it’s very strange that people are looking at Norm Macdonald, who very recently wrote a “memoir” that was blatantly made up, and taking what he said at 100% face value.
“Celebrity nutritionist” is a thing that should very much not exist.