Question for anybody that might already own this . . .
Question for anybody that might already own this . . .
Question for anybody that might already own this . . .
Question for anybody that might already own this . . .
Funnier than anything Jim Davis ever wrote.
“He won because no one noticed he was there.”
“Um, no I didn’t. I agreed Trump did get primary votes.”
Well said.
But you refuted your own point. He did exceptionally well in the primary against far more experienced politicians. Why? Because he’s a great salesman/communicator/bullshitter.
I didn’t say he was good at speaking or writing. I said he was good at communicating.
Go on . . .
It’s not a “bizarre insistence,” it’s an intentional rhetorical tactic.
I feel like, recently, I’ve been seeing the word “savage” everywhere.
Yes. They’re overly focused on his death. Not on his body. Adjra’s point is a fair one.
I’m not arguing that the joke wasn’t funny. I thought it was very clever. But, it was incredibly cruel, and that’s not dismissable just because the joke “works.”
I thought Deadspin’s stance was that the only thing worse than programs and franchises building a business on injured athletes’ brains was segments like ESPN’s “Jacked Up” exploiting those injuries for ratings?
I wish they still made that car. I also live in Colorado, and the WRX wagon was the perfect car (well, maybe if it had the GTI’s interior).
$20 says you didn’t see the movie.
But this wasn’t making fun of a “power dynamic.” It was making fun of a fat, unattractive person’s appearance.
“Punching up” would apply if this were a joke about men. This is a joke directed at an individual. It was cruel.
That was an amazing joke, and I salute that woman’s wit, but it was also incredibly cruel.
I misread your comment. Gotcha.
I know your comment is a year old, and maybe the ‘15s were spec’d differently, but I’ve got a 2016 GTI in my garage and it definitely has a sunroof.