thedrunkenchild2
thedrunkenchild
thedrunkenchild2

“All hail the new king I guess”

It’s almost like there’s a contingent of vocal Twitter activists who are ready to condemn any and everything he says based not on the content of his material but because he said something they didn’t like about transgender people months ago?

He didn’t say Jewish people control Hollywood, he said he could understand why some people might think that. “There’s also a lot of Black people in Ferguson, Missouri, but that don’t mean they run the place.”

So, a handful of writers sat out this episode and, as a result, it turned out to be the best of the season. If I were Lorne, I’d thank those writers for identifying themselves as the problem and give them their walking papers.

He said nothing disparaging about the Jewish people. He simply said what the vast majority of Americans already know but are afraid to say out loud: You’re allowed to make observations about every demographic in this country, except one. Pointing out a demographic coincidence that there is a disproportionate

While that’s true, many of her roles so far have been heavily sexual even by Hollywood actress standards.

I’m so over this.

Why did you choose the single worst picture of Anya Taylor Joy I’ve ever seen?

My argument is that there’s this bizarre compulsion from Americans to vet the media from around the world and imperiously grant it a seal of approval or disdain.

“I don’t think the Americans should be moral arbiters for the rest of the world.”

The flip side of “There’s dragons and orcs, why can’t there be Black people? This is a made up story and doesn’t represent reality, you can do whatever you want!” is “There’s dragons and orcs, why does there HAVE to be Black people? This is a made up story and doesn’t represent reality, you can do whatever you want!”

The truly baffling American desire to police other countries.

Creatives, here is a handy tool for determining the racial makeup of all fictional content moving forward...

Its almost as if forced diversity is more problematic than the problems it preposes to solve.

As someone whose never used Twitter before I’m becoming extremely judgmental of how these people spend days worth of time. Everyone wants to discuss this with me and I’m like “oh that thing that doesn’t affect me and only affects you because of arbitrary lines you’ve drawn in your head”. It’s wild people are like how

“As of today I have access to all my accounts and finances again”

So in less than 48 hours this has gone from alleging/revealing her husband was controlling every aspect of her life financially and emotionally, forcing her to continue doing streams, promising to sell off everything she had and threatening to murder her dogs if she did anything to displease him to… oh he just gave

She is correct that this film can give people the impression that all obese people are miserable but this was a play based on an obese man’s personal experience. We need to be able to tell all the stories, and this is one of them. 

It seems to me, as someone who has not seen this movie and only has this article and a write-up in the New York Times to go by, that this is a ridiculous overreaction to a film that is trying to be artsy or whatever in its unconventional choices. This is not a standard biopic. It sounds like a terrible movie, but

Do men and women play chess against one another at the highest levels?