treize123
Treize13
treize123

Snowflakes, the lot of them.

Agreed. I follow her on Instagram and find myself clenching my teeth when I read her posts. I just keep thinking the people who want to control her $$$ are going to use her erratic posts to find some way to control her again and next time it may not be so easy to get out of the situation.

That was Netflix, she didn’t feel that she was getting paid enough to do a comedy special. 

I agree Brit’s writing style is a bit rambling and teenagery. But her ideas are pretty coherent. I think she’s immature, which would make perfect sense given her life circumstances. I also wonder about her mental health too though.

I really hope she’s seeing a therapist or psychologist or something because coming out of that conservatorship and suddenly having to take care of herself after all these years has to be jarring. Her posts as of late are a bit...odd? 

I’m in no way defending these creeps and predators. But the grammies are really the biggest joke among all the award shows. Even the Oscars seem edgy in comparison.

Accountability is nice, so I won’t rush to call them. Glad Lee took responsibility for his actions. 

I don’t know, feel like Louis C.K. winning a Grammy was a pretty big slap.

Hailey’s dress isn’t a goddess dress. It’s a sheet wrapped around her like a towel. They both earn spots on the worst-dressed list; it’s just that his outfit is SO much worse that she looks almost sensible next to him.

Jerry Seinfeld’s prolonged whingefest about the current state of comedy and PC culture is endlessly amusing to me. Like, does he have a solid 60 minutes of material about fisting that he’s always wanted to do or something? Has he been waiting his whole career to move on from airplane food to donkey punching? 

And Jerry Seinfeld bitching about how comedians have to be all PC now.

I found it fascinating to see comedy clubs immediately putting up signs about it, apparently, as if there’s a sincere concern from them that this is absolutely going to happen in comedy clubs now, in spite of the fact that this was an incident which took place between two stars at an award show. I’m not talking about

all the comedians complaining about the slap and all the people who are like “comedians can’t make jokes anymore?”

I’m guessing the cocaine-fueled orgy Cawthorn is referencing is just these two guys trying to stretch out $50 worth of coke last all night while watching 5 straight hours of Cinemax and trying not to cry.

Because it eventually ends up being some kind of measuring stick for all black people. “White Gaze”, etc etc.

If the GMG websites want to tell me I’m not supposed to have thoughts about something sensational that happened on one of the biggest stages in the world between two A-list actors, they can bring their argument to me or they can stop writing about the incident altogether.  These are gossip websites-the whole point is

There are a LOT of excellent posts/articles/essays that answer your question. I recommend Roxane Gay’s essay, which you can find on her Twitter. The fact that you haven’t found the answer to your question all over social media makes me think you don’t follow a lot of Black and brown people who talk about race, which

This is such vague passive aggressiveness that I can’t even tell which part of what I said got under your skin. You either think Black women make this too much of a big deal or people with alopecia don’t matter in this conversation. Either way - weird thing to feel bothered about.

We don’t need white people in ALL of our conversations. When we want to hear from you, we will ask. In the meantime, leave us alone.

I believe it has to do with the fact that Black women have endured too much for us to understand what that moment was like for Jada and Will.