Well apparently he has just never tweeted. Also weird.
Well apparently he has just never tweeted. Also weird.
Also, Jared Kushner deleted his entire twitter feed. That’s kinda interesting.
Lauren, you lucky bitch...
If it doesn’t include Laura Linney’s character setting healthy boundaries and having some hot sex, I’m not into it.
This chemistry could be ridic, I’m hopeful.
I just saw Sandy Cohen’s dick...
My original comment also came across as snarky and dismissive, which I didn’t intend. We’re all here to discuss and we won’t always agree. I like that this is one of the few comment sections where this actually happens :)
I understand that and wish that was more apparent from the interview and not just the Jezebel write-up. My frustration is more with how Health and other diet/exercise magazines frame these stories, but I didn’t articulate that very well in my original comment.
I’m with you on that! What I poorly articulated in my original comment is that statements about body positivity that are covered by magazines seem to only come from thin problem who are slightly less thin than the Hollywood standard. It can feel disingenuous and exclusionary, especially when it’s splashed in a…
I don’t know if this was talked about in the full interview and they chose to cut it or not, but that is how it comes across when you just read the Health interview without the Jezebel commentary.
That is true. My problem is less with Tracy Ellis Ross and more how these types of stories are chosen and reported. I would like to see way more diversity of body types in the “I love my body now” oeuvre.
The Jezebel commentary adds context to the societal issue, but the actual interview is just diet and exercise talk. When you talk about how much you love your body and then claim OLIVES are a vice? Come on now.
This is a super important point that I wish was part of the discussion in the interview. My problem is that she talks about accepting herself while appearing on a cover that advertises losing weight and dieting. That’s on the magazine.
That’s not what I’m saying at all. I’m saying love your body, but recognize that where you fall on the spectrum of size privilege as well.
I think my problem is the way it’s reported than the way she’s saying it.
You said it better than I.
I’m a big proponent of body positivity, but these hyperbolic statements where a thin person talks about how much they’ve struggled being slightly less thin than other thin people drive me nuts.
Great info... that should be in the article.
I feel like every conversation about feminism should start with three questions: