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Vulture put up an interview with Fake Harry yesterday, and he pretty much just said he thought it was a hilarious concept and they agreed to let him keep a bunch of the clothes, so he did it. He also said a lot of the girls didn't believe he was Harry at first but were somewhat convinced by the other women.

How about Ron Weasley?

A rejected idea: I Wanna Bone Joey Fatone

That would be a great post.. nudge nudge :)

Uncle Joe only at #23??!!?

Kanye's on a list of his own.

Seriously? What kind of "Men We Love" list doesn't have Kanye? No way!

This is the finest most comprehensive list I've ever had the pleasure of reading. Bless this.

I swear to dog I scrolled down through this whole list just looking to see where Patrick Stewart would be and my heart actually started to pound at about 10 at the idea that you guys had left him out. I am so sorry for my doubt, however short-lived.

People who don't need or understand trigger warnings think they're infantilizing. People who don't take the pain of others seriously think they are infantilizing. The people who would actually use them and benefit from them think that they are a simple way to improve their learning experience. I'm sure there are

We aren't asking for trigger warnings for the world. We are asking for warnings for books. A simple thing that would make people's lives easier. A trigger warning is not the same as censorship. All it does is tell people what to expect so they can prepare themselves or avoid it. That's all. I don't understand why

The potential for trivial trigger warnings should not keep organizations from installing a warning system for obvious things like rape and violence. There are people who could seriously benefit from it. Helping people like that should take priority over sticking it to kids on tumblr.

However: It also cheapens & insults victims when they hear things such as "grow a spine", "get over yourself", "selfish millennial", etc... Even worse when this is prefaced by "I'm sorry but..." And the despair a victim feels when they hear it from a professional who should know better.

And I think it's easy to put in place a common-sense policy that warns (key word here) students of potentially triggering material. I don't think saying "this book contains a lynching scene" and allowing someone to skip that day's class discussion will lead to students getting a free pass because they disagree with

I take your comment that rape victims and sufferers of PTSD need to "grow a spine" pretty fucking personally. You basically called anyone who has problem with being triggered a coward.

In my opinion (I'm not at all sorry) you are a selfish, incompetent asshole who really doesn't know what the fuck they are talking about. Being triggered isn't about having a spine. It's an involuntary reaction to trauma. I don't want to throw up and start crying. That isn't fun for me. If I could just forget and make

No, I don't expect any warnings for anything. I myself was totally shocked by that occurrence, as well as all the others that followed & contine to follow. And while that illustrates that it's not likely possible to warn for *everything*, it also illustrates that something so seemingly innocent & normal can trigger an

But if everyone bases their education solely around topics that make them comfortable, we're going to run into problems real quick.

They have a cereal: