Jerking it to Bowsette isn't weird anymore because now there's a live action version on pornhub.
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Reboot was always for those kids that hung out with the creepy dude in his 60s that was still too enthusiastic about baseball cards and comic books.
https://mobile.twitter.com/EntranceJew/status/889699133052866561/video/1Here is some other thing Ernest Cline wrote. Edit: Here's the entire thing.(Image removed from quote.)
Quote from: TVC 15 on December 12, 2017, 11:41:02 AMReboot was always for those kids that hung out with the creepy dude in his 60s that was still too enthusiastic about baseball cards and comic books.So you liked Reboot huh
Honestly, in my 7 years here, I never once felt like I wasn’t able to speak my mind, even in the last few years in particular. So I’d say over-moderation, still.
if the age gap is more than four years it's fucking gross
Quote from: Leadbelly on December 12, 2017, 09:46:03 AMQuote from: Stro on December 11, 2017, 11:37:42 PMQuote from: Leadbelly on December 11, 2017, 11:02:29 PMQuote from: Cindi Mayweather on December 11, 2017, 10:24:07 PMWhat race are the people saying that women age poorly talking about?Some women age well. A large part depends on your genetics, but women tend to look after their skin more also.Interestingly though men age better than women in general. The reason is because men and women have different skin types. Men have thicker skin and much more collagen in their skin. It is the loss of collagen that makes the skin lose its elasticity. Men however, tend not to look after their skin as much as women so it isn't always readily noticeable. That said Monica Bellucci is a good example of a woman who aged well. She said once that she felt she was at her most attractive at around 38-39 years of age. She certainly wasn't unattractive at that age, that's for sure. If you've seen the movie irreversible, she was 38-39 in that movie.(Image removed from quote.)Men generally don't age better than women, but what is attractive about men is different than women, so being older and grosser for a man can be almost entirely counteracted by things that generally only come with age (money, prestige, social standing, wisdom, security). Meanwhile, a woman's attractiveness is almost always based on her physical appearance, which is certainly a finite resource, as is the ability to produce off spring. The system is rigged At least now older, even post menopausal women look better and are given more looks in generalNo, men do age better than women. This is not simply an opinion, there is scientific evidence to back it up. Men's skin ages more slowly because of a greater collagen density.There's more to aging well or poorly than collagen density. Men age like shit, too, even if they get less wrinkles.
Quote from: Stro on December 11, 2017, 11:37:42 PMQuote from: Leadbelly on December 11, 2017, 11:02:29 PMQuote from: Cindi Mayweather on December 11, 2017, 10:24:07 PMWhat race are the people saying that women age poorly talking about?Some women age well. A large part depends on your genetics, but women tend to look after their skin more also.Interestingly though men age better than women in general. The reason is because men and women have different skin types. Men have thicker skin and much more collagen in their skin. It is the loss of collagen that makes the skin lose its elasticity. Men however, tend not to look after their skin as much as women so it isn't always readily noticeable. That said Monica Bellucci is a good example of a woman who aged well. She said once that she felt she was at her most attractive at around 38-39 years of age. She certainly wasn't unattractive at that age, that's for sure. If you've seen the movie irreversible, she was 38-39 in that movie.(Image removed from quote.)Men generally don't age better than women, but what is attractive about men is different than women, so being older and grosser for a man can be almost entirely counteracted by things that generally only come with age (money, prestige, social standing, wisdom, security). Meanwhile, a woman's attractiveness is almost always based on her physical appearance, which is certainly a finite resource, as is the ability to produce off spring. The system is rigged At least now older, even post menopausal women look better and are given more looks in generalNo, men do age better than women. This is not simply an opinion, there is scientific evidence to back it up. Men's skin ages more slowly because of a greater collagen density.
Quote from: Leadbelly on December 11, 2017, 11:02:29 PMQuote from: Cindi Mayweather on December 11, 2017, 10:24:07 PMWhat race are the people saying that women age poorly talking about?Some women age well. A large part depends on your genetics, but women tend to look after their skin more also.Interestingly though men age better than women in general. The reason is because men and women have different skin types. Men have thicker skin and much more collagen in their skin. It is the loss of collagen that makes the skin lose its elasticity. Men however, tend not to look after their skin as much as women so it isn't always readily noticeable. That said Monica Bellucci is a good example of a woman who aged well. She said once that she felt she was at her most attractive at around 38-39 years of age. She certainly wasn't unattractive at that age, that's for sure. If you've seen the movie irreversible, she was 38-39 in that movie.(Image removed from quote.)Men generally don't age better than women, but what is attractive about men is different than women, so being older and grosser for a man can be almost entirely counteracted by things that generally only come with age (money, prestige, social standing, wisdom, security). Meanwhile, a woman's attractiveness is almost always based on her physical appearance, which is certainly a finite resource, as is the ability to produce off spring. The system is rigged At least now older, even post menopausal women look better and are given more looks in general
Quote from: Cindi Mayweather on December 11, 2017, 10:24:07 PMWhat race are the people saying that women age poorly talking about?Some women age well. A large part depends on your genetics, but women tend to look after their skin more also.Interestingly though men age better than women in general. The reason is because men and women have different skin types. Men have thicker skin and much more collagen in their skin. It is the loss of collagen that makes the skin lose its elasticity. Men however, tend not to look after their skin as much as women so it isn't always readily noticeable. That said Monica Bellucci is a good example of a woman who aged well. She said once that she felt she was at her most attractive at around 38-39 years of age. She certainly wasn't unattractive at that age, that's for sure. If you've seen the movie irreversible, she was 38-39 in that movie.(Image removed from quote.)
What race are the people saying that women age poorly talking about?
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showpost.php?p=253108240&postcount=104Quote from: 7echnicolorHonestly, in my 7 years here, I never once felt like I wasn’t able to speak my mind, even in the last few years in particular. So I’d say over-moderation, still.
I'm a "recovering anti-feminist" in that I spent several years in denial about things the patriarchy, male privilege, the wage gap, mansplaining, etc. I think I had a really strong defensive reaction because hearing those things made me extremely disgusted with my own maleness. I have a feeling that a lot of anti-feminists might be experiencing similar emotional responses, and I often wonder how that problem can be fixed. I've noticed that I didn't feel similarly about race, class, or disability. I was fully able to acknowledge that being white, being lower-middle class rather than lower class, and being born in a first-world country gave me advantages. But with gender I couldn't stay objective, and that's somewhat mysterious to me.I still have the same disgust feelings, but I'm now self-aware about them, which makes it possible for me to set them aside and analyze gender-relations objectively. But it's still really hard to not get nauseated when I think about the fact that I have a male sexuality, male physical strength, and look like a man. It reached a point that I considered gender transition because of my guilt over maleness, though now I think that's not for me. I've also done serious research in how to either chemically castrate myself or to reduce my libido down to zero. Which I understand would be bad medically-speaking, but the idea of not having these urges anymore is very difficult to resist.So I guess my question is, have other males experienced this level of shame and disgust after being exposed to feminism? And in particular, what aspects of feminist discussion set you off? I think for me the biggest "trigger" is discussions about "masculinity." I think in my mental image, I'm just an abstract being who happens to inhabit a particular physical avatar. But the word "masculinity" implies some kind of connection between me and that physical form, and that disturbs me.And also of course, the recent sexual assault discussions have raised all of this to a new level. It's become increasingly hard to put any of this stuff out of my thoughts. I think a lot of the disgust is centered around feeling like an "ogre" or an animal due to my physical appearance and the role I would play in sex. And of course, logically I know that not all sex is rape, that if a woman consented I shouldn't feel guilty for being with her, etc. But knowing those things logically doesn't make the male role any more palatable.
Quote from: I'm a Puppy! on December 12, 2017, 12:37:51 AMhttps://www.resetera.com/threads/former-facebook-exec-says-social-media-is-ripping-apart-society.10683/Look at all these Peter ceteras being like "quite right! Social media makes people stupid! Except me. My twitter is immaculate" Printing press is the WOAT, it enabled Mein Kampf !
https://www.resetera.com/threads/former-facebook-exec-says-social-media-is-ripping-apart-society.10683/Look at all these Peter ceteras being like "quite right! Social media makes people stupid! Except me. My twitter is immaculate"
Yes, that is very funny, but coming from SeanBaby... that's a little hypocritical isn't it? Hasn't his shtick been "Man the 80s and 90s sure were dumb, let's look at them" for about 20 years now?
Quote from: zomgee on December 12, 2017, 03:00:21 PMYes, that is very funny, but coming from SeanBaby... that's a little hypocritical isn't it? Hasn't his shtick been "Man the 80s and 90s sure were dumb, let's look at them" for about 20 years now?I'm honestly surprised he is still around doing the same thing.
I scored my wife with a Barney and Friends references; pre-school girls are so easy.
Not GAF, but it's too good not to sharehttps://www.reddit.com/r/MensLib/comments/7j6wt6/extreme_male_guilt/QuoteI'm a "recovering anti-feminist" in that I spent several years in denial about things the patriarchy, male privilege, the wage gap, mansplaining, etc. I think I had a really strong defensive reaction because hearing those things made me extremely disgusted with my own maleness. I have a feeling that a lot of anti-feminists might be experiencing similar emotional responses, and I often wonder how that problem can be fixed. I've noticed that I didn't feel similarly about race, class, or disability. I was fully able to acknowledge that being white, being lower-middle class rather than lower class, and being born in a first-world country gave me advantages. But with gender I couldn't stay objective, and that's somewhat mysterious to me.I still have the same disgust feelings, but I'm now self-aware about them, which makes it possible for me to set them aside and analyze gender-relations objectively. But it's still really hard to not get nauseated when I think about the fact that I have a male sexuality, male physical strength, and look like a man. It reached a point that I considered gender transition because of my guilt over maleness, though now I think that's not for me. I've also done serious research in how to either chemically castrate myself or to reduce my libido down to zero. Which I understand would be bad medically-speaking, but the idea of not having these urges anymore is very difficult to resist.So I guess my question is, have other males experienced this level of shame and disgust after being exposed to feminism? And in particular, what aspects of feminist discussion set you off? I think for me the biggest "trigger" is discussions about "masculinity." I think in my mental image, I'm just an abstract being who happens to inhabit a particular physical avatar. But the word "masculinity" implies some kind of connection between me and that physical form, and that disturbs me.And also of course, the recent sexual assault discussions have raised all of this to a new level. It's become increasingly hard to put any of this stuff out of my thoughts. I think a lot of the disgust is centered around feeling like an "ogre" or an animal due to my physical appearance and the role I would play in sex. And of course, logically I know that not all sex is rape, that if a woman consented I shouldn't feel guilty for being with her, etc. But knowing those things logically doesn't make the male role any more palatable.
Quote from: Jansen on December 12, 2017, 04:03:46 PMQuote from: zomgee on December 12, 2017, 03:00:21 PMYes, that is very funny, but coming from SeanBaby... that's a little hypocritical isn't it? Hasn't his shtick been "Man the 80s and 90s sure were dumb, let's look at them" for about 20 years now?I'm honestly surprised he is still around doing the same thing.It's like Maddox trying to do a youtube show now as if it had even the slightest semblance of the personality his old writings had. Just not the same anymore.
https://www.resetera.com/threads/rotten-apples-website-to-search-if-a-movie-features-someone-accused-of-sexual-misconduct.10875/
It didn't even occur to me that Weinstein was attached to Lord of the Rings. Man, I'm fucking bummed...
the idea of not watching bladerunner 2049 because of the few minutes Jared Leto was in the movie is insane god I can't wait till it is on bluray to watch itcagain
I feel things like that site are going to help people who have trouble accepting the real world is out there. They will eventually come to terms with fact that almost everything they like, somewhere somehow, has something attached to it they don't like.
Quote from: Uncle on December 12, 2017, 04:30:08 PMQuote from: Jansen on December 12, 2017, 04:03:46 PMQuote from: zomgee on December 12, 2017, 03:00:21 PMYes, that is very funny, but coming from SeanBaby... that's a little hypocritical isn't it? Hasn't his shtick been "Man the 80s and 90s sure were dumb, let's look at them" for about 20 years now?I'm honestly surprised he is still around doing the same thing.It's like Maddox trying to do a youtube show now as if it had even the slightest semblance of the personality his old writings had. Just not the same anymore.Maddox has been doing a YouTube show for years and years and years and not only did it perfectly capture the tone of his previous writing, the show was even better than the original format. Get fucked you tasteless mongoloid.
(Image removed from quote.)
In 2002, Jones was arrested for possession of child pornography and accused of soliciting a 14-year-old boy to pose for nude photographs.[24] Jones pleaded no contest to a felony charge. His attorney emphasized that there was no allegation of improper physical contact. His punishment was five years probation, counseling, and the requirement to register as a sex offender.[25] He has been arrested twice for failing to update his sex offender status, both in Florida (2004)[26] and in California (2010).
In July 2016, Jones posed with Justin Bieber for a photo that was shared to Bieber's Instagram; the post (captioned "Ferris buellers day off") was later deleted.
First Lady Barbara Bush paraphrased the film in her 1990 commencement address at Wellesley College: "Find the joy in life, because as Ferris Bueller said on his day off, 'Life moves pretty fast; if you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it!'" Responding to the audience's enthusiastic applause, she added "I'm not going to tell George ya clapped more for Ferris than ya clapped for George."
Someone look up Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery, site doesnt load for me. Wanna see if Joe Son pops.
rottenapplesaustin powersCast: John TravoltaCast: Kevin SpaceyCast: Rob Lowe
rottenapplesapocalypse nowCast: Marlon BrandoCast: Charlie Sheen
Quote from: Momo on December 12, 2017, 11:19:02 PMSomeone look up Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery, site doesnt load for me. Wanna see if Joe Son pops. Quoterottenapplesaustin powersCast: John TravoltaCast: Kevin SpaceyCast: Rob Lowe