i think we should all consider a full boycott of usa, including of their cultural exports. books, movies, shows, music, everything. it’s not a culture we should engage with.
Internet 101:
If a blue checkmark user says something upsetting 9/10 it's a grift. The more you engage, even to call them out, the more the algorithm will boost them, and the more Twitter blue money they get.
Ignore, block and report.
Because it does not matter because men of every single religion do this. Atheist men do it, agnostic men do it, Muslim, Jewish, Christian, Hindu, Buddhist men all do it. Men do it because the patriarchy allows them to do it and protects them too.
when the British ruled their colonies they often got the brown sepoys (troops) to murder and control the general colonised population fighting for independence. that is what this reminds me of.
The New York Times had a three-hour interview with Trump and didn’t ask about Epstein. Today, the bombshell release of new files didn’t make the front page.
So who the hell in NYT leadership or ownership was hanging out on the island and wants this to go away?
that white actor wearing an artifact stolen from india while promoting her whitewashed movie in which another white actor stole a role that was originally written for a person of indian heritage is too many levels of infuriating
audiobooks are great! some of us get eye strain easily, specially if we have to look at screens for work. I can also listen to books while crocheting which is like free therapy for me.
"Death to America"
"Umm could you please specify white english descendant christian protestant skinny body-abled neurotypical heterosexual cissexual male with white moms republican MAGA America? Thank you"
I hate Modi and his party with every living cell in my body but if I ever celebrate him being kidnapped by Zionist pedophiles in the middle of the night from my country, please castrate me before you whip me across the streets
We need to start calling US soldiers baby killers again. It should be embarrassing to be a member of the US military. You serve pedophiles and oil companies
besides, women are the primary audience of all kinds of romance, straight gay or sapphic, so it really doesn’t matter. ur not going to be catering to a largely male audience no matter what kind of gay romance you create.
#HeatedRivalry creator Jacob Tierney on why women love the show:
"Women love these books. These are books written by a woman. These are books largely consumed by women. So I wouldn’t want to speak on behalf of a female audience, but I think that what women are presented in romance is not always something that interests them in that way. I think that women are also, in real life and in culture, endlessly exposed to sexual violence. Seeing things like this, that are depictions ultimately of male vulnerability, can be very refreshing. From what I’ve heard, from the women who have written to me and Rachel and the boys, there’s a safety in seeing a woman being removed from the conversation. So you’re watching something happen between two men, and there is no fear of violence. There is no fear of things turning into stuff that women have to deal with too much in real life, and don’t want to deal with in their fantasies, and ultimately, this is a romantic fantasy. I think it’s also that maybe romance — which is a genre that women love and write and read and are the primary consumers of — just doesn’t get treated with a lot of respect. Nor do the people that make it, or those that adapt it either. So I think that they are responding to, at least I hope, the fact that we came to it pretty fullhearted, and as fans and as people who want to honor this material and want to honor the genre and make it as romantic as we can. That’s certainly what I wanted to do."
https://t.co/bgM12PVVnA
#HeatedRivalry creator Jacob Tierney on why women love the show:
"Women love these books. These are books written by a woman. These are books largely consumed by women. So I wouldn’t want to speak on behalf of a female audience, but I think that what women are presented in romance is not always something that interests them in that way. I think that women are also, in real life and in culture, endlessly exposed to sexual violence. Seeing things like this, that are depictions ultimately of male vulnerability, can be very refreshing. From what I’ve heard, from the women who have written to me and Rachel and the boys, there’s a safety in seeing a woman being removed from the conversation. So you’re watching something happen between two men, and there is no fear of violence. There is no fear of things turning into stuff that women have to deal with too much in real life, and don’t want to deal with in their fantasies, and ultimately, this is a romantic fantasy. I think it’s also that maybe romance — which is a genre that women love and write and read and are the primary consumers of — just doesn’t get treated with a lot of respect. Nor do the people that make it, or those that adapt it either. So I think that they are responding to, at least I hope, the fact that we came to it pretty fullhearted, and as fans and as people who want to honor this material and want to honor the genre and make it as romantic as we can. That’s certainly what I wanted to do."
https://t.co/bgM12PVVnA