Originally Posted by lcarus:
I wouldn't kick her out of bed or anything but drop dead gorgeous? Not anywhere close to that in my eyes.
Originally Posted by vailpass:
I had to look her up to see who she was. Butterface. Body is not horrible. As always, though, what one guy sees as attractive another may not see it at all. I love that system; there's something for everyone.
We had a discussion, right here, a month ago. Peek back a page. :-) [Reply]
'if you let the assholes steer, you're part of the problem.' - that's foundational to our current cultural divide. People who not only think their opposition is evil incarnate, but if they fail to gird for battle daily it's a personal moral failing to fight for your personal view of good and right.
No one on earth thought Kimoko was a goner off one neck snap.
Is Homelander cosplaying with Vito Corleone's cheek implants?
Credible lead ties Stormfront to Jeffrey Epstein death. [Reply]
'if you let the assholes steer, you're part of the problem.' - that's foundational to our current cultural divide. People who not only think their opposition is evil incarnate, but if they fail to gird for battle daily it's a personal moral failing to fight for your personal view of good and right.
No one on earth thought Kimoko was a goner off one neck snap.
Is Homelander cosplaying with Vito Corleone's cheek implants?
Spoiler!
The ultra liberals on another board I frequent feel attacked because the AOC archetype was the head exploder.
The finale was amazing. I loved every second of it.
Btw, for those of you who watched the final episode and are curious about what Stormfront was saying near the end, here it is...
Spoiler!
"It was so beautiful. How the three of us sat there, in the shade of an apple tree.
Do you remember the day Frederick? Chloe's arms out of the car window. We found the perfect spot by the river, in the shade of an apple tree. It was the first time Chloe ate fresh apples... was so happy. It was wonderful. I wanted it to never end."
Here's the thing about the political aspects for me. I think this show tries to attack the extreme aspects. We are a divided country right now and social media is a big part of that. The line that keeps ringing in my head is from storm fronts first confrontation with Homeland
"you need the whole country to love you. I need 5 million that are fucking pissed"
They are pulling from the more extreme aspects of trump and his fear mongering but it's hard to say it's not true when i jump on YouTube and see an ad for trump telling me biden is going to destroy America by allowing Syrian refugees to increase bay 700%. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Chitownchiefsfan:
Here's the thing about the political aspects for me. I think this show tries to attack the extreme aspects. We are a divided country right now and social media is a big part of that. The line that keeps ringing in my head is from storm fronts first confrontation with Homeland
"you need the whole country to love you. I need 5 million that are ****ing pissed"
They are pulling from the more extreme aspects of trump and his fear mongering but it's hard to say it's not true when i jump on YouTube and see an ad for trump telling me biden is going to destroy America by allowing Syrian refugees to increase bay 700%.
The fact the show makes you think of any of that is the problem. [Reply]
I try to look at it like the old Star Trek; it would take on issues of the current time with a different spin so you didn't know you were being preached to. [Reply]
Originally Posted by crayzkirk:
Wait? It's over already? Only eight episodes?
I try to look at it like the old Star Trek; it would take on issues of the current time with a different spin so you didn't know you were being preached to.
Except the showrunner has already done interviews stating that he wanted to put White Supremacy and and White Nationalism on display. Also, I don't recall Roddenberry being so blatant about his politics in the 60's. Subtle, sure, but not blatant.
“That character is a legitimate Nazi who comes out of the Nazi party and who ages very slowly. And so that was the character I walked into the Season 2 writers’ room with. I felt, through that, we could say a lot of things I wanted to say about white nationalism and white supremacy, and really take aim,” creator and showrunner Eric Kripke tells Variety. “What we found was the modern face of hate — especially online and social media-driven hate — is actually quite attractive: It’s a lot of good-looking, young men and women who couch these really despicable notions in this branding of ‘We’re just free-thinkers’ and ‘We don’t fit in with the mainstream because we’re telling the truth.’ But it’s the same old s— that people have been pitching for thousands of years.” [Reply]
I was a huge dedicant of the comic series, which is one of the best stories I've ever read. It's different - because it's a different medium and things have to be different.
The political overtones are present, but were present in the comic series as well - so it doesn't jump out or surprise me (I'm also not a snowflake).
Spoiler!
Victoria Neumann being the show replacement for Vic the Veep from the comics - Vaught's planted Manchurian Candidate - circles it back around to the core message of the comics (a critique of corporate greed, influence, hypocrisy, and capitalism). Yes, they're talking about social justice and white nationalism and weaponizing media and internet campaigns... but it's all window dressing. Stan Edgar, the CEO of Vaught, reminded us what it's all about when talking to Butcher... stock prices. Money. Influence.
Originally Posted by DaneMcCloud:
Except the showrunner has already done interviews stating that he wanted to put White Supremacy and and White Nationalism on display. Also, I don't recall Roddenberry being so blatant about his politics in the 60's. Subtle, sure, but not blatant.
“That character is a legitimate Nazi who comes out of the Nazi party and who ages very slowly. And so that was the character I walked into the Season 2 writers’ room with. I felt, through that, we could say a lot of things I wanted to say about white nationalism and white supremacy, and really take aim,” creator and showrunner Eric Kripke tells Variety. “What we found was the modern face of hate — especially online and social media-driven hate — is actually quite attractive: It’s a lot of good-looking, young men and women who couch these really despicable notions in this branding of ‘We’re just free-thinkers’ and ‘We don’t fit in with the mainstream because we’re telling the truth.’ But it’s the same old s— that people have been pitching for thousands of years.”
So... It's a bad thing to have white supremists as bad guys? [Reply]