I've never seen Friends but now I'm totally going to binge it.
I've never seen Friends but now I'm totally going to binge it.
MLB forces the Indians to get rid of Chief Wahoo. A fair number of tweets out in the twittersphere suggesting that the same should be done with the ND leprechaun.
https://sports.yahoo.com/mlb-forces-cleveland-relinquish-offensive-184505082.html
Was actually talking to my friend about Superbad recently. This movie just turned 10 years old.
How much of an uproar would there be if it came out today? "NEW MOVIE GLORIFIES DATE RAPE CULTURE."
The Quiet Man with John Wayne and Maureen O'Hara? Awesome movieHah very true...
Reminds of a movie I watched awhile ago called "The Quiet Man" that my wife said was one of her favorites. In it the main character at the end has people coming up to him offering a stick to beat his wife with and it's supposed to be comical and I'm watching it like "if this scene was ever in a modern day movie the SJWs would burn the studio to the ground."
Your daughter is a millennial? FFS you're old.My oldest daughter watches older stuff with us sometimes... it's funny because she's not offended or anything like that but she still recognizes what would be problematic to her generation. She constantly points that stuff out, "Oh that would be off my fellow millennials... can't do that anymore."
Your daughter is a millennial? FFS you're old.
Sounds mostly like my upbringing and I'm not from the plains.I'm often confused by the cutoffs for generations.
I'm born in 92. I'd feel FAR more in tune with people with people born in the 80's than the 2000's. I didn't have a cell phone until I was a sophomore in high school and didn't know how to send a text message until I was a junior. I grew up using online messenger and playing Nintendo 64 and OG XBox. We had freakin' LAN parties.
There was little to no PC stuff in school. Teachers didn't care if we had a gun on a t-shirt or care if we called each other gay slurs or tards (not saying that's good or bad, just an experience).
One of the big things that led me to being a ND fan was that they were the only team I could watch every Saturday. No one else was on every week, at least in our area. When Michigan lost to App State, three of us were huddled around a computer hitting refresh, 2004 kids have ESPN3 and loads of more content options.
People born in the 80's I imagine had relatively similar experiences to that, just replace Nintendo 64 with Super Nintendo and maybe throw in something about buying CD's or cassettes to listen to music instead of an MP3 player? 80's kids step up and give some input.
Kids born in 2004 were exposed to IPads and smartphones by the time they hit kindergarten. They probably don't know what dial-up internet is, and wouldn't know how to work a VCR, much less have the GD courtesy to rewind it after they are done. If we wanted something, even technology-related, we had to go to blockbuster or Best Buy or Wal-Mart to buy/rent it. 2004 kids would just go on Amazon or Netflix or Hulu or Steam and buy/rent/download it.
TL;DR: if someone born in 2004 is a millennial, then someone born in 1992 is not one. Wondering if geographic location should be considered too. NoDak is generally behind the times a bit with cultural stuff, so maybe the Plains and a couple other areas are anomalies and I'm way off base.
I'm often confused... I'm way off base.
You should, if only for the opportunity to spot the scene in every episode where Jennifer Aniston clearly isn’t wearing a bra while it’s also obviously very cold on the set.
I'm often confused by the cutoffs for generations.
I'm born in 92. I'd feel FAR more in tune with people with people born in the 80's than the 2000's. I didn't have a cell phone until I was a sophomore in high school and didn't know how to send a text message until I was a junior. I grew up using online messenger and playing Nintendo 64 and OG XBox. We had freakin' LAN parties.
There was little to no PC stuff in school. Teachers didn't care if we had a gun on a t-shirt or care if we called each other gay slurs or tards (not saying that's good or bad, just an experience).
One of the big things that led me to being a ND fan was that they were the only team I could watch every Saturday. No one else was on every week, at least in our area. When Michigan lost to App State, three of us were huddled around a computer hitting refresh, 2004 kids have ESPN3 and loads of more content options.
People born in the 80's I imagine had relatively similar experiences to that, just replace Nintendo 64 with Super Nintendo and maybe throw in something about buying CD's or cassettes to listen to music instead of an MP3 player? 80's kids step up and give some input.
Kids born in 2004 were exposed to IPads and smartphones by the time they hit kindergarten. They probably don't know what dial-up internet is, and wouldn't know how to work a VCR, much less have the GD courtesy to rewind it after they are done. If we wanted something, even technology-related, we had to go to blockbuster or Best Buy or Wal-Mart to buy/rent it. 2004 kids would just go on Amazon or Netflix or Hulu or Steam and buy/rent/download it.
TL;DR: if someone born in 2004 is a millennial, then someone born in 1992 is not one. Wondering if geographic location should be considered too. NoDak is generally behind the times a bit with cultural stuff, so maybe the Plains and a couple other areas are anomalies and I'm way off base.
I'm really bothered by unicorns. They're degrading to real horses and make them feel bad about themselves since they don't have a horn. This horse humiliation crap needs to end. #stoptheunicornmadness
Hah very true...
Reminds of a movie I watched awhile ago called "The Quiet Man" that my wife said was one of her favorites. In it the main character at the end has people coming up to him offering a stick to beat his wife with and it's supposed to be comical and I'm watching it like "if this scene was ever in a modern day movie the SJWs would burn the studio to the ground."
I could regale the kids here with stories of walking 4 miles to school in the snow uphill both ways, having to get up at 3 a.m. to milk the cows before school, start a fire by rubbing sticks together, then feed my pet mammoth while fighting off the injuns. Ahh, the good ol' days.
Wasn't quite that bad, but I grew up without video games or cell phones, learned to drive on a stick, had 3 channels of TV and they went off the air around 11, only got to see my favorite team on TV about 3 times per year, had to actually walk across campus to the library to do any research for a paper, knew that if I acted like an ass in school, the principal would paddle my butt and I'd get it twice as bad at home when my dad found out, and I had to fight my way through the jungle to get to the promised land (a 70's thing the older guys will understand).
I am down with poor little racism.
I take issue with the mechanics of this chart lol
Access to White Dolphins...
Always hated Ryan Tannehill's excess security anyway.
I now know my life's calling. Demarginalizing male dolphins. I'm gon' change the world!