Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: books, bottled water, celebrity, craigslist, ethics, hell, nashville, old soviet tv sets, porn, prostitution, rhode island, strippers, teabagging, violence, water
Aside from personally attacking the private sex lives of her opponents, Donna Hughes also published an article in the National Review, blaming on groups like NOW and the ACLU for refusing to support her panicky and poorly-researched fearmongering.
Meanwhile, more sensible people are acknowledging that criminalization actually increases violence against street-based sex workers.
Details reports on how (straight) porn is changing (straight) teen sex. I’d be interested to know what the gay variation on this is.
The first all-male strip club is slated to hit Nashville soon. One city councilman in this hilarious article is quoted as saying that the very idea makes him sick to his stomach, that it’s a sign the world is headed in the wrong direction, and that only a lady should be allowed to wave her genitalia in the vicinity of a pole.
How to stalk people based on their bookshelves.
Mother Jones has a really interesting story about Fiji water. Though I’m guilty of drinking it from time to time–because I avoid Nestle and Coke products and sometimes tap water isn’t an option–it’s never made sense to me to import water from pretty much the farthest-away place there is.
Speaking of water, here’s a bunch of bubblers. Because they’re bubblers, not water fountains.
The Washington Post tries to coin the word “famesque” to talk about celebrity fixtures like Sienna Miller and Ashton Kutcher. Because really what the world really needs is new words for these people.
Also from the Post, Hell is no longer for children.
And The Awl reports on the teabag people.
The ethics of being a blogger. Unfortunately I get very few offers of free stuff, so consider any product placement here to be sincere.
Someone wants to be taught a lesson.