Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean there is a time and place for everything, Lauren Sanchez doesn’t get this simple concept is what baffles me.
How hard is it to comprehend that WH is not a nightclub??? She wants to wear this racy stuff? Sure, do it at the clubs or other private events, why embarrass the entire country and yourselves?
I will start by saying I do not like her. She is too in love with herself, and is not as attractive as she thinks she is. Plus, she tends to be consistently trashy, does not even try to be humble on occasion, and the dress was all wrong. She could be attractive, wearing something more tasteful and appropriate.
But, I think some PPs are reading too much into it by trying to psychoanalyze her, and even their (admittedly odd) relationship, and that is even more heinous than the LS's awful, tasteless dress. Be better, ladies. We all have our opinions, but we don't need to air each of them, in an effort to try make ourselves look good. Do better. This is what happens when DCUM preaches "confidence" - it ends up looking like this dress.
Learn some humility, take it down a few notches, stay in your lane, and shut your big offensive mouths about other women.
It’s purely jealousy that she has the wealth and status.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lauren Sanchez' bad plastic surgery/fillers are worse than the Whores R Us dress---though both are pretty awful. All of the Japanese and Japanese American women had the best dresses.
Lauren Sanchez wore a dress from the Rasario “Resort” collection.
What dress did you wear for your invite?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am normally not worked up about stuff like this but wearing it to a White House state dinner apparently crosses a line for me because I'm embarrassed on her behalf. The sheer corset is what pushes it over the line for me. I also think the amount of cleavage is excessive and not appropriate for the venue, but if the dress were at least opaque, I'd probably wouldn't think much of it as long as there was no indecent exposure.
But wearing sheer red lace to a dinner hosted by the President for a foreign head of state? Come ON. It's such a pathetic level of "LOOK AT ME LOOK AT ME LOOK AT ME" in a room full of many people who also have that impulse but also mostly have enough self-awareness not to be so obvious about it.
It also seems like a missed opportunity, IMO. She's worn a million barely there dresses in public -- everyone knows she's in good shape and likes to show off her body. If she'd shown up to this looking really classic and refined, I actually think it would have resulted in more, and way better, press. Not to do it all the time but just to say "hey, when the situation calls for it, I can do classy and polished too -- I just choose not to most of the time." That, I would respect.
2nd all of this.
I don't think she's trying to curry favor with or earn the respect of people who expect "classy and polished". It's the ultimate flex to be able to show up exactly how she wants at the White House, not care what people think about it, and know the invitations will come again regardless.
Damn right.
But only as Besos’ plus one and no. Other. Reason.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am normally not worked up about stuff like this but wearing it to a White House state dinner apparently crosses a line for me because I'm embarrassed on her behalf. The sheer corset is what pushes it over the line for me. I also think the amount of cleavage is excessive and not appropriate for the venue, but if the dress were at least opaque, I'd probably wouldn't think much of it as long as there was no indecent exposure.
But wearing sheer red lace to a dinner hosted by the President for a foreign head of state? Come ON. It's such a pathetic level of "LOOK AT ME LOOK AT ME LOOK AT ME" in a room full of many people who also have that impulse but also mostly have enough self-awareness not to be so obvious about it.
It also seems like a missed opportunity, IMO. She's worn a million barely there dresses in public -- everyone knows she's in good shape and likes to show off her body. If she'd shown up to this looking really classic and refined, I actually think it would have resulted in more, and way better, press. Not to do it all the time but just to say "hey, when the situation calls for it, I can do classy and polished too -- I just choose not to most of the time." That, I would respect.
2nd all of this.
I don't think she's trying to curry favor with or earn the respect of people who expect "classy and polished". It's the ultimate flex to be able to show up exactly how she wants at the White House, not care what people think about it, and know the invitations will come again regardless.
Damn right.
But only as Besos’ plus one and no. Other. Reason.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am normally not worked up about stuff like this but wearing it to a White House state dinner apparently crosses a line for me because I'm embarrassed on her behalf. The sheer corset is what pushes it over the line for me. I also think the amount of cleavage is excessive and not appropriate for the venue, but if the dress were at least opaque, I'd probably wouldn't think much of it as long as there was no indecent exposure.
But wearing sheer red lace to a dinner hosted by the President for a foreign head of state? Come ON. It's such a pathetic level of "LOOK AT ME LOOK AT ME LOOK AT ME" in a room full of many people who also have that impulse but also mostly have enough self-awareness not to be so obvious about it.
It also seems like a missed opportunity, IMO. She's worn a million barely there dresses in public -- everyone knows she's in good shape and likes to show off her body. If she'd shown up to this looking really classic and refined, I actually think it would have resulted in more, and way better, press. Not to do it all the time but just to say "hey, when the situation calls for it, I can do classy and polished too -- I just choose not to most of the time." That, I would respect.
2nd all of this.
I don't think she's trying to curry favor with or earn the respect of people who expect "classy and polished". It's the ultimate flex to be able to show up exactly how she wants at the White House, not care what people think about it, and know the invitations will come again regardless.
Damn right.
But only as Besos’ plus one and no. Other. Reason.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am normally not worked up about stuff like this but wearing it to a White House state dinner apparently crosses a line for me because I'm embarrassed on her behalf. The sheer corset is what pushes it over the line for me. I also think the amount of cleavage is excessive and not appropriate for the venue, but if the dress were at least opaque, I'd probably wouldn't think much of it as long as there was no indecent exposure.
But wearing sheer red lace to a dinner hosted by the President for a foreign head of state? Come ON. It's such a pathetic level of "LOOK AT ME LOOK AT ME LOOK AT ME" in a room full of many people who also have that impulse but also mostly have enough self-awareness not to be so obvious about it.
It also seems like a missed opportunity, IMO. She's worn a million barely there dresses in public -- everyone knows she's in good shape and likes to show off her body. If she'd shown up to this looking really classic and refined, I actually think it would have resulted in more, and way better, press. Not to do it all the time but just to say "hey, when the situation calls for it, I can do classy and polished too -- I just choose not to most of the time." That, I would respect.
2nd all of this.
I don't think she's trying to curry favor with or earn the respect of people who expect "classy and polished". It's the ultimate flex to be able to show up exactly how she wants at the White House, not care what people think about it, and know the invitations will come again regardless.
Damn right.
But only as Besos’ plus one and no. Other. Reason.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am normally not worked up about stuff like this but wearing it to a White House state dinner apparently crosses a line for me because I'm embarrassed on her behalf. The sheer corset is what pushes it over the line for me. I also think the amount of cleavage is excessive and not appropriate for the venue, but if the dress were at least opaque, I'd probably wouldn't think much of it as long as there was no indecent exposure.
But wearing sheer red lace to a dinner hosted by the President for a foreign head of state? Come ON. It's such a pathetic level of "LOOK AT ME LOOK AT ME LOOK AT ME" in a room full of many people who also have that impulse but also mostly have enough self-awareness not to be so obvious about it.
It also seems like a missed opportunity, IMO. She's worn a million barely there dresses in public -- everyone knows she's in good shape and likes to show off her body. If she'd shown up to this looking really classic and refined, I actually think it would have resulted in more, and way better, press. Not to do it all the time but just to say "hey, when the situation calls for it, I can do classy and polished too -- I just choose not to most of the time." That, I would respect.
2nd all of this.
I don't think she's trying to curry favor with or earn the respect of people who expect "classy and polished". It's the ultimate flex to be able to show up exactly how she wants at the White House, not care what people think about it, and know the invitations will come again regardless.
Damn right.
But only as Besos’ plus one and no. Other. Reason.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lauren Sanchez' bad plastic surgery/fillers are worse than the Whores R Us dress---though both are pretty awful. All of the Japanese and Japanese American women had the best dresses.
Lauren Sanchez wore a dress from the Rasario “Resort” collection.
What dress did you wear for your invite?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am normally not worked up about stuff like this but wearing it to a White House state dinner apparently crosses a line for me because I'm embarrassed on her behalf. The sheer corset is what pushes it over the line for me. I also think the amount of cleavage is excessive and not appropriate for the venue, but if the dress were at least opaque, I'd probably wouldn't think much of it as long as there was no indecent exposure.
But wearing sheer red lace to a dinner hosted by the President for a foreign head of state? Come ON. It's such a pathetic level of "LOOK AT ME LOOK AT ME LOOK AT ME" in a room full of many people who also have that impulse but also mostly have enough self-awareness not to be so obvious about it.
It also seems like a missed opportunity, IMO. She's worn a million barely there dresses in public -- everyone knows she's in good shape and likes to show off her body. If she'd shown up to this looking really classic and refined, I actually think it would have resulted in more, and way better, press. Not to do it all the time but just to say "hey, when the situation calls for it, I can do classy and polished too -- I just choose not to most of the time." That, I would respect.
2nd all of this.
I don't think she's trying to curry favor with or earn the respect of people who expect "classy and polished". It's the ultimate flex to be able to show up exactly how she wants at the White House, not care what people think about it, and know the invitations will come again regardless.
Damn right.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lauren Sanchez' bad plastic surgery/fillers are worse than the Whores R Us dress---though both are pretty awful. All of the Japanese and Japanese American women had the best dresses.
Lauren Sanchez wore a dress from the Rasario “Resort” collection.
Anonymous wrote:Lauren Sanchez' bad plastic surgery/fillers are worse than the Whores R Us dress---though both are pretty awful. All of the Japanese and Japanese American women had the best dresses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am normally not worked up about stuff like this but wearing it to a White House state dinner apparently crosses a line for me because I'm embarrassed on her behalf. The sheer corset is what pushes it over the line for me. I also think the amount of cleavage is excessive and not appropriate for the venue, but if the dress were at least opaque, I'd probably wouldn't think much of it as long as there was no indecent exposure.
But wearing sheer red lace to a dinner hosted by the President for a foreign head of state? Come ON. It's such a pathetic level of "LOOK AT ME LOOK AT ME LOOK AT ME" in a room full of many people who also have that impulse but also mostly have enough self-awareness not to be so obvious about it.
It also seems like a missed opportunity, IMO. She's worn a million barely there dresses in public -- everyone knows she's in good shape and likes to show off her body. If she'd shown up to this looking really classic and refined, I actually think it would have resulted in more, and way better, press. Not to do it all the time but just to say "hey, when the situation calls for it, I can do classy and polished too -- I just choose not to most of the time." That, I would respect.
2nd all of this.
I don't think she's trying to curry favor with or earn the respect of people who expect "classy and polished". It's the ultimate flex to be able to show up exactly how she wants at the White House, not care what people think about it, and know the invitations will come again regardless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am normally not worked up about stuff like this but wearing it to a White House state dinner apparently crosses a line for me because I'm embarrassed on her behalf. The sheer corset is what pushes it over the line for me. I also think the amount of cleavage is excessive and not appropriate for the venue, but if the dress were at least opaque, I'd probably wouldn't think much of it as long as there was no indecent exposure.
But wearing sheer red lace to a dinner hosted by the President for a foreign head of state? Come ON. It's such a pathetic level of "LOOK AT ME LOOK AT ME LOOK AT ME" in a room full of many people who also have that impulse but also mostly have enough self-awareness not to be so obvious about it.
It also seems like a missed opportunity, IMO. She's worn a million barely there dresses in public -- everyone knows she's in good shape and likes to show off her body. If she'd shown up to this looking really classic and refined, I actually think it would have resulted in more, and way better, press. Not to do it all the time but just to say "hey, when the situation calls for it, I can do classy and polished too -- I just choose not to most of the time." That, I would respect.
2nd all of this.