Anonymous wrote:Ariana Grande is the worst thing to be foisted on the public since Dick Cheney shooting that guy in the face.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think he's right.
It is weird that a grown woman dresses and acts like a tween. As a 40 something white collar professional woman whose professional day job is social justice warrior/lawyer---who is all about gender equality and against sexual harassment---I think it's wrong that she has built a career on sexualizing teen girls (albeit the teen girl is herself). She sets the women's movement back...way back.
Listen, Ladies: we can't have it both ways. Can women dress sexy? Yes. But should they dress like sexy little girls? Nope. Her ponytail and ass-baring babydoll dresses with thigh high boots and little girl voice are intentional marketing strategies, and it's wrong.
If Ariana can lick donuts and criticize Americans, then why can't this old fart of an actor criticize her? She's famous, she's rich because of it, so she's fair game.
Aretha and Whitney didn't dress like teenage streetwalkers. Just saying.
Now see - because you deliberately announced that you're a "social justice warrior/lawyer," that somehow gives you a pass to make the "teenage streetwalkers" comment (which I agree with, btw). But had anyone else made that comment, they would be excoriated - by the other social justice warriors here on DCUM. Such hypocrisy.
I'm the SJW poster. Honestly, many of my peers would flip out if I said this. They tend to believe women can dress like Ariana and should still be taken seriously. They would debate me on this for sure. Yet they themselves don't dress like that. And privately they would diss anyone who showed up to work dressed provocatively.
Yes, there is a lot of hypocrisy. Agreed.
she's a POP STAR. her clothes are her uniform!
Ps ms "social justice warrior lawyer" -- you are way too
impressed with yourself. you spend all day on conference calls and them write one stupid press release read by 3 people, all in your ugly Ann Taylor suit.
Ha ha...so far from the truth, but whatevs.
Taylor Swift is a popstar who doesn't talk in a fake little girl voice and super sexy clothing accessorized with cat ears or some other tween gear. Most women think it's gross. I'm all for girl power, but Ariana prefers to hypersexualize herself as a teen sex kitten...and that isn't empowering anybody. YMMV.
But you might want to ask yourself why you're so invested in a poptart...so much so that you're going above and beyond to defend her while lashing out at strangers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think he's right.
It is weird that a grown woman dresses and acts like a tween. As a 40 something white collar professional woman whose professional day job is social justice warrior/lawyer---who is all about gender equality and against sexual harassment---I think it's wrong that she has built a career on sexualizing teen girls (albeit the teen girl is herself). She sets the women's movement back...way back.
Listen, Ladies: we can't have it both ways. Can women dress sexy? Yes. But should they dress like sexy little girls? Nope. Her ponytail and ass-baring babydoll dresses with thigh high boots and little girl voice are intentional marketing strategies, and it's wrong.
If Ariana can lick donuts and criticize Americans, then why can't this old fart of an actor criticize her? She's famous, she's rich because of it, so she's fair game.
Aretha and Whitney didn't dress like teenage streetwalkers. Just saying.
Now see - because you deliberately announced that you're a "social justice warrior/lawyer," that somehow gives you a pass to make the "teenage streetwalkers" comment (which I agree with, btw). But had anyone else made that comment, they would be excoriated - by the other social justice warriors here on DCUM. Such hypocrisy.
I'm the SJW poster. Honestly, many of my peers would flip out if I said this. They tend to believe women can dress like Ariana and should still be taken seriously. They would debate me on this for sure. Yet they themselves don't dress like that. And privately they would diss anyone who showed up to work dressed provocatively.
Yes, there is a lot of hypocrisy. Agreed.
she's a POP STAR. her clothes are her uniform!
Ps ms "social justice warrior lawyer" -- you are way too
impressed with yourself. you spend all day on conference calls and them write one stupid press release read by 3 people, all in your ugly Ann Taylor suit.
Ha ha...so far from the truth, but whatevs.
Taylor Swift is a popstar who doesn't talk in a fake little girl voice and super sexy clothing accessorized with cat ears or some other tween gear. Most women think it's gross. I'm all for girl power, but Ariana prefers to hypersexualize herself as a teen sex kitten...and that isn't empowering anybody. YMMV.
But you might want to ask yourself why you're so invested in a poptart...so much so that you're going above and beyond to defend her while lashing out at strangers.
Anonymous wrote:I think he's right.
It is weird that a grown woman dresses and acts like a tween. As a 40 something white collar professional woman whose professional day job is social justice warrior/lawyer---who is all about gender equality and against sexual harassment---I think it's wrong that she has built a career on sexualizing teen girls (albeit the teen girl is herself). She sets the women's movement back...way back.
Listen, Ladies: we can't have it both ways. Can women dress sexy? Yes. But should they dress like sexy little girls? Nope. Her ponytail and ass-baring babydoll dresses with thigh high boots and little girl voice are intentional marketing strategies, and it's wrong.
If Ariana can lick donuts and criticize Americans, then why can't this old fart of an actor criticize her? She's famous, she's rich because of it, so she's fair game.
Aretha and Whitney didn't dress like teenage streetwalkers. Just saying.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think he's right.
It is weird that a grown woman dresses and acts like a tween. As a 40 something white collar professional woman whose professional day job is social justice warrior/lawyer---who is all about gender equality and against sexual harassment---I think it's wrong that she has built a career on sexualizing teen girls (albeit the teen girl is herself). She sets the women's movement back...way back.
Listen, Ladies: we can't have it both ways. Can women dress sexy? Yes. But should they dress like sexy little girls? Nope. Her ponytail and ass-baring babydoll dresses with thigh high boots and little girl voice are intentional marketing strategies, and it's wrong.
If Ariana can lick donuts and criticize Americans, then why can't this old fart of an actor criticize her? She's famous, she's rich because of it, so she's fair game.
Aretha and Whitney didn't dress like teenage streetwalkers. Just saying.
Now see - because you deliberately announced that you're a "social justice warrior/lawyer," that somehow gives you a pass to make the "teenage streetwalkers" comment (which I agree with, btw). But had anyone else made that comment, they would be excoriated - by the other social justice warriors here on DCUM. Such hypocrisy.
I'm the SJW poster. Honestly, many of my peers would flip out if I said this. They tend to believe women can dress like Ariana and should still be taken seriously. They would debate me on this for sure. Yet they themselves don't dress like that. And privately they would diss anyone who showed up to work dressed provocatively.
Yes, there is a lot of hypocrisy. Agreed.
she's a POP STAR. her clothes are her uniform!
Ps ms "social justice warrior lawyer" -- you are way too
impressed with yourself. you spend all day on conference calls and them write one stupid press release read by 3 people, all in your ugly Ann Taylor suit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think he's right.
It is weird that a grown woman dresses and acts like a tween. As a 40 something white collar professional woman whose professional day job is social justice warrior/lawyer---who is all about gender equality and against sexual harassment---I think it's wrong that she has built a career on sexualizing teen girls (albeit the teen girl is herself). She sets the women's movement back...way back.
Listen, Ladies: we can't have it both ways. Can women dress sexy? Yes. But should they dress like sexy little girls? Nope. Her ponytail and ass-baring babydoll dresses with thigh high boots and little girl voice are intentional marketing strategies, and it's wrong.
If Ariana can lick donuts and criticize Americans, then why can't this old fart of an actor criticize her? She's famous, she's rich because of it, so she's fair game.
Aretha and Whitney didn't dress like teenage streetwalkers. Just saying.
Now see - because you deliberately announced that you're a "social justice warrior/lawyer," that somehow gives you a pass to make the "teenage streetwalkers" comment (which I agree with, btw). But had anyone else made that comment, they would be excoriated - by the other social justice warriors here on DCUM. Such hypocrisy.
I'm the SJW poster. Honestly, many of my peers would flip out if I said this. They tend to believe women can dress like Ariana and should still be taken seriously. They would debate me on this for sure. Yet they themselves don't dress like that. And privately they would diss anyone who showed up to work dressed provocatively.
Yes, there is a lot of hypocrisy. Agreed.