Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People who pronounce "Beijing" like "Beizhing." It's a HARD J. HARD J. Bay-JING. JFC.
I just worked myself into a lather.
There is also no 'cow' in Moscow.
Anonymous wrote:People that jog in the street, especially when there is a sidewalk RIGHT THERE. Can someone that does this please explain why? It seems objectively (and unnecessarily) dangerous!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. So many things.
1. When people say croissant without a French accent. #frenchitup
2. When people are walking and they cross right in front of me forcing me to come to a sudden stop, especially if those people are men.
3. People who listen to music or watch videos in public without headphones.
LOL - total opposite on the foreign language thing. When non-Spanish speakers overpronounce "quesadilla" or "gracias". Same for Giada and her ridiculous pronunciation of "mozzarella" (yes, I'm sure that's the right way to pronounce it in Italian). French is a bit of an outlier, however - it's really hard to say "le pain quotidien" in an American accent without sounding stupid.
+1 It actually makes me irrationally angry when native English speakers overly pronounce words in other languages with the corresponding accent in the middle of an English sentence. No, I'm not going to say "cwaasau" because I also wouldn't randomly call Paris "Paree" while I'm speaking English.
Anonymous wrote:People who need every detail spelled out in movies, books, etc. Do you possess any imagination at ALL??
Anonymous wrote:When I am trying to log in to a website on my phone, and they have to text me a code, which I look at and try to memorize, and then go back to enter the code and the keyboard displays the code, but only for a second, until you start typing, and then it disappears, and you forgot what all the numbers are. Why doesn’t the display stay there for the full typing of the numbers??
Anonymous wrote:I like to park all the way in the back of the lot at big box stores with literally DOZENS of empty spaces all around my car. I will come back out to find someone has parked in the spot right next to me and I can barely open the door.
I don't understand people like this. At all.
This happened to me twice in one day. I couldn't believe it and took photos to prove it to my family. They were as stumped as I was.
Anonymous wrote:Mine is very specific. People who sit in the fire lane at Wildwood shopping center in the morning while their kid runs in the get Starbucks or a Bethesda bagels. Even if there are open spaces they will still block traffic while their precious private school attending kilt wearing kid gets their bagel and sbux. And no, I’m not jealous. I live in the same shopping center neighborhood and my kid also attends private school. It’s the entitlement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So specific, here you go:
Jennifer Garner has a Capital One ad that starts with "You may know me from my other job, but I'm also a small business owner." Right away I'm irritated, because Jennifer Garner's main professional job is making commercials for Capital One. I know she's referring to her acting career, but the only acting she's done worth watching in the last 10 years is a small part on the reboot of Party Down, otherwise she mostly makes these ads and posts on social media. So no, Jen, I don't really know you from your other job. This is your job, this commercial I'm currently watching. Alias was ages ago.
But second, it makes me irrationally angry that Garner would describe herself as a "small business owner" and position herself as someone in a similar situation to the average small business owner, and thus capable of giving "advice" on how to take advantage of Capital One's small business services. As an actual small business owner, I would describe Garner as a "vanity business owner." Which is fine, but different. She's also, again, a paid spokesperson for Capital One, and has been for many years, so the idea that their relationship is premised on her business is ludicrous. It makes me really mad.
But the most enraging part of the ad comes at the end, when Jennifer is at the airport with her "colleagues" (a group of actors I am certain do not work for Jen's "business" and that she met on set the day this was filmed) waiting for the flight for their "business trip." She's extolling one of the perks of banking with Capital One, travel perks including access to airport lounges. She says, "I could get used to this!" in that folksy, guileless way she has of saying things. And then my head explodes.
YOU ARE JENNIFER GARNER. YOU USED TO BE MARRIED TO BEN AFFLECK. YOU HAVE A CRAP TON OF MONEY, LIVE IN A HUGE HOUSE IN MALIBU OR SOMETHING, AND FLY PRIVATE OR (AT A MINIMUM) FIRST CLASS WHEN YOU FLY. YOU DO NOT NEED ACCESS TO CAPITAL ONE'S SMALL BUSINESS PERKS TO GAIN ACCESS TO A FREAKING **AIRPORT LOUNGE** AND YOU ARE ALREADY USED TO IT. WHAT EVEN IS THIS, DOES THIS COMMERCIAL ACTUALLY INDUCE ANYONE TO BANK WITH CAPITAL ONE, WHY AM I THE ONLY ONE WHO THINKS THIS IS THE DUMBEST COMMERCIAL IN THE HISTORY OF THE WORLD.
/rant, thank you for reading
Same ad is played over and over ago 1.5 years later during World Series.
Jennifer Garner isn’t referring to her acting career, she’s referring to her company Once Upon a Farm. No, she’s not a small business owner in the sense pp is, but at least get the facts straight.
https://onceuponafarmorganics.com/