Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was really hoping the YouTube wife would leave her husband. I haven’t finished the third part, but saw that they were still together. He was such a narcissistic jerk.
That guy had some serious issues. I mean, surprising your wife with news of her own pregnancy—while filming the entire thing of course—and then immediately blasting it out on social media for validation is very very strange.
Indeed.
I also got the feeling that it was fake. I mean, why didn’t she flush the toilet? I know there are some people who don’t, for environmental reasons. But I don’t think that’s what was going on there. I think that was a planned video.
She ended up miscarrying a few days after the video was posted, which the documentary seemed to gloss over, because it was another moment when their channel was called out for being fake. The couple seem desperate for content, which is the only reason I can imagine agreeing to this documentary and dragging their family through reliving such a humiliating moment.
The dude clearly has more issues than Ashley Madison.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There were bots, yes. Even the employees admitted to engaging with male customers with fake profiles.
A couple things:
1) people calling out the name-searching of customers as a "witch hunt because we're all sinners" - F that. We all have choices. Many of us don't make choices that hurt and betray people we (allegedly) love.
2) the Christian social media guy calling the site's existence as "evil." Dude, no one made you sign up and cheat on your wife. Own up to your own choices. Ashley Madison still exists because of willing customers, not because the creators are evil. I don't blame the site for existing - no one's forced to sign up. There is no such thing as "satan" - take accountability for your own hurtful choices.
3) I have no ill judgement for couples that have open marriages/relationships, or for people that get divorced. I will always have ill thoughts over people who cheat. It isn't the physical act - it's the deception, betrayal, and outright disregard for the person they say they care about.
+1000
The documentary was too soft on the men who signed up.
They chose to focus on a guy who committed suici!!de and a younger guy who “confessed” and was forgiven by his wife. And really played up the “evil” CEO. Yes, the CEO was a horrible person but these married men on the site going behind their wives backs are also horrible. The betrayal, not to mention unknowingly exposing them to STIs. Very likely many of the men who signed up for the site also did other things with hookers, etc. too.
Anonymous wrote:There were bots, yes. Even the employees admitted to engaging with male customers with fake profiles.
A couple things:
1) people calling out the name-searching of customers as a "witch hunt because we're all sinners" - F that. We all have choices. Many of us don't make choices that hurt and betray people we (allegedly) love.
2) the Christian social media guy calling the site's existence as "evil." Dude, no one made you sign up and cheat on your wife. Own up to your own choices. Ashley Madison still exists because of willing customers, not because the creators are evil. I don't blame the site for existing - no one's forced to sign up. There is no such thing as "satan" - take accountability for your own hurtful choices.
3) I have no ill judgement for couples that have open marriages/relationships, or for people that get divorced. I will always have ill thoughts over people who cheat. It isn't the physical act - it's the deception, betrayal, and outright disregard for the person they say they care about.
Anonymous wrote:Such a complete bore. The whole thing was basically about the fat, gay guy who used to work there and the pathetic YouTube couple with the wife who apparently doesn't flush the toilet after she pees. They didn't even go into all of those government employees which I would have preferred. Such a waste of time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There used to be a way to search by zip code but I’m not sure it still exists.
+1
It does! Keep looking!
share, please.
I think it was posted on fairfaxunderground, but most of the list was wiped.
People absolutely still have copies of that list, both hardcopies and e copies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Y’all are combing through this list to check for neighbors?
Absafreakinglutely. You know why? Because exactly who we thought was on that list, is on that list.
Anonymous wrote:Y’all are combing through this list to check for neighbors?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There used to be a way to search by zip code but I’m not sure it still exists.
+1
It does! Keep looking!
share, please.
I think it was posted on fairfaxunderground, but most of the list was wiped.
Anonymous wrote:iAnonymous wrote:My husband was on the list. We are divorced.
I’m sorry. That must have been awful.