That was brutal

    by HaterLyfe998

    29 Comments

    1. ich_bin_alkoholiker on

      I find it so funny that people care about this shit in 2026. I couldn’t give two fucks about seeing people that are different from me. It may not be for me and that’s okay.

    2. Why are we talking about and not the fact that Ghislane Maxwell just testified in Congress today?

    3. FunkYeahPhotography on

      Shrek is majestic. Shrek is love, Shrek is life.

      ![gif](giphy|LR5GeZFCwDRcpG20PR|downsized)

    4. As part of the Asian delegation, we do better in school because all our parents learned kung fu from Bruce Lee. 

    5. What motivates these people to be so hateful that it appears like it’s a full time job?

      Hell, even if IS the full-time job, how can you wake up and be ok with doing this everyday? Can’t be good for the body.

    6. Jason Whitlock and Stephen A and Candace Owens should just make a show together somewhere away from everyone else.

    7. Calling Jason Whitlock uncle ruckus is a disservice to Uncle Ruckus. At least Ruckus is funny. Whitlock is just a clown

    8. NoFaithlessness7508 on

      Representation absolutely matters. When I was 10yrs old I saw Deep Impact and in that movie Morgan Freeman was the president. I didn’t know it then but that really had a profound impact on me.

    9. I’m so god*d*amn tired of idio*t*s with microphones!! 😡🤬

      Scientific studies confirm that media representation profoundly shapes social realities, impacting self-esteem, reducing prejudice, and influencing career ambitions, particularly for marginalized groups. Positive, accurate portrayals can foster inclusion and reduce stereotypes, whereas lack of representation or reliance on stereotypes reinforces inequality, damages self-worth, and limits aspirations.

      Brooks, D., & Hébert, L. (2006). Gender, race, and media representation. In The Sage handbook of gender and communication (pp. 297-318). SAGE Publications, Inc.. https://sk.sagepub.com/hnbk/edvol/hdbk_gendercomm/chpt/gender-race-media-representation

      Georgiou, M. (2013). Diaspora in the digital era: Minorities and media representation. Jemie, 12, 80. https://heinonline.org/HOL/LandingPage?handle=hein.journals/jemie2013&div=26&id=&page=

      Wright, T. (2002). Moving images: The media representation of refugees. Visual studies, 17(1), 53-66. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/1472586022000005053

      Edit: words

    10. I remember seeing Black Panther in theaters and the little boy who was maybe 8 or so behind me was so excited. At the end his mom apologized to my family(white) for him talking through out the movie.

      Walking out I asked what he thought and he said “It was so good! I love Spider-Man, but Black Panther looks like me and my daddy.” Sometimes I take for granted that I am represented regularly. I use my voice to encourage diversity cause it could mean so much to a little kid.

      I think about that kid a lot.

    11. KeyInvestigator3741 on

      Why is he being such a douche? I’m a black girl physician and interacting with black physicians was absolutely impactful to me when I was getting my education and training. I remember being so excited and amazed. And I have multiple mentees who have told me the same.

      Seriously, WTH is his problem???

    12. Supernova_Soldier on

      Jason is such a cuck and shill for racist white people. I’ve never seen a grown man on knees as much as he is

    13. Lmao, these are the same people that complain when a non-white person is in a video game, movie role, TV commercial, etc. They call it ‘woke.’

      Now they have the nerve to say representation doesn’t matter.

      If it didn’t matter then why you getting mad seeing a black person in a main TV role?

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