Originally posted by debbiejo
For me it's not what's on the outside, but on the inside...........funny how I have many friends, but the ones that stand out in my past were the heavy ones....Ohhhhh how they make me laugh......They seem so much more real.
So it's safe to say you prefer quantity over quality?
Originally posted by debbiejo
I prefer real to fake actually...........I myself am not heavy, but people are my favorite thing in life, and the more genuin ......then the more I will be there for them............I like real.
I'm just ****ing with you... I wasn't really implying you are fat and ugly.
its a myth that fat people are funny,
i can only name a couple of fat comedians...and two of those died of heart attacks
most fat people because of this "fat people are funny" myth ive met are ****ing annoying
they smell too
i find that they assume they have to be funny because they are fat
much like the majority of black people assume they have to listen to rNb,Hip Hop,be materialistic over tacky shit and eat fried chicken.
here we go
Originally posted by vintageSW77
its a myth that fat people are funny,
i can only name a couple of fat comedians...and two of those died of heart attacks
most fat people because of this "fat people are funny" myth ive met are ****ing annoying
they smell too
i find that they assume they have to be funny because they are fat
much like the majority of black people assume they have to listen to rNb,Hip Hop,be materialistic over tacky shit and eat fried chicken.here we go
Where did the friend chicken come from? Although I like ''materialistic over tacky things''- too true.
Originally posted by debbiejo
For me it's not what's on the outside, but on the inside...........funny how I have many friends, but the ones that stand out in my past were the heavy ones....Ohhhhh how they make me laugh......They seem so much more real.
Originally posted by Victor Von Doom
Funny, I thought he described it as a quality of 'the majority of black people'.
Actually, there is a sub-culture of materialism within the hip-hop culture. And the glorification of the poverty (for those who are not poor more than those who are).
It is also called a strain theory.
It is a dictated cultural aspects of young black males today. The differance is that some resist it and other do not.