SwimExpert
Gold Member
- Nov 26, 2013
- 16,247
- 1,679
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- Banned
- #1
He said a woman was hot.
Instead of praising her acting (it sucks), or lauding the show's substance (the equivalent of cotton candy delivered by girls in bikinis), Jeb Bush responded to an inquiry about his favorite superheros by saying that Melissa Benoist, who plays Kara Zor-El in the last night's newly premiered TV series Supergirl, is "hot." This is clearly indicative of Bush's hatred for women.
I mean, why can't he just compliment the woman's acting? Sure, it's bad. But what does that matter? And look at the script writing. The hour long premier was chock-full of easter eggs spanning nearly every television series and movie in the Superman mythos, while accomplishing next to nothing in terms of character development or establishing any kind of identity for the show other than the same regurgitated nonsense that has been poorly executed 100 times before. But all the actors sure are nice to look at.
So what gives? Just because a woman got a TV role based on her attractiveness, that seems designed to use poor writing as a vehicle to deliver allure by sex appeal, doesn't mean that she's not a hero! Melissa Benoist is a hero, Mr. Bush! And you, sir, are a prick.
Instead of praising her acting (it sucks), or lauding the show's substance (the equivalent of cotton candy delivered by girls in bikinis), Jeb Bush responded to an inquiry about his favorite superheros by saying that Melissa Benoist, who plays Kara Zor-El in the last night's newly premiered TV series Supergirl, is "hot." This is clearly indicative of Bush's hatred for women.
I mean, why can't he just compliment the woman's acting? Sure, it's bad. But what does that matter? And look at the script writing. The hour long premier was chock-full of easter eggs spanning nearly every television series and movie in the Superman mythos, while accomplishing next to nothing in terms of character development or establishing any kind of identity for the show other than the same regurgitated nonsense that has been poorly executed 100 times before. But all the actors sure are nice to look at.
So what gives? Just because a woman got a TV role based on her attractiveness, that seems designed to use poor writing as a vehicle to deliver allure by sex appeal, doesn't mean that she's not a hero! Melissa Benoist is a hero, Mr. Bush! And you, sir, are a prick.