It's not the fact that they have the ability to track this information. It's the fact that the social media manager has access to this information and feels comfortable sharing this information with the general public. How many employees have access to this information? What controls are in place for exactly who can access this data and what it can be used for? Why is the social media manager creeping on people? And why are they publicly shaming their customers?
Regardless of whether or not you think the tweet is invasive of privacy or whatever, you should at the very least be offended because it isn't funny. "Who hurt you?", gmafb.
Besides being not funny, it crosses another fairly serious line into making fun of what, abuse victims? (That's literally who "who hurt you?" is making fun of.) The crazy lonely women who we're meant to imagine would watch that movie?
But again this is besides the main point, which non-woke men such as yourselves should still be able to get behind - that while the idea behind the joke is somewhat sound, the execution is poor, and in this holiday season that's the most pathetic thing of all.
The Windsors - very very stupid and over the top, but often hilarious comedy spoof of the British Royal Family.
Hit and miss but gets a few belly laughs per episode. Aimed at a British audience, but anyone with a passing knowledge of the British Royal Family should find someone to like.
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Originally Posted by PartyGirlUK
The final episode of Detectorists was last night. Great stuff.
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Originally Posted by yimyammer
of this season or is this the last season?
Apparently the last season, although there's wiggle room.
Just finished Wormwood. Very interesting story, def recommended. If you're unaware of how vile our government (the CIA in particular) is, it may shock you. Merica!
Not Netflix but I gave Man in the High Castle a try last night and was kind of shocked how consistently bad the dialogue and acting were by halfway into the first episode and I stopped watching. Was hyped after the awesome opening theme sequence and knowing about its very intriguing premise but then was quickly turned off. Feel like the script could have been 10x better.
Generally, the rule is you have to watch at least one whole episode if you want to form an opinion
Generally, sure. MitHC reeked of network cop show quality writing/acting/everything a few minutes in. Premise aside, who's got time for trash like that nowadays? I made it one whole ep before quitting forever.
Wife and I gave up on MitHC earlyish season 2. It's a cool concept, with promise for sure. And I thought the acting and visuals were totally fine/good, it's just so slow. Not a lot of plot moves in each episode.
The first season of Mr. Robot was one of my favorite seasons of TV. I thought S2 was extreme trash and couldn't get past a few episodes.
Watched Dark in just a few days, start to finish. So good, and I'm also one who struggles to binge subtitles because you have to stay overly focused. For me it was that good.
The reference earlier to 12 Monkeys is pretty spot on as well (the series moreso than the movie), with a great dose of "whodunnit" sprinkled all throughout.