Monday, March 4, 2013

Seth MacFarlane owes no one an apology

Seth MacFarlane


I didn't watch the Oscars in its entirety but I did see clips on youtube and they were funny. All these assholes saying MacFarlane should apologize fuck them. MacFarlane just threw their political correctness crap right back in their faces. These assholes have no problem maligning the image of men but if someone doesn't bow down and kiss the feet of their repugnant queens and princesses then they throw a shit fit.

First of all,Seth MacFarlane doesn't have to apologize to anyone. The assholes and cunts complaining are the same ones who have no problem denigrating the image of men so I take what they have to say with suspicion. They didn't feel they had to apologize to us so fuck apologizing to them. Fuck those misandric hypocrite bigots.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Late comment, but here goes: If this is about the "We Saw Your Boobs" song, the idea that MacFarlane's song was somehow anti-feminist is ridiculous -- it celebrated female actors' ability to gain fame and money by showing their boobs, and it's disappointing to see so-called MRAs supporting that and not calling for a boycott of feminist Hollywood in general.

Masculist Man said...

It's more than just that one song. If you've ever seen McFarlane's show Family Guy you can see his anti-feminist stance.

Masculist Man said...

We can influence Hollywood and adverisers but we need to act together. The movie Red was a departure from the feminist narrative that has plague not only Hollywood but the nation and world.

Anonymous said...

I hope you don't mean the movie Red starring Bruce Willis and Morgan Freeman; I got about 20 minutes into that movie before turning it off because it looked like it would be all about the Mary-Louise Parker character playing out her fantasy. Even if that wasn't the case or the movie wasn't what you'd call feminist, it was still female-centric (or maybe just annoying-female-character-centric).

Masculist Man said...

That's the movie. If you had watched it in its entirety you would have seen that female characters were being killed off as well as men. That there were male and female villians but the male villian was allowed to redeem himself and the female villian dies. Also there was a scene where one of the older female spies tells Mary Louise Parker's character "If you ever hurt him I will kill you". I would say thst is a departure from the feminist narrative.