MovieChat Forums > Rosie Huntington-Whiteley Discussion > She has the most HORRIBLE mouth I have e...

She has the most HORRIBLE mouth I have ever seen on an actress


Who smacked her with a boxing glove on her lips?


And...SHE IS A TERRIBLE ACTRESS!!



PENECTOMY...a word I don't get to use every day!

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I could not take my eyes off those surgically 'enhanced' lips. Vy poor acting, but we know how this girl trades off her only asset...her looks.

DrT
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The problem with marriage is that there's no casting vote!!

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Her lips were the only place I could look when I saw her...And it was obvious she wasn't used to them yet, because they were affecting the way she spoke.

Assuming they're injections, of course.

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When we were very young, there were more bullies in our schools and neighborhoods than the few we were aware of. These bullies-on-hold didn't start acting-out until they discovered a safer outlet: the Internet. And then there's the bully subset: lemmings. To the stand-up human-being/poster who spoke to a subject that too many have commented on while having no idea what they're going-on about: Thank You.

"...they're her natural lips as proven by early pics of her as a kid. She even admitted in an interview that she was teased when she was young for her lips." -- Drappelfed2000

http://www.vogue.co.uk/news/2011/05/31/rosie-huntington-whiteley-child hood-bullying

http://www.celebuzz.com/2011-07-13/rosie-huntington-whiteley-before-sh e-was-famous-photos/

If the above links time-out, search "childhood photos rosie huntington-whitely."

By the design of human evolution, not all of us will find the same woman attractive. Obviously it's a good thing that we're not all digging The Sexiest Woman In The World (FHM 2011 first place winner): Rosie Huntington-Whiteley. Our design/differing taste creates honest reasons for whether or not we're attracted to Rosie or any part of her, including her (yes/louder for the cheap seats/natural) sumptuous lips. But there are also dishonest reasons or tainted motives that cause some to say negative things about Rosie. Passing phases like those experienced by some disappointed Megan Fox fans, for example, are more understandable than what could be called General Sport Antagonism.

The clues each of us will find along life's journey may or may not lead to the necessary amount of introspection needed for growth. Would that some could receive a free one-minute life-lesson from Jason Statham, Rosie's beau. It's not too late to mature and grow a soul until a person's entire lifetime has been spent with the small heart of an eleven year old bully.

Most of the free world favors the blossoming of Miss Huntington-Whiteley's success and her inevitable recognition. We don't attempt to discredit her or feel the need to attack her. The harder side of recent events is understandably more troubling for some. In time, after the fallout has settled, and history is accepted for what it is, even the smallest among us (including the meanest lemmings) may find better things to do than the shrunken-heart-wiggle. Putting history squarely on the table might assist the evolution of perspective.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2011/jun/20/steven-spielberg-megan-fox- transformers

It is possible to disagree for honest reasons with the very popular but subjective view that Rosie Huntington Whiteley is amazingly hot and stunningly pretty. But honest people may at least find common ground in the more objective observation that Rosie blossoms with integrity, as part of her extraordinary beauty consists of finer magnetic qualities.

To Rosie Huntington-Whiteley:

Down these mean streets a man must go who is not himself mean, who is neither tarnished nor afraid. He is a hero, he is everything. He must be a complete man and a common man and yet an unusual man. He must be, to use a rather weathered phrase, a man of honor, by instinct, by inevitability, without thought of it, and certainly without saying it. He must be the best man in his world and a good enough man for any world." -- Rebecca Harding Davis (1831 - 1910)

Given that some of Rosie's less mature detractors are lurking about, there may invariably be gleeful pointing at the word "man" in this quote. The immediate meaning and especially the broader implications of Rebecca Harding Davis' big-hearted wisdom will sail past those who need it most. By understanding her intention, most of us will conclude that her message is, of course, inclusive of women. And concider the Victorian Era (when women had less liberty) in which Rebecca Harding Davis lived most of her days.


"It is that rare Impressionist painting where people don't judge the light, but rather are judged by it." -- Alexandra Johnson on Claude Monet's painting: Terrace at Sainte-Adresse


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