It's got an "R" bcuz of this:
"Now that's a bra. Boobies in this thing say, 'Put me in your mouth, I taste good' "
"Put the hot dog in your mouth slowly. Men like to see penis-shaped things going into women's mouths"
"When we ask you how you're doing, it's guy code for: 'Let me stick my dick in your ass.' "
" Men, or man-whores...
...prefer women in slutty clothes who suck lots of cock."
Wait a second,
did you just say "cock"?
Yes. Yes, I did.
I can say "cock."
You don't own the word. Cock.
Cock, cock, cock.
Okay, I got it.
A week ago, you were crying
at the thought of a vibrator.
Now you're "cock this, cock that,"
cock, cock, cock.
There are more lines like that. & a scene with a woman in a dinner meeting with 3 guys, being stimulated by a vibrator & having an orgasm. I'm not a prude (not by a long shot) but there's no way in hell I'd let an 11 & 14 year old watch something like that. (But my sister did!) I'm aware that kids talk like this & talk about other things--exposure they get when parents aren't around to control everything. But to help/show approval by not having rules for appropriate content? No, man...just no. Kids aren't adults. Learning about sex & experiencing sexuality are one thing; treating kids as if they're adults is another. If we start saying this kind of programming is okay, then we might as well let all the teachers who've had sex with high school kids out of jail. We can't sit here & say it's wrong to have sex (regardless of who their partner is) after we've raised our kids on a steady diet of sex--it's a mixed message.
(And my sister also lets her kids watch "Game of Thrones" since it's begun airing--her daughters were 9 & 12.) In my mind, there's time for all of that...& all things in good time.
reply
share