Quote: (03-11-2018 08:27 PM)IvanDrago Wrote:
Quote: (03-10-2018 12:17 PM)godfather dust Wrote:
WB. However, there is a no-makeup pic floating around and she drops from a 9 to a 5 (WB much less enthusiastically.)
Christ dude, where do you live? Jennifer Lawrence has never been anywhere near a 7; let alone a 9, no matter any level of makeup, lighting or photoshop. Fame game is getting to your head if you think she is a 9.
We had this discussion over ten years ago somewhere in the manosphere. Might have been in the Heartiste comments section.
We no longer get stunning female movie stars like Hedy, Marilyn, or Raquel because the female audience can't handle seeing women of that caliber. Years ago, women could admire other women who were more beautiful. Today, they're too neurotic and get jealous and resentful.
And so, starting around 1990, we got an array of reasonably nice-looking but flawed female leads with whom American woman could identify. There was the gangly Julia Roberts, the scrunch-faced Renee Zellweger, and now the dorky, boyish Jennifer Lawrence.
On top of this, the media has relentlessly pushed women into stardom who would have been described as "frightening" decades ago. These include Rebel Wilson, Amy Schumer, Melissa McCarthy, and that fat fuck from that popular TV show with Mandy Moore (speaking of hot women who should have been major movie stars).
This resentment has now bled into sports. Even though Britain's Formula One racing is watched primarily by men, they were pressured into getting rid of their "Grid Girls," who are walk-on promotional models. Nice-looking women, apparently, are too much for today's females to handle, even when they don't tune in!
This has to do with the lack of maturity of a lot of today's women. Decades ago, parents raised girls to be women per se. Now they stay girls and parents indulge their worst behavior. As such, a lot of women seem to stay frozen at age 13: Petty, jealous, and small-minded.
To find really beautiful women, go to old movies, TV shows, or '70s-era Playboy magazines.
I recently stumbled onto an obscure TV show from the 1990s called "One West Waikiki," which starred Cheryl Ladd, who was in her forties then. Even at that age, she was hotter than almost anyone you see today. It's telling that her biggest TV gig after "Charlie's Angels" was in a show no one heard of.