Wednesday, July 15, 2020
Genre Kryptonite Ladies Whod Make a Sailor Blush
Genre Kryptonite Ladies Whod Make a Sailor Blush Thereâs nothing like a perfectly dropped f*bomb from a ladies lips. I mean to this day one of my all time favorite movie quotes is Kit De Luca saying Cinder-fuckin-rellaâ"I like to believe itâs what Vivian remembered while standing out on the fire escape that lead her to rescue Edward right back. via GIPHY Now you can like âvulgaritiesâ or not, itâs a personal taste/preference after all, but women are told to leave it to the fellas and behave like ladies instead. Say what? Even at a young age I was very aware of gender double standards: Why couldnât I pee behind a bush if I suddenly couldnât hold it? Why did I have to wear a shirt if my chest looked no different then the boys? How come there were types of humor only funny if it came out of a boyâs mouth? I might have known squat about the world back then but I knew something was rotten in the state of Girlville and I was determined to figure out who was behind it so I could yell at them and change itâ"or tell their mother on them. That obviously never happened and the older I got the more I realized if girls cursed or talked about periods, boobs, bodily functions, sex⦠they were labeled a certain type of girl, and it wasnât a good label. It was a bad, bad labelâ"like being diagnosed with the cooties. Naturally, I wanted to find all the girls riddled with cooties and hear what they had to say. It wasnât until my mid-twenties when I read Chelsea Lately Handlerâs My Horizontal Life: A Collection of One Night Stands that Iâd finally read a woman being completely open in a hilarious wayâ"I still laugh thinking about her in an MM costume stuck in a window. Donât get me wrong, Iâm not saying every woman should adopt this personality. Nor that everyone needs to be a fan. But Iâd like all the ladies in the world whoâve been told theyâd make a sailor blush to be able to stand proud and write a memoir or collection of essays because I will immediately buy it. And then read it in one sitting and wish I hadnât read it so fast because now the joy is over and the laughter-tears have dried. Not only have I read all of Handlerâs books Iâve also managed to find more potty-mouthed funny ladies who refuses to shy away from âunladylikeâ topics. And I love them all, individually and collectively, for so many different reasonsâ"starting with they are each unique. I donât have to agree with everything they do or say, and I can cringe at some of the stories thinking I would have pretended not to know her if I was standing next to her at that moment, but that doesnât mean I donât love or appreciate them. More importantly, and I say this with zero stalker tendency, I want to be friends with each of these ladies. Aisha Tylerâs Self-Inflicted Wounds: Heartwarming Tales of Epic Humiliation reads as if Tyler is animatedly (and long-windedly) telling you these stories while sitting across from you in a bar. As the title implies she recalls moments in her life where the only person she can play the blame game with is herselfâ"basically she runs full speed into the unknown and asks questions later, which doesnât always end well for her but makes for great stories and lessons learned (sometimes). Funny, oozing heart, and intelligentâ"even if she did once discover she could not hold her pee in all the way home. Rating: Mild sailor blushing. In On My Knees: A Memoir, Periel Aschenbrand hilariously tells stories of squatting in her dead grandmotherâs apartment, heartbreak, conversations with her girlfriend, a trip to Israel, her sex-life⦠Periel certainly has NO filters and will openly talk about ANYTHINGâ"something her poor mother constantly has to deal with. Rating: The sailor has left the building! A queen of vulgarities and making a name for herself in the male comedy world Sarah Silverman applied her no-joke-is-off-limits philosophy and wrote about her childhood, battle with depression, battling TV censors, and life as a comedian in The Bedwetter: Stories of Courage, Redemption, and Pee. Rating: Full double-cheek blush for the writers room chapter alone. In Has Anyone Seen My Pants? Sarah Colonna manages to be insanely funny and introspective while easily moving from humorous to heartfelt stories. And while I love her potty-mouth, sense of humor, and honesty what made me fall even deeper in love with this book, and her, was her awesome female friendships. Rating: HBO level blushing. 14+ years later Margaret Choâs Im The One That I Want is still 100 percent relevant and important: from her stories of childhood bullies, self-hate/destruction (self-realization), and Hollywoodâs DISGUSTING treatment of women and âothers. Rating: Rated R blushing. And across the pond Caitlin Moran uses the dirtiest f-word ever (feminism) in How to Be a Woman. No lady subject is off-limits nor spared Moranâs wit, opinion, or wisdomand she boldly goes into conversations rarely talked about, let alone publicly. Rating: The sailor needs new cheeks! Do you have a favorite potty mouthed lady writer? Any essay/memoir recs? Ill happily risk shelf collapse under the weight of too many books in this genre. Save
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