




MANY MEN WANTED TO LAY ME DOWN, BUT FEW WANTED TO LIFT ME UP
-Eartha Kitt
well [email protected]
Blame society. Men get away with being promiscuous/constantly expressing their sexuality. They are always pushing the envelope. And I can't stand that "oh Boys will be boys" attitude.
“Cook for him like a housewife, fuck him good like a nympho….pay the rent and the car note, he invests in me like crypto”





You know I saw part of 'Frenzy' about a rapist/murderer, seemed like the topic was a little too familiar..
I do like his movie 'Notorious' w/Ingrid Bergman, & also To Catch a Thief.
MANY MEN WANTED TO LAY ME DOWN, BUT FEW WANTED TO LIFT ME UP
-Eartha Kitt





I'm not surprised.
http://www.chron.com/entertainment/m...ff-1647095.php








No, but doesn't it contain a scene where they stick a guy in a kitchen oven...nooooo I can't take that shit!
I do love Notorious, also North by Northwest
MANY MEN WANTED TO LAY ME DOWN, BUT FEW WANTED TO LIFT ME UP
-Eartha Kitt
2 nuts were walking down the street - 1 was a salted.





I would not doubt if he had some problems. His work is dark for TODAY's society, never mind back then. I am 100% a feminist and am NOT making any type of excuses or condoning his behavior in any way but, it was probably pretty "normal" for the time (you know the whole producer's couch thing). Also she seemed to shut him down without any negative consequences- so I feel like it is ok to still like his work. I don't put him into the same group as a Bill Cosby or a Donald Trump.
XoXo Gia
Danielle Fishell (the Dish): "If the Super-Star thing doesn't work out, Gia makes a great stripper name"



No dude in an oven! I promise! Hitchcock's goriest movies are The Birds and Psycho. Most of his movies are more psychological.





"The trouble today is that we don't torture women enough" that's a direct quote. He would have said he meant it in dramatic fashion but that's pretty out there. Hollywood back then.....
Where Am I? Missing NYC



Hitchcock isn't here to defend himself, so this isn't fair.





Aside from the negativity of this accusation...Hitchcock's "Vertigo" is an incredible study of masculinity.
Sadly creepy-as-hell sexual come ons were considered acceptable before the feminist movement gained traction. Not saying it was okay.
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