Word: fucked
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...have broken the glass ceiling, had their perfect children, built their Barbie dream home, and still have amazing social lives and fabulous shoes—are supposed to be the role models to whom I look up, but even they are dissatisfied and depressed upon turning 43. Where the fuck are we supposed to go from here...
...Nick McDonell ’06’s “Twelve.” There are barely any drugs, the narrator is more concerned with drinking Diet Coke than selling cocaine, and over the course of 200 pages, there is only one “fuck,” one “kiss,” and one imaginary handjob...
...school by senior year. This metamorphosis is fueled by the misaligned schematics of the Harvard social scene, which ensure that everyone hyperbolizes their worst characteristics. But what are you going to do? People hate floaters even more than they hate transfers. Is there a silver lining? Not really. Fuck this “neighborhooding” bullshit!!! All it does is ensure that you can live near even more people that you will probably end up disliking. Not like you’ll see them anyway—the truth is that if someone lives in a different entryway...
...20/20,” the latest from Rakaa, Evidence, and DJ Babu, is a product of a group that wants (and has) the money it knows it should push away. Evidence still raps about wack MCs on the radio (“The game’s fucked a thousand sound-alikes it’s sad”), and he still raps about how he shuns a mainstream sound (“I don’t fuck with that industry flow”), but his resistance to the trappings of mass appeal has waned. Turns out that...
...each pause, the woman said “More” and the sequence was repeated with slight variations and increasingly sinister shades to the voice’s story, leading to an eerie payoff and possibly the best two-word encapsulation of the four plays: “Fuck life.” While the plays were discomfiting, they were all interesting, even when it was hard to know exactly what to make of them. They hung together surprisingly well, partially because they all dealt with themes of loss, isolation, decay, and circularity, and partially because the transitions between...