no she didn't...Had him doing the moonwalk. Lol
Imma say this, maybe I am late but, I am expectationally proud of the ability to affectively communicate and respectfully argue a point that I have seen a lot of Black women and Black adjacent women communicate in the last 6 months.
The high college enrollment rate is really starting to shine through. It's beautiful to see the quick spread of intellectualism spread through BW and Black adjacent women in real time.
As low level, as BM feel Amber Rose is. She literally displayed more intelligence than every man in that discussion.
That conversation with Amber would ended quickly if he wasn't scared to offend her
Amber: "Why do ya'll men say Hoe in a derogatory way?"
Me: "Because it's supposed to be derogatory, if you are a woman who is not discretionary with men you sleep with and have alot of sexual partners, you are a hoe, and should be shamed for it"
Conversation over lol
Yeah that sounds good…I think the crux of Mooks argument was that it's not the hoes fault they hustlin' it's the nikkas choosin the hoes, pedestalizing them, and taking them seriously that's an issue. society at large is perverse and can be manipulated en masse by media or those who profit from the promotion of certain images in media. amber was triggered and argued for her "hoes"...Mook was actually fully coherent when he went into his rap. In the normal convo, he was kinda incoherent.
And he is generally right, his retort should’ve been that for young kids (male or female)…the next generation, what’s being promoted is to look a certain way, or act a certain way (in this convo Kim Kardashian, Amber Rose….or not the male equivalent, but let’s say Steven Jo) to acquire fame or money.
Versus actually having a talent (Mook rapping, Taylor Rooks interviewing). For as fine as Taylor Rooks is, the young gen can still look to that example and be like I gotta improve my interview skills…not necessarily that they have to alter their body (obviously looks so come into play for visible female media members).
Or they can look at Mook….yea he somewhat portrays and raps of a street life….but his talent is primarily rapping. Which is what got him to where he is.
(Rose is right in that it has a lot to do with the consumer, but it seems like Mook was questioning society’s value to begin…so in essence the consumer)

lux be workin out, i don't think he does drugs tbh.She had that man scramblin'.
On another note, is Loaded Lux on drugs? That man looks terrible. Murda Mook also looks bloated as heck.
i'm sure he just wants to keep the door open so he can possibly sleep with her at some point.Damn she challenged him and had him juelzing.
That’s tuff.
@Fillerguy You should ask the room full of BM that allowed her to say the N word when it became cool. BM made it popular by using it freely in entertainment. If you aren't taking issue with that then you can get out my face with that. You want me as a BW to be upset about what BM allow the women they fawn over to do? Ha nah bra. That's between BM and their lady friends.
And she communicated better than anyone else in the room because she actually knew what she was talking about. You're trying to make that an excuse when it should be the standard. You should actually KNOW what you are talking about when you speak on an issue which again, was my point about actual intellectualism.
Ya'll listen to unsuccessful idiots on the internet give uninformed opinions and act like that's the norm.
Hmmm good question. There's definitely not as much or not as popular. Here are the guys with superficial popularity that I can think of:
Nothing to do with the thread…but is there a male equivalent to Kim Kardashian, Amber Rose, etc?
For the female rappers that use their looks over their skills or catchiness…I see obvious male parallels. But legit can’t think of none for the Brittany Renner / Kardashian archetypes.
Even female pornstars have an actual talent besides their looks. And male counterparts.

