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This Is The Most Shockingly Racist Comment Section You'll Ever See

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Apparently this Washington, DC Examiner article , posted today, about race relations in America's restaurants got bombarded with racist commenters.

At the time of posting this there are over 100 shocking comments flooding the site. The article covered a controversial survey submitted to "The Journal Of Black Studies."

The new survey, completed by two sociologists, one from Wayne State University, the other from North Carolina State University, adds to the explosive atmosphere sparked by the shooting death of Trayvon Martin in Florida that’s been followed by racial clashes around the nation. Notable in the survey: of the 200 servers who participated, 87 percent were white.

This is probably a really good example of why you need to have a comment moderator...

This was the article's headline

This was the article's headline

And here's a small example of what's filled the article's comment section

And here's a small example of what's filled the article's comment section


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Frances Bean Says Courtney Love Should Be Banned From Twitter

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Courtney Love tweeted that Dave Grohl had hit on her daughter. Now Frances Bean has responded.

Frances Bean Cobain released this statement through her publicist:

Via: caroarantxa

The crazy thread she's referring to (Love is writing on her private Twitter account, @cbabymichelle):

The crazy thread she's referring to (Love is writing on her private Twitter account, @cbabymichelle):

(Getty Images / gawker.com)


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Sarah Silverman Is Pregnant With A Food Baby

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Today's Twitter Buzz: Sarah Silverman is about to give birth to a bouncing burrito bundle. Plus, Hulk Hogan wants you to know about his failed musical career, Chris Brown is growing his hair out, and Jennifer Love Hewitt tweets her lovlies.

Source: @SarahKSilverman

Source: @alyankovic

Source: @oliviamunn


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Unexplainable Photo Of Freddie Mercury Riding Darth Vader

Danny McBride Discusses The Kenny Powers Mullet

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And now we know: Kenny's hair in season one of “Eastbound and Down” was extensions, but now it's a hairpiece. I heard once that when a man takes a shower with a mullet, he's changed forever.

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And what a mullet it is:

And what a mullet it is:

34 Foxes Sticking Their Tongues Out

What Google Might Have Looked Like In The '80s

13 Stylish Black Cats Teach You How To Wear Black


14 Reasons Why Corgis Are The Smartest Animals In The World

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Earlier this week there was outrage over an article I published called 10 Corgis Who Thought The Titanic Wasn't Real . Well, I wanted to apologize for calling those corgis stupid by making this post. Corgis are the best!

Statistically, corgis are ranked in the upper tier of doggie intelligence. #11 is pretty damn good.

Statistically, corgis are ranked in the upper tier of doggie intelligence. #11 is pretty damn good.

Source: en.wikipedia.org

Corgis are great therapy and service dogs. BUT according to Pamela Christie, "Some service dog organizations won't work with Corgis because the breed is a little TOO SMART.

Corgis are great therapy and service dogs. BUT according to Pamela Christie, "Some service dog organizations won't work with Corgis because the breed is a little TOO SMART.

Labrador Retrievers and Golden Retrievers will learn skills designed to help people and stop there, but Corgis often find ways to use those new skills for their own benefit.

Source: carlinskennels.com

Corgis make excellent watch dogs.

Corgis make excellent watch dogs.

According to Deborah Harper, the author of 'The New Complete Pembroke Welsh Corgi', "The Corgi has always been valued as a watchdog. His acute hearing alerts him to unusual sounds, and his big dog bark means business when something is amiss."

Source: carlinskennels.com

Corgi expert, Sarah Christie stated in "Corgi Diversions," Corgis "excel in obedience, agility, flyball, tracking and more, as well as their traditional herding activities."

Corgi expert, Sarah Christie stated in "Corgi Diversions," Corgis "excel in obedience, agility, flyball, tracking and more, as well as their traditional herding activities."

Source: carlinskennels.com


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The Most Important Question Surrounding Angelina Jolie And Brad Pitt's Engagement

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It's not “what wedding dress will she wear?” Oh no, the most important question goes much deeper than that.

(Reuters / LUCY NICHOLSON)

Via: usmagazine.com

11 Clever Minimalist Disney Posters

A Musical Ode To "Fat Betty"

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This is glorious. I'm sure January Jones just loves that this exists.

Via: uproxx.com

15 Ridiculous Nightclub Posters Featuring NBA Players

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There's nothing quite like the art of the nightclub poster. And when the night in question is being hosted by an NBA player, the results are amazing.

D-Wade looks happy. That sweater is so pink.

Dwight's not playing tonight, and he's still hosting a nightclub afterward. Isn't that sort of like skipping school because you're "sick" and then still going out at night?

Via: @DwightHoward

I tried to go to Lavo on Spring Break once. I didn't know that it was a place LeBron James hosted parties at — in fact, I got dragged there without really knowing what it was at all. We didn't get in.

Via: media.cleveland.com

THE BIG THREE. LeBron looks like he's trying to seduce me.

Via: blogimages.thescore.com


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Videogame Planets

Zac Efron Face Morph

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This one isn't as scary as the Lindsay Lohan one , but it gets a little gross because of puberty.

Source: youtube.com


The Best Double-Dutching Dog You'll Ever See

Ann Romney's "Childhood Nanny" Dishes On Privileged Upbringing

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“Juanita” calls into Current TV claiming she worked for Ann's wealthy family as a cook and babysitter. Says she and Mitt were “nice,” but confirms she “never worked a day in her life.” There's also a strange story about a parakeet.

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BuzzFeed has reached out to the Romney campaign for comment, and will update when they respond. The only woman of the right age in the Pontiac area identified in public records as "Juanita" was listed with a telephone number that has been disconnected.

The call took place on Current's morning program, the Stephanie Miller Show.

Why I Want My Parents To Watch "Girls"

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HBO's newest show addresses issues most early twentysomethings don't want to talk about. But it'll explain the whole “Millennials” thing to our parents so we don't have to.

Dunham as Hannah.

After watching the first three episodes of "Girls," which premieres Sunday night on HBO, I've decided that it is a savior. For one, it is smarter and more original than the usual clichéd sitcoms and involves far less screaming than your average reality show. But it also sheds more light than any show of its kind ever has on so many of the issues that define my technology-addicted generation — our obsessive texting, our allergy to plan-making, our constant sharing, our hesitancy to commit to anything. This is why I want my parents to watch the series.

A number of superficial moments in the show that serve as a kind of "look, we get it" wink, showing me that it knows how to speak my language. In one scene, Allison Williams' character explains the hierarchy of communication intimacy: "Facebook, then email, then Gchat, then text, then phone, then in person." It's spot-on, totally. And there's the part where Lena Dunham's character learns she is not suitable for a job because unlike the other intern, she does not know Photoshop.

My parents are by no means Luddites, nor are they out of touch with what's hip. They have iPads and know how to text. They do most of their work on computers. (My Mom even recently became acquainted with the world of Gchat, but that's a topic for another time.) They watch "Weeds" and know about Nicki Minaj. They have dabbled in our pop culture and tried our technologies, but they (fairly) don't entirely understand the somewhat bizarre ways we use — and mold our lives — around them. They don't understand how we communicate constantly but refuse to make definitive plans. They don't get why we sometimes ignore them but also rely on them. They don't get how difficult it can be to date and socialize as an urban twentysomething as a result. "Girls" is better at addressing that in a way they might understand than I ever could.

Hannah's parents.

But I don't really need my parents to understand why a boy sending me a Facebook message is so wildly different than his sending me a text. I can talk about that stuff with my parents. I'd be comfortable explaining it, whether they'd truly understand or not. In fact, that's the kind of stuff I'd readily explain to my parents, because it would mean avoiding talking about other, ickier issues. Real issues.

It's "Girls'" subtler moments that so effectively explore some of those issues we struggle to talk about or have a hard time explaining – but ones we need to discuss nonetheless. And one of "Girls"' most subtle strengths is that it doesn't apologize for broaching these issues. Quite the opposite, in fact. Many scenes in "Girls" made me uncomfortable, because they hit eerily close to home.

In the first episode, there's a scene in which Dunham's character, Hannah, finds out her parents are going to cut her off financially. "One final push," as they put it. The scene touches on a significant issue, but what I found more interesting, and telling, is the way Hannah reacts when her parents follow up about getting together the next day. Hannah decides she doesn't want to see them. "I have work, and then I have a dinner thing, and then I am busy—trying to become who I am," she says. No matter that ultimately, "work" involves getting fired, which is followed by her spontaneously calling a guy because she's "near his apartment" and stopping by to have sex with him. At the end of it all, she ends up being hours late for the "dinner thing." After the "dinner thing," she appears, stoned, in her parents' hotel room. The sequence of events is believable, but what's more telling is the way the whole sequence illustrates the way we hesitate to make anything reminiscent of defined plans — and both hugely resist our parents, while also hugely depending on them.

In high school, and over the summers I lived at home during college, and during the months I lived at home after graduating, my parents routinely asked what my plans were for any given night or weekend. It wasn't because they were concerned I'd be spending my time somewhere age-inappropriate, or that I'd stay out too late — they were genuinely interested, and confused by the fact that I rarely planned much in advance. We resist committing to plans, because they are so easily made and changed by our crippling addiction to being in constant communication.


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A Frame-By-Frame Breakdown Of The Worst Baseball Slide Ever Attempted

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To even call this a slide seems dishonest, but hey: Kelly Shoppach got the first steal of his career!

During today's Boston Red Sox — Tampa Bay Rays game, Sox catcher Kelly Shoppach pulled off a truly bizarre, deranged slide. It sort of comes in three acts, each with its own narrative arc; remarkably ends with Shoppach safe on base; and is unlike anything you've ever seen before.

Deadspin has video of the "slide," but we've broken down the tape frame-by-frame to analyze the critical moments.

Act I: Preparing For War

Act I: Preparing For War

"Hey! Hey guys! I'm trying to steal a base!

Shit... there it is. It's coming up really fast. What do I do?"

Here's the first hint of Shoppach's attempt at a slide; right leg forward, he leans back and looks ready to go. But as you can see, there's no base in sight, and Shoppach seems to realize this.

So, instead of sliding like a normal person — one leg out, the other tucked close to the body — he just collapses like a sack of bagels.


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Airport Security Asks Dave Coulier If He Still Knows The Olsen Twins

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