I decided to start this topic after what i had viewed this past weekend.
My family and I had rented "We bought a Zoo" on Saturday night. (actually a good movie)
Watch this segmented video and pay close attention to what was said at 22 seconds in.
I agree Highlander,, In that movie after 'Rosie' had said what she said to her 'father', MY sweet 12 year old daughter said some very nice words of reassurance to me.
I decided to start this topic after what i had viewed this past weekend.
My family and I had rented "We bought a Zoo" on Saturday night. (actually a good movie)
Watch this segmented video and pay close attention to what was said at 22 seconds in.
Im not sure why the director/writer/producers thought that this line would be so warmly accepted and cute by the masses.
A cute little daughter expressing her happiness to her father that he ISN'T BALD!
My view on this is very biased of course. What does everyone think? What other movies have done the same??
Yes, this is really sad BUT Matt Damon is losing his hair. Anyway, you have a family so why do you care about hairloss? Once I have my own family that loves me for me and not cause the way I look or any other BS then ill stop using fin and rogaine.
This kind of thing always pisses me off. I absolutely despise it when I see people making stupid jokes about baldness/hair loss in popular culture. Certain things are taboo; things that are off limits to poke fun at, like race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, etc. Hell, there are plenty of people who have been raked over the coals and fired for making fun of a person's race or sexual orientation, yet it's totally acceptable, and even encouraged, to make fun of baldness/hair loss. It seems like a lot of people laugh at that Larry David piece of crap and that pudgy little turd nuggett George Costanza, yet I cannot stand them because they make it acceptable to poke fun at a disease (hair loss) which affects all of our lives so greatly. In my opinion, it is just as disgusting and unacceptable to make fun of some one's hair loss as it is to make fun of their race/ethnicity.
Dex's question- "Anyway, you have a family so why do you care about hairloss?"
Would anyone like to answer this one for me?
Age and family are pretty much meaningless when it comes to hair loss.
It's in our evolutionary hardwiring to care. Those who think theyll magically stop caring when they're x# of years old or when they have a wife and kids--you're in for a rough surprise.
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