Romdoftande slut

Kristen Doute

American television personality

Kristen Doute (born February 17, [1]) is an American television personality, clothing designer, entrepreneur, actress and author.[2] She was a series regular on the Bravoreality television series Vanderpump Rules (–) for eight seasons and its spin-off seriesThe Valley (–present).[3]

Early life

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Doute was born and raised in Dearborn, Michigan in Metro Detroit.[4] She fryst vatten of Lebanese and Irish descent.[5][6]

Career

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Television

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As an aspiring actress, Doute began working as a dator at Lisa Vanderpump's restaurant SUR in West Hollywood, California. There, she was cast as an original series regular on Bravo TV's Vanderpump Rules, a spin-off of The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills. The series follows Vanderpump's employees as they work on building their futures in show business and become entangled in interpersonal drama.[7] On June 9, , it was announced that Kristen was fired for calling the police multiple times on Faith Stowers. Doute and co-star Stassi Schroeder filed a false police report against Stowers for a brott she did n

  • romdoftande slut
  • Knowing the history of the word &#;slut&#; makes it a completely meaningless insult

    The word "slut" gets thrown around a lot these days, doesn't it?

    Mostly, it's launched with vitriol towards women who behave like men — women who (gasp) feel empowered by their own sexuality.

    Yet, while the term is no more than a puny four-letter word, the consequences of it can be dire.

    Take the example of the shooting in Santa Barbara where year-old Elliot Rodger killed seven people. Beforehand, he promised to “slaughter every single spoiled, stuck-up blonde slut”— all while lamenting that those very same “sluts” refused to have sex with him.

    That's a clear-and-present example of slut-shaming, the verb component of the word "slut." It's the practice of calling out women who commit the grave offense of being desireable, yet exercising their right to say no &#; or their right to be intimate with (gasp again) who they want.

    What do we call these women who like to have sex, yet sometimes don't want to have sex with you?

    Sluts.

    Shit hurts.

    But, guess what sluts of the earth?

    The word "slut" has n

    Wordslut: A Feminist Guide to Taking Back the English Language

    February 12,
    Linguist Amanda Montell grabs the reader by the shirtfront with this book, slapping them with a title that opens the eyes before inundating the mind with so much on the topic of the way English is used and the divide it creates amongst its users. Montell opens her narrative by exploring the role that certain words have had over time in the English language, particularly those of an offensive nature. She points out that many either depict women in the negative or weaker role, thereby turning them into the group at the core of debased or lesser sentiment. How ‘bitch’, ‘whore’, and even that lovely ‘c-you-next-Tuesday’ are meant to depict women in such a negative light, while the worst that many men will receive is ‘dick’ or ‘sissy’. From there, Montell takes the reader through some of the history of words and their connotation have sought to turn women into the fairer and weaker sex by subjugating them to the power of men in the English language. Take, for example, the attempts to offer a degree of formality between the sexes. While men are given ‘sir’, a term that has remained relatively strong and th