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Guy couldn't fix his oven door, so he joyfully dances to "I feel like a woman" after getting assistance from an app. (www.youtube.com)

Talk about emasculation. The ad came out 8 months ago. South Park lampooned the exact same scenario 2 months ago.

Also, read all the comments from the ad. Gross.

What do you think?

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Airplane Clouds
Airplane Clouds
10 months ago

Masonic zig zag dance floor…

Sharine
Sharine
10 months ago

First of all, sometimes it’s fine to pay an expert to fix something, especially when it involves gas and/or electricity and you’re not trained in explosives, haha.

Second, in this weird time, finding parts is hard unless you have access to the supply chain (which we all know is broken anyway).

Third, yeah, it’s f*****g lame that a dude is dancing on his kitchen island while phone-chatting with another dude. Help me. None of this is funny!

username
username
10 months ago

I would have cut his d*ck off so he remembers he got some balls in there!

Karine
Karine
10 months ago
Reply to  username

A little bit too harsh…

username2
username2
10 months ago
Reply to  username

Yes, do it!

Trut4seeker
Trut4seeker
10 months ago

Lmao @the comments.

What a weak a*s beta male world we’re living in. God forgive me and grant me more compassion, the flesh in me can’t stand it.

Lori
Lori
10 months ago

The comments on YouTube are so cringe! Please tell me they’re from bots.

Last edited 10 months ago by lori
realestatepup
realestatepup
10 months ago
Reply to  Lori

The comments are all the same, way to lame and fake to be from real people. Look at the user names….

Trut4seeker
Trut4seeker
10 months ago
Reply to  realestatepup

lol

I wish I still had your guys’ optimism. Are AI bots real? Yes I do unquestionably believe it, but (and maybe it’s just me) I come across more than enough ppl both online and in the real world who give off the same cringe vibes as those comments to think they’re not real, unfortunately.

Feels to me like we’re living in the movie “Idiocracy” more and more each day. I can laugh about it but it’s extremely disturbing.

Last edited 10 months ago by Trut4seeker
Lori
Lori
10 months ago
Reply to  Trut4seeker

It does feel like Idiocracy! And Babylon Bee articles come to life every day.

lgageharleya
lgageharleya
10 months ago
Reply to  Trut4seeker

I did an article months ago on two Babylon Bee founders in a videotaped interview with John Cleese…broke it down and explained and showed all the tells. VL declined it. BB are not who we think they are.

Trut4seeker
Trut4seeker
10 months ago
Reply to  lgageharleya

VL declined? How come?

I don’t disagree @not who we think they are…

Is there a way for you to share your article? I’d love to check it out if that’s ok.

lgageharleya
lgageharleya
10 months ago
Reply to  Trut4seeker

VL doesn’t give a reason, it just doesn’t post. I’d have to rewrite it. I didn’t realize initially that if they decline a post it’s sent to the internet trash bin, so I didn’t save it. But their body language spoke volumes and even many of their comments and word choices were heavy with double meanings. The audience felt like they were in on the jokes, laughing with, but only a slight shift in perspective and you could see they were actually mocking their target audience.

Confused 2
Confused 2
10 months ago

I never even thought that this was emasculating, but I am not a man, young or a bot. I thought it was a great commercial until you guys ruined it for me.

Maybe sometimes we read too much into things?

Trut4seeker
Trut4seeker
10 months ago
Reply to  Confused 2

On one hand, I can kind of get where you’re coming from. Men have been doing that silly, self-emasculating type of comedy or humor skits for centuries now, right?

On the other hand, does that make it ok? Especially in this day and age where not only are subconscious and subliminal messages ever more prevalent in everyday life (such as mass media), but men associating themselves with femininity (whether subconsciously or not, whether in a silly vane or not) is an encouraged attribute (by TPTB). Makes one wonder if it’s purposeful/deliberate, or just ignorantly careless. Although, we are seeing more and more that nothing appears to be by accident these days…

Re: reading too much into things: that’s one of the more interesting parts about this whole matrix-like reality we’re all living right now. You can still hop back into blissful ignorance at this point, if you so choose. Just know that you do so at your own peril.

I don’t mean that to be antagonistic toward you. More reflective than anything else.

Last edited 10 months ago by Trut4seeker
rick
rick
10 months ago

Black and white floor: duality, the yin and yang. Good and evil, the karmic balance.

The man has been demasculated and emasculated and even dances in a very feminine way. The ad is discouraging men to be men.

Man in the commercial is a enuch.

For people wondering if we are reading too much into, you can cut through the smoke because they always leave stench behind. In this case: thre black and white floor. Also, their aggressive attack on “toxic masculinity”. Those are the signs.

Funny or not, it stopped being funny when he was dancing on his island to what seems like Shania Twain. What man does that?

Last edited 10 months ago by rick
Confused 2
Confused 2
10 months ago
Reply to  rick

I have a black and white floor in my kitchen. Does that make me evil? This guy is trying to fix his oven, which is what men usually do (fix things around the house). Only this time he is getting help from an app instead of YouTube. That’s what I got out of it.

I never saw the emasculation of man in this commercial until I started reading these comments. You can find evil in anything. Please don’t go down that road. It is dangerous.

Last edited 10 months ago by Confused 2