I thought it was about friendship and coworkers. Rejection isn't only dating. Part of the world rejects us every day.
I thought it was about friendship and coworkers. Rejection isn't only dating. Part of the world rejects us every day.
There came a time when the Old Gods died! The Brave died with the Cunning! The Noble perished locked in battle with unleashed Evil! It was the last day for them! An ancient era was passing in fiery holocaust!
If you're getting rejected in situations that don't involve dating...besides maybe a high five or a hug, then that's an entirely different discussion.
Kirby beat me to it, but rejection comes in many forms. From romantic rejection to rejection of friendship to rejection of arguments or ideas. Some people you might see as "abrasive" or "toxic" might just be telling you uncomfortable truths, or even just giving you a perspective or opinion that you're free to disagree with but is no less valid than your own. That can be seen as a rejection of you, because they reject your ideas or even the things that you like, but it isn't necessarily about you.
Not wanting to face the fact that you could be wrong is what usually leads people to withdraw, blame others for their problems, and seek out like-minded individuals to stay in a thought-bubble/safe space and avoid rejection or contradiction. Personally I find that to be unhelpful long-term and boring in the short term. Give me conflict baby, even better if they make good points and help me recalibrate my thinking (though, like most people, I tend to cling to my beliefs/likes/thoughts).
I enjoy some of his stand-up, but I'd take a Carlin/Jim Jeffries/Bill Burr any day of the week if I'm putting something on in the background. I love the movie, "the Birdcage" (even if Nathan Lane steals the show from him). I honestly gun-to-my-head couldn't name another project of his that really grabs me, but danged if I'm not a fan anyway. Mork & Mindy is hamstrung by the fact that it was a sitcom in the '70s. Sitcoms are usually crap, to appeal to a mass audience, so I give him a pass there. "Death to Smoochy" though, that's on him. I keep wanting to go back and watch it, thinking "It can't be as bad as I remember it being" but still hesitate. Someday, when I'm bored enough.
Williams did a guest shot on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno once, and Leno just sat back and let him ad-lib. It was one of the funniest things I've ever seen. That's when he was gold, when he was just let to say and do whatever he wanted. But yeah, the reruns I saw of Mork and Mindy never even approached what he could do; and just wasn't very funny. That said, that era of TV produced some of the greatest and funniest sitcoms of all time. I'd say WKRP or Barney Miller more than makes up for Mork and Mindy in redeeming the sitcoms of that time.
In fact, I will go with "As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly..." as the single funniest sitcom line ever.
Well I think it's part of human nature that we have to try and attribute some kind of deeper cause or motivation to everything and can't accept that most of the time, things just kind of happen and aren't always an indictment of your value as a person. The problem is that our society very much encourages people to communicate through subtle gestures and innuendo rather than just being direct with each other, and so it can be difficult to tell whether a particular social signal is meaningful, or if you are just reading too much into something innocuous.
I know someone who attributes the absolute worse motive to everyone. If someone ignores them, it's not that they didn't hear or see them. it's that they thought this person was worthless.
If someone reacts to them with a "don't bother me" it's not that they might be having a bad day, it's that they wanted to show how this person is a piece of crap. And so on.
There came a time when the Old Gods died! The Brave died with the Cunning! The Noble perished locked in battle with unleashed Evil! It was the last day for them! An ancient era was passing in fiery holocaust!
There came a time when the Old Gods died! The Brave died with the Cunning! The Noble perished locked in battle with unleashed Evil! It was the last day for them! An ancient era was passing in fiery holocaust!
To be fair, it is an aspect of human nature to try and read patterns where none exist, and media doesn't really help either because it is always implying to an extent that if you're a bad person, then other people will just kind of instinctively know and try to avoid or shun you because of it, and so it's easy for people to interpret every instance of being mistreated as a personal slight. And I think that the interconnectedness of modern society has paradoxically made people lonelier, because the fact that we all have a lot more contacts and acquaintances than we would have without modern technology means that we don't have as much time or energy to devote to each person in our lives, and I would wager any amount of money that every person who has ever felt like they were being ignored or insulted by someone they cared about is doing the EXACT same thing to someone else and isn't even aware of what they might be feeling.
For good reasons, I hate the people in power in the People's Republic of China.
Moving on, Juan of the Dead is leagues better than any American Pie film.