My “Hey! It’s Franklin!” CD.
Metal. A lot of people kinda freak out when they hear you like metal of any kind. And not in a good way.
Sounds like the kind of people i would not wanna have a second date with…
italo-disco. though i might reveal that in a later moment.
Donk is a 2nd or 3rd date kind of genre.
Demi Lovato’s first album, Don’t Forget. It absolutely slaps but it’s difficult for me to talk about it.
Some Baby Metal songs.
Probably the cursed remixes on YouTube, they don’t need to know how much of a banger beatswapped uptown funk is.
Insane Clown Posse
…every once in awhile i listen to top fourty countdowns from the mid-eighties, not necessarily because i enjoy the music, but because i’m mesmerised by the time-warp effect of revisiting period radio programs…
…i disliked a lot of the music then but i appreciated the shared cultural experience of legitimately popular broadcast media, and retrospectively it’s a window into a world which no longer exists…
I don’t know how she woud react to the entire ratchet & clank OST so I probably wouldn’t show her this.
New Age. Lot of Jonn Serrie.
Snake River Conspiracy
Nah, I’m gonna own it because if they don’t like KiNG MALA then they probably won’t like being with me
My Chemical Romance — the first two albums at least, wasn’t a fan of “Black Parade”
Why isn’t it just common practice to just use “they” instead the entirely cumbersome “he/her”?
Like it’s just so much easier to type out and say, and it’s just better to use regardless.
The fun part is that you’ll have people complaining about it either way!
Yea, but the people who complain about “they” are assholes so we can safely ignore them.
I am offended by your use of ‘people’, that excludes folk and kin!
Rawr!
You were not appreciated in your time.
Not only is it more readable and aesthetically-pleasing, singular “they” is more inclusive of people outside the gender binary!
Love how the top comment doesn’t even answer the question. But TIL, I guess. If I had known this option existed, I probably would have used it. I’m going to play the “not a native english speaker”-card on this one.
Because “they” refers to multiple people?
I was taught this very aggressively in school, but it turns out that it’s just not true and there’s a long history of singular they.
It doesn’t though. They has been used for singular without knowing the gender for a long time.
Like at least since English has been a language.
Singular “they” actually predates singular “you”.
My friend forgot their umbrella at the office.
They nervously answered the phone.
They’re a lazy motherfucker.
I gave my friend a hug and wished them a speedy recovery.
Any of those sound unusual, or like they’re referring to more than one person?