Once upon a time, Sports Illustrated was a big thing with millions of subscribers who for some unknown reason were almost exclusively straight male sports fans who once a year were delighted to have the annual swimsuit edition show up at the mailbox featuring some of the hottest women on the planet. I'm guessing that their remaining subscribers and website visitors are still largely straight sports loving males. Apparently, there is a huge untapped group of lesbians who are jonesing on seeing the women of the WNBA. Who knew. One is not like the other.
The only sportswoman more insufferable than this bunch is Megan Rapinoe.
One of the WNBA’s top players hailed the issue as a victory for social justice, or something, in a word salad.
“We represent a variety of things: of course women, women of color, members of the LGBTQIA2+ community and much more … The [Swimsuit] issue for so many years has been iconic and has represented a lot for women,” declared Sue Bird. “Now you are seeing an evolution in what that can mean and what that can look like, and I think the WNBA players being a part of that is what makes it special. There is no better group of women to showcase that evolution.”
Once upon a time, Sports Illustrated was a big thing with millions of subscribers who for some unknown reason were almost exclusively straight male sports fans who once a year were delighted to have the annual swimsuit edition show up at the mailbox featuring some of the hottest women on the planet. I'm guessing that their remaining subscribers and website visitors are still largely straight sports loving males. Apparently, there is a huge untapped group of lesbians who are jonesing on seeing the women of the WNBA. Who knew. One is not like the other.
The only sportswoman more insufferable than this bunch is Megan Rapinoe.
One of the WNBA’s top players hailed the issue as a victory for social justice, or something, in a word salad.
“We represent a variety of things: of course women, women of color, members of the LGBTQIA2+ community and much more … The [Swimsuit] issue for so many years has been iconic and has represented a lot for women,” declared Sue Bird. “Now you are seeing an evolution in what that can mean and what that can look like, and I think the WNBA players being a part of that is what makes it special. There is no better group of women to showcase that evolution.”
I’m down for the one on the ground. She wouldn’t really even have to move much. But the other mules need to go first.
Once upon a time, Sports Illustrated was a big thing with millions of subscribers who for some unknown reason were almost exclusively straight male sports fans who once a year were delighted to have the annual swimsuit edition show up at the mailbox featuring some of the hottest women on the planet. I'm guessing that their remaining subscribers and website visitors are still largely straight sports loving males. Apparently, there is a huge untapped group of lesbians who are jonesing on seeing the women of the WNBA. Who knew. One is not like the other.
The only sportswoman more insufferable than this bunch is Megan Rapinoe.
One of the WNBA’s top players hailed the issue as a victory for social justice, or something, in a word salad.
“We represent a variety of things: of course women, women of color, members of the LGBTQIA2+ community and much more … The [Swimsuit] issue for so many years has been iconic and has represented a lot for women,” declared Sue Bird. “Now you are seeing an evolution in what that can mean and what that can look like, and I think the WNBA players being a part of that is what makes it special. There is no better group of women to showcase that evolution.”
Once upon a time, Sports Illustrated was a big thing with millions of subscribers who for some unknown reason were almost exclusively straight male sports fans who once a year were delighted to have the annual swimsuit edition show up at the mailbox featuring some of the hottest women on the planet. I'm guessing that their remaining subscribers and website visitors are still largely straight sports loving males. Apparently, there is a huge untapped group of lesbians who are jonesing on seeing the women of the WNBA. Who knew. One is not like the other.
The only sportswoman more insufferable than this bunch is Megan Rapinoe.
One of the WNBA’s top players hailed the issue as a victory for social justice, or something, in a word salad.
“We represent a variety of things: of course women, women of color, members of the LGBTQIA2+ community and much more … The [Swimsuit] issue for so many years has been iconic and has represented a lot for women,” declared Sue Bird. “Now you are seeing an evolution in what that can mean and what that can look like, and I think the WNBA players being a part of that is what makes it special. There is no better group of women to showcase that evolution.”
So proud of my environmentalist Mayor and Governor.
The Emerald City. The Duwamish Tribe. The Salmon Runs.
All destroyed by Leftist Commies.
Can't spell Democrat without Hypocrite. Have a $5 million home on Lake Washington with a leaky septic tank and Geezus Phucking Christ, you have a problem the dem bureaucracy is really interested in.
Once upon a time, Sports Illustrated was a big thing with millions of subscribers who for some unknown reason were almost exclusively straight male sports fans who once a year were delighted to have the annual swimsuit edition show up at the mailbox featuring some of the hottest women on the planet. I'm guessing that their remaining subscribers and website visitors are still largely straight sports loving males. Apparently, there is a huge untapped group of lesbians who are jonesing on seeing the women of the WNBA. Who knew. One is not like the other.
The only sportswoman more insufferable than this bunch is Megan Rapinoe.
One of the WNBA’s top players hailed the issue as a victory for social justice, or something, in a word salad.
“We represent a variety of things: of course women, women of color, members of the LGBTQIA2+ community and much more … The [Swimsuit] issue for so many years has been iconic and has represented a lot for women,” declared Sue Bird. “Now you are seeing an evolution in what that can mean and what that can look like, and I think the WNBA players being a part of that is what makes it special. There is no better group of women to showcase that evolution.”
I was hoping for Lizzo.
She have any interest in playing on the O-Line?
Also offers need to got out tomorrow. Solid punch at the line of scrimmage.
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And with that. ASU had no other choice than to create the KRUNKiiiiite school of journalism.
Go Dwags!
The Emerald City. The Duwamish Tribe. The Salmon Runs.
All destroyed by Leftist Commies.
I'm not saying it's on Elon but there are certainly a lot better tweets showing up in my feed the last week or so.
Also offers need to got out tomorrow. Solid punch at the line of scrimmage.