![Rolling Eyes :roll:](./images/smilies/icon_rolleyes.gif)
No fucker has a right to be on TV, get over yourself, you sound almost woke.
And not strange to bring kancut into it. He was fond of ridiculous hyperbole at times.
No need to get nasty, Carlos. Let me clarify my points: I thought the PDC axed both the cheerleaders and walk-on girls from appearing on television, but I appear to be mistaken. Sorry about that.Carlos J wrote: ↑Thu Jan 04, 2024 4:27 pm How can your argument still stand? The PDC axed the walk-on girls, not the dancing girls/cheerleaders, they are still there. Get that right first and there might be a chance of debate.
No fucker has a right to be on TV, get over yourself, you sound almost woke.
And not strange to bring kancut into it. He was fond of ridiculous hyperbole at times.
Apologies, Lambers, I was referring to the walk-on girls, not the dancers.
I understand what you mean, Subs, but I respectfully disagree. If women dolled up to the nines accompanying professional sportsmen on stage as mere forms of display is outdated, shouldn't that logic also apply to similar practices celebrated in British society today? For example, take Love Island: Male viewers enjoy looking at and rating women's bodies. In the [I'm a Celebrity] jungle, men (and women! I don't think only men enjoying doing it) admire half naked celebrities showering themselves. Eurovision is no morally better, visually speaking. Looking through our 21st-century puritanical lens, these things, happily encouraged by the nation's biggest television companies, most certainly belong in another era—Rome, 27 BC, I'd say. Let's axe these things too.