เข้าสู่ระบบ สมัครสมาชิก

laddism การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • "We've overdosed on laddism, " said Smith, who has for years been the only designer that beer-guzzling lads accepted.
  • A BBC article suggests that Gary and Tony were " a reaction against the onset of the caring, sharing'laddism, whilst allowing female viewers to ridicule the bad but lovable Tony and Gary ".
  • Shortly afterwards Flextech appointed Jonathan Webb to replace Lisa Opie as managing director; Jonathan Webb was responsible for moving Challenge away from its staple of game shows and axing Bravo's " laddism " strategy.
  • He was quoted as saying at the time : " I won't talk about Laddism and all that bollocks, that shows a lack of understanding of what " Loaded " is about.
  • Here it is one of a genre aimed at the " laddism " subculture of middle-class British men who revel in drinking, yelling rude things at women, and generally acting like boors.
  • Small wonder that the movie has become a cultural emblem of the English phenomenon called " laddism " _ rowdy, boys-will-be-boys behavior that has come to be fashionable and hip.
  • Brown vaulted to prominence in the London magazine world a few years ago, when he created Loaded magazine as a celebration of what Britons call " laddism " _ a kind of hard-drinking, babe-watching, childish ethos.
  • They [ say ] nothing much about anything . " Andy Gill of " The Independent " commented that " She's Electric " is laddism of a tiresomely generic kind [ whilst ] " Roll With It " is drab and chummy . " Perhaps the most damning review came from David Stubbs of the now-defunct " Melody Maker ".
  • Observers have also argued that the social media campaigns have been repressive and counterproductive in relation to more important feminist goals for achievement of women's equality, such as changing laws and funding women's services, or that they amount to futile attacks on the culture of young adult men such as ( in the United Kingdom ), laddism, or are evidence of outright prudism.
  • Britain is at the moment in thrall to " laddism, " with its definingly " bloke-ish " ( that's to say, male and usually working-class ) element surfacing in television shows like the comedy " Men Behaving Badly " and in plays like Nick Grosso's " Real Classy Affair, " which was staged at the Royal Court Theater last fall.