Parent-game in China

mrgoodstuff

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Maybe. Please consider its maybe not though.

I don't ask questions I have the answer to.
Sorry if it does seem like I'm autistic.
I didn't say that. But stepford wives basically made fun of women who wanted to be good wifes to their men and the men for wanting it. I wasn't sure how mad men made fun of?
 

Lynx nkaf

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I didn't say that. But stepford wives basically made fun of women who wanted to be good wifes to their men and the men for wanting it. I wasn't sure how mad men made fun of?
I'm not sure either. I think I had that impression by the similar crispness and attention to detail the women and men too had in the ads for that tv show. The whole 50's and early 60's look/image.

I'll tell you something, that would be wonderful to see people dress with that much care again. It would be wonderful to see wives like that again. So comforting and just a feeling of rightness with the world.
I sometimes only catch snippets of pop culture stuff like that show ran for 8 years and I never saw one episode.
Its only at relatives or friends' houses I watch their tv with them.
 

MatureDJ

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I really want to see that movie. Can you spoil it and tell me all about it? I still watch movies after spoilers. lol
There is a town in SW Connecticut that the main characters move to (i.e., from other parts of the NYC area) that turns out to be a place where a country club run by a creepy old guy named "Diz" (because he used to work for Disney) makes a robots to resemble new members' wives (i.e., the reason men move their families to this place is to get this done), with the original wives "disappearing" and the robots taking their place; part of the process is that another member of the club claims to be a linguistic professor that wants to get women to record themselves saying a bunch of words. Three of the original wives are all uppity with a bad attitude, interested in femynism, not wanting to cook & clean, etc. that wonder why all the exiting "wives" there act so strange (i.e., being very deferential to their husbands, and wearing a certain style of summer dress, very interested in cooking & cleaning, etc.), and as the movie progresses, these original wives are seen to "transform" into good-attitude women that are no longer being uppity and have the strong desire to cook & clean around the house, while the remaining ones wonder what's going on. When the first of the 3 (i.e., the one who is the same actress that was Ginger in Gilligan's Island) "tranforms", the other 2 - the main character and the tall, leggy one - get a little suspicious. Finally, the last normal wife (the main character) figures out what is going on when the tall leggy one gets "transformed", and tests her theory by stabbing her friend, which doesn't bleed and starts manfunctioning, dropping stuff on the floor, etc. - and then goes to the country club where she sees her replacement - with much bigger teats, of course, but also not quite finished as she has completely black eyes - and her replacement is seen walking toward her with a strip of fabric that looks to be used to strangle the real one. The final scene is the local supermarket where are the new wives are shopping, saying hello to all the other "transformed" wives, including the last wife. There is a regular couple (black) there as well, with the wife arguing with the husband (is she next to be transformed?).

I actually popped an erection when the tall, leggy wife got "transformed". o_O o_O

 
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Lynx nkaf

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There is a town in SW Connecticut that the main characters move to (i.e., from other parts of the NYC area) that turns out to be a place where a country club run by a creepy old guy named "Diz" (because he used to work for Disney) makes a robots to resemble new members' wives (i.e., the reason men move their families to this place is to get this done), with the original wives "disappearing" and the robots taking their place; part of the process is that another member of the club claims to be a linguistic professor that wants to get women to record themselves saying a bunch of words. Three of the original wives are all uppity with a bad attitude, interested in femynism, not wanting to cook & clean, etc. that wonder why all the exiting "wives" there act so strange (i.e., being very deferential to their husbands, and wearing a certain style of summer dress, very interested in cooking & cleaning, etc.), and as the movie progresses, these original wives are seen to "transform" into good-attitude women that are no longer being uppity and have the strong desire to cook & clean around the house, while the remaining ones wonder what's going on. When the first of the 3 (i.e., the one who is the same actress that was Ginger in Gilligan's Island) "tranforms", the other 2 - the main character and the tall, leggy one - get a little suspicious. Finally, the last normal wife (the main character) figures out what is going on when the tall leggy one gets "transformed", and tests her theory by stabbing her friend, which doesn't bleed and starts manfunctioning, dropping stuff on the floor, etc. - and then goes to the country club where she sees her replacement - with much bigger teats, of course, but also not quite finished as she has completely black eyes - and her replacement is seen walking toward her with a strip of fabric that looks to be used to strangle the real one. The final scene is the local supermarket where are the new wives are shopping, saying hello to all the other "transformed" wives, including the last wife. There is a regular couple (black) there as well, with the wife arguing with the husband (is she next to be transformed?).

I actually popped an erection when the tall, leggy wife got "transformed". o_O o_O

ok thanks, the transforming of the existing ones(same faces?) adds a different dimension to what I thought it was about.
And none of these new ones were expected to work outside the home? I bet there's actual male dominant dense towns in the world where this can occur, lol
 

Lynx nkaf

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There is a town in SW Connecticut that the main characters move to (i.e., from other parts of the NYC area) that turns out to be a place where a country club run by a creepy old guy named "Diz" (because he used to work for Disney) makes a robots to resemble new members' wives (i.e., the reason men move their families to this place is to get this done), with the original wives "disappearing" and the robots taking their place; part of the process is that another member of the club claims to be a linguistic professor that wants to get women to record themselves saying a bunch of words. Three of the original wives are all uppity with a bad attitude, interested in femynism, not wanting to cook & clean, etc. that wonder why all the exiting "wives" there act so strange (i.e., being very deferential to their husbands, and wearing a certain style of summer dress, very interested in cooking & cleaning, etc.), and as the movie progresses, these original wives are seen to "transform" into good-attitude women that are no longer being uppity and have the strong desire to cook & clean around the house, while the remaining ones wonder what's going on. When the first of the 3 (i.e., the one who is the same actress that was Ginger in Gilligan's Island) "tranforms", the other 2 - the main character and the tall, leggy one - get a little suspicious. Finally, the last normal wife (the main character) figures out what is going on when the tall leggy one gets "transformed", and tests her theory by stabbing her friend, which doesn't bleed and starts manfunctioning, dropping stuff on the floor, etc. - and then goes to the country club where she sees her replacement - with much bigger teats, of course, but also not quite finished as she has completely black eyes - and her replacement is seen walking toward her with a strip of fabric that looks to be used to strangle the real one. The final scene is the local supermarket where are the new wives are shopping, saying hello to all the other "transformed" wives, including the last wife. There is a regular couple (black) there as well, with the wife arguing with the husband (is she next to be transformed?).

I actually popped an erection when the tall, leggy wife got "transformed". o_O o_O

That clip was from 1975! So its a remade movie. Interesting. I wish ladies still wore gloves and moved gracefully through grocery stores with purpose.
Its the whole mildmanneredness that is the difference. The selfcontainment but confidence in their femininity. They were more attractive as Stepford wives, lets face it.
 
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The more interesting issue here i think is that as a whole society on both the male and female side we are so abysmally unpreparred to actually handle relationships ( regardless of level of casualness or seriousness.)

I dated a girl casually just before covid who had watched way to much disney and it showed in her conception of what relationships actually are. To be fair I am kind of a ****boy so I'm sure to them I have my own issues im unaware of.

nevermind the Xmillion "leftover people" stat. How many people as a percent of total are in a position in life to be near-optimally datable?

I recently was journalling/auditing some recent dating experiences i've noticed and its astoundingly clear that 99% of people have no ****ing idea what they should be doing.

oh well, not like I ever really gave a **** in the first place *shrugs*
 

Lynx nkaf

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The more interesting issue here i think is that as a whole society on both the male and female side we are so abysmally unpreparred to actually handle relationships ( regardless of level of casualness or seriousness.)

I dated a girl casually just before covid who had watched way to much disney and it showed in her conception of what relationships actually are. To be fair I am kind of a ****boy so I'm sure to them I have my own issues im unaware of.

nevermind the Xmillion "leftover people" stat. How many people as a percent of total are in a position in life to be near-optimally datable?

I recently was journalling/auditing some recent dating experiences i've noticed and its astoundingly clear that 99% of people have no ****ing idea what they should be doing.

oh well, not like I ever really gave a **** in the first place *shrugs*
I read more than once over the years that to show yourself you're ready for a relationship, care and tend to a living plant indoors for no less than two years.
Interesting selfexperiment to prove you have ability to be aware of some other living thing in your care.
 
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I read more than once over the years that to show yourself you're ready for a relationship, care and tend to a living plant indoors for no less than two years.
Interesting selfexperiment to prove you have ability to be aware of some other living thing in your care.
Haha I love that. Kinda like the old experiment in youth education where they'd give young people animatronic dolls for several weeks that respond to stimulus (food, emotion, etc) to see how the kids respond. Also the egg experiment where kids are expected to "care" for an egg for a week and if it breaks or otherwise is damaged/lost its essentially a fail.

Getting a dog was huge for me. took me all of like 3 days to realize the responsibility of caring for another being.
 
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