Are you expecting me to kiss your ring?
No, but you have to kiss Luca Brasi.

It's a Don deal. An offer you cannot refuse.
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Are you expecting me to kiss your ring?
I don't know about others or other places, but I don't think it's social bias for me. You'd be surprised at what women were doing in the 50's and 60's. When I was a kid - we had male teachers and nothing was thought about it, female singers were just as plentiful as male, there were women in construction and in the military, police departments, etc.Me, too!
I always assumed it was an ingrained social bias. Women were not even allowed to DO anything until recently. So naturally, all this female singing is new (unless you count smoky bars, etc)
MANY people feel this way about women in the military, as pilots, preachers, officers, etc
However, some people still feel weird with male nurse and teachers.
I believe the aversion is simply an ingrained bias based on male preferences over millennia.
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When I'm working jigsaw puzzles, I don't like the puzzles with people in the picture. @Sherlock77 I loved your photographs and the people in your photos told a story, but while looking at them I realized I preferred the photos with people at a distance more and I found myself, in some photos, trying to look past the people. More so when the subject is female. I like the old cowboys with wrinkled faces and nothing appeals to me more than a man's smile lines around his eyes. So maybe it has to do with the lack of wrinkles and imperfections.
Wait - I think it's the faces. This sounds terrible, but just like I don't like female singers, I also don't like female faces.
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I prefer photos without people in them, too. I remember going on a school trip and taking loads of photos of buildings and other things that interested me, but no pictures of classmates and especially not of people posing in the photos. I know some people who literally can't take a photo without either themselves or some other person being in it and posing in front of the building or monument, but never do this. I'm not a huge fan of taking pictures anyway, and only ever do so if I find something truly unique and interesting. And selfies - don't get my started on those. It's just boring. I don't need photos to remember things, and don't get all emotional over photos the way some people do.
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I think that's what I like about your photos - it's people within the environment, rather than just a person.Ahh... Sorry just got home from work while all these posts piled up... I did see this post while at work on lunch break...
I see what you're saying, I have evolved into my style of photography, not the traditional close up street photography, trying to show more of the overall scene, also a form of this is what is called an environmental portrait, people within the scene... And I might add that most people I photograph are complete strangers to me, whether a stranger portrait or candid... Actually I rarely photograph my friends and family, as I tend to look for something more candid
And I get bored with traditional landscape photography, I look more what I call "how people interact with the world around them", whether it's a building, or vehicle, or people within a landscape...
That would definitely be a connection, but, no, she didn't sing. I heard her sing very softly a couple times and would try to get her to sing, but she wouldn't. I kinda think she was possibly on the spectrum, too. I didn't have major issues with her - mine were mostly because my dad. She did more of the role reversal thing and I usually was trying to protect her.@Pats , didn't you write (on another post) that you had issues with your mom when you were growing up? Did she, by any chance, sing around the house?
(I don't mean to pry. It just seemed like there might be a connection.)
Ella is on my playlist...Ella Fitzgerald with the music from the big band era are to love
I am not sure what that means. Did you perceive her as being weak?She did more of the role reversal thing and I usually was trying to protect her.
As I got older I did. Teen years and later (already didn't like female singers thoughElla is on my playlist...
I am not sure what that means. Did you perceive her as being weak?
Oh, I know that song. lol Kind of reminds me of Tiny Tim's tiptoe through the tulips. Maybe it is the higher pitch.![]()
People in a photo as part of the environment is fine, it's the selfie-type photo, or family holiday type photos with people posing in front of buildings that I don't like.... if a building is interesting enough to me for me to want to take a photo of it, then the building will be the subject of the photo, not a person, the person doesn't belong in the photo. One or the other, but not both. With scenery, I need to have a specific focus for the photo, something unusual or something viewed at an unique angle, not just the 'what a pretty scene, let's take a photo' that most people do.I see what you're saying, I have evolved into my style of photography, not the traditional close up street photography, trying to show more of the overall scene, also a form of this is what is called an environmental portrait, people within the scene...
YES, though this is just one of the effects of the now industry willing to sacrifice everything so more people will get it.As far female singers - I don't like "most" modern "performances" because the music industry wants the females to sound soooo "sexy" and, to me, the results are soooo "sickening".
I totally agree, except late 60's - early 70's for me.I don't care for much of the music today. I've always preferred male singers over females.
This breathy, moany, whiney struggling-to-get-a-breath out sound they have today really gets on my nerves. I much prefer late 70s, early 80s pop/rock music, I don't know what it's callled. It was just in the last few years I realized what some of the lyrics were actually talking about, which is disgusting. ??? Not much to listen to these days. The only difference now is they are more open with what they are talking about rather than trying to diguise it like they used to. And the costumes they wear? Yuck. Much too revealing and much too little there. Country music is no longer country. But no, I never really liked female singers, only a few that had a catchy song ever caught my ear, and it was the music not the singer. TMI, I'm sure, sorry about that.