C'mon, you know "moist uterus" would be way worse.
QUOTE="WonderWino, post: 7138112, member: 46815"]
There were some real interesting moments in that video
'When I first meet these guys I gotta feed them!' stands out. Lucas is very transactional with everyone and everything. He thinks if he does something for you that you have to give him what he wants in return. He 'feeds' people because he thinks that means they're obligated to give him a woman a return, like a literal caveman.
See, that part I didn't find weird. That's a really common thing in a lot of cultures, to offer food as a welcoming gesture or as a gesture to show friendship or love toward someone.
In the upper Midwest US, especially outside of large city centers, where there's still a largely dominant Nordic, German, and Polish background, it's almost impossible to visit someone's house either as a relative, friend, partner, or Air BnB client if the owner is still home and not be almost constantly offered food.
Super common among the Hmong populations here as well.
You're technically allowed to refuse it but it's like some goddamned magic spell where you have to say 'no' in very polite ways at least three times and even then you'll probably get food sent with you when you leave.
Not sure if that's how it works in Aberdeen, WA which is where I think he grew up, but the food offering thing is a thing even I just do automatically if someone visits or if I have shareable food on me and, god forbid because I legitimately hate it, a stranger strikes up conversation with me in public.
Lucas has shitty intent behind what he's doing, as he's expecting something in return, but most normal people (from certain parts of the US anyway) just kind of auto offer food to people. We're like a website that pops up that, "HEY, YOU WANT 15% OFF? ENTER YOUR EMAIL! WE PROMISE NEVER TO SHOW UP AT YOUR HOUSE WITH FUNERAL POTATOES BECAUSE WE MADE WAY TOO MANY FOR THE LAST FUNERAL WE ATTENDED."
There's a funny, to me at least since I'm from that area, bit in How to Talk Minnesotan that ran on PBS in the 80s about food and when I watch it my brain just goes, "...okay but why is that weird?"
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Yeah but in lucas's case its very much a transactional situation. He isn't doing it due to any customs, hes doing it to get people indebted to him, at least in his mind. He's had that attitude toward people for years
Stafford Beer Bong said:
He literally displays submission with physical cues like an animal. We have seen this before in previous videos but for some reason it really stood out in this latest one.
Case in point:
He emulates his hero the silverback gorilla to a disturbing degree