- Joined
- Jan 24, 2007
- Posts
- 8,152
He had an 11 year old kid, and I don't give a fuck how sad you feel, if you've got a kid then guess what you're not living for yourself anymore.
You are an absolute fucking idiot.
He had an 11 year old kid, and I don't give a fuck how sad you feel, if you've got a kid then guess what you're not living for yourself anymore.
You are an absolute fucking idiot.
You are an absolute fucking idiot.
“The so-called ‘psychotically depressed’ person who tries to kill herself doesn’t do so out of quote ‘hopelessness’ or any abstract conviction that life’s assets and debits do not square. And surely not because death seems suddenly appealing. The person in whom Its invisible agony reaches a certain unendurable level will kill herself the same way a trapped person will eventually jump from the window of a burning high-rise. Make no mistake about people who leap from burning windows. Their terror of falling from a great height is still just as great as it would be for you or me standing speculatively at the same window just checking out the view; i.e. the fear of falling remains a constant. The variable here is the other terror, the fire’s flames: when the flames get close enough, falling to death becomes the slightly less terrible of two terrors. It’s not desiring the fall; it’s terror of the flames. And yet nobody down on the sidewalk, looking up and yelling ‘Don’t!’ and ‘Hang on!’, can understand the jump. Not really. You’d have to have personally been trapped and felt flames to really understand a terror way beyond falling.”
This is probably the best quote I've read regarding suicide.
Here’s one: if a bunch of kids are playing Russian roulette and one of them “loses” the game. Did the kid kill himself? Like was it suicide the minute they all decided to even play the game or was it just shit luck?
This sucks so much. I've seen every show he has done and Parts Unknown was part of my staple TV. He will be missed.
Drama queens pay attention. This is how you comment on a celebrity's death. "Awww shit I just loved watching his show. Now wtf am I gonna watch".
The rest is bullshit because you don't know they guy in person. Don't make this about you and your goddamn disorders - nobody cares.
I know I shouldn't even bother replying to an a-hole like you. As already stated in this thread, you must be another person who must be an absolute pleasure to be with.
The meaning of what I wrote is how much I liked what he did. Not "now I have nothing to watch on TV". So stop fucking straw manning me.
He was kind of a culinary diplomat by visiting other cultures and making people understand that we all aren't so different after all.
It's a damn shame. I really loved his shows. When he first showed up with no reservations I was flipping burgers in a fast food hell. I watched his show and felt like this dude really understood what restaurant life was at its core. He wasn't some pissy tv chef who made fancy bullshit dishes and talked about foams, and xanthan gum. He was dirty, real, everyone in the kitchen was a member of a rogues gallery of criminals, addicts, failed writers, actors, and wet behind the ears kids who want to learn how to cook a steak by sound alone.
He put it out there that the breakfast shift sucks, the dinner rush sucks too, and all you can hope for is that the kitchen porter has scored a big bag for when the shift is over and you get your bus home. What he was saying, what he would talk about spoke right to me and every other sweaty chef friend I had. I've long since hung up the non slip shoes, and now cook for fun. But Anthony showed us how food really bridges cultures, and how the best way to travel is on an empty stomach. He was a rare breed as far as chefs go. Totally open and candid about the world behind the kitchen door. Something other tv chefs never, ever, talk about. He was a real class act.
It's a damn shame. I really loved his shows. When he first showed up with no reservations I was flipping burgers in a fast food hell. I watched his show and felt like this dude really understood what restaurant life was at its core. He wasn't some pissy tv chef who made fancy bullshit dishes and talked about foams, and xanthan gum. He was dirty, real, everyone in the kitchen was a member of a rogues gallery of criminals, addicts, failed writers, actors, and wet behind the ears kids who want to learn how to cook a steak by sound alone.
He put it out there that the breakfast shift sucks, the dinner rush sucks too, and all you can hope for is that the kitchen porter has scored a big bag for when the shift is over and you get your bus home. What he was saying, what he would talk about spoke right to me and every other sweaty chef friend I had. I've long since hung up the non slip shoes, and now cook for fun. But Anthony showed us how food really bridges cultures, and how the best way to travel is on an empty stomach. He was a rare breed as far as chefs go. Totally open and candid about the world behind the kitchen door. Something other tv chefs never, ever, talk about. He was a real class act.
Flipping burgers fast food are considered chefs?
It's a damn shame. I really loved his shows. When he first showed up with no reservations I was flipping burgers in a fast food hell. I watched his show and felt like this dude really understood what restaurant life was at its core. He wasn't some pissy tv chef who made fancy bullshit dishes and talked about foams, and xanthan gum. He was dirty, real, everyone in the kitchen was a member of a rogues gallery of criminals, addicts, failed writers, actors, and wet behind the ears kids who want to learn how to cook a steak by sound alone.
He put it out there that the breakfast shift sucks, the dinner rush sucks too, and all you can hope for is that the kitchen porter has scored a big bag for when the shift is over and you get your bus home. What he was saying, what he would talk about spoke right to me and every other sweaty chef friend I had. I've long since hung up the non slip shoes, and now cook for fun. But Anthony showed us how food really bridges cultures, and how the best way to travel is on an empty stomach. He was a rare breed as far as chefs go. Totally open and candid about the world behind the kitchen door. Something other tv chefs never, ever, talk about. He was a real class act.
Good stuff. I heard that he mentioned a significant amount of people in prison in the US where kitchen workers by trade. Nuts.
Also notice how these two always reply in tandem where the one fag is one upping the other fag. Fake account alert.