Romans emocjonalny z zonatym facetem??

03.09.05, 10:20
witam was!oto pewna historia...

ona ma 17 lat a on 35. Poki co to znajomośc tylko internetowa, choc on bardzo chetnie by sie z nia spotkal- mieszkaja od siebie jakies 30 km. Ona odwleka to spotkanie... bojac sie czegos.Oboje dobrze wiedza ze nic miedzy nimi nie moze byc, ale cos juz jakby zaikskrzylo, rozmawiaja ze soba codziennie. Sa ze soba zwiazani glownie emocjonalnie.On jest zonatym dojrzalym mezczyznom, zadne z nich nie szuka przygod, ale kto wie co moze sie zdarzyc gdy sie spotkaja?? Dodam tylko ze on ma corke... w wieku 17 lat.

widzicie w tym cos zlego? czy ona powinna zerwac kontakt?
    • zona_boskiego_hydraulika Re: Romans emocjonalny z zonatym facetem?? 03.09.05, 10:22
      Zbok!
      • mara73 Re: Romans emocjonalny z zonatym facetem?? 03.09.05, 10:41
        ona sie zaangazuje, bo jest mloda, naiwna, starszy facet bedzie jej prawdopodobnie imponowal,
        itd....itp....a facet? coz facet jaki jest kazdy wie;) mloda laska, zapatrzona to go bedzie rajcowac ale
        przeciez nie zostawi zony dla jakiejs gowniary no nie? czyli co? ona z tego wyjdzie mocno poturbowana
        emocjonalnie, gorzej jak mocniej zaiskrzy;) i zostana kochankami, ciaza? tak tez moze byc prawda? jak
        facet ma troche oleju w glowie to powinien odpuscic lub nie powinni sie spotac w realu, raczej watpie, ze
        to ona zlamie mu serce...
        • giraffa Re: Romans emocjonalny z zonatym facetem?? 03.09.05, 10:56
          tylkjo pomiedzy nimi nie ma zadnegogo uczucia, jest tylko wiez, tyle ze bardzo przyjacielska, ona nie chce nic od niego, niczego nie oczekuje, na nic nie liczy
          • mara73 Re: Romans emocjonalny z zonatym facetem?? 03.09.05, 11:16
            trele morele na poczatku sie zawsze na nic nie liczy, niczego nie oczekuje a pozniej taka dziewczyna
            wpada jak sliwka w kompot;) i zaczyna liczyc i wiecej oczekiwac a skad wiadomo, ze nic nie bedzie jak sie
            spotkaja? przeciez on juz teraz ja kreci skoro utrzymuja kontakt, jak fizycznie tez zaiskrzy to strach sie
            bac:)))) a wogole czego ten facet szuka u 17-latki zrozumienie? przyjazni? czemu nie pogada z zona? coz
            ja bym odpuscila jak bym ta babka byla:( zonaty facet=klopoty (dla dziewczyna) dla niego fajowa zabawa i
            podbudowanie swojego ego
    • maria92 Re: Romans emocjonalny z zonatym facetem?? 03.09.05, 11:03
      nie mezczyznom a mezczyzna ty idiotko
      • giraffa Re: Romans emocjonalny z zonatym facetem?? 03.09.05, 11:13
        oho, jezykoznawca sie znalazl, do bledu sie przyznaje, nawet najlepszym zdarzają się poyłki :)

        pozdrawiam cie
      • neder Re: Romans emocjonalny z zonatym facetem?? 03.09.05, 16:53
        > nie mezczyznom a mezczyzna ty idiotko

        nie mezczyzna a mężczyzną ty idiotko
    • john_malkovitch Re: Romans emocjonalny z zonatym facetem?? 03.09.05, 11:40
      Żonaty, 35-o letni mężczyzna podrywający nastolatki przez net, nie jest
      dojrzały emocjonalnie..
      • megieraa Re: Romans emocjonalny z zonatym facetem?? 03.09.05, 11:50

    • goldenwomen Re: Romans emocjonalny z zonatym facetem?? 03.09.05, 12:06
      jesli on ma tyle lat co piszesz i ma córke w wieku 17 lat to stwierdzam
      że 'gorące majty" z niego :DDD szuka jak nic przygody
    • squirrel22 Re: Romans emocjonalny z zonatym facetem?? 03.09.05, 13:54
      Więź emocjonalna? Założę się, że tylko ze strony tej dziewczyny. Typowy
      przykład uwiedzenia naiwnej nastolatki... Jakby miała trochę oleju w głowie, to
      już dawno zerwałaby znajomośc, ba, nie powinna jej w ogóle rozpoczynać, wiedząc
      jaka jest sytuacja tego mężczyzny.
    • krecilapka Szybko zaczal sie u niego 03.09.05, 23:51
      kryzys wieku sredniego z naiwna kretynka w tle ;).
    • floriano Bzdura 04.09.05, 03:56
    • vaporetto Re: Romans emocjonalny z zonatym facetem?? 04.09.05, 15:20
      To chyba dlatego,z



      TALK SHOWS

      The television talk show is, on the face of it, a rather strange institution.
      We pay people to talk for us. Like the soap opera, the talk show is an
      invention of twentieth century broadcasting. It takes a very old form of
      communication, conversation, and transforms it into a low cost but highly
      popular form of information and entertainment through the institutions,
      practices and technologies of television.

      The talk show did not originate over night, at one time, or in one place. It
      developed out of forty years of television practice and antecedent talk
      traditions from radio, Chatauqua, vaudeville and popular theater. In defining
      the talk show it is useful to distinguish between "television talk" (unscripted
      presentational address) and "talk shows"--shows organized principally around
      talk. "Television talk" represents all the unscripted forms of conversation and
      direct address to the audience that have been present on television from the
      beginning. This kind of "live," unscripted talk is one of the basic things that
      distinguishes television from film, photography, the record and book
      industries. Television talk is almost always anchored or framed by an announcer
      or host figure, and may be defined, in Erving Goffman's terms, as "fresh talk,"
      that is, talk that appears to be generated word by word and in a spontaneous
      manner. Though it is always to a degree spontaneous, television talk is also
      highly structured. It takes place in ritualized encounters and what the viewer
      sees and hears on the air has been shaped by writers, producers, stage managers
      and technical crews and tailored to the talk formulas of television.

      Thus, though it resembles daily speech, the kind of talk that occurs on
      television does not represent unfettered conversation. Different kinds of
      television talk occur at different times of the broadcast day, but much of this
      talk occurs outside the confines of what audiences and critics have come to
      know as the "talk show." Major talk traditions have developed around news,
      entertainment, and a variety of social encounters that have been reframed and
      adapted for television. For example, talk is featured on game shows, dating or
      relationship shows, simulated legal encounters (People's Court) or shows that
      are essentially elaborate versions of practical jokes (Candid Camera). All of
      these shows feature talk but are seldom referred to as "talk shows."

      A "talk show," on the other hand, is as a show that is quite clearly and self-
      consciously built around its talk. To remain on the air a talk show must adhere
      to strict time and money constraints, allowing time, for instance, for the
      advertising spots that must appear throughout the show. The talk show must
      begin and end within these rigid time limits and, playing to an audience of
      millions, be sensitive to topics that will interest that mass audience. For its
      business managers the television talk show is one product among many and they
      are usually not amenable to anything that will interfere with profits and
      ratings. This kind of show is almost always anchored by a host or team of
      hosts.

      Host/Forms

      Talk shows are often identified by the host's name in the title, an indication
      of the importance of the host in the history of the television talk show.
      Indeed, we might usefully combine the two words and talk about host/forms.

      A good example of the importance of the host to the form a talk show takes
      would be The Tonight Show. The Tonight Show premiered on NBC in 1954 with Steve
      Allen as its first host. While it maintained a distinctive format and style
      throughout its first four decades on the air, The Tonight Show changed
      significantly with each successive host. Steve Allen, Ernie Kovacs, Jack Paar,
      Johnny Carson, and Jay Leno each took The Tonight Show in a significant new
      direction. Each of these hosts imprinted the show with distinctive
      personalities and management styles.

      Though many talk shows run for only weeks or months before being taken off the
      air, once established, talk shows and talk show hosts tend to have long runs.
      The average number of years on television for the thirty-five major talk show
      hosts listed at the end of this essay was eighteen years. Successful talk show
      hosts like Mike Wallace, Johnny Carson, and Barbara Walters bridge generations
      of viewers. The longevity of these "super stars" increases their impact on the
      forms and formats of television talk with which they are associated.

      Television talk shows originally emerged out of two central traditions: news
      and entertainment. Over time hybrid forms developed that mixed news, public
      affairs, and entertainment. These hybrid forms occupy a middle ground position
      between news and entertainment, though their hosts (Phil Donahue, Oprah
      Winfrey, and Geraldo Rivera, for example) often got their training in
      journalism. Approximately a third of the major talk show hosts listed at the
      end of the essay came out of news. The other two thirds came from entertainment
      (comedy in particular).

      Within the journalistic tradition, the names Edward R. Murrow, Mike Wallace,
      Ted Koppel and Bill Moyers stand out. News talk hosts like Murrow, Koppel, and
      Moyers do not have bands, sidekicks, or a studio audience. Their roles as talk
      show hosts are extensions of their roles as reporters and news commentators.
      Their shows appear in evening when more adult and older aged viewers are
      watching. The morning host teams that mix "happy talk" and information also
      generally come from the news background. This format was pioneered by NBC's
      Sylvester "Pat" Weaver and host Dave Garroway with the Today show in the early
      1950s. Hosts who started out on early morning news talk shows and went on to
      anchor the evening news or primetime interview shows include: Walter Cronkite,
      John Chancellor, Barbara Walters, Tom Brokaw, and Jane Pauley. Each developed a
      distinctive style within the more conversational format of their morning show.

      Coming from a journalism background but engaging in a wider arena of cultural
      topics were hosts like Phil Donahue, Oprah Winfrey, and Geraldo Rivera. Mixing
      news, entertainment, and public affairs, Phil Donahue established "talk
      television," an extension of the "hot topic" live radio call-in shows of the
      1960s. Donahue himself ran a radio show in Dayton, Ohio before premiering his
      daytime television talk show. Donahue's Dayton show, later syndicated
      nationally, featured audience members talking about the social issues that
      affected their lives.


      Ricki Lake

      Within the field of entertainment/variety talk, it was the late night talk show
      that assumed special importance. Late night talk picked up steam when it
      garnered national attention during the talk show "wars" of the late 1960s and
      early 1970s. During this time Johnny Carson defended his ratings throne on the
      Tonight show against challengers Joey Bishop, David Frost, Dick Cavett and Merv
      Griffin. Late night talk show wars again received front page headlines when
      Carson's successors, Jay Leno, David Letterman, Chevy Chase, Arsenio Hall,
      Dennis Miller, and others engaged in fierce ratings battles after Carson's
      retirement. Within the United States these talk show wars assumed epic
      proportions in the press, and the impact that late night entertainment talk
      show hosts had over their audiences seemed, at times, to assume that of
      political leaders or leaders of state. In an age in which political theorists
      had become increasingly pessimistic about the possibilities of democracy within
      the public sphere, late night talk show hosts became sanctioned court jesters
      who appeared free to mock and question basic American values and political
      ideas through humor. Throughout the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s Johnny Carson's
      mo
Inne wątki na temat:
Pełna wersja