Apparently, any description of an organ common to over half of the world's population needs to have prior Administrative approval. The more you know!
This is the FP, and we do not allow comments.
I saw the Georgia O'Keefe retrospective at the Smithsonian years ago, with a group of friends (very smart people, with good brains. Not losers). We all agreed that they were Hoo Hahs.
Just a…
<img src="https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/236x/37/08/fe/3708fedb106a5d47be8e40bdf85e4547.jpg"/>
Um.
<img src="http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2009/09/17/arts/30129460.JPG"/>
Well, yeah, but…
<img src="https://img.buzzfeed.com/buzzfeed-static/static/2014-12/5/15/tmp/webdr07/75c6f192814ff10d1899c8d476284ddf-7.jpg"/>
OH ALL RIGHT. They're hoo hahs.
Huh?
Did James O'Keefe try to get into women's bathrooms to study the resemblance of female organs to his distant relative's paintings?
Not quite as obvious as | Gustave Courbet's L'Origine du monde | but, yeah. (Linky NSFW.)
At least she didn't say Jehovah
<img src="https://media.giphy.com/media/l41lGAcThnMc29u2Q/giphy.gif"/>
Apparently, any description of an organ common to over half of the world's population needs to have prior Administrative approval. The more you know!
This is the FP, and we do not allow comments.
I saw the Georgia O'Keefe retrospective at the Smithsonian years ago, with a group of friends (very smart people, with good brains. Not losers). We all agreed that they were Hoo Hahs.
Excellent! Will you be looking at vaginas there too?