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Posts Tagged ‘Sex and the City’

–*This Ryan Reynolds look-alike has people doubting their own sanity.

–*This bog body was obviously not having a good time 8,000 years ago.

–*You’re being attracted to Sydney Sweeney all wrong.

–*Are you really into Pre-Raphaelite art or just into crazy chicks? Take this quiz.

–*Will anything stop Timothée Chalamet? What about his being chained to this radiator?

–*How this brain-eating amoeba learned to relax.

–*How your inability to do long division is making you feel safer in these Red States.

–*That song you’re enjoying right now … have you thought about whether it’s less perfect than “God Only Knows” by the Beach Boys?

–*Nation‘s pigeons want to know: Are you going to drop that bread?

–*Customer service representative confidently refers you back to the number you already dialed.

–*This devastated chef used to be a devastated cook.

–*And just like that, “Sex and the City” removed all the jokes from the scripts.

–*Children of alcoholics confess: A few of the years were fun.

–*The NSA admits the nation’s paranoids are getting too boring to eavesdrop on.

–*We threw random punches at people, and if you know anything about mammals, their reactions will not surprise you.

–*Don’t let sinkholes get you down.

–*This fast food disruptor offers hamburger solutions.

–*Last bit of imagination this Ohio man boasted could’ve been used on climate solutions, but he wrote a dragon screenplay.

–*Last bit of imagination this New York man boasted could’ve been used on climate solutions, but he wrote a comedy listicle.

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Washington, D.C.–Some 80% of Americans said on Tuesday that they “can’t do this anymore,” and made a dramatic exit from some marriage, situation, job, argument or film screening.

Americans everywhere have found refuge to this careworn phrase, one stemming from perhaps every movie on the planet from “Sex and the City” to “Traffic” to “Fight Club,” to express common frustrations of their everyday life and bring closure to some chapter of their lives. In many cases, they are ending a job or a relationship.

“I can’t do this anymore,” said Brayden Horowitz to his girlfriend Sadie Asher. “Haven’t we done too much damage to each other to continue this game?”

“I can’t do this anymore,” said Peter Wilhelm, a vice president at J.P. Morgan Chase Bank to his boss, Stanley Wheel. “The financial services industry is just too wrecked for us to go on.”

“I can’t do this anymore,” said Linda Splevin, on the verge of sending her 8-year-old son Tyler to military academy.

All across the country, experts admit, Americans just can’t do it anymore. The U.S. Happiness Index suggests that a steady dose of geopolitical turmoil, economic uncertainty, rampant unemployment and sexual frustration have led Americans to a dramatic need to take a stand like the one they see made practically every day on television.

“When Miranda on ‘Sex and the City,’ said to Steve ‘I can’t do this anymore,’ she was really speaking for all of us,” said Lacey Weiss, a psychologist at Northwestern University. “People tend to view both their world and their own lives in a dramatic story arc. They love beginnings. They struggle through the middles. They enjoy the high points for as long as they last. But what we love most of all when we’re being dramatic is bringing everything to a sweeping conclusion, likely with music ringing in their ears and the crashing denouement, ‘No, really, I can’t do this anymore.’ It is not just a trite phrase. It is part of our self-mythologizing.”

Weiss said that she planned to give up on her doctorate degree later that month and go get a job learning Chinese.

“I loved being a psychologist, but how long do I have to wait around for an interview like this one to make it all worth while? I just can’t do this anymore.”

The new trend is seen most perceptibly on the MTV hit “The Jersey Shore,” where approximately 67% of the dialogue is “I can’t do this anymore.” (The other 33% being “She’s DTF!” and “Snookie in the house, bitch.”)

“I just can’t do this anymore,” said Hosni Mubarak to the people of Egypt in mid-February. Meanwhile, other people who haven’t been able to do this anymore are Ashlee Simpson, Sandra Bullock and Kate Winslet. Comedy superstar Steve Carrell will meanwhile be leaving his hit series “The Office,” also because he can’t do this anymore.

However, pundits have noticed a discouraging number of people who as of this posting can indeed still do this anymore–among them are Muammar Gaddafi, Sarah Palin, Glenn Beck and Kim Kardashian.

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