No, I really gotta disagree there. Kari's really skilled when it comes to principles of physics and making accurate models, working with ballistics gel, or working with chemicals in general (particularly the episodes that deal with explosive substances--the exploding trousers and Confederate cannon ones were my favorite). I think it might've taken her between the second and third season to really settle into that, but she contributes as much--if not more--than folks like Grant or Tori. Scottie, meanwhile, contributes a lot from the mechanical engineering end.Alunissage wrote:1) As far as I can tell Kari is solely there to BE eye candy, with her bleached-red hair. (Pointless, right, Phyco? ) She's basically the equivalent of the girl who dresses provocatively to get attention, because her role is to draw that attention. Sure, she does stuff too, but it's pretty obvious by how she dresses that she's there to get fanboys to drool over how cute she is. And it works, obviously. (I miss Scotty, who actually knew what she was doing.)
That puts it a lot better than I could have. A lot of guys will give lip-service to the whole "oh you don't really need makeup" opinion, but, most of the time, it's a (transparent) attempt to come off as sounding compassionate and understanding. It doesn't work pretty much for the reasons you cited...Alun wrote:Phyco, the reason women are less than delighted when you comment that makeup is pointless is that you're basically telling them that their efforts to make themselves look better are pointless and they should be stuck with whatever less attractive face they feel they have
Saying that makeup doesn't matter is like me saying that I shouldn't bother shaving, combing my hair, or any other kind of self-grooming in the morning. If I come into work or meet with our clients and have disheveled hair and a three-day beard, I'm going to come off as very unconcerned not only with my appearance, but also the kind of impression I'm giving off.
It's one thing not to be overly concerned with what other people think, but there's no sense in taking that to extremes and using that as a justification not to take care of yourself.
It takes me, maybe, 30 minutes to an hour to get ready in the morning. A lot of women can get by and look quite fine spending just 15-30 minutes applying some makeup; it's about the same amount of time I spend, say, shaving or trimming my beard. KF