Wally: I'm brilliant but I don't want to use my brain as offen as people would prefer, so yes while I have calculated the ricks of the dumb stuff I do, I just simply don't care and continue on my quest to be a silly little guy.
Dick, waist deep in taxes: you mean to tell me, I didn't have to do you're taxes!?
Wally: no you still have to do them.
Dick: why?
Wally: you broke my first chem set I got from my dad, you are in the dog house for that.
Dick: I'll buy you a new one.
Wally: can't replace what Barry got me, unless you want to go back in time.
Dick, gets up: let's go then.
Roy: but you're not done yet...
Dick; it's only Bruce's taxes, he'll be fine with a little bit of tax evasion.
Roy: he pissed you off again?
Dick: he ate my lunch Alfred packed me today when I came to get these forms, I was going to do them a bit wrong anyways.
Unpopular opinion but I kind of hate posts making fun of “instagram poetry.”
Like I get that the people making them are thinking about soulless marketing or whatever, but I feel like assuming the thoughts and intentions put into a poem are inherently fake just because it’s short and poorly written (in your opinion) is a big oversimplification.
I just knew kids in high school who had/still have poetry accounts that had some poems that could fall under the “instagram poetry,” definition and like, they weren’t getting book deals or even a lot of attention, they were just expressing themselves. And yeah, maybe they were doing so in a simplistic style that’s gotten semi-popular, but like… so what?
I’m not saying you have to like that type of poetry by any means, just that maybe your frustration should be pointed more towards the media industries only promoting whatever they think is the safest bet, and less at the artists themselves and the people that enjoy their work.