![gay twink asshole bad puppy gay twink asshole bad puppy](https://img0.etsystatic.com/119/1/12430161/il_340x270.1035447476_bd7s.jpg)
He feels he is not to be questioned, and he is the one who is chiefly wronged. Moral philosopher Aaron James, in his 2012 book, Assholes: A Theory, gives a more precise meaning of the word, particularly to its connotation in the United States: A person, who is almost always male, who considers himself of much greater moral or social importance than everyone else who allows himself to enjoy special advantages and does so systematically who does this out of an entrenched sense of entitlement and who is immunized by his sense of entitlement against the complaints of other people. The word is mainly used as a vulgarity, generally to describe people who are viewed as stupid, incompetent, unpleasant, or detestable. A variant of the term, "ass clown", was coined and popularized by the 1999 comedy film Office Space. In some broadcast edits (such as the syndication airings of South Park), the word is partially bleeped out, as "assh-".
#GAY TWINK ASSHOLE BAD PUPPY SERIES#
By 1994, however, vulgarity had become more acceptable, and the word was featured in dialog on the long-running television series NYPD Blue, though it has yet to become anything close to commonplace on network TV.
![gay twink asshole bad puppy gay twink asshole bad puppy](https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/~hkAAOSwNzleVwd5/s-l640.jpg)
However, there were PG-13 and R rated films in the 1980s that featured use of the word, such as the R-rated The Terminator (1984), the PG-13-rated National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation (1989), and the PG-rated Back to the Future (1985). Comedian Andrew Dice Clay caused a major shock when he uttered the word during a televised MTV awards show in 1989. Until the early 1990s, the word was considered one of a number of words that could not be uttered on commercial television in the United States. By the 1970s, Hustler magazine featured people they did not like as "Asshole of the Month." In 1972, Jonathan Richman of Modern Lovers recorded his song " Pablo Picasso", which includes the line "Pablo Picasso was never called an asshole." As with other vulgarities, these uses of the word may have been common in oral speech for some time before their first appearances in print.
![gay twink asshole bad puppy gay twink asshole bad puppy](https://img1.etsystatic.com/000/0/5849696/il_570xN.159109661.jpg)
Its earliest known usage in newspaper as an insult was 1965. In the ninth chapter of his 1945 autobiography, Black Boy, Richard Wright quotes a snippet of verse that uses the term: "All these white folks dressed so fine / Their ass-holes smell just like mineĀ .". The metaphorical use of the word to refer to the worst place in a region (e.g., "the arsehole of the world"), is first attested in print in 1865 the use to refer to a contemptible person is first attested in 1933. The combined form arsehole is first attested from 1500 in its literal use to refer to the anus. The word arse in English derives from the Proto-Germanic (reconstructed) word *arsaz, from the Proto-Indo-European word *ors-, meaning "buttocks" or "backside".