Lol Amber Heard

mellowjello

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Jan 11, 2017
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She uses donated and pledged synonymously lol.
They're not the same?
So much for being nuanced.

What gets me too is her total lack of self awareness, how she is totally oblivious to her own conspicuous behaviour
and how she is being perceived.
Or maybe she is that delusional about her own acting abilities.
 
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james t kirk

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Aug 17, 2001
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I'm glad Depp won, but I severely doubt he will ever see a dime out of her.

There is no way she has the dough to pay him and even if she did, she still wouldn't pay him.
 

mandrill

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Aug 23, 2001
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Dude, stop.
You cant equate both those sentences.
Directly writing an article full of lies that the jury found to be defamatory is VERY different from being found to be liable for defamatory statements via technicality (the lawyer being Depp's agent).
Sure I can equate them. The judge and jury did.

Depp presumably instructed the lawyer to make those statements. He could have had the lawyer retract the statements a day or a week later. And it's essentially Depp's position that Heard's whole article was a hoax. That's why his lawyer made the statement.
 

springbloom

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Megyn Kelly has the most coherent reaction to the verdict I seen. You can tell how educated and beautiful this women is VS. High school trailer trash drop out Amber Heard.

Megyn also example of a hottie in her... 50s!!! Imagine how gorgeous she probably looked in her 20s.

 
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squeezer

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Her Hollywood career for next couple of years is fucked. Perhaps even for eternity

Heard faces career ruin AND bankruptcy after Johnny Depp battle | Daily Mail Online
Johnny's career will take off again and for now Amber will be in the dumpsters but eventually she can come back if she doesn't let herself sink into a black hole and stays in shape and keep her looks as long as she can. Just like in the WWE , they can always come back if they play their cards right. .
 

Uncharted

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Sure I can equate them. The judge and jury did.

Depp presumably instructed the lawyer to make those statements. He could have had the lawyer retract the statements a day or a week later. And it's essentially Depp's position that Heard's whole article was a hoax. That's why his lawyer made the statement.
Well no other real lawyer does. And they explain exactly why.

Why are you trolling this subject so much?
You admit that you never saw the UK trial, and that you only read the judges verdict, or so you claim.
You admit you never watched this trial, and only saw the excerpts on social media.
You have admitted you have no knowledge of either parties past records with partners.
Yet you keep pushing the narrative that Depp is scum and the guilty party. Based solely on the written verdict of a UK judge in a condensed 3 week trial, that you admit you never saw for yourself.
You refuse to accept the implications of the rulings of this trial. You vehemently present extremely weak arguments, that are not based in any real legal backing, in an attempt to subvert those implications.

You are either heavily biased towards Heard, or your trolling the entire subject for shits and giggles.

Either way your arguments are probably the thinnnest ones in this thread, just based on the fact that admittedly, you haven't seen anything but the verdict of a single judge.
 

Phil C. McNasty

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I'm glad Depp won, but I severely doubt he will ever see a dime out of her.

There is no way she has the dough to pay him and even if she did, she still wouldn't pay him
In California they can garnish her wages, but they cannot come after her house or her pension.
(I remember this from the OJ Simpson civil trial)
 

springbloom

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Apr 30, 2022
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they can garnish her wages
Then she won't have a problem. Her goal was to not work or have a career, but just to retire out of gold digging money. For example, even when she got a good offer for AQ2, she barely did the work and kept the team hanging last minute, it was bad enough the production company sued her due to delays. IDK what's wrong with her, she could've kept the $7m divorce settlement and called it a day but had to rub it in with having 3rd parties write articles on her behalf and then get paid. Gluck TO this scum bitch, now she will def. be investigated for perjury like she is in Australia.
 

Jenesis

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Why would I eat crow?

The jury's perfectly entitled to come to whatever decision they want.

I already discussed my feelings about the trial in a post further up the thread. I haven't followed the trial. I thought the UK judge pulled Depp apart and it was a sleazeball move for him to relitigate the issues in the US. I think it's also highly abusive. But it's possible he could win with a jury in a new trial. And if he does, he does.
I knew you wouldn’t. You simply can’t admit to being wrong at all. Which is fine, but let me let you in on a secret. You are human, you will be wrong sometimes. It doesn’t make you a bad person. You were wrong in this case. Your belief in AH is misplaced.

I, as a woman of true DV, as a woman who just last week had a man try to sexually assault me, I find AH actions disgusting. What she did impacts me and every other woman who wants to come forward about DV and sexual assault. She was proven to be lying and your need to stick up for that negative behaviour is what is getting you called out by every member in this thread.

You are a lonely man on an island in this case. Just admit you got it wrong and come join the party with the rest of us. We are not that bad - I promise. 😉
 
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Mitchell99

"A ride dont require explanation just participants
Apr 15, 2019
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Looks like she's going to have to do porn, she's done in this business.
Agreed.

I'm not a 'fan' of either of them. I don't personally know either of them. Having watched some of the key moments in the trial, my conclusion is that Depp has some character flaws (btw who doesn't) but is generally a nice person. He seems like a good guy, good humoured, intelligent, honest and philanthropic.

Amber Heard seems like a person who needs help. A lot, and quickly. I hope she gets it before she does more harm, self harm or implodes.

My conclusion.
 

Phil C. McNasty

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He's a troll, won't admit. Even Amber admitted in a public statement, "It's sad I lost..." blablabla... But I'm willing to bet Mandrill won't admit she lost

Why Some People Will Never Admit They're Wrong

  • The typical response to discovering one is wrong is to admit it, either fully or partially.
  • Some people refuse to admit they’re wrong, even in the face of overwhelming evidence, due to a fragile ego.
  • If one cannot psychologically handle being wrong, they may attempt to deny facts in order to defend their actions or beliefs.

We all make mistakes, and we do so with regularity. Some errors are small, such as, “No, we don’t need to stop at the store; there’s plenty of milk left for breakfast." Some are bigger, such as, “Don’t rush me; we have plenty of time to get to the airport before the flight leaves.” And some are crucial, such as, “I know it was raining and dark, but I’m sure that was the man I saw breaking into the home across the street.”

No one enjoys being wrong. It’s an unpleasant emotional experience for all of us. The question is how do we respond when it turns out we were wrong—when there wasn’t enough milk left for coffee, when we hit traffic and missed the flight, or when we find out the man who sat in jail for five years based on our identification was innocent all along?

Some of us admit we were wrong and say, “Oops, you were right. We should have gotten more milk.”

Some of us kind of imply we were wrong, but we don’t do so explicitly or in a way that is satisfying to the other person: “We had plenty of time to get to the airport on time if the traffic hadn’t been unusually bad. But fine, we’ll leave earlier next time.”

But some people refuse to admit they’re wrong, even in the face of overwhelming evidence: "They let him go because of DNA evidence and another dude’s confession? Ridiculous! That’s the guy! I saw him!”

The first two examples are probably familiar to most of us because those are typical responses to being wrong. We accept responsibility fully or partially (sometimes, very, very partially), but we don’t push back against the actual facts. We don’t claim there was enough milk when there wasn’t, or that we were not late to the airport.

But what about when a person does push back against the facts, when they simply cannot admit they were wrong in any circumstance? What is it in their psychological makeup that makes it impossible for them to admit they were wrong, even when it is obvious they were? And why does this happen so repetitively—why do they never admit they were wrong?

The answer is related to their ego; their very sense of self.

A Fragile Ego Leads to Attempts to Distort Reality

Some people have such a fragile ego, such brittle self-esteem, such a weak "psychological constitution," that admitting they made a mistake or that they were wrong is fundamentally too threatening for their egos to tolerate. Accepting they were wrong, absorbing that reality, would be so psychologically shattering, their defense mechanisms do something remarkable to avoid doing so—they literally distort their perception of reality to make it (reality) less threatening. Their defense mechanisms protect their fragile ego by changing the very facts in their mind, so they are no longer wrong or culpable.

As a result, they come up with statements, such as, "I checked in the morning, and there was enough milk, so someone must have finished it." When it’s pointed out that no one was home after they left in the morning, so no one could have done that, they double down and repeat, “Someone must have, because I checked, and there was milk,” as though some phantom broke into the house, finished the milk and left without a trace.

In our other example, they will insist that their erroneous identification of the robber was correct despite DNA evidence and a confession from a different person. When confronted, they will continue to insist or pivot to attacking anyone who tries to argue otherwise and to disparaging the sources of the contradictory information (e.g., "These labs make mistakes all the time, and besides, you can't trust a confession from another criminal! And why do you always take their side?").

People who repeatedly exhibit this kind of behavior are, by definition, psychologically fragile. However, that assessment is often difficult for people to accept, because to the outside world, they look as if they’re confidently standing their ground and not backing down, things we associate with strength. But psychological rigidity is not a sign of strength, it is an indication of weakness. These people are not choosing to stand their ground; they’re compelled to do so in order to protect their fragile egos. Admitting we are wrong is unpleasant, it is bruising for any ego. It takes a certain amount of emotional strength and courage to deal with that reality and own up to our mistakes. Most of us sulk a bit when we have to admit we're wrong, but we get over it.

But when people are constitutionally unable to admit they’re wrong, when they cannot tolerate the very notion that they are capable of mistakes, it is because they suffer from an ego so fragile that they cannot sulk and get over it—they need to warp their very perception of reality and challenge obvious facts in order to defend their not being wrong in the first place.

How we respond to such people is up to us. The one mistake we should not make is to consider their persistent and rigid refusal to admit they’re wrong as a sign of strength or conviction because it is the absolute opposite—psychological weakness and fragility
 

shack

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Oct 2, 2001
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Why Some People Will Never Admit They're Wrong

  • The typical response to discovering one is wrong is to admit it, either fully or partially.
  • Some people refuse to admit they’re wrong, even in the face of overwhelming evidence, due to a fragile ego.
  • If one cannot psychologically handle being wrong, they may attempt to deny facts in order to defend their actions or belief
How ironic coming from Phil.
 

Jenesis

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